Jeanne Finkenbinder appeals from a trial court order which followed arbitration of her claim against her underinsurance carrier, State Farm Mutual Auto Insurance Co. Following the filing of the arbitration award, Finkenbinder moved the trial court to award costs, preverdict interest on her medical
Finkenbinder now renews her claims that: (1) she should be awarded costs; (2) she should be permitted to recover preverdict interest on the stipulated medical expenses; and (3) the common law should be changed to allow interest on the entire tort award for both liquidated and unliquidated damages. We conclude that the relevant statutory authority for awarding costs, § 814.01, Stats., does not apply to a party in an arbitration proceeding, that Finkenbinder never raised the issue of preverdict interest during arbitration and has thereby waived it, and that we are bound by existing precedent as it pertains to the computation of post-award interest. Consequently, we affirm.
Finkenbinder was injured when she was struck by a car while crossing the street. American Family Insurance, which insured the driver of the car, paid out the limits of its policy on behalf of its insured and was released. State Farm, as Finkenbinder's underin-surance carrier, brought a motion to compel arbitration.
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The circuit court granted that motion; an arbitration hearing was held and resulted in a net award of $131,000.
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After the arbitrator's award was
Ordinarily, the award of an arbitrator is subject to only limited review. Our review of the arbitrator's award is without deference to the trial court and our function is to insure that the parties received the arbitration they bargained for.
See City of Madison v. Local 311, Int'l Ass'n of Firefighters, AFL-CIO,
The trial court concluded that there was no entitlement to "costs in a circuit court action in a matter that was commended ultimately to arbitration" and therefore denied Finkenbinder's request. Our review of this issue requires us to construe the applicable statute, § 814.01, Stats. Construction of a statute and its application to a particular set of facts is a question of law that we review de novo.
See Minuteman, Inc. v. Alexander,
Section 814.01, Stats., is entitled "Costs allowed to plaintiff." It provides: "Except as otherwise provided in this chapter, costs shall be allowed of course to the
The predecessor section to § 814.01, STATS.,
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was considered by the supreme court in
DeGroff v. Schmude,
A plaintiff is entitled to costs under sec. 271.01 only 'upon a recovery.' Because a new trial was ordered, the third-party plaintiffs did not recover in their action for contribution and a literal reading of the cited sections would appear to support the awarding of costs to the third-party defendants.
However, a persuasive argument is also made that the legislature did not intend that the awarding of costs to a defendant be mandatory whenever the plaintiff fails to recover on his claim. Rather, the statutory scheme appears to contemplate theawarding of costs only to successful parties. Where, as here, there is no final determination on the merits and the action does not end in judgment for one party or the other, neither party should be entitled to costs.
Id.
at 568,
In a more recent case which considered the statutory imposition of costs,
State v. Foster,
Consideration of the applicable statutory section and relevant case law convinces us that the statutory scheme of ch. 814, Stats., envisions a "prevailing party" as one who is successful in a litigated trial court proceeding, not one who succeeds in obtaining an award before an arbitrator. This conclusion squares with prior case law that has considered the issue of awarding costs in various actions. Furthermore, our holding is also supported by the following definition of arbitration: "[A] method of alternative dispute resolution which occurs outside established or traditional tribunals of justice."
State v. P.G. Miron Constr. Co.,
Finkenbinder responds that costs should have been permitted because the action "began as a circuit court action and ended as one." However, it is not the beginning and end points of an action that are disposi-tive; rather, the determining factor is whether the action was the subject of a litigated trial court proceeding. She also argues that if we were to hold that an award of costs was discretionary pursuant to § 814.035, Stats., "the Court's ruling comments on the matter were a simple denial of the motion, without any discussion of applicable law and . . . [t]hat of course, constitutes an abuse of discretion."
The issue presented to the trial court was whether taxable costs are statutorily authorized following an arbitration award. Counsel for State Farm argued there was "no statutory authority; no case law" permitting recovery of costs after arbitration. Finkenbinder's counsel responded by stating, "There is a circuit court action." The trial court responded to this argument as follows: "I don’t believe that entitles you to costs in a circuit court action in a matter that was commended ultimately to arbitration, and therefore the request for costs are denied, as well." Because the trial court addressed Finkenbinder's legal entitlement to costs rather than its discretionary authority to award authorized costs, we disagree with her conclusion that the court's ruling involved an erroneous exercise of discretion. Discretion in awarding costs takes place only when the law allows the court to consider whether to grant costs in the first place.
Without considering the merits of Finkenbinder's claim, we conclude that she has waived this issue due to her failure to raise it during arbitration. Absent a reservation of rights, even partial participation in the arbitration process can estop a party from challenging the arbitration agreement.
See Pilgrim Inv. Corp. v. Reed,
Finkenbinder's final claim on appeal is founded upon her position that "the common law should be changed to allow preverdict interest on all tort damages, liquidated or unliquidated." The supreme court has held that "a decision to allow pre-verdict interest on unliquidated tort claims would require a study of complex social and economic factors and policy considerations which this Court is not equipped to make. We conclude that such a study and decision is better left to the legislature."
Johnson v. Pearson Agri-Systems, Inc.,
By the Court. — Order affirmed.
Notes
Finkenbinder concedes that this last issue would require a change in the law to allow interest on all damages in tort actions, regardless of their resolution.
The motion to compel was based on a specific provision in the insurance contract.
The original arbitration award was for $462,156.55, which included $350,000 for "gross pain, suffering, disability and disfigurement," and $112,156.55 for stipulated medical bills. This was then reduced by fifty percent due to the fifty percent negligence attributable to Finkenbinder in the accident. The remaining award of $231,078.27 was then reduced by the
The wording of the statute has not changed. See § 271.01, Stats., 1973.
