SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-436-00T2
MARY SCHEER,
Plaintiff/Respondent,
v.
AMY DiBENEDETTO,
Defendant/Respondent,
and
TRAVELERS INDEMNITY COMPANY,
Defendant/Appellant,
and
HUGH HEAGNEY,
Defendant.
________________________________________
Argued November 7, 2001 - Decided January 18,
2002
Before Judges Eichen, Collester and Parker.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Law Division, Union County, L-6051-97.
Edward McElroy argued the cause for appellant
(William E. Staehle, attorney; Jeffrey A.
Savage, on the brief).
Victor J. Horowitz argued the cause for
respondent Mary Scheer.
Traci A. Zalinski argued the cause for
respondent Amy DiBenedetto (Bashwiner and
Woods, attorney; Ms. Zalinski, on the brief).
No other parties participated in this appeal.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
EICHEN, J.A.D.
The question posed by this appeal is whether an underinsured
motorist (UIM) carrier which has intervened in a personal injury
automobile action in the Superior Court involving multiple
tortfeasors should have been permitted to continue in the action to
protect its liability exposure to plaintiff after plaintiff settled
with one of the tortfeasors. We conclude that the UIM carrier
should have been permitted to remain as a party to protect its
liability exposure to the plaintiff. Because the judge prevented
the UIM carrier from participating, we reverse.
Plaintiff Mary Scheer commenced a personal injury automobile
negligence action alleging that she was injured in a three car
chain reaction collision on November 7, 1995. She contends she was
waiting to make a left turn when her vehicle was struck in the rear
by defendant Amy DiBenedetto's vehicle. Defendant DiBenedetto
claims she was stopped behind plaintiff's vehicle when defendant
Hugh P. Heagney's vehicle suddenly struck her vehicle forcing it
into the rear of plaintiff's vehicle.See footnote 11
Defendant Heagney's automobile was covered by a liability
policy issued by Allstate Insurance Company in the mandatory
minimum amount of $15,000. Plaintiff had liability and
underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage of $1 million under a policy
issued by the Travelers Insurance Company (Travelers). Defendant
DiBenedetto also had liability coverage of $1 million under an
automobile insurance policy issued by Providence Washington
Insurance Company.
On December 16, 1999, the matter was submitted to court-
sponsored non-binding arbitration. Plaintiff rejected the award
and filed a demand for a trial de novo.
On January 13, 2000, plaintiff informed Travelers of her
intention to pursue a UIM claim under the arbitration clause of her
automobile liability insurance policy. A short time later,
defendant Heagney offered to settle plaintiff's claims against him
for the $15,000 coverage available under his insurance policy.
Meanwhile, the court granted Travelers motion for leave to
intervene in the personal injury action instituted by plaintiff.
On June 2, 2000, Travelers advised plaintiff it did not oppose
plaintiff's settlement with defendant Heagney for the $15,000
maximum coverage available under his policy, and plaintiff accepted
the settlement offer from Heagney, releasing him from further
liability for the accident. Thereafter, a date was scheduled for
trial on the issue of liability only.See footnote 22
On the trial date, plaintiff and defendant DiBenedetto moved
informally to bar Travelers' continued participation in the
liability trial. Plaintiff argued that Travelers had relinquished
its right to proceed in defendant Heagney's shoes to prove
defendant DiBenedetto's fault because it had not opposed
plaintiff's settlement with defendant Heagney as it could have
under Longworth v. Van Houten,
223 N.J. Super. 174 (App. Div.
1988). Plaintiff further argued that if Travelers were permitted
to proceed in defendant Heagney's place, it would amount to an
unfair "double-team[ing]" of two defense lawyers against her when
she had anticipated that, by settling with defendant Heagney, she
would only have one adversary at trial. Therefore, plaintiff
maintained that had she known that Travelers would be asserting
defendant Heagney's position against defendant DiBenedetto, she
would not have settled her claims against Heagney. Defendant
DiBenedetto also objected to Travelers participation in the trial
claiming that it was plaintiff and Travelers that were "doubling
teaming" against her and that plaintiff's interests were
sufficiently protected by her attorney without Travelers'
participation in the trial.
Citing Zirger v. General Accident,
144 N.J. 327, 341 (1996),
which recognized intervention as the appropriate vehicle for a UIM
carrier to protect its interests at a damages trial, Travelers
countered that the issues of liability and damages were so
"interrelated, it would be totally inequitable" not to allow it to
participate in the liability portion of the case. Travelers
explained that it "was not going to ... step into the shoes of the
plaintiff and ... go after [the] third defendant [Heagney] for
excess money, we're not doing that." According to Travelers, its
sole purpose in intervening was to try to reduce its liability
exposure to plaintiff by establishing that defendant DiBenedetto
was also at fault in the accident. Travelers further asserted that
if it were permitted to continue in the case, plaintiff would not
be prejudiced because she would still recover 100% of her damages.See footnote 33
Travelers explained that if the jury determined that defendant
DiBenedetto had contributed to the accident, the percentage of
fault attributed to DiBenedetto would be used to calculate the
amount of damages her liability insurer would pay, thus reducing
the underinsured portion of the damages for which Travelers would
be responsible. That remaining percentage, of course, would be
paid by Travelers in accordance with plaintiff's UIM coverage.
In sum, Travelers argued that it did not intervene in the case
to establish the defendant Heagney's liability in order to pursue
his personal assets, because those were insulated from any further
proceedings under the general release plaintiff had given Heagney.
Rather, Travelers simply sought to protect its own liability
exposure by seeking to demonstrate the co-defendant's negligent
contribution to the accident.
Travelers also urged the court to devise a method by which it
could participate in the trial which would not disclose its
identity as an insurance carrier, but which would allow it to
protect its liability exposure, suggesting the model offered by
this court in Wenz v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
316 N.J. Super. 570, 580
(App. Div. 1998). In Wenz, we suggested that the carrier might be
addressed as either "defendant," without further description, or by
substituting the defendant's name. Ibid. In that way, Travelers
maintained, the jury would not learn that it was an insurance
company, a circumstance interdicted by our holding in Wenz. Ibid.
The trial judge rejected Travelers' arguments and granted
plaintiff's application to preclude Travelers from participating in
the trial. The judge noted that there was no precedent for
allowing a UIM carrier to participate in a liability trial after it
had allowed a plaintiff to settle with one of the tortfeasors in a
personal injury case. He determined that allowing Travelers to
step into the settled tortfeasor's shoes would be against
Travelers' own insured's interests, and would mislead the jury.
He, therefore, concluded that Travelers "gave up [its] right to
represent the third car ... when [it] allowed the settlement to go
through."
At trial, plaintiff first called defendant DiBenedetto as a
witness who testified as to the happening of the accident. She
stated that she was hit in the rear by defendant Heagney's vehicle
and was catapulted into plaintiff's vehicle. Plaintiff's version
was similar. Hence, the jury did not learn of the version of
plaintiff's testimony at depositions which Travelers maintains was
different from her trial testimony. At the end of plaintiff's
case, defendant moved for "a directed verdict based upon the weight
of the evidence [that] clearly shows that Mr. Heagney's vehicle was
at fault and [defendant DiBenedetto] was at a complete stop when
the accident occurred." When asked whether he opposed the motion,
plaintiff's counsel stated only that plaintiff "can only defer to
the evidence which Your Honor heard and let Your Honor make a
decision." Thereafter the judge granted the motion.
On appeal, Travelers makes the same arguments it made to the
motion judge. We agree with Travelers, reverse the judgment and
remand for a new trial. Travelers was entitled to continue in the
action to attempt to establish defendant DiBenedetto's liability
for the happening of the accident.
In Zirger, supra, 144 N.J. at 341, the Supreme Court stated
that "[s]ubject to the discretionary authority of trial courts to
resolve specific motions for intervention, ... [UIM] carriers
ordinarily may intervene in their insured's actions against the
third-party tortfeasor." In that case, the Court held the failure
to do so would bar the UIM carrier from relitigating the issue in
a different forum. Id. at 342. Indeed, in this case, a different
judge had already granted Travelers' motion to intervene in
plaintiff's personal injury action against defendants.
Defendant DiBenedetto had $1 million in liability coverage and
plaintiff had $1 million in UIM coverage. Hence, DiBenedetto was
not underinsured with respect to plaintiff because DiBenedetto's
liability coverage was not less than plaintiff's UIM coverage. See
N.J.S.A. 17:28-1.1(e). Only Heagney was underinsured with respect
to plaintiff because his coverage did not exceed the mandatory
minimum $15,000 in liability coverage. If it could be demonstrated
that defendant DiBenedetto also had been negligent in operating her
vehicle, her liability insurance would be "available" to plaintiff,
see Hreshko v. Harleysville Ins. Co.,
337 N.J. Super. 104, 111
(App. Div. 2001), and Travelers' UIM liability would be reduced.
It was for that reason Travelers intervened in the action.
The fact that plaintiff settled with defendant Heagney without
Travelers opposing the settlement or seeking to become subrogated
to plaintiff's rights against defendant Heagney is immaterial to
the question whether Travelers should have been allowed to remain
in the action. Travelers sought to pursue and establish defendant
DiBenedetto's, not defendant Heagney's, liability. Indeed,
Heagney's personal assets are insulated by the release given to him
by plaintiff. That release, however, did not guarantee that
plaintiff would have an unobstructed field in which to establish
defendant Heagney as the sole responsible cause of the accident.
When Travelers did not oppose plaintiff's settlement with defendant
Heagney, that simply meant Travelers would not seek to be
subrogated to plaintiff's rights against Heagney; it did not mean
that Travelers was giving up its right to try to reduce its
liability exposure to plaintiff for UIM damages with respect to
defendant DiBenedetto's contributory negligence in the accident.
Indeed, plaintiff had little, if any, incentive to act
vigorously to establish fault on the part of defendant DiBenedetto
because plaintiff stood to recover 100% of the value of her claim
for damages from Travelers under her $1 million UIM coverage.
Further, by holding in DiBenedetto, plaintiff would be required to
prove her damages through expert testimony, a more costly procedure
in the Law Division than it is in UIM arbitration. That may be why
plaintiff never mentioned at trial the fact that there actually had
been two impacts during the accident. Nonetheless, we assume at
some point in time plaintiff believed DiBenedetto had been at fault
in the accident; otherwise, she would not have named DiBenedetto as
a defendant. See Hreshko, supra, 337 N.J. Super. at 111 (noting
that "a claim must be filed in good faith and have an evidentiary
and legal basis"). In these circumstances, at least, Travelers was
entitled to try to demonstrate defendant DiBenedetto's contributory
fault, if any, to the accident.
Moreover, we agree with Travelers that plaintiff will not
suffer any prejudice if Travelers is successful in reducing its
liability exposure to plaintiff. If Travelers establishes that
DiBenedetto was also at fault for the accident, then plaintiff will
recover damages represented by that percentage of DiBenedetto's
liability in the accident from DiBenedetto's liability carrier,
with the remainder of her claim for damages to be paid by Travelers
under plaintiff's UIM endorsement. On the other hand, there is
potential for harm to Travelers if it is barred from trying to
establish DiBenedetto's fault in the accident because it would not
be able to relitigate the issue of liability in any future UIM
arbitration proceeding. We assume it is for that reason that the
other judge permitted Travelers to intervene in the first instance.
See Zirger, supra, 144 N.J. at 342 (noting that a UIM carrier may
be barred from enforcing its arbitration clause if it does not
exercise its right to intervene when given adequate notice).
Accordingly, we disagree that Travelers' participation is
improperly adverse to its insured's interests. Nor do we perceive
any unfairness in "two lawyers ... [proceeding] against the middle
car [DiBenedetto]" in this case. Finally, we do not agree with the
motion judge's concern that permitting Travelers to stand in
defendant Heagney's shoes would improperly mislead the jury.
Indeed, we suggested a similar resolution in Wenz, supra, 316 N.J.
Super. at 580. We continue to adhere to that suggestion as an
appropriate mechanism for resolving Travelers' status at trial,
especially where there appears to be disparate views as to the
manner in which the accident occurred, and little incentive for
plaintiff to pursue liability against defendant DiBenedetto. As
the events suggest, neither the judge nor the jury heard the
evidence concerning the number of impacts plaintiff's vehicle
sustained during the accident. Without Travelers' participation in
the trial, we cannot be certain that the liability question was
properly resolved through a truly adversarial proceeding.
The judgment is reversed and the matter is remanded for a new
trial. The trial judge shall try the case on liability first. In
the event defendant DiBenedetto is exonerated of any liability,
plaintiff shall proceed to have the value of her damage claim
against Travelers determined in a UIM arbitration proceeding. If,
on the other hand, defendant DiBenedetto is found liable, to any
extent, the case shall proceed forthwith to a trial on damages.
Any UIM arbitration that has been scheduled shall be stayed pending
further proceedings not inconsistent with our decision.
The judgment is reversed.
Footnote: 1 1 According to the UIM carrier, the discovery conducted in the matter presented a disparate version of the accident than that presented by either plaintiff or DiBenedetto at trial. At trial, plaintiff testified as follows: "Q: So all you know is you heard some screeching and you got hit? A: Correct." However, at plaintiff's deposition, she stated that there were two impacts: the first was with the DiBenedetto vehicle which was more severe than the second impact which was with the Heagney vehicle. Footnote: 2 2 The record is silent on the issue, but we assume the matter was bifurcated because plaintiff sought to avoid the expense of producing a damage expert or experts, anticipating a dismissal in favor of DiBenedetto. Footnote: 3 3 It is undisputed that plaintiff was not at fault in the happening of the accident.