Delores HEFFNER, Appellant, v. ALLSTATE INSURANCE COMPANY.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania.
April 12, 1979
401 A.2d 1160
Argued June 16, 1978.
James M. Marsh, Philadelphia, for appellee.
Before JACOBS, President Judge, and HOFFMAN, CERCONE, PRICE, VAN der VOORT, SPAETH and HESTER, JJ.
The instant appeal arises from the lower court‘s granting a motion for summary judgment in favor of the defendant Allstate Insurance Company. In granting the motion the lower court determined that Mrs. Heffner, whose husband was fatally injured when the automobile he was driving flipped over and collided with a utility pole, was entitled to recover from Allstate only the survivor‘s loss benefit of $5,000 and the funerаl expense benefits provided according to Pennsylvania‘s No-Fault Motor Vehicle Insurance Act,
At the outset we caution anyone who embarks on the high seas of Pennsylvania‘s No-Fault Motor Vehicle Insurance Act not to do so without a good compass, a knowledge of reefs and storms and plenty of food and water. Any attempt to choose an alternate route by land in an effort to unlock the seсrets of the Act will encounter mazes of paths, pitfalls, underbrush and dead ends. In attempting to explain what should be the rudimentary “work loss” compensatory scheme, no less an experienced guide than the Pennsylvania Bar Institute was forced to conclude that the Act is impenetrable. In its book, Pennsylvania No-Fault Motor Vehicle Insurance Act—Practice Under the Act (Pub. # 61, 1975), PBI unequivocally asserts:
“It is not pоssible to determine with any degree of certainty the amount of work loss benefits required to be paid under the act. . . . The act is essentially incapable of execution since there are at least four possible interpretations of how ‘basic loss benefits’ for ‘work loss’ are calculated. None of the interpretations properly use all of the act and the provisions are apparently totally irreconcilable.” Id. at 22.
With these difficulties in mind, we turn to the resolution of the instant controversy.
In essence, appellant‘s argument is a simple syllogism: The No-Fault Motor Vehicle Insurance Act provides that survivors of deceased victims are entitled to receive basic loss benefits;2 “Work loss” is adumbrated under the Act as a particular kind of basic loss;3 Therefore, as a survivor of a dеceased victim, Mrs. Heffner contends she is entitled to receive work loss benefits. Mrs. Heffner argues this conclu-
Allstate maintains, and the hearing court below agreed, that the scheme of the Act, insofar as is relevant to the instant litigation, was to devise twо separate classes of accident victims. On the one hand, had Mr. Heffner survived the accident he would have been entitled to particular basic loss benefits including: professional medical treatment and care, emergency health services, and medical and vocational rehabilitation services;6 work loss benefits;7 as well as replacement services loss.8 However, Allstate argues, because Mr. Heffner died immediately as a result of the accident, appellant was only entitled to recover survivor‘s loss9 and funeral expenses.10 Allstate supports its position by referring us to two features of the Act. First, Section 103 differentiates between victims and deceased victims; the former “means an individual who suffers injury arising out of the maintenance or use of [an automobile],” while the latter “means a victim suffering death resulting from injury.” Thus, Allstate contends that there was no reason for creating a “victim-deceased victim” dichotomy unless the
Of course, recalling the sentiment with which we began our discussion of the No-Fault Motor Vehicle Insurance Act, it is not surprising to learn that Allstate‘s argument is
Thus, the Act leaves us in a quandary. To adopt appеllant‘s argument is to create the likelihood of overlapping or double recoveries for survivors of deceased victims, as well as to compensate them for expenses which were not incurred (e. g., support for a victim who did not survive an accident). On the other hand, to accept Allstate‘s argument is to ignore countervailing, albeit equivocal, indications that the Act permits such recoveries, and to sublimate the long-standing principle that insurance contracts, as well as remedial legis-
One of the purposes of the No-Fault Motor Vehicle Insurance Act, if not its raison d‘etre, is the partial abolition of the tort system, and its concomitant negligence standards, for determining compensation due to individuals injured in motor vehicle accidents on the highways of this Commonwealth.20 Of course, the system devised by the Act is suppоsed to be low-cost, comprehensive and fair.21 In order to provide a plan that was both low-cost and comprehensive, however, it was necessary to retain the tort system to compensate persons who were very seriously injured or killed.22 Thus, Section 301 of the Act formally abolishes tort liability for accidents falling within the purview of the Act, except for those circumstances which are specifically delineated in Section 301. Appellant claims that if Allstate‘s interpretation of the Act is accepted, the economic detriment aspect of survival actions under traditional tort principles is abolished with respect to accidents occurring within the terms of the Act, a consequence which would render Section 301, the very heart of the Act, contrary to the Constitution of this Commonwealth.23
In general terms, under Section 301 the system of tort liability is retained if, and only if: (1) The accident is caused by the operation of a vehicle which is not insured under the Act; (2) The accident was caused by a defect in design, manufacture, repair, service, or maintenance of the vehicle;
In Pennsylvania damages recoverable in survival actions include medical bills, the victim‘s conscious pain and suffering, and his probable lifetime earnings, less his probable lifetime costs of maintenance, discounted to their present value. Skoda v. West Penn Power Co., 411 Pa. 323, 191 A.2d 822 (1963); Murray v. Philadelphia Transp. Co., 359 Pa. 69, 74, 58 A.2d 323 (1948). The proceeds of the action belong to the victim‘s estate and are disbursed to his heirs. Frazier v. Oil Chemical Co., 407 Pa. 78, 179 A.2d 202 (1962); Martin v. Swift, 258 F.2d 797 (3d Cir. 1958). In a wrongful death action the damages include the present value of the services the victim would have rendered to his family had he lived, as well as his funeral expenses. Swartz v. Smokowitz, 400 Pa. 109, 161 A.2d 330 (1960); Gaydos v. Domabyl, 301 Pa. 523, 533-34, 152 A. 549 (1930). The persons entitled to recover such damages dо not include the victim‘s estate generally, but the “husband, widow, children, or parents of the deceased, and no other relatives.”24
Comparing the scheme for retaining the tort liability system under Section 301 of the No-Fault Motor Vehicle Insurance Act with damages traditionally recoverable in wrongful death and survival actions, a serious difficulty arises under Allstate‘s interpretation of the Act—it abolishes
However, in Pennsylvania our Constitution, Article III, Section 18 provides that the General Assembly may not limit
In any event, even if we were to conclude that the General Assembly could, consistent with our Constitution, abolish the recovery of damages for economic loss in a survival action, we could not conclude that the General Assembly so intended—at least not in the equivocal manner Allstate‘s argument suggests. Such a reading of the Act would certainly forsake its stated objectives of being fair, comprehensive, and achieving “the maximum feasiblе28 restoration of all individuals injured and compensation of the economic losses of the survivors of all individuals killed” on our highways. Thus, in light of the untoward and, we are convinced, legislatively unintended consequences entailed in Allstate‘s argument in the instant case, we conclude that appellant is entitled to recover work loss benefits as the survivor of a deceased victim under the No-Fault Motor Vehicle Insurance Act and, consеquently, under the contract of insurance with Allstate.
The order of the court below is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings to compute the amount of damages to which appellant is entitled.
VAN der VOORT, J., files a concurring opinion in which SPAETH, J., joins.
PRICE, J. notes his dissent.
JACOBS, former President Judge, and HOFFMAN, J., did not participate in the consideration or decision of this case.
I join the lead Opinion by President Judge CERCONE with the undеrstanding on my part that we are not authorizing double recovery for the same items.
