Young v. Teti
Young v. Teti
Opinion of the Court
H. Victor Teti injured Patricia Young in an automobile accident; Teti was at fault. Teti’s insurance carrier paid $9,386 to Young. Young sued Teti for damages. The jury returned a verdict for Young, against which the trial court offset the $9,386 that Teti’s insurance carrier
FACTS
Teti drove his car into the path of another vehicle and crashed, injuring his passenger, Young. Teti’s insurer, Allstate Indemnity Company, paid Young $9,386 for her medical expenses and lost wages under Teti’s Personal Injury Protection (PIP) coverage.
Teti moved to offset the jury award by Allstate’s earlier $9,386 PIP payment to Young; Young agreed. Thus, at this juncture, Teti owed Young $10,614.
But Young argued that she was entitled to deduct from the offset her attorney fees and costs under Mahler v. Szucs, 135 Wn.2d 398, 957 P.2d 632, 966 P.2d 305 (1998). The trial court agreed, reasoning that:
*724 there is special funding under the PIP coverage in an insurance policy and there’s funding under the liability coverage in an insurance policy. And they’re not the same. They’re two different categories under the insurance policy. . . . And if [Young] had not brought the case, Allstate would not get any setoff against any judgment. If there was no judgment, there would be no need for setoff. But he brought the action, he got the judgment, and you [Teti] are entitled to a setoff, I agree, but your setoff is going to be reduced ....
Report of Proceedings (June 25, 1999) at 12. The trial court then reduced Teti’s offset to $2,600.
ANALYSIS
I. Mahler v. Szucs
The insurers in Mahler paid their fault-free, injured insureds under their insurance policies’ PIP coverage. These policies gave the insurers reimbursement rights for PIP payments if the injured insureds recovered from the tortfeasor(s). Mahler, 135 Wn.2d at 418, 421. The policies further provided for sharing recovery costs: “If the insured recovers from the party at fault and we [the insurer] share in the recovery, we will pay our share of the legal expenses.” Mahler, 135 Wn.2d at 419.
The injured insureds in Mahler recovered from the tortfeasors and reimbursed their insurance carriers for their earlier PIP payments. But, contrary to the policy provisions, the carriers refused to share their insureds’ legal expenses incurred in recovering damages from the tortfeasors. 135 Wn.2d at 407, 409.
The Supreme Court found the insurers’ promise to share in their insureds’ recovery expenses consistent with “the common fund doctrine, which, as an exception to the
But such is not the case here. Young, the injured plaintiff, initially received PIP payments, not from her oum insurer, as in Mahler, but rather from the tortfeasor’s insurer. Thus, when Young sued the tortfeasor, Teti, and recovered, she did not create a fund to benefit, or to reimburse, anyone other than herself.
II. Mahler: Inapplicable For Fee Apportionment Where Lawsuit Does Not Benefit Insured or Insurer
Because Young’s litigation did not benefit Allstate, Mahler does not apply and Allstate need not share in Young’s litigation costs. When the jury awarded plaintiff Young past economic damages against defendant Teti, Young agreed that Teti was entitled to an offset for Allstate’s earlier PIP payment to Young under Teti’s insur
In contrast, Young’s lawsuit increased the amount that Allstate had to pay to cover the additional damages awarded against its insured, Teti, under his bodily injury liability coverage with Allstate. Rather than reimbursing Allstate, the proposed $9,386 offset simply relieved Allstate and Teti from having to pay Young again for the same $9,386 medical expenses and lost wages that it had already paid Young under Teti’s PIP coverage. See Winters v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 99 Wn. App. 602, 615, 994 P.2d 881, review granted, 141 Wn.2d 1018 (2000);
But, contrary to the trial court’s ruling, and unlike Mahler, here there is no contractual or legal basis for requiring Teti to share Young’s litigation expenses in suing him and recovering damages. First, Young, the injured-plaintiff, was not Allstate’s insured. Rather, Teti, the tortfeasor-defendant, was Allstate’s insured, and Young
Unlike Mahler, Young’s litigation against Allstate’s insured produced no additional party from whom Allstate could recoup any money. Thus, Mahler awards are inappropriate here, where an injured, faultless third person recovers only from the insured tortfeasor, rather than also from the injured party’s own insurer.
Reversed and remanded for entry of judgment with no reduction of Teti’s offset against Young’s verdict.
Houghton and Bridgewater, JJ., concur.
In Mahler v. Szucs, 135 Wn.2d 398, 404-05, 957 P.2d 632, 966 P.2d 305 (1998), the Washington Supreme Court held that an insurer was required to pay a pro rata share of its insured’s (Mahler) attorney fees and costs of recovering damages from an automobile accident tortfeasor (Szucs), where a portion of Mahler’s recovery reimbursed the insurer for its earlier PIP (Personal Injury Protection) payments to Mahler.
Young’s verdict operated to Teti’s and his insurer’s detriment, unlike the facts in Mahler, where the injured plaintiffs lawsuit and settlement against the tortfeasor operated to the plaintiffs insurer’s benefit (Mahler’s insurer was reimbursed from her settlement against tortfeasor Szucs).
The PIP coverage was for an “injured personj’s]” wage loss and “reasonable and necessary expenses incurred within one year from the date of the accident.”
Allstate was not a party to this lawsuit.
$9,386 previously paid to Young minus (1) Young’s attorney fees of $3,285 and (2) Young’s costs of $3,501 equals $2,600.
$20,000 judgment minus $2,600 court-ordered offset equals $17,400.
Under the American Rule followed in Washington, a court has no power to award attorney fees in the absence of a contract, statute, or recognized ground of equity providing for fee recovery. Dayton v. Farmers Ins. Group, 124 Wn.2d 277, 280, 876 P.2d 896 (1994).
We do not know whether, as in Mahler, Young also recovered from her own insurer; if she did, that fact and its related issues are not before us.
Compare Mahler, where the plaintiff’s litigation produced funds to reimburse the plaintiffs insurer.
Teti’s Allstate insurance policy provided: (1) bodily injury liability (BIL) coverage, for “damages an insured person is legally obligated to pay because of. .. bodily injury sustained by any person”; (2) personal injury protection (PIP) coverage, for an “injured person[’s]” wage loss and “reasonable and necessary expenses incurred within one year from the date of the accident”; (3) reduction of the BIL coverage “by all amounts paid or payable under the [PIP] Coverage”; and (4) a “Reimbursement Agreement:”
When we pay any person under [PIP] coverage:
1. and an injured person receives a judgment. .. from a party legally responsible for the bodily injury, the injured person must repay us.. ..
Repayment shall be only to the extent the damages recovered include any expense, amount or payment for which benefits were paid.
2. all rights of recovery against any legally responsible party or insurer must be maintained and preserved for our benefit.
3. where the injured person or Allstate or both have incurred expenses in recovering payments which benefit both, the expenses will be shared by both parties.
Clerk’s Papers at 54-55 (emphasis added).
Winters, like Mahler, involved a debate between a fault-free, injured insured, over apportionment of attorney fees and costs to recover damages from the at-fault tortfeasor, and a carrier standing in the shoes of the at-fault tortfeasor.
The policy provided in pertinent part: “3. where the injured person or Allstate or both have incurred expenses in recovering payments which benefit both, the expenses will be shared by both parties.” (Emphasis added.)
Teti was not injured nor did he incur expenses to recover payments from anyone.
Teti unnecessarily attempts to distance himself from our recent Winters v. State Farm holding that a common fund for the payment oí Mahler expenses could be created from a third party tortfeasor’s liability proceeds and the faultless insured’s UIM (underinsured/uninsured motorist) award. 99 Wn. App. at 615. But we specifically stated in Winters: “Nothing in this opinion considers or addresses the at-fault PIP insured,” the position occupied here by Teti. 99 Wn. App. at 611 n.31.
Similarly inapplicable is Young’s equitable estoppel argument.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Patricia A. Young v. H. Victor Teti
- Cited By
- 5 cases
- Status
- Published