OPINION
Thе question presented by this appeal is whether an assignment of proceeds expected to be recovered from a personal injury action is enforceable. The facts are as follows:
On March 27, 1975, Seymour and Shirley Karp obtained a judgment in the amount of $6,248.85 against Donald and Virginia Speizer. Thereafter, a written agreement was entered into with the Karps whereby Donald Speizer assigned “so much of the proceeds which may become due me as a result of my accident on December 9, 1974, at the corner of 44th Street and Camelback Road, Phoenix, Arizona, for the payment of the judgment obtained against me in Cause Nо. C-290931 by SEYMOUR KARP and SHIRLEY KARP, plaintiffs.” Speizer retained Neal Sundeen and Sidney Rosen to represent him in the accident case, and copies of the assignment were given to thоse attorneys. Subsequently, the accident case was settled for $27,500 and the proceeds were distributed without payment of the amount assigned to the Karps. Thereupon, the Karps filed a complaint against the Speizers, Sundeen and Rosen, alleging breach of the assignment agreement. The defendants filed a motion tо dismiss which was granted by the trial court and this appeal followed. We affirm.
We address first a procedural matter raised by appellees in their answering briefs, wherein appellees assert that this court should not consider arguments made by appellants based on
Allstate Insurance Company
v.
Druke,
The Karps argue that an assignment of only the proceeds which may be recovered from a persоnal injury action is an enforceable agreement if the assignee is not subrogated to nor takes an assignment of the personal injury claim itself. We disagree.
As conceded by appellants, the general rule of law in Arizona and in other jurisdictions is that absent a statute to the contrary a cause of action for рersonal injuries is not assignable.
K. W. Dart Truck Co. v. Noble,
Appellants attempt to аvoid the general rule by contending that only the proceeds of the claim were here involved. This distinction is “one which has been espoused only rarely,” and it appears that most courts have not considered it. Annot.,
A minority view allows thе assignment of the proceeds of a personal injury claim as is reflected in
Davenport v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company,
We feel and therefore hold, that the better reasoned rule is that even though a cause of action for personal injury may survive, an action still may not be assignable either in whole or in part prior to judgment.
Harleysville Mutual Insurance Company v. Lea, supra,
Arizona has not heretofore considered the assignability of the proceeds of a claim for
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personal injuries between individuals standing in relation to each other as are the parties herein. However, in
Allstate Insurance Company v. Druke, supra,
the Arizona Supreme Court held unenforceable a medicаl expense repayment agreement between an insurance company and its insured, which required that “each insured shall repay Allstate out of the proceeds, if any, recovered in exercise of his rights against any person liable to the insured because of the bodily injury for which such payment was made.”
While neither provisiоn expressly attempts to assign the cause of action itself to the insurance company, we believe that is the practical result of both provisions .... Such an arrangement, if made or contracted for prior to settlement or judgment, is the legal equivalent of an assignment and therefore unenforceable.
Allstate Insurance Company v. Druke, supra,
We see no reason why the holding in Allstate is nоt controlling here. In attempting to distinguish that case, appellants argue that an insurance company was there involved and, therefore, the public policy reasons given by the court in support of its decision are not relevant to the present appeal. However, the public policy reasons and legal principles underlying the general rule prohibiting the assignment of a claim for personal injuries which have been expressed throughout this decision have nоt been supported solely by insurance considerations, and we find those reasons to be equally applicable to the present situation.
For the reаsons stated, we hold that the assignment agreement was unenforceable. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
. Maintenance means assisting another in litigation where the one providing the assistance has no personal interest. That situation becomes champertous if there is an agreement that the one providing the assistance will share in the proceeds of the litigation. Restatement of Contracts § 540 (1932).
