Blair v. Federal Insurance Company ( 2018 )


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    Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,
    303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email
    corrections@akcourts.us.
    THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
    DANIEL BLAIR,             )
    )                             Supreme Court No. S-16388
    Appellant,  )
    )                             Superior Court No. 3AN-12-11530 CI
    v.               )
    )                             OPINION
    FEDERAL INSURANCE COMPANY )
    and CHARLES FOGLE,        )
    No. 7287 – September 7, 2018
    )
    Appellees.  )
    )
    Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third
    Judicial District, Anchorage, William F. Morse, Judge.
    Appearances: Gerald W. Markham, Friday Harbor,
    Washington, for Appellant. Cheryl L. Graves, Farley &
    Graves, P.C., Anchorage, for Appellees.
    Before: Stowers, Chief Justice, Winfree, Maassen, Bolger,
    and Carney, Justices.
    MAASSEN, Justice.
    I.    INTRODUCTION
    A seaman sued his former employer and the former employer’s liability
    insurer, claiming that the insurer had failed to pay him amounts due under the terms of
    a settlement agreement. The seaman asserted that the “policy limits” settlement included
    both the policy’s stated limits and attorney’s fees calculated under Alaska Civil Rule 82.
    The insurer, relying on the policy’s notice that fees were included in the policy limits,
    argued that the settlement had been fully satisfied. The parties also disagreed about
    whether costs from a review of the seaman’s medical bills were properly counted against
    the policy limits. After contentious discovery, the superior court granted summary
    judgment for the insurer, finding that the policy’s Rule 82 notice was valid and that the
    settlement had been satisfied. The court awarded attorney’s fees to the insurer as the
    prevailing party.
    The seaman appeals the grant of summary judgment, the denial of some
    discovery, and the award of attorney’s fees. We affirm the superior court’s summary
    judgment and discovery rulings except with regard to whether the costs of the medical
    review were properly deducted from the policy limits; we conclude that issues of fact
    precluded summary judgment on this issue. We reverse summary judgment only as to
    that issue, vacate the attorney’s fees award, and remand for further proceedings.
    II.    FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
    A.     Facts
    Daniel Blair was injured in August 2008 while working onboard the F/V
    INVINCIBLE, a vessel owned and operated by Charles Fogle. Fogle held a policy of
    marine insurance issued by Federal Insurance Company. The policy’s liability limit was
    “$1,000,000 Each Vessel . . . [for] Any One Accident or Occurrence.” It also contained
    a notice, headed, “THIS POLICY LIMITS COVERAGE FOR ATTORNEY FEES
    UNDER ALASKA RULE OF CIVIL PROCEDURE 82,” which summarized Alaska
    Civil Rule 821 and explained that “[i]f the limit of liability of the applicable coverage is
    $1,000,000 or more, we will not pay or indemnify you for any combination of judgment
    1
    Alaska Rule of Civil Procedure 82(a) provides that, with some limited
    exceptions, “the prevailing party in a civil case shall be awarded attorney’s fees
    calculated under this rule.”
    -2-                                       7287
    or claim settlement and attorney fees under Alaska Rule of Civil Procedure [sic] that
    exceeds the limit of liability of the applicable coverage.”
    Blair and Federal, through their lawyers, negotiated over the course of
    several months and then reached a settlement agreement. Neither party discussed Rule
    82 fees or the policy’s Rule 82 notice during these negotiations. From the outset,
    however, the parties disagreed about the sum of $2,268.78 paid to Mahl’s Medical
    Review, a company that reviews medical bills in order to help “insurers save money by
    identifying and eliminating inaccurate, duplicate[,] and unwarranted charges.” Blair
    contended that the sum should not be deducted from the policy limits because Mahl’s
    was engaged to lower costs for Federal’s benefit, not Blair’s. Our record shows no clear
    resolution of this issue during the negotiations.
    The parties signed their settlement agreement on December 27, 2009. The
    agreement reads, in part:
    I, DANNY BLAIR, in exchange for the remaining policy
    limits under the vessel’s $1,000,000 P&I [protection and
    indemnity] policy do hereby release and forever discharge
    Charles Fogle . . . . The P&I underwriter has calculated the
    remaining policy limits at $961,447.81 and will pay that
    amount upon execution of this release. Mr. Blair reserves the
    right to claim additional amounts which he contends may be
    part of the policy limits, including any unpaid deductible.[2]
    The vessel owner and vessel’s insurers do not agree that
    additional sums are due but if these sums are determined to
    be due as properly part of the P&I limits under this policy
    they will be paid.
    Federal paid the specified sum of $961,447.81 to Blair.
    2
    In the original, the sentence reprinted here in strikethrough was crossed out
    by hand and initialed by Blair.
    -3-                                      7287
    B.        Proceedings
    Nearly three years later — on December 11, 2012 — Blair filed suit against
    Federal. He alleged that Federal had breached the settlement agreement by paying
    “substantially less” than the remaining policy limits, though his complaint did not
    identify what had not been paid. In May 2013 he filed a motion for partial summary
    judgment that clarified his claim. He argued that “[i]n arriving at its ‘remaining policy
    limits’ calculation Federal failed to address its obligation for [Rule] 82 attorney fees.”
    Although acknowledging the existence of the Rule 82 notice in the policy, Blair
    contended that the notice did not comply with governing regulations of the Alaska
    Division of Insurance and was therefore void. Thus, Blair argued, the policy limits were
    the $1 million face value of the policy, less amounts already paid, plus Rule 82 attorney’s
    fees. Blair also argued that Federal had improperly deducted the Mahl’s bill from the
    policy limits.
    Federal cross-moved for summary judgment, arguing that the policy’s
    Rule 82 notice was valid and that the settlement was for the sum certain of $961,447.81,
    which it had promptly paid. Blair then moved under Alaska Civil Rule 56(f) for a
    continuance to conduct additional discovery, and the continuance was granted.
    A period of contentious discovery followed, in which the superior court
    conducted in camera review of some documents Federal claimed were privileged,
    ordered production of some requested documents but not others, and denied a motion to
    compel brought by Blair. The court then granted summary judgment in favor of Federal.
    It found that Federal’s Rule 82 notice was lawful because it conformed with the
    standards imposed by the Division of Insurance. It also “construe[d] the Release to mean
    that parties completely settled the claim against the P&I policy by having Federal pay
    Blair $961,447.81.” The court awarded Federal, as the prevailing party, Rule 82
    attorney’s fees and costs.
    -4-                                     7287
    Blair appeals the superior court’s orders granting Federal’s cross-motion
    for summary judgment, denying his discovery motion, and awarding Rule 82 attorney’s
    fees to Federal.
    III.   STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We review a grant of summary judgment de novo.3 “We will affirm a grant
    of summary judgment if there are no genuine issues of material fact and if the movant
    is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”4 We draw all reasonable inferences in favor
    of the nonmoving party.5
    We review a superior court’s discovery rulings, including decisions about
    “discovery sanctions, such as spoliation remedies, for abuse of discretion.”6 We will find
    an abuse of discretion upon a showing that a decision was “arbitrary, capricious,
    manifestly unreasonable, or stemmed from improper motive.”7
    Whether the superior court applied the appropriate legal standard in
    awarding attorney’s fees is a question of law that we review de novo.8
    3
    Alakayak v. B.C. Packers, Ltd., 
    48 P.3d 432
    , 447 (Alaska 2002) (citing
    Moore v. Allstate Ins. Co., 
    995 P.2d 231
    , 233 (Alaska 2000)).
    4
    
    Id. (citing Moore,
    995 P.2d at 233).
    5
    
    Id. (citing Moore,
    995 P.2d at 233).
    6
    Todeschi v. Sumitomo Metal Mining Pogo, LLC, 
    394 P.3d 562
    , 570 (Alaska
    2017) (citing Mills v. Hankla, 
    297 P.3d 158
    , 164-65 (Alaska 2013)); Madonna v.
    Tamarack Air, Ltd., 
    298 P.3d 875
    , 878 (Alaska 2013).
    7
    Lindbo v. Colaska, Inc., 
    414 P.3d 646
    , 651 (Alaska 2018).
    8
    State v. Jacob, 
    214 P.3d 353
    , 358 (Alaska 2009).
    -5-                                      7287
    IV.   DISCUSSION
    A.	    The Superior Court Did Not Err By Entering Summary Judgment
    Against Blair On The Issue Whether Federal Owed Rule 82 Attorney’s
    Fees Under The Settlement.
    We first address whether Federal’s Rule 82 notice is valid and enforceable.
    Concluding that it is, we consider whether there is any other basis on which Blair could
    believe that the parties’ settlement agreement entitled him to attorney’s fees beyond the
    policy limits; we conclude there is not and that the superior court properly granted
    summary judgment on this issue.
    1.	    Federal’s Rule 82 notice conformed to the notices written by the
    Division of Insurance.
    A regulation promulgated by the Division of Insurance provides two
    options for an insurer wanting to limit its exposure for Rule 82 attorney’s fees to its
    stated policy limits.9 First, an insurer may use a notice that “conform[s]” with one of
    four model forms written by the Division (referred to as Notices A, B, C, and D).10
    Alternatively, the insurer may use a notice of its own devising, provided it obtains
    written approval from the Division’s director “upon a determination that the proposed
    notice is substantially equivalent to” any one of the Division’s four models.11
    In Therchik v. Grant Aviation, Inc. we decided that for a notice to be found
    to be “conform[ing],” it must follow the Division’s model forms far more closely than
    a notice the director approves as “substantially equivalent.”12 A conforming notice must
    be “very close to identical” to a model form, though it need not be “word-for-word
    9
    3 Alaska Administrative Code (AAC) 26.550 (2016).
    10
    3 AAC 26.550(b)(1).
    11
    3 AAC 26.550(b)(2).
    12
    
    74 P.3d 191
    , 196-97 (Alaska 2003).
    -6-	                                    7287
    identical.”13 It may contain “minute deviations, such as immaterial punctuation errors,
    that would not diminish the quality of notice or the substantive message.”14 An insurer’s
    notice that differs from the model forms in “substance, tone, clarity, [or] directness”
    would not “conform.”15
    Federal does not dispute that it did not obtain the director’s approval of its
    Rule 82 notice “upon a determination that [it was] substantially equivalent” to one of the
    Division’s model forms. The parties’ disagreement focuses instead on whether Federal’s
    notice conformed with any of the four models. Blair initially asserted that Federal’s
    notice “grossly fails to strictly comply” because it did not identify which of the model
    forms it was intended to follow and it failed to include the Division’s heading. The
    Division’s notices have the following five lines at the top of the first page:
    ALASKA DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
    DIVISION OF INSURANCE
    ATTORNEY FEES COVERAGE NOTICE [A, B, C, OR D]
    THIS POLICY LIMITS COVERAGE FOR ATTORNEY’S FEES
    UNDER ALASKA RULE OF CIVIL PROCEDURE 82
    Blair argued that the first three lines of this heading were necessary so the insured would
    know that Federal’s Rule 82 notice was “an Alaskan official notice.”16 Federal
    responded that its notice was a valid combination of relevant information from the
    Division’s Notices B and C with some minor differences in font.
    The superior court rejected Blair’s argument that the notice had to include
    the entirety of the Division’s heading. The court characterized the first three lines as
    13
    
    Id. at 196.
           14
    
    Id. at 196-97.
           15
    
    Id. at 198.
           16
    Emphasis omitted.
    -7-                                       7287
    “simply identif[ying] the notices as being promulgated by the Division and
    distinguish[ing] between the four Division notices.” Blair maintains his argument on
    appeal, contending that “the Director wanted it clear this was an Alaskan official notice
    from the agency charged with the insured’s protection, not merely some insurance
    company incomprehensible ‘boiler plate.’ ”17 He argues that using the Division’s entire
    heading verbatim would give the notice greater weight and make it more likely to be
    read.
    We agree that the headings in an insurance policy should be designed to
    attract the insured’s attention to the policy’s important provisions, but we conclude that
    Federal accomplished this with its heading, the first two lines of which are reproduced
    directly from the Division’s model forms:
    THIS POLICY LIMITS COVERAGE FOR ATTORNEY’S FEES
    UNDER ALASKA RULE OF CIVIL PROCEDURE 82
    COMBINED FORM
    Adding the Division’s name and the letter designations of its model forms would dilute
    the directness of the notice’s heading. It could also be misleading: Federal’s notice was
    not an “Alaskan official notice” but a conforming one created by Federal.
    Although the nonconformance argument Blair made in his motion for
    summary judgment addressed only the notice’s heading, the superior court carefully
    scrutinized the body of Federal’s notice and noted several other differences between it
    and the Division’s model forms. Federal’s notice, except for the heading, is all in the
    same typeface. In the Division’s Notices, however, the third and fourth paragraphs
    (explaining the limitations on coverage) are in bold and the fifth paragraph (advising
    insureds that they may be exposed to attorney’s fees liability) is in bold italics. As the
    superior court noted, these different fonts were presumably used for emphasis. But the
    17
    Emphases in original.
    -8-                                      7287
    court also found that “the extent of the boldface in the Division’s Notices undercut its
    effectiveness”; that the use of boldface for only the most important words would have
    been more likely to make a difference to a reader; and that overall “the differences in
    typeface have no significance in substance or clarity.” Blair does not challenge these
    conclusions in his opening brief, so we need not decide whether we agree.
    The superior court also noted that Federal’s “Combined Notice” combined
    introductory language from the Division’s Notice B — addressing suits “in which we
    have a right or duty to defend an insured within the limits of liability” — and Notice C
    — addressing suits “in which we have neither a right nor a duty to provide a defense but
    we have agreed to indemnify an insured for the costs of defense within the limits of
    liability.” Federal’s notice combined these phrases to read, “In any suit in Alaska in
    which we have a right or duty to defend an insured or in which we have neither a right
    nor a duty to provide a defense.” It left out the concluding phrase from Notice C: “but
    we have agreed to indemnify an insured for the costs of defense.” The superior court
    overlooked this omission when it found that the combined language did “not change the
    substance of the notice” and conformed to the Division’s model notices.
    Blair argues that the omitted phrase was “essential to understanding the
    [Rule] 82 limitation in the context of a P&I policy.” He asserts, however, that “[p]utting
    this [argument] in his brief would make it seriously over-length,” and he refers us to his
    summary judgment pleadings.18 Though given more attention in Blair’s reply than his
    opening brief, the argument is inadequately briefed, and we decline to consider it.19 We
    18
    We note that Blair’s opening brief is already overlength, and that its 32
    pages of facts and proceedings fail to focus on what was relevant to the issues actually
    briefed.
    19
    Kay v. Danbar, Inc., 
    132 P.3d 262
    , 265 n.1 (Alaska 2006) (“Because Kay’s
    (continued...)
    -9-                                      7287
    therefore affirm the superior court’s decision on summary judgment that Federal’s
    Rule 82 notice was valid.
    2.	    The valid Rule 82 notice resolves the objective meaning of the
    settlement as to attorney’s fees.
    We turn to the interpretation of the settlement agreement in light of our
    conclusion that Federal’s Rule 82 notice is valid. “When interpreting a contract, the goal
    ‘is to give effect to the reasonable expectations of the parties.’ ”20 In order to ascertain
    the parties’ reasonable expectations, we look to the written agreement and “extrinsic
    evidence regarding the parties’ intent at the time the contract was made.”21 “The intent
    of the parties when entering a contract is a question of fact and . . . summary judgment
    is improper when the evidence before the superior court establishes a factual dispute as
    to the intent of the contracting parties.”22
    In this case there is no dispute that the insurance policy informed Blair that
    Federal would not be liable for Rule 82 attorney’s fees in excess of the policy limits. We
    have determined that Federal’s Rule 82 notice is valid. Blair does not contend that his
    claim relies on some ambiguity in the notice’s language. The parties’ settlement
    19
    (...continued)
    brief merely incorporates his superior court arguments on the summary judgment issues,
    we deem these issues to be inadequately briefed, and we decline to consider them.”);
    Anchorage Nissan, Inc. v. State, 
    941 P.2d 1229
    , 1240 (Alaska 1997) (“We need not
    consider arguments which a party on appeal merely adopts and incorporates by reference
    to its lower court memoranda.”).
    20
    Nautilus Marine Enters., Inc. v. Exxon Mobil Corp., 
    305 P.3d 309
    , 315
    (Alaska 2013) (quoting Villars v. Villars, 
    277 P.3d 763
    , 768 (Alaska 2012)).
    21
    Fairbanks N. Star Borough v. Tundra Tours, Inc., 
    719 P.2d 1020
    , 1024
    (Alaska 1986).
    22
    K & K Recycling, Inc. v. Alaska Gold Co., 
    80 P.3d 702
    , 712 (Alaska 2003).
    -10-	                                  7287
    agreement mentions attorney’s fees only when listing them among the claims that Blair
    expressly agreed to “release and forever discharge” “in exchange for the remaining
    policy limits,” which the agreement represents to be $961,447.81. Nor does Blair cite
    any extrinsic evidence in support of his claim; he does not allege that the parties ever
    discussed attorney’s fees during their negotiations. Even viewing the facts in the light
    most favorable to Blair, there is simply no evidence that he reasonably expected anything
    in settlement other than the policy limits as the policy defined them.
    At oral argument Blair’s counsel acknowledged that “we should have been
    more forthcoming” during negotiations by bringing up the attorney’s fees issue. He
    suggested, however, that it might be appropriate for parties to leave some terms
    unresolved during negotiations and “see what happens with the law,” based on the
    possibility that successful litigation in a different case will support a claim to more
    money before the statute of limitations runs. But assuming that was Blair’s strategy here,
    he so closely guarded his claim to Rule 82 fees that there is no evidence it ever existed.
    “The mutual assent requirement ‘cannot be defeated by the unexpressed subjective intent
    of one of the parties; rather[] it must rest on an objective manifestation of mutual intent
    regarding the essential terms of the contract.’ ”23 Blair objectively manifested his intent
    to settle the case for policy limits, and, with the exception noted in the section that
    follows, the superior court did not err when it found that the parties completely settled
    Blair’s claim, including any claim to attorney’s fees.
    B.	    It Was Error To Enter Summary Judgment For Federal On The Issue
    Of The Bills From Mahl’s Medical Review.
    Blair asserts that the superior court erred when it entered final judgment
    without ruling on his claim that Federal improperly deducted the Mahl’s payment from
    23
    Colton v. Colton, 
    244 P.3d 1121
    , 1128 (Alaska 2010) (quoting Howarth v.
    First Nat’l Bank of Anchorage, 
    596 P.2d 1164
    , 1167 n.8 (Alaska 1979)).
    -11-	                                     7287
    the policy limits. Blair squarely raised this claim in his motion for summary judgment,
    but the superior court’s decision addressed only the Rule 82 issue, finding in Federal’s
    favor. Federal contends that the court did not overlook the Mahl’s payment issue but
    rather implicitly rejected Blair’s argument when it ruled that his claim was completely
    settled by Federal’s payment of $961,447.81 under the settlement agreement. But
    whether the court failed to rule on the issue or implicitly ruled against Blair, we conclude
    it was error because fact issues should have precluded summary judgment.
    In the settlement agreement, the sentence reserving Blair’s “right to claim
    additional amounts which he contends may be part of the policy limits” is stricken and
    initialed by Blair, but the next sentence remains: “The vessel owner and vessel’s insurers
    do not agree that additional sums are due but if these sums are determined to be due as
    properly part of the P&I limits under this policy they will be paid.” Federal’s attorney
    appears to have conceded at his deposition that the settlement agreement’s phrase
    “additional sums” referred to the Mahl’s payment.24 The other extrinsic evidence
    reinforces this conclusion: Blair contested the Mahl’s payment from the time of his first
    letter discussing settlement. The record also contains emails showing that the parties had
    still failed to reach agreement on the Mahl’s payment a week before the settlement
    agreement was signed. And the underlying policy is reasonably susceptible to two
    interpretations: either the Mahl’s payment was a legitimate expense of the insured
    charged against the policy limits or, as Blair argued, the services were analogous to those
    provided by an adjuster and should be carried by the insurer.
    24
    The attorney also testified, however, that this line was meant to be stricken
    because the Mahl’s payment issue had been resolved. But because Federal prevailed on
    summary judgment, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to Blair. Alakayak
    v. B.C. Packers, Ltd., 
    48 P.3d 432
    , 447 (Alaska 2002) (citing Moore v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
    
    995 P.2d 231
    , 233 (Alaska 2000)).
    -12-                                       7287
    We conclude there was a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the
    issue of the Mahl’s payment was resolved or was left open for later determination. We
    therefore reverse the grant of summary judgment on this narrow issue.
    C.	    Blair Demonstrates No Abuse Of Discretion In The Superior Court’s
    Denial Of His Discovery Motions.
    Blair also asserts that the superior court abused its discretion by improperly
    denying discovery. His briefing of the issue is cursory and confusing. He refers to an
    attorney’s bills and files from the Coastal Marine Fund, which he alleges has acted as
    Federal’s agent.25 He provides no citations to the record, cites no legal authority, and
    does not explain how the court’s rulings prejudiced him.26 Federal’s discussion of the
    discovery issues helps our understanding of them, but it would be anomalous for us to
    allow the appellee’s helpfulness to resurrect arguments the appellant has waived by his
    inadequate briefing.27 In short, Blair gives us no basis for determining that the superior
    court abused its discretion in any of its discovery rulings.
    25
    Blair’s discovery argument also mentions “Bauer/Moynihan documents,”
    not further explained, but he describes them as “belatedly produced,” so we assume his
    claim of error does not extend to them.
    26
    Blair cites to earlier pages of his brief for “[a] description of his denial of
    discovery into Fogle’s agents[’] documents of events surrounding the execution of
    Blair’s release,” but we do not find those earlier pages any more helpful in constructing
    Blair’s arguments.
    27
    See Windel v. Carnahan, 
    379 P.3d 971
    , 980 (Alaska 2016) (“[W]aiver due
    to inadequate briefing ‘is not correctable by arguing the issue in a reply brief.’ ” (quoting
    Adamson v. Univ. of Alaska, 
    819 P.2d 886
    , 889 n.3 (Alaska 1991))). In Juelfs v. Gough,
    
    41 P.3d 593
    , 596 (Alaska 2002), we declined to find an issue “waived on the basis of
    cursory briefing” in part because the appellee “accurately perceive[d] [the appellant’s]
    argument and respond[ed] to it.” But the appellant in that case was unrepresented, and
    even so she made her argument “implicitly and in a manner that we can easily review,”
    
    id., which is
    not the case here.
    -13-	                                      7287
    D.	    The Superior Court Did Not Err By Deciding That Maritime Law Did
    Not Preclude An Award Of Rule 82 Attorney’s Fees.
    Our conclusion that one substantive claim remains to be resolved on
    remand — regarding the payment to Mahl’s Medical Review — requires the superior
    court to also reconsider its prevailing party determination and attorney’s fees award. For
    the sake of efficiency we address Blair’s argument that Federal cannot recover Rule 82
    fees because Blair’s claim arose in admiralty.
    We rejected the same argument more than 30 years ago in Williams v.
    Eckert, in which we held that a plaintiff who sued in state court to recover a vessel was
    entitled to Rule 82 attorney’s fees when he prevailed.28 We noted that “Congress has not
    prohibited such an award in state actions arising out of the admiralty jurisdiction of the
    United States” and that “an award of attorney’s fees in a state court does not frustrate or
    displace the essential features of substantive maritime law” because “[i]t is merely
    remedial in nature.”29 We extensively revisited Williams in Hughes v. Foster Wheeler
    Co., in which we concluded once again that Rule 82 was not inconsistent with federal
    law and could be applied to mariners’ claims brought in state court.30
    Blair does not engage significantly with our discussion in Williams and
    Hughes, much less carry his “heavy threshold burden of showing compelling reasons”
    for overturning these precedents.31 His central argument is that attorney’s fees awards
    may chill future claims brought by other mariners and that courts must be particularly
    28
    
    643 P.2d 991
    , 997 (Alaska 1982).
    29
    
    Id. 30 932
    P.2d 784, 786-91 (Alaska 1997).
    31
    McCrary v. Ivanof Bay Vill., 
    265 P.3d 337
    , 340-41 (Alaska 2011) (quoting
    Guerrero ex. rel. Guerrero v. Alaska Hous. Fin. Corp., 
    123 P.3d 966
    , 982 n.104 (Alaska
    2005)).
    -14-	                                     7287
    solicitous of sailors as “the wards of admiralty.”32 But many would-be civil plaintiffs
    face the same potential “chilling” effect. Accordingly, the factors listed in Rule 82(b)(3)
    allow the court to vary an award based on considerations including “the extent to which
    a given fee award may be so onerous to the non-prevailing party that it would deter
    similarly situated litigants from the voluntary use of the courts”33 and “other equitable
    factors deemed relevant.”34 Because federal law does not displace Rule 82 when
    mariners bring their suits in state court, and because Rule 82 accommodates the concern
    Blair presses on appeal, we see no reason to again reconsider Williams and Hughes. The
    superior court did not err in deciding that Rule 82 applied to this case.
    V.     CONCLUSION
    We AFFIRM the superior court’s summary judgment and discovery rulings
    except with respect to the claim regarding Mahl’s Medical Review. We REVERSE the
    entry of summary judgment on this issue, VACATE the attorney’s fees award, and
    REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    32
    See Brown v. State, 
    816 P.2d 1368
    , 1371 (Alaska 1991).
    33
    Alaska R. Civ. P. 82(b)(3)(I).
    34
    Alaska R. Civ. P. 82(b)(3)(K).
    -15-                                      7287