Plaintiff successfully sued defendant pursuant to the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (FELA), 45 U.S.C. Sections 51 to 60 (1989), for injuries sustained during the course of his employment with the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Company. The jury found defendant to be eight percent at fault and plaintiff ninety-two percent at fault, and it awarded plaintiff $263,444.75 in damages in a general verdict
Plaintiff appeals, contending that the set-off was erroneous because (1) defendant waived its set-off claim by failing to raise it as an affirmative defense or by motion prior to the jury’s verdict; (2) defendant’s post-trial motion was untimely and improper under the New Mexico District Court Rules of Civil Procedure; and (3) defendant waived its set-off claim by failing to submit to the trial court the entire collective bargaining agreement, which may have revealed other portions of the agreement conflicting with the portion relied on by defendant. A fourth issue raised in the docketing statement but not briefed is deemed abandoned. See State v. Fisk,
The question of whether defendant’s set-off claims are barred for failure to plead them as an affirmative defense under SCRA 1986, 1-008(C) is a question of first impression in New Mexico. Prior cases from this and other jurisdictions, however, provide some governing principles, with which we begin our analysis.
“An affirmative defense ordinarily refers to a state of facts provable by defendant that will bar plaintiff’s recovery once a right to recover is established.” Beyale v. Arizona Pub. Serv. Co.,
The function of a set-off is “to achieve equity and justice by adjusting in one suit all conflicting claims between parties that [are] readily susceptible to an expedient and final resolution.” Sunwest Bank v. Miller’s Performance Warehouse, Inc.,
Defendant’s set-off claim for $5500 was premised upon 45 U.S.C. Section 362(o) (1989), as implemented by 20 C.F.R. Section 341.3 (1991). These sections create a statutory lien for reimbursement of benefits paid by the Railroad Retirement Board to an employee in the event that the employee sues and recovers any sum for damages based on the employer’s liability.
Plaintiff does not take issue on appeal with defendant’s substantive right to reimbursement under these provisions. He objects only to the way defendant sought to have the reimbursements implemented procedurally. We recognize that plaintiff has alleged prejudice as a result of defendant’s post-judgment motion in that plaintiff claims in his brief that the lateness of the motion deprived him of the opportunity to have the jury make specific allocations in its verdict for pain and suffering, medical expenses, and lost wages. The first time plaintiff raised this claim was in a written pleading filed after the post-judgment hearing held July 26, 1989, in this case. At the hearing, the trial court indicated that it would rule in defendant’s favor, contingent on review of the pertinent provisions of the collective bargaining agreement. Plaintiff was a union member subject to those provisions. As such, it appears that as a factual matter, plaintiff was on notice that a general jury verdict would be subject to a set-off under the specific terms of the agreement. As a legal matter, plaintiff’s assertion of prejudice was too late procedurally to preserve the issue for review. See Thompson Drilling, Inc. v. Romig,
In asking this court to reverse, plaintiff relies heavily upon Chicago Great Western Railway v. Peeler,
We believe that the reasoning in Peeler is sufficiently countered by the more recent case of Hassan v. United States Postal Service,
We find the case of Hamm v. City of Milton,
[Authorities from other states indicate such payment is not properly an affirmative defense. The payment made does not become a charge against the injured parties until a settlement is reached or a judgment rendered. Had there been no settlement or jury verdict, [plaintiff] would not have to account for the $2,686.64 paid to her. Also, to force the insurer to plead payment may improperly intellect the fact of insurance into the case. Finally, should the jury become aware of partial payment by an insurer, it could have the effect of an admission of liability. [Citations omitted.]
Hamm,
We conclude, as did the court in Hamm, that defendant’s claim was properly raised as a postverdict motion and it need not have been presented as an affirmative defense. See also Strong,
Defendant was clearly entitled to reimbursement in the amount of $5500, the amount it repaid to the Retirement Board for sums advanced to plaintiff. See 45 U.S.C. § 362(o); 20 C.F.R. § 341.3. Under the collective bargaining agreement, defendant was also entitled to reimbursement for sickness benefits up to the amount plaintiff was awarded in lost wages. Since the jury’s award to plaintiff was a general one, the concluding sentence in the applicable paragraph of the collective bargaining agreement comes into play: “[A] recovery which does not specify the matters covered thereby shall be deemed to include a recovery for loss of wages to the extent of any actual wage loss due to the disability involved.” Here, because plaintiff claimed lost wages in the amount of $150,000 to $255,000, the trial court correctly granted defendant a set-off of $8473.09 — the amount paid to plaintiff in sickness benefits. To hold otherwise would permit the unjust enrichment of plaintiff at defendant’s expense and would violate the policy considerations counseling against disclosure of insurance and partial payment of a claim, see Hamm,
We further hold that defendant’s motion was appropriate and timely under SCRA 1986, 1-060(B), which enables a party to obtain relief from a judgment when circumstances warrant it. The New Mexico Supreme Court has directed courts to “be liberal in determining what constitutes good cause to vacate a judgment so that the ultimate result will address the true merits and substantial justice will be done.” Phelps Dodge Corp. v. Guerra,
The reasoning of Phelps is persuasive here. The fact that defendant in this case did not specifically invoke Rule 1-060(B) in its motion is immaterial under Phelps. Defendant produced evidence that plaintiff in this case had already been paid $13,973.09 prior to verdict. Phelps makes clear that unwarranted windfalls are to be avoided. Defendant’s motion was filed approximately two months after judgment, a reasonable amount of time under the circumstances of this case. See Home Sav. & Loan Ass’n v. Esquire Homes, Inc.,
We note that defendant attempted to tender a check in the amount of $7102.49 (verdict amount less defendant’s reimbursements) a few days after judgment was entered, but, as of the date defendant filed its motion, plaintiff apparently had not notified defendant of his response to the tender. Our prior New Mexico cases did not establish a procedure for obtaining proper credit for the payments at issue here. See Howard,
Plaintiff's remaining issue concerning a conflict in the evidence on the issue of defendant’s right to reimbursement under the collective bargaining agreement is without merit. Plaintiff provides no citation to authority to support his claim that contradictory evidence requires reversal. Issues unsupported by cited authority ordinarily will not be considered on appeal. Wilburn v. Stewart,
Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
