Bibbs v. Toyota Motor Corp.
Bibbs v. Toyota Motor Corp.
Opinion of the Court
*852In this wrongful death lawsuit, the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia has certified two questions to this Court:
Under Georgia law, are the damages that may be recovered in a wrongful death action brought by survivors of a decedent limited by a settlement entered into by the decedent's guardian in a previous personal injury suit settling all claims that were or could have been asserted in that suit?
If the answer is yes, what components of wrongful death damages are barred?
We answer the first question in the affirmative, and in response to the second question, we explain that damages recovered or recoverable in an earlier personal injury lawsuit cannot be recovered again in a wrongful death suit. In many instances, this rule against double recoveries will not significantly limit the damages that may be recovered in a wrongful death lawsuit, but in the circumstances of this case, we acknowledge that the limitation is substantial.
1. In September 1992, Delia Bibbs was involved in a car accident in which she sustained a head injury that left her in a coma. A few months after the accident, she filed-through her husband, who then was acting as her legal guardian-a personal injury lawsuit against Toyota Motor Corporation and Toyota Motor Sales, USA, Inc. In that lawsuit, Bibbs alleged that her 1986 Toyota YR2 van had a defective seatbelt latch and door-locking mechanism, and she asserted that these defects caused her injuries. The case was tried by a jury, but before it returned a verdict, Bibbs and Toyota entered into a "high-low" settlement agreement, which guaranteed some recovery for Bibbs in the event of a verdict for Toyota, but limited Toyota's exposure in the event of a verdict for Bibbs. The jury returned a verdict for Bibbs, awarding substantial damages, including more than $400,000 for past medical expenses, $6 million for future life care expenses, and $30 million for past and future pain and suffering.
Within the next month, Toyota paid the amount required under the settlement agreement, and Bibbs (through her husband) executed a written release that incorporated the settlement agreement. In the settlement papers, Toyota "expressly den[ied] any liability" for the accident, and with one exception, Bibbs broadly released Toyota from all "claims" and "damages" arising from the accident. Expressly excluded from the release was "any claim for Delia Bibbs' wrongful death, inasmuch as Delia Bibbs has not died and no such claim was made or could have been made in the [personal injury lawsuit]." Also in connection with the settlement, Bibbs dismissed her personal injury lawsuit with prejudice. Throughout the course of that suit and at the time of the settlement, Bibbs's husband was aware that her coma was permanent and that she was totally and permanently disabled.
More than 20 years later, Bibbs died, never having awakened from her coma. Together with her surviving children, Bibbs's husband filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Toyota, seeking damages for the full value of her life. The case was removed to federal district court, and Toyota filed a motion for partial summary judgment. In relevant part, Toyota argued that the release in the personal injury suit effectively precluded the plaintiffs in the wrongful death suit from recovering any damages beyond funeral expenses. In its initial ruling, the district court agreed for the most part with Toyota. Because Bibbs was totally and permanently disabled at the time of her personal injury lawsuit, the district court reasoned, the economic value of her life-the money that she might have earned but for the accident-was recoverable in the personal injury suit and could not be recovered again in wrongful death. And although the plaintiffs in the wrongful death suit properly *853could seek to recover damages for the intangible, non-economic value of her life, that value would have to be measured from her perspective at the time of her death, when she already had been in a coma for more than 20 years.
2. In Georgia, wrongful death claims are authorized by OCGA § 51-4-2 (a), which provides that a surviving spouse or child "may recover for the homicide of the spouse or parent the full value of the life of the decedent, as shown by the evidence." In one form or another, this provision has been a part of our law for nearly 170 years. See Engle v. Finch,
In 1850, the General Assembly adopted our first wrongful death statute, which provided:
[I]n all cases hereafter where death shall ensue from or under circumstances which would entitle the deceased, if death had not ensued, to an action against the perpetrator of the injury, the legal representative of such deceased shall be entitled to have and maintain an action at Law against the person committing the act from which the death has resulted-one half of the recovery to be paid to the wife and children, or the husband of the deceased, if any, in case of his or her estate being insolvent.
1851 Cobb's Digest at 476, § 83. See also Thompson,
*854[I]f any one shall be killed by the carelessness, negligence or improper conduct of any of said rail-road companies, their officers, agents or employees, by the running of the cars or engines of any of said companies, ... the right of action to recover damages, shall vest in his widow, if any; if no widow, it shall vest in his children, if any; and if no child or children, it shall vest in his legal representatives.
1859 Cobb's Compilation at 526; Thompson,
A widow, or if no widow a child or children, may recover for the homicide of the husband or parent; and if suit be brought by the widow or children, and the former or one of the latter dies pending the action, the same shall survive in the first case to the children, and in the latter case to the surviving child or children.
Ga. Code of 1861, p. 543, § 2913; Thompson,
In the decades that followed the original codification of the wrongful death statute, this Court struggled with the application of the proper measure of damages under the statute. As we observed,
[t]he confusion arises, no doubt, because the statute gives a right of action to others for a tort committed upon another, upon the death of the party upon whom the tort is committed, and the idea of survival of a cause of action thus rears its head to torment and bewilder the investigator approaching the matter of construing the statute.
Thompson,
In this light, although the cause of action for wrongful death belongs to the decedent's survivors and benefits them directly, the measure of damages in wrongful death actions is much the same as in personal injury actions. As we explained in one of our earlier cases, "the gist of the [wrongful death] action is an injury to the person," and the wrongful death statue "practically, though not technically, continue[s] and extend[s]" the right of action for personal injury. Atlantic, V. & W. R. Co. v. McDilda,
was intended to apply to the case of a party who, having a good cause of action for a personal injury, was prevented by his death, which resulted from such injury, from pursuing his legal remedy, or who omitted in his lifetime to do so. Such being the purpose of the change in the common law, ... the [wrongful death] action may be reasonably and naturally called an action for damages for personal injuries.
Id. at 472,
In Southern Bell Tel. & Telegraph Co. v. Cassin, 111 Ga. at 576,
Citing the purpose of the wrongful death statute-to allow recovery for a person's injuries despite the death of the injured-we explained that, while the statute may provide a new and separate cause of action, it is "inherently rooted and grounded" in the personal injury claim; "[i]t grows out of it, and is a part of it, having almost complete identity of substance, and subject to the same defenses." Cassin, 111 Ga. at 580,
Although Cassin was decided more than a century ago, we recently have reaffirmed the principle that wrongful death claims are "wholly derivative" of personal injury claims, and thus "all defenses which could have been made against a decedent also bind the beneficiaries when they pursue a wrongful death claim." United Health Servs. of Georgia v. Norton,
3. Given the foregoing principles, we can now begin to answer the district court's questions in light of the facts of this case. Because the plaintiffs' wrongful death claim is wholly derivative of Bibbs's personal injury claim, they can only recover those damages that Bibbs herself could have recovered if she had asserted the claim herself. See Norton,
"Georgia, as part of its common law and public policy, has always prohibited a plaintiff from a double recovery of damages; the plaintiff is entitled to only one recovery and satisfaction of damages, because such recovery and satisfaction is deemed to make the plaintiff whole." Georgia Northeastern R. Co. v. Lusk,
As we mentioned earlier, the sorts of damages recoverable in wrongful death actions are substantially the same as the kinds of damages that may be recovered in personal injury actions. See McDilda,
Having fully settled her personal injury lawsuit, Bibbs is presumed to have recovered the damages she was entitled to receive at that time as a result of her catastrophic physical injury. She was fully compensated *857under the law for the fact that she was, and would remain for the rest of her life, totally and permanently disabled-just not for the additional fact of her death. Having thus recovered, she was made whole (in the legal sense) and could no longer recover for the economic and non-economic damages stemming from her disability. To hold otherwise would be to allow impermissible double recovery. See Lusk,
It is true that Bibbs did not release a wrongful death claim , but, as Toyota points out, this does not mean that the damages recoverable under that claim are not limited by her prior recovery or release. See Cassin, 111 Ga. at 595,
Citing our decision in Spradlin v. Georgia R. & Elec. Co.,
a recovery can be had for pain and suffering, lost time, physician's bills, etc., accruing prior to the death of the injured person, but no recovery can be had for the 'full value of his life.' In the [wrongful *858death] action, a recovery cannot be had for any of the damages recoverable in the former but for 'the full value of the life of the deceased,' from the time of his death. The damages recoverable in one case are not recoverable in the other, so that they do not overlap in that respect .
Spradlin,
In the context of this case, Spradlin stands for the simple proposition that, until the injured person dies, she has not yet lost-and thus cannot recover-the "full value" of her life. Spradlin cannot be read to mean that no part of the damages recoverable in a personal injury action can ever overlap with wrongful death damages. That would make little sense. Both personal injury and wrongful death actions, for example, allow recovery of economic damages based on lost earnings. See, e.g., Wright v. Lail,
Like any precedential decision, Spradlin must be read in light of the facts presented in that case. And unlike this case, Spradlin involved a personal injury case that was litigated to judgment only after the death of the original plaintiff, while a separate wrongful death suit was pending. Because the original plaintiff died before the conclusion of the personal injury case, his damages recoverable in the personal injury case were cut off at the point of his death, and there was no occasion in the personal injury case for the recovery of damages for future losses extending beyond the date of actual death. Every loss recoverable in personal injury had been sustained by the time of the judgment, and in the personal injury case, the only damages properly recoverable would have been for the past economic and non-economic losses sustained by the original plaintiff up to the date of his death. The wrongful death action, on the other hand, would cover damages from the point of actual death until the normally expected time of death, as shown by mortality tables or other evidence. See Spradlin,
In cases, on the other hand, in which a personal injury claim is litigated to judgment before the death of the plaintiff, damages for both past and future losses may be recoverable in the personal injury action. Moreover, the future losses recoverable in such a case involving a permanent disability extend out to the full life expectancy of the plaintiff, as that life expectancy would have been understood before the injury-to "the end of [the plaintiff's] life, had he not been injured." Florida Central & Peninsular R. Co. v. Burney,
Consequently, in cases like this one, there may be substantial overlap between the damages for future losses recoverable in personal injury and the damages recoverable in *859wrongful death. Indeed, in this case, Bibbs's personal injury action was litigated and fully resolved long before her death. At the time of the settlement, the parties and the jury did not know (and could not have known) how long Bibbs would actually live, and so, for purposes of calculating damages, they could reasonably assume that Bibbs would live out her expected life span; Bibbs was entitled to recover damages for the entire expected duration of her permanent and total disability-that duration being her ordinary life expectancy based on mortality tables or other evidence. See OCGA § 24-14-45 (a) (allowing use of mortality tables to calculate damages for wrongful death or permanent personal injury); Cox v. Cantrell,
The plaintiffs argue that, even if personal injury and wrongful death damages overlap, the wrongful death statute still authorizes double recovery because the statute is punitive and is intended to "make[ ] homicide expensive." Western & A. R. Co. v. Michael,
To sum up, we answer the district court's first question in the affirmative: damages in a wrongful death action are limited by the decedent's full settlement of her earlier personal injury action.
4. We now turn to the second question certified-what components of wrongful death damages are barred? The answer to this question flows directly from our previous discussion. What is barred are those components that were recovered or recoverable in the fully-settled personal injury action. In many circumstances, this bar would leave substantial damages to be recovered in wrongful death. After all, most injuries are not completely disabling, and for so long as the victims live with the injury, they may retain at least some capacity for earning money and enjoying life; in those instances, it *860is easy to see how an untimely death creates additional and substantial loss. But where the injury leaves the victim in a permanent coma, as in this case, it becomes more difficult to identify additional damages flowing merely from the additional fact of death.
Toyota argues that the plaintiffs cannot recover anything in this wrongful death action (save for burial expenses) because Bibbs was deprived essentially of her entire life at the moment of injury, and she could have recovered damages for that deprivation in the personal injury action. But we are not prepared to go so far. With respect to economic damages, Toyota is almost certainly correct. We see no reason to conclude that anything less than the full measure of Bibbs's economic damages was recoverable at the time of her personal injury case, and so, there are no economic damages left to recover in wrongful death. With respect to non-economic damages, on the other hand, we cannot say as a matter of law that there is no difference in value between living in a permanent coma and not living at all, even from the decedent's perspective. Put simply, we cannot say that Bibbs's life in a coma had zero monetary value. After all, not everyone would choose to be disconnected from life support in the event of a catastrophic injury. A jury may find, for example, that a patient in a permanent coma might still retain some vestiges of consciousness or inner life. Or it may be that simply being alive, though comatose, allows a person to provide some comfort and hope to her loved ones in a way that is lost with death. Whatever the residual value, if any, of Bibbs's life to her while she was in a coma, this question is properly litigated in the district court.
Certified questions answered.
All the Justices concur.
See Bibbs v. Toyota Motor Corp., 1:15-CV-02607,
The district court declined to certify a separate and distinct question about whether the jury verdict in the personal injury lawsuit precludes Toyota from disputing certain liability issues (such as product defect and causation) in this wrongful death lawsuit. The district court concluded that the verdict has no preclusive effect because Toyota expressly denied liability in the settlement and release that resolved the earlier lawsuit, and the district court found that the question about the preclusive effect of the verdict presented no "novel issue of Georgia law" that would warrant the certification of an additional question. In this Court, the plaintiffs urge us to take up the third question even in the absence of certification, but we decline to do so. Although we have jurisdiction to answer questions certified by a district court, see Ga. Const. of 1983, Art. VI, Sec. VI, Par. IV, the certification of questions does not give us jurisdiction over the case generally, which remains within the breast of the district court.
Lord Campbell's Act provided:
Whenever the death of any person shall be caused by wrongful act, neglect, or default, and the act, neglect, or default is such as would (if death had not ensued) have entitled the party injured to maintain an action and recover damages in respect thereof, then and in every such case the person who would have been liable if death had not ensued shall be liable to an action for damages, notwithstanding the death of the person injured, and although the death shall have been caused under such circumstances as amount in law to a felony.
Thompson,
This new code section was not the result of an independent and stand-alone enactment of the General Assembly. Rather, the code section was formulated by the codification commission, and the General Assembly later approved the new code in general. See Ga. L. 1858, p. 95-96 (granting authority to codify the laws); Ga. L. 1860, p. 24 (approving the new code). See also Robert E. Cleary, Jr., Eldrige's Georgia Wrongful Death Actions § 1:10 at 11-12 (4th ed. 2018).
Other parts of the wrongful death statute, including the enumeration of persons entitled to bring a wrongful death suit, have changed from time to time, but these changes are not relevant to our discussion.
We should note that Georgia law contains a separate non-abatement statute, which provides: "No action for a tort shall abate by the death of either party, where the wrongdoer received any benefit from the tort complained of; nor shall any action or cause of action for the recovery of damages for homicide, injury to the person, or injury to property abate by the death of either party." OCGA § 9-2-41. It appears that this provision evolved independently of the wrongful death statute-its earliest iterations predate Lord Campbell's Act and can be found in Georgia law as early as the eighteenth century. See 1800 Watkin's Digest at 395, § XVIII (non-abatement provision in the Judiciary Act of 1789); Neal v. Haygood,
The non-abatement statute allows the victim's estate to bring (or continue) a personal injury action against the wrongdoer, while the wrongful death statute allows the victim's spouse or children to bring an independent action for wrongful death. See Mays v. Kroger Co.,
There are, of course, practical differences in the measure of damages for one who is deceased and one who is totally and permanently disabled. One who is living with a total and permanent disability would be entitled in a personal injury suit, for example, to recover long-term care expenses, while one who dies instantly from her injuries would not incur, and would not be entitled to recover, the same losses in wrongful death. Likewise, a long-term injury might allow recovery for certain elements of pain and suffering, while instantaneous death would not. Compare Grant v. Georgia Pacific Corp.,
At that time, the wrongful death statute was codified in Ga. Code of 1895, § 3828, and provided in relevant part:
A widow, or, if no widow, a child or children, may recover for the homicide of the husband or parent; and if suit be brought by the widow or children, and the former or one of the latter dies pending the action, the same shall survive in the first case to the children, and in the latter to the surviving child or children. The husband may recover for the homicide of his wife, and if she leaves child or children surviving, said husband and children shall sue jointly, and not separately, with the right to recover the full value of the life of the deceased, as shown by the evidence, and with the right of survivorship as to said suit if either die pending the action.
As mentioned above, Bibbs's husband signed the release in his capacity as her legal guardian, and in this wrongful death action, he is proceeding in his distinct capacity as her surviving spouse.
One of the mortality tables expressly authorized by OCGA § 24-14-45 (a) -The Commissioners 1958 Standard Ordinary Mortality Table-projects a 36-year-old person to have a further life expectancy of 35.78 years. See OCGA, Title 24, Appendix at 1237. These tables are not exclusive, however, and other tables and evidence may be used for calculating damages. See OCGA § 24-14-45 (b), (c).
Reference
- Full Case Name
- BIBBS v. TOYOTA MOTOR CORPORATION
- Cited By
- 5 cases
- Status
- Published