Appeal from judgments for each of the above plaintiffs, requiring the State Insurance Fund, carrier for Workmen’s Compensation claims, to pay a proportionate share of the costs and attorneys’ fees in actions brought by plaintiffs against third-party tortfeasors, where judgments were recovered and the plaintiffs reimbursed the Fund in full for the amounts of awards paid to them from the Insurance Fund,— all of which is provided for and governed by Title 35-1-62, Utah Code Annotated 1953, set out at length in McConnell v. Comm. of Finance, 13 Utah 2d 395, 375 P.2d 394 (1962), a case relied on by appellant in the instant litigation. Reversed, with no costs awarded.
Pertinent and essential facts may be abstracted as follows: Each plaintiff. 1) suffered on-the-job injuries, 2) received compensation from the Fund under the Workmen’s Compensation Act (Title 35-1, U.C. A.1953), 3) sued and recovered judgment against third-party tortfeasors, 4) paid the costs and attorneys’ fees incident thereto, 5) returned to the Fund amounts they had received therefrom, 6) but under protest, after refusal of the administrators of the Fund to share in such expenses, 7) all of which occurred before this court’s decision in Worthen v. Shurtleff & Andrews, Inc.,1 which required those administering the Fund to share such expenses in a similar case, but 8) after the then subsisting governing case of McConnell v. Comm, of Finance was decided by this court, which case was overruled in a three to two decision in the Worthen case, insofar as it was inconsistent with the latter decision.
The main point on appeal and our conclusions with respect thereto are as follows :
That Worthen v. Shurtleff should not be applied retroactively so as to permit the plaintiffs here to recover part of their costs and attorneys’ fees incident to their independent actions against third-party tort-feasors. We agree with this contention.
*440The McConnell case, saying that the insurance carrier, which was not a party to the action against the third-party tort-feasor, did not have to share costs and attorneys’ fees under the statute, which required full reimbursement to the carrier, was then the only case interpreting the act involved in not only the Worthen case but the instant cases. Under the particular circumstances of the instant cases, we see no reason to indulge the fiction that the McConnell case never really existed, and that therefore (without any logic) it was wasted effort, breath and paper. Since the construction of a statute in the light of existing judicial interpretation (the McConnell case) is the precise issue here, we think and hold that espousing such fiction here simply would amount to judicial legislation.2 To allay any fears as to the matter before us, our decision prospectively will be authoritative.
We conclude that the following points urged on appeal either are without merit, or are moot because of our decision reflected in the preceding paragraph: That plaintiffs are barred by estoppel, limitation-statutes, failure to pursue administrative-procedures, are not the real parties in interest and laches.
CROCKETT, C. J., and CALLISTER and TUCKETT, JJ., concur.. 19 Utah 2d 80, 426 P.2d 223 (1967).
. This is not to say that there cannot be decisions that have retroactive effect in a given set of circumstances.