Arhart v. Micro Switch Mfg. Co., a Div. of Honeywell, Inc.

Citation798 F.2d 291
Decision Date04 September 1986
Docket NumberNo. 86-1002,86-1002
PartiesLinda and Randy ARHART, Appellants, v. MICRO SWITCH MANUFACTURING COMPANY, A DIVISION OF HONEYWELL, INC., Appellee.
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Eighth Circuit

John B. Greer, III, Texarkana, Tex., for appellants.

E.L. Merriman, Longview, Tex., for appellee.

Before HEANEY and WOLLMAN, Circuit Judges, and BATTEY, * District Judge.

BATTEY, District Judge.

I. NATURE OF CASE

The plaintiffs Linda and Randy Arhart appeal from entry of judgment on a take-nothing jury verdict in a products liability action. Jurisdiction is based on diversity, 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1332.

The plaintiffs appeal from the district court's 1 method of treatment of the settling tortfeasors and the instructions to the jury given during the course of and at the conclusion of the trial. During the trial the court advised the jury of the fact that two joint tortfeasors had settled the plaintiffs' claim. The amount and terms of the settlement were not revealed to the jury. Plaintiffs claim error in that the trial court (1) should have advised the jury of the terms of the settlement; and (2) should have submitted the issue of the negligence and liability of all defendants on special interrogatories and required an apportionment of fault.

For the reasons set forth herein we affirm.

II. FACTS

The plaintiff Linda Arhart suffered a traumatic amputation of her right arm in an industrial accident. She and her husband, Randy Arhart, brought a products liability action against three defendants: Custom Stainless Equipment Company, Inc., Weiler East, Inc., and Micro Switch Manufacturing Company, a division of Honeywell, Inc. The defendants by way of cross claims sought indemnity and contribution under the Arkansas Uniform Contribution Among Tortfeasors Act.

During the trial the plaintiffs entered into a settlement agreement with the defendants Custom Stainless Equipment Company, Inc., and Weiler East, Inc., the terms of which provided inter alia that the plaintiffs receive the sum of $465,000. While the settlement discharged the plaintiffs' claim against the settling defendants, the cross claim for contribution and indemnity filed by the nonsettling defendant Micro Switch remained unaffected.

After advising the court of the settlement, Micro Switch requested the court to advise the jury that a settlement had been reached. The plaintiffs requested that the court advise the jury the exact amount of the settlement. The court instructed the jury of the fact of settlement, but denied the plaintiffs' request to present the settlement terms to the jury. The court advised the jury that the issues had been resolved between the plaintiffs and defendants Custom Stainless Equipment Company and Weiler-East, Inc., and accordingly the jury was not to be concerned any longer with the settling defendants. The jury was then advised that the case would proceed to trial with the plaintiffs bringing the action against Micro Switch Manufacturing Company. Counsel for the settling defendants then left the courtroom. 2

After all the evidence had been received, the court gave general instruction 24-A as to negligence and comparative negligence. 3 It was the court's intention to require the jury to deliberate further on the issue of contribution as between Micro Switch and the settling defendants if the jury returned a verdict against Micro Switch.

The plaintiffs objected 4 to the court's method of submitting the case and offered a set of interrogatories which would allow the jury to determine issues of negligence and contribution among all settling and nonsettling defendants. 5

Utilizing this procedure the return of a take-nothing verdict obviated the necessity of the bifurcated procedure contemplated by the court.

III. ANALYSIS

This case involves the application of the Uniform Contribution Among Tortfeasors Act adopted by Ark.Stat. Secs. 34-1001--34-1009 as between settling and nonsettling tortfeasors. At issue is whether a court after advising the jury of the fact of settlement during the course of trial by one or more joint tortfeasors should also advise the jury of the amount of such settlement.

Under this act the right of contribution exists among joint tortfeasors. Ark.Stat. Sec. 34-1002. 6 Further, it is contemplated that each tortfeasor will be credited with amounts paid by other joint tortfeasors, Ark.Stat. Sec. 34-1004, but the statute is silent about how the matter is to be handled. Walton v. Tull, 234 Ark. 882, 356 S.W.2d 20, 25 (1962).

The case authority in Arkansas has generally approved different approaches to the treatment of settling and nonsettling tortfeasors.

One approach is to submit both the fact and the amount of the settlement to the jury. Giem v. Williams, 215 Ark. 705, 222 S.W.2d 800 (1949). In Giem the court held that where the jury had been informed of the amount of a compromise payment made by another tortfeasor, its amount should not have been subtracted from the verdict as the jury had already taken it into consideration. The jury was advised of the fact a tortfeasor had paid the plaintiff $4,000 in settlement. The court held that a returned verdict of $8,950 would have reflected this payment of $4,000 and to further reduce the verdict would be to apply the allowance twice. The settling tortfeasor had not been made a third party defendant. The remaining defendant elected to proceed under Sec. 34-1004 Ark.Stat. 7

In Walton, supra, the court held that such a deduction would be proper where the jury had not been told about the settlement made by the other tortfeasors. The court cited the editors of 9 U.L.A. 242 with approval to the effect that the method of letting the jury apply the prior payments in reduction of its verdict is less satisfactory than the method of letting the court credit the payment upon the final judgment. The Walton court in discussing Giem stated, "We did not hold that the procedure to advise the jury of the amount of settlement to be proper in all cases." Walton at 25.

Woodard v. Holliday, 235 Ark. 744, 361 S.W.2d 744 (1962) was decided eight months after Walton. In Woodard the trial court ordered that a sum paid by a settling tortfeasor should be credited upon the amount of the verdict of the jury. The jury had not been told of the settlement which took place prior to trial.

Again, applying Ark.Stat. Sec. 34-1004, the Woodard court found no error in the procedure utilized by the trial court. The Court reasoned that since the jury had no knowledge of the settlement it therefore assessed all damages and under the statute the court must reduce the verdict by the extent of the settlement.

Another method of treating settling tortfeasors occurred in Bailey v. Stewart, 236 Ark. 80, 364 S.W.2d 662 (1963) where the third party defendants settled prior to trial by payment of $9,000 to the plaintiffs. The release was introduced at the trial, thus informing the jury of both the fact and amount of settlement. The trial judge instructed the jury that the release did not relieve the defendant from liability and submitted special interrogatories to the jury. 8 The trial judge further instructed that the court would be able to enter a proper judgment if the jurors answered the interrogatories. The settlement amount was $9,000 and the verdict returned was $10,000. The defendant's motion to credit the settlement amount on the verdict under the rationale of Giem and Walton was denied. The Arkansas Supreme Court held that the submission of the case on interrogatories made Giem and Walton inapplicable. It accordingly found no error.

Twelve years later the issue again surfaced in the Supreme Court of Arkansas in Arkansas Kraft Corporation v. Johnson, 257 Ark. 629, 519 S.W.2d 74 (1975).

In Arkansas Craft the plaintiff, an employee of Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Ry. Co., was killed when a load of logs fell from a train car. The logs had been loaded by the employees of the defendant Arkansas Kraft Corporation. A judgment for $81,936.32 was recovered against Arkansas Kraft.

Prior to this judgment the plaintiff commenced a second cause of action against the railroad under the Federal Employers' Liability Act. The FELA case was settled for $79,500. Over the defendant's objection, the trial court advised the jury of both the fact and amount of the FELA settlement. This procedure was claimed as error under Walton.

The court reviewed the decisions of Giem, Walton, Bailey and Woodard and found no inconsistencies. The court noted that it had never reversed a judgment on either the basis of advising a jury or not advising a jury about settlement with another tortfeasor.

We do not read Arkansas Kraft as holding, as suggested by plaintiffs Arhart, that plaintiffs are entitled over defendant's objections to prove up the settlement terms entered into with a settled tortfeasor. A plaintiff in choosing to settle with one or more joint tortfeasors should not be permitted to use the settlement as a club to hold over the head of the nonsettling tortfeasor. To permit Arhart to place the settlement terms before the jury over the objection of Micro Switch would have been unfair to the nonsettling defendant Micro Switch who had been given no choice in the plaintiffs' decision to settle.

When the plaintiffs decided to settle during the course of the trial it became obvious to the jury when the settling defendants left the courtroom that a settlement had been reached. Thus there remained no other alternative than to advise the jury of the obvious--that there had been a settlement. While the trial court may have explained the parties' absence in some other way, we find no error in the manner in which it was done.

It is the plaintiff's right as between joint tortfeasors to receive the total damages to which the plaintiff is entitled. Contribution and apportionment is of concern to the tortfeasors who may become obligated for a...

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    ...No. 4, or to consider the issue of damages or the settlement language set out in Interrogatory No. 5, Cf. Arhart v. Micro Switch Mfg. Co., 798 F.2d 291 (8th Cir.1986). As a result, those interrogatories were not submitted to the jury. Although Bragg argues the trial court's reading of Inter......

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