Opinion
This case presents the issue of how proceeds of a negligence action are to be distributed between the employer, which intervened for the purpose of recovering workers’ compensation payments, and the employee’s attorney. We hold that the “reasonable and necessary” expenditures recoverable under General Statutes § 31-293 (a) are different from the enumerated fees and costs recoverable from an opposing party in a civil action. The plaintiff-employee, Donna Yeager, appeals from the trial court’s judgment granting the motion of the intervening plaintiff-employer, Priority Care, Inc. (Priority Care), for apportionment and ordering that $170,000 be paid to Priority Care and $30,000 remain in escrow for future determination of appellate legal fees. 1 On appeal, the plaintiff claims that the court erred by failing to deduct from the amount available for apportionment to Priority Care all her reasonable and necessary expenditures incurred in effecting recovery pursuant to § 31-293 (a). We reverse the judgment of the trial court and remand the matter for further proceedings.
The court found the following facts in its memorandum of decision issued July 19,2010. “This action arises out of a motor vehicle accident that occurred in Waterbury ... on September 7, 2006, wherein the plaintiff, Donna Yeager, while in the course of her employment was struck from behind by an automobile operated by one defendant, Maria Alvarez. On May 2, 2007, the plaintiffs employer Priority Care . . . moved to intervene because it had become obligated to make certain payments to and on behalf of the plaintiff in accordance with the workers’ compensation laws of Connecticut. This motion was granted on May [14], 2007, by Agati, J. On June 4, 2009, after a trial to a jury . . . the plaintiff was awarded $396,242 in economic damages and $983,998 in noneconomic damages for a total award of $1,380,240. Thereafter, the defendants’ insurance company tendered $300,000 — the full amount of the [defendants’] insurance policy. By agreement of [Priority Care’s] counsel and counsel for the plaintiff, the plaintiffs attorney was allowed to take the sum of $100,000 as a legal fee, leaving the remaining $200,000 in escrow.
“[Priority Care had] . . . filed a motion for apportionment on August [13], 2008, and now seeks payment of all the remaining funds pursuant to ... § 31-293, part of the Workers’ Compensation Act. On
The court concluded, inter aha, that “the plaintiff has improperly raised issues of additional costs at a hearing for a motion for apportionment.” It cited Practice Book § 18-5, which provides in relevant part: “(a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, costs may be taxed by the clerk in civil cases fourteen days after the filing of a written bill of costs provided that no objection is filed. ...(b) Either party may move the judicial authority for a review of the taxation by the clerk by filing a motion for review of taxation of costs within twenty days of the issuance of the notice of taxation by the clerk. . . .” The court held that “the plaintiffs costs are incorrectly before the court” because (1) “no formal motion to review the costs taxed is before the court”; (2) “the plaintiff has already had one opportunity to move the court to approve her bill of costs and most of these expenses were not raised at that time”; 3 and (3) “Practice Book § 18-5 requires a motion to review to be brought within twenty days of a ruling,” which motion was not brought by the plaintiff, or alternatively, “[e]ven if the court treated the plaintiffs argument as its own motion,” it was not timely. Applying the language of § 31-293 (a), the court held that Priority Care was entitled to the remaining $200,000 in satisfaction of the $235,179.97 hen. It also ordered that $30,000 remain in escrow for reasonable appellate attorney’s fees.
Subsequently, the plaintiff filed a motion to reargue the court’s decision, and Priority Care filed motions for payment,
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for reargument and reconsideration of the order of escrow of $30,000 and for articulation and/or clarification. The court granted Priority Care’s motion for payment and denied both parties’ motions for rear-gument and reconsideration as well as Priority Care’s motion for articulation and/or clarification. The plaintiff thereafter filed the present appeal from the order granting the motion for apportionment, and Priority Care filed a cross appeal, which was
The plaintiff argues that the court erred by failing to deduct her reasonable and necessary expenditures incurred in effecting recovery against the defendants pursuant to § 31-293 (a) prior to apportioning the damages to Priority Care. Specifically, she argues that the “reasonable and necessary” expenditures recoverable under § 31-293 (a) are different from the enumerated fees and costs recoverable by a party in a civil action pursuant to General Statutes § 52-257. At oral argument before this court, the plaintiff asserted that if she were to prevail, the proper remedy is a remand to the court for a hearing to determine which, if any, of her claimed expenditures are reasonable and necessary pursuant to § 31-293 (a). We agree with the plaintiff.
Because this issue involves examining § 31-293 (a) and a rule of practice, it presents an issue of interpretive construction over which we exercise plenary review.
See Mayfield v. Goshen Volunteer Fire Co.,
We begin, therefore, with the language of § 31-293 (a). Section 31-293 (a) is part of the Workers’ Compensation Act; General Statutes § 31-275 et seq.; and provides in relevant part: “If the employer and the employee join as parties plaintiff in the action and any damages are recovered, the damages shall be so apportioned that the claim of the employer, as defined
The language of the statute and its relationship to Practice Book § 18-5 are clear. Section 31-293 (a) provides in relevant part that an employer that pays workers’ compensation benefits to an injured employee is entitled to reimbursement for those payments “after the deduction of reasonable and necessary expenditures, including attorneys’ fees, incurred by the employee in effecting the recovery. . . .” (Emphasis added.) The court concluded that, because the plaintiff did not list in her bill of costs payable by the defendants the additional expenses she sought to have deducted from the damages apportionment pursuant to § 31-293 (a), she could not properly request such expenses at a hearing for a motion for apportionment.
The language of § 31-293 (a) and Practice Book § 18-5 does not support such a reading. The court relied on Practice Book § 18-5 (a), which provides in relevant part that “costs may be taxed by the clerk in civil cases . . . .” Various statutory provisions, including § 52-257 (fees of parties in civil actions), General Statutes §§ 52-258 (jury fees), 52-259 (court fees), 52-260 (witness fees) and 52-261 (fees and expenses of officers and persons serving process or performing other duties), list specific enumerated costs that are recoverable from a defendant in a bill of costs.
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Section 31-293 (a) provides for the deduction of “reasonable and necessary expenditures” from the apportionment of damages to an employer-coplaintiff. Section 31-293 (a) does not enumerate recoverable expenditures; rather, it leaves to the discretion of the court to determine which expenditures are reasonable and necessary. Cf.
Traystman, Coric & Keramidas, P.C.
v.
Daigle,
We note also the absence of a cross-reference between § 31-293 (a) and the statutes providing enumerated costs; the plain language of the § 31-293 (a) does not place a restriction on reasonable and necessary expenditures rendering them coterminous with those costs listed in a bill of costs. The legislature knows how to create limitations, and it has chosen to limit expenditures recoverable under § 31-293 (a) only by their reasonableness and necessity. See
Cruz
v.
Montanez,
This reading is further supported by the distinction between “costs” and “expenditures.” Our Supreme Court has stated that “costs are a creature of statute, and, therefore, a court may not tax a cost unless it is clearly empowered to do so . . . .”
Levesque
v.
Bristol Hospital, Inc.,
Our construction of § 31-293 (a) does not lead to an absurd or unworkable result. On the contrary, our holding is consistent with avoiding redundancy among statutes. “It is a basic tenet of statutory construction that the legislature [does] not intend to enact meaningless provisions.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Lopa
v.
Brinker International, Inc.,
Additionally, our holding is consistent with two principal purposes of § 31-293 (a), “namely, to ensure that an employer is reimbursed for its expenses and to prevent an injured employee from obtaining a double recovery.”
Cardenas
v.
Mixcus,
In contrast to § 31-293 (a), taxation of costs pursuant to Practice Book § 18-5 serves to transfer costs “in a civil action where there is a prevailing party in whose favor a decision or verdict is rendered and judgment entered.”
Triangle Contractors, Inc.
v.
Young,
The judgment is reversed and the matter is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
The plaintiff brought this action against the defendants Maria Alvarez and Benito Alvarez doing business as Benny’s Used Cars, also known as Benny’s Auto Repair, Benny’s Used Cars and Benny’s Auto Repair. Only the plaintiff and Priority Care are parties to this appeal.
The plaintiff originally sought $28,946.16 in her bill of costs. The court granted a portion of the plaintiffs bill of costs and subsequently granted the plaintiffs motion for review, granting an additional $10,725 for expert witness fees.
At the hearing on the motion for apportionment, the plaintiffs counsel indicated that examples of expenditures incurred by the plaintiff in the present case that would not be taxable included production and copying of medical records, obtaining final reports from the plaintiffs treating doctors and conferences with medical providers.
Priority Care filed a motion for an order requiring the plaintiff immediately to pay Priority Care $137,724.56 — the portion of the $200,000 that did not include the $30,000 in escrow and the $32,275.44 that the plaintiff argued in her motion to reargue that she was entitled to for expenses incurred in effecting the recovery.
On July 21, 2009, the plaintiff filed another appeal from the underlying action regarding the ruling of the court to strike the plaintiffs offer of compromise on the ground that she had not made full disclosure of the extent of her injuries, and, thus, the defendants could not properly evaluate the offer.
Yeager
v.
Alvarez,
In the present case, costs were taxed by the clerk pursuant to §§ 52-257 and 52-260.
