The district court’s allowance of defendant’s Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c) summary judgment motions, adopting a magistrate’s recommendation, raises questions of opinion, the law as well as the basic facts being undisputed.
First, some dates. On November 11, 1988 Cesare Forcucci, son of plaintiffs Carmen and Theresa Forcucci, was injured in a single
On November 28, having received no response, plaintiffs’ counsel, by fax, asked defendant why it did not respond. On December 4, having received no reply, counsel telephoned defendant and was told that it was awaiting completion of its investigation into the possibility of plaintiffs making a claim against the nightclub that had supplied Goodwin with alcoholic beverages. Asked why this was relevant, defendant’s claim representative could give no answer. On December 5 plaintiffs mailed a demand letter for unfair settlement practices pursuant to G.L. c. 93A, § 9(3). This extensive letter referred,
inter alia,
to a recent Massachusetts case,
Bertassi v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
Plaintiffs’ first claim is that defendant’s offer was not “prompt,” one of the four objections to the magistrate’s report, because it was made 31 days from the date of its receipt of plaintiffs’ December 5 letter, rather than within 30. Thirty days is a statutory period relating to a defendant’s opportunity to receive Ch. 93A protection, Mass.G.L. e. 93A, § 9(3), not to the statutory requirement of a reasonably prompt response. Mass.G.L. c. 176D, § 3(9). Especially with the holiday season interference we accept the magistrate’s conclusion that 31 days was reasonably prompt as matter oflaw. 1
The more serious question is whether $25,000 was a reasonable offer. The magistrate found it was on the low side, but reasonable as matter of law. In agreeing with him we stress two factors; one, perhaps more than he did, and one that he did not stress at all. Negotiating a settlement, particularly when the damages are unliquidated, is, to an extent, a legitimate bargaining process. The statute does not call for defendant’s final offer, but only one within the scope of reasonableness. Experienced negotiators do not make their final offer first off, and experienced negotiators do not expect it, or take seriously a representation that it is. Indeed, plaintiffs say as much in now intimating that their own $100,000 policy limits offer was not final in spite of the fact that, in several talks, they refused to reduce it.
The reasonableness of a defendant’s response is to be considered in the light of the situation as a whole, one aspect of which was the size of plaintiffs’ demand. Plaintiffs’ demand was very high.
2
Ordinary give and take would suggest that both would and should move. Defendant was not ever given that opportunity, even when it traded against itself, as shown in the magistrate’s report.
We have only one problem, the last minute expression of defendant’s legal department’s fear that $100,000 would be a likely outcome. How over-large that opinion might be is indicated by the arbitrator’s finding. See n. 2, ante. This brings us to Theresa Forcucci’s extensive victim impact statement, submitted in support of her claim herein. With the greatest respect for a bereaved mother who has suffered a great tragedy, a jury’s response is not necessarily predictable. Defendant’s legal department’s belief that a jury might give it great weight did not destroy the reasonableness of the claim department’s opinion that it might not. Two different views could both be reasonable. Apprehensions did not make the lower offer unreasonable, particularly where, in dollars, that offer was the nearer to the arbitrator’s finding.
We accept the magistrate’s recommendation in substance, and affirm the district court.
Notes
. We further ask, if plaintiffs consider 30 days appropriate, may not a fax on the 31st day be equivalent to a letter mailed on the 30th?
. In saying this we may look at the arbitrator’s finding of $55,000. Plaintiffs’ complaint of the magistrate’s giving weight hereto overlooks that the statute expressly permits it. Mass.G.L. c. 176D, § 3(9)(g). Their contention that he accepted it out of hand is incorrect.
