DAUPHIN COUNTY BAR ASSOCIATION by J. Thomas Menaker, Trustee ad litem, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Augustus F. MAZZACARO, a/k/a A. “Gus” Mazzacaro, Defendant-Appellant.
351 A.2d 229
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
Argued May 6, 1975. Decided Jan. 29, 1976.
J. Thomas, Menaker, Harrisburg, for appellee.
Before JONES, C. J., and EAGEN, O‘BRIEN, ROBERTS, POMEROY and NIX, JJ.
OPINION OF THE COURT
POMEROY, Justice.
This is an appeal from a final decree of the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County, enjoining Augustus F. Mazzacaro, a licensed casualty adjuster, from representing tort claimants in pursuing damage claims against tort-feasors or their insurers for personal liability and property damages.1 The injunction was sought by the Dauphin County Bar Association against appellant on the grounds that such third-party2 representation exceeds appellant‘s authority under the Public Adjuster Act, Act of April 25, 1921, P.L. 276, § 1, as amended,
The nature of Mazzacaro‘s challenged practice may be briefly stated. As part of his casualty adjustment practice, Mazzacaro has solicited the claims of injured parties against alleged tort-feasors who are insured, or their insurers. For a contingent fee of ten to twenty per cent of any resultant settlement, Mazzacaro investigates the accident, estimates the dollar amount of damages sustained, writes a demand letter to the party from whom
I.
Mazzacaro has been licensed by the Pennsylvania Insurance Commission as a “public adjuster“. Public Adjuster Act, supra, § 3,
“The term, ‘public adjuster,’ as used in this act, shall include every person, co-partnership, association, and corporation advertising, soliciting business, or holding himself or itself out to the public, as an adjuster of claims for losses or damages arising out of policies of insurance, surety, or indemnity upon property, persons, or insurable business interests within
this Commonwealth, and receiving any compensation or reward for the giving of advice or assistance to the assured in the adjustment of claims for such losses, or who for compensation or reward, whether by way of salary or commission or otherwise, directly or indirectly, solicit business, investigate or adjust losses, or advise the assured with reference to claims for losses, on behalf of any other person, partnership, association, or corporation engaged in the business of adjusting losses.”
Appellant reads this provision as defining two types of public adjusters-(1) those who adjust “claims for losses or damages arising out of policies of insurance . . . upon property [or] persons . . .“; and (2) those who for compensation give “advice or assistance to the assured in the adjustment of claims . . .” (emphasis supplied). Because third-party claimants seek to recover claims arising out of policies of insurance, appellant urges that the definition in the first numbered clause confers authority under his license to undertake third-party representation.
Appellant‘s argument, however, ignores the grammatical construction of Section 301. The two clauses which he attempts to isolate are connected by the conjunctive “and“, not by the disjunctive “or“. We read this section as describing and defining but one type of public adjuster, the definition containing several distinct, but necessary, elements. Thus we reject the view that clause (1) in the preceding paragraph confers authority to represent third persons.
Appellant also contends that the term “assured” in Section 301 should be construed to mean “a party making a claim for damages arising out of a policy of insurance.” Under this reading, either of the two clauses quoted above, or both taken together, would confer the authority to represent third persons. There is however,
We therefore conclude that Mazzacaro‘s public adjuster license does not confer authority to negotiate settlements on behalf of injured claimants against alleged tort-feasors or their insurers.
II.
Having decided that the public adjuster‘s license which he holds does not authorize appellant to represent third-party claimants, we must next consider whether such representation is enjoinable as constituting the un-
When a person holds himself out to the public as competent to exercise legal judgment, he implicitly represents that he has the technical competence to analyze legal problems and the requisite character qualifications to act in a representative capacity. When such representations are made by persons not adequately trained or regulated, the dangers to the public are manifest:
“A layman who seeks legal services often is not in a position to judge whether he will receive proper professional attention. The entrustment of a legal matter may well involve the confidences, the reputation, the property, the freedom, or even the life of the client. Proper protection of members of the public demands that no person be permitted to act in the confidential and demanding capacity of a lawyer unless he is subject to the regulations of the legal profession.” EC 3-4, Code of Professional Responsibility, adopted by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, February 27, 1974, 455 Pa. - (1974).
Indeed, “the bar itself actually arose out of a public demand for the exclusion of those who assume to practice
“While, in order to acquire the education necessary to gain admission to the bar and thereby become eligible to practice law, one is obliged to ‘scorn delights, and live laborious days,’ the object of the legislation forbidding practice to laymen is not to secure to lawyers a monopoly, however deserved, but, by preventing the intrusion of inexpert and unlearned persons in the practice of law, to assure to the public adequate protection in the pursuit of justice, than which society knows no loftier aim.” 327 Pa. at 91, 193 A. at 24.
See also Childs v. Smeltzer, 315 Pa. 9, 171 A. 883 (1934); Vom Baur, An Historical Sketch of the Unauthorized Practice of Law, supra; Note, The Unauthorized Practice of Law by Laymen and Lay Associations, 154 Cal.L. Rev. 1331 (1966).
Mazzacaro contends that the technical skills of damage valuation and settlement that he performs for third-party claimants have traditionally been performed in the adjustment of claims on behalf of insured claimants against their own insurers; that the performance of these services has always been considered to involve the exercise of lay judgments; that the nature of these judgments does not change merely because the judgments are exercised on behalf of third-party claimants; that fault, the only possible legal issue that could arise as to these claimants, is uncontested in the claims that he handles; and that he is never, therefore, required to make a legal assessment of the claim and accordingly cannot be said to be engaged in the practice of law. Mazzacaro‘s con-
While the objective valuation of damages may in uncomplicated cases be accomplished by a skilled lay judgment, an assessment of the extent to which that valuation should be compromised in settlement negotiations cannot. Even when liability is not technically “contested“, an assessment of the likelihood that liability can be established in a court of law is a crucial factor in weighing the strength of one‘s bargaining position. A negotiator cannot possibly know how large a settlement he can exact unless he can probe the degree of unwillingness of the other side to go to court. Such an assessment, however, involves an understanding of the applicable tort principles (including the elements of negligence and contributory negligence), a grasp of the rules of evidence, and an ability to evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of the client‘s case vis a vis that of the adversary. The acquisition of such knowledge is not within the ability of lay persons, but rather involves the application of abstract legal principles to the concrete facts of the given claim. As a consequence, it is inescapable that lay adjusters who undertake to negotiate settlements of the claims of third-party claimants must exercise legal judgments in so doing.6 It has been well said that
“[t]he conduct of litigation is by no means all of legal practice. A lawsuit is but one process of settling
an issue of legal right and wrong. Many are disposed of without suit. But the disposition of such issues for others, by advice and negotiation, for hire, is as much the practice of law as though process and pleadings, with or without trial, were necessary. Counsel as to legal status and rights, and conduct in respect thereto, are as much a special function of the English solicitor and the American lawyer as diagnosis, prognosis, and prescription are in the special field of medicine.” Fitchette v. Taylor, 191 Minn. 582, 254 N.W. 910, 911 (1934).
In sum, we conclude that such third-party claimant representation by lay adjusters constitutes unauthorized practice of law. The majority of courts that have confronted this problem are in accord. J. Appleman & J. Appleman, Insurance Law and Practice, § 8649 (1968). See, e. g., Wilkey v. State, 238 Ala. 121, 189 So. 198 (1939); Meunier v. Bernich, La.App., 170 So. 567 (1936); In re Bodkin, 21 Ill.2d 458, 173 N.E.2d 440 (1961); Fitchette v. Taylor, 191 Minn. 582, 254 N.W. 910 (1934).7
III.
The unauthorized practice of law statute proscribes, upon penalty of fine or imprisonment, the “practice of law” by one not “a member of the Bar.”
Decree affirmed. Costs on appellant.
MANDERINO, J., did not participate in the consideration or decision in this case.
NIX, J., concurs in the result.
ROBERTS, J., filed a dissenting opinion.
ROBERTS, Justice (dissenting).
I dissent from the holding of the majority because this case is not ripe for decision by this or any other court of the Commonwealth. The plaintiff in this case seeks to prevent the defendant from adjusting the claims of “third parties” against insurance companies. Defendant claims that his license permits him to do so. If defendant is acting beyond the scope of his license, there is an administrative remedy: a complaint may be filed with the Insurance Commission seeking to have defendant‘s license revoked.* As Mr. Justice Pomeroy stated in Lilian v. Commonwealth, 467 Pa. -, -, 354 A.2d 250, - (1976) [J-515 1974],
“Where such an administrative remedy is statutorily prescribed the general rule is that a court-be it a
court of equity or a court of law-is without jurisdiction to entertain the action. See, e. g., DeLuca v. Buckeye Coal Company, 463 Pa. 513, 345 A.2d 637 (1975); West Homestead Borough School District v. Allegheny County Board of School Directors, 440 Pa. 113, 269 A.2d 904 (1970); Commonwealth v. Glen Alden Corp., 418 Pa. 57, 210 A.2d 256 (1965). Strict compliance with the statutory procedure thus established is the norm.”
I see no reason to depart from well-established procedure in this case.
Notes
“Appellants [insurance carriers] answer that the insurance corporation can only act through human agency, that it is not the client of its salaried employees; and that to be engaged in the law business, as the very term implies, they must hold themselves out to the public as being engaged in the business of settling claims.
“The question is difficult, but we have come to the conclusion that appellants are correct in this contention. The reason why laymen are forbidden to engage in the law business is that it is detrimental to the public interest for them to represent themselves to the public as being qualified to do that business when they are not, thereby ensnaring the public and spreading error broadcast.
“On the other hand, appellants’ lay claim adjusters work only for their several employers, who hire and retain them with their eyes open. When they deal with claimants it is on an adversary basis, not a representative basis implying a fiduciary relation.” Liberty Mutual Insurance Company v. Jones, 344 Mo. 932, 130 S.W.2d 945, 960 (1939). It is presumably for these reasons that the legislature has not seen the necessity of subjecting insurance company adjusters to a licensing requirement of any sort and has specifically excluded them from the scope of the Public Adjuster Act.
