58 Mass. App. Ct. 645 | Mass. App. Ct. | 2003
By complaint for a declaratory judgment as to its liability under a legal malpractice insurance policy, Reliance National Insurance Company (Reliance) put the question: Is the activity involved in billing a client for legal services within the compass of professional services covered by a malpractice insurance policy? A judge of the Superior Court decided it was not and declared that Reliance was not liable under the policy. We affirm.
Now awakened, Sears brought an action in the United States District Court for an accounting and to recover for fraudulent billing by Goldstone. The District Court judge, who heard the case on a summary judgment motion, concluded that Goldstone had bilked Sears to the tune of $833,409 and ordered the entry of judgment for that amount, and, as Sears had made a claim under G. L. c. 93A, added $112,000 to the judgment on account of legal costs and attorneys’ fees incurred by Sears. That judgment was affirmed in Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Goldstone & Su-dalter, P.C., 128 F.3d 10 (1st Cir. 1997), albeit not on grounds of misrepresentation but because Goldstone had failed to adduce any evidence tending to prove that he was owed fees in respect of the 15,000 or so closed files.
Goldstone, at the time of the improper billings, carried a lawyers’ professional liability insurance policy with Reliance. Goldstone looked to Reliance for indemnity under the policy, and Reliance apprehended that Sears might look to the policy as a third-party beneficiary. Under the policy, Reliance covers claims “caused by any act, error, or omission of the insured
On Reliance’s motion for summary judgment, the Superior Court ordered entry of a judgment declaring that Reliance was not obligated to indemnify Goldstone and that Reliance was not entitled to recover funds it had expended in connection with defending Goldstone. This appeal was brought by Sears, a named defendant in the declaratory judgment action. Sears filed a counterclaim with its answer to the declaratory judgment complaint. The counterclaim was derivative of any rights to indemnity that might exist under the Reliance policy.
1. Whether billing is a professional service. Some baseline principles of interpreting language of an insurance policy: interpretation of an insurance contract is a question of law for the court, Kelleher v. American Mut. Ins. Co., 32 Mass. App. Ct. 501, 503 (1992); the context of that language — here the phrase “professional service” — in relation to the policy and the object of the insurance is a primary source of guidance, see Save-Mor Supermarkets, Inc. v. Skelly Detective Serv., Inc., 359 Mass. 221, 226 (1971); insurance policies are to be read with an eye to fair meaning, ibid.; and “[cjommon sense is not a stranger to the interpretation of insurance policies.” Smartfoods, Inc. v. Northbrook Property & Cas. Co., 35 Mass. App. Ct. 239, 245 (1993).
This is not the first occasion on which a Massachusetts court has been asked to decide whether a particular act of a person who practices a profession has the character of a professional service. In Roe v. Federal Ins. Co., 412 Mass. 43, 44-46 (1992), the parties put to the court the question — to which there was an exceptionally self-evident answer — whether a dentist’s sexual contacts with a patient were professional services and, thus, covered by the dentist’s medical malpractice insurance policy. The court had no difficulty concluding that such contacts
Against those criteria we decide that the billing function of a lawyer is not a professional service. Billing for legal services does not draw on special learning acquired through rigorous intellectual training. We are not aware that courses in billing clients appear in law school curricula. The billing function is largely ministerial. There are elements of experience and judgment in billing for legal services, but the same goes for pricing shoes.
Goldstone’s excessive and unsupported billing to Sears did not constitute the rendering of professional services. Reliance is not liable under its professional liability policy.
2. Costs. Sears makes a perfunctory argument that Reliance was not entitled to recover its costs of the action in the amount of $2,392.07. The costs were routine ones: photocopies, deposition transcripts, witness fees, filing fees, and constable fees. Such costs may be recovered under G. L. c. 261, § 1, and Mass. R.Civ.P. 54(d), 382 Mass. 821 (1980), as a matter of course.
Judgment affirmed.
As the court in Roe v. Federal Ins. Co. remarked, incidents involving improper physical contact are generally not covered by professional liability insurance when there is no connection between the contact and the medical practice. There may be coverage when the disjunction between the sexual contacts and professional service is absent or less obvious. Such is the case with sexual advances by a psychiatrist, id. at 50, or a sexual assault by a gynecologist during a gynecological examination. See St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Asbury, 149 Ariz. 565, 566 (Ct. App. 1986).
The Roe opinion, at 48-49, surveys decisions from the courts of other States and Federal courts that state fundamentally the same sense of what is a professional act or service in the context of claims against a malpractice insurance policy. See, particularly, Marx v. Hartford Acc. & Indent. Co., 183 Neb. 12, 13 (1968).
We do not diminish the importance of skillful and thoughtful billing. Indeed, billing may have tax consequences, as in divorce cases or structured settlements in tort actions. When, by arrangement, lawyers bill third parties, they must take care not to reveal lawyer-client confidences. Such billing decisions involve the application of knowledge of the law for the benefit of a client; accordingly, they take on the character of professional services. Such instances aside, however, billing for services and the considerable time and effort attendant on billing correctly are not what a client expects to pay for. As to eight factors to be considered about the reasonableness of a legal fee, see Matter of Fordham, 423 Mass. 481, 485-486 (1996), cert. denied, 519 U.S. 1149 (1997); ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 1.5 (1983); Restatement of the Law Governing Lawyers § 34 comment c (2000).
The interior quotations are from Harad v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 839 F.2d 979, 984-985 (3d Cir. 1988).