Key: (1) language to be deleted (2) new language
Laws of Minnesota 1988
CHAPTER 503-H.F.No. 1493
An act relating to civil law; deleting the minimum
percentage amount for interest on judgments; altering
the application of joint and several liability;
providing for payment of future damages; amending
Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 604.02, subdivision 1;
Minnesota Statutes 1987 Supplement, section 549.09,
subdivision 1; proposing coding for new law in
Minnesota Statutes, chapter 549; repealing Minnesota
Statutes 1986, section 604.07.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 1987 Supplement, section
549.09, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. [WHEN OWED; RATE.] (a) When the judgment is
for the recovery of money, including a judgment for the recovery
of taxes, interest from the time of the verdict or report until
judgment is finally entered shall be computed by the court
administrator as provided in clause (c) and added to the
judgment.
(b) Except as otherwise provided by contract or allowed by
law, preverdict or prereport interest on pecuniary damages shall
be computed as provided in clause (c) from the time of the
commencement of the action, or the time of a written settlement
demand, whichever occurs first, except as provided herein. The
action must be commenced within 60 days of a written settlement
demand for interest to begin to accrue from the time of the
demand. If either party serves a written offer of settlement,
the other party may serve a written acceptance or a written
counteroffer within 60 days. After that time interest on the
judgment shall be calculated by the judge in the following
manner. The prevailing party shall receive interest on any
judgment from the time the action was commenced or a written
settlement demand was made, or as to special damages from the
time when special damages were incurred, if later, until the
time of verdict or report only if the amount of its offer is
closer to the judgment than the amount of the opposing party's
offer. If the amount of the losing party's offer was closer to
the judgment than the prevailing party's offer, the prevailing
party shall receive interest only on the amount of the
settlement offer or the judgment, whichever is less, and only
from the time the action was commenced or a written settlement
demand was made, or as to special damages from when the special
damages were incurred, if later, until the time the settlement
offer was made. Subsequent offers and counteroffers supersede
the legal effect of earlier offers and counteroffers. For the
purposes of clause (3), the amount of settlement offer must be
allocated between past and future damages in the same proportion
as determined by the trier of fact. Except as otherwise
provided by contract or allowed by law, preverdict or prereport
interest shall not be awarded on the following:
(1) judgments, awards, or benefits in workers' compensation
cases, but not including third-party actions;
(2) judgments, decrees, or orders in dissolution,
annulment, or legal separation actions;
(3) judgments for future damages;
(4) punitive damages, fines, or other damages that are
noncompensatory in nature;
(5) judgments not in excess of the amount specified in
section 487.30; and
(6) that portion of any verdict or report which is founded
upon interest, or costs, disbursements, attorney fees, or other
similar items added by the court.
(c) The interest shall be computed as simple interest per
annum. The rate of interest shall be based on the secondary
market yield of one year United States treasury bills,
calculated on a bank discount basis as provided in this section.
On or before the 20th day of December of each year the
state court administrator shall determine the rate from the
secondary market yield on one year United States treasury bills
for the most recent calendar month, reported on a monthly basis
in the latest statistical release of the board of governors of
the federal reserve system. This yield, rounded to the nearest
one percent, shall be the annual interest rate during the
succeeding calendar year; provided, however, that in no event
shall the rate of interest be less than eight percent per
annum. The state court administrator shall also determine the
average rate of interest on judgments to be used during the
succeeding calendar year for computation of the discount rate
under section 604.07, subdivision 4. The state court
administrator shall communicate the interest rates to the court
administrators and sheriffs for use in computing the interest on
verdicts and the discount rate under section 604.07.
When a judgment creditor, or the judgment creditor's
attorney or agent, has received a payment after entry of
judgment, whether the payment is made voluntarily by or on
behalf of the judgment debtor, or is collected by legal process
other than execution levy where a proper return has been filed
with the court administrator, the judgment creditor, or the
judgment creditor's attorney, before applying to the court
administrator for an execution shall file with the court
administrator an affidavit of partial satisfaction. The
affidavit must state the dates and amounts of payments made upon
the judgment after the most recent affidavit of partial
satisfaction filed, if any; the part of each payment that is
applied to taxable disbursements and to accrued interest and to
the unpaid principal balance of the judgment; and the accrued,
but the unpaid interest owing, if any, after application of each
payment.
Sec. 2. [549.25] [FUTURE DAMAGES; PAYMENT.]
Where a claimant is awarded an amount representing future
damages greater than $100,000, the court shall hold a hearing
prior to ordering entry of judgment to allow the claimant to
consider whether payment of the future damages over time as the
damages are incurred is in the best interests of the claimant.
The following factors may be considered at the hearing, as well
as any others as justice requires:
(1) the claimant's financial ability to meet obligations
likely to be incurred as a result of the injury at issue in the
trial;
(2) the advantages, if any, to the claimant from
voluntarily entering into a structured settlement; and
(3) the interests of the claimant in self-determination
over the claimant's financial affairs.
If the claimant decides, after the hearing, that structured
payments of future damages would be in the claimant's best
interests, the court shall make available information to assist
the claimant in seeking an appropriate financial instrument to
provide such payments. Judgment may not be entered until the
claimant has notified the court that the claimant does not wish
to enter into a structured settlement.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 604.02,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. When two or more persons are jointly
liable, contributions to awards shall be in proportion to the
percentage of fault attributable to each, except that each is
jointly and severally liable for the whole award. Except in
cases where liability arises under chapters 18B - pesticide
control, 115 - water pollution control, 115A - waste management,
115B - environmental response and liability, 115C - leaking
underground storage tanks, and 299E - pipeline safety, public
nuisance law for damage to the environment or the public health,
any other environmental or public health law, or any
environmental or public health ordinance or program of a
municipality as defined in section 466.01, a person whose fault
is 15 percent or less is liable for a percentage of the whole
award no greater than four times the percentage of fault,
including any amount reallocated to that person under
subdivision 2.
If the state or a municipality as defined in section 466.01
is jointly liable, and its fault is less than 35 percent, it is
jointly and severally liable for an amount a percentage of the
whole award no greater than twice the amount of fault, including
any amount reallocated to the state or municipality under
subdivision 2.
Sec. 4. [INJURY COMPENSATION STUDY.]
The speaker of the house of representatives and the
majority leader of the senate shall each appoint three persons
to a commission to study the civil justice system and current
and alternative methods of compensating injured persons. Not
later than January 1, 1990, the study commission shall report
its findings to the legislature along with any recommendations
for legislative action.
Sec. 5. [REPEALER.]
Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 604.07, is repealed.
Sec. 6. [APPLICATION; EFFECTIVE DATE.]
Sections 2 and 3 apply to causes of action arising on or
after their effective dates. Sections 1 and 5 are effective the
day following final enactment and apply to all cases pending or
brought on or after that date.
Approved April 12, 1988
Official Publication of the State of Minnesota
Revisor of Statutes