Recent Blog Posts in 2010 |
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| August 26, 2010 |
| Judge lets former Hooters employees' lawsuits proceed |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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Two former female Hooters employees who filed a lawsuit against Hooters alleging weight discrimination can proceed with their cases after a Macomb County Circuit judge declined a Hooters’ request to dismiss the cases.
Hooters of Roseville Inc. and Hooters of America Inc., the defendants, argued that the Cassandra Smith and Leanne Convery, who worked as servers at the
restaurant
, had signed agreements that “mutually bound” all parties to arbitrate the discrimination claims.
Macomb County Circuit Judge Peter Maceroni — in an opinion issued Monday that the parties received today — said the women “may not have knowingly waived their right to litigate their claims in court should their claim be proven that they were never afforded an opportunity to take the agreement with them to consult with counsel.”
The request for summary judgment was “denied without prejudice” meaning that Hooters could file for a dismissal again if they produce convincing evidence.
“For now, he rules the case stays in Circuit Court,” Michael Gatti, lawyer for Smith, said today.
Smith filed her lawsuit in May and Convery in June alleging that Hooters violated the Michigan Elliot-Larsen Civil
Rights
Act that bars employers from discrimination on the basis of religion, marital status, race, gender, age, height and weight.
By Cecil Angel, Free Press Staff Writer
Read more: Judge lets former Hooters employees' lawsuits proceed | freep.com | Detroit Free Press
http://www.freep.com/article/20100824/NEWS04/100824082/Judge-lets-former-Hooters-employees-lawsuit-proceed#ixzz0xk0W5V00
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| August 19, 2010 |
| Appeals Court Upholds $65 Million Verdict for Woman in 2007 Crash |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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The 2nd District Court of Appeal has upheld a $65 million verdict for a Wauchula woman injured in a 2007 traffic crash.
The verdict is
considered to be one of the largest by a Polk County jury.
Kendra Lymon, then 19, was driving her Dodge Neon on Aug. 21, 2007, when a tractor-trailer struck her car at State Road 35 and State Road 64 in Zolfo Springs, according to the lawsuit.
Lymon's lawyers argued at trial that she had the green light and produced an eyewitness to testify to that.
Before the crash, the Hardee High School graduate was attending South Florida Community College, majoring in psychology, court records show.
She could speak six languages and was working as a residential aide for Florida Institute of Neurologic Rehabilitation, according to the deposition of her mother, Vanessa Lymon.
After the crash, Kendra Lymon was left with extensive injuries and is unable to care for herself.
Vanessa Lymon said in her deposition her daughter's condition requires constant supervision.
During a normal day, she requires help to bathe, to dress, to eat, to go to the bathroom and to do other routine tasks. She has trouble walking and uses a wheelchair.
On March 18, 2009, a jury found in favor of Lymon with the multimillion-dollar verdict.
An Auburndale-based company, Bynum Transport, and its part-time truck driver, Robert Bohn, had argued the amount should be reduced because it was excessive and a new trial should take place, court records show.
The appeal specifically challenged $41,443,401 being awarded for "pain and suffering, disability, physical impairment, disfigurement, mental anguish, inconvenience, aggravation of disease or physical defect, or loss of capacity for the enjoyment of life."
But the Lakeland-based appellate court affirmed the lower court's decision to award the jury's verdict of $65 million, according to a one-page ruling Friday.
No further explanation was given. The decision was agreed upon by appellate Judges James W. Whatley, Edward C. LaRose and Marva Crenshaw.
Isaac Ruiz-Carus, a Tampa lawyer who represented Lymon in the appeal, said Lymon's family is pleased with the appellate court's decision.
He said the money from the lawsuit would help to provide the 24-hour care that she needs to live.
[ Jason Geary can be reached at jason.geary@theledger.com or 863-802-7536. ]
By Jason Geary
THE LEDGER
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| August 16, 2010 |
| Long Beach to pay nearly $8 million to man who was in prison for 24 years on wrongful murder conviction |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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The city of Long Beach agreed Wednesday to pay nearly $8 million to settle a lawsuit filed by a man who spent 24 years in prison after being wrongly convicted of murder based largely on the testimony of a jailhouse informant.
Thomas L. Goldstein was convicted in the 1979 shotgun slaying of John McGinest in Long Beach. Edward Fink, the informant, testified that Goldstein confessed to the murder while they were in Long Beach City Jail.
A judge overturned the conviction more than a dozen years later because of Fink's credibility problems as well as prosecutors' failure to tell Goldstein's attorney that they had cut a deal to go easy on Fink in a separate criminal case.
Goldstein, a Marine Corps veteran, was freed in 2004. He sued the Los Angeles County prosecutors involved in his case, contending officials regularly used jailhouse informants and did not take steps to make sure they were telling the truth.
Barry Litt, who represented Goldstein in the civil case, said the settlement was important because it held authorities accountable for failing to provide all the information that could have aided in his client's defense.
"In Tom’s case, the information the authorities suppressed would have led to his acquittal instead of his conviction," Litt said. "Their conduct resulted in Tom spending 24 years in some of the worst prisons in the whole country, years he never should have spent and can never recover."
Monte Machit, principal deputy city attorney for Long Beach, said that despite the settlement, Long Beach authorities deny that Goldstein was wrongfully arrested or that his constitutional rights were violated.
"The city's settlement is a product of the cost of defending the case through trial and the possibility that if Goldstein did prevail, the verdict could be quite sizable at a time that every municipal entity is financially strapped," Machit said.
He added that the city did not have the opportunity to cross-examine key witnesses in the case, including one man who "was suffering from serious mental problems [at the time he recanted] and was vulnerable to suggestion."
Goldstein was living in Long Beach when he was arrested in a shooting in an alley near his home. Several witnesses gave conflicting descriptions of a suspect. Some identified the gunman as black and one witness told investigators it was Goldstein, who is white.
Fink, a heroin addict who investigators placed in a Long Beach City Jail cell with Goldstein, testified that Goldstein confessed to the murder while they were locked up together.
After Goldstein's conviction, it was revealed that a number of people in law enforcement had doubts about Fink's credibility. The other key witness against him would later recant his testimony.
A 1990 grand jury investigation documented prosecutors' widespread abuse of false testimony by jailhouse informants in Los Angeles County during the 1970s and '80s.
After his release, Goldstein sued the Los Angeles County district attorney's office for his wrongful imprisonment. He alleged that top prosecutors had failed to develop policies and procedures regarding jailhouse informants, and failed to adequately train and supervise their subordinates regarding that information.
But the U.S. Supreme Court last year threw out the lawsuit, ruling that district attorneys are immune from wrongful conviction suits. Attorneys for Goldstein also sued Long Beach; it was that suit that was settled Wednesday
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| August 16, 2010 |
| Molestation Award Against Catholic Church is Upheld |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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Howard v. American National Fire Inc. Co. (2010) , Cal.App.4th
[Nos. A121569 and A123187. First Dist., Div. Four.
Aug. 11, 2010.]
JAMES HOWARD et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, v. AMERICAN NATIONAL FIRE INS. CO. et al., Defendants and Appellants.
(Superior Court of the city and county of San Francisco, No. 307379 and 307383, Steven Stone, Judge.)
(Opinion by Sepulveda, J., with Ruvolo, P. J., and Rivera, J., concurring.)
COUNSEL
Glaspy & Glaspy, Inc., David M. Glaspy; Clyde & Co. US, Peter J. Whalen, Kathryn C. Ashton. for Appellant
Law Offices of Tony J. Tanke, Tony J. Tanke; Reinhardt, Wendorf & Blanchfield, Mark A. Wendorf for Respondents. {Slip Opn. Page 2}
OPINION
SEPULVEDA, J.-
James Howard, a young man molested as a child by a Catholic priest, sued the Bishop who retained the priest in the diocese. A jury found the Bishop liable for negligent retention, and the court entered judgment in the amount of $5.5 million: $2.5 million in compensatory damages and $3 million in punitive damages. The Bishop settled with Howard while the case was on appeal, and agreed to join Howard in an action against the Bishop's insurers to recover on the judgment and for bad faith failure to defend, settle, and indemnify the molestation case. This action against one of the defendant insurers, American National Fire Insurance Company (American), was adjudicated in a bench trial. The court found American liable for breach of contract and bad faith failure to defend, settle, and indemnify. The court awarded almost $3 million in damages. American appeals the judgment, and plaintiffs appeal the denial of prejudgment interest. In a separate appeal, American challenges the legal costs awarded to plaintiffs in a postjudgment order. We consolidated the two appeals for purposes of oral argument and decision. As discussed below, we modify the judgment to award prejudgment interest but affirm the judgment in all other respects. We also affirm the postjudgment order awarding costs, with one modification.
I. FACTS
A. The underlying lawsuit and insurance coverage disputes
A Catholic priest, Father Oliver O'Grady, sexually molested many young children over many years and was criminally convicted of child molestation in 1993. In 1994 and 1995, James Howard and his brother Joh Howard sued O'Grady and other defendants for damages suffered from the priest's molestation. The named defendants included the head of the diocese that employed O'Grady, the Roman Catholic Bishop of Stockton (Bishop), who is a corporation sole (a corporation of one person whose successor becomes the corporation on his death or resignation).
In his complaint, James Howard alleged that the Bishop employed O'Grady from approximately 1977 through 1991. James, who was born in June 1975, alleged that he was an active parishioner in the church from the time of his birth and that O'Grady regularly and repeatedly molested him "[b]eginning in approximately 1979" and continuing through about 1988. James Howard's younger brother, Joh Howard (born in August 1978) alleged molestation by O'Grady "[b]eginning in approximately December 1984" through 1991.
The Bishop had several comprehensive general liability policies from different insurers and excess insurance policies as well. American insured the Bishop from November 1, 1978 to November 1, 1979, under a comprehensive general liability policy for all sums he became legally obligated to pay as damages for "bodily injury caused by an occurrence," defined as an "accident" resulting during the policy period in bodily injury "neither expected nor intended from the standpoint of the insured," including bodily injury caused by an employee's battery, up to a limit of $500,000 per occurrence. American also agreed to defend civil lawsuits brought against the Bishop. When the Bishop was sued for negligent retention of a molesting priest, the Bishop sought defense and indemnity from several insurers, including American. A number of insurers defended the Bishop. American did not. American maintained that the molestation was not covered by its policy because the molestation occurred after expiration of American's {Slip Opn. Page 3} policy in November 1979, and thus it denied any duty to defend or indemnify. American also denied coverage for Joh Howard's claims, noting that Joh's complaint did not allege molestation prior to 1984. fn. 1 As for James Howard, American's letter denying coverage made no mention of the complaint's allegation that James was molested beginning in about 1979. Instead, American relied upon statements James made during his deposition to conclude that the abuse really began in 1984.
James and Joh Howard made several pretrial settlement demands. In July 1997, they demanded $2.75 million each to settle. James reduced his demand to $2.3 million in October 1997 and to $1.85 million in April 1998. American did not offer any contribution toward settlement and refused to attend mediation sessions until the April 1998 mediation, where the lowest settlement demand was made. During that mediation, American said that it would contribute only "a minimal amount toward the settlement" and "no firm figure was given." Internal documents show that American's counsel had no authority to pay above $50,000 in settlement at the April 1998 mediation. The case did not settle.
Trial began in May 1998. The case was tried to a jury against a single defendant, the Bishop, and on a single cause of action, negligent retention or supervision. The jury found the Bishop negligent in the James and Joh Howard cases and assessed both compensatory and punitive damages. The jury found compensatory damages to be $3.05 million for James Howard and $3.3 million for Joh Howard. The jury also awarded punitive damages of $12 million for each plaintiff.
The trial judge reduced the awards in September 1998 on posttrial motions. Compensatory damages were reduced pursuant to Proposition 51, which limits liability for noneconomic damages in proportion to a defendant's percentage of fault. (Civ. Code, § 1431.1 et seq.) Here, the jury in the underlying case found the Bishop to be eighty percent at fault in the negligent retention of O'Grady and the court applied that {Slip Opn. Page 4} percentage to reduce the amount of the compensatory damages assessed by the jury. The trial judge also found the punitive damages to be excessive and granted a remittitur of punitive damages from $12 million to $3 million for each plaintiff.
The final judgment, following postverdict motions, awarded compensatory damages of $2.5 million to James Howard and $2.75 million to Joh Howard. The Howards' punitive damages were $3 million each. Both the Howards and the Bishop appealed the judgment. The Howards maintained that the trial court improperly applied Proposition 51 to reduce the amount of compensatory damages awarded by the jury and sought reinstatement of all punitive damages. The Bishop sought an entirely new trial.
B. Settlement and partial satisfaction of the underlying judgment
The Bishop had difficulty providing the collateral necessary for an appeal bond. In November 1998, the Bishop paid $1 million toward satisfaction of the punitive damages component of the judgment, to be credited equally between plaintiffs, in exchange for a stay of execution until January 1999. The Bishop felt that the assets of the diocese were at risk and, in early 1999, the Bishop negotiated with the Howards and various insurers to settle the litigation.
Two of those insurers, Century Indemnity Company and related entities (CIGNA) and St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company (St. Paul), had contributed to the Bishop's defense while reserving their rights to contest coverage under their policies. In February 1999, CIGNA agreed to pay the Bishop its remaining policy limits of $956,342.12, plus interest on that amount from the date of judgment and CIGNA's share of costs taxed against the Bishop, in partial satisfaction of the judgment. Likewise, in March 1999, St. Paul agreed to pay the Bishop its remaining policy limits of $2.339 million plus interest and costs in partial satisfaction of the judgment. fn. 2 Both insurers gave the Bishop permission to allocate the payment to either of the two Howards and among any claims, except punitive damages. {Slip Opn. Page 5}
In May 1999, the Bishop finalized a settlement agreement with the Howards. At the time, the Howards had a judgment awarding James $5.5 million and Joh $5.75 million. Against that combined total of $11.25 million, the Bishop had already paid $1 million. The settlement agreement provided for an additional, immediate cash payment of $6,655,442. fn. 3 That payment was funded by the CIGNA and St. Paul payments of their policy limits, described above, combined with the Bishop's payment of $3,360,099.88. The Howards equally divided the $6,655,442 cash payment between themselves. Each received $3,327,721. fn. 4
All sums paid under the agreement were said "to compensate plaintiffs for their physical injuries and sickness caused by the events underlying" their lawsuit against the Bishop for negligent retention of O'Grady. The parties agreed that the Howards "may allocate any and all payments received by them under this agreement among their respective claims and interests as they, in their sole discretion, see fit." The Bishop also agreed to prosecute litigation against his insurers and to pay the Howards the proceeds from that litigation. In exchange for the Bishop's payments and promises, the Howards released him from all claims. The parties dismissed their appeals, rendering the judgment final. {Slip Opn. Page 6}
C. Initiation of this lawsuit by the Bishop as insured and the Howards as judgment creditors
In October 1999, the Howards filed a complaint against the Bishop's insurers as judgment creditors seeking to collect on their judgment and claiming bad faith refusal to pay the judgment. The Bishop filed a separate complaint against the same insurers for breach of contract and bad faith breach of the insurance contracts in failing to defend, settle, and indemnify the Howards' claims against him. The complaints were consolidated in the trial court.
The defendant insurers included American, CIGNA, and St. Paul. In 2003, CIGNA and St. Paul reached a partial settlement of the coverage litigation with plaintiffs. fn. 5 The parties agreed to submit insurance policy benefit claims to a private judge and settled the amount of "noncontractual claims," such as bad faith, at $75,000 to be paid by each insurer to plaintiffs at the conclusion of the trial. CIGNA and St. Paul also assigned to plaintiffs the insurers' contribution rights against American for defense costs the two insurers incurred in the underlying Howard litigation.
CIGNA and St. Paul later reached a comprehensive settlement with plaintiffs that included a release of policy claims. CIGNA paid the Howards a total of $425,000, of which $75,000 was for noncontractual claims as previously negotiated in the January 2003 partial settlement agreement. St. Paul agreed to pay plaintiffs $825,000 "for alleged compensatory damages awarded for alleged bodily injury sustained by the Howards arising from the events and circumstances underlying the Howard action and post judgment interest . . . ." St. Paul paid an additional $75,000 for noncontractual claims, as previously negotiated. The two insurers' assignments to plaintiffs of contribution rights against American were reaffirmed in these later settlement agreements.
Meanwhile, plaintiffs' claims against American proceeded to trial. Plaintiffs and American agreed to a bench trial by retired Justice Steven Stone of JAMS, appointed as a {Slip Opn. Page 7} temporary judge of the superior court and privately compensated by the parties. The parties retained their right to appeal. The trial between plaintiffs and American was bifurcated into liability and damages phases with a statement of decision issued after each phase. The court's statement of decision on liability was issued in December 2005, and the final decision on damages issued in January 2008. Judgment was filed in March 2008.
The court found that James Howard was sexually molested during American's policy period, which triggered coverage under the policy, and that American, in bad faith, breached its duty to defend, settle, and indemnify the underlying litigation brought by James against the Bishop. American was ordered to pay almost $3 million, as follows: (1) American's per occurrence policy limit of $500,000 to James Howard as a judgment creditor; (2) $75,523.87 to plaintiffs as assignees of St. Paul and CIGNA in contribution for defense fees and costs and independent counsel fees and costs in the underlying action; (3) bad faith damages of $1,533,698 to reimburse the Bishop for settlement payments he made to James, and the further amount of $194,817.17 to reimburse the Bishop for his out-of-pocket payment of attorney fees and accounting expenses incurred postjudgment in the underlying action; and (4) $661,719.97 to reimburse attorney fees incurred to compel payment of benefits due under the insurance policy. The court also awarded plaintiffs costs of suit, to be assessed later. In a postjudgment order, the court awarded costs of $93,827.07.
American filed a timely notice of appeal from the judgment in May 2008, and plaintiffs cross-appealed. American challenges the judgment on numerous grounds and contests both the trial court's liability findings and its calculation of damages. Plaintiffs dispute the trial court's refusal to award them prejudgment interest. In a separate appeal, American disputes the court's postjudgment award of costs. The parties completed {Slip Opn. Page 8} briefing on appeal in 2010. We consolidated the two appeals for purposes of oral argument and decision. fn. 6
II. DISCUSSION
A. American had a duty to indemnify the Bishop for damages assessed in the underlying litigation and James Howard, as a judgment creditor, was entitled to recover against American on that judgment
Liability insurance obligates the insurer to indemnify the insured against third party claims covered by the policy by settling the claim or paying any judgment against the insured. (Croskey et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Insurance Litigation (The Rutter Group 2009) ¶ 7:500, p. 7B-1.) Where judgment is obtained against an insured in an action based on bodily injury, death, or property damage, the plaintiff (now a judgment creditor) may bring an action against the insurer on the policy, subject to the policy's terms and limitations, to recover on the judgment. (Ins. Code, § 11580, subd. (b)(2).) In short, the " 'judgment creditor may proceed directly against any liability insurance covering the defendant, and obtain satisfaction of the judgment up to the amount of the policy limits.' " (Shafer v. Berger, Kahn, Shafton, Moss, Figler, Simon & Gladstone (2003) 107 Cal.App.4th 54, 68 (Shafer v. Berger, Kahn).) Among the elements that must be proven is that " 'the policy covers the relief awarded in the judgment.' " (Garamendi v. Golden Eagle Ins. Co. (2004) 116 Cal.App.4th 694, 710.)
It is undisputed that James Howard obtained a judgment against the Bishop, American's insured, for compensatory damages of $2.5 million. The dispute at trial was "whether James Howard was injured (i.e., sexually molested) during the American insurance policy period from November 1, 1978 through November 1, 1979, such that coverage was triggered under the policy." The court found that plaintiffs met their {Slip Opn. Page 9} burden of proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, that "James Howard was sexually molested by Father O'Grady during the American policy period."
The court's finding of molestation during the policy period is supported by substantial evidence. As the trial court observed, "Father O'Grady was a voracious sexual predator of children in 1979 and during that time he repeatedly had unfettered access to James Howard." During 1979, O'Grady frequently was in the Howard home, often staying overnight and sleeping with James. In 1993, James told the police that his sexual molestation by O'Grady first started "probably [in the] late seventies" when James "was around four or five years old." James Howard was born on June 16, 1975, and he was therefore four years old on June 16, 1979, in the midst of the American policy period. Other evidence likewise supports the court's finding of molestation in 1979, when James was four years old. James was interviewed by church officials in 1993, and told them that O'Grady molested him "from when [he] was aged 4" and later repeated that the molestation "first took place when [he] was about 4." O'Grady was deposed in 2000, during the course of this coverage litigation, and initially testified that he had sexual contact with James in the 1970's (he later equivocated and invoked the Fifth Amendment).
American does little to deny the force of this evidence. American even concedes that "O'Grady was a sexual predator" and "he abused James." But American argues that the evidence presented in the underlying litigation failed to show that O'Grady abused James during the 1979 policy period and that the court in this coverage action erred in considering evidence (like the police report) not presented in that underlying litigation. American insists that the only evidence admissible in this coverage action is the evidence that was presented to the jury in the underlying litigation. American is mistaken.
Insurance coverage and personal injury liability present distinct issues. "Generally speaking, in an action by an injured party against the party who allegedly caused the injury the court does not adjudicate the issue of insurance coverage. The only questions litigated are the defendant's liability and the amount of damages. The plaintiff is not concerned with the theory of liability which produces victory; only with procuring the {Slip Opn. Page 10} largest possible judgment. Similarly, the defendant is concerned only with avoiding, or at least minimizing, a judgment for the plaintiff. [Citation.] Whether the plaintiff's loss is covered by the defendant's insurance is not germane to the action, and evidence on that issue would be excluded as irrelevant." (Schaefer/Karpf Productions v. CNA Ins. Companies (1998) 64 Cal.App.4th 1306, 1313.) The evidence presented in the underlying litigation is properly focused on questions of liability, not insurance coverage, and therefore does not necessarily dictate the scope of evidence in a later coverage action.
The underlying litigation may, of course, impact issues in the coverage litigation. A party may be collaterally estopped from relitigating issues actually litigated in the underlying litigation. (Schaefer/Karpf Productions v. CNA Ins. Co., supra, 64 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1312-1313.) Generally, the issues litigated in the underlying litigation are the defendant insured's liability and the amount of damages suffered by the injured party, not coverage issues. (Croskey et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Insurance Litigation, supra, ¶¶ 15:1083 to 15:1086, pp. 15-188 to 15-189.) Accordingly, it has been held that a jury's finding that the injured party suffered property damage for purposes of establishing liability and assessing damages was not conclusive against the insurer on the distinct issue of whether the damages suffered were covered by insurance as property damage under policy terms. (Schaefer/Karpf, supra, at p. 1314.)
The underlying litigation may also impact issues in the coverage litigation by application of the simple principle that the duty to indemnify "is determined by the actual basis of liability imposed on the insured." (Armstrong World Industries, Inc. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. (1996) 45 Cal.App.4th 1, 108.) Where a jury expressly imposed liability on the basis of trademark infringement and the insurance policy excluded coverage for trademark infringement, no indemnification was due. (Palmer v. Truck Ins. Exchange (1999) 21 Cal.4th 1109, 1113-1114, 1120.) The insured was not permitted to recharacterize the injury as an advertising injury in a later coverage action. (Id. at p. 1120.)
These cases do not assist American. The exact dates of molestation were not adjudicated in the underlying litigation and thus provide no grounds for invoking the {Slip Opn. Page 11} doctrine of collateral estoppel. It is true, as American notes, that the timing of the molestation was a subject of testimony in the underlying litigation and a necessary element of plaintiffs' contention that the Bishop had reason to know, before James was molested, that O'Grady posed a risk to children. But the specific dates of James's molestation--and whether those dates fell within the insurance policy term--were not adjudicated. As for the basis of liability, the jury in the underlying action found that James was injured by the Bishop's negligent retention of O'Grady, which clearly falls within the policy's coverage provisions. American misconstrues Palmer v. Truck Ins. Exchange, supra, 21 Cal.4th at p. 1120 (and similar cases) in arguing that California law requires that plaintiffs "prove that James's judgment against the Bishop was based on the jury's acceptance that James was molested during American's policy period." Plaintiffs were not required to prove molestation within the policy period in the underlying action. It is sufficient that plaintiffs proved to the jury that James was molested by a priest negligently retained by the Bishop (establishing a basis for liability encompassed by the policy) and later proved, in this coverage action, that the molestation occurred within the policy period.
In a related argument, American maintains that plaintiffs should have been precluded from introducing evidence of molestation during the policy term of 1979 because the evidence contradicts James's testimony in the underlying litigation placing the start of molestation in 1980. The argument rests on James's response to a single question when he was asked at the 1998 trial, "When in time is your first memory of Oliver O'Grady violating you?" and James answered, "It's probably five or six years old." American points out that James was five years old on June 16, 1980, seven months after the American policy expired.
American makes too much of this testimony. James testified about his "first memory" of molestation, not the first actual incident of molestation; vaguely said he was "probably" five or six years old; and gave his testimony in a context where the exact time that the molestation started was immaterial. As the trial court noted, "the fact that James Howard testified that his first memory of the abuse was 'probably' at [five or six] years {Slip Opn. Page 12} of age establishes that James Howard was simply estimating an answer to a question that was entirely irrelevant to the issues actually being litigated before the jury." The trial testimony is far too uncertain to constitute a binding admission. "An unclear or equivocal statement does not create a binding judicial admission." (Stroud v. Tunzi (2008) 160 Cal.App.4th 377, 385.) A court may disregard fragmentary and equivocal statements, especially when contradicted by other credible evidence. (Price v. Wells Fargo Bank (1989) 213 Cal.App.3d 465, 482.) Here, there was other credible evidence. Among that evidence was James's 1993 interviews with the police and church officials, which predated the trial testimony, in which James reported molestation in 1979, when he was four years old. As the trial court noted, these early reports of molestation in 1979 "were given long before coverage under the 1979 American insurance policy was an issue--indeed, long before anyone even knew that American insured the Bishop at that time. James Howard's lack of incentive to report molestation in 1979 lends additional credence and veracity to the statements." The trial court was not precluded from considering these statements and other evidence proving molestation in 1979, despite James's trial testimony suggesting a later time. Substantial evidence supports the trial court's finding of molestation during the 1979 policy period. James Howard, as a judgment creditor, was thus entitled to proceed directly against American, as an insurer covering the defendant Bishop, and obtain satisfaction of the judgment. (Shafer v. Berger, Kahn, supra, 107 Cal.App.4th at p. 68.)
B. The trial court properly calculated the amount of recovery on the judgment
As noted above, a " 'judgment creditor may proceed directly against any liability insurance covering the defendant, and obtain satisfaction of the judgment up to the amount of the policy limits.' " (Shafer v. Berger, Kahn, supra, 107 Cal.App.4th at p. 68.) The trial court here ordered satisfaction of the judgment up to the amount of American's policy limit: $500,000. On appeal, American argues that the judgment was partially satisfied by other insurers, leaving only $292,794 in compensatory damages unpaid, and that an award of $500,000 creates a double recovery. The trial court considered this argument and disagreed with American's calculations, finding that any offset against the {Slip Opn. Page 13} judgment for settlement payments made by other insurers would still leave over $500,000 in compensatory damages unpaid, and thus required American to pay its policy limit. The trial court was correct.
"To prevent a double recovery, equity demands credit be given for payments received on the judgment. Such a balance acts as an offset against the judgment. 'At common law, a setoff is based upon the equitable principle that parties to a transaction involving mutual debts and credits can strike a balance between them.' [Citations.] Setoffs routinely are allowed in actions to enforce a money judgment. [Citation.] The right of offset rests upon the inherent power of the court to do justice to parties appearing before it. [Citations.] . . . [¶] It is the rule that 'if one joint tortfeasor satisfies a judgment against all joint tortfeasors the judgment creditor cannot obtain a double recovery by collecting the same judgment from another of the tortfeasors.' [Citation.] The rationale is that '[a]n injured person is entitled to only one satisfaction of judgment for a single harm, and full payment of a judgment by one tortfeasor discharges all others who may be liable for the same injury.' [Citation.] . . . '[W]here fewer than all of the joint tortfeasors satisfy less than the entire judgment, such satisfaction will not relieve the remaining tortfeasors of their obligation under the judgment. Stated otherwise, "partial satisfaction has the effect of a discharge pro tanto [for so much]." ' The single satisfaction rule is equitable in nature, and its apparent purpose is to prevent unjust enrichment. [Citation.] The plaintiff is entitled only to a single recovery of full compensatory damages for a single injury." (Jhaveri v. Teitelbaum (2009) 176 Cal.App.4th 740, 753-754.)
We are concerned here with insurers, not joint tortfeasors, but similar rules apply to prevent an insured or injured party from receiving a double recovery. "The fact that several insurance policies may cover the same risk does not increase the insured's right to recover for the loss, or give the insured the right to recover more than once. Rather, the insured's right of recovery is restricted to the actual amount of the loss. Hence, where there are several policies of insurance on the same risk and the insured has recovered the full amount of its loss from one or more, but not all, of the insurance carriers, the insured has no further rights against the insurers who have not contributed to its recovery. {Slip Opn. Page 14} Similarly, the liability of the remaining insurers to the insured ceases, even if they have done nothing to indemnify or defend the insured. They remain liable, however, for contribution to those insurers who have already paid on the loss or for the insured's defense." (Fireman's Fund Ins. Co. v. Maryland Casualty Co. (1998) 65 Cal.App.4th 1279, 1295, italics omitted.)
Here, James Howard received a judgment awarding compensatory damages of $2.5 million. In May 1999, the Bishop settled the underlying litigation while it was on appeal, and two insurers contributed to that settlement. The insurer settlement agreements expressly stated that they were in partial satisfaction of the judgment. St. Paul paid $2.339 million, and CIGNA paid $956,342, which amounts were divided equally between plaintiffs James and Joh Howard. The insurers paid additional amounts for postjudgment interest. James Howard's share of the principal payments was $1,647,671. This effectively reduced James's judgment for compensatory damages from $2.5 million to $852,329. American does not dispute this calculation.
American's dispute rests with the insurers' later settlement payments during this coverage litigation. St. Paul, in 2005, and CIGNA, in 2006, settled coverage litigation brought by both the Bishop and the Howards. St. Paul paid plaintiffs $825,000, and CIGNA paid $350,000 (excluding payments for noncontractual claims, such as bad faith). James received 47.62 percent of these payments, which was his pro rata share of the compensatory damages judgment. American maintains that the entire amount James received from these settlements ($559,535) should be offset against the $852,329 judgment balance, reducing the outstanding judgment (and American's liability) to $292,794. The trial court questioned if these settlements constituted a partial satisfaction of the underlying judgment that entitled American to an offset but ultimately found it "immaterial whether or not the other insurer's payments are properly offset from the James Howard judgment." The court held, assuming an offset was proper, that only $326,129 should be offset because $233,406 of the total amount received in settlement was for postjudgment interest. The court therefore concluded that over $526,000 {Slip Opn. Page 15} remained unpaid on the judgment, and thus American was liable for the full amount of its policy limit.
The trial court was correct in apportioning the settlement payments between principal and interest. Money received in satisfaction of a money judgment is credited against accrued interest, and then to the principal amount of the judgment remaining unsatisfied. (Code Civ. Proc., § 695.220, subds. (c), (d).) American does not dispute this legal principle but argues that there was no accrued interest, either because interest was separately paid (as it was in the prior settlements) or no interest accrued after May 1999 when the Bishop settled with the Howards.
American is wrong on both points. The 2005 and 2006 settlements, unlike the prior settlements in 1999, paid lump sums rather than separate principal and interest payments. St. Paul's 2005 settlement agreement states that it agrees to pay $825,000 "for alleged compensatory damages awarded for alleged bodily injury sustained by the Howards arising from the events and circumstances underlying the Howard action and postjudgment interest in a check made payable" to plaintiffs' attorneys' trust account. Plainly, there was a single payment of $825,000 for compensatory damages and postjudgment interest. There is no evidence to the contrary. CIGNA also made a lump sum payment.
The court also properly found that interest accrued from the time of the judgment in 1998. It is not true, as American asserts, that interest stopped accruing in 1999, when the Bishop settled with the Howards. That settlement did not satisfy the judgment in full. Interest accrues on any unpaid principal of a money judgment remaining unsatisfied. (Code Civ. Proc., § 685.010, subd. (a).) The trial court's only error, if any, was in calculating interest on the amount of the individual settlement payments, instead of the amount of the entire outstanding judgment. But the parties do not raise this issue on appeal, and the calculation favored American in lessening the amount of the settlement payment attributed to interest. However the interest is calculated, whether based upon the amount of the outstanding judgment or upon the amount of the individual settlement {Slip Opn. Page 16} payments, over $500,000 remained unpaid on the judgment. James Howard, as a judgment creditor, was entitled to recover $500,000 from American.
C.American breached its duty to defend and owed contribution to the defending insurers
The trial court found that American had a duty to defend the Bishop in the underlying litigation brought by James Howard and breached that duty. The defense of the Bishop fell to his other insurers, who shouldered the expense through trial. Two of those insurers, St. Paul and CIGNA, assigned to plaintiffs their contribution claims against American for defense costs. The court calculated the amount of the two insurers' right of contribution from American at $75,523.87 and awarded that amount to plaintiffs as the insurers' assignees.
American disputes the trial court's liability finding and its calculations. As to liability, American maintains that a duty to defend is determined at the time the insured tenders the insurance policy and, at that time, the facts known to American showed that the molestation of James occurred outside its policy period. American also questions the basis for awarding any recovery, even if it did have a duty to defend. American argues that an insured cannot recover for breach of the duty to defend if the insured is fully defended by other insurers and denies plaintiffs' entitlement to receive contribution as assignees of defending insurers. As for the calculation of the amount due, American writes a single sentence in its appellate brief to say that the trial court's calculations "are incorrect in a number of ways" including giving American no offset for expenses attributable to defending Joh Howard's portion of the underlying case and awarding American's full share of expenses despite the fact that only two of four defending insurers assigned plaintiffs their rights to these expenses. American's claims are meritless.
"Liability insurance usually imposes two separate obligations on the insurer: (1) to indemnify its insured against third party claims covered by the policy (by settling the claim or paying any judgment against the insured); and (2) to defend such claims against its insured (by furnishing competent counsel and paying attorney fees and costs." {Slip Opn. Page 17} (Croskey et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Insurance Litigation, supra, ¶ 7:500, p. 7B-1, italics omitted.) The duty to defend is generally determined "from all of the information available to the insurer at the time of the tender of the defense," although later developments may impact the insurer's duty to defend. (B & E Convalescent Center v. State Compensation Ins. Fund (1992) 8 Cal.App.4th 78, 92; see Marie Y. v. General Star Indemnity Co. (2003) 110 Cal.App.4th 928, 957 [amended complaint triggered duty]; Croskey et al, supra, ¶ 7:517, p. 7B-8.)
The duty to defend is broader than the duty to indemnify. Indemnification is due for claims actually covered by the policy but an insurer "must defend a suit which potentially seeks damages within the coverage of the policy." (Gray v. Zurich Insurance Co. (1966) 65 Cal.2d 263, 275, original italics.) "[A] bare 'potential' or 'possibility' of coverage [is] the trigger of a defense duty." (Montrose Chemical Corp. v. Superior Court (1993) 6 Cal.4th 287, 300.) Unresolved factual disputes impacting insurance coverage do not absolve the insurer of its duty to defend. "If coverage depends on an unresolved dispute over a factual question, the very existence of that dispute would establish a possibility of coverage and thus a duty to defend." (Mirpad, LLC v. California Ins. Guarantee Assn. (2005) 132 Cal.App.4th 1058, 1068, italics omitted.)
Substantial evidence supports the trial court's finding that American had a duty to defend the Howard litigation. The Howard complaint alleged that the Bishop (American's insured) negligently retained O'Grady who "regularly and repeatedly sexually molested" James "[b]eginning in approximately 1979." In James's 1996 deposition, which was conducted and reviewed before American reached a decision on the tender of defense, James testified that he had "vague memories of the occasions in which [O'Grady] molested [him] in the home and [he] believe[d] that they started during the late '70s era." This information raised the possibility that the molestation occurred during American's 1979 policy period and triggered its duty to defend.
American's sole reason for denying a defense, then and now, rests on a different part of James's deposition, where he described specific recollections of molestation and said the first one he could recall (with details as to "places, things, images, [and] {Slip Opn. Page 18} memories") was a weekend spent at the rectory after watching a movie, Romancing the Stone (Twentieth Century Fox 1984). That movie was not released in theatres until 1984, years after expiration of American's insurance policy. American claims that James's deposition testimony negated any possibility that James was molested during its policy period, thus absolving the insurer of any to defend. The claim is spurious.
At his deposition, James testified that his first childhood memory of O'Grady was at his brother's baptism in 1978 and that the molestation occurred "as often as [the priest] was involved with [the Howard] family" with molestation activity occurring "somewhere between 100 and 200 times." James said he could not describe every incident. James testified that O'Grady molested him in the Howard family home "many, many times" but could only "bring forth specific images and times where it was more . . . lucid than others." James described several specific incidences that occurred outside his home, of which the rectory incident following the movie was the first. The movie incident was the first detailed incident James recounted; it was not the first time he was molested. James's testimony, when read in context, makes this clear. James explained that he had "only vague memories of the occasions in which [O'Grady] molested [him] in the home, and [he] believe[d] that they started during that late '70s era." The movie incident was the first detailed incident James could tie to a specific date, and James said that incident occurred "in the early '80s."
As the trial court properly found, "when reading the deposition in proper context, it is apparent that James Howard was not testifying that the 'Romancing the Stone' incident was the very first time he was molested by O'Grady, since, moments before he gave that testimony he stated under oath that he had vague recollections of being abused in the family home in the late '70's era. [¶] . . . [¶] It is clear from the deposition of James Howard, taken as a whole, that he was not providing a complete chronology of the 100 to 200 times he was sexually molested by O'Grady, but rather the specific incidents of abuse he testified to such as the 'Romancing the Stone' incident, were simply specific incidents that he had a more vivid recollection tied to a particular place and date. The deposition testimony of James Howard hardly precludes the possibility that James {Slip Opn. Page 19} Howard was sexually molested by Father O'Grady in 1979." American had a duty to defend the Howard litigation.
American argues that, assuming a duty to defend, its failure to defend was not an actionable breach because the Bishop suffered no damages since other insurers provided a defense. It is true that, "to support an action at law for breach of contract, the plaintiff must show it has suffered damages." (Emerald Bay Community Assn. v. Golden Eagle Ins. Corp. (2005) 130 Cal.App.4th 1078, 1088.) It is also true that "[t]he general measure of damages for breach of the duty to defend an insured . . . are the costs and attorney fees expended by the insured defending the underlying action." (Id. at pp. 1088-1089, italics added.) An insured fully defended by one insurer may have no damages to assert against a nondefending insurer. (Id. at p. 1093.) But it is not true that an insured necessarily suffers "no damages from an insurer's breach of the duty to defend whenever the insured receives a defense under any policy." (Risely v. Interinsurance Exchange of the Automobile Club (2010) 183 Cal.App.4th 196, 215.) "In cases in which the insured faces potential liability beyond the policy limits of the defending insurer's policy, courts have concluded that an insured can demonstrate that he has suffered damages from an insurer's breach of the duty to defend, apart from defense costs, in the form of exposure to personal liability." (Ibid.) Here, American's failure to defend, coupled with its failure to settle, exposed the Bishop to a ruinous judgment and led the Bishop to settle the Howard case after judgment when American again breached its duties under the insurance policy and refused to indemnify the Bishop. Moreover, the Bishop did incur some defense costs. Other insurers provided a defense through trial but the Bishop was required to hire attorneys after trial when the appeal was pending. An insurer's duty to defend does not end at trial. (Jenkins v. Insurance Co. of North America (1990) 220 Cal.App.3d 1481, 1489.) The trial court properly found that American breached its duty to defend.
In any event, the court did not award damages for a contractual breach of the duty to defend but for tortious bad faith breach of American's multiple duties to defend, settle, and indemnify, as discussed below. Any success American might have in overturning the {Slip Opn. Page 20} lower court's finding of breach of the duty to defend would therefore have no impact on the judgment awarding the Bishop damages caused by American's failure to settle and indemnify. Nor would it have any impact on the separate matter of coinsurer contribution, to which we now turn.
As noted above, the trial court found that American's failure to defend left the Bishop's other insurers with a disproportionate share of defense expenses. Two of the defending insurers, St. Paul and CIGNA, assigned to plaintiffs their contribution claims against American for defense costs. The court calculated the amount of the two insurers' right of contribution from American at $75,523.87 and awarded that amount to plaintiffs as the insurers' assignees. The award was correct.
"Equitable contribution apportions costs among insurers sharing the same level of liability on the same risk as to the same insured, and is available when several insurers are ' "obligated to indemnify or defend the same loss or claim, and one insurer has paid more than its share of the loss or defended the action without any participation by the others." . . . "The purpose of this rule of equity is to accomplish substantial justice by equalizing the common burden shared by coinsurers, and to prevent one insurer from profiting at the expense of others." ' " (Safeco Ins. Co. of America v. Superior Court (2006) 140 Cal.App.4th 874, 879.) Equitable contribution thus "permits reimbursement to the insurer that paid on the loss for the excess it paid over its proportionate share of the obligation, on the theory that the debt it paid was equally and concurrently owed by other insurers and should be shared by them pro rata in proportion to their respective coverage of the risk." (Fireman's Fund Ins. Co. v. Maryland Casualty Co., supra, 65 Cal.App.4th at p. 1293, italics omitted.) It is well established that an insurer that defends the insured is entitled to equitable contribution from a coinsurer that fails to defend. (Id. at p. 1289.)
American argues that plaintiffs never pleaded a right to equitable contribution and thus are not entitled to such relief. It is true that plaintiffs failed to amend their complaint to allege a right to equitable contribution after the plaintiffs received an assignment of rights from St. Paul and CIGNA during the course of this coverage litigation. But the failure is not fatal to recovery. "It is well settled that the failure of a complaint to state a {Slip Opn. Page 21} cause of action is not fatal to a judgment for the plaintiff unless the appellant can show that the error has resulted in a miscarriage of justice. Where the parties at the trial treat a certain issue as being involved, and the judgment is based on that issue, it is not a prejudicial error that the complaint defectively alleges or fails to allege at all that issue." (Page v. Page (1962) 199 Cal.App.2d 527, 532.) As our Supreme Court has explained, "variance between pleadings and proof is not a basis for reversal unless it prejudicially misleads a party. A variance must be disregarded if the issues on which the decision is actually based were fully and fairly tried." (Franz v. Board of Medical Quality Assurance (1982) 31 Cal.3d 124, 143-144.)
The issue of contribution was fully litigated below. Plaintiffs' trial brief discussed the insurers' assignment of the right to contribution and argued that "plaintiffs are entitled to recover under those contribution rights." American's trial brief addressed the issue in depth. American did not object to the variance between plaintiffs' complaint and their trial claim for contribution; it addressed the merits of the claim. American treated the issue of equitable contribution as involved in the case, and the issue was fully and fairly tried. Under these circumstances, the complaint's failure to allege a right to contribution does not justify overturning the judgment awarding contribution. (Franz v. Board of Medical Quality Assurance, supra, 31 Cal.3d at pp. 143-144; Page v. Page, supra, "199 Cal.App.2d at p. 532.)
Finally, we reach American's challenge to the calculation of the amount of contribution. As we observed earlier, American writes a single sentence in its appellate brief to say that the trial court's calculations "are incorrect in a number of ways" including giving American no offset for expenses attributable to defending Joh Howard's portion of the underlying case and awarding American's full share of expenses despite the fact that only two of four defending insurers assigned plaintiffs their rights to these expenses. Conclusory assertions of error are ineffective in raising issues on appeal. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.204 (a)(1)(B).)
On the record presented, we find no error. The trial court did not apportion defense costs incurred in the underlying litigation between the claims of James and Joh {Slip Opn. Page 22} Howard because, as the court explained, the claims "arose out of a common core of facts, namely the Bishop's negligence in allowing Father O'Grady to have access to the Howard family, which was common in both cases. Virtually all fees incurred were reasonably necessary to defend the Bishop in the James Howard case, even if the Joh Howard case had never been brought." American provides no argument or authority to dispute this ruling.
American also provides no support for its assertion that the court awarded American's full share of expenses when only St. Paul and CIGNA (not all defending insurers) assigned plaintiffs their rights to these expenses. The record indicates that the court limited the contribution award to those defense costs due St. Paul and CIGNA, not all defending insurers, as American claims. The court's statement of decision on damages shows that the court apportioned defense costs among coinsurers and awarded only the amount that St. Paul and CIGNA paid in excess of their proportionate share of the obligation. The calculations appear correct, and have not been demonstrated to be erroneous. American was properly ordered to make an equitable contribution toward defense costs.
D. American breached its duty to settle the underlying Howard case
"In each policy of liability insurance, California law implies a covenant of good faith and fair dealing. This implied covenant obligates the insurance company, among other things, to make reasonable efforts to settle a third party's lawsuit against the insured. If the insurer breaches the implied covenant by unreasonably refusing to settle the third party suit, the insured may sue the insurer in tort to recover damages proximately caused by the insurer's breach." (PPG Industries, Inc. v. Transamerica Ins. Co. (1999) 20 Cal.4th 310, 312.)
The trial court here found that American breached its duty to settle the underlying Howard case. American disputes this finding on appeal. American maintains that (1) there was never a settlement demand within American's $500,000 policy limit so it alone could not have settled the Howard case; (2) the settlement demands were unreasonably high; and (3) the insured was never exposed to personal liability in excess {Slip Opn. Page 23} of the aggregate limit of all his insurance policies and thus unharmed by any failure to settle.
In support of the first argument, American relies upon single insurer cases where the insurer's "refusal to accept an offer of settlement within the policy limits" is said to be a necessary factor in finding breach of the duty to settle. (E.g., Comunale v. Traders & General Ins. Co. (1958) 50 Cal.2d 654, 659.) The reason is obvious: causation. An insurer does not breach the duty to settle if it never had an opportunity to settle. In a single insurer case, the opportunity to settle is typically shown by proof that the injured party made a reasonable settlement offer within the policy limits and the insurer rejected it. (Croskey et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Insurance Litigation, supra, ¶ 12:288, p. 12B-16.) But we are not here concerned with a single insurer. Although there was never a settlement demand within American's $500,000 policy limit, there was a settlement demand for $1.85 million that was well within the primary insurance policy limits of the multiple insurers on the risk, which totaled almost $4.3 million. That fact is relevant in evaluating whether an insurer, in a multiple insurer case, had an opportunity to settle. When multiple insurance policies provide coverage, each insurer's obligation is to cover the full extent of the insured's liability up to policy limits. (Armstrong World Industries, Inc. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., supra, 45 Cal.App.4th at p. 106.) American did not respond to the settlement demand with its policy limits and, had it and other insurers done so, could have settled the litigation. As the trial court observed, the law "cannot excuse one insurer for refusing to tender its policy limits simply because other insurers likewise acted in bad faith. If this were not the case, insurers on the risk could simply all act in bad faith, thus immunizing themselves from bad faith liability."
"Moreover, in deciding whether or not to compromise the claim, the insurer must conduct itself as though it alone were liable for the entire amount of the judgment. [Citation.] Thus, the only permissible consideration in evaluating the reasonableness of the settlement offer becomes whether, in light of the victim's injuries and the probable liability of the insured, the ultimate judgment is likely to exceed the amount of the settlement offer. Such factors as the limits imposed by the policy . . . or a belief that the {Slip Opn. Page 24} policy does not provide coverage, should not affect a decision as to whether the settlement offer in question is a reasonable one." (Johansen v. California State Auto. Assn. Inter-Ins. Bureau (1975) 15 Cal.3d 9, 16 (Johansen).)
This brings us to American's second claim: that the settlement demands were excessive because the ultimate judgment was not likely to exceed the amount of the settlement offer. This is a difficult argument to make where, as here, the ultimate judgment did exceed the amount of the settlement offer. James Howard's settlement demand was for $1.85 million and judgment was entered for $2.5 million in compensatory damages. The size of the judgment recovered in a personal injury action "furnishes an inference that the value of the claim is the equivalent of the amount of the judgment . . . ." (Crisci v. Security Ins. Co. (1967) 66 Cal.2d 425, 431.) Of course, "the finder of fact must take into account that information available to the insurer at the time of the proposed settlement." (Camelot by the Bay Condominium Owners' Assn. v. Scottsdale Ins. Co. (1994) 27 Cal.App.4th 33, 48.)
American argues that James Howard's settlement demand seemed excessive at the time it was made and notes that the Bishop's defense counsel in the underlying case never valued James's case above $1 million (excluding punitive damages). But defense counsel also reported his nationwide search of jury verdicts in cases with similar facts, in which he found a verdict range from $150,000 to $10 million. Counsel gave his estimated value of the Howard case with the cautionary note that "[t]hese cases are difficult to evaluate." Others involved in the litigation warned that priest molestation cases could subject a diocese to substantial jury verdicts. An attorney for the diocese wrote to American and other insurers to advise them that the Howards could each document $400,000 in special damages (for psychological care) "before the jury even evaluates general damages." The diocese attorney also reported a then-recent judgment against a diocese in Dallas for $120 million. Substantial evidence supports the trial court's finding that James Howard made a reasonable settlement offer in asking for $1.85 million and that the ultimate judgment was likely to exceed the amount of the settlement offer, which it did. {Slip Opn. Page 25}
Moreover, there is no evidence that American ever relied on defense counsel's valuation of the case in refusing to settle. American's position was that there was no coverage under its insurance policy, and thus it would contribute little or nothing in settlement, regardless of the reasonableness of the amount of the proposed settlement. Therefore, if American means to suggest that it acted in good faith reliance on advice of counsel, the suggestion is refuted by the record. American refused to settle because it claimed the molestation was not covered by its policy. Having taken that position and then rejecting a reasonable settlement offer, American is liable for wrongful failure to settle. (Johansen, supra, 15 Cal.3d at pp. 15-17.)
American's third basis for denying liability is that the insured Bishop was never exposed to personal liability for compensable damages in excess of the aggregate limit of his insurance policies, and thus was unharmed by American's failure to settle. The primary insurance policy limits of the multiple insurers on the risk totaled almost $4.3 million, and the final judgment of $11.25 million awarded compensatory damages of $2.5 million to James Howard. The $2.5 million awarded as compensatory damages, which was the insurable component of the judgment, thus exceeded American's policy limit of $500,000, but did not exceed all policies on the risk.
In most cases, an excess judgment (a judgment against the insured in an amount exceeding policy limits) is needed to establish liability and damages for wrongful refusal to settle. (Croskey et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Insurance Litigation, supra, ¶ 12:355, p. 12B-33.) An example illustrates why this is so. If a single insurer with a $2 million policy limit refuses to settle for $1.85 million and judgment is entered for $1 million there is no liability (insurer properly evaluated the claim's value as less than the settlement offer) and no damages (the insured is covered for the full amount of the judgment and need not pay from the insured's own funds). Although an excess judgment is the common way in which an insured establishes liability and damages in a failure to settle case, it is not the only way.
An insurer's wrongful failure to settle may be actionable even without rendition of an excess judgment. (Croskey et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Insurance Litigation, supra, {Slip Opn. Page 26} ¶¶ 12:391-12:392.2, p. 12B-38; see Camelot by the Bay Condominium Owners' Assn. v. Scottsdale Ins. Co., supra, 27 Cal.App.4th at p. 48 ["there is no explicit requirement for bad faith liability that an excess judgment is actually suffered by the insured"]; see also Larraburu Bros., Inc. v. Royal Indem. Co. (9th Cir. 1979) 604 F.2d 1208, 1214 ["to say that a subsequent verdict within policy limits always exonerates an insurer for the consequences of an earlier failure to settle seems to us an unwarranted restriction on the insurer's duty to the insured under California law"].) An insured may recover for bad faith failure to settle, despite the lack of an excess judgment, where the insurer's misconduct goes beyond a simple failure to settle within policy limits or the insured suffers consequential damages apart from an excess judgment. (See, e.g., J.B. Aguerre, Inc. v. American Guarantee & Liability Ins. Co. (1997) 59 Cal.App.4th 6, 13-14 [insurer used insured's fear of punitive damages to coerce the insured to contribute to settlement]; Bodenhamer v. Superior Court (1987) 192 Cal.App.3d 1472, 1478-1479 [delayed settlement damaged insured's business goodwill];Barney v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. (1986) 185 Cal.App.3d 966, 978 [insurer settled claim without insured's consent]; Larraburu Bros., supra, 604 F.2d at p. 1215 [delayed settlement damaged insured's credit].)
Matters are complicated here by the fact that American was one of many insurers on the risk, not a single insurer. Nevertheless, the essential elements remain the same and the insured had to establish liability and damages for American's failure to settle. Liability was established by evidence that American (and other insurers) rejected a reasonable settlement offer of $1.85 million when the ultimate judgment was likely to (and did) exceed the amount of the offer. (Johansen, supra, 15 Cal.3d at p. 16.) As noted above, when one of multiple insurance policies provides coverage, each insurer's obligation is to cover the full extent of the insured's liability up to policy limits. (Armstrong World Industries, Inc. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., supra, 45 Cal.App.4th at p. 106.) American did not respond to the settlement demand with its policy limits and, had it and other insurers done so, could have settled the litigation. {Slip Opn. Page 27}
Damages were established by evidence that the insured Bishop suffered consequential damages, even if we accept American's position that all available insurance policies must be considered and that there was no excess judgment because the James Howard compensatory damages component of the judgment ($2.5 million out of $11.25 million) did not exceed the amount of the Bishop's aggregate policy limits of $4.3 million. As the trial court found, the Bishop was exposed to dire financial circumstances as a direct result of American's failure to defend, indemnify, or settle James Howard's claim. Although the amount of compensatory damages awarded to James Howard did not exceed the amount of the Bishop's aggregate policy limits, the fact is that the insurers (including American) did not step forward to pay those damages or to settle with James Howard. On paper, the Bishop had aggregate policy limits of $4.3 million. But coverage under those policies was disputed. Even those insurers who defended the Bishop did so under a reservation of rights to deny coverage and refused indemnification. The Bishop did not have access to insurance funds for indemnification sufficient to satisfy the judgment. The Bishop was forced to reach his own settlement with the Howards in May 1999, while the case was on appeal. The Bishop suffered damages from American's misconduct, including payments the Bishop made to settle the case, and postjudgment attorney fee and accounting expenses incurred to protect his interests. The trial court properly found that American breached its duty to settle.
E. American acted in bad faith
"Every contract imposes upon each party a duty of good faith and fair dealing in its performance and its enforcement." (Rest.2d Contracts, § 205.) "The implied promise requires each contracting party to refrain from doing anything to injure the right of the other to receive the benefits of the agreement. [Citations.] The precise nature and extent of the duty imposed by such an implied promise will depend on the contractual purposes." (Egan v. Mutual of Omaha Ins. Co. (1979) 24 Cal.3d 809, 818.) Breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing exposes an insurer to breach of contract and tort damages. (Foley v. Interactive Data Corp. (1988) 47 Cal.3d 654, 684.) But "a breach of an insurance contract does not automatically subject an insurer to tort damages {Slip Opn. Page 28} for bad faith." (Griffin Dewatering Corp. v. Northern Ins. Co. of New York (2009) 176 Cal.App.4th 172, 194.) An insurer's tortious "breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing involves something beyond breach of the contractual duty itself." (California Shoppers Inc. v. Royal Globe Ins. Co. (1985) 175 Cal.App.3d 1, 54.) In simple terms, an insurer's tortious bad faith conduct is conduct that is unreasonable. (Croskey et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Insurance Litigation, supra, ¶¶ 12:52, 12:224, pp. 12A-19 to 12A-20, 12B-4.)
The trial court here determined that "American is liable for its bad faith failure to defend, settle, and indemnify the Bishop in the James Howard case," and assessed tort damages for all harm "suffered by the Bishop that were proximately caused by American's breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing." American argues that its conduct was not unreasonable, and thus not actionable as tortious bad faith. The record, however, shows substantial evidence of bad faith.
As noted above, the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing "obligates the insurance company, among other things, to make reasonable efforts to settle a third party's lawsuit against the insured. If the insurer breaches the implied covenant by unreasonably refusing to settle the third party suit, the insured may sue the insurer in tort to recover damages proximately caused by the insurer's breach." (PPG Industries, Inc. v. Transamerica Ins. Co., supra, 20 Cal.4th at p. 312.) There is substantial evidence, described above, that American acted unreasonably in refusing to settle the James Howard lawsuit. American denies that conclusion and insists that it was guilty of no more than an honest mistake or bad judgment, which is not actionable bad faith.
"A number of cases suggest that some degree of insurer 'culpability' is required before an insurer's refusal to settle a third party claim can be found to constitute 'bad faith.' " (Croskey et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Insurance Litigation, supra, ¶ 12:245, p. 12B-11.) It has been noted, however, that these cases address the reasonableness of the insurer's refusal to settle based on a dispute as to the value of the case, not a dispute as to coverage. (Id. at ¶ 12:246.1, p. 12B-11.) Although an insurer may reasonably underestimate the value of a case, and thus refuse settlement, an insurer does not act {Slip Opn. Page 29} reasonably in using its no-coverage position to refuse settlement altogether. " 'An insurer who denies coverage does so at its own risk and although its position may not have been entirely groundless, if the denial is found to be wrongful [i.e., erroneous], it is liable for the full amount which will compensate the insured for all the detriment caused by the insurer's breach of the express and implied obligations of the contract.' " (Johansen, supra, 15 Cal.3d at pp. 15-16 & fn. 4, original italics.)
Despite this well-established principle, American argues that its refusal to settle was prompted by a genuine dispute concerning coverage (whether the molestation occurred within the policy period) and cites a case for the proposition that "where there is a genuine issue as to the insurer's liability under the policy for the claim asserted by the insured, there can be no bad faith liability imposed on the insurer for advancing its side of that dispute." (Chateau Chamberay Homeowners Assn. v. Associated Internat. Ins. Co. (2001) 90 Cal.App.4th 335, 347 (Chateau), italics omitted.) American's reliance on Chateau is misplaced.
Chateau was a first party insurance case, where the insured sought compensation for losses sustained directly by the insured. (Chateau, supra, 90 Cal.App.4th at p. 339.) We are here concerned with the distinct situation of a third party insurance case, where the insured Bishop was sued for losses sustained by a third party, James Howard. There are material differences in the purposes of first party insurance policies (that obligate the insurer to pay damages claimed by the insured itself) and third party insurance policies (that obligate the insurer to defend, settle, and pay damages claimed by a third party against the insured). (McMillan Scripps North Partnership v. Royal Ins. Co. (1993) 19 Cal.App.4th 1215, 1220-1221.) A court must be mindful of these differences in determining the scope of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing and the obligations the covenant imposes on an insurer. (See Egan v. Mutual of Omaha Ins. Co., supra, 24 Cal.3d at p. 818 [the precise nature and extent of the duty imposed by the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing depend on the contractual purposes]; see also Garvey v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co. (1989) 48 Cal. 3d 395, 406 [distinguishing first and third party insurance coverage].) Although the same implied {Slip Opn. Page 30} covenant of good faith and fair dealing is involved in both first party and third party bad faith cases, the claims and settlement procedures "may differ significantly." (Croskey et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Insurance Litigation, supra, ¶¶ 12:800, p. 12C-1.)
Chateau's genuine dispute rule does not apply in all bad faith insurance contexts. (Croskey et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Insurance Litigation, supra, at ¶¶ 12:618-12:618.10, 12:621, pp. 12B-103 to 12B-105, 12B-106.) In first party cases, where payment is sought for the insured's direct losses, an insurer may raise a reasonable dispute over coverage without being guilty of bad faith. (Chateau, supra, 90 Cal.App.4th at p. 347.) But it has never been held that an insurer in a third party case may rely on a genuine dispute over coverage to refuse settlement. Instead, it is a long-standing rule that "the only permissible consideration in evaluating the reasonableness of the settlement offer becomes whether, in light of the victim's injuries and the probable liability of the insured, the ultimate judgment is likely to exceed the amount of the settlement offer." (Johansen, supra, 15 Cal.3d at p. 16.) "[A] belief that the policy does not provide coverage[] should not affect a decision as to whether the settlement offer in question is a reasonable one." (Ibid; see Croskey et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Insurance Litigation, supra, ¶ 12:241, p. 12B-9 [coverage defenses irrelevant to insurer's settlement decision]).)
Even if the genuine dispute standard were applied here, American's refusal to settle cannot be excused as a reasonable dispute. American's no-coverage position was founded on an unfair and selective reading of James Howard's deposition testimony that distorted James's account of specific episodes of molestation into an admission that no molestation occurred during the policy period, and the insurer's refusal to settle ignored powerful indications that a multimillion-dollar judgment was likely. The trial court detailed these matters in its statement of decision and we will not repeat them here.
American also acted in bad faith in refusing to indemnify the Bishop after judgment was entered in the Howard case. In this context, an insurer's genuine dispute as to coverage may negate bad faith. (Dalrymple v. United Services Auto. Assn. (1995) 40 Cal.App.4th 497, 523.) But "[a] genuine dispute exists only where the insurer's position is maintained in good faith and on reasonable grounds." (Wilson v. 21st Century {Slip Opn. Page 31} Ins. Co. (2007) 42 Cal.4th 713, 723, italics omitted.) "In the insurance bad faith context, a dispute is not 'legitimate' unless it is founded on a basis that is reasonable under all the circumstances." (Id. at p. 724, fn. 7.) American's refusal to indemnify the Bishop for the Howard judgment was not reasonable. The refusal to indemnify, like the refusal to settle, was based on an unfair and selective reading of James Howard's testimony--in this instance, James's trial testimony.
In denying indemnification posttrial, American argues that James's trial testimony placed the start of molestation in 1980, after expiration of American's insurance policy in 1979. We discussed the same coverage argument above. As we noted, the argument rests on James's response to a single question when he was asked at the 1998 trial, "When in time is your first memory of Oliver O'Grady violating you?," and James answered "It's probably five or six years old." James was five years old on June 16, 1980, seven months after the American policy expired. American did not reasonably rely upon this testimony to deny indemnification. As explained earlier, James testified about his "first memory" of molestation, not the first actual incident of molestation; vaguely said he was "probably" five or six years old; and gave his testimony in a context where the exact time that the molestation started was immaterial. The trial testimony was far too uncertain to constitute a reasonable basis for the denial of indemnification. Substantial evidence supports the trial court's conclusion that American acted in bad faith.
F. Bad faith damages were properly calculated
In assessing bad faith damages, the court found that the Bishop was entitled to recover payments made by the Bishop to settle the James Howard case, and to recover payments made to attorneys and accountants to protect the Bishop's assets after judgment was rendered. American contends that the trial court's assessment of bad faith damages was incorrect.
American first argues that the court erred in awarding the Bishop the entire amount he paid to settle the James Howard case, $1,533,698, because all or most of that amount went to punitive damages, which are not insurable. American reasons as follows: {Slip Opn. Page 32} (1) the Bishop's settlement "payment was for the judgment"; (2) the compensatory damages component of the judgment was largely paid by insurers CIGNA and St. Paul; (3) the Bishop's payment must necessarily be allocated to the remaining punitive damages component of the judgment; (4) punitive damages are not insurable; (5) the Bishop may not recover his settlement payment because it was for punitive damages. This argument was presented to the trial court and rightly rejected. The argument's flaw lies in the first premise.
The Bishop's settlement payment was not in satisfaction of the judgment. At the time of the settlement, the judgment was on appeal and the Howards were asserting rights to compensatory damages beyond those awarded in the underlying action. The settlement thus went beyond the judgment and encompassed all claims the Howards made, or could make, concerning the Bishop's retention of a molesting priest. The agreement, by its terms, settled "all claims of Joh Howard and James Howard against the Bishop arising out of or connected with the allegations of Joh Howard and James Howard, including but not limited to, those causes of action and theories of liability alleged by Joh Howard and James Howard" in the underlying cases. (Italics added.) The Bishop's payment was made "to compensate plaintiffs for their physical injuries and sickness caused by the events underlying" the wrongful retention cases--not to pay the judgment itself.
American argues that if the settlement payment did not go to the judgment, then the payment was not proximately caused by the insurer's bad faith and thus was not recoverable as damages. We disagree. The settlement was necessitated by American's failure to settle and indemnify. We also reject American's argument that the settlement agreement improperly shifted punitive damages to the insurer. American is right, of course, that "an insured may not shift to its insurance company, and ultimately to the public, the payment of punitive damages awarded in the third party lawsuit against the insured as a result of the insured's intentional, morally blameworthy behavior against the third party." (PPG Industries, Inc. v. Transamerica Ins. Co., supra, 20 Cal.4th at p. 319.) But the trial court here found no evidence that "the settlement payment was unreasonable {Slip Opn. Page 33} or the product of fraud or collusion," and American has not demonstrated otherwise. Absent evidence of fraud or collusion, we will not set aside a settlement agreement negotiated between an insured and injured parties and recharacterize the sums paid under their agreement.
As a second point on bad faith damages, American argues that fees incurred postjudgment in hiring an attorney to obtain an appeal bond, explore bankruptcy, and negotiate with the Howards and insurers were wrongly awarded as costs of mitigation rather than as costs to compel payment of benefits under the insurance policy (Brandt fees). (Brandt v. Superior Court (1985) 37 Cal.3d 813, 817 (Brandt).) As either type of cost is recoverable, it is not clear what American hopes to accomplish by recharacterizing the award. (Croskey et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Insurance Litigation, supra, ¶¶ 13:72.5, 13:120, pp. 13-18, 13-32.1.) In any event, the trial court properly characterized the attorney fees as costs incurred to mitigate the damages caused by American's failure to defend, settle, and indemnify, and properly ordered reimbursement.
G. Brandt fees were properly awarded
If "an insurer denies coverage in bad faith, the insured can recover attorney fees in an action to recover the policy benefits." (Essex Ins. Co. v. Five Star Dye House, Inc. (2006) 38 Cal.4th 1252, 1257, citing Brandt, supra, 37 Cal.3d at p. 817.) An insurer's tortious breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing makes the insurer liable for all damages that are a proximate result of that breach. (Brandt, supra, 37 Cal.3d at p. 817.) Thus, "[w]hen an insurer's tortious conduct reasonably compels the insured to retain an attorney to obtain the benefits due under a policy, it follows that the insurer should be liable in a tort action for that expense. The attorney's fees are an economic loss--damages--proximately caused by the tort. [Citation.] These fees must be distinguished from recovery of attorney's fees qua attorney's fees, such as those attributable to the bringing of the bad faith action itself. What we consider here is attorney's fees that are recoverable as damages resulting from a tort in the same way that medical fees would be part of the damages in a personal injury action. [¶] 'When a pedestrian is struck by a car, he goes to a physician for treatment of his injuries, and the {Slip Opn. Page 34} motorist, if liable in tort, must pay the pedestrian's medical fees. Similarly, in the present case, an insurance company's refusal to pay benefits has required the insured to seek the services of an attorney to obtain those benefits, and the insurer, because its conduct was tortious, should pay the insured's legal fees.' " (Ibid.)
However, the fees recoverable "may not exceed the amount attributable to the attorney's efforts to obtain the rejected payment due on the insurance contract. Fees attributable to obtaining any portion of the plaintiff's award which exceeds the amount due under the policy are not recoverable." (Brandt, supra, 37 Cal.3d at p. 819.) In short, the plaintiff is entitled to legal fees attributable to the contract recovery but not fees attributable to the tort recovery. (Ibid.) Of course, contract and tort issues are often intertwined. (Cassim v. Allstate Ins. Co. (2004) 33 Cal.4th 780, 811 (Cassim).) Apportionment of fees between contract and tort issues may be further complicated where plaintiff agrees to compensate his or her attorney on a contingency basis, as a percentage of the entire award. (Id. at pp. 807-813.) The California Supreme Court has addressed this situation and developed a method for calculating Brandt fees in a contingent fee context. (Cassim at pp. 811-812.) "This method requires the trier of fact to determine the percentage of the legal fees paid to the attorney that reflects the work attributable to obtaining the contract recovery. . . . [¶] To determine the percentage of the legal fees attributable to the contract recovery, the trial court should determine the total number of hours an attorney spent on the case and then determine how many hours were spent working exclusively on the contract recovery. Hours spent working on issues jointly related to both the tort and contract should be apportioned, with some hours assigned to the contract and some to the tort. This latter figure, added to the hours spent on the contract alone, when divided by the total number of hours worked, should provide the appropriate percentage." (Ibid.)
The trial court here employed the Cassim method and, after a comprehensive review of detailed time records, concluded that 57.44 percent of the attorneys' time was attributable to contract claims. (Cassim, supra, 33 Cal.4th at pp. 811-812.) The contingent fee agreement promised 50 percent of the total recovery to the attorneys for {Slip Opn. Page 35} their legal work on the case, and thus the court concluded that plaintiffs are entitled to 28.72 percent of all damages as Brandt fees. The amount was calculated as $661,719.97.
On appeal, American argues that the court erred in multiplying the fee percentage against all damages, including the $500,000 awarded to James as a judgment creditor and the $75,523.97 in defense costs awarded to plaintiffs as assignees of CIGNA and St. Paul. American maintains that these two items were not attributable to the Bishop's recovery on the insurance policy. However, American fails to provide any meaningful analysis of the court's calculation. American simply asserts its claim of error in two sentences in its opening appellate brief without any citation to the record. It is not our place to comb the record seeking support for assertions parties fail to substantiate. (Employers Mutual Casualty Co. v. Philadelphia Indemnity Ins. Co. (2008) 169 Cal.App.4th 340, 354.)
The court's statement of decision, on its face, shows that the court arrived at the fee percentage after excluding time spent on matters unrelated to contract recovery. The court may have excluded time spent on the judgment creditor and assignment claims, which American claims are not contract-related. American has provided no basis for us to conclude otherwise. Its argument that the court erred in multiplying the fee percentage against all damages, when some were not contract-related, misapprehends the calculations required by Cassim. Under Cassim, supra, 33 Cal.4th 780, the court excludes noncontract related legal work at the outset--when calculating the fee percentage. American has not shown that the fee percentage was in error and that plaintiffs' attorneys did not spend 57.44 percent of their time pursuing contract claims. American has thus failed to demonstrate that the court improperly awarded fees for legal work done to recover payment outside the insurance contract.
H. Prejudgment interest
We now reach plaintiffs' cross-appeal challenging the trial court's refusal to award prejudgment interest. We conclude that plaintiffs are entitled to interest and modify the judgment to award interest.
"Every person who is entitled to recover damages certain, or capable of being made certain by calculation, and the right to recover which is vested in him upon a {Slip Opn. Page 36} particular day, is entitled also to recover interest thereon from that day . . . ." (Civ. Code, § 3287, subd. (a), hereafter § 3287(a).) "[O]ne purpose of section 3287[a], and of prejudgment interest in general, is to provide just compensation to the injured party for loss of use of the award during the prejudgment period--in other words, to make the plaintiff whole as of the date of the injury." (Lakin v. Watkins Associated Industries (1993) 6 Cal.4th 644, 663.) Under section 3287(a), "the court has no discretion, but must award prejudgment interest upon request, from the first day there exists both a breach and a liquidated claim." (North Oakland Medical Clinic v. Rogers (1998) 65 Cal.App.4th 824, 828.) Courts generally apply a liberal construction in determining whether a claim is certain, or liquidated. (Chesapeake Industries, Inc. v. Togova Enterprises, Inc. (1983) 149 Cal.App.3d 901, 907 (Chesapeake Industries).) The test for determining certainty under section 3287(a) is whether the defendant knew the amount of damages owed to the claimant or could have computed that amount from reasonably available information. (Ibid.) Uncertainty as to liability is irrelevant. "A dispute concerning liability does not preclude prejudgment interest in a civil action." (Boehm & Associates v. Workers' Comp. Appeals Bd. (1999) 76 Cal.App.4th 513, 517.) The certainty required by section 3287(a) is not lost when the existence of liability turns on disputed facts but only when the amount of damages turns on disputed facts. (Olson v. Cory (1983) 35 Cal.3d 390, 402.) Moreover, only the claimant's damages themselves must be certain. Damages are not made uncertain by the existence of unliquidated counterclaims or offsets interposed by defendant. (Chesapeake Industries, supra, at p. 907.)
Plaintiffs here seek prejudgment interest on two components of damages awarded by the court: (1) the $500,000 due on the underlying judgment of July 1998 awarded to plaintiff James Howard as a judgment creditor; and (2) the $1,533,698 payment made by the Bishop to settle the James Howard case in May 1999. The trial court denied the request for prejudgment interest with little explanation. The court simply said that "American's liability was not liquidated and certain." As plaintiffs rightly note, it is the amount of damages, not liability, that must be liquidated and certain. The trial court erred in denying prejudgment interest. {Slip Opn. Page 37}
Plaintiffs are entitled to prejudgment interest on the $500,000 policy limit owed by American to indemnify the Bishop for the James Howard judgment entered in July 1998, and awarded to James Howard as a judgment creditor. (See California Shoppers Inc. v. Royal Globe Ins. Co., supra, 175 Cal.App.3d at pp. 34-35 [awarding prejudgment interest on damages for insurers' breach of duty to indemnify].) James received a fixed and certain judgment of $2.5 million in compensatory damages. Assuming coverage under the policy was established, as it ultimately was, American had a duty to indemnify the Bishop on the judgment, and to pay James as a judgment creditor, up to the insurer's $500,000 policy limit. Liability was uncertain but the $500,000 policy limit was a sum certain. American does not dispute these principles.
However, American argues that the amount due the Bishop or James was uncertain because two insurers, CIGNA and St. Paul, made payments toward partial satisfaction of the judgment. American notes that the parties disagreed at trial as to whether the two insurers' settlement payments constituted offsets that reduced the amount owed on American's policy, and maintains that this dispute prevented certainty in the amount owed. But, as stated above, damages are not made uncertain by the existence of unliquidated counterclaims or offsets interposed by a defendant. (Chesapeake Industries, supra, at p. 907.) American suggests that partial satisfaction of judgment is something distinct from a standard counterclaim or offset but does little to advance that argument. Even if we accept American's argument, the fact remains that the amounts CIGNA and St. Paul paid in partial satisfaction of the judgment did not significantly reduce the judgment, and thus did not render uncertain American's obligation to pay its $500,000 policy limit. James and Joh Howard received a judgment awarding compensatory damages of $5.25 million. In May 1999, the Bishop settled the underlying litigation while it was on appeal and St. Paul and CIGNA contributed to that settlement. St. Paul paid $2.339 million, and CIGNA paid $956,342. A total offset of these payments against the judgment would leave almost $2 million unpaid on the Howard judgment, of which James Howard was due roughly half. Thus, under any scenario, the judgment remained far in excess of American's policy limit of $500,000. The possibility {Slip Opn. Page 38} of offsets did not make the amount of American's debt uncertain. Prejudgment interest was due under section 3287(a).
Even if interest was not due under section 3287(a), it was due under the terms of the insurance policy. American's Supplementary Payment provision (SPP) states: "The company will pay, in addition to the applicable limits of liability [¶] . . . [¶] all interest on the entire amount of any judgment therein which accrues after entry of the judgment and before the company has paid or tendered or deposited in court that part of the judgment which does not exceed the limit of the company's liability thereon . . . ." American was obligated to pay interest accruing from the time of judgment. (State Farm General Ins. Co. v. Mintarsih (2009) 175 Cal.App.4th 274, 289; Croskey et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Insurance Litigation, supra, ¶¶ 7:160, 7:160.8, 13:57, pp. 7A-74, 7A-76.1, 13-12.)
Plaintiffs are also entitled to interest on the $1,533,698 payment made by the Bishop to settle the James Howard case in May 1999. (§ 3287(a).) American disputes this conclusion. American argues that damages awarded for insurance bad faith are inherently uncertain because they necessarily involve a resolution of conflicting facts, and insists that no case has ever awarded prejudgment interest on bad faith damages. American is mistaken. "Prejudgment interest may . . . be recoverable in insurance litigation in certain tort cases." (Croskey et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Insurance Litigation, supra, ¶ 13:171, p. 13-49.) "Whether prejudgment interest is awardable as a matter of right . . . depends on whether the amount due under the policy is sufficiently 'certain.' " (Id. at ¶ 13:31, p. 13-8.) The Ninth Circuit, applying California law, affirmed an award of prejudgment interest where the primary insurer breached the covenant of good faith and fair dealing in failing to settle and an excess judgment resulted. (Highland Ins. Co. v. Continental Cas. Co. (9th Cir. 1995) 64 F.3d 514, 521-522.) The federal court held that an excess insurer was entitled to prejudgment interest under section 3287(a) on its postjudgment settlement payment. (Highland Ins. at pp. 516-518, 521-522.) State courts have likewise awarded prejudgment interest in bad faith insurance cases, albeit with little discussion. (E.g., California Shoppers Inc. v. Royal Globe Ins. Co., supra, 175 Cal.App.3d at p. 35 [affirming award of prejudgment interest on damages for {Slip Opn. Page 39} insurers' bad faith breach of duty to indemnify].) Although bad faith insurance cases commonly involve disputed issues of fact as to liability, damages may be certain and prejudgment interest therefore proper. (Highland Ins. Co., supra, 64 F.3d at p. 521.) Here, there was no dispute concerning how much the Bishop paid to settle with the Howards. The sum was certain, and thus prejudgment interest was due.
Plaintiffs ask that we modify the judgment to award prejudgment interest of $1,431,478.73, pursuant to a series of calculations they set out in their briefs on appeal. American disputes the accrual date and rate of interest and maintains that any award of prejudgment interest requires remand to the trial court to determine when the money owed became certain, and the applicable rate of interest. But the accrual date is certain. Plaintiffs are entitled to interest on $500,000 due on the underlying judgment from the date the final judgment was issued in July 1998, and entitled to interest on the $1,533,698 payment made by the Bishop from the date of settlement in May 1999.
The rate of interest is also clear. The parties agree that a seven percent rate of interest applies to the $1,533,698 settlement payment by the Bishop, which plaintiffs calculate (without dispute by American) as interest of $947,978.73. The rate of interest for breach of contract (unless specified by the contract itself) is seven percent on contracts entered into on or before January 1, 1986, and 10 percent on contracts entered into after January 1, 1986. (Cal. Const., art. XV, § 1; Civ. Code, § 3289, subd. (b); Michelson v. Hamada (1994) 29 Cal.App.4th 1566, 1585-1586.) The contract here--the insurance policy--was entered into in 1978 and thus the seven percent rate of interest applies.
American argues that a seven percent contract rate of interest also applies to the $500,000 judgment creditor award, whereas plaintiffs put the rate at 10 percent as interest accruing on a judgment. Plaintiffs are correct. The contract "rate applies until the contract is superseded by a judgment." (Croskey et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Insurance Litigation, supra, ¶ 13:59, p. 13-13; see Civ. Code, § 3289, subd. (a) [contract rate applies "until the contract is superseded by a verdict or other new obligation"].) Postjudgment interest accrues at the rate of 10 percent. (Code Civ. Proc., § 685.010, {Slip Opn. Page 40} subd. (a).) Plaintiffs calculate the interest due on the $500,000 payment toward the underlying judgment as $483,500. American does not challenge this mathematical computation. The total prejudgment interest due is, as plaintiffs state, $1,431,478.73. We modify the judgment to award that amount.
I. Costs
The trial court awarded plaintiffs costs of suit in the amount of $93,827.07. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1032, subd. (b).) American does not deny that prevailing parties are entitled to recover costs but contests various items allowed as costs. American claims the court erred in awarding (1) private judge fees; (2) deposition costs; (3) expert fees; and (4) attorney meal expenses. We address these claims in turn.
1. Private judge fees
The parties agreed to resolve the insurance litigation by means of a bench trial presided over by Justice Stone of JAMS, who was appointed as a judge pro tem. In April 2005, the parties filed a stipulation with the court agreeing to the appointment of Justice Stone and further stipulating "that the parties shall divide the fees of the Judge Pro Tem as follows: plaintiffs--50% and American National Fire Insurance Company/Great American Insurance Companies--50%." The parties also executed an agreement sometime around May 2005 detailing the terms of the appointment. fn. 7 The agreement provides: "The Parties agree that the expedited trial will be presided over by Justice Steven Stone, or another judge or judges (either sitting or pro tem) upon whom the Parties agree, one-half of the cost to be borne by Plaintiffs, one-half by American."
After prevailing at trial, plaintiffs filed a memorandum of costs that sought $46,542.32 for the JAMS fees they incurred in paying for Justice Stone's services. American filed a motion to tax costs in which it objected to an award of JAMS fees. American argued that the parties expressly "agreed to split the cost of the J.A.M.S. judge equally." Plaintiffs responded that JAMS fees are a recoverable cost without directly {Slip Opn. Page 41} addressing the specific terms of the parties' agreement. The trial court denied American's motion to tax costs.
American renews its objection to the award of JAMS fees. Plaintiffs argue, as they did in the trial court, that private judge fees are a recoverable cost of litigation. Plaintiffs give short shrift to the actual terms of the parties' agreement. Plaintiffs say that "[i]t is not unusual for parties to agree to advance the cost or expense of a legal procedure or item that is necessary to conduct litigation between them. However, barring an express waiver, such an agreement does not bar a discretionary recovery of the winning party's initial share from the losing party." (Original italics.) Plaintiffs also say that "JAMS required the parties to pay up front for its ADR services. American agreed to share the cost of advancing the necessary JAMS fees. Those fees became an item of costs claimable by the prevailing party in the trial court's discretion." The argument is an act of obfuscation. Plaintiffs' supposition that the parties agreed to "advance the cost" of a private judge in equal proportions is untrue. No fair reading of the parties' agreement supports that claim.
The parties stipulated "that the parties shall divide the fees of the Judge Pro Tem as follows: plaintiffs--50% and American National Fire Insurance Company/Great American Insurance Companies--50%." The parties further stated "that the expedited trial will be presided over by Justice Steven Stone, . . . one-half of the cost to be borne by Plaintiffs, one-half by American." The agreement does not say that the fees will be advanced equally, but that the fees will be "divide[d]" and "borne" equally. The plain meaning of the parties' agreement is inescapable: the parties agreed to split the cost of the JAMS judge equally. The trial court erred in awarding JAMS fees to plaintiffs.
2. Deposition costs
Plaintiffs were awarded $44,588.78 to reimburse the cost of deposing 21 individuals. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1033.5, subd. (a)(3).) American contends, as it did in the trial court, that the costs should have been allocated between itself and another {Slip Opn. Page 42} defendant insurer who, at the time of the cost bill, was awaiting trial on damages. fn. 8 We reject the contention. A prevailing party is entitled to all costs reasonably necessary to the conduct of the litigation. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1033.5, subd. (c)(2).) American never demonstrated that the deposition costs were unnecessary to the conduct of litigation against it, and necessary only for the litigation against a codefendant insurer. In fact, American concedes that the "depositions involved Plaintiffs' claims against American" but argues that an allocation should be made because the depositions also impacted other defendants. American provides no authority for its assertion that a court must allocate a prevailing plaintiff's costs among a codefendant adjudged liable, and another codefendant for whom litigation remains pending (and may never be adjudged liable and subject to costs recovery). fn. 9 Allocation may have been appropriate if American had demonstrated that the issues involved in the depositions were separable between the defendants. This American did not do. We therefore conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in finding the deposition costs reasonably necessary to the conduct of the litigation against American and ordering American to pay those costs.
3. Expert fees
Plaintiffs sought costs totaling $103,227.07, of which $9,400 was attributable to expert witness fees. American objected to the fees, noting that fees are recoverable only for court-appointed experts. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1033.5, subd. (b)(1).) The court generally denied American's objections to plaintiffs' cost memorandum but made the denial "subject to the following reduction." The court reduced plaintiffs' cost request by $9,400, awarding $93,827.07. Although it is better practice to specify the items of costs that are denied, it is sufficiently clear on this record that the court denied plaintiffs' request for $9,400 in expert witness fees. American's argument that expert fees are not recoverable is therefore moot. No expert fees were awarded. {Slip Opn. Page 43}
4. Attorney meal expenses
Finally, American argues that the court erred in awarding plaintiffs $2,368 in attorney meal expenses incurred while traveling to take depositions. The expense of taking depositions--including travel expenses incurred by out-of town-counsel to attend depositions--is an allowable cost. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1033.5, subd. (a)(3); Thon v. Thompson (1994) 29 Cal.App.4th 1546, 1549.) American argues that meal expenses are never allowed, and relies upon a case disallowing meal expenses incurred by local attorneys taking local depositions. (Ladas v. California State Automobile Assn. (1993) 19 Cal.App.4th 761, 774-775.) We do not understand Ladas to establish an absolute rule prohibiting reimbursement for attorney meal expenses under any and all circumstances. (See Gorman v. Tassajara Development Corp. (2009) 178 Cal.App.4th 44, 72 [distinguishing local meal expenses from meal expenses incurred while traveling].) The trial court is vested with broad discretion in determining if an expense is "reasonably necessary to the conduct of the litigation." (Code Civ. Proc., § 1033.5, subd. (c)(2).) Although the incurring of meal expenses may be merely convenient to an attorney attending a local deposition, meal expenses may be reasonably necessary where an out-of-state attorney must travel to the deposition. We cannot say that the court abused its discretion here in awarding costs--including meal expenses--incurred by attorneys traveling to take depositions.
III. DISPOSITION
The judgment is modified to award plaintiffs prejudgment interest of $1,431,478.73 but is otherwise affirmed. Plaintiffs' postjudgment cost award is modified to strike $46,542.32 awarded in private judge fees but is otherwise affirmed. {Slip Opn. Page 44}
Plaintiffs shall recover costs incurred on the appeal and cross-appeal in case number A121569, upon timely application in the trial court. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278(c)(1).) The parties shall bear their own costs incurred in case number A123187.
Ruvolo, P. J., and Rivera, J., concurred.
FN 1. Joh Howard does not challenge the lower court's finding that American had no duty to defend the Bishop against his personal injury complaint. The case on appeal concerns James alone.
FN 2. The amount of St. Paul's payment is sometimes said to be $2,339,221. We use the figure of $2.339 million, which is stated in the settlement agreement. In any event, the difference is immaterial to resolution of the appeal.
FN 3. There is some confusion in the record about the amount of the cash settlement payment. The Howards say the payment was $6.295 million and cite a March 1999 letter using that figure in a discussion of the settlement. The trial court sometimes listed that figure, and sometimes others. American says the payment was $6,655,442, and this is the amount stated in the May 1999 settlement agreement. This amount is consistent with other documents in the record. We use the $6,655,442 figure stated in the settlement agreement. As with the minor discrepancy noted above concerning the amount of St. Paul's contribution to the settlement, the difference is immaterial to resolution of the appeal.
FN 4. The Howards did not actually recover the entire settlement amount because they had to pay their attorney fees and costs. We state here the gross amounts received in the various settlements.
FN 5. The agreement was written in October 2002 but not fully executed until January 2003. Documents in the record sometimes refer to this agreement as "the October, 2002 contract."
FN 6. A third appeal by American is pending and will be separately determined. (Howard v. American National Fire Ins. Co., A126699.) That appeal challenges a postjudgment order approving plaintiffs' settlement with another insurer, Centennial Insurance Company.
FN 7. The copy of the agreement provided in the record on appeal is not fully executed but its authenticity is not questioned.
FN 8. American's request to take judicial notice of a court document setting forth the status of the litigation against the codefendant is granted. (Evid. Code, § 452, subd. (c).)
FN 9. Ultimately, this is what transpired here as the codefendant insurer settled with plaintiffs. |
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| August 13, 2010 |
| UNF professor's survivors win $6.2 million medmal verdict against Hospital |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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An Alachua County jury returned a $6.2 million medical malpractice verdict Wednesday against Shands at the University of Florida hospital in Gainesville in favor of the survivors of a University of North Florida Business School professor who died there during a CT scan in 2002.
According to the family’s attorney, Frank Ashton of Hardesty, Tyde, Green & Ashton in Jacksonville, Professor Cory Fine was 41 when he went to Shands Gainesville to undergo gastric bypass surgery for weight loss in December 2002. The operation was uneventful.
But five days after the surgery, Fine developed breathing difficulties. Ashton said he was sent without medical monitoring to undergo a CT scan of his lungs. Even though Fine told the CT technicians that he would have difficulty breathing if lying down, they elected to strap him down flat to the CT table for several minutes in preparation for the exam, Ashton said.
Fine was then put into the CT machine for the scan and died during the procedure.
He is survived by his wife, Lisa, and his 10-year-old son. |
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| August 12, 2010 |
| Olympic swimming group named in sexual misconduct lawsuit |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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SAN JOSE, Calif., Aug. 12 (UPI) -- The organization that oversees events to develop Olympic swimming contenders has been named in a lawsuit alleging sexual misconduct, a report says.
Colorado Springs, Colorado-based USA Swimming was named as a defendant in a lawsuit filed in San Jose, Calif., USA Today reported Thursday.
The suit was filed on behalf of 28-year old Jancy Thompson, who alleged a former swimming coach in California molested her over a five-year period from the time she was 15.
"I am here today in hopes that USA Swimming will retain new leadership and clean up its program -- get rid of abusive swim coaches and create a safe environment for young swimmers," Thompson said in the report.
The organization has been named in five lawsuits, but all involve club-level coaches and athletes, USA Today said.
Chuck Wielgus, executive director of 300,000-member USA Swimming, said the organization has a code of conduct for all its affiliates that "expressly prohibits physical or sexual abuse," the newspaper said.
Additionally, Wielgus said USA Swimming was among the first Olympic organizations to implement background screening of its coaches. Wielgus said he would only be interviewed via e-mail, the paper said. |
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| August 09, 2010 |
| $4.7M Award in Near Drowning at Jackson Motel |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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It's believed the children left their room to go to the lobby to get the free continental breakfast. Hotel officials said they had seen the children other days come to the lobby to get breakfast.
According to Ogden, once the female child ended up in the pool, her brother tried to save her and he fell or was pulled into the pool.
Court records say that around 7 a.m., guests were awakened by shouting from the pool area and called the front desk. Lehman ran to the pool while 911 was called.
Lehman jumped into the pool and rescued them from the shallow end. The girl was floating face down with the throw rope from the pool life-preserver wrapped around her body. The boy was floating face-up in the pool making gurgling noises.
Four young women who were guests at the hotel helped Lehman get the girl out of the pool and assisted Lehman in administering CPR until emergency personnel arrived.
The children suffered medical problems afterward; one was in the hospital for about eight or nine days and the other about a month.
Ogden said one child is mildly to moderately retarded, and the other has a cognizant learning disorder.
About two years earlier, 16-year-old Christopher Elliott drowned at the LaQuinta. But LaQuinta argued Elliott's drowning had no similarity to the Sproles' children case. They said Elliott could swim and was in the pool during operating hours. They said he apparently had a seizure or some sort of asthma attack that caused him to drown.
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| August 04, 2010 |
| Stun Gun Lawsuit Settled for $750,000 |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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MOUNT VERNON, Ill., Aug. 3 (UPI) -- A lawsuit alleging a Jefferson County, Ill., sheriff's deputy used a stun gun on three teens has been settled, records show.
Deputy David Bowers was accused in Mount Vernon of using a stun gun on the teenagers and assaulting another at the Southern Thirty Adolescent Center two years ago, and Deputy Lonnie Lawler was accused of witnessing the assaults, WSIL-TV, Harrisburg, reported Thursday.
The total settlement amount of $750,000, will be paid by the sheriff department's insurance provider, WSIL said.
State police investigations showed no wrong doing in the incident, and both deputies still work at the Jefferson County Sheriff's Department, Sheriff Robert Mulch said.
The plaintiff will get what remains after $250,000 goes to attorney fees and $13,000 is used for court costs, WSIL reported. |
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| August 03, 2010 |
| Las Vegas widow sues Toyota over floor mat in crash |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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A Las Vegas woman is suing the Toyota Motor Corp. and a Henderson Toyota dealership after her husband was killed in a December car crash, alleging the death was the result of a faulty accelerator and floor mat.
Kim Levine and her attorney, Gerald Gillock, filed the lawsuit July 28 and discussed the case Monday at Gillock’s Las Vegas office. The suit accuses the company and Findlay Toyota, 925 Auto Show Drive in Henderson, of intentional misconduct and negligence in connection with the death of Levine’s husband, Jeffrey, on Dec. 17, 2009.
The suit claims Jeffrey, who has two children, was coming home from work at 5:30 a.m. northbound on U.S. 95 when the gas pedal of his 2009 Toyota Tacoma, a company vehicle, became lodged beneath the truck’s floor mat.
The vehicle then accelerated to speeds exceeding 90 mph, slammed into the back of a motor home and veered off the highway. Jeffrey died at the scene. His body’s position suggested he was trying to dislodge the accelerator, according to the lawsuit.
Levine, 48, is seeking unspecified compensation for the emotional trauma experienced by her and the couple’s two sons, and the economic loss resulting from Jeffrey’s death.
“This did not have to happen,” Levine said, explaining her motivation Monday for filing the lawsuit.
She said her two sons, ages 6 and 13, are struggling to cope with the loss of their father, and the strain on her schedule as a single parent has affected her ability to work as a skin care specialist.
Gillock on Monday said Toyota delayed extending a factory recall to the United States in 2009 – focused on gas pedals and floor mats – that already was taking place in Europe.
Levine said Jeffrey had the truck serviced Nov. 16, a month before his death, at Findlay Toyota. The lawsuit alleges the dealership was aware of the possible risk and the recall in Europe, and inspected the floor mat and gas pedal but made no mention of the problem to Jeffrey.
The recall reached the U.S. about a month after Jeffrey’s death and named 2005-2010 Toyota Tacomas. Toyota President Akio Toyoda apologized to Congress in February for the deadly defects, which have been tied to 38 lawsuits against the company.
Selman Breitman, the law firm representing Findlay Toyota, declined to comment on the case on Monday. Vincent Galvin, who will defend the Toyota Corp. in the case, didn’t immediately return calls for comment. Toyota spokesman Brian Lyons in Torrance, Calif., told the Associated Press the death was tragic, but says the company doesn't comment on pending litigation.
By Dylan Scott, Las Vegas Sun |
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| August 02, 2010 |
| Former waitresses at Bronx strip club Sin City claim bosses demanded sexual favors: lawsuit |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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Slinging booze to horny strangers was actually the best part of working at Sin City.
Waitresses at the Bronx jiggle joint were routinely groped by depraved managers who stole their tips and demanded sexual favors in the club's Champagne Room, they charged in a suit filed in Manhattan Federal Court.
"Because it's a strip club doesn't mean that they have the right to disrespect you," said plaintiff Janelle Denalli, 25, one of six ex-waitresses filing the suit.
"I'm not grinding," the Elmont, L.I., woman said Thursday. "I'm not giving anyone any lap dances. I'm just serving drinks....This is a workplace."
The scantily-clad waitresses, who could earn $500 a night in tips, would often see the money disappear into their bosses' pockets, the suit charged.
The heels at the club even fined the waitresses for wearing the wrong kind of footwear - one of a litany of twisted complaints in the 22-page suit.
Denalli said she was reduced to tears by manager Kevin Wells, while co-workers claimed the bosses referred to the waitresses as "bitches" or with ethnic slurs.
"They degraded us," said Jasmine Felipe, 26, of the Bronx. "They insulted us. They touched us. ...There was a lot of sexual harassment and touching."
Owner Gus Drakopoulos used the N-word to describe Gloria Fields, a black waitress who was humiliated when the boss crudely pawed at her, the suit charged.
Felipe charged Drakopoulos once demanded oral sex in return for buying her a scarf, while Denalli accused Wells of sucking on her foot and yanking at her bra.
"It's humiliating," said plaintiffs' lawyer Lizabeth Schalet, of Lipman & Plesur. "These women will tell you they get more respect from the customers than they do from the managers."
The suit contradicted the scenario on the Sin City website, which promises a "sophisticated decorum" with 50 to 100 dancers nightly in "New York's No. 1 Strip Club!"
"We're really upset. We strongly deny the allegations and we look forward to vindicating ourselves in the courtroom," said Drakopoulos' lawyer, Stephen Hans.
"Maybe the waitresses are upset because it's a recession. Maybe guys are spending less money," Hans said.
In addition to the purported sexual harassment, the workers were forced to work unpaid overtime and were paid less than minimum wage, the suit says.
"It doesn't matter where you work," said Caroline Espinal, 21, who claimed she was repeatedly pressed for sex. "Nobody's supposed to be treated that way."
By Scott Shifrel, Dein Deutsch, et al., of the Daily*News
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| July 30, 2010 |
| Suicide's family sues Catholic church |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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The family of an alleged victim of priestly sexual abuse who killed himself filed a wrongful death suit Thursday against the Catholic diocese of Pittsburgh.
Michael Unglo's family said the diocese and Bishop David Zubik should have continued to pay for his treatment at the Austen Riggs Center in Massachusetts, the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review reported. Unglo killed himself at Austen Riggs in May, two months after he was told a final payment of $75,000 from the diocese would be the last one.
Unglo, 39 when he died, grew up in Etna, Pa., and said he was molested for several years by Richard Dorsch, the priest at All Saints Church. Dorsch was later defrocked and imprisoned after he was convicted of abusing another boy.
The diocese began paying for Unglo's psychiatric treatment after a 2008 suicide attempt. In December that year Zubik promised Unglo and his brothers the church would "right the wrong" to him.
Unglo made a second unsuccessful suicide attempt last year
2010 UPI |
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| July 30, 2010 |
| Ex-secretary gets $23K in lawsuit |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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Almost four years after filing a civil suit against former Lafayette Police Chief Randy Hundley and the department, Jeanette Luque was awarded $23,000 in a settlement.
Luque, Hundley's former secretary, filed the lawsuit in September 2006, just months after Hundley and three other police officers were indicted on charges of illegally recording conversations in her office.
While the criminal trial against Hundley ended in June 2008 with a plea bargain, in which he pleaded guilty to attempted malfeasance in office, the city is now paying for his alleged wiretapping of Luque's desk.
"It was never about the money," said Jill Craft, Luque's attorney. "It was about exposing things that should have never even happened. She did nothing more than to stand up for what was right."
In August 2004, a state police investigation found that a wireless microphone was planted in her office. For about 30 to 45 days, the microphone remained in Luque's office but investigators said there was nothing of value on the tapes as it had only recorded background noise.
Craft said the main issue was to ensure that everyone has a right to privacy, even in the workplace.
"And for the police to install listening devices without their consent violated the law," she said.
Hundley's co-defendants in the criminal case — Shannon Hundley, Brian Butler and Michael Lavergne — had their charges dropped after testifying against Hundley saying Hundley had given them orders to place the microphones.
Hundley resigned as the police chief in June 2006 after 30 years working for the department.
"I think (Luque) is first and foremost relieved," Craft said. "Secondly, I am extraordinarily proud of her for standing up for herself, as should everyone else be."
Luque continues to work for Lafayette police.
J.J. Alcantara • jalcantara@theadvertiser.com • July 30, 2010 |
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| July 29, 2010 |
| Lawsuit, speed allegations hang over Greyhound |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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Six bus passengers injured in last week's horrific accident on Highway 99 filed a lawsuit Wednesday against Greyhound as another passenger charged that the bus driver was speeding just before the crash.
The lawsuit, filed in Sacramento County Superior Court, makes general allegations against bus driver James Jewett, saying he did not fulfill his duty to transport the passengers safely. It asks that the company be held responsible for damages to those who were injured or killed in the July 22 accident in central Fresno. Six people died.
Wednesday's lawsuit could be just the first legal salvo as many connected to the deadly accident hire attorneys and consider their own court filings.
In an unrelated twist that may support that first lawsuit, bus passenger Avtar Jandi told The Modesto Bee that the bus was traveling too fast just before it struck an overturned SUV. He is not among the plaintiffs in the lawsuit.
Jandi, a veterinary surgeon in Modesto, was on the bus because he had missed his Amtrak train while heading home from Los Angeles. He estimated the speed of the bus at more than 70 mph and said he had left his seat to tell the driver to slow down.
JOAN BARNETT LEE / THE MODESTO BEE
Avtar Jandi, a veterinarian who relocated recently to Modesto, was among the survivors of the Greyhound bus crash July 22 in Fresno. Jandi said he had left his seat on the bus to question the driver about the bus' speed when the accident occurred.
JOHN WALKER / THE FRESNO BEE
Six bus passengers injured in Thursday's fatal collision in Fresno have filed a lawsuit against Greyhound, according to the law firms representing the plaintiffs.

But as the bus passed a slower car, Jandi said he saw danger ahead as he peered into the darkness through the front windshield.
"I looked out, and I saw the disabled car between the first and middle lane," he said. "I didn't know if it was stopped, upside down or just slow. I knew it wasn't normal, though, and I knew he [the bus driver] was going to hit it. He was going too fast."
Wednesday, CHP officials said they haven't yet determined the speed of the bus. An investigation into an accident of such size, involving three vehicles and dozens of people, typically takes 90 to 120 days.
Among those killed was Jewett, 57, of Sacramento. He also was named in the lawsuit filed Wednesday; Greyhound representatives said they would not comment on pending litigation.
But the lawsuit, filed by the Scranton Law Firm of Concord and the Brady Law Group in San Rafael, could be the first of many over the early-morning crash. The sole surviving driver and family of one of those killed say they have retained attorneys and may consider legal action.
Several prominent Fresno civil attorneys who aren't involved in the case said they would have conducted a more lengthy investigation before filing any lawsuit over the crash.
Lawyer Nicholas "Butch" Wagner said he thinks suing before the official accident report is complete "is premature ... you're suing people that might not be liable and leaving out defendants that should be in there."
But Steven Brady, principal trial lawyer at the Brady Law Group, said the only way to find answers is to start the legal process.
Plaintiffs in the lawsuit are adults Maurice Campbell, Catrina Connor, Robert Long Jr. and Maria Tellez, and children Demarco Campbell and Dalven Pipkins. Most suffered orthopedic and head injuries; the children also are experiencing severe emotional distress, according to legal representatives.
In a news release issued by the law firms, Maurice Campbell of Sacramento called the wreck "a life-altering nightmare. I now have extreme difficulty walking due to an injury to my Achilles tendon and one of my shoulders is causing me extreme pain."
In addition to Greyhound and the bus driver, the lawsuit names several other defendants -- including the two other drivers involved in the accident "because the investigation has not been completed," according to the news release.
By Jim Guy and Cyndee Fontana/The Fresno Bee
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| July 29, 2010 |
| AUTO OWNERS INSURANCE COMPANY v. MUNROENo. 09-3427. Argued Feb. 17, 2010. -- July 22, 2010 |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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After Joshua Munroe and his wife entered a settlement agreement that released those who allegedly caused a severe tractor-trailer accident from any individual liability above their liability insurance coverage, Auto-Owners Insurance Company brought a declaratory judgment action to establish that the insurance policy limited coverage to $1,000,000. The district court agreed with Auto-Owners and granted its motion for summary judgment. The Munroes appeal, arguing that the coverage limit was higher either under the terms of the policy or under minimum limits required by the Motor Carriers Act. Because the policy unambiguously limits coverage to $1,000,000 and the federal minimum limits are inapplicable here, we affirm.
I.
On November 6, 2006, Joshua Munroe sustained significant injuries when the tractor-trailer he was driving in the northbound lane of Illinois Route 1 in Edgar County, Illinois, struck the rear of a southbound tractor-trailer driven by Monty Murphy, and then careened into a fiery head-on collision with Roger Snyder's tractor-trailer, which was following close behind. Murphy had been attempting to pass yet another tractor-trailer, this one operated by Gerald Sturgeon. When he saw Munroe approaching, Murphy attempted to pull back into his own lane but could not completely clear Munroe's lane. Munroe was air-lifted from the scene. He suffered severe burns and broken bones throughout his body and incurred medical expenses in excess of $474,000.
All three southbound trucks were owned and operated by Wayne Wilkens Trucking and had been traveling in convoy. All were covered under a single insurance policy issued by Auto-Owners. The policy declarations listed each of the tractor-trailers (and many others), and each declaration specified a limit of $1,000,000 for each occurrence. The policy also contained a Combined Limit of Liability provision, which stated that the maximum total coverage was the $1,000,000 limit stated in the declarations, regardless of how many automobiles were listed in the declarations or involved in the accident.
Munroe and his wife sued Wilkens and the drivers of the tractor-trailers. They alleged that all three drivers acted negligently: Sturgeon by failing to yield and letting the second pass at a safe time and place, Murphy by passing when unsafe, and Snyder for following too closely and failing to avoid the head-on collision. All three tractor-trailers were allegedly exceeding the posted speed limit. Wilkens was allegedly negligent in hiring and training the drivers.
The Munroes entered a partial settlement agreement in which they agreed to release Wilkens and the drivers from any individual liability above their liability insurance coverage in exchange for $903,449.48, the remainder of the $1,000,000 coverage limit after property damage was paid to the owner of Munroe's tractor-trailer. The agreement acknowledged that Auto-Owners would seek a declaratory judgment that the limit of the liability insurance coverage under the policy was in fact $1,000,000. The Munroes reserved the right to proceed with their case if the court determined the coverage limit was greater than $1,000,000.
As anticipated, Auto-Owners brought the present suit for declaratory judgment against the Munroes. Both sides moved for summary judgment. The district court granted summary judgment to Auto-Owners, holding that the insurance policy unambiguously limited coverage to $1,000,000 for each occurrence and dismissing the Munroes' additional argument that federal law mandated at least $2.25 million insurance. The Munroes appeal.
II.
The Munroes advance two arguments. First, they argue that the Auto-Owners policy provided at least $3 million of coverage, either because each vehicle was subject to a separate $1,000,000 limit or because the accident constituted three separate occurrences, with a $1,000,000 limit each, due to the separate negligent acts of each of the drivers. Second, they argue that even if the policy is construed against them, federal law mandates at least $750,000 worth of insurance coverage for each vehicle and that we should read the policy as providing a minimum of $2.25 million coverage for this accident. We consider each argument in turn.
A.
We review the district court's grant of summary judgment, and its construction of the insurance policy, de novo. Ace Am. Ins. Co. v.. RC2 Corp., 600 F.3d 763, 766 (7th Cir.2010). The parties agree that Illinois law governs the interpretation of the insurance policy in dispute. Like any contract, an insurance policy is construed according to the plain and ordinary meaning of its unambiguous terms. Nicor, Inc. v. Associated Elec. & Gas, 860 N.E.2d 280, 286 (Ill.2006). Ambiguity exists only where a term is susceptible to more than one reasonable interpretation. Id.
The insurance policy at issue in this case is not ambiguous. It provides up to $1,000,000 of coverage per occurrence for each insured vehicle. The policy contains a severability clause, which provides that the coverage applies separately to each person against whom a claim is made “except as to our limit of liability.” The “Combined Limit of Liability” provision, which replaces the limit of liability provision referenced in the severability clause, provides that the per-occurrence limit-$1,000,000-is the most that Auto-Owners will pay, “regardless of the number of automobiles shown in the Declarations ․ or automobiles involved in the occurrence.” While the Munroes attempt to find ambiguity, including in the terms “automobiles” and “combined,” these contortions merit little discussion here: applied to the facts of this case, the unambiguous terms of the policy limit the coverage to $1,000,000 for each occurrence, notwithstanding the involvement of three Wilkens tractor-trailers.
Thus, the only question of any real substance is whether there was more than one “occurrence” here. The policy defines an occurrence using the same language that the Illinois courts have interpreted many times in the past: “an accident that results in bodily injury or property damage and includes, as one occurrence, all continuous or repeated exposure to substantially the same generally harmful conditions.”
The parties agree that Illinois has adopted the “cause theory” to determine the number of occurrences under an insurance policy for purposes of coverage limitations of deductibles. Under the cause theory, the number of occurrences is determined according to the number of “separate and intervening human acts” giving rise to the claims under the policy. Nicor, 860 N.E.2d at 294.
But the cause theory (like the opposing effect theory) answers a question that presupposes there are several discrete events. All of the Illinois cases applying the cause theory involve multiple discrete events rather than an uninterrupted continuum: the only question is whether all of the discrete events should be attributed to a common cause. Most recently, for instance, the Illinois Supreme Court concluded that the deaths of two boys due to negligently maintained property constituted two occurrences despite a common cause under an exception to the cause theory. Addison Ins. Co. v. Fay, 905 N.E.2d 747, 756 (Ill.2009). Previously, in Nicor, the court found that there were multiple occurrences when separate negligent acts of various employees caused nearly two hundred discrete exposures to mercury contamination. 860 N.E.2d at 286. Before Nicor, the Illinois Appellate Court's relevant decisions all involved multiple claims or injuries. For example, the negligent manufacture and sale of asbestos building materials gave rise to a single occurrence despite many claims of exposure. U.S. Gypsum Co. v. Admiral Ins. Co., 643 N.E.2d 1226, 1259 (Ill .App.Ct.1994). And a single trucker caused two “occurrences” when his separate act of negligence following an initial collision with his tractor-trailer caused a second collision five minutes later. Illinois Nat'l. Ins. Co. v. Szczepkowicz, 542 N.E.2d 90, 91 (Ill.App.Ct.1989).
Whether there is a single continuous event or several discrete events will not always be obvious, but in this case we have a helpful guidance from Illinois Appellate Court precedent. In Szczepkowicz, a truck driver stopped his tractor-trailer in the middle of a state highway, blocking both northbound lanes. 542 N.E.2d at 91. An automobile struck the rear wheels of the tractor-trailer, and the driver then moved his vehicle forward enough to free up most of one lane, but failed to completely remove the vehicle from the travel lanes. Id. Five minutes later, a second vehicle traveling northbound smashed into the side of the tractor-trailer. Id. Lawsuits arose from both collisions and the truck's insurer sued for a declaratory judgment to establish its maximum liability. Id. The insurer argued that both collisions constituted a single accident, but the appellate court, applying the cause theory, held that the two collisions resulted from two separate causes: when the driver moved the tractor-trailer after the first collision, he negligently failed to clear all lanes, and this separate and intervening act caused a second accident five minutes later. Id. at 92. The two collisions were not the result of a “single force, nor an unbroken or uninterrupted continuum that, once set in motion, caused multiple injuries.” Id.
None of these cases implies, as the Munroes claim, that the cause theory can be used to turn a single discrete event into multiple occurrences. Unlike Szczepkowicz, this case does involve a single force and an uninterrupted chain-reaction involving several vehicles, and thus a single continuous occurrence. Although there may have been several causes for the uninterrupted events, none of these causes occurred after the force that caused the injury had been set in motion. In other words, even if the causes could properly be called separate, none were intervening causes. All of them came together at the same time to produce a single set of circumstances that caused a single accident: Munroe's truck collided with one Wilkens truck and then, out of control, hit the following truck head-on. He has one claim against the trucking company and the drivers, allegedly caused by three separate acts of negligence. This single claim gives rise to a single occurrence under the insurance policy, with a $1,000,000 limit.
In sum, no Illinois court has held that a single claim or injury can give rise to multiple occurrences merely because several acts of negligence combined to produce a single result. There is no indication that the Illinois Supreme Court would reach such a result, contrary to common sense and the Illinois courts' own interpretation of the cause theory.
B.
The Munroes also argue that the federal Motor Carriers Act, 49 U.S.C. § 13906(f), and its implementing regulations, requires that the three Wilkens tractor-trailers involved in the accident have a combined coverage of at least $2.25 million. This is so, according to the Munroes, because Wilkens satisfied its obligation under federal law to ensure a minimum amount of funds is available to pay damages caused to the public by its trucks by including an MCS-90 endorsement in the insurance policy. The MCS-90 endorsement, they argue, requires a minimum of $750,000 coverage for each vehicle involved in the accident.
The MCS-90 provides that Auto-Owners “[a]grees to pay, within the limits of liability described [in the endorsement], any final judgment recovered against the insured for public liability resulting from negligence in the operation, maintenance or use of motor vehicles.” The form also clearly states that “the limits of [Auto-Owner's] liability for the amounts prescribed in this endorsement apply separately, to each accident.” While the endorsement in the record has not been filled in with a specific amount of coverage, the minimum coverage scheduled on the second page of the endorsement is $750,000 for a for-hire vehicle with a gross weight of 10,000 pounds or more carrying nonhazardous property.
No court, to our knowledge, has discussed how the MCS90 applies when more than one insured vehicle under the same endorsement is involved in the same accident-a rather unusual set of facts, especially in this case. We are skeptical of the Munroes' argument that the MCS90 applies per-vehicle as well as per-accident, in light of our precedent applying the MCS-90 on a strictly per-accident basis even when an accident involves more than one injured party. See Carolina Cas. Ins. Co. v. Estate of Karpov, 559 F.3d 621, 625 (7th Cir.2009).
But we need not answer this question here because the MCS-90 is inapplicable for a more fundamental reason: there is no final judgment in this case, so Auto-Owners' payment obligation under the MCS-90 has not been triggered. Moreover, because the Munroes have agreed to release Wilkens from any liability beyond what the insurance policy provides, there will never be an unpaid final judgment in this case: the parties have settled and the underlying case will presumably be dismissed once this declaratory judgment action is complete. Under its terms, the MCS-90 simply requires an insurance company to pay “any final judgment recovered against the insured for public liability resulting from negligence in the operation ․ of motor vehicles subject to the financial responsibility provisions of [the Motor Carrier Act].”
The Munroes attempt to escape the impossibility of a triggering final judgment in this case by arguing that the MCS-90 requirements are relevant because they set the minimum insurance amounts, and that we should effectively amend the policy to provide that amount. But this is not how the MCS-90 works. The insurer guarantees payment of a final judgment against the insured, but “all terms, conditions and limitations in the policy to which the endorsement is attached shall remain in full force and effect as binding between the insured and the company.” The payment obligation is broader than the policy itself and applies regardless of “whether or not each motor vehicle is specifically described in the policy,” and despite any “condition, provision, stipulation, or limitation contained in the policy.” Thus, an insurer is required to pay even if, for example, the insured operates a leased vehicle not shown in the declarations or the accident is caused by a type of event excluded by the policy. In other words, the MCS-90 does not modify the terms of the policy, but instead obliges the insurer to pay up to $750,000 of a final judgment regardless of the terms of the policy.
Rather than modify the policy to which it is attached, the MCS-90 creates a suretyship among the injured public, the insured, and the insurer, under which the insurer agrees to guarantee a minimum payment to the injured public, regardless of whether the injury would, in fact, be covered by the policy. See Carolina Cas. Ins. Co. v. Yeates, 584 F.3d 868, 881 (10th Cir.2009). Under this suretyship, the insurer is only obliged to pay what the insured actually owes, and then only if that debt arises from a final judgment. See id. at 881 (“The essence of suretyship is the undertaking to answer for the debt of another. The surety's liability is coextensive with that of the debtor and arises only when the debtor fails to discharge his duties or to respond in damages for that failure.” (quoting Peter A. Alces, The Law of Suretyship and Guaranty § 1:1 (2009))). And, ultimately, the insured is liable for any payment beyond the policy limits: the MCS90 expressly provides that “the insured agrees to reimburse the company for any payment made by the company ․ for any payment that the company would not have been obligated to make under the provisions of the policy except for the agreement contained in this endorsement.”
Because of this, when an injured claimant releases a motor carrier from liability beyond the coverage limits of its insurance policy, there can be no liability that the insurer is responsible for under the MCS-90. This is true regardless of whether the settlement amount is greater or less than the liability limits mandated by the MCS-90. The MCS-90 guarantees payment of a final judgment up to a certain amount; it does not guarantee a minimum settlement amount.
Otherwise, the release would be ineffective: because the motor carrier would ultimately be responsible for the payment in excess of the policy limits, a finding of additional liability against the insurer would be tantamount to additional liability against the insured. Here, the Munroes released Wilkens from any liability above the coverage provided by the insurance policy, and Auto-Owners has agreed to pay its coverage limit under the policy, which we have determined to be $1,000,000 and which is unaffected by the MCS-90. Therefore, there never will be an unpaid final judgment for more than $1,000,000 in this case.
III.
Accordingly, we hold that the insurance policy unambiguously limits coverage to $1,000,000 per occurrence and that there was a single occurrence in this case because there was a single continuous event. Further, the MCS-90 endorsement does not affect Auto-Owners' liability because it applies only if triggered by an unpaid final judgment against Wilkens. Therefore, we Affirm the judgment of the district court.
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| July 28, 2010 |
| $7 Million Settlement in Shooting of Groom on Wedding Day |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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| The 2006 shooting of Sean Bell, the unarmed black man shot in his car and killed by police officers early on the morning of his wedding day, is one of the most controversial in recent New York City history. On Tuesday, the city agreed to pay more than $7 million to his two children and two of his friends; the friends were in the vehicle and were wounded when the police opened fire. The federal lawsuit set off a debate over the use of deadly force and prompted the city to change some of its policing procedures, including alcohol testing for officers in any shooting in which someone is injured, as well as improved firearms training. The settlement ranks among the biggest in recent years involving the city’s police. Mr. Bell’s children, whom he had with his fiancée, Nicole Paultre Bell, will receive $3.25 million. Mr. Bell’s two friends Joseph Guzman and Trent Benefield, who were injured in the shooting, will receive $3 million and $900,000, respectively. [NYT] (Also see The New York Post and The Daily News.)
New York Times By EMILY B. HAGER
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| July 26, 2010 |
| Kalama man awarded $5.8 million for 2008 shooting |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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A Kalama home developer won a $5.8 million settlement against the man who shot him four times in 2008, according to court documents.
Clark County Superior Court Judge Barbara D. Johnson ruled last week that the shooter, Roy S. Jorgenson of Woodland must pay the damages to Chad Wilson, who underwent 14 surgeries following the attack and racked up more than a half-million dollars in medical bills.
Wilson's lawyer doesn't expect his client to ever see anywhere near that amount, however.
A jury convicted Jorgenson of second-degree assault in March. He is serving a nine-month sentence in the Cowlitz County Jail.
Wilson, the developer of the high-end Dave's View housing tract in Kalama, said this week that it's been a difficult stretch, with one legal battle after another.
In 2007, the city of Kalama accused Wilson of stealing two million gallons of water from a city reservoir for two ponds at the development's entrance and his personal home. The prosecutor dropped charges against Wilson of defrauding a public utility in November 2007 and Kalama officials withdrew a civil claim against him in 2008, Wilson said in court documents.
Wilson filed a civil claim for unspecified damages against the city of Kalama in June, saying the imbroglio cost him past and future earnings. Kalama City Attorney Paul Brachvogel declined to comment on the claim, except to say, "We'll defend any claim like that that's brought against the city - vigorously."
In addition, Wilson faces a lawsuit from his development's residents, saying he improperly assessed and collected fees against members of the developments' homeowners' association. He said he suspects the allegations of water theft lead residents to believe he mishandled the homeowners' association's funds.
"He's had an awful lot on his plate between the shooting and this," said Longview attorney Duane Crandall, who is representing Wilson in his claim against the city of Kalama. "He's kind of swimming for the surface at this point."
At the time of Jorgenson's sentencing, Wilson said he was infuriated by a jury's decision to convict Jorgenson of a lesser charge, which carried what he considered a light sentence. He said this week that the award in the civil case restored "some needed confidence in our overall justice system."
Crandall said the suit over the shooting was filed in Clark County because Jorgenson owns property there. It's unclear how much Wilson will be able to collect from Jorgenson, Crandall said. Wilson said this week that the value of Jorgenson's assets is "not even in the ballpark" of $5.8 million.
Prosecutors said Wilson and his wife discovered Jorgenson looking at some landscaping in their development on May 18, 2008. Jorgenson refused to leave and punched Wilson in the face, prosecutors said. When Wilson fought back, Jorgenson pulled a gun and began firing as Wilson tried to run away. Wilson was shot four times at a range of at least 30 feet, prosecutor's said.
Jorgenson said he acted in self-defense because Wilson was severely beating him.
Wilson said he underwent 14 surgeries over three months. Some of his fingers were permanently paralyzed, he said. A portion of his intestines were removed and, he said, he had to use a colostomy bag for about a year.
He said he is a country and classic rock musician who has toured with bands and lived in Nashville, but playing guitar is too difficult now.
"Oh my God, we're still struggling," Wilson said. "We're still trying to get back on track."
Wilson said his claim against the city of Kalama - the first step in filing a lawsuit - is aimed mainly at clearing his name.
"I just really feel strong in my heart that my family deserves an answer; my friends deserve an answer; my business associates deserve an answer," Wilson said. "If I could clear my name, I'd feel a lot better about doing business here."
He said the city gave him permission to hook up to the reservoir and that much of the water disappeared as a result of a leak. He provided to the newspaper an affidavit from Paul King, a Kalama landscape contractor, which says the city gave him unmetered access to the reservoir in August 2005 to construct the development's "entry monument."
"These construction practices are fairly routine and have been applied in the field regularly by the city of Kalama and other municipalities in the past," King said.
Wilson also provided three affidavits from Confer Road area residents saying the city of Kalama was in the neighborhood repairing a water main leak in August 2006. The city has provided no documentation of the repairs, Wilson said.
Wilson said he paid the city $1,000 to settle the question of the stolen water, largely because it would have been more expensive to pay an attorney than to drag the matter through the court system.
Sometimes, he said, "life comes at you.
by Tony Lystra / The Daily News |
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| July 20, 2010 |
| Atlanta lawyer wins $11 million lawsuit for family in botched circumcision |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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The maker of an instrument used in circumcisions claimed that injury was impossible with its use, but after an infant lost a portion of his penis during an operation with the Mogen clamp, a judge awarded $10.8 million in damages against the company.
The judgment handed down Friday in New York involves an Atlanta lawyer who has been crusading against circumcision as a dangerous and unnecessary practice.
Attorney David Llewellyn won a similar case in Atlanta last year and the injury behind that prior lawsuit in Fulton County Superior Court put the New York clamp manufacturer on notice about the danger of the device, his current lawsuit said.
The baby in the current case, identified in court documents only as L.G., lost the entire glans, or head, of his penis after it was pulled into the jaws of the clamp, according to a federal magistrate's order. On Friday, U.S. District Judge Jack B. Weinstein ordered Mogen Circumcision Instruments of New York to pay $10.8 million in compensatory and punitive damages to the Florida boy, now 3, and his parents.
The parents "are extraordinarily distraught and angered that this company tells people it can't happen," Llewellyn said.
It's unclear whether they will ever collect the money. Mogen is already in default on a $7.5 million judgment in 2007 from a Massachusetts lawsuit, Llewellyn said.
The company is going out of business, according to a woman who answered the phone at its Brooklyn headquarters Monday. The woman, who said she was a secretary and would identify herself only as D. Rotter, the person whom Llewellyn said was served papers in the lawsuit. She said increased competition has undermined their business.
"It's just kind of dwindling down to nothing," she said, adding that the phones at the Mogen office were scheduled to be disconnected Tuesday. Mogen didn't defend itself in court, and Rotter said it was because the company couldn't afford it.
She said the Mogen clamp is "painless and safe" when used properly. The case involving the Florida boy was "unfortunate," she said, adding that "any medical mishap is unfortunate."
In this case, a New York mohel, or Jewish ritual circumcisor, performed the operation in the baby's home, Llewellyn said. The mohel negotiated a separate settlement, the terms of which Llewellyn would not disclose.
Llewellyn won another circumcision case in 2009 over an operation at South Fulton Medical Center. In that case, which involved a baby identified only as D.P. Jr., the mother contended that the doctor who circumcised him removed too much tissue and that his pediatrician failed to respond when a nurse complained of excessive bleeding.
The tip of the penis was placed in a biohazard bag and might have been reattached if he'd gotten attention in time, Llewellyn said in 2009. His lawsuit in New York says D.P. Jr. lost a third of his glans.
The jury found that both the pediatrician and the physician who performed the circumcision were negligent, and awarded $2.3 million to the plaintiffs. South Fulton Medical Center was absolved of liability.
In Friday's decision, the court determined that Mogen had to pay for medical expenses and for the years of psychotherapy that will be needed. The boy suffers pain when he urinates, the court order says. He will eventually be able to have sex, but he is likely to be embarrassed and will likely have trouble forming "meaningful" relationships with girls, it adds. "At 3 years old, L.G. is aware that he looks different from other boys based on both his own observations and comments from other children which make him feel inferior ."
By Ty Tagami
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution |
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| July 19, 2010 |
| Tots in Mind playard tents recalled |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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WASHINGTON, July 16 (UPI) -- The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission announced a voluntary recall of Tots in Mind playard tents due to a risk of strangulation.
About 20,000
portable
tents
were imported from China by Tots in Mind Inc. of Salem, N.H., and sold nationwide from January 2005 through February 2010 for about $60.
The tents are dome-shaped, white with insect screening, designed to fit over playards ranging from 28 inches by 40 inches to 31 inches by 44 inches.
The commission said clips that attach the tent to the top of the playard can break or be removed by a child and a child can lift the tent and become entrapped at the neck between the rigid playard frame and the metal base rod of the tent, posing a strangulation hazard.
The commission said a 2-year-old died as a result of strangulation when he was trapped between the playard frame and metal base rod of the tent.
Consumers were advised to stop using the tents immediately and contact Tots in Mind to receive replacement clips that are used to secure the base of the tent to the top rail of the crib.
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| July 16, 2010 |
| Caltrans, driver ordered to pay $12.2 million for Millbrae crash that left girl in coma |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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REDWOOD CITY — Caltrans and a driver who ran her car into a Millbrae girl walking across El Camino Real were ordered to pay the now-comatose woman $12.2 million in damages, attorneys said Wednesday.
A San Mateo County jury decided Gada Hassan and Caltrans were responsible for the March 2006 collision in a crosswalk near Ludeman Lane in Millbrae that left then-17-year-old Emily Liou with permanent brain injuries, said her attorney, Douglas Saeltzer.
The settlement is to be paid in a lump sum, he added.
Caltrans said by e-mail it is considering an appeal, but made no further comment.
One of Saeltzer's primary arguments to the jury was that the crosswalk Liou used was dangerous because it sits on top of a small rise where drivers can't see pedestrians.
Three walkers have been struck and killed by cars in the same spot since 1991.
Aggravating the situation is a lack of traffic lights or stop signs to slow drivers.
The result is a crosswalk that gives pedestrians a sense of security, though there is nothing to protect them, Saeltzer said.
"Caltrans created the problem," he added. "They have not done a thing to (improve) this intersection."
Liou was walking across the road in the early evening on her way home from singing karaoke with friends.
She had made it across six of seven lanes when she was struck by a Toyota sedan.
Although the impact was at a relatively low speed — 20-25 mph
— Liou was knocked to the ground and hit her head
Hassan told investigators that she didn't see the girl until just before the impact, Saeltzer said. Her attorney, Jonathan Lee, declined to comment on the case.
Liou, now 21, is in China seeking treatment because medical costs are lower there.
Saeltzer said one of the themes of the four-week trial, which ended with a verdict July 1, was to bring Liou back to the United States.
"Caltrans told people that this is a safe way to cross. It's definitely not," he said.
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| July 13, 2010 |
| Woman Offered 14-year-old Sex, Drugs on Flight |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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A Chicago area father claims in a lawsuit that Southwest Airlines failed to protect his teenage son from an older female passenger who made sexual advances and offered him illegal drugs during a flight two years ago.
The incident occurred on a July 2008 flight from Chicago's Midway Airport to Orlando, according to the lawsuit filed Monday in Cook County Circuit Court.
The boy, who was 14 at the time, asked flight attendants to switch his seat multiple times but "was emphatically told no," the lawsuit said.
"This was a little boy who was flying alone who was really, you know, in the care and custody of that airline," the family's attorney, Jeffrey Deutschman, said in a telephone interview. "They failed to protect him. They allowed an individual to get intoxicated on that flight. That person was harassing my client sexually as well as trying to give him drugs. He was a very scared little boy."
A spokesman for Southwest Airlines declined comment on the lawsuit.
The boy, who was flying to Florida to visit relatives, was so frightened by the experience that he refused to return home by himself, so his father flew down to accompany him home, according to Deutschman.
The family is asking for more than $50,000 for the "personal injury" that the boy sustained while on the flight.
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| July 13, 2010 |
| Airline Passenger Denied Recovery in Slip and Fall Accident |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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ELASSAAD v. INDEPENDENCE AIR INC
; Delta Air Lines, Inc.
No. 08-3878.
Argued Jan. 28, 2010. -- July 06, 2010
AMENDED OPINION OF THE COURT
Joseph Elassaad appeals from an order granting summary judgment in favor of Independence Air, Inc., with respect to his negligence claim for injuries sustained when he fell while disembarking from an airplane at the Philadelphia International Airport. His appeal requires us to consider the extent to which the Federal Aviation Act (“Aviation Act”), 49 U.S.C. § 40101 et seq., preempts state law concerning tort claims arising from an air carrier's conduct in overseeing the disembarkation of passengers. Although we stated in Abdullah v. American Airlines, Inc., 181 F.3d 363, 365 (3d Cir.1999), that the Aviation Act preempts “the entire field of aviation safety” from state regulation, we hold that the “field of aviation safety” does not include a flight crew's oversight of the disembarkation of passengers once a plane has come to a complete stop at its destination. Abdullah therefore does not control the instant case. We also hold that the Aviation Act and the regulations promulgated thereunder do not preempt state tort law with respect to such negligence claims. Moreover, we conclude that the federally enacted Air Carrier Access Act (“ACAA”), 49 U.S.C. § 41705 et seq., and its implementing regulations do not control the standard of care from the standpoint of airline safety. As a result, we conclude that the standard of care in Elassaad's negligence claim is not preempted by federal law, and we will reverse the grant of summary judgment for Independence and remand for further proceedings.
I. Background
Elassaad's right leg was amputated above the knee in 1978, and he relies on a pair of crutches to walk. On February 9, 2004, he boarded a Boston-to-Philadelphia flight operated by Independence under the auspices of Delta Air Lines. The flight was on a Dornier 328, a small commuter jet, which passengers boarded from the tarmac via a 31/212-foot long flight of steps built into the door of the aircraft. After arriving at his seat without incident, Elassaad attempted to place his crutches in the overhead bin, which was not long enough to accommodate them. Adrien Lavoie, the lone flight attendant on the plane, then took the crutches and stowed them in the baggage area for the duration of the flight.
Upon landing in Philadelphia, Lavoie asked Elassaad to stay in his seat until the other passengers had deplaned. Lavoie then returned the crutches to Elassaad, who used them to approach the aircraft door. At that point, despite having boarded the aircraft by the same staircase, Elassaad noticed for the first time that the stairs were narrow.1 The staircase had a railing on the left side, but not on the right. Though Elassaad recognized that he “needed assistance” to descend the staircase, App. 117, he chose not to request help because he believed the only aid the airline could offer would be to carry him down the stairs. Elassaad testified that he would have declined such assistance due to his perception of it as demeaning.2 However, he would have accepted the assistance of a wheelchair or an electronic lift had he known that this type of assistance was available to him.3
As Elassaad began to descend the stairs, he lost his balance and fell off the right side of the staircase, striking his shoulder on the pavement. According to his complaint, this resulted in severe injuries, including torn cartilage in his shoulder that required surgical repair.
Elassaad commenced this lawsuit in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, advancing three separate negligence claims under Pennsylvania law against Independence and Delta: that the airlines were negligent in (1) operating an aircraft made defective by design features of the aircraft steps; (2) failing to inspect and maintain the steps; and (3) failing to offer and render personal assistance to Elassaad as he disembarked from the jet. The case was removed to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania on May 18, 2005, based on diversity of citizenship. Shortly thereafter, on June 14, 2005, Elassaad voluntarily dismissed Delta from the suit. Independence then moved for partial summary judgment with respect to the first claim. The District Court granted Independence's motion as unopposed. By that time, Elassaad had withdrawn his second claim, which was based on Independence's alleged failure to inspect and maintain the steps, leaving, in the words of the District Court, “the sole liability issue [as] whether [Independence] negligently failed to assist [Elassaad] in disembarking the airplane, including, without limitations, making available all appropriate safety measures and devices.” App. 3.
Independence moved for summary judgment on Elassaad's remaining claim, arguing that the controlling standard of care, dictated by federal law, obligates an airline to provide assistance only upon request, and that it is undisputed that Elassaad did not ask for assistance. Specifically, Independence argued that the regulations implementing the ACAA,4 which address air carriers' conduct toward the disabled, see 14 C.F.R. §§ 382.1-.70 (2004), preempt state law negligence standards. The ACAA regulations require air carriers to “provide assistance requested by or on behalf of qualified individuals with a disability, or offered by air carrier personnel and accepted by qualified individuals with a disability, in enplaning and deplaning.” 14 C.F.R. § 382.39(a) (2004).5 Neither the ACAA nor its regulations expressly require air carriers to offer assistance, and Elassaad made no such request for assistance. Nor do the ACAA regulations obligate carriers to inform a disabled passenger of available assistive measures unless the passenger states the need for a wheelchair. See 14 C.F.R. § 382.45(a)(2) (2004).6
Elassaad responded to Independence's motion for summary judgment by asserting that the ACAA and its regulations were intended only to prevent discrimination against disabled passengers, not to establish standards for the safe operation of an aircraft. He argued that air carriers could be held liable for failing to affirmatively offer assistance to disabled passengers, notwithstanding the ACAA, if that failure compromised passenger safety. Elassaad noted that the Federal Aviation Administration (“FAA”), which has the authority to establish air safety standards, has not promulgated any safety regulations describing what, if any, assistance air carriers must offer passengers when deplaning. In the absence of a controlling federal safety regulation, Elassaad argued, state negligence law governs an air carrier's duty of care in that situation, and the failure of Independence to offer him aid constituted negligence under Pennsylvania common law. Alternatively, Elassaad argued that, if the Aviation Act does control, the general standard of care set forth in 14 C.F.R. § 91.13, which prohibits carriers from operating an aircraft in a “careless or reckless manner,” imposed a duty of care on Independence to offer him deplaning assistance and that the airline consequently breached that duty when it failed to offer him such assistance.
The District Court concluded that, under our holding in Abdullah, federal law dictated the standard of care for Elassaad's negligence suit. The District Court adopted Independence's view of the applicable standard of care, as found in the ACAA regulations. The District Court concluded that the ACAA and its regulations impose no affirmative duty to offer assistance to a disabled airline passenger, and that, even if the standard under 14 C.F.R. § 91.13 applied, Elassaad had failed to “point[ ] to caselaw or expert testimony to establish that the failure of Independence to offer assistance to [Elassaad] constituted careless or reckless conduct.” App. 6-7. The District Court granted Independence's motion for summary judgment, and Elassaad filed a timely appeal.
II. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
Independence removed the present action to federal court under 28 U.S.C. § 1441. The District Court exercised diversity jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Our jurisdiction arises under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We review de novo district court orders granting or denying summary judgment. See Levy v. Sterling Holding Co., 544 F.3d 493, 501 (3d Cir.2008). We also exercise de novo review of a preemption determination, as it is a question of law. See Horn v. Thoratec Corp., 376 F.3d 163, 166 (3d Cir.2004).
Summary judgment is proper where “the pleadings, the discovery and disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). Because summary judgment was entered against Elassaad, we view any disputed facts in his favor. See Brewer v. Quaker State Oil Ref. Corp., 72 F.3d 326, 330 (3d Cir.1995).
III. Discussion
On appeal, Elassaad challenges the District Court's determination that the ACAA and its implementing regulations preempt state negligence law with respect to an air carrier's duty to offer aid to disabled passengers when deplaning. Elassaad asserts that state negligence law governs an air carrier's duty of care under such circumstances, or in the alternative, that if our holding in Abdullah dictates that there is federal preemption, then the standard of care is the “careless or reckless” standard established by 14 C.F.R. § 91.13.
Independence argues that whether or not Abdullah applies, the ACAA and its implementing regulations “preempt state law on air carrier interaction with passengers with a disability.” Appellee's Br. at 7. Independence alternatively urges that Abdullah “remains good law, extends to boarding and disembarking, and applies in this case,” but that the level of care provided was above the “careless or reckless” standard imposed by § 91.13. Id. at 5.
We agree with Elassaad's main contention, namely, that his common law negligence claim is not preempted by federal law. We will explain our reasoning by addressing each of the arguments made by Independence on appeal. To do this, we will begin by discussing our decision in Abdullah, the scope of its holding, and why the instant case does not fall within that scope. Then we will discuss why the Aviation Act and the ACAA, and the regulations implementing those statutes, do not preempt the state law standard of care in this case. These are issues of first impression in our court, as we have not previously considered the intersection of the Aviation Act safety regulations and the ACAA regulations, or their proper applications in this context.
A.
In Abdullah, passengers aboard an American Airlines flight were injured as a result of severe turbulence en route from New York to Puerto Rico. 181 F.3d at 365. The passengers initiated two separate lawsuits in the District Court of the Virgin Islands against American Airlines, which were consolidated for trial. Id. The passengers claimed that the flight crew was negligent as a matter of Virgin Islands law both in failing to take reasonable precautions to avoid, and in failing to warn the passengers about, the turbulence. Id. After a jury in Saint Croix returned a verdict in favor of the passengers, the trial court granted American Airlines' motion for a new trial, on the ground that the court had improperly instructed the jury on the local standard of care rather than on the standard prescribed by the Aviation Act. Id. at 366.
At the passengers' request, the trial court then certified a two-part question for appeal: “Does federal law preempt the standards for air safety, but preserve State and Territorial damage remedies?” Id. at 364. We granted interlocutory review, and answered both parts of the question in the affirmative. We held that there was “implied preemption of the entire field of aviation safety,” but that “despite federal preemption of the standards of care, state and territorial damage remedies still exist for violation of those standards.” Id. at 365.
Abdullah's holding was grounded in our finding that Congress, by enacting the Aviation Act, intended “ ‘to promote safety in aviation and thereby protect the lives of persons who travel on board aircraft’ “ by resting “sole responsibility for supervising the aviation industry with the federal government.” Id. at 368 (citation omitted). This conclusion as to congressional intent was primarily supported by the Aviation Act's legislative history and its judicial interpretation in City of Burbank v. Lockheed Air Terminal, Inc., 411 U.S. 624 (1973). We noted that the Supreme Court in City of Burbank had analyzed the Aviation Act's legislative history to reach the conclusion that “Congress's consolidation of control of aviation in one agency indicated its intent to federally preempt aviation safety.” Abdullah, 181 F.3d at 369 (citing City of Burbank, 411 U.S. at 639).
In Abdullah, we specifically found that Congress intended the Administrator of the FAA to exercise “sole discretion in regulating air safety” by vesting the Administrator with broad regulatory authority. Id. We stated that, to effectuate this authority, the Administrator “has implemented a comprehensive system of rules and regulations” to promote flight safety. Id. Based on the comprehensive regulatory system, we determined that federal law so thoroughly occupies the legislative field of aviation safety that federal law impliedly preempts state regulation in that area. Id. at 371. Our finding of field preemption notwithstanding, we held that state common law remedies were still available to the injured passengers based on the specific language of the Aviation Act's savings and insurance clauses. Id. at 375-76. We remanded proceedings to the trial court to determine whether the jury instructions based on Virgin Islands law nevertheless comported with the federal standard of care. Id. at 376.
We did not conclude in Abdullah that the passengers' common law negligence claims themselves were preempted; instead, we determined only that the standard of care used in adjudicating those claims was preempted. Local law still governed the other negligence elements (breach, causation, and damages), as well as the choice and availability of remedies. This was consistent with our prior observation, in the context of airline deregulation, that “[i]t is highly unlikely that Congress intended to deprive passengers of their common law rights to recover for death or personal injuries sustained in air crashes.” Taj Mahal Travel, Inc. v. Delta Airlines, Inc., 164 F.3d 186, 194 (3d Cir.1998).
Again, Abdullah's primary holding was that federal law preempted “the entire field of aviation safety.” 181 F.3d at 365. Of critical import here is the fact that precedent is controlling only as far as it goes. Because the parties debate whether and when Abdullah applies, we will provide clarification on that issue.
B.
Courts have recognized three species of preemption: express preemption, conflict preemption, and field preemption. Express preemption requires that Congress's intent to preempt be “ ‘explicitly stated in the statute's language or implicitly contained in its structure and purpose.’ “ Cipollone v. Liggett Group, Inc ., 505 U.S. 504, 516 (1992) (citation omitted). Conflict preemption occurs when state law “actually conflicts with federal law,” such that “it is impossible for a private party to comply with both state and federal requirements, or where state law stands as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives of Congress.” English v. Gen. Elec. Co., 496 U.S. 72, 79 (1990) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). Field preemption occurs when a field is “reserved for federal regulation, leaving no room for state regulation,” and “congressional intent to supersede state laws [is] clear and manifest.” Holk v. Snapple Beverage Corp., 575 F.3d 329, 336 (3d Cir.2009) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). Both statutes and regulations can preempt state law. Id. at 339.
C.
There is no basis for finding that the Aviation Act preempts Elassaad's state law claims through express preemption or conflict preemption. To the extent that the Aviation Act preempts these claims, it must be through field preemption.
In Abdullah, we found that there was implied field preemption “of the entire field of aviation safety” as a result of the Aviation Act and its implementing regulations. 181 F.3d at 365. However, our analysis of field preemption in Abdullah-specifically, the “field” of “aviation safety”-was in the context of in-flight safety. This is clear from a careful reading of our decision. In describing our conclusion regarding preemption, we stated that “federal law establishes the applicable standards of care in the field of air safety,” and that the FAA has “sole discretion in regulating air safety. ” Id. at 367, 369 (emphases added). As examples of what we meant by the term “air safety,” we noted that a goal of the Aviation Act was to reduce “accidents in air transportation,” id. at 369 (quoting 49 U.S.C. § 44701(c)); we referred to the FAA's regulation of “pilot certification, pilot pre-flight duties, pilot flight responsibilities, and flight rules,” id. at 369 (footnotes omitted); and we described case law regarding issues “such as airspace management, flight operations, and aviation noise,” id. at 371. Accordingly, we identified the standard of care applicable in Abdullah as that supplied by 14 C.F.R. § 91.13(a), which states, with respect to “[a]ircraft operations for the purpose of air navigation,” that “[n]o person may operate an aircraft in a careless or reckless manner so as to endanger the life or property of another.” 14 C.F.R. § 91.13(a); see 181 F.3d at 372. This is, of course, consistent with the facts of Abdullah, in which plaintiffs brought suit based on injuries sustained while the aircraft was in the air, transporting passengers from New York to Puerto Rico. 181 F .3d at 366.
Our discussion of the regulatory framework giving rise to preemption in Abdullah focused exclusively on safety while a plane is in the air, flying between its origin and destination. Our use of the term “aviation safety” in Abdullah to describe the field preempted by federal law was thus limited to in-air safety. The supervision of the disembarkation process by a flight crew therefore falls outside the bounds of what we were considering in Abdullah.7
As we have not opined as to the preemptive effect of federal law in this context, we must do so here. Accordingly, we will consider an issue presented to us for the first time: whether the Aviation Act, the ACAA, and their implementing regulations preempt state tort law with respect to accidents that occur when a passenger is disembarking a plane.
D.
When considering preemption of an area of traditional state regulation, we “begin our analysis by applying a presumption against preemption.” Holk, 575 F.3d at 334 (citations omitted).8 It is beyond dispute that it has traditionally been the province of state law to govern disputes in cases where a plaintiff alleges that he fell as a result of the defendant's negligence. Moreover, as we recognized in Taj Mahal, Inc. v. Delta Airlines, Inc., 164 F.3d 186 (3d Cir.1998), it is appropriate to use a restrained approach in recognizing the preemption of common law torts in the field of aviation. Although Taj Mahal focused on the impact of the Airline Deregulation Act, we reasoned that preemption of tort law in aviation should be constrained in part because “the Department of Transportation has neither the authority nor the apparatus required to superintend” tort disputes. 164 F.3d at 194.
In addition, as Justice Stevens has stated, “ ‘Congress did not intend to give airlines free rein to commit negligent acts subject only to the supervision of the Department of Transportation, any more than it meant to allow airlines to breach contracts with impunity,” because “the standard of ordinary care, like contract principles, ‘is a general background rule against which all individuals order their affairs.’ “ Id. at 192 (quoting Am. Airlines, Inc. v. Wolens, 513 U.S. 219, 236-37 (1995) (Stevens, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part)). Even though Taj Mahal addressed a different statute than the federal laws at issue in this case, we adhere to its conservative approach today.
As noted above, to find field preemption, we must find that federal law “leav [es] no room for state regulation” and that Congress had a “clear and manifest” intent to supersede state law. Holk, 575 F.3d at 336 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). In undertaking this inquiry, we consider the language and goals of the applicable statute and regulations, as well as any explicit statements by Congress or an agency regarding preemption. Id. at 336-39.
When the Aviation Act was enacted in 1958, it, among other things, created the FAA, gave the government authority to review airfares, instituted a system for registering and certifying aircraft, and set safety standards for air carriers and aircraft. See Federal Aviation Act of 1958, Pub.L. No. 85-726, 72 Stat. 731. Only the portions of the Aviation Act relating to safety are relevant here. In their current form, the statute's safety-related provisions set forth standards for certifying pilots, flight attendants, air carriers, airports, and other facilities, see 49 U.S.C. §§ 44702-44711, 44728, and require the FAA to regulate such issues as collision avoidance systems, aircraft inspections, and “aircraft operations during winter conditions,” see §§ 44713, 44716, 44717, 44722. The statute also directs the FAA to issue regulations in keeping with two safety-related goals: the “reduc[tion] or eliminat[ion][of] the possibility or recurrence of accidents in air transportation,” and the “promot[ion][of] safe flight of civil aircraft,” such as by prescribing standards for the construction and maintenance of aircraft, “the reserve supply of fuel and oil carried in flight,” and “the maximum hours or periods of service of airmen and other employees of air carriers.” § 44701(c), (a). Nothing in the statute pertains to safety during disembarkation; rather, the statute's safety provisions appear to be principally concerned with safety in connection with operations associated with flight. Indeed, as we noted in Abdullah, Congress enacted the Aviation Act to “protect the lives of persons who travel on board aircraft.” 181 F.3d at 368 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
It is not surprising, then, that most of the regulations adopted pursuant to the Aviation Act concern aspects of safety that are associated with flight. For example, the regulations detail certification and “airworthiness” requirements for aircraft parts.9 They include flight rules familiar to air travelers, such as those requiring the use of seatbelts, restricting the use of electronic devices, regulating where carry-on baggage can be stored, and requiring the stowage of food and beverage equipment during taxiing, takeoff, and landing.10 They also set qualifications for pilots, flight attendants, and air traffic control operators,11 and regulate the conduct of crew members during flight.12 Similarly, the regulations impose restrictions on an aircraft's speed, altitude, communications, and flight path.13 We note that the regulations under the Aviation Act do not specifically regulate the conduct of the crew in connection with the loading or unloading of passengers. The primary purpose of these regulations appears to be the prevention of accidents, and the assurance of passenger safety, in connection with flight.
The regulations also contain a broader standard in 14 C.F.R. § 91 .13, which we identified in Abdullah as “provid[ing] a general description of the standard required for the safe operation of aircraft” even “where there is no specific provision or regulation governing air safety.” 181 F.3d at 371. That regulation contains two paragraphs. Section 91.13(a) applies when an aircraft is being operated “for the purpose of air navigation”; section 91.13(b) applies when an aircraft is being operated “other than for the purpose of air navigation.”
Section 91.13(a) provides as follows: “Aircraft operations for the purpose of air navigation. No person may operate an aircraft in a careless or reckless manner so as to endanger the life or property of another.” Independence contends that the aircraft was being “operat[ed] for the purpose of air navigation” within the meaning of this regulation. We are not so sure.
In order to interpret the phrase “operations for the purpose of air navigation” as used by § 91.13(a), we begin by considering the definitions provided by the regulations themselves. The general definitions section of the regulations defines “operate” to mean “use, cause to use or authorize to use aircraft, for the purpose (except as provided in [§ 91.13] ) of air navigation including the piloting of aircraft, with or without the right of legal control (as owner, lessee, or otherwise).” 14 C.F.R. § 1.1. As that definition indicates, the meaning of “operate” is derived in part from § 91.13. Since § 91.13(a), like the general definition of “operate,” refers to “operations for the purpose of air navigation,” the reference to § 91.13 appears to mean § 91.13(b), which we will discuss below.
The definitions provided by the Aviation Act also help to elucidate the meaning of § 91.13(a). The statute defines “ ‘operate aircraft’ and ‘operation of aircraft’ [to] mean using aircraft for the purposes of air navigation, including-(A) the navigation of aircraft; and (B) causing or authorizing the operation of aircraft with or without the right of legal control of the aircraft.” 49 U.S.C. § 40102(a)(35). Although the statute does not define “air navigation,” it does define two related terms: “navigate aircraft” and “air navigation facility.” “ ‘[N]avigate aircraft’ and ‘navigation of aircraft’ include piloting aircraft.” § 40102(a)(33). “ ‘[A]ir navigation facility’․ includ[es]-(A) a landing area; (B) a light; (C) apparatus or equipment for distributing weather information, signaling, radio-directional finding, or radio or other electromagnetic communication; and (D) another structure or mechanism for guiding or controlling flight in the air or the landing and takeoff of aircraft .” § 40102(a)(4).
In light of these definitions, we conclude that the aircraft was not being operated for the purpose of air navigation at the time of Elassaad's accident, and thus that the standard of care provided by § 91.13(a) did not apply to this situation. By the time of the accident, the aircraft had landed, taxied to the gate, and come to a complete stop; the crew had already opened the door and lowered the plane's stairs; and all of the passengers other than Elassaad had deplaned. As discussed above, the statutory and regulatory definitions of “operate” state that a plane is only being operated, within the meaning of § 91.13(a), when it is being “use[d]” for “navigation,” and the Aviation Act's definitions of “navigate aircraft” and “air navigation facility” demonstrate that the term “navigation” principally applies to the takeoff and landing of an aircraft, and the “piloting” that occurs during the flight. These definitions contemplate a flight crew's interaction with an aircraft and with passengers who are on the aircraft. By contrast, we conclude that a flight crew's oversight of the disembarkation of passengers-after a plane has finished taxiing to the gate, and its crew has opened the aircraft's door and lowered its stairs-does not constitute “operations for the purpose of air navigation.”14
We also conclude that the aircraft was not being operated “other than for the purpose of air navigation” as envisioned by 14 C.F.R. § 91.13(b). Both parties concede this, and we agree. That portion of the regulation provides as follows:
Aircraft operations other than for the purpose of air navigation. No person may operate an aircraft, other than for the purpose of air navigation, on any part of the surface of an airport used by aircraft for air commerce (including areas used by those aircraft for receiving or discharging persons or cargo), in a careless or reckless manner so as to endanger the life or property of another.
§ 91.13(b). The comments made by the FAA in conjunction with the issuance of this regulation15 help to clarify its meaning. The agency explained that the term “ ‘operate an aircraft other than for the purpose of air navigation’ ․ is employed in this rule in order to clearly limit the applicability of the rule to those acts which impart some physical movement to the aircraft, or involve the manipulation of the controls of the aircraft such as starting or running an aircraft engine.” Careless or Reckless Ground Operation of Aircraft, 32 Fed.Reg. 9640, 9640-41 (July 4, 1967) (emphasis added). There is no evidence that, by watching Elassaad exit the plane, the flight crew was engaging in any acts that “impart[ed] some physical movement to the aircraft, or involve[d] the manipulation of the controls of the aircraft.” Id. As noted above, not only had the aircraft come to a complete stop, but the aircraft's door had been opened, its stairs had been lowered, and most of the passengers had already disembarked. The crew's conduct with respect to Elassaad's disembarkation therefore did not constitute “operations” for any purpose under § 91.13.
The statutory and regulatory framework of the Aviation Act thus provides no evidence of any intent-much less a “clear and manifest” intent-to regulate safety during disembarkation. In Abdullah, we concluded that, given the overwhelming number of relevant Aviation Act safety regulations, the Aviation Act preempted the field of aviation safety. Here, there is no indication that either Congress or the FAA intended that federal law would impose a legal duty in an area that is neither specifically regulated by federal law nor clearly governed by a general federal standard of care: the assistance provided to passengers during their disembarkation. Accordingly, we conclude that the Aviation Act and its safety regulations do not preempt state law standards of care in this negligence action.
E.
After the District Court found federal preemption based on Abdullah, it looked to the ACAA regulations for the applicable standard of care. On appeal, Independence goes further than the District Court, and argues that, as a matter of both field preemption and conflict preemption, the ACAA independently preempts Elassaad's negligence claim. We reject these arguments.
Congress passed the ACAA in 1986 as an amendment to the Aviation Act. See Pub.L. No. 99-435 § 2(a), 100 Stat. 1080 (1986). The statute was intended to close a gap in antidiscrimination law that was made apparent by the Supreme Court's decision in Department of Transportation v. Paralyzed Veterans of America, 477 U.S. 597, 610-12 (1986), in which the Court held that, despite receiving federal funding, air carriers were not subject to certain provisions of the Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C. § 794. The ACAA was designed to address and prohibit airline discrimination based on disabilities, and directed the FAA to issue regulations “to ensure nondiscriminatory treatment of qualified handicapped individuals consistent with safe carriage of all passengers on air carriers.” § 3, 100 Stat. at 1080; see also 49 U.S.C. § 41705(a). More than just prohibiting overtly discriminatory conduct, these regulations “are aimed at ensuring that services, facilities, and other accommodations are provided to passengers with disabilities in a respectful and helpful manner.” Nondiscrimination on the Basis of Disability in Air Travel, 70 Fed.Reg. 41,482, 41,504 (July 19, 2005).16 Despite the statute's reference to the “safe carriage of all passengers,” the ACAA regulations do not displace Aviation Act safety regulations. See 14 C.F.R. § 382.3(d) (2004) (“Nothing in this part shall authorize or require a carrier to fail to comply with any applicable FAA safety regulation.”).17
It is clear that the ACAA is aimed at ensuring respect and equal treatment for disabled airline passengers. But Elassaad did not claim that Independence violated any of its obligations under the ACAA,18 nor did he even suggest that discrimination played any role in its conduct toward him. Instead, Elassaad alleged in his complaint that Independence was negligent, inter alia, in failing to provide both “a means for Plaintiff to safely exit the plane given his physical condition and need to use crutches” and “personal assistance to help Plaintiff go down the steps.” App. 16-17. Independence contends that these claims are preempted by the ACAA.
In light of the purposes of the ACAA and its implementing regulations, we are not persuaded that they preempt state law through either field preemption or conflict preemption. Independence contends that the ACAA preempts the field of “air carrier interaction with disabled persons.” Appellee's Br. at 16. However, the ACAA is clearly directed at nondiscrimination, and we are not persuaded that Congress intended the ACAA to preempt any state regulation of the interaction between an air carrier and disabled passengers (or disabled persons in general). At most, the ACAA might preempt state nondiscrimination laws as they apply to discrimination by air carriers against disabled passengers. See Nondiscrimination on the Basis of Handicap in Air Travel, 55 Fed.Reg. 8008, 8014 (Mar. 6, 1990) (“[The ACAA] is a detailed, comprehensive, national regulation, based on Federal statute, that substantially, if not completely, occupies the field of nondiscrimination on the basis of handicap in air travel ․ [I]nterested parties should be on notice that there is a strong likelihood that state action on matters covered by this rule will be regarded as preempted.” (emphasis added)). State nondiscrimination laws, however, are not at issue in this case. We can find no evidence of a “clear and manifest” congressional intent to supersede any relevant state tort law or to “leav[e] no room for state regulation” in this area, and we thus cannot conclude that field preemption applies here. Holk, 575 F.3d at 336.
Nor do we believe that there is conflict preemption here. When conflict preemption applies, it is because state and federal requirements are diametrically opposed so as to frustrate each others' goals. In Fidelity Federal Savings and Loan, for instance, a federal regulation allowed savings and loans to enforce “due-on-sale” clauses, but state law prohibited enforcement of such clauses. Fid. Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass'n v. de la Cuesta, 458 U.S. 141, 155 (1982). In Geier, a federal regulation sought a “variety and mix” of safety devices in cars, but a state law required the use of just one safety device. Geier v. Am. Honda Motor Co., 529 U.S. 861, 881 (2000). In Umland, there was a “comprehensive administrative scheme” under federal law for employees to challenge their classifications as independent contractors, but this scheme would have been undermined by a state law cause of action based on the same claim. Umland v. PLANCO Fin. Servs., Inc., 542 F.3d 59, 64-65 (3d Cir.2008).
The present case is quite different. The ACAA was intended to ensure nondiscriminatory treatment of airline passengers. If it is true, as Elassaad contends, that the standard of care supplied by state law required Independence to assist him with his disembarkation and to provide a means for him to safely exit the aircraft,19 those duties could easily coexist with the ACAA's mandate that Independence not discriminate against him. Independence urges that a goal of the ACAA was to protect “the dignity of disabled passengers,” and that this objective would be frustrated by the state law duties cited by Elassaad. Appellee's Br. at 12. Independence relies on three sources of authority for this argument: Department of Transportation guidance stating that carriers should “[o]ffer assistance only if the passenger appears to need help” (in order to “ensur[e] that services ․ are provided ․ in a respectful and helpful manner”), 70 Fed.Reg. at 41,504; a regulation prohibiting carriers from “[r]equir[ing] an individual with a disability to accept special services ․ not requested by the passenger,” 14 C.F.R. § 382.7(a)(2) (2004); and a regulation requiring carriers to “provide assistance requested by or on behalf of qualified individuals with a disability, or offered by air carrier personnel and accepted by qualified individuals with a disability, in enplaning and deplaning,” 14 C.F.R. § 382.39(a) (2004). These authorities, respectively, encourage carriers not to offer assistance when it is obvious that none is required; forbid carriers to insist that disabled passengers accept unwanted assistance; and require carriers to assist passengers who do request or accept such assistance. These mandates do not prohibit air carriers from offering unsolicited assistance to disabled passengers when the situation warrants it, and they do not evince a congressional intent that air carriers should withhold assistance from disabled passengers when doing so would be negligent or reckless under state law. In any event, we are not persuaded that compliance with duties imposed by state law would require air carriers to act in a manner that would undermine the dignity of disabled passengers. Thus, there is no basis for us to find either that it would have been “impossible” for Independence to comply with both state law and the ACAA, or that state law would have been an “obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives of Congress.” English, 496 U.S. at 79 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).20
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons given above, we conclude that Elassaad's case is governed by state law negligence principles and, since the District Court measured Elassaad's claim according to a different standard, we will vacate the District Court's order and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
FOOTNOTES
1. At his deposition, Elassaad estimated that the steps were between eleven and thirteen inches wide, and he explained that he had not previously taken note of their narrowness because descending stairs using crutches is more difficult than ascending them. He stated that he was apprehensive of falling because the stairs were narrow and he sometimes has difficulty maintaining his balance on tight staircases.
2. According to the relevant ACAA-implementing regulation, airline personnel would not have been permitted to carry Elassaad down the stairs unless there was an emergency. See 14 C.F.R. § 382.39(a)(2) (2004). The Department of Transportation revised the regulations implementing the ACAA on May 13, 2008, after Elassaad's accident. See Nondiscrimination on the Basis of Disability in Air Travel, 73 Fed.Reg. 27,614 (May 13, 2008). All references to and quotations of those regulations in the body of this opinion are based on the pre-amendment text, which was in effect at all times relevant to this case. The current prohibition on carrying a passenger appears at 14 C.F.R. § 382.101 (2009).
3. During his deposition, Lavoie stated that he had told Elassaad about the availability of a wheelchair (though Elassaad denies this), but not about the availability of an electronic lift or a “straight back.” A “straight back” is similar in form to a hand truck.
4. When referring to the ACAA-implementing regulations hereafter, we will simply say “the ACAA regulations.”
5. The provisions of § 382.39(a) that are pertinent to this case currently appear in 14 C.F.R. § 382.95(a) (2009), and impose requirements that are substantively identical to the former § 382.39(a).
6. That obligation currently appears in 14 C.F.R. § 382.41(c) (2009).
7. The parties argue at length about whether our holding in Abdullah survives the Supreme Court's decision in Wyeth v. Levine, 129 S.Ct. 1187 (2009). Because Abdullah does not apply to the facts of this case, we make no comment regarding what effect, if any, Wyeth has on Abdullah's continued vitality.
8. As the Supreme Court has recently stated, a cornerstone of its preemption jurisprudence is “the assumption that the historic police powers of the States were not to be superseded by the Federal Act unless that was the clear and manifest purpose of Congress.” Wyeth, 129 S.Ct. at 1194-95 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
9. See, e.g., 14 C.F.R. § 21.127(a) (“Each person manufacturing aircraft ․ shall establish an approved production flight test procedure and ․ flight test each aircraft produced.”); 14 C.F.R. §§ 23.21-.29 (governing weight limits within which aircraft may be safely operated); 14 C.F.R. § 23 .51 (governing takeoff speeds).
10. See 14 C.F.R. § 91.107 (seatbelts); 14 C.F.R. §§ 91.21 and 135.144 (electronic devices); 14 C.F.R. §§ 91.523, .525 (carry-on baggage); 14 C.F.R. § 91.535 (food and beverage equipment).
11. See, e.g., 14 C.F.R. § 61.159 (“[A] person who is applying for an airline transport pilot certificate with an airplane category and class rating must have at least 1,500 hours of total time as a pilot․”); 14 C.F.R. § 65.33 (governing general eligibility requirements for air traffic controllers); 14 C.F.R. § 91.533(b) (“No person may serve as a flight attendant on an airplane ․ unless that person has demonstrated to the pilot in command familiarity with the necessary functions to be performed in an emergency or a situation requiring emergency evacuation and is capable of using the emergency equipment installed on that airplane.”).
12. See, e.g., 14 C.F.R. § 91.15 (“No pilot in command of a civil aircraft may allow any object to be dropped from that aircraft in flight that creates a hazard to persons or property.”); 14 C.F.R. § 91.17(a)(2) (“No person may act or attempt to act as a crewmember of a civil aircraft-While under the influence of alcohol․”); 14 C.F.R. § 135.100(b) (“No flight crewmember may engage in, nor may any pilot in command permit, any activity during a critical phase of flight which could distract any flight crewmember from the performance of his or her duties or which could interfere in any way with the proper conduct of those duties.”).
13. See, e.g., 14 C.F.R. § 91.117(a) (“[N]o person may operate an aircraft ․ at an indicated airspeed of more than 250 knots (288 m.p.h.).”); 14 C.F.R. § 91.119 (setting minimum altitudes for various situations); 14 C.F.R. §§ 91.126, .127, .129, .130, .131, and .135 (prescribing requirements for communications with air traffic control towers); 14 C.F.R. § 91.145 (describing temporary flight restrictions that may be imposed “to prevent the unsafe congestion of aircraft in the vicinity of an aerial demonstration or major sporting event”).
14. We do not reach the issue of whether other activities that occur while a plane is on the ground, such as taxiing or the process of opening an aircraft's doors, would constitute “operations” such that they would be subject to federal preemption.
15. At the time, § 91.13(b) was known as 14 C.F.R. § 91.10. The regulation was later renumbered, without any textual revisions, in 1989. See Revision of General Operating and Flight Rules, 54 Fed.Reg. 34,284, 34,289 (Aug. 18, 1989).
16. The FAA goes so far as to advise air carriers on the proper content of, and tone used in, communications with disabled passengers. See 70 Fed.Reg. 41,504 (“Emotions matter․ When acknowledging the emotions of others, it may be more effective to use ‘you’ rather than ‘I.’ For example, use, ‘You must be frustrated |
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| July 13, 2010 |
| Foster Care Agency Not Liable for the Negligent Acts of the Foster Care Father when Foster Child was Injured. |
| Posted By Joseph Tosti |
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In December 2002, a car accident paralyzed a foster care child, I .H. A jury found that his foster father's negligent driving caused I.H.'s injury. The single issue before us in this tragic case is whether a private foster care agency can be vicariously liable for the ordinary negligence of a foster parent. The District Court held no, and granted the foster care agency's motion for summary judgment on this issue. We affirm.
I. Facts
In November 1998, a court determined I.H., then three years old, was a “dependent child.” As a result, Lehigh County took legal and physical custody of him.
With the Lutheran Home at Topton's assistance, Lehigh County placed I.H. with foster parents, Peter and Atlanta Norton.1 The County had contracted with the Home to aid with foster child placement and related supervision. The Contract of Service (the “Service Contract”) between the parties imposed several obligations on the Home, including:
supervising each foster child's placement; submitting to the County individual service plans, progress reports, discharge summaries, and other written reports required by the County or regulations pertaining to each foster child; submitting to the County medical, dental[,] and educational information; and providing notification to the County if it proposes changing a foster child's placement from one foster home to another.
In exchange for providing these services, the Home received a daily fee of $43.75 for each child under its supervision. In turn, it paid its foster parents $17.00 per day.
Prior to I.H.'s placement, the Home entered into a Foster Care Placement Contract of Agreement (the “Placement Agreement”) with the Nortons. In it, the Nortons promised “to receive a foster child [into their home] ․ and to be responsible to meet [his] physical, social[,] and emotional needs.” It also contained baseline requirements intended to guide I.H.'s care. Many of these provisions incorporated specific items from the Service Contract (including various state regulations). However, the Placement Agreement included additional requirements imposed by the Home itself. The Nortons also received a Foster Care Handbook (the “Handbook”), which outlined the family's obligations in greater detail. In the end, the parties agreed that “it is the responsibility of the Home and foster family to work together on behalf of [I.H.]” Importantly, both the Home and the Nortons had the power to terminate the Placement Agreement with reasonable notice.
At various times the Home was quite active in supervising I.H.'s care. For instance, shortly after I.H.'s placement, the Home received reports that the Nortons were using inappropriate methods to discipline and toilet train him. These methods violated the Nortons' obligations under their Placement Agreement, as well as related Pennsylvania law.2 In response, the Home met with the Nortons and counseled them on proper disciplinary methods.
A few months later, I.H. and his foster brothers were swimming in the Nortons' pool. They had just returned home from a party. While unsupervised, I.H. nearly drowned. Mr. Norton pulled the child from the pool, and Mrs. Norton administered life-saving CPR. As a result of this incident, the County and I.H.'s court-appointed guardian instructed the Home to increase the frequency of its in-house visits with the foster family. They also directed the Home to provide additional training to the Nortons and use their supervisory authority to intervene further, as needed.
In December 2002, Mr. Norton was bringing I.H. home from daycare. During that trip, Mr. Norton was momentarily distracted when I.H. bit Thomas (Mr. Norton's son) on the arm. Mr. Norton glanced in his rearview mirror to see what was happening and to reprimand the boys. With this distraction, he crossed the center line of the road and hit an oncoming car. Thomas was killed, and Mr. Norton was severely injured. I.H. was rendered paraplegic.
II. Procedural History
In August 2004, I.H., through his guardian ad litem, filed an action against Mr. Norton, Lehigh County, and the Home to recover for his injuries. I.H. brought the following claims in his initial Complaint: 1) ordinary negligence against Norton; 2) constitutional violations against Lehigh County for alleged deliberate indifference; and 3) direct liability against the Home for negligent placement and supervision. Even an Amended Complaint did not allege that the Home was vicariously liable for Norton's negligence, but I.H.'s later summary judgment motion referred to it.3
In March 2006, I.H. filed a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. The District Court denied his motion on the ground that genuine issues of material fact existed as to whether Norton was negligent. In October 2006, the Home and Lehigh County filed motions for Partial Summary Judgment. The District Court granted both motions. In its opinion, the Court addressed the merits of I.H.'s vicarious liability claim, concluding that it “fails as a matter of law because the requisite master-servant relationship does not exist between the Home and Peter Norton.” The Court reasoned that most of the rules imposed on Norton in the Placement Agreement and the Handbook were the product of state regulations. It added that this setting of state-mandated standards and goals addressed the results of the work and not the manner in which it was conducted, leaving the Nortons free to make the same decisions for I.H. that they would make for their own children on a daily basis. (The Court further held that the Home's actions were not the proximate cause of I.H.'s injuries. Thus, it was not directly liable for them, either.)
In March 2007, I.H. filed a motion requesting that the District Court certify its decision for immediate appeal. Specifically, I.H. sought review of the Court's determination that there were no genuine issues of material fact with respect to the existence of a master-servant relationship between the Home and Norton. After initially denying this request, the Court sua sponte vacated its decision and certified this matter for appeal. We denied the request.
I.H.'s claim against Norton continued to trial. The jury returned a unanimous verdict, finding Norton negligent and awarding $28,750,000 in damages. After entry of a final judgment, I.H. appealed the District Court's summary judgment order from February 2007. I.H. limited his appeal to the Court's dismissal of his vicarious liability claim against the Home.
III. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
The District Court had jurisdiction to hear this case under 28 U.S.C. § 1331. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
The standard of review for a grant of summary judgment is “plenary.” Michael v. Shiley, Inc., 46 F.3d 1316, 1321 (3d Cir.1995). When considering a grant of summary judgment, we employ the same legal standard as the District Court. Kelly v. TYK Refractories Co., 860 F.2d 1188, 1192 (3d Cir.1988). Summary judgment is only proper where, when viewing the record in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and ․ the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c).4
IV. Analysis
To repeat, the single issue before us is whether a private foster care agency can be vicariously liable for a foster parent's act of ordinary negligence. Although this is an issue of first impression under Pennsylvania law,5 our conclusion is dictated by well-established legal principles.
A. The “Master-Servant” Relationship and the “Right of Control” Test
In Pennsylvania, only a “master-servant” relationship “gives rise to vicarious liability for negligence.” Smalich v. Westfall, 440 Pa. 409, 269 A.2d 476, 481 (Pa.1970). “As a general rule, a master may be held liable for the acts of the servant when those acts are committed during the course of his employment and within the scope of his authority.” Valles v. Albert Einstein Med. Ctr., 569 Pa. 542, 805 A.2d 1232, 1237 (Pa.2002). The rationale for this rule is simple: “[B]ecause a master has the right to exercise control over the physical activities of the servant within the time of service, he is vicariously liable for the servant's negligent acts committed within the scope of his employment.” Smalich, 269 A.2d at 481 (emphasis in original).
In a master-servant relationship, “a master not only controls the results of the work but also may direct the manner in which such work shall be done.” Id.; see also Universal Am-Can, Ltd. v. Workers' Comp. Appeal Bd., 563 Pa. 480, 762 A.2d 328, 333 (Pa.2000) (“[C]ontrol over the work to be completed and the manner in which it is to be performed are the primary factors in determining employee status.”).6 “[A] servant, in rendering the agreed services, remains entirely under the control and direction of the master.” Smalich, 269 A.2d at 481. When determining whether a master-servant relationship exists, “[a]ctual control of the manner of work is not essential; rather, it is the right to control which is determinative.” Drexel v. Union Prescription Ctrs., Inc., 582 F.2d 781, 785 (3d Cir.1978).
Under this “right of control” test, “[t]he control of the principal does not ․ include control at every moment; its exercise may be very attenuated and, as where the principal is physically absent, may be ineffective.” Smalich, 269 A.2d at 481 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Although this passage might suggest a lenient “right of control” test, the right to exercise day-to-day control remains an important factor in the master-servant inquiry. See, e.g., Smith v. Exxon Corp., 436 Pa.Super. 221, 647 A.2d 577, 583 (Pa.Super.Ct.1994); Myszkowski v. Penn Stroud Hotel, Inc., 430 Pa.Super. 315, 634 A.2d 622, 626 (Pa.Super.1993); Burnatoski v. Butler Ambulance Serv. Co., 130 Pa.Cmwlth. 264, 567 A.2d 1121, 1124 (Pa.Commw.Ct.1989). The party seeking vicarious liability bears the burden of proving a master-servant relationship. See Basile v. H & R Block, Inc., 563 Pa. 359, 761 A.2d 1115, 1120 (Pa.2000).
B. Applying the “Right of Control” Test
In this context, the dispute between the parties focuses on the scope of control that the Home could exercise over Norton-not the level of control that the Home actually exercised during I.H.'s placement. I.H. argues that, because Norton was in the act of caring for him at the time of the accident, the Home should be held vicariously liable for any injuries caused by Norton's conduct. Under this far-reaching theory, a private foster care agency's liability would extend to all acts of ordinary negligence committed by a foster parent in the provision of foster care-which is defined by relevant regulations as a “[t]wenty-four hour” commitment. 55 Pa.Code § 3700.4.7
Such a theory would impose a considerable financial burden on the Pennsylvania foster care system.8 More importantly, it is also contrary to established Pennsylvania law. In reaching this conclusion, we first consider the terms of the Service Contract between Lehigh County and the Home. From there, we analyze the Placement Agreement between the Home and Norton. Throughout, we consider these agreements in light of the regulatory scheme enacted by the Commonwealth, as well as related Pennsylvania caselaw.
1. The Service Contract
I.H. stakes much of his argument on a single passage from the “Independent Contractor” provision of the Service Contract. In relevant part, this provision states that the Home “is deemed an Independent Contractor and shall not during the term of this contract assign, subcontract, transfer, or otherwise delegate all or part of its obligations or responsibilities without prior written approval of [Lehigh County].” From this, I.H. argues that the Home had a non-delegable duty to exercise all control necessary to ensure his safety. On this reading, the Home committed itself to providing more than initial placement and ongoing monitoring of established goals; it also must exercise additional control over the manner of its foster parents' care (on a daily basis, if necessary). According to I.H., it is thus no argument that the Home did not exercise this control, including when supervising I.H.'s care by the Nortons. The Home had the duty to exercise whatever level of control was necessary to keep I.H. safe.9
Scattered provisions of the Service Contract strengthen this reading. For instance, the “Purpose of [the] Contract” between the Home and Lehigh County was defined (quite broadly) as “Residential/Foster Care,” while the Home elsewhere agreed to provide “Foster Care ․ Services.” Furthermore, the Home promised to “promote [each] child's growth and development by providing the physical care, nurturance[,] and opportunity [necessary] for individual, social, emotional[,] and intellectual development.” Finally, the Home agreed to accomplish these goals by: 1) “provid[ing] a temporary living environment in the form of foster family care”; 2) “retain[ing] responsibility of [I.H.'s] physical custody” throughout his placement; and 3) “actively participat[ing] in the delivery of [related foster care] services.”
Given these provisions, I.H. concludes that the Home was charged with running a “foster care” program, with non-delegable responsibilities that extended beyond mere placement and supervision to additional control over the manner in which the Nortons cared for I.H. on a daily basis. These textual arguments, simple and supportive, nonetheless fall short.
First, I.H. reads too much into the “Independent Contractor” provision. Recourse to it merely begs the key question on appeal. It provides that the Home “shall not ․ delegate all or part of its obligations or responsibilities without prior written approval.” This provision says little about what those “obligations” and “responsibilities” are. As the Illinois Supreme Court recently noted in a similar context, “whatever duty there is to provide placement, to institute procedures, or even to exercise general authority over foster children[,] is not the same as a continuing, nondelegable duty to provide for the care of children placed in foster homes.” Nichol v. Stass, 192 Ill.2d 233, 248 Ill.Dec. 931, 735 N.E.2d 582, 589 (Ill.2000).
Furthermore, many of the provisions that I.H. cites apply equally to a Service Contract providing for foster care placement and ongoing monitoring rather than one including additional responsibilities for directing the manner of care the foster parents need to provide on a daily basis. For instance, the Home's purported duty to “provide a temporary living environment in the form of foster family care” can be met through placement services. The same is true of the Home's obligation to “promote a child's growth and development by providing the physical care, nurturance[,] and opportunity [necessary] for individual, social, emotional, and intellectual development.” And while the Home agreed to “actively participate in the delivery of services,” this need not extend to all (or even most) of the Nortons' day-to-day parenting decisions. Indeed, this passage itself is part of a larger paragraph on the role of caseworkers in “monitor[ing]” foster families.
The Home's level of control is further clarified by the following passage, which was part of a program description incorporated into the Service Contract by the parties: “The Lutheran Home strives to provide the most stable and caring environment for children. Proper recruitment and training of foster parents, careful matching of children and families, and viable accessible supports for foster parents and foster children are in place in order to avoid multiple placements.” J.A. 517 (emphasis added). In this passage, the Home defined its key duties as foster family recruitment, foster child placement, and ongoing supervision.
Other passages in the program description also aid this account of the Home's responsibilities. Among them, the Home pledged “to provide supportive services to [its] foster families,” which were intended to “under-gird the foster parents' effectiveness in providing a stable, nurturing environment for the foster children in their care.” In addition, the Home put in place a referral procedure for processing requests from Lehigh County: “A referral for foster care placement can be made by the county by contacting the foster care supervisor. A verbal description of [a] child's [characteristics] ․ [is] necessary in order to provide the most appropriate foster family setting.” Importantly, “[a]cceptance of the referral is contingent upon whether a suitable match can be made between the child and a foster family and the availability of an opening.” Therefore, if a “suitable match” with a family were not made, the Home would not accept a referral from Lehigh County.10
Moreover, within the Home's program approved foster families agree to “provide room/board, basic physical care, health care, and supervision,” as well as provide for the child's “developmental needs.” In this role, foster parents must “participate in the development of the [child's] [i]ndividual [s]ervice [p]lan” and “facilitate many of the objectives outlined in the plan.”
Related regulations provide further support for this account. Pennsylvania law defines a “foster family care agency” as “[a] public or private agency which recruits, approves, supervises[,] and places children with foster families.” See 55 Pa.Code § 3700.4. In this capacity, it is a stand-in for the county, which would typically be responsible for these tasks. At the same time, a foster family is defined as “[t]he living unit, including the foster family residence and foster parent, approved by a foster family care agency to provide foster family care to children.” Id. Similarly, a foster parent is defined as “[a]n individual responsible for providing foster family care to children placed by a[ ] [foster family care agency].” Id. Within this scheme, foster families are tasked with “[p]rovid[ing] temporary, substitute care” for each “child in need.” Id. at § 3130.5.
In addition, the Service Contract itself suggests that it should be read in light of these regulatory goals, as the Contract's “Interpretation” provision provides that it is “the intention of the [parties] that the public health, safety[,] and welfare be protected and furthered by the [C] ontract. Therefore, this [C]ontract is to be interpreted in such manner as to favor such public interest as opposed to any private interest.” As the Home's counsel explained at oral argument, “The [service] contracts are written in light of [related] code provisions.” Oral Arg. Tr. 24. Analyzing the Service Contract in light of related regulations, the Home argues that its duty is to provide “foster care indirectly through a foster family” and “assist the county in placing children in foster families.” Id. at 25, 26, 248 Ill.Dec. 931, 735 N.E.2d 582. The Pennsylvania Children and Youth Administrators Association (“PCYAA”) similarly explained, “Private foster care agencies cannot and do not supervise and control the day-to-day ․ care that a foster parent provides a foster child. Foster care agencies do not have the power or authority to exercise this type of control over foster parents.” PCYAA's Br. 10-11. These accounts are consistent with the role of a “foster family care agency” as defined by Pennsylvania's regulatory scheme.
Taken together, these passages suggest that the Home's duties extended only to initial placement and ongoing supervision of established goals, not to the manner in which the Nortons chose to achieve each of these goals. Therefore, the Service Contract, standing alone, is insufficient to establish a master-servant relationship. Yet this does not end the master-servant inquiry. It is still possible that the Home's related supervisory responsibilities give rise to a master-servant relationship. To that end, we turn to the Placement Agreement and accompanying Handbook.
2. The Placement Agreement and the Handbook
Under the Placement Agreement and the Handbook, the Home had the right to control many facets of I.H.'s care. Under the Agreement, Norton was assigned a “Topton foster care caseworker.”11 In addition, Norton agreed that “[f]requent contacts between the caseworker ․ and the foster parents [we]re necessary [so] both c[ould] discuss observations, difficulties, general development, and future plans regarding [I.H.].” To that end, the Agreement provided for biweekly visits by the caseworker to the foster home for the first two months of placement and monthly visits thereafter (“at the discretion of the caseworker and supervisor”).
Apart from these ongoing visits, the Home also set various standards for I.H.'s care. In its Handbook, the Home “detail[ed] foster care practices, foster parent/Topton roles and responsibilities, and current foster care regulations.” As new foster parents, the Nortons were required to participate in an orientation, which outlined “Topton philosophy, practices, foster parent and Topton's roles and responsibilities, and applicable regulations for foster care.” These “practices” and “regulations” included rules dealing with a foster child's money, clothing, medical and dental treatment, education, employment, transportation, recreation, religious practices, tobacco use, and vacations. They also included standards that governed its foster parents on everything from disciplinary practices to the frequency of photograph-taking. The Home even “reserve[d] the right to question the adequacy of meals, clothing, recreational opportunities, or other needs being provided by the foster family.” In addition to these “paper” provisions, the level of control that the Home actually exercised during I.H.'s placement further suggests the limited scope of foster parent autonomy within the Home's foster care program-with the Home's frequent phone calls and visits (to say nothing of their direct interventions involving the Nortons and I.H.).
While true that the relationship between Norton and I.H. was not that of a biological parent and his children,12 this does not settle the master-servant question. The test is not whether Norton retained as much control over I.H. as a biological parent; it is whether the Home had sufficient control over Norton to result in a master-servant relationship. We hold that it did not.
First, in the Placement Agreement, Norton agreed “to be responsible for meeting the physical, social[,] and emotional needs of [I.H.]” on an ongoing basis, leaving the Home with the related responsibility of “assisting” Norton in achieving these goals. This passage alone suggests a division of labor inconsistent with a master-servant relationship, with Norton responsible for daily parenting decisions and the Home merely responsible for setting goals and providing additional support (as needed). Under Pennsylvania law, that the Home “set[ ] certain standards in order to maintain a uniform quality of ․ service only addresse[d] the result of the work and not the manner in which it [wa]s conducted.” Myszkowski, 634 A.2d at 627 (emphases in original). This is insufficient to establish a master-servant relationship.
Second, in the specific context of transportation, the Home's responsibilities under the Service Contract were narrow, and its control over Norton attenuated: the Home simply agreed to “guarantee[ ] all drivers hold a valid, appropriate driver's license.” The Placement Agreement is not in tension with this. Rather than exerting continuous control over Norton's manner of driving, the Home stipulated that anyone driving I.H. had to have a driver's license and adequate insurance coverage-subject to certain common-sense (and state-imposed) safety guidelines.13 Indeed, the Home even permitted other adults to drive I.H., at the discretion of Norton, subject only to the “expectation” that Norton “knows the driver, the destination, and is able to validate that the driver has a current motor vehicle driver's license and adequate insurance coverage.” Taken together, these requirements fulfilled the Home's obligations under the Service Contract and established less extensive control over Norton's transportation responsibilities than in other areas.
Finally, the source of many of the more invasive requirements within the Placement Agreement was the Commonwealth itself-either through statute or regulation-not the Home. Under Pennsylvania law, these requirements alone do not result in a master-servant relationship. In Universal Am-Can, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court held that an agreement between a hauling company and the owner-operator of a tractor-trailer did not establish a master-servant relationship. On examining the agreement between the parties, the Court observed that its provisions were “for the most part governed by federal regulations,” including “requirements for mandatory inspections, for observing speed limits, and for covering loads with tarps.” Universal Am-Can, 762 A.2d at 334, 335. It added:
Factors which demonstrate compliance with government regulations do not assist in the application of the [right-of-control] test. The existence of the regulations precludes [the parties] from negotiating any terms subject to the regulations. Neither party has bargaining power, or the ability to control the work to be done, when dealing with matters subject to regulation.
Id. at 334-35. As a result, the Court concluded that the regulations were “not probative” of the master-servant issue, as they “reflect the control of the government, not the motor carrier.” Id. at 336.
Because federal and state regulations controlled the essential elements of the trucker's work, the Court concluded that other features of the Agreement (which were not dictated by government regulations) also fell short of establishing a master-servant relationship. These additional features included requirements to communicate with the dispatcher every 12 or 24 hours, submit fuel and toll receipts, and take a mandatory one-hour stop for meals. See id. at 337-38 (Cappy, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).14
The Home argues that the same is true here. And, indeed, the Placement Agreement and Handbook do overlap with state regulations in many key areas. For instance, the Pennsylvania Administrative Code reads: “The county agency shall provide an opportunity for a child placed in a foster home or child care facility which it administers to participate in religious activities, services [,] and counseling, taking into account the choices specified by the parents or guardian or the child.” 55 Pa.Code § 3130.86. The Placement Agreement largely tracks the Code's language, providing that “[a]ll children are to be given reasonable opportunities for religious expression within the broad religious preferences of their choice or that of their parents.” This is only one of several examples of how the Placement Agreement and the Handbook track state regulations. Others include the regulation of a foster child's money,15 education,16 safety,17 medical and dental care,18 residence,19 grievance procedures,20 transportation requirements,21 and constraints on parental autonomy (including methods of discipline22 and training23 requirements).
I.H. counters that not every provision in the Placement Agreement and Handbook was a product of state regulations. For instance, the Home included certain disciplinary practices beyond those enumerated under Pennsylvania law. The Home also exercised final authority over whether a child could partake in certain childhood rights-of-passage, including holding a summer job and driving a car. Finally, foster parents were prohibited from “sign[ing] any papers or documents other than school absence excuses, report cards[,] or items of a routine nature.” I.H. contends that, even if Universal Am-Can applied, these additional provisions, among many others, would be enough to establish a master-servant relationship. We disagree.
Universal Am-Can does not mean that all requirements within an agreement must be the product of government regulations. Instead, in this case we must consider the foster care agency-foster parent relationship in light of related state regulations, as well as the provisions imposed by the Home itself.
3. The Relationship Between Foster Care Agencies, Foster Parents, and Foster Children Under Pennsylvania Law
The relationship between a foster care agency and a foster parent is unlike that of the typical master and servant.24 Within the framework provided by the agency, foster parents are given considerable latitude in meeting the goals of each child's individual service plan. This is by design, as the Commonwealth requires placements that, as much as possible, “replicate ․ the traditional family setting[ ].” 55 Pa.Code § 3130.67(b)(7)(i). Implicit in the foster parent-foster child relationship is a level of parental autonomy that permits foster parents, on a daily basis, to adjust their care to the individualized needs of their foster child, just as biological parents would in a “traditional family setting.”
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has recently provided guidance in assessing relationships that are similarly “individualized” and “dynamic.” In Valles, the plaintiff brought a claim against a hospital “premised ․ upon a theory of vicarious liability for the battery committed by [the doctor] due to his failure to obtain informed consent prior to performing [an] aortogram.” 805 A.2d at 1234. The plaintiff argued that, “[b]ecause a hospital has an obligation to oversee all persons who practice medicine within its walls, ․ [it] as an employer and health care provider in its own right maintains a right of control in the relationship sufficient to justify the imposition of liability.” Id. at 1236.
The Court affirmed the grant of summary judgment in favor of the hospital, concluding that the relationship between it and a staff radiologist in the context of informed consent was not that of a “master” and its “servant.” This was despite the hospital exercising much control over the radiologist, including:
its provision of the instrumentalities, place to work, support staff, patient base and wages; its right to require the employee's presence at a particular time[,] and to terminate his employment; its retention of revenues for the employee's professional services; and its use of departmental organization, peer review, rules and regulations, credentialing[,] and privileging practices.
Id. at 1238. As the plaintiffs argued, the doctor's “exercise of independent medical judgment was subject to [the hospital's] right of control because: his work may not be delegated to others ․; his medical findings must be reported in a manner ․ set by hospital policy; and he must perform the requested study according to departmental protocols․” Id.
The Court nonetheless declined to recognize a master-servant relationship, holding “as a matter of law [that] a medical facility lacks the control over the manner in which the physician performs his duty to obtain informed consent so as to render the facility vicariously liable.” Id. at 1239. It explained that “a medical facility cannot maintain control over this aspect of the physician-patient relationship,” since “[i]nformed consent flows from the discussions each patient has with his physician, based on the facts and circumstances each case presents.” Id. The baseline was that it would be “improvident and unworkable” to “interject an element of a hospital's control into this highly individualized and dynamic relationship.” Id.
We conclude that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court's analysis in Valles should apply equally to the relationship between a foster care agency and its foster parent. Given the “highly individualized” and “dynamic” adjustments that foster parents must make in fulfilling the ongoing obligations to their foster children, it would be similarly “improvident and unworkable” to “interject an element of the [foster agency's] control into” such a relationship.25
4. Conclusion
Under its Service Contract, Lehigh County assigned to the Home the duty of selecting and approving prospective foster parents, assisting the County with suitable placements, monitoring these placements, and submitting to the County individual service plans and various reports tracking each foster child. Although this provided the Home with a great deal of control over its foster parents, it fell short of imposing a “right of control” over the manner in which foster parents provided foster care to their foster children on a daily basis. The Home's Placement Agreement with the Nortons presented general guidelines for foster care and incorporated specific provisions of the Service Contract and state regulations. Instead of subjecting Norton to the continuous control of the Home, these documents generally addressed the results of the work and not the manner in which it was conducted. It gave the Home a broad supervisory role, but not the right to control the daily activities of the Norton family. On a daily basis, the Nortons decided how to meet I.H.'s physical, social, and emotional needs themselves. This was by design.
One of the key goals of the Pennsylvania foster care system “is to replicate as closely as possible the traditional family settings in which children are cared for and raised.” Leshko v. Servis, 423 F.3d 337, 346 (3d Cir.2005). This goal limits the scope of control that the foster care agency may exercise over its foster parents on a daily basis. Indeed, too much control over the day-to-day activities of foster families would make it impossible “to replicate ․ the traditional family setting[ ].” Id. Therefore, even with the level of control that the Home may have exercised under the Placement Agreement, the Nortons still exercised largely the same level of control over I.H.'s day-to-day life as they did over their biological children. As the District Court noted, the Nortons still decided “the activities I.H. would engage in ․, the food he would eat, [and] the books he would read.” In addition, “[n]o one controlled what time the Nortons must awake I.H. in the morning, what time they must feed him, what time he must go to sleep, and what tasks or activities he should be doing at any given moment.” For goals outlined by the Home, the Nortons were largely free to accomplish them as they saw fit. For items not contained in the Placement Agreement or the Handbook, the Nortons were free to treat I.H. as they would their biological children.
Of course, the Nortons were constrained in important ways by the Placement Agreement, and they were subjected to consistent monitoring by the Home. Nonetheless the Nortons still had a great deal of discretion on a daily basis over how to care for I.H. Much as the doctor-patient relationship in Valles, the foster parent-foster child relationship in this case was “highly individualized” and “dynamic,” making it similarly “improvident” and “unworkable” to exercise a high level of control over the relationship. Moreover, such control would be inconsistent with the regulatory regime imposed by the Commonwealth.
For these reasons, we hold that a master-servant relationship did not exist between the Home and Norton. Hence the Home was not vicariously liable for Norton's ordinary negligence at issue in this appeal.
We therefore affirm.
FOOTNOTES
1. In his Amended Complaint, I.H. labeled Topton House, LLC, Topton Management Services, Inc., and the Lutheran Home at Topton, collectively, as “the Topton Defendants.” Topton House, LLC and Topton Management Services, Inc. were subsequently dismissed from the suit. Only the Lutheran Home at Topton is before us on appeal.
2. Under Pennsylvania law, foster children may not be “punish[ed] for bedwetting or actions related to toilet training.” 55 Pa.Code § 3700.63.
3. We may address this issue because the Home was on notice of the claim, did not argue in our Court that the issue was waived, and addressed the issue on the merits in its brief to us. See Hedges v. Musco, 204 F.3d 109, 122 (3d Cir.2000) (citing Johnson v. Horn, 150 F.3d 276, 284 (3d Cir.1998); and Venuto v. Carella, Byrne, Bain, Gilfillan, Cecchi & Stewart, P.C., 11 F.3d 385, 388 (3d Cir.1993)).
4. “Generally, it is a jury question whether a person is an agent or an independent contractor.” Mahon v. City of Bethlehem, 898 F.Supp. 310, 312 (E.D.Pa.1995). I.H. thus argues that the District Court “usurped the jury's role” by granting summary judgment in this case. Appellant's Br. 13. This is overstated. Both parties concede that the relationship between the Home and Norton is governed by an agreement between them. See Appellant's Br. 10, 22; Appellee's Br. 3-4, 13. Therefore, the District Court was within its power to decide whether that agreement gave rise to a master-servant relationship as a matter of law. See Cox v. Caeti, 444 Pa. 143, 279 A.2d 756, 758 (Pa.1971) (“[W]here the facts [underlying an alleged master-servant relationship] are not in dispute, the question of the relationship becomes one for determination by the court.”); see also Valles v. Albert Einstein Med. Ctr., 569 Pa. 542, 805 A.2d 1232 (Pa.2002); Myszkowski v. Penn Stroud Hotel, Inc., 430 Pa.Super. 315, 634 A.2d 622 (Pa.Super.Ct.1993).
5. Appellant's counsel suggested at oral argument that this case presents a question of first impression for any Circuit Court of Appeals. See Oral Arg. Tr. 15 (“This is a case of first impression, and it's all Pennsylvania law.”); see also Appellee's Br. 14 (“[T]here is no known Pennsylvania appellate precedent specifically involving the relationship between a foster care agency and foster parent․”). Counsel is correct, to our knowledge. Several states have considered similar questions, but those cases have focused principally on the relationship between foster parents and the state. See, e.g., Hunte v. Blumenthal, 238 Conn. 146, 680 A.2d 1231 (Conn.1996); Nichol v. Stass, 192 Ill.2d 233, 248 Ill.Dec. 931, 735 N.E.2d 582 (Ill.2000); Mitzner v. State, 257 Kan. 258, 891 P.2d 435 (Kan.1995); Miller v. Martin, 838 So.2d 761 (La.2003); Archer v. DARE Family Servs., No. CA 98-04354, 2002 WL 243649 (Mass.Super.Ct. Feb. 4, 2002); Simmons v. Robinson, 305 S.C. 428, 409 S.E.2d 381 (S.C.1991). But see Commerce Bank v. Youth Servs. of Mid-Ill., Inc., 333 Ill.App.3d 150, 266 Ill.Dec. 735, 775 N.E.2d 297 (Ill.App.Ct.2002) (addressing the relationship between a foster care agency, foster parents, and a foster child); M.H. |
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| June 21, 2010 |
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