Ohio: Attorney Fees Distinct from Punitive Damages

June 7, 2010

The Ohio Supreme Court recently issued a slip opinion finding that attorney fees are distinct from punitive damages and that public policy does not prevent an insurance company from covering those fees on behalf of an insured.

In Neal-Pettit v. Lahman, Slip Opinion No. 2010-Ohio-1829, Allstate Insurance Co. had argued that the automobile policy issued to the insured does not cover awards of attorney fees, according to the opinion written by Justice Lanziger.

Allstate said the “attorney-fee award is an element of the punitive-damages award because both are made in cases of malicious conduct.” Allstate’s policy doesn’t cover punitive damages, therefore the award for attorney fees is not covered either, the insurer reasoned.

As Lanziger described the case, “Kimberly Neal-Pettit, filed suit against Linda Lahman for compensatory and punitive damages due to personal injuries sustained in an automobile accident on March 27, 2003. As alleged in the complaint, when Lahman struck Neal-Pettit’s vehicle, she was intoxicated and fleeing the scene of an earlier collision.”

At trial, a jury returned a “verdict against Lahman for compensatory damages totaling $113,800 and punitive damages totaling $75,000. In addition, the jury awarded attorney fees to Neal-Pettit based on a finding that Lahman had acted with malice. The trial court set the amount of attorney fees at $46,825, and also awarded Neal-Pettit $10,084.96 in expenses.”

Allstate, Lahman’s insurer, paid the other amounts but declined to pay punitive damages and attorney fees.

In a supplemental complaint filed by Neal-Pettit against All-state for payment of the attorney fees, the trial court found in favor of Neal-Pettit.

Allstate appealed but the “Eighth District affirmed the trial court’s decision, holding that attorney fees are ‘conceptually distinct’ from punitive damages and that attorney fees are not expressly excluded from coverage by the language of the policy,” Lanziger wrote.

After reviewing the language in Allstate’s policy, the Court affirmed the finding of the court of appeals, rejecting Allstate’s argument that the award for attorney fees is tied to the award for punitive damages and therefore not covered.

The justices found irrelevant “the fact that the awards have similar bases” and cited previous cases that established that while “an award of attorney fees may stem from an award of punitive damages, the attorney-fee award itself is not an element of the punitive-damages award.”

Additionally, Lanziger wrote, although public policy in Ohio does prevent “insurance contracts from insuring against claims for punitive damages based upon an insured’s malicious conduct,” the applicable state statute “mentions only punitive and exemplary damages, not attorney fees.”

Topics Ohio

Was this article valuable?

Here are more articles you may enjoy.

From This Issue

Insurance Journal Magazine June 7, 2010
June 7, 2010
Insurance Journal Magazine

Program Directory, Vol I.; IBA West Young Agents & Brokers