64 Conn. App. 506 | Conn. App. Ct. | 2001
The defendant The Stop & Shop Supermarket Company (Stop & Shop)
This is a negligence action arising from injuries sustained by the plaintiff when she fell on snow and ice in the parking lot of the defendant’s Westport store. Stop & Shop leased the store and adjacent sidewalk from the defendant Byelas.
Snow had fallen two days prior to the plaintiffs fall, and Palmer had plowed the parking lot. The plaintiff thereafter brought this action against Stop & Shop and Byelas, who subsequently impleaded Palmer for indemnification and apportionment. Prior to trial, the plaintiff settled with Byelas and Palmer for $15,000 and $7500, respectively, and released them from liability and withdrew the action as to Byelas, who in turn withdrew their third party complaint. The case then went to trial against Stop & Shop alone. Stop & Shop filed notice of its intent to claim apportionment against the settled and released parties, Byelas and Palmer.
After a reduction of 40 percent from the $37,226.96 verdict, the plaintiff was entitled to receive $22,336.18 from the defendants. The plaintiff, however, already had received $22,500 from the pretrial settlements with Byelas and Palmer. Stop & Shop thereafter filed a motion to reduce the verdict against it to $1. The court denied the motion and Stop & Shop appealed, raising as its sole issue that the court improperly failed to recognize that when the amount of settlement proceeds exceeds the amount of a verdict attributable to settled and released parties who have been named as apportionment defendants, the court must reduce the remaining verdict by that excess. Stop & Shop contends that the plaintiff will receive a double recovery if the verdict is not reduced. General Statutes § 52-216a is the statutory authority for reduction of verdicts by a judge.
Stop & Shop does not challenge the court’s determination under the reasoning of Mauro that the amount of the verdict in this matter, when added to the amount of the preverdict settlements, does not shock the conscience. Rather, Stop & Shop contends that the common-law principles that (1) a plaintiff should not be compensated by an amount more than that which makes the plaintiff whole, and (2) the jury’s determination of fair and just compensation puts a cap on what the plaintiff can receive, should control. It argues that under those principles, the maximum sum that the plaintiff here could properly receive would be $22,336.18. We are not persuaded. The common-law rules relied on by the defendant apply to verdicts and not to pretrial settlements. No case has been brought to our attention that limits the amount that a plaintiff may agree to receive by way of settlement.
The history of tort reform in Connecticut supports our conclusion.
“Both Tort Reform I and Tort Reform II direct a trial court to reduce an injured party’s award for damages by the payments received from ‘collateral sources.’ See Fleming v. Garnett, 231 Conn. 77, 82, 92-93, 646 A.2d 1308 (1994). In principle, such reductions reflect the understanding that the entitlement of an injured party to be made whole does not include an entitlement to a double recovery for the same loss. Representing differing points of view about what makes an injured party whole, the two acts contain different definitions of ‘collateral sources.’ Under Tort Reform I, but not under Tort Reform II, settlements are treated as deductible
Accordingly, the defendant might have prevailed during the brief time when Tort Reform I was the rule. It cannot prevail, however, under Tort Reform II as it now exists. The defendant does not argue that it is entitled to prevail under Tort Reform II. Its contention is that at the present time, there are no statutes that govern how preverdict settlements should be handled in evaluating damages. We do not agree.
Stop & Shop claims that this is a case of first impression and urges us to adopt the reduction of verdict rule for which it argues in this appeal. Our examination of the case law discloses that since § 52-216a was enacted in 1976, that statute has been the sole guide for courts in deciding whether a jury’s verdict should be reduced. We are furnished with no reason to bring a new rule into an area that is working well under the statute.
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
After the plaintiff withdrew the action as against the named defendant et al., the remaining defendants were The Stop & Shop Supermarket Company, The Stop & Shop Companies, Inc., Stop & Shop Holdings, Inc., and The Stop & Shop Supermarket Holdings Company. Only The Stop & Shop Supermarket Company has appealed. We therefore refer in this opinion to The Stop & Shop Supermarket Company as the defendant.
The defendant Byelas is the Irving Byelas Irrevocable Trust, Leslie Byelas and Ruth Byelas. For simplicity, we refer in this opinion to those defendants collectively as Byelas.
General Statutes § 52-216a provides in relevant part,: “If the court at the conclusion of the trial concludes that the verdict is excessive as a matter of law, it shall order a remittitur and, upon failure of the party so ordered to remit the amount ordered by the court, it shall set aside the verdict and order a new trial. . .
For a general discussion on the effect of tort reform, see G. Royster, Jr., “Joint and Several Liability and Collateral Sources Under the 1987 Tort Reform Act,” 62 Conn. Bar J. 257 (1988).
Public Act. 86-338 was codified in General Statutes §§ 13a-149, 30-102, 52-102, 52-184c, 52-190a, 52-225a, 52-225b, 52-225c, 52-225d, 52-226a, 52-251c, 52-557m, 52-557n, 52-568 and 52-572h. Nash v. Yap, supra, 247 Conn. 639 n. 1.
Public Act 87-227 was codified as General Statutes §§ 30-102, 52-102, 52-184c, 52-190a, 52-251c, 52-225a, 52-225b, 52-225c, 52-225d, 52-557m and 52-572h. Nash v. Yap, supra, 247 Conn. 640 n.2.