OPINION
{1} Defendant Stephan Williams appeals the judgment entered by the district court against him and in favor of Plaintiff Alfredo Rodriguez after a bench trial on a personal injury claim arising from a motor vehicle accident. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
{2} In February 2012, Defendant ran a red light and struck Plaintiffs vehicle, injuring Plaintiff. At the time of the crash, Defendant’s blood-alcohol content was .11, Plaintiffs blood-alcohol content was .076, and Plaintiff was not wearing a seat belt. Plaintiff was transported by ambulance to the hospital where he underwent a “craniotomy for evacuation of [a] subdural hematoma” and spent a total of eight days in recovery. Plaintiffs medical bills totaled $111,924.63. Plaintiff sued Defendant for damages.
{3} Plaintiff, who had been earning $9.50 per hour as an auto dealership employee, was unable to work for three months after the accident and was apparently uninsured and unable to pay his medical bills. As a result, the hospital filed a lien in the event he was awarded a judgment or received insurance proceeds. In response to the lien, Plaintiff amended his complaint to include a claim against the hospital that his medical bill was unreasonable. Plaintiff and the hospital eventually entered into a settlement agreement in which the hospital agreed to accept one-third of “all monetary recovery [Plaintiff] receives arising out of or relating to the [a]ccident” in full satisfaction of his medical bill. The hospital’s chief financial officer (CFO) testified at trial that Plaintiff s medical bill of $111,924.63 was reasonable and necessary for Plaintiffs care. The district court asked the CFO whether the settlement agreement would allow the hospital to recover more than what it had billed in the event one-third of Plaintiffs recovery exceeded the amount of his medical bill. The CFO replied that in her experience with this type of settlement agreement, she had never seen a case where the hospital recovered more than the billed amount, that the hospital usually receives less than what it billed, and that she believed the agreement capped the hospital’s recovery at the amount of the bill. The CFO explained that the hospital typically enters into this kind of settlement agreement with an uninsured patient so that any award is evenly split between the patient, the patient’s attorney, and the hospital.
{4} After a bench trial, the district court entered judgment in favor of Plaintiff. It concluded that Defendant was primarily at fault for Plaintiffs injuries and that Plaintiff was only 5% at fault due to his own alcohol impairment. The district court declined to consider the fact that Plaintiff was not wearing his seat belt in its comparative fault analysis because NMSA 1978, § 66-7-373(A) (2001) prohibits such consideration. The district court found that Plaintiffs total damages amounted to $191,864.63, which consisted of $4,940 in lost wages; $111,924.63 in medical costs; $25,000 in “[n]ature, extent and duration”; and $50,000 in pain and suffering. It subtracted 5% off of Plaintiff s total damages to account for his percentage of fault, and entered judgment against Defendant in the amount of $182,271.40.
{5} Defendant renews four arguments on appeal: (1) the unlawful acts doctrine barred Plaintiffs claims; (2) the district court should have considered the fact that Plaintiff was not wearing a seat belt in determining Plaintiffs comparative negligence; (3) Plaintiffs seat belt non-use barred operation of the collateral source rule; and (4) Plaintiffs medical damages should have been reduced to the amount that the hospital eventually agreed to accept from Plaintiff, not what it initially billed.
DISCUSSION
A. Unlawful Acts Doctrine
{6} Defendant argues that our Supreme Court’s decision in Desmet v. Sublett adopted a common law rule — the “unlawful acts” doctrine — that applies in this case to preclude Plaintiff from recovering damages against Defendant because Plaintiff was unlawfully driving under the influence of alcohol at the time Defendant ran a red light and struck Plaintiffs vehicle. See
{7} First, although the facts of this case are distinguishable, the judgment in this case is consistent with the principles that our Supreme Court applied in Desmet. There, the plaintiff bought a truck from a third party. Id. ¶ 2. The plaintiff and the third party agreed that the third party would use the truck to haul logs for hire over the public highways. Id. The defendant was a mechanic who had repaired the truck during the time that the third party owned it. Id. The third party never paid the defendant for those repairs. Id. After the plaintiff bought the truck from the third party, he authorized the third party to take it to the defendant to repair it. Id. The defendant repaired the truck, but refused to surrender the truck until he received payment for the repairs that he made when the third party owned the truck. Id. The plaintiff sued the defendant for return of the truck and for damages in the amount of income the plaintiff lost from not being able to use the truck to haul logs for hire during the year in which the defendant retained it. Id. The district court ordered the truck be returned to the plaintiff and awarded the plaintiff damages in an amount equal to the fair rental value of the truck for each day that the defendant refused to surrender it. Id. ¶¶ 2-3. The district court also found that the plaintiff had not properly registered the truck and that he did not have the required permit to operate the truck for hire over the public highways. Id. ¶ 3. Our Supreme Court upheld the order returning the truck to the plaintiff, but it reversed the damages award based on the
well settled rule of law that a person cannot maintain an action if, in order to establish his cause of action, he must rely, in whole or in part, on an illegal or immoral act or transaction to which he is a party, or where he must base his cause of action, in whole or in a part, on a violation by himself of the criminal or penal laws.
Id. ¶ 9. It recognized that the policy behind this rule is that “[n]o court will lend its aid to a man who [founded] his cause of action upon an immoral or illegal act.” Id. ¶ 11 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). The Supreme Court concluded that this rule precluded the plaintiffs monetary recovery because “the plaintiff [founded] his claim for damages on the fact that he was not allowed to operate his truck on the public highways of this state in violation of its positive law.” Id. ¶ 12. In other words, the plaintiff could not recover damages on a claim of lost income when the activity that would have produced that income would have been done unlawfully. Id.
{8} Here, Plaintiff’s damages claim was based on injuries he sustained when Defendant ran a red light and struck his vehicle. The district court found that a small portion of Plaintiff’s injuries resulted from his own alcohol impairment, and it reduced his damages accordingly. Thus, the damages that Plaintiff actually recovered were founded solely on Defendant’s negligence in running a red light and striking Plaintiffs vehicle, not on Plaintiffs unlawful act of driving impaired. In Desmet, one hundred percent of the income that the plaintiff claimed to have lost due to the defendant’s conduct would have been earned in violation of New Mexico law, and the Supreme Court accordingly reduced his recovery by one hundred percent. Id. ¶ 15. Here, consistent with Desmet, Plaintiffs recovery was reduced by the portion of the damages attributed to his unlawful act.
{9} Second, Defendant urges this Court to follow the rule adopted by New York courts, one that precludes a plaintiff from recovering any damages for injuries sustained while committing an unlawful act, under certain circumstances. In particular, Defendant cites Alami v. Volkswagen of Am., Inc.,
{10} In Alami, the driver’s widow sued Volkswagen and claimed that a defect in the Jetta’s design enhanced the driver’s injuries. Id. at 575. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Volkswagen, dismissing the widow’s damages claim because the decedent’s act of driving intoxicated was a serious violation of the law that directly resulted in his injuries. Id. In reversing summary judgment, New Y ork’s highest court recognized that driving intoxicated was “indisputably a serious violation of the law.” Id. However, it concluded that the rule precluding recovery based on unlawful acts did not apply because (1) “[i]f Volkswagen did defectively design the Jetta ... it breached a duty to any driver of a Jetta involved in a crash regardless of the initial cause”; (2) the plaintiff did not “seek to profit from her husband’s intoxication — she ask[ed] only that Volkswagen honor its well-recognized duty to produce a product that does not unreasonably enhance or aggravate a user’s injuries”; and (3) “[tjhe duty she [sought] to impose on Volkswagen originates not from her husband’s act [of driving intoxicated], but from Volkswagen’s obligation to design, manufacture and market a safe vehicle.” Id. at 577. In reaching this conclusion, the New York court emphasized that the unlawful acts rule “embodies a narrow application of public policy imperatives under limited circumstancesf,]” and that “[extension of the rule here would abrogate legislatively mandated comparative fault analysis in a wide range of tort claims.” Id.
{11} Other New York cases also address whether an intoxicated driver can recover in a negligence action where the driver’s intoxication was a partial cause of his or her injuries. In LaPage v. Smith,
{12} Even if this Court agreed with Defendant and adopted New York’s analysis of whether an intoxicated driver can recover against another party in a negligence action, we conclude that the judgment entered by the district court would be affirmed. Like New York, New Mexico has adopted a comparative fault analysis of tort claims. See Scott v. Rizzo,
{13} Finally, our conclusion is consistent with at least one treatise that has considered the effect of a plaintiffs unlawful act in connection with his or her negligence action:
The plaintiff s violation of [a] statute is ordinarily relevant, of course, as showing [his or] her negligence, but not as forbidding the claim entirely. The fact that the plaintiff is guilty of contributory negligence per se in violating a statute shows negligence but it does not show how much, so a comparison of the plaintiffs per se fault and the defendant’s negligence is still appropriate.
1 Dan B. Dobbs et al., The Law of Torts § 228, at 818 (2d ed. 2011). For all of these reasons, we conclude — the fact that Plaintiffs blood-alcohol content was .076 at the time Defendant ran the red light and struck the Plaintiffs vehicle does not preclude Plaintiff from recovering damages attributed to Defendant’s comparative negligence.
B. Seat Belt Non-Use
1. Statutory Interpretation of Section 66-7-373 (A)
{14} Defendant asserts that the district court erred when it concluded that Section 66-7-373(A) barred it from considering the fact that Plaintiff was not wearing a seat belt in determining Plaintiff’s comparative negligence. Section 66-7-373(A) provides, in pertinent part, “Failure to be secured ... by a safety belt as required by the Safety Belt Use Act shall not in any instance constitute fault or negligence and shall not limit or apportion damages.” Defendant contends that Section 66-7-373(A)’s language “only forecloses parties from invoking the statute to establish negligence per se[,]” and that “[i]t does not foreclose the assertion that seat belt non-use constitutes comparative negligence at common law.” We disagree.
{15} We review the interpretation of a statute de novo. Chatterjee v. King,
{16} Our Supreme Court adopted the comparative fault doctrine in 1981. See Scott, 1981 -NMSC-021, ¶ 22. In November 1984, this Court concluded that a plaintiff’s damages caused by his failure to wear a seat belt could be considered under a comparative fault analysis. Thomas v. Henson,
In the light of safety factors involved, the plaintiff’s failure to wear an available seat[]belt or safety harness may be quite unreasonable. Today, with pervasive seat[]belt use and statutes requiring it, failure to wear a seat[]belt certainly could count as comparative fault. However, this result is barred by many state statutes.
1 Dobbs, supra, § 231, at 827. If we were to conclude, as Defendant urges, that Section 66-7-373(A) does not bar consideration of an injured plaintiffs failure to wear a seat belt in a comparative fault analysis, then a plaintiffs failure to wear a seat belt would almost certainly “constitute fault or negligence” resulting in “limiting] or apportioning]” a plaintiffs damages. Section 66-7-373(A). Such an interpretation would render the relevant portion of Section 66-7-373(A) meaningless and anullity. See Johnson,
2. Constitutional Arguments
{17} Defendant asserts that if Section 66-7-373(A) bars consideration of seat belt non-use in a comparative fault analysis, we should conclude that Section 66-7-373(A) is unconstitutional because it violates the separation of powers doctrine set forth in Article IV, Section 34 of the New Mexico Constitution and it violates Defendant’s due process and equal protection rights. We are not persuaded.
{18} Article IV, Section 34 of the New Mexico Constitution provides that “[n]o act of the [Legislature shall affect the right or remedy of either party, or change the rules of evidence or procedure, in any pending case.” The purpose of this provision is to “prevent legislative interference with adjudication of pending cases." Brazos Land, Inc. v. Bd. of Cnty. Comm’rs,
{19} As to Defendant’s remaining constitutional arguments, this Court has previously considered and rejected those arguments in Mott and we are not persuaded to revisit this precedent. See
C. Collateral Source Rule
{20} Generally, “plaintiffs may not collect more than the damages awarded to them, or, put another way, they may not receive compensation twice for the same injury.” Sunny land Farms, Inc. v. Cent. N.M. Elec. Co-op,
{21} Defendant argues that the collateral source rule should not apply in this case because both Plaintiff and Defendant were wrongdoers in that they both drove impaired and Plaintiff additionally failed to wear his seat belt. Because Defendant provides no authority for the proposition that the collateral source rule does not apply where the plaintiff in a negligence action shares some degree of fault for his injuries, we decline to review this argument on appeal. See In re Adoption of Doe,
D. Medical Costs Award
{22} Defendant argues that Plaintiffs settlement agreement with the hospital “represents either a de facto or de jure medical damages cap in this case” and this Court should “remand with instructions ... to reduce the medical damages award ... to $37,308.21 [,]” representing one-third of the hospital’s $111,924.63 bill. He argues that, because Plaintiffs settlement agreement with the hospital did not result in the hospital being reimbursed for Defendant’s entire $111,924.63 hospital bill in this case, the judgment awarding Plaintiff the full amount of his medical bills provides Plaintiff with a “windfall[.]” Again, Defendant does not cite any authority in support of his argument. See id. (explaining that the appellate courts will not research for authority supporting a position where no cited authority is provided in the briefing). Instead, Defendant refers us to the record for a motion he filed in the district court that purportedly contains “ample support for his argument in the general case law on the subject” and a law review article that “examinefs] the general issues of medical billing in America.” We decline to consider such an argument because he does not cite any authority to support it in his brief in chief. See Rule 12-213 (A)(4) NMRA.
CONCLUSION
{23} For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment entered by the district court.
{24} IT IS SO ORDERED.
