OPINION
The defendant in this action, United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. (“Fidelity”), a Maryland corporation, has filed a motion pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) (Docket Item [“D.I.”] 35) to dismiss the complaint of the plaintiffs, Francis and Patricia DiSabatino, Jr., who are citizens of Delaware, on the grounds that their complaint fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. 1 The present litigation arose from a case settled in state court involving the alleged medical malpractice of the defendants’ insured. The plaintiffs claim that Fidelity, through its agent, fraudulently misrepresented the amount of insurance coverage and that absent this misrepresentation a trial or settlement would have resulted in a substantially greater recovery. (D.I. 1, ¶ 10.) The plaintiffs proceed on a theory based on fraud and pray for compensatory and punitive damages. (D.I. 1 at 3.) The defendant, in answer, claims that the plaintiffs’ case remains essentially a cause of action based on tort, that punitive damages are inappropriate, and that the plaintiffs’ only remedy is to rescind the settlement and proceed upon the underlying negligence cause of action. (D.I. 7, (¶ 12; D.I. 36 at 5-11.)
BACKGROUND
The plaintiffs instituted their original suit against Drs. Charles L. Miller, David A. Levitsky, Joseph A. Vitale, and the Wilmington Medical Center, Inc., in Delaware Superior Court on July 6, 1977. 2 (D.I. 1, ¶ 4.) In the spring of 1983, C. Waggaman Berl, Jr., counsel for plaintiffs, entered into settlement negotiations with Harry B. Hoffman, agent for Fidelity, which was the malpractice liability insurer for Drs. Miller and Levitsky. (Id. at ¶ 5.)
The plaintiffs claim that in the course of these settlement negotiations Hoffman represented to Berl that Miller and Levitsky each had liability coverage of $200,000, for a total policy limit of $400,000 when Hoffman knew in fact that a $1,000,000 excess malpractice liability policy covered the insureds against the plaintiffs’ claim and that his representation was false. (D.I. 1, ¶¶ 6-7.) The plaintiffs further allege that in reliance on this representation they entered into a settlement agreement whose value Hoffman represented to Berl as having a current value of $294,000. The Court of Chancery approved the settlement on July 8, 1983. {Id. at Í1 8.)
The defendant denies that Hoffman made any misrepresentation but admits that he knew that there was excess liability coverage. (D.I. 7, ¶¶ 6-7.)
ANALYSIS
The defendant has made a motion to dismiss pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). A court should not dismiss a complaint for failure to state a claim “unless it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief.”
Conley v. Gibson,
In this case, the Court is exercising its diversity jurisdiction. Although providing a federal forum, the Court must apply the substantive law of the appropriate state jurisdiction as expressed in that state’s statutes and decisions of its highest courts.
Erie Railroad v. Tompkins,
The Court must examine the best available evidence in forecasting such decisions. Evidence of state law can come in the form of lower state court precedents, related decisions in considered dicta of a state’s highest court, the policies that inform that court’s application of certain legal doctrines, court decisions in other jurisdictions, and relevant legal treatises and articles.
See McKenna v. Ortho Pharmaceutical Corp.,
As the defendant notes, the Delaware courts are in accord with the basic contract principle that a party defrauded on a contract may elect either to rescind the contract or to affirm it and sue for damages.
Sannini v. Cascells,
This Court predicts that in a case such as this a Delaware court would rule that a tort claimant has an election to stand on a fraudulently induced release and proceed on a cause of action based on fraud. The reasoning of the Delaware Court of Chancery in Hegarty provides some support for such a prognostication. Hegarty involved an allegedly fraudulent acquisition of stock by the defendant from the plaintiff. The plaintiff was allowed to recover on the basis of the equitable right to a rescission although he did not restore or offer to restore anything obtained under the contract.
. The court in
Hegarty
employed expansive language in detailing the remedies available to a party induced to enter an agreement by fraudulent misrepresentation. In such a case, the contract is voidable, and the plaintiff may “let the contract stand, retaining all that he obtained thereunder, and maintain an action at law to recover damages for the fraud.”
Hegarty,
Eastern States Petroleum demonstrates that in Delaware a settlement agreement involving the release of a cause of action should be treated no differently from a fraudulently induced commercial contract in which courts routinely allow an election >f remedies. Such a rule of law is signifi:int, because it is in fundamental contra- . action to the reasoning of courts which differentiate between a simple contract and a settlement of a tort claim.
The holdings of Hegarty and Eastern States Petroleum can easily be extended to cover a contract of settlement compromising a tort claim. A contrary holding fails both on grounds of analytical consistency and for reasons of policy.
The distinction made by some courts between simple contracts and releases of tort actions rests in part on the theory that the tort claimant has parted with nothing because he can avoid the contract of settlement and reinstitute his original cause of action. Unlike tort claims, commercial contracts often involve commodities whose value diminishes with each transaction. Of course, proof of damage is a necessary element in an action based on fraud.
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An Ohio court in
Shallenberger v. Motorists Mutual Ins. Co.,
There is usually no analogy between the situation of one induced by fraud to release a tort claim and one induced by fraud to buy something. Obviously, in a case like the instant case, the releasor of a tort claim buys nothing, although he may receive something, usually money or its equivalent, for what he relinquishes. He does give up something (i.e., his tort claim), as a seller gives up what he sells. Thus, on cursory consideration, the release of a tort claim might appear to be analogous to a sale of something. However, where there has been a sale of something, possession of that something has usually been relinquished by the seller. Even where use of the sold something has not made it less valuable, the seller will usually want money for it as he did when he made the sale. If he takes it back, he has to sell it to get that money. Each change of possession of that something will ordinarily involve expense or inconvenience. On the other hand, the releasor has nothing to repossess on rescission of the release; and such rescission revests him with the same claim for money that he had before, not something he must resell to get that money. In reality, the releasor does not sell anything even of an intangible nature. In effect, the releasor has merely agreed for a consideration not to enforce his tort claim.
Id.
On close examination, the fallacy of this position is evident. A tort claimant may indeed have lost something by deciding not to prosecute an action and instead to accept a monetary consideration in settlement. The court in
Shallenberger
does not attribute any value to opportunities foregone. The lapse of time may well affect the cost of bringing suit. A statute of limitation may have run out.
See Beeck v. Kapalis,
A settlement agreement is surely a contract, for which consideration on both sides has passed. The consideration given by the plaintiff, the right to prosecute his tort claim — like something which a seller has sold and whose value in use is bound to decline — certainly will change in value with the passage of time. In effect, the plaintiff is a seller of a cause of action of which he must regain possession. “Each change of possession of that something will ordinarily involve expense or inconvenience.”
Shallenberger,
The second rationale employed by these courts involves an argument concerning damages. The argument is twofold. The assumption is that the damages in the action for fraud are too speculative because they must be measured on the basis of the personal injuries sustained. “[T]he measure of damages, if any, in the action for fraud and deceit is inextricably bound with the question of liability and the nature and extent of the injuries involved in the underlying tort claim which was settled.”
Mackley v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
The difficulty in determining the amount of damages is insurmountable. If the jury found a fraud had been committed upon the plaintiff to induce her to give up her cause of action, how would it determine what amount, if any, she would have received from another jury, had she not compromised her action, but had proceeded to trial? And how could damages in the instant case be assessed without some measure of what would have been accorded to plaintiff in the original action, had she proceeded to trial.
Id.
(quoting
Taylor v. Hopper,
The measure of damages under this second method must take into consideration the salable value of the right of action for the purpose of compromising, and the nature and extent of the injuries known and foreseeable as of the time of the settlement, under the particular circumstances of the parties then shown existing.
Automobile Underwriters, Inc. v. Rich,
In addition, some courts require a plaintiff in an action based on fraud to allege and prove not only that the settlement was procured by fraud but also that he had a good cause of action against the tortfeasor at the time of settlement.
See Automobile Underwriters,
Simply as a matter of policy, this cause of action should be deemed to exist. First, insurance companies would have everything to gain and nothing to lose by systematically defrauding tort claimants into accepting low settlement offers. In such cases the company gambles that the deceit will not be uncovered. If the fraud is uncovered, then the company only faces litigation, or the costs of reimbursement, that it would have had to confront without a settlement. In economic terms, some insurance carriers calculate an “opportunity cost”
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which is artificially low. If, in
Second, the opportunities for overreaching and committing fraud in releases of tort claims may be greater than in typical cases of commercial contract fraud, where the parties are more often on an equal footing. Duress, coercion, and immediate need for liquid assets are ever present for the unfortunate tort claimant. In many cases, plaintiffs have spent much, if not all, of the settlement sum on necessities before discovering the fraud. The plaintiff should be permitted to retain the settlement amount in the ensuing fraud action, and to deduct that amount from the final amount of damages. The difficulty and often impossibility of restoring the status quo ante has served as rationale for retaining the settlement amount even in cases of rescission.
Pattison v. Highway Ins. Underwriters,
As with any case of fraud, a court may impose punitive damages if the fraud is “gross, oppressive, or aggravated, or where it involves breach of trust or confidence.”
Stephenson v. Capano Development, Inc.,
Because the Court holds that a party defrauded on an agreement to settle a tort claim may elect in Delaware either to rescind the contract or to affirm it and sue for damages resulting from the fraudulent misrepresentation, the Court need only briefly address the defendant’s contention that the plaintiffs may not sue them directly but must sue the insureds. (D.I. 36 at 12-13.) Quite simply, the plaintiffs are seeking relief against Fidelity for the alleged fraud that it carried out directly against them. The alleged tortfeasor has no role to play in the present litigation.
The rationale of the Court’s holding also disposes of the defendant’s argument that “the determination as to whether or not the release was fraudulently obtained should be decided in a trial separate from the underlying tort action” because of the prejudice resulting from the “injection of insurance into the underlying tort action.” (D.I. 36 at 14.) Again, the only cause of action which the plaintiffs frame in their complaint is one sounding in fraud allegedly committed by the defendant insurance company. Indeed, insurance coverage — both the amount which Fidelity allegedly misrepresented to the plaintiffs and the actual limit of coverage of $1,000,000 — has the utmost material relevance in determining the liability and amount of compensatory and punitive damages, if any, in this case. The cases cited by the defendant are completely inapposite, as they involve an underlying tort action, which the plaintiffs in this case have elected to forego. The al
Judgment will be entered in accordance with this opinion.
Notes
. Jurisdiction arises under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1). Venue is laid under 28 U.S.C. § 1391(a).
. Civil Action No. 77C-JL-9 (New Castle County).
. In this case, the court was criticizing the plaintiff for attempting to rescind the agreement yet enjoy some of its benefits. A clear election must be made: "In other words, it (the plaintiff) cannot cause the rescission of a contract in part and its approval in part, as self-interest may dictate.
Hegarty v. American Commonwealth Power Corporation____Eastern States Petroleum,
. In an action based on fraud,
(1) The deceiver must make a false representation of a material fact to the victim. (2) The deceiver must have had knowledge of the falsity of his representation, while his victim must have been ignorant thereof. (3) The representation must have been made with the threefold intent that the victim believe it to be true, act in reliance thereon, and be deceived thereby. (4) The victim must have so believed, acted, and been deceived, as well as having been damaged thereby.
Twin Coach Co. v. Chance Vought Aircraft, Inc.,
. An “opportunity cost” is a concept in economics which measures the cost of engaging in one activity instead of another. As an example, the cost to Robinson Crusoe when he picks strawberries is the sacrificed amount of raspberries he might otherwise have picked with the same time and effort. P. Samuelson,
Economics
474-75 (1976). In the present case, the opportunity cost would be merely the cost of defending the tort claim by the plaintiff. In other words, the insurance carrier calculates the cost of engaging in fraud to be only the cost of going to trial on
