Title: Walker v. K&W Cafeterias
Citation: N/A
Docket Number: 99PA19
State: north-carolina
Issuer: north-carolina Supreme Court
Date: August 14, 2020

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA 
No. 99PA19 
Filed 14 August 2020 
 
GWENDOLYN DIANETTE WALKER, Widow of ROBERT LEE WALKER, 
Deceased Employee 
 
 
v. 
K&W CAFETERIAS, Employer, LIBERTY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, 
Carrier 
 
On discretionary review pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7A-31 of the unanimous 
decision of the Court of Appeals, 264 N.C. App. 119, 824 S.E.2d 894 (2019), affirming 
an Opinion and Award entered on 27 February 2018 by the North Carolina Industrial 
Commission. On 11 June 2019, the Supreme Court allowed plaintiff’s petition for 
discretionary review. Heard in the Supreme Court on 6 January 2020.  
 
The Sumwalt Law Firm, by Vernon Sumwalt, for plaintiff-appellant. 
 
Cranfill Sumner & Hartzog, LLP, by Roy G. Pettigrew, for defendant-appellees. 
 
 
HUDSON, Justice. 
  
 
Pursuant to plaintiff’s petition for discretionary review, we review the decision 
of the Court of Appeals, which affirmed the 27 February 2018 Opinion and Award of 
the North Carolina Industrial Commission (the Commission). The Commission found 
that the uninsured/underinsured motorist (UIM) proceeds that plaintiff received on 
behalf of her husband’s estate through the settlement of a South Carolina wrongful 
death lawsuit were subject to defendants’ subrogation lien under N.C.G.S. § 97-10.2. 
We conclude that, by an endorsement to the UIM policy covering the vehicle that 
WALKER V. K&W CAFETERIAS 
 
Opinion of the Court 
 
 
-2- 
decedent was driving when he was killed, South Carolina insurance law applies, and 
it bars subrogation of UIM proceeds. S.C. Code § 38-77-160 (2015). Therefore, the 
UIM proceeds that plaintiff recovered from the wrongful death lawsuit may not be 
used to satisfy defendants’ workers’ compensation lien under N.C.G.S. § 97-10.2. 
Accordingly, we reverse and remand for further proceedings not inconsistent with 
this opinion.1  
Factual and Procedural Background 
 
On 16 May 2012, Robert Lee Walker (decedent), plaintiff’s husband and an 
employee of defendant K&W Cafeterias (K&W), was involved in a motor vehicle 
accident with a third-party in Dillon, South Carolina. Decedent died as a result of his 
injuries. The vehicle that decedent was driving was owned by K&W, a North Carolina 
corporation headquartered in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.  
 
Prior to the occurrence of the accident in which Mr. Walker died, the vehicle 
insurance policy applicable here was modified by an endorsement, pertinent parts of 
which are quoted below: 
THIS 
ENDORSEMENT 
CHANGES 
THE 
POLICY. 
PLEASE READ IT CAREFULLY. 
 
SOUTH CAROLINA UNDERINSURED MOTORISTS 
COVERAGE 
 
                                            
1 Because of this holding, we need not—and do not—reach the issue of whether the 
Commission erred in ordering that any workers’ compensation lien could be satisfied by 
distributing UIM proceeds held for wrongful death beneficiaries who never received workers’ 
compensation benefits. 
WALKER V. K&W CAFETERIAS 
 
Opinion of the Court 
 
 
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For a covered “auto” licensed or principally garaged in, or 
“garage operations” conducted in South Carolina, this 
endorsement modifies insurance provided under the 
following: 
 
BUSINESS AUTO COVERAGE FORM 
GARAGE COVERAGE FORM 
MOTOR CARRIER COVERAGE FORM 
TRUCKERS COVERAGE FORM 
 
With respect to coverage provided by this endorsement, the 
provisions of the Coverage Form apply unless modified by 
the endorsement.  
 
A.  
Coverage 
 
1.  
We will pay in accordance with the South Carolina 
Underinsured Motorists Law all sums the “insured” is 
legally entitled to recover as damages from the owner or 
driver of an “underinsured motor vehicle.” 
 
. . . .  
 
E.   
Changes In Conditions 
 
. . . . 
 
5.   
The following provision is added: 
 
CONFORMITY TO STATUTE 
 
This endorsement is intended to be in full conformity with 
the South Carolina Insurance Laws. If any provision of this 
endorsement conflicts with that law, it is changed to 
comply with the law.  
Decedent’s widow, Gwendolyn Dianette Walker, filed a workers’ compensation 
claim with the North Carolina Industrial Commission (the Commission) for medical 
expenses and death benefits resulting from decedent’s death under N.C.G.S. § 97-38–
WALKER V. K&W CAFETERIAS 
 
Opinion of the Court 
 
 
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40. On 7 January 2013, the Commission entered a Consent Opinion and Award 
ordering defendants to pay $333,763 in workers’ compensation benefits to plaintiff.2 
 
In 2014, plaintiff, as representative of decedent’s estate, filed a new and 
separate civil action in South Carolina—a wrongful death case seeking damages from 
the driver of the motor vehicle (the third-party) who was at fault in the accident that 
resulted in Mr. Walker’s death. In 2016, plaintiff and the third-party reached a 
settlement agreement, according to which plaintiff recovered a total of $962,500 on 
behalf of decedent’s estate. The recovery included: (1) $50,000 in liability benefits 
from the third-party’s insurer; (2) $12,500 in personal UIM proceeds from plaintiff’s 
and decedent’s own personal UIM policy; and (3) $900,000 in UIM proceeds from a 
commercial UIM policy that K&W purchased with its automobile insurance carrier.  
 
On 21 March 2016, Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.—the workers’ compensation 
insurance carrier for K&W and co-defendant in this case—filed a request for a 
hearing with the North Carolina Industrial Commission in which it sought 
repayment of the workers’ compensation death benefits it had paid to plaintiff 
beginning in 2013, claiming a lien under N.C.G.S. § 97-10.2 on the UIM proceeds that 
she recovered from the South Carolina wrongful death settlement in 2016.  
                                            
2 Because all of the decedent’s children were adults at the time of his death, under the 
statute, only the widow was entitled to the death benefit. N.C.G.S. § 97-39; N.C.G.S. § 97-
2(12) (“ ‘Child,’ ‘grandchild,’ ‘brother,’ and ‘sister’ include only persons who at the time of the 
death of the deceased employee are under 18 years of age.”). 
WALKER V. K&W CAFETERIAS 
 
Opinion of the Court 
 
 
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On 30 March 2016, plaintiff filed a declaratory judgment action against 
defendants in South Carolina, asserting that S.C. Code § 38-77-160 precluded 
subrogation and assignment to defendants of the UIM proceeds that plaintiff had 
been awarded in the settlement. On 2 May 2016, defendants removed the action to 
the United States District Court for the District of South Carolina on the basis of 
diversity jurisdiction. The United States District Court ultimately abstained from 
hearing the declaratory judgment action.  
 
Meanwhile, on 13 June 2016, plaintiff filed a motion in the North Carolina 
Industrial Commission to stay all proceedings on defendants’ subrogation claim 
there, pending the result of the federal litigation. Plaintiff’s motion was denied on 28 
June 2016. Plaintiff then filed a motion to reconsider, which the Commission denied 
on 18 July 2016. Plaintiff appealed and filed another motion for stay. Plaintiff’s 
appeal was heard by a Deputy Commissioner.  
 
In its 10 July 2017 Opinion and Award, the Deputy Commissioner denied 
plaintiff’s motion to stay the proceedings and ordered the distribution of plaintiff’s 
entire recovery from the South Carolina wrongful death settlement with the at-fault 
driver (the third-party recovery). The Deputy Commissioner concluded that 
defendants were entitled to subrogation under N.C.G.S. § 97-10.2(f)(1)(c), (h), and 
ordered that defendants be reimbursed out of the third-party recovery for the 
$333,763 in workers’ compensation benefits that they had paid to Mrs. Walker under 
the 7 January 2013 Consent Opinion and Award.  
WALKER V. K&W CAFETERIAS 
 
Opinion of the Court 
 
 
-6- 
 
Plaintiff appealed the 10 July 2017 Opinion and Award to the Full 
Commission, which affirmed the Deputy Commissioner’s decision. Plaintiff then 
appealed to the Court of Appeals.  
 
The Court of Appeals affirmed, holding in pertinent part that “[t]he Full 
Commission correctly concluded Defendants could assert a subrogation lien for 
workers' compensation benefits paid to Plaintiff on the UIM policy proceeds obtained 
by Plaintiff in the South Carolina wrongful death action.” Walker v. K&W Cafeterias, 
264 N.C. App. 119, 133, 824 S.E.2d 894, 904 (N.C. Ct. App. 2019). As explained below, 
we conclude that defendants may not satisfy their workers’ compensation lien by 
collecting from plaintiff’s recovery of UIM proceeds in her South Carolina wrongful 
death settlement. Accordingly, we reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals. 
Analysis 
First, we emphasize that this case is not plaintiff’s workers’ compensation 
claim. That claim was fully resolved in 2013 when death benefits were paid to 
plaintiff under the Workers’ Compensation Act due to Mr. Walker’s work-related 
death. Instead, here we review what should happen to over $900,000 that was paid 
to plaintiff in the South Carolina wrongful death settlement with the at-fault driver. 
That settlement was reached in 2016, and to date, the money remains in the trust 
account of plaintiff’s attorneys.  
Because the 2012 workers’ compensation case was brought in North Carolina, 
Liberty Mutual sought to have the Commission order plaintiff to reimburse the 
WALKER V. K&W CAFETERIAS 
 
Opinion of the Court 
 
 
-7- 
workers’ compensation benefits she had been paid with the as-yet-undistributed 
recovery she received in her South Carolina wrongful death settlement. Although the 
Commission and the Court of Appeals concluded that Liberty Mutual could be 
reimbursed with plaintiff’s wrongful death UIM proceeds, we disagree. 
For the reasons below, we conclude that the South Carolina UIM policy—a 
contract to which defendants are party and according to which the wrongful death 
settlement proceeds were paid—controls the outcome here. That policy requires the 
application of South Carolina law to the payment of UIM proceeds. Under South 
Carolina UIM law, an insurer is barred, without exception, from seeking to be 
reimbursed with UIM proceeds for benefits it has previously paid. S.C. Code § 38-77-
160 (“Benefits paid pursuant to this section are not subject to subrogation and 
assignment.”). Accordingly, we reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and 
remand to the Commission for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. 
This case presents a single issue of law, i.e., a conclusion of law by the 
Commission, which we review de novo. N.C.G.S. § 97-86 (“The award of the Industrial 
Commission . . . shall be conclusive and binding as to all questions of fact; but either 
party to the dispute may, within 30 days . . . appeal from the decision of the 
Commission . . . for errors of law . . . . The procedure for the appeal shall be as provided 
by the rules of appellate procedure.”). 
We must determine whether to apply North Carolina or South Carolina law to 
the attempted subrogation of plaintiff’s wrongful death settlement UIM proceeds. The 
WALKER V. K&W CAFETERIAS 
 
Opinion of the Court 
 
 
-8- 
Court of Appeals analyzed this question as an abstract choice of law issue and 
concluded that North Carolina law applies. See Walker, 264 N.C. App. at 131, 824 
S.E.2d at 902–03 (discussing Anglin v. Dunbar Armored, Inc., 226 N.C. App. 203, 742 
S.E.2d 205 (2013)). We do not agree with the conclusion that this case presents a 
choice of law issue; instead we conclude that this issue is properly analyzed under 
contract law interpreting a choice-of-law clause. As we are basing our decision on 
contractual terms rather than legal principles related to choice of law, we need not—
and do not—go beyond the contract as modified by its endorsement; by the explicit 
terms of that contract, the UIM proceeds are paid and governed by South Carolina 
law.  
The dissent maintains that plaintiff’s stipulation in 2012 to the jurisdiction of 
the Commission over her workers’ compensation claim carries significance here. As 
noted above, this case is not the workers’ compensation claim, but involves the 
settlement proceeds paid under a UIM policy to settle a civil action filed in South 
Carolina against the at-fault driver. Here, in the proceedings before the Commission, 
the parties’ stipulations included the following: 
1.  
. . . However, Plaintiff disputes if the Industrial 
Commission has personal or in rem jurisdiction to exercise 
authority over underinsured motorist (“UIM”) proceeds 
paid under a South Carolina UIM policy . . . and whether 
those proceeds can be attached to satisfy Defendant’s 
subrogation interest under N.C.[G.S.] § 97-10.2. 
 
2. 
All parties are subject to and bound by the 
provisions of the North Carolina Workers’ Compensation 
WALKER V. K&W CAFETERIAS 
 
Opinion of the Court 
 
 
-9- 
Act, N.C.[G.S.] § 97-1 et seq. (“the Act”), except to the extent 
that Plaintiff contends the Industrial Commission’s 
jurisdiction might be limited because of the circumstances 
expressed in paragraph 1. 
Unlike the stipulations entered in the workers’ compensation claim, the ones above, 
which are included in the Full Commission’s 2017 Opinion and Award, specifically 
reserve the arguments plaintiff raises here. 
Defendants argue that the commercial UIM policy purchased by K&W is not a 
South Carolina UIM policy. Specifically, they point out that the parties stipulated 
before the Commission that the commercial UIM policy was purchased and entered 
into in North Carolina. Defendants argue that this fact is dispositive because, under 
N.C.G.S. § 58-3-1, an insurance policy is “deemed to be made” in North Carolina if it 
is the state where “applications for [the policy] are taken.” N.C.G.S. § 58-3-1 (2019).  
More significantly, defendants’ argument overlooks the effect of the 
endorsement that was added to the commercial UIM policy on 7 July 2011, titled 
“South Carolina Underinsured Motorist Coverage.” Specifically, the endorsement 
states that it “changes the policy.”3 The endorsement also states that it “is intended 
to be in full conformity with the South Carolina Insurance Laws” and that “[i]f any 
provision of this endorsement conflicts with that law, it is changed to comply with the 
                                            
3 Even under North Carolina insurance law, an endorsement like this one that 
“changes the contract” becomes part of that contract and is treated as such. See e.g., 
Scottsdale Ins. Co v. Travelers Indem. Co., 152 N.C. App. 231, 234, 566 S.E.2d 748, (2002) 
(treating the endorsement as part of the contract for the purposes of construing ambiguity in 
favor of the insured). 
WALKER V. K&W CAFETERIAS 
 
Opinion of the Court 
 
 
-10- 
law.” Further, the endorsement states that “[the insurance carrier] will pay in 
accordance with the South Carolina Underinsured Motorists Law.” The clear intent 
and effect of this endorsement was to provide for the application of South Carolina 
law to all UIM payments under the policy. 
Furthermore, the vehicle operated by decedent at the time of the accident fell 
within the categories of vehicles for which the policy endorsement intended to apply 
South Carolina law. The endorsement modified the insurance policy for “a covered 
‘auto’ licensed or principally garaged in” South Carolina. As found by the Commission 
in the 10 July 2017 Opinion and Award, the vehicle decedent was driving at the time 
of the accident was registered, garaged, and driven in South Carolina. These factors, 
and the fact that the policy endorsement explicitly provided as a matter of contract 
that South Carolina UIM law would apply to payments made under the commercial 
UIM policy, demonstrate that South Carolina law should apply here. Accordingly, we 
hold that the endorsement requires South Carolina UIM law to apply here.4  
The applicable South Carolina statutes include the following:  
All contracts of insurance on property, lives, or interests in 
this State are considered to be made in the State . . . and 
are subject to the laws of this State. 
                                            
4 The dissent suggests that the intent of the North Carolina General Assembly in its 
Workers’ Compensation Act controls the distribution of the UIM proceeds in the South 
Carolina civil case. However, K&W purchased the UIM policy and specifically agreed therein 
that any such payments be covered by South Carolina law. Because we conclude that the 
UIM payments here are governed by South Carolina law under the terms of the policy 
contract, we conclude that the intent of the North Carolina General Assembly does not 
control. 
WALKER V. K&W CAFETERIAS 
 
Opinion of the Court 
 
 
-11- 
S.C. Code § 38-61-10 (2015). 
Additional uninsured motorist coverage; underinsured 
motorist coverage. Automobile insurance carriers shall 
offer, at the option of the insured, uninsured motorist 
coverage [and] underinsured motorist coverage, up to the 
limits of the insured liability coverage. . . . Benefits paid 
pursuant to this section are not subject to subrogation and 
assignment. 
S. C. Code § 38-77-160. 
By its plain language, S.C. Code § 38-77-160 prohibits subrogation of UIM 
payments like those paid to plaintiff in her wrongful death settlement. Accordingly, 
having concluded that South Carolina law applies to proceeds paid under Liberty 
Mutual’s UIM insurance policy, defendants’ subrogation lien under N.C.G.S. § 97-
10.2 cannot be satisfied by the UIM proceeds that plaintiff received as part of the 
wrongful death settlement. 
The dissent here proposes, without explanation or authority, that applying 
South Carolina law as required by the contract would allow for “double recovery.” 
There can be no double recovery in these circumstances, where Mrs. Walker was 
awarded workers’ compensation death benefits, a limited statutory remedy designed 
to pay some part of lost wages, medical and funeral expenses only. The UIM proceeds, 
limited by statute to one million dollars, are also provided by law as a limited remedy 
to give at least some recovery to the victims of an underinsured at-fault driver. 
Neither remedy (nor the two combined) purports to fully compensate Mrs. Walker or 
her six grown children for their losses due to Mr. Walker’s death, let alone to exceed 
WALKER V. K&W CAFETERIAS 
 
Opinion of the Court 
 
 
-12- 
any actual damages they have suffered. Moreover, if defendants here were permitted 
to recover more than $300,000 out of the UIM proceeds, the grown children (who were 
not eligible to receive the workers’ compensation benefits) would be deprived in 
significant part of even that limited remedy. We see no indication of a double recovery 
here. 
Conclusion 
Because we conclude that South Carolina law applies and prohibits the 
subrogation of the UIM proceeds paid on account of decedent’s death, we reverse and 
remand to the Commission for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.  
 
REVERSED AND REMANDED.  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Justice NEWBY dissenting.  
This case asks whether a plaintiff who seeks benefits under the North Carolina 
Workers’ Compensation Act (the Act) subjects herself to North Carolina’s 
accompanying remedial laws, including those concerning subrogation. Under the 
General Assembly’s carefully crafted statutory scheme, when a plaintiff chooses to 
file for benefits under the Act, the plaintiff also accepts the accompanying provisions 
regarding subrogation. Plaintiff had the option to proceed under either North 
Carolina or South Carolina’s workers’ compensation acts; plaintiff chose the more 
generous North Carolina Act. In her initial proceeding to obtain benefits under North 
Carolina’s Act, plaintiff stipulated that she was “subject to and bound by the 
provisions of the North Carolina Workers’ Compensation Act” and that “[t]he North 
Carolina Industrial Commission has jurisdiction over the parties and the subject 
matter involved in this case.” Having availed herself of the benefits under the Act, 
she is also bound by the terms of North Carolina’s remedial laws, including those 
allowing an employer to subrogate recoveries from third-parties which prevent double 
recoveries. Because plaintiff received a separate third-party recovery after 
defendants had provided benefits under the Act, defendants are entitled to proceed 
under the Act to seek subrogation of those proceeds. As such, the Court of Appeals 
properly affirmed the Industrial Commission’s holding that plaintiff’s wrongful death 
proceeds were subject to subrogation. 
WALKER V. K&W CAFETERIAS 
 
Newby, J., dissenting 
 
 
-2- 
To reach its outcome, the majority, however, mischaracterizes the issue here 
and relies solely on what it terms as contract law and South Carolina insurance law. 
The majority ignores that plaintiff chose to file for workers’ compensation in North 
Carolina and, as such, subjected herself to all aspects of the Act. The majority allows 
a plaintiff to choose the best parts of the Act, permitting plaintiff to obtain the full 
benefits of the Act without being subject to the accompanying subrogation provisions 
designed to prevent double recovery. By doing so, the majority essentially rewrites 
the North Carolina Workers’ Compensation Act by deleting the comprehensive 
nature of its provisions. The majority ultimately concludes that so long as there is a 
rider to the insurance policy applying a state’s law that prohibits subrogation, a 
plaintiff who has an accident outside of North Carolina but files for benefits in North 
Carolina may be eligible for double recovery.1 Because plaintiff chose to proceed 
under North Carolina Workers’ Compensation Act, she is bound by the subrogation 
provision of N.C.G.S. § 97-10.2(f) (2019). As the Court of Appeals held, the proceeds 
from the separate third-party recovery she obtained are subject to subrogation by the 
employer. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.  
                                            
1 Moreover, the full ramifications of the majority decision are unclear given that there 
are numerous companies located in North Carolina that do business in other states and have 
similar riders on their insurance policies conforming the policies to the laws of the other 
states. The majority’s holding will certainly have a significant impact on the insurance 
premiums that North Carolina companies pay.  
WALKER V. K&W CAFETERIAS 
 
Newby, J., dissenting 
 
 
-3- 
 
Decedent, a South Carolina resident, was killed in a vehicular accident in 
South Carolina, driving a truck owned by his employer, K&W Cafeterias, Inc., a 
North Carolina corporation. A third party caused the accident. K&W had insured the 
truck under a blanket vehicular insurance policy purchased and entered into within 
North Carolina. Because K&W conducted business in South Carolina, the policy 
contained a required endorsement providing the coverage to be in conformity with 
“South Carolina Insurance Laws.”2  
 
The deceased employee’s widow (plaintiff), a South Carolina resident, could 
have pursued workers’ compensation benefits under North Carolina or South 
Carolina law, because the deceased was employed by a North Carolina corporation. 
On 21 August 2012, plaintiff decided to file for death benefits under North Carolina’s 
Workers’ Compensation Act. As a part of plaintiff’s initial action seeking death 
benefits under the Act, the parties stipulated the following: 
1. 
The date of the admittedly compensable injury that 
is the subject of this claim is May 16, 2012. On that date, 
Employee-Plaintiff died as the result of a motor vehicle 
accident arising out of and in the course of his employment 
with Defendant-Employer. 
 
2. 
At all relevant times, the parties hereto were subject 
to and bound by the provisions of the North Carolina 
Workers’ Compensation Act.  
 
                                            
2 K&W, doing business in multiple states, had multiple endorsements in its UIM 
policy, including endorsements or financial responsibility identification cards for Florida, 
West Virginia, and Virginia.  
WALKER V. K&W CAFETERIAS 
 
Newby, J., dissenting 
 
 
-4- 
. . . .  
 
6. 
The North Carolina Industrial Commission has 
jurisdiction over the parties and the subject matter 
involved in this case.  
 
Based on the stipulations and other evidence, the Industrial Commission entered an 
order requiring defendants to pay plaintiff a total of $333,763 in benefits. 
On 26 August 2014, after accepting benefits under the North Carolina 
Workers’ Compensation Act, plaintiff, the appointed representative of decedent’s 
estate, filed a wrongful death and survival action in South Carolina against the at-
fault driver and his father. In March 2016, about a year and a half after plaintiff filed 
the action, the parties settled the lawsuit, from which plaintiff received $962,500 (the 
third-party settlement). The settlement consisted of (1) $50,000 in liability benefits 
from the at-fault driver’s insurer under a South Carolina insurance policy; (2) $12,500 
from the underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage of plaintiff and decedent’s own 
personal vehicle from their automobile insurance carrier; and (3) $900,000 in 
commercial UIM coverage from employer K&W’s automobile insurance carrier 
pursuant to their commercial UIM coverage for the vehicle decedent was driving 
when the accident occurred. Throughout the proceeding, plaintiff has conceded that 
the $50,000 in benefits provided from the at-fault driver’s insurer through a South 
Carolina insurance policy is subject to subrogation under both North Carolina law 
and South Carolina law.   
WALKER V. K&W CAFETERIAS 
 
Newby, J., dissenting 
 
 
-5- 
 
On 21 March 2016, defendants filed the appropriate form with the North 
Carolina Industrial Commission for a subrogation lien of $333,763 against the 
$962,500 that plaintiff had received from the third-party settlement. Defendants 
proceeded under the relevant portion of the Act that allows a defendant to be 
subrogated against any recovery. Plaintiff had initially stipulated that she was 
subject to the North Carolina Industrial Commission’s jurisdiction when she filed to 
receive benefits. However, after receiving full benefits, when defendants filed for 
subrogation, plaintiff for the first time disputed whether the Industrial Commission 
had jurisdiction over the UIM policy proceeds, and whether those proceeds were 
subject to subrogation under N.C.G.S. § 97-10.2.3 On 10 July 2017, the deputy 
commissioner ruled in defendants’ favor, finding that plaintiff must satisfy 
defendants’ $333,763 subrogation lien from the $962,500 third-party settlement.  
Plaintiff then appealed to the full Industrial Commission, which ultimately 
held that defendants were entitled to a subrogation lien of the entire third-party 
settlement proceeds, “not just [plaintiff’s] share of the Third-Party Recovery.” The 
Commission reasoned that “[p]laintiff voluntarily triggered the Commission’s 
jurisdiction by filing a claim for benefits under the Act and obtaining a final award of 
benefits via the Consent Opinion and Award, in which [p]laintiff explicitly 
                                            
3 The majority does not discuss the stipulations entered into initially by the parties 
and seems to confuse those stipulations with the stipulations made later when plaintiff was 
contesting defendants’ subrogation rights.   
WALKER V. K&W CAFETERIAS 
 
Newby, J., dissenting 
 
 
-6- 
acknowledged the applicability of the Act and the jurisdiction of the Commission.” 
Moreover, because plaintiff was seeking relief in North Carolina, where she willingly 
chose to file for benefits under the Act, and because N.C.G.S. § 97-10.2 is remedial in 
nature, the Commission concluded as a matter of law that the statute allowed 
defendants to seek subrogation of the relevant portion of the wrongful death proceeds. 
Essentially, plaintiff’s choice to subject herself to the benefits of the Act also 
warranted the application of the relevant procedural subrogation provision as 
provided by the North Carolina legislature.  
The Court of Appeals upheld the full Commission’s decision, holding that 
defendants were entitled to a lien against the third-party settlement proceeds. Walker 
v. K&W Cafeterias, 824 S.E.2d 894, 904 (N.C. Ct. App. 2019). The Court of Appeals 
reasoned, inter alia, that regardless of whether the UIM policy was a South Carolina 
policy, plaintiff had chosen North Carolina as the forum state in which to file for 
benefits, and thus North Carolina law would apply as the law of the forum state. Id. 
at 903–04. This rationale is consistent with Anglin v. Dunbar, which reaffirmed that 
remedial rights are determined by the law of the forum state. Id. (citing Anglin v. 
Dunbar Armored, Inc., 226 N.C. App. 203, 204–05, 209–10, 824 S.E.2d 894, 206–07, 
209 (2013)). As such, the Court of Appeals in this case concluded that defendants were 
entitled to seek subrogation of the wrongful death proceeds. Id. at 904.  
 
The question presented here is whether the General Assembly intended for 
someone who receives benefits under the Act to be bound by its remedial provisions. 
WALKER V. K&W CAFETERIAS 
 
Newby, J., dissenting 
 
 
-7- 
“The principal goal of statutory construction is to accomplish the legislative intent.” 
Lenox, Inc. v. Tolson, 353 N.C. 659, 664, 548 S.E.2d 513, 517 (2001) (citing Polaroid 
Corp. v. Offerman, 349 N.C. 290, 297, 507 S.E.2d 284, 290 (1998)). “The best indicia 
of that intent are the language of the statute[,] . . . the spirit of the act[,] and what 
the act seeks to accomplish.” Coastal Ready-Mix Concrete Co. v. Bd. of Comm’rs, 299 
N.C. 620, 629, 265 S.E.2d 379, 385 (1980) (citation omitted).  
The North Carolina legislature has chosen to provide generous compensation 
for injured workers and their heirs through the North Carolina Workers’ 
Compensation Act. “[T]he purpose of the North Carolina Workers’ Compensation Act 
is not only to provide a swift and certain remedy to an injured worker, but is also to 
ensure a limited and determinate liability for employers.” Estate of Bullock v. C.C. 
Mangum Co., 188 N.C. App. 518, 522, 655 S.E.2d 869, 872 (2008) (citing Barnhardt 
v. Cab Co., 266 N.C. 419, 427, 146 S.E.2d 479, 484 (1966)).  
Notably, the Act is comprehensive. Given the fact that the Act provides 
extensive and generous benefits to individuals, the legislature has balanced an 
employer’s duty to provide compensation with its right to subrogate those benefits 
where an individual or estate receives a second, separate recovery for the same injury. 
“The legislative intent behind the Workers’ Compensation Act is not to provide an 
employee with a windfall of a recovery from both the employer and the third-party 
tortfeasor.” Id. (citing Radzisz v. Harley Davidson of Metrolina, 346 N.C. 84, 89, 484 
S.E.2d 556, 569 (1997)). Thus, section 97-10.2 provides that an employer may obtain 
WALKER V. K&W CAFETERIAS 
 
Newby, J., dissenting 
 
 
-8- 
a subrogation lien, to the extent of the amount of benefits paid, against certain third-
party recovery amounts. The statute sets forth that: 
(f)(1) . . . if an award final in nature in favor of the 
employee has been entered by the Industrial Commission, 
then any amount obtained by any person by settlement with, 
judgment against, or otherwise from the third party by 
reason of such injury or death shall be disbursed by order 
of the Industrial Commission for the following purposes 
and in the following order of priority: 
 
. . . .  
 
c. Third to the reimbursement of the employer for all 
benefits by way of compensation or medical compensation 
expense paid or to be paid by the employer under award of 
the Industrial Commission. 
 
. . . .  
 
(h) In any . . . settlement with the third party, every 
party to the claim for compensation shall have a lien to the 
extent of his interest under (f) hereof upon any payment 
made by the third party by reason of such injury or 
death . . . and such lien may be enforced against any person 
receiving such funds.  
 
N.C.G.S. § 97-10.2 (emphases added). 
 
Whether this statute applies here also depends on if section 97-10.2 is 
substantive or remedial. Lex loci, or the “law of the jurisdiction in which the 
transaction occurred or circumstances arose on which the litigation is based,” governs 
substantive laws. Cook v. Lowe’s Home Centers, Inc., 209 N.C. App. 364, 366, 704 
S.E.2d 567, 569 (2011) (citing Charnock v. Taylor, 223 N.C. 360, 361, 26 S.E.2d 911, 
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913 (1943)). Alternatively, lex fori, or “the law of the forum in which the remedy is 
sought,” governs when the statute at issue is remedial. Id.  
 
“Where a lien is intended to protect the interests of those who supply the 
benefit of assurance that any work-related injury will be compensated, it is remedial 
in nature.” Id. at 367, 704 S.E.2d at 570. Because N.C.G.S. § 97-10.2(f), like N.C.G.S. 
§ 97-10.2(j), “is remedial in nature and remedial rights are determined by the law of 
the forum,” Anglin, 226 N.C. App. at 209, 742 S.E.2d at 209 (cleaned up) (citation 
omitted), North Carolina law applies.  
 
Here plaintiff chose to pursue workers’ compensation benefits in North 
Carolina instead of pursuing benefits in her home state, which was also the location 
of the accident. As a part of her initial filing with the Industrial Commission seeking 
benefits under the Act, plaintiff explicitly stipulated that she was “subject to and 
bound by the provisions of the North Carolina Workers’ Compensation Act” and that 
“the North Carolina Industrial Commission had jurisdiction over the parties and the 
subject matter involved in this case.” Thus, plaintiff subjected herself to North 
Carolina jurisdiction by initially filing for benefits in North Carolina. In order to 
receive employer provided benefits under the Act, plaintiff necessarily consented to 
the application of North Carolina’s remedial laws, as North Carolina is the forum 
state in this dispute.  
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Because N.C.G.S § 97-10.2(f) is remedial in nature, and because plaintiff 
consented to the application of North Carolina’s remedial laws when she initially filed 
to receive benefits under the Act, plaintiff is bound by N.C.G.S § 97-10.2. Plaintiff 
chose to file for benefits in North Carolina, under the Act which provides generous 
benefits, but those benefits are also balanced by the corresponding subrogation 
provisions. On the other hand, South Carolina does not allow subrogation of UIM 
proceeds, but that balances the more limited benefits that it provides through its own 
workers’ compensation act. Had plaintiff wanted the benefit of South Carolina’s policy 
which prevents subrogation, she should have, and could have, filed for workers’ 
compensation benefits in South Carolina. Simply put, the General Assembly did not 
intend for a plaintiff to choose to subject herself to North Carolina’s jurisdiction to 
receive benefits, but reject North Carolina’s jurisdiction when it comes to the 
remedial aspects of North Carolina’s Workers’ Compensation scheme, including an 
employer’s ability to subrogate any proceeds that a plaintiff or estate receives from a 
third-party.  
 
The majority concludes that plaintiff did not stipulate to the application of 
North Carolina law to the UIM proceeds since she did not stipulate to this fact in the 
full Industrial Commission proceeding. In doing so, the majority ignores that plaintiff 
chose the forum state by filing for benefits under the Act, and by stipulating to the 
application of North Carolina’s jurisdiction at that point, which results in the 
application of North Carolina remedial laws. The majority instead treats this case in 
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a vacuum as one solely involving an insurance contract interpreting a choice-of-law 
clause. The majority also fails to acknowledge the comprehensive nature of the North 
Carolina Workers’ Compensation Act, allowing a plaintiff to choose only the best 
portions of the Act. 
  
Moreover, though the application is not entirely clear, it seems the majority’s 
analysis will result on one hand in a North Carolina resident who has an accident in 
South Carolina achieving a double recovery by receiving workers’ compensation 
benefits without subrogation. On the other hand, a North Carolina resident who has 
an accident in North Carolina would not achieve a double recovery as he would be 
subject to the subrogation statutes, even when both parties choose to file for benefits 
in North Carolina. Surely the North Carolina legislature did not intend to provide 
this windfall recovery to some individuals while limiting the recovery for others. The 
intent of the North Carolina legislature is relevant where a plaintiff subjects herself 
to benefits under the Act by filing in North Carolina, despite the majority’s contention 
to the contrary.4  
 
Plaintiff’s policy and the rider here cannot be viewed in a vacuum as presenting 
only a question of contract law as the majority contends. By filing for benefits under 
the Act, plaintiff is bound by North Carolina’s clearly established statutory provisions 
                                            
4 The majority contends that since the recovering parties under workers’ 
compensation and the UIM policy may be different, some may be deprived of recovery through 
subrogation under North Carolina law. This is a policy determination appropriately made by 
the legislature.  
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allowing subrogation of any third-party proceeds. N.C.G.S. § 97-10.2(f)(1), (h). The 
decision of the Court of Appeals upholding the decision of the Industrial Commission 
should be affirmed. I respectfully dissent.