STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY A/S/O TORI HARVEY UKPAKA v. NICHOLAS D. PAYNE
Case Number: 115692
THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA
Decided: 12/05/2017
2017 OK 95
NOTICE: THIS OPINION HAS NOT BEEN RELEASED FOR PUBLICATION. UNTIL RELEASED, IT IS SUBJECT TO REVISION OR WITHDRAWAL.
STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY A/S/O TORI HARVEY UKPAKA, Plaintiff/Appellant,
v.
NICHOLAS D. PAYNE, Defendant/Appellee.
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE OKLAHOMA COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS, DIVISION I
¶0 Plaintiff/Appellant is an insurance company suing as subrogee of its insured for damages arising out of an automobile accident between the insured and Defendant/Appellee. The insured originally brought this action, but voluntarily dismissed it after the statute of limitations had run. Whether Plaintiff/Appеllant may now revive that claim depends on whether it may take advantage of the savings statute at
CERTIORARI PREVIOUSLY GRANTED; OPINION OF THE COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS VACATED; JUDGMENT OF THE DISTRICT COURT REVERSED; CASE REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS
Thomas G. Ferguson, Jr., Clay G. Ferguson, and Brian P. Kershaw, Walker, Ferguson & Ferguson, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for Plaintiff/Appellant.
Greg D. Givens and Sheila R. Benson, Givens Law Firm, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for Defendant/Appellee.
¶1 When describing an insurer‘s subrogation claim, we say that the subrogated insurer “steps into the shoes of the plaintiff.”1 Here, the оriginal plaintiff, Tori Ukpaka, brought a timely lawsuit against the Defendant/Appellee, Nicholas Payne, for injuries arising out of an automobile accident that happened in 2012. Ukpaka then voluntarily dismissed that lawsuit in 2015—after the statute of limitations for such actions had run. No one questions that if Ukpaka wanted to refile her claim, the savings statute at
I.
¶2 The automobile accident giving rise to this case happened on January 23, 2012. On January 3, 2014, just within the applicable two-year statute of limitatiоns,3 Ukpaka filed a negligence claim against the other driver in the accident, Payne, alleging damages “in excess of $10,000.”
¶3 Ukpaka, meanwhile, was going through the claims process with her insurance provider, State Farm. State Farm assessed Ukpaka‘s damages, and shortly after Ukpaka сommenced
¶4 Roughly two months later, on March 20, 2015, State Farm filed this lawsuit raising the same negligence claim as Ukpaka, only this time the named plaintiff was “State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company a[s]/s[ubrogee]/o[f] Tоri Harvey Ukpaka,” rather than Ukpaka herself. State Farm argued in its petition that this action was timely in light of
II.
¶5
If any action is commenced within due time, and a judgment thereon for the plaintiff is reversed, or if the plaintiff fail in such action otherwise than upon the merits, the plaintiff, or, if he should die, and the cause of action survive, his representatives may commence a new action within one (1) year after the reversal or failure although the time limit for commencing the action shall have expired before the new action is filed.
To avail itself of this statute, State Farm must demonstrate four things: (1) thаt the original action was timely, (2) that the action terminated for some reason other than its merits, (3) that State Farm qualifies as one of the parties entitled to revive the action, and (4) that the new action is substantially the same as the original.4 Ukpaka‘s original action was timely and its voluntary dismissаl was a termination for reasons other than the merits,5 which leaves only two questions. First, does State Farm qualify as one of the parties entitled to revive the action? And, second, is the action State Farm asserts substantially the same as Ukpaka‘s? We answer both in the affirmative.
A.
¶6 Under the plain tеxt, there are two classes of person entitled to the benefit of the savings statute: “the plaintiff” and “his representatives” as survivors of the plaintiff.6 State Farm does not claim to be a representative survivor of Ukpaka; thus, the only way it can proceed under the savings statute is if it can quаlify as “the plaintiff.” Payne argues that we should narrowly construe that term and limit it to only those that participated as plaintiffs in the original action. Our cases say otherwise.
¶7 We have consistently held that Oklahoma‘s savings statute is “remedial” in nature, and thus “should be liberally construed.”7 Accordingly, our test for whether a subsequent plaintiff qualifies as “the plaintiff”
¶8 For example, in Midland Valley Railroad Co. v. Townes, we held that a personal representative to a decedent‘s estate could avail itself of the savings statute to revive a wrongful death claim originally brought by the decedent‘s widow.10 We said in that case that “the present action is the same as the former. The change is merely a substitution of parties . . . . The change is in form rather than in substance.”11
¶9 Likewise, in Haught v. Continental Oil Co., we held that the savings statute applied to revive a claim for damages to real property where the original plaintiff‘s wife, a co-tenant of the property at issue, was added as a plaintiff in the subsequent action after the first was dismissed for failure to join her as а necessary party.12 We said there that “[s]ince both actions contemplated recovery in full of all damage sustained to the common property and complete adjudication of the rights of the joint owners thereof, we conclude that the cause of action is the sаme in both cases, that the parties are substantially the same and that the present action is one within the intendment of the saving provisions of Section 100.”13
¶10 But perhaps the most helpful example comes from Garrett v. Downing, where we held that the parties lacked the requisite relationship.14 In that case, an individual shareholder of a corporation brоught an action to foreclose on a “mechanic‘s” lien that had been filed in connection with services the corporation had provided to the defendant.15 After the relevant statute of limitations had run, the shareholder dismissed that action without prejudice and, on the very next day, filed a subsequent action naming both himself and the corporation as plaintiffs.16 We ultimately determined that the shareholder was not a proper party to that action; thus, the corporation‘s right to collect on the lien hinged on whether it was qualified to revive the claim under the savings statute.17 In holding that it was not qualified, we emphasized the “general rule” that “a shareholder cannot maintain a suit to redress wrongs done to the corporation.”18 And “[s]ince an individual cannot maintain a suit in his own name to redress wrongs done to the corporation,” we explained, “it cannot logically be said that a suit instituted by the shareholder . . . can toll the statutory time requirements
¶11 The “generаl rule” in subrogation, however, is just the opposite. When an insurer establishes a claim as subrogee, we say that the subrogated insurer “steps into the shoes of the plaintiff.”20 The insurer “takes the claim” of the plaintiff/insured “subject to all legal and equitable defenses which the tortfeasor may have аgainst the plaintiff” and “acquires no rights greater than those of the [plaintiff].”21 The subrogated insurer brings the same cause of action as the plaintiff/insured,22 to recover damages arising from the same injuries as the plaintiff/insured.23 In short, the subrogated insurer maintains a suit in its own name to redress wrongs done to its insured; аnd for that reason, we hold that a subrogated insurer is “substantially the same, suing in the same right” as its plaintiff/insured for purposes of
¶12 This conclusion is also consistent with our treatment of subrogees for purposes of statutes of limitations generally. In Employers Mutual Casualty Co. v. Mosby, we held that even though a subrogated insurer doesn‘t gain its right to sue until the date it pays on the loss, it nevertheless shares the same accrual date as the insured for purposes of the statute of limitations.25 Thus, in a case like this, where State Farm did not establish its right to sue until 2014, the statute of limitations still began to run against it from the date of the accident in 2012. If subrogated insurers should bе bound to the same temporal fate as their insureds under the statute of limitations, they should also benefit from the same graces under the savings statute.26
B.
¶13 Having found that State Farm is the same as “the plaintiff” under
¶14 State Farm‘s petition names the same defendant, Nicholas Payne. It alleges the same January 23, 2012, accident as the factual basis for the action. It again cites Payne‘s negligence as the legal basis for the action. Finally, it asks for redress of the same property and bodily-injury damages incurred by its insured, Tori Ukpaka. As we said in Midland Valley Railroad Co.: “[T]he same facts prove or disprove all of the issues . . . , the
* * *
¶15 In light оf the relationship created through subrogation, we hold that a subrogated insurer is “substantially the same” as its insured for purposes of the savings statute at
Gurich, V.C.J., Kauger, Winchester, Edmondson, Reif, and Wyrick, JJ., concur.
Watt and Colbert, JJ., dissent.
Combs, C.J., disqualified.
