42 Mass. App. Ct. 251 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1997
We deal in this case primarily with: (1) the liability of an insurance broker for damages to his customer for
Facts.
Arrangements for insurance were initiated for Franchi by his bookkeeper, Jean Whitney Goodwin, with a telephone call to John J. Stella, Jr. (doing business as John J. Stella Insurance Agency). Stella had been handling most of Franchi’s insurance business for eight to ten years.
As Stella went about applying for insurance, he inquired whether there would be a fence around the work site, a question that Goodwin passed on to Louis Franchi (Pasquale’s son). Louis responded that there was no fence then but that there would be during construction. Stella also asked whether there was a mortgage on the property, to which Goodwin, in like fashion, responded that there would be when construction activity began, adding that Franchi generally obtained construction loans from Guaranty First Bank & Trust Company. The amount of insurance was to be $1,000,000 for the three existing buildings and $3,000,000 for the construction improvements.
Stella placed the coverage requested with United Capitol Insurance Company (United) through Montgomery and Collins, Inc., a “special insurance broker” (a statutory term) licensed under G. L. c. 175, § 168, to purchase insurance policies from companies that are not, in the ordinary course,
In due course, United issued a full-blown policy providing insurance from September 27, 1988, through March 27, 1990, and mailed it to Stella. He retained the policy in his office and did not deliver either the policy or a copy of it to Fran-chi. The policy, counting cover sheet, inserts and endorsements, contained thirty-five pages. One of those pages was the “Protective Safeguards” endorsement; it called for “fenced site during construction.” Another page, titled “Schedule of Limits and Mortgagees,” listed Guarantee First Trust Company as mortgagee.
Under the general direction of Eastern Builders, gutting of the three buildings down to their brick bearing walls and supporting timbers got under way. On February 11, 1989, fire damaged the premises so badly that what remained of them had to be demolished. HRDT filed a proof of loss claiming $1,000,000 on account of the real estate plus $565,585.29 on account of demolition, building costs, architectural fees, imputed interest, insurance costs, legal expenses, and real
Trial of the common law questions was before a jury. At the conclusion of the evidence, the trial judge gave the case to the jury on twenty-one special questions. It simplifies presentation to telescope some of the separate answers into one. So, for example, the import of the jury’s answers to the first four questions was that United was hable to HRDT on the insurance policy. The actual cash value of HRDT’s buildings immediately before the fire the jury assessed at $1,250,976.55 and the cost of removing debris left after the fire they assessed at $119,000. As to Stella, the jury found that he had been negligent and that his negligence had caused Franchi damage. The last question was: “Please state in words and figures what you find to be the amount of the plaintiffs damages, without regard to the negligence or lack of negligence of anyone” (emphasis in original).
Counsel for Stella immediately remarked on the inconsistency of the jury’s answers on damages and suggested to the judge that she call back the jury, which she had just discharged. The judge quite agreed that the verdict was inconsistent but questioned whether she could call back the jury to explain themselves. She could have. On proper motion to resolve an inconsistency, a judge may resubmit questions with additional instructions, or submit supplemental questions. Holder v. Gilbane Bldg. Co., 19 Mass. App. Ct. 214,
1. The motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Stella’s argument for judgment notwithstanding the verdict is that, as United ultimately was found liable on its insurance policy, HRDT suffered no damage and the negligence attributed by the jury to Stella is an abstraction in that it caused no harm. Franchi was to receive the same benefits from the policy as he would have had Stella performed his duties flawlessly. Indeed, it is elementary that a tort claimant must prove that the injury for which the claimant seeks compensation more likely than not was the consequence of the defendant’s negligence; or, in the familiar language of the law, the negligence must have been the proximate cause of the harm. Fallstrom v. Brady Elec. Co., 347 Mass. 600, 607 (1964). Home Ins. Co. v. Columbia Ins. Agency, Inc., 5 Mass. App. Ct. 621, 622-623 (1977). See Rae v. Air-Speed, Inc., 386 Mass. 187, 192-193 (1982).
Viewing the facts favorably to the plaintiffs, however, see O’Shaughnessy v. Besse, 7 Mass. App. Ct. 727, 728-729 (1979), the jury could have found that Stella’s imprecise handling of the protective fence and mortgagee issues provided United with plausible grounds — until rebutted — to disclaim liability on its policy. There was a chain of causation between Stella’s negligence and Franchi becoming obliged to seek legal redress and to run up legal expenses. In the trial of the case, Franchi also pressed the point that he had not been apprised by Stella, and was unpleasantly surprised to learn after the fact, that coverage in the United policy for removal of debris from fire was subject to a deductible formula. Had he known, he might have sought an endorsement to the policy giving fuller coverage. That hypothesis may have been implausible, but the jury could accept it.
The motion for judgment n.o.v. was rightly denied.
2. Whether acceptance of remittitur barred a new trial. Fol
Judgment against Stella in the amount of $1,969,000 was entered on December 14, 1992. A second paragraph of the judgment expressed the idea that the c. 93A damages were, indeed, duplicative and (except for $50,000 relating to legal fees incident to the c. 93A action) subsumed in the common
“I find that the remaining award is still greatly disproportionate to the proven injury. After a further review of this case, I conclude that the jury did not exercise a reasonable and honest judgment in accordance with controlling principles of law when they determined the amount of damages to be awarded against the defendant Stella. This failure has resulted in an award that is duplicative, disproportionate, and against the weight of the evidence. To avoid the injustice which would result if this award were to stand, a new trial is hereby ordered on the issue of damages proximately caused by Stella’s negligence.”
An order vacating the remittitur and allowing the motion for a new trial on damages was thereupon entered on the docket.
Someone, no doubt counsel for Franchi, reminded the judge that Franchi had accepted the remittitur. That information stimulated the judge on May 18, 1994 (that is the date of the docket entry), to repent of her allowance of a new trial on damages. She concluded “that the plaintiffs’ acceptance of the remittitur precluded my grant of a new trial on any issue.” Accordingly, on her own motion, the judge vacated the allowance of the motion for a new trial and reinstated against Stella the judgment of $1,969,000, reduced by the $1,725,000 received by the plaintiffs from United. That was the step which laid the basis for Stella’s second point on appeal, to which, at long last, we can return.
The trial judge, having decided that it would work an injustice to allow the jury verdict, even as reduced, was not immobilized by acceptance of the remittitur. Although a final judgment had been entered, it was not final in the sense that the ten-day period for moving for a new trial — or moving to alter or amend the judgment — had expired. Until the expira
In the instant case, the area in which the judge thought the juiy had stepped beyond the boundary of reason was on the issue of Franchi’s damages. It lay within her power to propose a further remittitur figure at the number she thought was within the boundary of reason. If Franchi chose not to accept that figure, there would be a new trial on damages. As it is, the final judgment ultimately entered in this case is the product of the judge’s misapprehension about what she might do to correct what she had declared was an injustice. Accordingly, that judgment must be reversed.
When a judge proposes a remittitur it does not constitute an offer, the acceptance of which binds a defendant, who may still, as here, move for a rehearing on its motion for a new trial. Cf. Omni Flying Club, Inc. v. Cessna Aircraft Co., 366 Mass. 154, 164 (1974). It would be a reproach to justice if a trial judge, who had become convinced that an injustice was about to be done and who still was in possession of jurisdiction over a case, was reduced to a wringing of hands. The judge who presided at trial has retired from the bench. The question of damages will have to be heard by a new judge.
3. Damages. One point in particular has been argued on appeal on the subject of damages. Although that question is not now ripe for appeal because there is going to be a new trial on damages, the point is so likely to recur that we think
It may also be useful to rehearse the permissible elements of damage against Stella, United having been required to meet its obligations under the policy: (a) $56,451 for unreim-bursed demolition-debris removal costs; (b) legal expenses incident to the action in the Superior Court against United, but not including legal expenses allocable to the pursuit of Montgomery and Collins (the special insurance broker); (c) $5,040 for Stella’s service charge determined by the trial judge to be improper in the c. 93A aspect of the case; and (d) legal expenses attributable solely to the c. 93A action aspect of the case (the trial judge did not provide any rationale for the $50,000 that she awarded).
The judgment is affirmed on the question of the liability of Stella for damages to Franchi by reason of negligence in connection with obtaining the builders’ risk insurance policy
So ordered.
We base our recitation of the pertinent facts on what the jury might have found, reading the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, and on the facts found by the trial judge in connection with a G. L. c. 93A component of the case.
Stella, as the c. 93A aspect of the case brought out, had an incentive not to publish the premium of $21,000 to Franchi, because he billed HRDT $26,040 for the insurance, without troubling to inform his customer that he had added $5,000 to the tab. Another example of Stella’s excessively expedient practices in the transaction is that he made an affidavit that, after diligent effort, he had failed to place the coverage with an insurer licensed to do business in Massachusetts and that three such insurers declined to offer the insurance desired. He had made no such effort; rather he made the affidavit on the strength of his certainty, based on his knowledge in the insurance business, that insurers licensed to do business in Massachusetts would decline builders’ risk coverage on a rehabilitation project.
The $565,585.29 amount broke down as follows: $119,000 for demolition of the fire ravaged structures; $127,158.51 for building work prior to the fire; $118,000 for architectural fees; $160,654.09 for imputed interest; $26,040 for insurance; $5,818.04 for legal expenses related to the project; and $8,914.65 for real estate taxes.
Whether arson had caused the destructive fire was much disputed. In any event, arson was not attributed to Franchi and the allegation of arson is not relevant to the appeal.
This demonstrably unhelpful question had been proposed by trial counsel for Stella.
The only compensable loss suffered by Franchi that United was not bound to pay was debris removal costs in excess of the $62,548.83 payable under the policy. That excess was $56,451.17. The rules of civil procedure do not include “motion for a remittitur” within their terminology. Rather, a defendant aggrieved by what it considers to be an insupportably high verdict may, pursuant to Mass.R.Civ.P. 59(a), 365 Mass. 827 (1974), move for a new trial. The rule provides that, “A new trial shall not be granted solely on the ground that the damages are excessive until the prevailing party has first been given an opportunity to remit so much thereof as the court adjudges excessive.” The “motion for a remittitur” does not appear in the docket of the case, but a copy of the motion, dated April 13, 1992, appears in the record appendix, as does a transcript of the hearing on the motion.
This figure is illustrative because it does not take into account the calculation of interest on the award.
The elements of that figure appear to be the same uninsured debris removal costs and legal fees included in the common law judgment. The judge found that Stella had not acted wilfully and did not multiply the c. 93A damages.
Before the enactment of G. L. c. 231, § 6F, counsel fees were occasionally recovered in cases when a plaintiff had been obliged to bring legal action in the face of a stonewalling attitude by a party when, manifestly, there was no tenable defense. See, e.g., Malloy v. Carroll, 287 Mass. 376, 386 (1934), but see the limitations on that approach discussed in Chartrand v. Riley, 354 Mass. 242, 243-244 (1968).