St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co. (“St. Paul”) appeals the District Court’s 1 grant of summary judgment in favor of Peggy Ann McNicholes. 2 For the reasons stated below, we affirm the judgment of the District Court.
McNicholes entered psychotherapy with psychologist Leo Subotnik in the fall of 1984. She sought treatment because she recently had been raped and was also a victim of childhood incest. During the course of McNicholes’s treatment, Subotnik and McNi-choles became involved in a sexual relationship, which, according to the undisputed evidence in this case, resulted from Subotnik’s mishandling of the transferenee-counter-transference phenomenon. 3
McNicholes filed an action against Subot-nik in the District Court claiming severe psychological injuries resulting from her sexual relationship with him. Subotnik called upon his professional liability carrier, St.
Prior to trial, McNieholes notified the attorney St. Paul retained to defend Subotnik that she wished to settle the ease. St. Paul did not pursue settlement with McNieholes and continued to maintain that there was no coverage for Subotnik’s actions; no one ever instituted a declaratory judgment action to determine coverage. McNieholes then notified St. Paul that she would try. to negotiate a settlement directly with Subotnik in accordance with the principles set out in
Miller v. Shugart,
McNieholes and Subotnik settled the case for $650,000, with McNieholes stipulating that she would seek collection only from St. Paul, not Subotnik. In the ensuing garnishment proceedings, St. Paul continued to deny coverage and moved for summary judgment. In addition to denying coverage, St. Paul alleged that the settlement was void because Subotnik breached his duty to cooperate when he settled directly with McNieholes, and that the agreement was reached by fraud and collusion. The District Court granted St. Paul’s motion for summary judgment, but upon McNicholes’s motion, subsequently vacated its order. Vetter v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., No. Civ. 3-89-556 (D.Minn. Nov. 30, 1991). 4
McNieholes then moved for and was granted summary judgment, and St. Paul filed its notice of appeal. McNieholes has filed a motion to dismiss the appeal, arguing that St. Paul’s notice of appeal was untimely. The motion is denied. We conclude that in view of the District Court’s June Í9, 1992, order granting St. Paul’s timely motion to extend the appeal deadline based on the court’s finding of excusable neglect, see Fed. R.App.P. 4(a)(5), St. Paul’s June 4, 1992, notice of appeal, which was within the thirty-day extension granted by the June 19 order, was sufficient to invoke the jurisdiction of this Court. It was not necessary for St. Paul to file a further notice of appeal after June 19. Instead, the June 19 order retroactively validated the June 4 notice of appeal. Our jurisdiction established, we turn to the merits of St. Paul’s appeal.
“We review a grant of summary judgment de novo.”
United States ex rel. Glass v. Medtronic, Inc.,
In granting summary judgment in favor of McNieholes, the District Court correctly noted that a
Miller-Shugart
settlement agreement is enforceable against an insurer if (1) the agreement is reasonable and prudent, (2) the insured did not violate his duty to cooperate with the insurer, and (3) the agreement is not the product of fraud and collusion.
Miller,
Seeking reversal, St. Paul argues that, given the undisputed facts of the ease, the District Court erred in determining that (1) Subotnik did not breach his duty to cooperate with St. Paul by entering into the settlement agreement and (2) the settlement agreement is not the product of fraud or
We turn first to St. Paul’s arguments concerning Subotnik’s alleged breach of his duty to cooperate with his insurer. St. Paul contends that Subotnik breached his duty to cooperate because he purposefully inserted language into the settlement agreement that deprived St. Paul of certain coverage defenses. St. Paul argues that McNieholes and Subotnik prejudicially “steered” the language of the stipulation away from McNieholes’s intentional tort claims, claims that were contained in the original complaint but would not be covered under the liability policy, and toward the allegations of negligence and professional malpractice, claims that would be covered under the liability policy, therefore making the stipulation void and unenforceable. We disagree.
In
St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co. v. Love,
The Love case thus controls the question of coverage, and, together with McNicholes’s uncontradicted evidence, supports the language of the settlement agreement. Contrary to St. Paul’s assertions, the plaintiffs’ complaint in Love, like McNicholes’s complaint here, alleged not only negligence, but also intentional torts. 5
“While the defendant insureds have a duty to cooperate with the insurer, they also have a right to protect themselves against plaintiff’s claim.”
Miller,
We note that the Minnesota decisions speak with one voice in their interpretation of
Miller-Shugart
agreements, agreeing that a settlement made before an insurer acknowledges coverage is not a violation of the duty to cooperate.
See Alton M. Johnson Co. v. M.A.I. Co.,
St. Paul relies upon
Buysse v. Baumann-Furrie & Co.,
We turn next to St. Paul’s contention that the settlement agreement is the product of fraud and collusion because Subotnik received several side benefits from the agreement and because the amount agreed upon was not reasonable and prudent. St. Paul’s argument confuses the issue of fraud and collusion with the separate issue of reasonable and prudent settlement. The settlement agreement is not the product of fraud and collusion simply because St. Paul believes that the amount agreed upon is not reasonable and prudent.
St. Paul has offered no evidence to raise a genuine issue of fact on the question of fraud and collusion. That Subotnik bargained for and received personal benefits is not evidence of fraud and collusion. Furthermore, St. Paul misses the point -with its contention that there was fraud and collusion because Subotnik felt that the amount settled for was “irrelevant,” and because he settled for $650,000 even though he did not actually believe that McNicholes was damaged. The record is replete with uncontradicted evidence that a sexual relationship developed between Subotnik and McNicholes as a result of Subotnik’s mishandling of the transference-countertransference phenomenon, and also with uncontradicted evidence of the severe psychological injuries McNicholes consequently suffered. Moreover, the affidavits detailing the large recoveries obtained by plaintiffs in other similar cases are uncontroverted. Subotnik’s subjective beliefs about MeNicholes’s claim are not evidence of fraud and collusion. If to gain personal benefits Subotnik had offered McNicholes an unreasonably large amount of money to settle her claim, then the agreement would be unenforceable because it would not be reasonable and prudent, not because it was the result of fraud and collusion. The District Court correctly determined that on the undisputed evidence the agreement was not the product of fraud and collusion.
Finally, we consider the question of whether McNicholes met her burden of showing that the settlement is reasonable and prudent.
See Miller,
We believe the District Court correctly determined that St. Paul has faded to create a genuine issue as to any material fact and that MeNicholes is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Accordingly, the judgment of the District Court is affirmed. McNicholes’s motion to supplement the record is denied as moot.
Notes
. The Honorable Paul A. Magnuson, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.
. Appellee formerly was known as Peggy Ann Vetter. The Court was advised of the change of her surname to McNicholes during the pendency of this appeal.
. Transference is a common result of psychotherapy. The term refers to the patient's "projection of feelings, thoughts and wishes onto the analyst, who has come to represent some person from the patient’s past.” Steelman's Medical Dictionary 1622 (25th ed. 1990) Unfortunately, counter-transference also often occurs and it is "the analyst's transference (often unconscious) of his emotional needs and feelings toward the patient, with personal involvement to the detriment of the desired objective analyst-patient relationship.” Id. at 364.
. This case originally was assigned to The Honorable Edward J. Devitt, who entered the initial orders referred to in this portion of the text. Upon Judge Devitt's death, the case was reassigned to Judge Magnuson, who ultimately granted McNicholes's motion for summary judgment.
. Although
St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Love,
. This evidence includes affidavits from several attorneys stating their knowledge of settlements and jury verdicts in similar cases that were far in excess of the settlement here. Moreover, Subot-nik’s attorney advised Subotnik of the risk that if the case were to go to trial there might be a verdict against him in excess of the $1,000,000 policy limit.
