What Happens if I Need to Sue a Negligent Driver and My Disability Insurer Following a Car Accident?
A serious motor vehicle accident can leave you unable to return to work and thus earn a living. In such cases you may be eligible for benefits under a long-term disability insurance policy, as well as damages from the negligent driver in a separate tort (personal injury) claim. Of course, either the negligent driver or your insurance carrierโor bothโmay dispute the extent of your injuries. If that happens, do you have to pursue duplicate litigation against both parties, or is it possible to consolidate matters into a single trial?
Kaur v. Blue Cross: One Accident, Two Lawsuits
Recently, an Ontario Superior Court justice confronted this precise scenario. These cases involved a plaintiff who was injured in a 2012 car accident. As a result of her injuries, the plaintiff said she was medically unable to work, so she applied for long-term disability benefits under a policy issued her by Blue Cross Life Insurance Company of Canada. The plaintiff also filed a personal injury lawsuit against the other driver in the car accident, alleging his negligence was responsible for her injuries.
The personal injury defendant denied liability. Separately, Blue Cross denied the plaintiffโs disability benefits claim. This led the plaintiff to file a separate lawsuit against the insurer.
The plaintiff asked the Superior Court to consolidate both claimsโthat is, to hear them together. The personal injury defendant did not object to this. Blue Cross did.
Under the rules governing civil cases in Ontario courts, a judge may consolidate two or more pending cases under any of the following circumstances:
- The cases share a common โquestion of law or factโ;
- The relief sought by the plaintiff โarises out of the same transactionโ or series of events; or
- The judge determines there is โany other reasonโ to justify hearing the cases together.
If the Court grants consolidation, it may be in the form of conducting one trial for both cases simultaneously or โone immediately after the other.โ
Here, the plaintiff argued that both her personal injury and disability claims arose from the same eventโthe 2012 car accident. Both cases involved a common โquestion of fact,โ i.e., the nature and extent of her injuries. It would therefore impose an unnecessary cost and burden to present the same medical evidence twice in separate trials.
In response, Blue Cross denied there were any common factual or legal questions. For instance, whether or not the personal injury defendant was liable for the accident had no bearing on the issue of the insurance companyโs liability under a disability policy. In any event, Blue Cross maintained a consolidated trial would โprejudiceโ its interests.
Blue Cross also cited another provision of the Ontario court rules that prohibits a party who has set a trial date in a case from โinitiating or continuingโ any motion without prior leave of the court. In this situation, both cases were previously set down for trial on separate dates, but they were removed from the courtโs calendar after the plaintiffโs former lawyer failed to make a required court appearance.
Judge Cites Critical Factual Dispute, Potential Costs To Plaintiff Of Litigating Twice
Justice Steve Coroza of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice ultimately granted the plaintiffโs motion to consolidate, overriding Blue Crossโ objections. In a May 28 order, Justice Coroza first disposed of Blue Crossโs argument regarding the timing of the plaintiffโs motion. The judge said he preferred a โflexible approachโ to granting leave and would โconsider all of the circumstances of the matterโ before making a decision. While he said there was โmeritโ to Blue Cross pointing out the plaintiffโs delay in bringing her consolidation motion, as well as the โpeculiarโ circumstances of her other lawyerโs non-appearance, the delay was not โunreasonable,โ particularly since neither case had been rescheduled for trial.
Regarding the merits of the plaintiffโs request for consolidation, Justice Coroza noted the purpose of the rule was to โavoid multiplicity of proceedings, promote expeditious and inexpensive determination of disputes, and avoid inconsistent judicial findings.โ Here, it was clear that both the tort and insurance cases revolve around the โcritical issueโ of the plaintiffโs injuries in the car accident. While the burden of proof in each case may be different, the judge said, the plaintiff must essentially present the same evidence. That is sufficient to create a โquestion of fact in common.โ
Consolidation also represents a significant cost savings to the plaintiff. For example, Justice Coroza pointed out that โ[r]etaining medical doctors and experts is expensive,โ and such witnesses are โnotoriously difficultโ to schedule for one trial, much less two. While it would cost the plaintiff significantly more to manage two trials as opposed to one, the costs for Blue Cross would be the same either way.
Finally, Justice Coroza firmly rejected Blue Crossโ argument that consolidated proceedings would be too โdifficult for a judge to manage.โ To the contrary, the judge said it would not be that difficult to โcreate a trial management scheduleโ that ensures things moved along smoothly. Indeed, โmanaging trials with different tests, different counsel, and different parties is standard fare for most trial judges,โ so handling a pair of โstandard civil actions related to a motor vehicle accidentโ should not pose much of a logistical challenge.
Speak With A Toronto Car Accident Lawyer Today
Remember, in Ontario courts an unsuccessful plaintiff is liable for the defendantsโ legal costs in addition to their own expenses in connection with their case. This means that when you are faced with multiple defendants in related actions, it is often in your best interest to seek consolidation. As the opinion in the case above illustrates, judges are favourable to such requests when there are clearly common factual or legal questions involved.
If you have been in a car accident and have a claim against the negligent driver as well as your own insurance company, you may greatly benefit from working with an Ontario personal injury lawyer, who may be able to guide you the complexities of provincial law. Contact Preszler Injury Lawyers to schedule a free, no-obligation consultation with one of our lawyers today.
Source:
https://www.canlii.org/en/on/onsc/doc/2018/2018onsc3303/2018onsc3303.html
More Case Summaries