Hull v. Glewwe
Hull v. Glewwe
Opinion of the Court
*269*95¶1 Frank Hull appeals a judgment dismissing his negligence claim against John Glewwe and Glewwe's insurer, State Farm Fire and Casualty Company. Hull and Glewwe were both injured in an accident that occurred during a roofing project at Hull's home. In a prior lawsuit, Glewwe had pursued claims for damages arising out of the accident directly against Hull's liability insurer, Unitrin Auto and Home Insurance Company, without Hull being made a party to that action. That case terminated in a settlement agreement under which Glewwe released his claims against Hull and Unitrin in exchange for the payment of a designated sum.
¶2 Hull subsequently filed this negligence action against Glewwe and State Farm. The case was *96dismissed based upon the circuit court's conclusion that Hull was required to assert his affirmative claim for damages in the earlier lawsuit, even though he was not a party to that action. The issue presented in this appeal is whether claim preclusion and the common law compulsory counterclaim rule operate so as to bar an injured person's negligence claim against an alleged tortfeasor, when prior litigation arising out of the same accident has been settled by that injured person's insurer without that injured person having been a party to the prior litigation.
¶3 We conclude that, under the circumstances present in this case, Hull is not precluded from pursuing a negligence claim against Glewwe and State Farm. Because Hull was not a party to the prior action, he could only be bound to the outcome in the earlier case if he was in privity with his insurer, Unitrin. Privity, in turn, requires a sufficient alignment of interests that is lacking in this case. Specifically, although Hull's and Unitrin's interests aligned for purposes of defending against the claims in the prior lawsuit, their interests did not align for purposes of advancing Hull's affirmative claim for relief. Accordingly, we reverse the grant of summary judgment and remand for further proceedings.
BACKGROUND
¶4 This appeal arises from an accident that occurred on June 30, 2015. According to the complaint, Glewwe, a contractor, was installing metal roofing panels on Hull's home. On the date of the accident, Glewwe asked for Hull's help getting some roof measurements. Glewwe had screwed a board into the home's fascia to support a "treadway," which is a wooden ladder-like structure laid across the roof to *97allow a person to walk on the roof without damaging the panels. Hull alleged that Glewwe failed to adequately secure the support board to the home, causing both him and Glewwe to fall from the roof. Both individuals sustained injuries in the fall.
¶5 In May 2016, Glewwe and his wife filed a direct action lawsuit (hereinafter, Glewwe I ) in which they alleged negligence and Safe Place Act claims against Hull's homeowners' insurer, Unitrin Auto and Home Insurance Company.
¶6 Hull was not named as a party in Glewwe I . He did not participate in that litigation, except that he testified as a witness in a deposition. As a result, Hull did not file a counterclaim for his own damages against Glewwe or State Farm in Glewwe I , and his affirmative claims were not directly at issue in that litigation.
¶7 The parties in Glewwe I ultimately entered into a settlement agreement that resolved the litigation. In exchange for the payment of a specified sum, Glewwe released Hull and Unitrin from any liability for all injuries he sustained in the accident. The release further stated that the payment "is not to be *98construed as an admission of liability and is a compromise of a doubtful and disputed claim." Although the release resolved Glewwe's claims against Unitrin, the parties explicitly stated that their intentions were to "resolve a questionable claim by plaintiffs," and the release provided that "the payment to plaintiff is a significant compromise due to various factors, including issues of liability, damages, extent of care and treatment, which does not provide full compensation." Based upon the parties' stipulation, the circuit court signed an order for judgment dismissing Glewwe's claims against Unitrin "with prejudice" and "on the merits."
¶8 It is undisputed that Hull had no input in the drafting or execution of the Glewwe I settlement agreement, he was not consulted with respect to any matters regarding the settlement, and he did not know the case had been settled until after the fact. Unitrin has maintained, without challenge from Hull, that it had the authority to settle Glewwe's claims against it on its own, without consulting Hull or receiving his approval.
¶9 Hull filed the present negligence action just weeks after Glewwe I 's dismissal. Glewwe and State Farm filed a joint answer and a motion for summary judgment.
¶11 The circuit court also determined that permitting Hull's action to go forward would violate Wisconsin's common law compulsory counterclaim rule. It concluded that any recovery for Hull in this action would leave Glewwe at a "substantial risk of incurring double, multiple, or otherwise inconsistent obligations and would impair the rights he established in the first action as he ... may not be able to assert Mr. Hull's *100negligence as a defense and would not be free to argue [the amount of his damages]," potentially forcing him to return a substantial portion of his recovery from the previous lawsuit. (Internal quotation marks omitted.) The court concluded that Hull was barred from raising his present claim regardless of whether Unitrin refused to represent him in making a counterclaim, and it remarked that Hull should have retained private counsel to intervene and join in Glewwe I . Hull now appeals.
DISCUSSION
¶12 We review a grant of summary judgment de novo. Tews v. NHI, LLC ,
¶13 Glewwe argues that if Hull wished to pursue his affirmative negligence claim, he was required to file it as a counterclaim in the earlier lawsuit, in which the issue of comparative negligence was raised. As an introductory matter, we note that Hull was not named as a party in the earlier lawsuit. Glewwe sued *101Unitrin, Hull's insurer, pursuant to Wisconsin's direct action statute, WIS. STAT. § 632.24, which makes a liability insurer directly liable to an injured party in an amount not to exceed its policy limits.
¶14 In that sense, Glewwe asks us to take the law a step further than our supreme court when it announced the common law compulsory counterclaim rule in A.B.C.G. Enterprises v. First Bank Southeast, N.A. ,
¶15 An understanding of the principles of res judicata-which Wisconsin courts now refer to as claim preclusion, see Northern States Power Co. v. Bugher ,
¶16 A.B.C.G. asserted that applying claim preclusion to bar its claims against First Bank violated WIS. STAT. § 802.07(1), which governs counterclaims. See A.B.C.G. Enters. ,
¶17 As Hull correctly argues, A.B.C.G. Enterprises established a narrow, common law exception to the permissive counterclaim rule as a means of reconciling the tension between that rule and claim preclusion. A counterclaim is compulsory only if claim preclusion would otherwise apply and "a favorable judgment in the second action would nullify the judgment in the original action or impair rights established in the initial action." A.B.C.G. Enters. ,
¶19 "Privity exists when a person is so identified in interest with a party to a former litigation that he or she represents precisely the same legal right in respect to the subject matter involved."
¶20 The parties sharply disagree on the results that this comparative exercise produces in this case. The circuit court accepted Glewwe's argument that Hull and Unitrin were privies because an insurer's liability under the direct action statute is derivative of the insured's. See Koscielak v. Stockbridge-Munsee Cmty. ,
¶21 This identity of interests in the general question of negligence is insufficient to establish privity between Hull and Unitrin for purposes of advancing Hull's affirmative claim for relief. As an initial matter, there is significant tension in Glewwe's assertions that Hull was in privity with Unitrin for purposes of recovering for his own injuries, but that he would, nonetheless, have to retain his own attorney, intervene in the action, and prosecute his own claim to vindicate his rights. If Hull's interests in his affirmative claim for relief were adequately represented by Unitrin in the earlier action, one would expect his intervention would not be necessary.
¶22 In any event, Glewwe generally concedes that Unitrin's policy of insurance, as is true of most liability policies, only required it to defend and indemnify Hull for any damages resulting from his negligence covered by the policy. See Maxwell v. Hartford Union High Sch. Dist. ,
¶23 Here, it is undisputed that these duties did not encompass prosecuting Hull's affirmative claim for relief. Unitrin's apparent interest was to dispose of the *106litigation against it as economically as possible. Cf. Roehl Transp., Inc. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. ,
¶24 On the other hand, Hull's interest was in maximizing his recovery by establishing that Glewwe's percentage of causal fault for Hull's injuries was as high as possible. Comparative negligence principles play a key role in our analysis. A "successful" defense from Unitrin's perspective generally involved either economically settling the case prior to trial or establishing at trial that Glewwe could not recover because he was at least fifty-one percent causally negligent. Meanwhile, Wisconsin law generally permits an injured party to recover damages as long as his or her negligence is not greater than the negligence of the alleged tortfeasor. See WIS. STAT. § 895.045(1). Thus, from Hull's perspective, the bare minimum he needed to do to prevail on his own claim was to establish that Glewwe was at least fifty percent causally negligent for *107the accident. As a practical matter, Hull and Unitrin may have used much of the same evidence to achieve their goals within the comparative negligence setting, but their goals were materially different.
¶25 Longstanding case law in Wisconsin recognizes this distinction between these interests on the part of the insurer and the insured. For example, in Towne Realty, Inc. v. Zurich Insurance Co. ,
¶26 Our supreme court has also considered the divergent nature of the insurer's and the insured's interests in a situation similar to the one presented here. In Birkholz v. Cheese Makers Mutual Casualty Co. ,
¶27 When Birkholz Brothers subsequently commenced an action against McNulty for damages, McNulty asserted that he was entitled to summary judgment.
¶28 Birkholz was based upon an earlier ruling in Wm. H. Heinemann Creameries, Inc. v. Milwaukee Automobile Insurance Co. ,
*109¶29 While Heinemann Creameries is a strong case for Hull, it seems to run contrary to our supreme court's later decision adopting the common law compulsory counterclaim rule in A.B.C.G. Enterprises .
¶30 Glewwe nonetheless argues that the "sufficiency of Unitrin's representation is further evidenced by the fact that an insurer and its insured stand in privity with respect to settlement." Glewwe primarily relies on Parsons in making this argument. There, the minor Parsons was injured in an automobile accident and, together with her parents, sued the insurer of the driver of the car in which she was riding, as well as the insurer of another of the car's passengers. Parsons ,
¶31 On appeal, we concluded that even though the passenger's parents were not present in the action until after the settlement had been reached, the settlement also bound them because the "insured stands in privity with the insurer."
¶32 Admittedly, Hull and Unitrin, for different reasons, each had a generalized interest in advocating that Glewwe was causally negligent for the accident that produced both Hull's and Glewwe's injuries. However, privity is not established merely because the two parties "are interested in the same question or in proving the same facts." Amber J.F. v. Richard B. ,
¶33 We have concluded, for example, that in a two-car accident, privity does not exist merely because different parties are interested in the same question of comparative negligence. Muchow v. Goding ,
*277
*112¶34 We rejected that argument and concluded that claim preclusion did not protect Goding or his insurer because they were not in privity with the estate or Dairyland in the earlier third-party action.
¶35 Even beyond the comparative negligence context, case law demonstrates that there must be a sufficiently close alignment of interests for parties to be deemed in privity with one another.
¶36 Pasko also illustrates these privity concepts. In Pasko , the question was whether certain police officers who had litigated a previous wage lawsuit were in privity with the Milwaukee Police Association (the officers' collective bargaining agent) in a second lawsuit relating to the same general allegations of underpayment. Pasko ,
¶37 Glewwe objects that "[i]njustice would result" if Hull was not bound by Glewwe's settlement with Unitrin, as Hull obtained the benefit of the release. Glewwe also argues that the settlement agreement leaves him "weaponless" because he "possibly cannot dispute liability [in this action] based on the terms of the release." We perceive no unfairness to Glewwe in this instance. For the reasons we have identified, *278there is no injustice in holding that Hull and Unitrin were in privity as to the defense of Glewwe's claims, but not as to Hull's affirmative claim for his own injuries. If Glewwe wished to bind Hull to the *114disposition in the first lawsuit for purposes of Hull's own claim, Glewwe merely needed to name Hull as a defendant (the direct action statute does not preclude him from doing so). Glewwe also could have obtained Hull's agreement to be bound by the settlement with his insurer or obtained a mutual release of his claims from him (nonparties to a lawsuit can so agree). Additionally, the terms of the release do not appear to justify Glewwe's concern that he is unable to adequately defend against Hull's claim, and Hull stipulated at oral argument that the release permitted Glewwe to dispute in the current lawsuit the degree of his negligence.
¶38 Glewwe alternatively argues that permitting Hull's action to proceed contravenes the purposes of the direct action statute. The direct action statute generally endeavors to save litigation and reduce expense by determining the rights of all parties in a single action involving the insurance carrier, to expedite the final settlement of litigation and payment to the injured person, and to place the burden on the insurer to pay *115damages sustained by a person as a result of the insured's causal negligence. Estate of Otto v. Physicians Ins. Co. of Wis. ,
¶39 Glewwe's concerns are overstated, and there are equally good policy reasons for not applying claim preclusion in this instance. The settlement agreement released only Glewwe's claims against Hull in exchange for the payment of a monetary sum; Glewwe did not bargain for or receive a mutual release. Moreover, Hull observes that it would have been much more difficult to obtain a settlement in Glewwe I had Hull been present in that litigation. Finally, precluding an insured's claim under these circumstances-when the insured does not know that the suit against his or her insurer has settled and potentially does not know the scope of his or her damages-creates significant fairness concerns.
¶40 In sum, we conclude it is not appropriate to apply claim preclusion under the circumstances of this case. Hull *279was not made a party to the prior action, and his interests in advancing his own claim for injuries were not adequately represented by his insurer *116in that prior action. Therefore, the first element of claim preclusion-an identity of the parties between the two actions-is not present. The fact that Glewwe's lawsuit ended in a settlement with Hull's insurer Unitrin does not preclude Hull from prosecuting the present action for his own damages.
By the Court. -Judgment reversed and cause remanded for further proceedings.
See Glewwe v. Unitrin Auto & Home Ins. Co. , Burnett County Circuit Court case No. 2016CV68. Hull's health insurer, which had made payments to health care providers on Hull's behalf, was also named as a party in the lawsuit.
Hull averred he hired his own attorney to represent him at his deposition.
Glewwe and State Farm are jointly represented on appeal. Because their interests appear to be aligned for purposes of this appeal, we will refer to them collectively as "Glewwe" for the remainder of this opinion.
All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2017-18 version unless otherwise noted.
Following the initial briefing, this court held oral argument, and amicus briefs were later submitted by the Wisconsin Association for Justice and the Wisconsin Insurance Alliance.
In whole,
Any bond or policy of insurance covering liability to others for negligence makes the insurer liable, up to the amounts stated in the bond or policy, to the persons entitled to recover against the insured for the death of any person or for injury to persons or property, irrespective of whether the liability is presently established or is contingent and to become fixed or certain by final judgment against the insured.
It is not clear whether McNulty commenced a formal action prior to the settlement with Birkholz Brothers' insurer. Nonetheless, evidence in the record showed that the settlement was made without Birkholz Brothers' knowledge or participation. Birkholz v. Cheese Makers Mut. Cas. Co. ,
Indeed, when the court of appeals was presented with the controversy in A.B.C.G. Enterprises prior to the supreme court's decision in that case, it concluded that the legislative history for the permissive counterclaim statute suggested that Wm. H. Heinemann Creameries, Inc. v. Milwaukee Automobile Insurance Co. ,
The parties dispute the degree to which the interests of the persons or entities must be aligned in order to be held in privity. Hull endorses an "absolute identity" standard, see Pasko v. City of Milwaukee ,
Further, despite his apparent concerns about the scope of the settlement agreement, Glewwe pled as an affirmative defense in this action that he was not negligent and did not contribute in any way to Hull's alleged damages. Both Hull's stipulation at oral argument and Glewwe's contesting negligence in his pleading are consistent with the terms of the settlement agreement, which does not purport to address the issue of comparative fault. Rather, the release speaks to any "liability, actions, causes of action, claims and demands, for any damages, losses or injuries ...."
Additionally, we note that Glewwe's concerns regarding the purposes of the direct action statute being thwarted are implicated only when there is a colorable comparative negligence question. In the main, the direct action statute serves its purposes well in instances where there is not a genuine issue of comparative negligence, as in a case where there is only one person principally responsible for an accident.
Because we resolve this case based upon the lack of privity between Hull and his insurer, we need not address the parties' arguments regarding the other elements of claim preclusion, or whether a favorable judgment in this action would nullify the outcome of the earlier litigation or impair rights established in that action. See Turner v. Taylor ,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Frank HULL v. John GLEWWE and State Farm Fire and Casualty Company, Defendants-Respondents.
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published