Memorandum Opinion and Order
Joseph Mercóla (along with his sister and his company, who can be ignored) alleges in this diversity suit that attorney Mark Ziebold, insurance broker Mostafa Abdou, and Abdou’s employer, The Koenig Group, LLC, hoodwinked him. into purchasing several premium financed life insurance policies. Doc. 139. The operative complaint alleges legal malpractice against Ziebold, breach of fiduciary duty against Abdou and Koenig, and common law and statutory fraud against Abdou. Earlier in the case, the court denied Defendants’ motions to dismiss. Docs. 59-60 (reported at
After answering, Defendants—whom this opinion will call “Third-Party Plaintiffs”—filed third-party complaints under the Illinois Joint Tortfeasor Contribution Act (“JTCA”), 740 ILCS 100/2(a), against the investment advisor AXA Advisors, LLC, its agent Andrew Bennett, and the law firm Duggan Bertsch, LLC (and a Duggan partner, who can be ignored). Docs. 176-78. Because the third-party complaints are materially identical, they will be referred to in the singular and only one will be cited. Third-Party Defendants have moved under Federal Rule of . Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) to dismiss the third-party complaints. Docs. 196, 213, 215. In addition, Duggan has moved under the JTCA for a finding that the settlement it reached with Mercóla was made in good faith and thus bars the third-party contribution claims against it. Doc. 235. The motions are denied.
Background
On a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the court must accept the third-party complaint’s well-pleaded factual allegations, with all reasonable inferences drawn in Third-Party Plaintiffs’ favor, but not its legal conclusions. See Zahn v. N. Am. Power & Gas, LLC,
Mercola’s allegations against Third-Party Plaintiffs are set forth in a prior opinion, familiarity with which is assumed.
Discussion
I. Third-Party Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss
A. Whether the Third-Party Claims Comply With Rule 14
Rule 14(a) states that “[a] defending party may, as third-party plaintiff, serve a summons and complaint on a non-party who is or may be liable to it for all or part of the claim against it.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 14(a)(1). Third-Party Defendants argue that Rule 14(a) allows a third-party complaint only if the third-party plaintiff alleges that the third-party defendant is derivatively liable to the third-party plaintiff for the plaintiffs claim against it. Doc. 198 at 7-8. In this, Third-Party Defendants are correct. See Owen Equip. & Erection Co. v. Kroger,
Whether derivative liability exists is a question of substantive law, which in this diversity suit is Illinois law. See Ragusa v. City of Streator,
B. Whether the Third-Party Complaint States a Viable Contribution Claim Under Illinois Law
As noted, the JTCA allows contribution claims only if the third-party plaintiffs liability arises from the “same injury” to the plaintiff as does the third-party defendant’s liability. Third-Party Defendants argue that the third-party claims do not satisfy this requirement because they simply allege “a variation of ‘it was him, not me.’ ” Doc. 198 at 9; Doc. 213 at 2 ¶¶ 6-6; Doc. 216 at ¶¶ 9-13. They are incorrect.
As the Supreme Court of Illinois has explained:
[T]he proper focus of the “same injury” requirement is not the timing of the parties’ conduct which created the injury, but the injury itself. The [plaintiff] has alleged that [the third-party plaintiffs] ... have created a water pollution hazard. [The third-party plaintiffs], in turn, have alleged that [the third-party defendant] ... has contributed to this same water pollution hazard. Assuming that the facts alleged in the ... third-party complaint are true, the trier of fact could find that the conduct of the [third-party plaintiffs] and [the third-party defendant], although separate in time, contributed to produce the “same injury”....
People v. Brockman,
Third-Party Plaintiffs have pleaded just that. Mercóla alleges that Third-Party Plaintiffs induced him to purchase an insurance product, that the product was not as advertised, and that he thus chose to surrender it, incurring losses in the process. Doc. 139 at ¶ 6. The third-party complaint alleges that, at Third-Party Defendants’ urging, Mercóla surrendered the insurance product too early, exacerbating the damages he incurred from Third-Party Plaintiffs’ conduct. Doc. 176 at ¶¶30, 34-35. This is sufficient to meet the “same injury” requirement.
Third-Party Defendants next argue that Third-Party Plaintiffs have not alleged facts sufficient to plead that they breached any duty to Mercóla. Doc. 198 at 11-12; Doc. 213 at 2; Doc. 215 at 4-5. The core factual allegations against Third-Party Defendants are as follows:
29. [Third-Party Defendants] owed a duty of care to Dr. Mercóla and breached the standard of care in the advice [they] rendered to Dr. Mercóla regarding the existing premium financed life insurance policies and regarding available alternative options relating to that insurance.
80. The negligent advice rendered by [Third-Party Defendants] led to Dr. Mercola’s decision to prematurely surrender the four Minnesota Life Policies, incurring the losses alleged to be in excess of $3 million.
Doc. 176 at ¶¶ 29-30. These allegations do more than merely provide “labels and conclusions, and a formulaic recitation of the elements of a cause of action.... ” Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly,
Bennett and Duggan contend that the allegations regarding their conduct toward Mercóla, while framed in the language of negligence or malpractice, actually sound in fiduciary duty. Doc. 213 at ¶¶ 9—14; Doc. 215 at ¶¶ 18-22. This is important, they maintain, because the JTCA requires that the third-party defendant from whom contribution is sought be subject to liability “in tort” to the original injured party, 740 ILCS 100/2(a), and breach of fiduciary duty is not a- tort. Even assuming that fiduciary duty claims are not tort claims, this argument fails.
The allegations regarding Duggan, a law firm, sound in tort. Under Illinois law, attorneys may be subject to legal malpractice claims. See Barth v. Reagan,
According to Bennett, the third-party complaint alleges that he served as Mercola’s insurance broker. Citing Plumb v. Fluid Pump Services,
The Illinois statute governing insurance brokers—the statute refers to “insurance producer, registered firm, and limited insurance representative,” but that phrase has been held to include insurance brokers, see Skaperdas v. Country Cas. Ins. Co.,
No cause of action ... against any insurance producer, registered firm, or limited insurance representative concerning the sale, placement, procurement, renewal, binding, cancellation of, or failure to procure any policy of insurance shall subject the insurance producer, registered firm, or limited insurance representative to civil liability under standards governing the conduct of a fiduciary or a fiduciary relationship except when the conduct ... involves the wrongful retention or misappropriation by the insurance producer, registered firm, or limited insurance representative of any money that was received as premiums, as a premium deposit, or as payment of a claim.
735 ILCS 5/2-2201(b). This provision expressly contemplates that some claims by an insured against an insurance broker will sound in fiduciary duty, while others will sound in tort. The third-party complaint here alleges that Bennett breached his tort duty of ordinary care in urging Mercóla to prematurely surrender the insurance policies. It follows, at least at the pleading stage, the Bennett is properly subject to a third-party contribution claim under the JTCA.
C. Whether the Moorman Doctrine Bars the Third-Party Claims Against Bennett
Bennett argues that the “economic loss doctrine,” also known as the Moor-man doctrine, see Moorman Mfg. Co. v. National Tank Co.,
There traditionally have been three exceptions to the Moorman doctrine:
(1) where the plaintiff sustained damage, i.e., personal injury or property damage, resulting from a sudden or dangerous occurrence; (2) where the plaintiffs damages are proximately caused by a defendant’s intentional, false representation, ie., fraud; and (3) where the plaintiffs damages are proximately caused by a negligent misrepresentation by a defendant in the business of supplying information for the guidance of others in their business transactions.
In re Chicago Flood Litig.,
As noted, the Illinois insurance broker statute creates an extracontractual duty of “ordinary care and skill” on insurance brokers where they are “renewing, procuring, binding, or placing the coverage requested by the insured or proposed insured.” 735 ILCS 5/2-2201(a). This statutorily created extracontractual duty gives rise to an exception to the Moorman doctrine.
The extracontractual duty exception would apply even if, as Third-Party Plaintiffs argue, their claims against Bennett allege not that he breached his duty as an insurance broker, but rather that he was negligent “as Dr. Mercola’s financial advis- or.” Doc. 230 at 6 (emphasis added). Illinois courts have not directly addressed whether claims against financial advisers fall within the extracontractual duty exception, but Congregation of the Passion provides guidance. In holding that the exception applies to accountants, Congregation of the Passion emphasized that an accountant’s services in large part concern the provision of an intangible product:
The characteristics of a tangible object are readily ascertainable, and they can be memorialized in a contract and studied by the parties. The characteristics of something intangible, however, are much more amorphous than the characteristics of something tangible. It is not necessary or generally possible to memorialize all the elements of “competent representation” in a contract. What is necessary to competently represent a client will normally vary with different situations and cannot be anticipated before performance begins. Further, the law has not traditionally required that these elements be included in the retention contract. Application of the Moor-man doctrine limiting recovery of purely economic losses to contract, therefore, is inappropriate where a relationship results in something intangible.
J.A. Hannah is persuasive and leads to the same result here. The third-party complaint alleges that Mercóla and Bennett entered into a contractual arrangement for Bennett to provide Mercóla with financial advice concerning his insurance products. That relationship would not involve the provision of a “tangible” item. Given these allegations, Bennett had an extracontractual duty to Mercóla as his financial advisor. Accordingly, whether they are construed as claims against an insurance broker or against a financial ad-visor, the third-party claims against Bennett fall within the extracontractual duty exception to the Moorman doctrine.
Third-Party Plaintiffs assert contributory negligence as an affirmative defense to Mercola’s claims. Doc. 145 at 48-49. Duggan argues that because it was Mercola’s agent, any negligence on its part must be imputed to Mercóla. Doc. 215 at ¶¶ 23-25. Thus, according to Duggan, because Third-Party Plaintiffs’ liability to Mercóla will be reduced by an amount commensurate with Mercola’s negligence, and because Mercola’s negligence will include Duggan’s negligence because Mercó-la is Duggan’s ' principal, Third-Party Plaintiffs will never pay more than their pro rata share. Id. at ¶25. As a result, Duggan continues, because the JTCA provides that the right of contribution exists only where one party has paid more than his pro rata share, Third-Party Plaintiffs’ contribution claims under the JTCA are not viable. Id. at ¶ 26.
This argument suffers from a fundamental flaw: the third-party claims allege that Duggan breached a duty to Mercóla, and Mercóla cannot be held responsible under an agency theory for a tort that Duggan committed against him. It is true that the attorney-client relationship is governed, at least in part, by the law of agency. See United States v. 7108 West Grand Ave.,
II. Duggan’s Motion for a Good Faith Finding
Duggan also has moved for a good faith finding, contribution bar, and dismissal with prejudice on the basis of a settlement it reached with Mercóla. Doc. 235. The settlement requires Duggan to pay Mercóla $25,000, in exchange for Mercola’s releasing Duggan from all claims. Doc. 235-1 at ¶¶ 1-2. The settlement is conditioned on this court’s finding that it satisfies the JTCA’s good faith requirement. Id. at ¶ 4.
The JTCA provides that a third-party defendant potentially liable in contribution to a third-party plaintiff may avoid contribution liability by entering into a good faith settlement with the plaintiff. See 740 ILCS 100/2(c)~(d). The settling parties bear the burden of making a preliminary showing of good faith, which may be accomplished by producing a valid settlement agreement. See Johnson v. United
Third-Party Plaintiffs have met their burden of showing that the settlement was not made in good faith. As an initial matter, the settlement is for $25,000, less than one percent of Mercola’s claimed damages. A small settlement does not necessarily entail bad faith. See Miranda v. Walsh Grp., Ltd.,
The close relationship between Mercóla and Duggan also suggests a lack of good faith. In Warsing v. Material Handling Services,
In sum, because the Mercola-Duggan relationship is close, the settlement is paltry compared to the asserted liability, and there is no basis on the pleadings to conclude that recovery against Duggan is unlikely, the court finds that the Mercola-Duggan settlement is not a good faith settlement within the meaning of the JTCA.
Conclusion
Third-Party Defendants’ motions to dismiss and Duggan’s motion for a good faith finding are denied. Given the upcoming holidays, Third-Party Defendants need not answer the third-party complaints until January 5, 2017.
