Abel Cuellar v. Megan G. Vettorel , 235 Ariz. 399 ( 2014 )


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  •                               IN THE
    ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION TWO
    ABEL CUELLAR,
    Plaintiff/Appellant,
    v.
    MEGAN G. VETTOREL,
    Defendant/Appellee.
    No. 2 CA-CV 2014-0005
    Filed August 18, 2014
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Pima County
    No. C20113599
    The Honorable Charles V. Harrington, Judge
    AFFIRMED
    COUNSEL
    Phillips & Lyon, P.L.C., Phoenix
    By Henry G. Hester
    Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellant
    Curl & Glasson, P.L.C., Tucson
    By David L. Curl
    Counsel for Defendant/Appellee
    OPINION
    Presiding Judge Kelly authored the decision of the Court, in which
    Judge Howard and Judge Vásquez concurred.
    CUELLAR V. VETTOREL
    Opinion of the Court
    K E L L Y, Presiding Judge:
    ¶1            Abel Cuellar appeals from the trial court’s award of
    sanctions to Megan Vettorel pursuant to Rule 68, Ariz. R. Civ. P.,
    after Cuellar failed to obtain a final judgment more favorable than
    Vettorel’s offer of judgment. Cuellar contends the court erred by
    failing to account for his medical liens when comparing the offer of
    judgment to the final judgment. For the following reasons, we
    affirm.
    Factual and Procedural Background
    ¶2            Cuellar filed a complaint against Vettorel, claiming he
    had been injured as a result of her negligent driving. Vettorel
    offered to allow judgment to be entered against her in the amount of
    $10,000, inclusive of costs and fees, “contingent on the satisfaction of
    all liens which attach by operation of law to the proceeds of this suit
    and for which [Vettorel] could be held liable.” Cuellar did not
    accept the offer.
    ¶3           Following trial, the jury found in favor of Cuellar,
    concluding his damages were $41,300 but finding him ninety
    percent at fault for the accident. Judgment was entered in Cuellar’s
    favor for $5,310.90, which included costs of $1,180.90. Cuellar
    objected to Vettorel’s proposed form of judgment, arguing that
    Vettorel should not be awarded Rule 68 sanctions because Cuellar’s
    medical liens rendered the offer of judgment “far less” than the final
    judgment. The court implicitly rejected this argument, concluding
    Cuellar’s final judgment did not exceed the $10,000 offer of
    judgment, and awarded Vettorel sanctions in the amount of
    $25,631.06 pursuant to Rule 68(g) for double her taxable costs and
    expert witness fees dating from the offer. Cuellar timely appealed
    the court’s judgment. We have jurisdiction pursuant to A.R.S.
    §§ 12-120.21 and 12-2101(A)(1).
    Discussion
    ¶4          Cuellar argues the trial court erred by imposing Rule 68
    sanctions because “the Offer of Judgment included a requirement
    that [Cuellar] assume outstanding liens which rendered the true
    2
    CUELLAR V. VETTOREL
    Opinion of the Court
    value of the Offer of Judgment less than [Cuellar]’s total verdict.”1
    We review de novo the trial court’s award of sanctions based on its
    interpretation of a court rule. See Vega v. Sullivan, 
    199 Ariz. 504
    , ¶ 8,
    
    19 P.3d 645
    , 648 (App. 2001). Our primary goal in construing a court
    rule “‘is to discern and give effect’” to the intent of the rule. Warner
    v. Sw. Desert Images, LLC, 
    218 Ariz. 121
    , ¶ 49, 
    180 P.3d 986
    , 1001
    (App. 2008), quoting Bridgestone/Firestone N. Am. Tire, L.L.C. v. A.P.S.
    Rent-A-Car & Leasing, Inc., 
    207 Ariz. 502
    , ¶ 15, 
    88 P.3d 572
    , 576 (App.
    2004). The language of the rule itself is the “best and most reliable
    indicator” of intent. Vega, 
    199 Ariz. 504
    , ¶ 
    9, 19 P.3d at 648
    . If the
    plain language is unambiguous, we need not employ other methods
    of construction. State v. Campoy, 
    220 Ariz. 539
    , ¶ 11, 
    207 P.3d 792
    ,
    797 (App. 2009).
    ¶5           Rule 68(g) requires a trial court to impose sanctions
    upon a party that rejects an offer of judgment and fails to obtain a
    more favorable judgment at trial. See Levy v. Alfaro, 
    215 Ariz. 443
    ,
    ¶ 8, 
    160 P.3d 1201
    , 1203 (App. 2007) (award of sanctions pursuant to
    Rule 68(g) is mandatory). When determining whether a judgment is
    “more favorable” than an offer of judgment, the court must make an
    “apples to apples” comparison between the offer and the judgment
    finally obtained. See Hales v. Humana of Ariz., Inc., 
    186 Ariz. 375
    , 378,
    
    923 P.2d 841
    , 844 (App. 1996). For example, a court may not
    compare an offer of judgment, with costs, to the final award,
    without costs, as such would not permit an “apples to apples”
    comparison. 
    Id. ¶6 Cuellar
    argues the trial court erred in applying Rule 68
    because “the true value of the Offer of Judgment [was] less than
    [Cuellar]’s total verdict.” He claims that the actual value of the offer
    was $1,882.26—far less than the final judgment of $5,310.90,
    reasoning that the $10,000 offer of judgment required him to satisfy
    his medical lien, which was $6,936.84 at the time of the offer, and
    1 Although Vettorel argues that Cuellar has waived any
    objection to the offer of judgment by failing to object within ten days
    after the offer was made as required by Rule 68(d), Ariz. R. Civ. P.,
    we construe Cuellar’s argument on appeal as a challenge to the trial
    court’s application of Rule 68(g), rather than an objection to the form
    of the offer.
    3
    CUELLAR V. VETTOREL
    Opinion of the Court
    included costs totaling $1,180.90. Cuellar argues the court should
    have “ruled that [his] recovery was greater than the actual amount
    of the actual judgment when the lien was taken into consideration.”
    By not doing so, he claims, the “trial [c]ourt failed to properly
    compare ‘apples to apples.’”
    ¶7           In support of his position, Cuellar urges us to adopt the
    Alaska Supreme Court’s holding in Dearlove v. Campbell, 
    301 P.3d 1230
    (Alaska 2013), that a subrogation payment made by the
    defendant directly to the subrogee must be added to the jury’s
    damages award when making a Rule 68 comparison.2 In that case,
    Campbell sued Dearlove for her damages arising from a vehicular
    collision. 
    Id. at 1232.
    Campbell rejected Dearlove’s pretrial offer of
    judgment of $18,000, which had required Campbell to satisfy her
    insurer’s outstanding subrogation claim for medical expenses. 
    Id. Dearlove’s insurer
    subsequently paid Campbell’s insurer $20,000 to
    satisfy the claim.3 
    Id. Dearlove thereafter
    made a second offer of
    judgment for $5,000, which was conditioned upon Campbell
    satisfying all accident-related liens and expenses except the $20,000
    subrogation payment Dearlove already had paid. 
    Id. Campbell did
    not accept the second offer, and a jury, having been instructed to not
    “make an economic award for those expenses that have already been
    paid,” awarded Campbell $3,870 in damages. 
    Id. ¶8 The
    Alaska Supreme Court held that when evaluating
    the first offer of judgment for purposes of Rule 68, the trial court
    should compare the offer to the offeree’s ultimate recovery—
    calculated by adding the previously paid subrogation payment to
    2This  case examined the application of Alaska R. Civ. P. 68(b),
    which is similar to Arizona’s Rule 68(g), and provides in pertinent
    part that “[i]f the judgment finally rendered by the court is at least 5
    percent less favorable to the offeree than the offer, . . . the offeree . . .
    shall pay all costs as allowed under the Civil Rules and shall pay
    reasonable actual attorney’s fees incurred by the offeror from the
    date the offer was made.”
    3The    same company insured both parties. 
    Dearlove, 301 P.3d at 1232
    .
    4
    CUELLAR V. VETTOREL
    Opinion of the Court
    the amount the offeree recovered at trial.4 
    Id. at 1235.
    Cuellar urges
    that Dearlove “stand[s] for the logical proposition that a Rule 68 offer
    that contains conditions or requirements that change the real value
    of the offer must be considered in light of what the offer was
    actually worth at the time it was made.” For the following reasons,
    we disagree.
    ¶9           We first question whether Dearlove stands for the
    principle proposed by Cuellar. That case involves a voluntary
    payment to Campbell’s insurer by Dearlove’s insurer after Campbell
    filed a complaint specifically seeking reimbursement for her
    insurer’s subrogated claim for medical expenses—a circumstance
    not present here.5 
    Dearlove, 301 P.3d at 1232
    . Given that the amount
    of the subrogated claim had been established and paid prior to the
    second offer of judgment, the second offer excepted the $20,000
    payment from its requirement that Campbell would be “responsible
    for satisfying any and all accident-related liens and expenses.” 
    Id. The Dearlove
    court concluded the $20,000 payment had to be added
    to the offer when making a Rule 68 comparison to prevent a party
    from “‘creat[ing] a loophole allowing parties to either escape or
    create the punitive measures of an offer of judgment by simply
    making a gratuitous payment prior to the entry of a final
    judgment.’” 
    Id. at 1235,
    quoting Progressive Corp. v. Peter ex rel. Peter,
    
    195 P.3d 1083
    , 1091 (Alaska 2008). But the court did not, as Cuellar
    suggests, evaluate “what the offer was actually worth at the time it
    was made” by adjusting for other “accident-related liens and
    expenses,” as Dearlove’s offer had required. 
    Id. at 1232.
    4As to Dearlove’s second offer of judgment, the Alaska
    Supreme Court concluded that the $20,000 subrogation payment
    properly was excluded from Campbell’s total recovery. 
    Id. at 1235.
    That amount had been removed from Campbell’s amount of
    damages by the time of the second offer, and she could not have
    expected to recover it at trial. 
    Id. at 1235-36.
          5Nor   is it likely to be present in any Arizona case because of
    our anti-subrogation doctrine—“a common law doctrine that bars
    the subrogation or assignment of personal injury claims.” Estate of
    Ethridge v. Recovery Mgmt. Sys., Inc., 
    235 Ariz. 30
    , ¶ 4, 
    326 P.3d 297
    ,
    299 (App. 2014).
    5
    CUELLAR V. VETTOREL
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶10          Even if Dearlove could be read to require the trial court,
    when applying Rule 68, to evaluate the “real value” of an offer “at
    the time it was made,” the plain language of Arizona’s rule does not
    permit Cuellar’s approach. Rather, Rule 68 requires a court to
    compare the offer, comprised of a “specifically stated sum” that
    includes “all damages, taxable court costs, interest, and attorneys’
    fees, if any, sought in the case” to the judgment finally obtained.
    Ariz. R. Civ. P. 68(b) and (g). To determine if the judgment finally
    obtained is more favorable than the offer, the court may consider
    only those taxable costs and attorney fees incurred as of the date the
    offer was made. Ariz. R. Civ. P. 68(g); see also Vega, 
    199 Ariz. 504
    ,
    ¶ 
    12, 19 P.3d at 649
    (had our supreme court intended taxable costs to
    be excluded from comparison of judgments, presumably it would
    have said so). Nor is there a provision in the rule for subtracting
    medical liens from either the offer or the judgment before the two
    are compared.
    ¶11           Next, even were we to conclude that medical liens
    could be removed from the offer of judgment to determine its true
    value, Cuellar’s proposal does not lend itself to an “apples to
    apples” comparison. Rather, his suggested calculation would
    require the trial court to compare the offer of judgment, less costs
    and the medical lien, to the judgment following trial, less costs and
    fees, without consideration of the medical lien. Although Cuellar is
    correct in stating that AHCCCS,6 his medical provider, has a “lien by
    operation of law” pursuant to A.R.S. § 36-2915, and that it has
    asserted such a lien, Cuellar has not addressed how his medical liens
    would be satisfied following trial—liens which he asserts were much
    larger than at the time of the offer of judgment.7
    6 Arizona
    Health Care Cost Containment System is a state
    agency that administers health care services to Arizona’s eligible
    indigent population pursuant to A.R.S. §§ 36-2901 through
    36-2930.01.
    7As Vettorel correctly points out, Cuellar was responsible for
    his medical bills both at the time of the offer and following trial; had
    he accepted the offer of judgment, he would have had $10,000 with
    which to do so; following trial, he had the lesser sum of $5,310.90.
    6
    CUELLAR V. VETTOREL
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶12           Moreover, even were it possible to account for a lien
    obligation in determining the net amount of an offer of judgment, as
    Cuellar proposes, it would not be possible to account for liens in a
    final judgment where, as here, Cuellar did not seek reimbursement
    for liens in his complaint, making an “apples to apples” comparison
    impossible under these circumstances.            A “judgment finally
    obtained” means “the sum ultimately obtained in a particular case,”
    Hall v. Read Dev., Inc., 
    229 Ariz. 277
    , ¶ 14, 
    274 P.3d 1211
    , 1215 (App.
    2012), and while it may include costs, interest, or attorney fees, it
    does not encompass any obligations a party may owe that were not
    litigated in the action. See Ariz. R. Civ. P. 58(a) and (g); A.R.S. § 44-
    1201(B); see also Gerow v. Covill, 
    192 Ariz. 9
    , ¶ 15, 
    960 P.2d 55
    , 59
    (App. 1998) (suggesting judgment contingent on satisfaction of lien
    would be invalid, as conditional judgments generally void).
    ¶13           Additionally, “‘[t]he word ‘judgment’ is commonly
    understood to mean the act of a court which fixes clearly the rights
    and liabilities of the respective parties to litigation and determines
    the controversy at hand.’” Berry v. 352 E. Virginia, L.L.C., 
    228 Ariz. 9
    ,
    ¶ 28, 
    261 P.3d 784
    , 789 (App. 2011), quoting Wolf Corp. v. Louis, 
    11 Ariz. App. 352
    , 355, 
    464 P.2d 672
    , 675 (1970). Judgments do not
    encompass or direct any rights or obligations pertaining to third-
    party entities, such as medical lien holders, that are not parties to the
    action. See State ex rel. Thomas v. Grant, 
    222 Ariz. 197
    , ¶ 12, 
    213 P.3d 346
    , 350 (App. 2009) (with few exceptions, person not party to an
    action not bound by judgment in that action), citing Restatement
    (Second) of Judgments § 62 cmt. a (1982).
    ¶14          Finally, we see nothing wrong with Vettorel’s attempt
    to protect herself from any future liability for the liens. See Hall, 
    229 Ariz. 277
    , ¶ 
    18, 274 P.3d at 1216
    (offer to settle usually represents
    offeror’s willingness to pay specific amount in exchange for
    termination of further liability). As Vettorel points out, had Cuellar
    failed to pay his medical liens, AHCCCS potentially could pursue an
    action against her to satisfy the lien obligation.             See, e.g.,
    A.R.S. §§ 36-2916 and 33-934. This result would be directly contrary
    to the purpose of Rule 68—to promote settlement and end litigation.
    Levy, 
    215 Ariz. 443
    , ¶ 
    12, 160 P.3d at 1203
    .
    ¶15          Such purpose is not met by encouraging or requiring
    collateral litigation to determine liability for lien obligations
    7
    CUELLAR V. VETTOREL
    Opinion of the Court
    following entry of judgment. See Warner, 
    218 Ariz. 121
    , ¶ 
    57, 180 P.3d at 1003
    . Nor is it advanced by requiring evidence of the
    amount of liens asserted at the time of an offer of judgment as
    opposed to the obligation which may exist at the time a final
    judgment is entered. As Cuellar admits, these amounts can vary,
    making an “apples to apples” comparison inherently difficult and
    detracting from Rule 68(b)’s specificity requirement. See also Drozda
    v. McComas, 
    181 Ariz. 82
    , 86-87, 
    887 P.2d 612
    , 616-17 (App. 1994)
    (litigant considering offer of judgment engages in risk-benefit
    calculation based on knowledge at time of offer).
    ¶16         In considering whether Rule 68 sanctions were
    warranted, the trial court correctly determined that the jury’s verdict
    did not exceed Vettorel’s offer of judgment. It therefore did not err
    in awarding Vettorel sanctions pursuant to Rule 68(g).
    Disposition
    ¶17         For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court’s
    judgment.
    8