Court Opinion

ID: 2704932
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-08-04 22:10:58.335669+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:55:05.713553
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
                IN AND FOR NEW CASTLE COUNTY

LAURIE L. MITCHELL and              )
RAY MITCHELL,                       )
                                    )
                  Plaintiffs,       )
                                    )
v.                                  )     C.A. No. N13C-02-224 PRW
                                    )
EMS, INC.,                          )
a foreign corporation,              )
                                    )
                  Defendant,        )
                                    )

                            Submitted: May 12, 2014
                             Decided: July 16, 2014

                  MEMORANDUM OPINION & ORDER

          Upon Employers Insurance of Wassau’s Motion to Intervene,
                               GRANTED.

Joseph W. Weik, Esquire, Weik, Nitsche, Dougherty & Galbraith, Wilmington,
Delaware, Attorney for Plaintiffs.

Sandra F. Clark, Esquire, Reger Rizzo & Darnall LLP, Wilmington, Delaware,
Attorney for Employers Insurance of Wassau.

WALLACE, J.
    I.          INTRODUCTION

          Plaintiff Laurie L. Mitchell (“Ms. Mitchell”) has filed a personal injury

claim against EMS, Inc. (“EMS”), her employer’s janitorial service supplier, for an

incident that occurred at her workplace.                Ms. Mitchell previously obtained

workers’ compensation payments from her employer’s insurance company,

Employers Insurance of Wausau (“Employers Insurance”) for that same incident.1

Employers Insurance has filed a motion to intervene in Ms. Mitchell’s personal

injury case in an effort to recoup what it has paid out in workers’ compensation

benefits. 2       Ms. Mitchell opposes that motion.3            For the following reasons,

Employers Insurance’s Motion to Intervene is GRANTED.

    II.         FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

          Ms. Mitchell was allegedly injured after slipping on a wet floor while

employed by the Home for Aged Women (a/k/a “Gilpin Hall”). Gilpin Hall

employed Defendant EMS to supply janitorial services. EMS’s liability insurance

carrier is Ohio Casualty, which is a member of Liberty Mutual Group (“Liberty

Mutual”).4 Gilpin Hall was covered by a workers’ compensation insurance policy

1
          See Employers Insurance’s Mot. to Intervene, ¶ 3.
2
          Id. at ¶ 5.
3
          See Pltfs’ Response to Employers Insurance’s Mot. to Intervene, Ex. G.
4
          Id.

                                                -2-
issued by Employers Insurance, which paid and continues to pay Ms. Mitchell’s

claim. 5 Employers Insurance and Liberty Mutual are also affiliated. 6

       Ms. Mitchell filed a personal injury action against EMS, upon which

Employers Insurance wishes to exercise subrogation right. Delaware law, 19 Del.
C. § 2363, 7 permits an employer or insurance company that has paid benefits

resulting from a worker’s compensation claim to become subrogated to that

worker’s claim against the party who caused the injury, and to be reimbursed for

the amount that it has paid to the worker. But given the relationship of the insurers

here as co-affiliates/co-members of Liberty Mutual, Ms. Mitchell objects to

Employers Insurance’s request to intervene in her personal injury action so as to

exercise this statutory right.

    III.   EMPLOYERS INSURANCE MAY INTERVENE TO SECURE ITS
           STATORY RIGHT

       In Delaware, an employee who is injured by a third party, during the course

of her employment, is permitted to recover workers’ compensation benefits from

5
       See Employers Insurance’s Mot. to Intervene, ¶ 3 (Pursuant to the policy, Employers
Insurance has paid more than $300,000, and continues to pay Ms. Mitchell’s benefits to this
day).
6
       Ms. Mitchell also previously raised the issue of whether Employers Insurance should
even be allowed to subrogate, given that Liberty Mutual was the company listed on her workers’
compensation checks. That issue was addressed at oral argument and is no longer before the
Court.
7
       DEL. CODE ANN. tit. 19, § 2363 (2014).

                                                -3-
her employer. 8 An employer’s insurance carrier who has paid such workers’

compensation benefits subrogates to a subsequent cause of action that the injured

employee brings against any tort-liable party, and does so to the amount of the

workers’ compensation paid to the employee. 9                 Under 19 Del. C. § 2363, a

workers’ compensation insurance carrier is permitted to join in the employee’s

personal injury action against the liable party in order to assert its lien. 10

       Here, Liberty Mutual is both Gilpin Hall’s workers’ compensation insurance

carrier and has paid, through Employers Insurance, those benefits to Ms. Mitchell,

and it is EMS’s personal injury liability insurance provider and may have to pay a

claim if EMS is found liable. Our Supreme Court made clear, in Baio v.

Commercial Union Ins. Co., that an insurance company does not forfeit its

statutory right of subrogation merely because it may stand on both sides of a

dispute.11 Rather, the subrogation right of repayment is governed by equitable

principles, and can be forfeited through inequitable action. 12

8
       Duphily v. Delaware Elec. Coop., Inc., 662 A.2d 821, 834 (Del. 1995).
9
       Id.
10
       See DEL. CODE ANN. tit 19, § 2363(e) (2004) (any recovery by an employee “shall first
reimburse the employer or its work[ers’] compensation carrier for any amount paid or payable
under the Workmen’s Compensation Act . . . .”). See also Cannon v. Container Corp. of
America, 282 A.2d 614, 617 (Del. 1971) (“The law is clear that the employer or his carrier are
real parties in interest in the joint third party litigation and, as such, are entitled to separate
representation.”), overruled on other grounds by Keeler v. Harford Mut. Ins. Co., 672 A.2d
1012, 1013 (Del. 1996).
11
       410 A.2d 502, 506-08 (Del. 1979).

                                               -4-
        Employers Insurance, through its parent company Liberty Mutual, has paid

all of Ms. Mitchell’s workers’ compensation benefits.                 Employers Insurance

processed her claim and arranged for its payment, and therefore has grounds for its

claim to exercise its subrogation right to Ms. Mitchell’s personal injury action.

Liberty Mutual does have an interest on both sides of this suit. It supplied and still

supplies both workers’ compensation coverage to Ms. Mitchell’s employer (and, in

turn, the payments to Ms. Mitchell just mentioned), and personal injury liability

insurance to that employer’s supplier, the alleged tortfeasor and named defendant

in this suit. That status alone is not enough to deny the statutory right to intervene;

this “conflict” must also be accompanied by evidence of inequitable conduct in

order to prevent Liberty Mutual from subrogating through Employers Insurance

here.

        No such inequitable conduct is present, nor even alleged. Unrealized fears

of future harm are not a substitute for the demonstration of inequity required to

supersede Employers Insurance’s statutory right of subrogation. 13 The measures

that Employers Insurance has assured the Court have been put in place here to

12
       Id. (failing to aid or actively hindering an employee’s efforts to recover on a claim can
reach such a level of inequity so as to waive subrogation rights).
13
        Counts v. General Motors Corp., 1988 WL 32066, at *2 (Del. Super. Ct. Mar. 25, 1988).

                                              -5-
segregate the representation of Liberty Mutual’s several interests appear adequate

to prevent any harm to Ms. Mitchell’s claims should it intervene. 14

      Employers Insurance’s motion to intervene is GRANTED.

      IT IS SO ORDERED.

                                         /s/ Paul R. Wallace
                                         Paul R. Wallace, Judge

Original to Prothonotary
cc: Counsel via File & Serve

14
      See Baio, 410 A.2d at 508 (describing the opponent-protective measures an insurance
company may have to engage in such circumstances).

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