WACHOVIA INSURANCE SERVICES, INC., et al., Appellants,
v.
Richard L. TOOMEY, etc., et al., Appellees.
Supreme Court of Florida.
*981 John H. Pelzer, Donald A. Mihokovich, and Brigid F. Cech of Ruden, McClosky, Smith, Schuster, and Russell, P.A., Fort Lauderdale, FL, for Appellants.
Lisa K. Hsiao, Romeo S. Quinto, Jr., and James F. Hibey of Howrey, LLP, Washington, D.C., and Valeria Hendricks and Cody F. Davis of Davis and Harmon, P.A., Tampa, FL, for Appellees.
PER CURIAM.
This case is before the Court for review of a question of Florida law certified by the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit that is determinative of a cause pending in that court and for which there appears to be no controlling precedent. We have jurisdiction. See art. V, § 3(b)(6), Fla. Const. For the reasons explained below, we provide the following three answers to the issues raised by the certified questions: (1) a settlement agreement between two parties that explicitly contains both an assignment of causes of action against a third party insurer and an immediate release of the insured on the same causes of action is valid and not barred by our opinion in Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York v. Cope,
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The instant action arises from the decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit in Toomey v. Wachovia Insurance Services, Inc.,
I. WHAT IS THE EFFECT OF A SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT BETWEEN TWO PARTIES THAT EXPLICITLY CONTAINS BOTH AN ASSIGNMENT OF CAUSES OF ACTION AGAINST A THIRD PARTY INSURER AND AN IMMEDIATE RELEASE OF THE INSURED ON THE SAME CAUSES OF ACTION?
II. CAN A CLAIM FOR BREACH OF FIDUCIARY DUTY AGAINST AN INSURANCE BROKER BE ASSIGNED?
Id. at 1231.
The facts of the underlying action, as summarized in the Eleventh Circuit's opinion, are as follows. Brian Holman and Richard Toomey were employees and officers of IMC, a mortgage business based in Tampa, Florida. Wachovia was the insurance broker for IMC. In 1997, IMC purchased Holman and Toomey's mortgage business, Central Money Mortgage (CMM), and Holman and Toomey were appointed officers and employees of IMC's subsidiary. Each man had a five-year employment contract with an annual salary of $300,000 and a severance clause requiring IMC to pay their full salary for the years remaining on the contract if IMC terminated Toomey or Holman without cause. Also in 1997, Joel Williams sold IMC an Employment Practices Liability Insurance Policy (the Policy) that covered claims for breaches of written employment contracts. Under financial pressure, IMC decided to cease operations of its subsidiary and notified Holman and Toomey that it planned to terminate their employment contracts.
Holman and Toomey sued IMC in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, alleging that they had been formally terminated without cause. This litigation resulted in a judgment of $1.8 million in favor of Holman and Toomey against IMC. IMC was unable to satisfy the judgment and initiated settlement negotiations. During these negotiations, IMC discovered that it had lost the Policy's coverage for breach of employment contract claims. Because the Policy had been due to expire during litigation, IMC had extended its coverage with Wachovia for several months to cover any potential claims, such as Holman and Toomey's breach of employment contract claims. However, in extending the Policy, Wachovia is alleged to have summarily removed coverage for breach of written employment contract claims without IMC's knowledge. To satisfy the outstanding $1.8 million judgment, IMC executed a settlement agreement with Holman and Toomey. Under the terms of the agreement, Holman and Toomey, for consideration of $1.5 million, dismissed all their causes of action against IMC except the counts for breach of their employment contracts. Holman and Toomey, however, expressly reserved their claims against Wachovia. Additionally, IMC agreed to assign Holman and Toomey "all its rights, including its causes of action, which rights IMC may have under *983 or because of the existence of [the Policy]... to secure indemnification sufficient to satisfy" the $1.8 million judgment. Id. at 1228.
Subsequently, Holman and Toomey brought suit against Wachovia in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida in August 2003. Pursuant to IMC's assignment of the potential claims, Holman and Toomey alleged that: (1) Wachovia breached fiduciary duties owed to IMC; and (2) Wachovia was negligent in its dealings with IMC. Holman and Toomey also alleged two direct claims against Wachovia: (1) the intentional interference with their rights under their employment contracts; and (2) the breach of fiduciary duties allegedly owed by Wachovia directly to them. Specifically, under Count 2 of the first amended complaint entitled "Breach of Fiduciary Duties Owed Plaintiffs," Holman and Toomey alleged that Wachovia "breached [its] obligation[] of loyalty to Plaintiffs and duty to carefully manage their claims under the Policy when, with actual knowledge of an existing claim of Plaintiffs, [it] failed to notify or advise IMC to notify the insurance company of the claim, but instead, in conspiracy with other IMC officers and employees, designed the Subject Endorsement to exclude claims for breach of written employment contracts from the Policy." Under Count 3, which is entitled "Breach of Fiduciary Duty Owed IMCRights Assigned to Plaintiffs," Holman and Toomey alleged that Wachovia "negligently or intentionally or maliciously failed to advise or consult IMC about the Subject Endorsement, failed to make inquiries of IMC to determine the impact of the Subject Endorsement on current or future litigation IMC faced, and failed to maintain coverage for Plaintiffs' breach of employment contract claims in the Maryland Litigation." Finally, under Count 4, which is the negligence claim, Holman and Toomey alleged that Wachovia, as insurance broker for IMC and them, "owed duties of care and loyalty to IMC and Plaintiffs that obligated [Wachovia] to advise and consult with them on insurance coverage issues, the filing of claims under the Policy, and the obtaining and maintenance of the coverage afforded by the Policy," but failed to follow through with that duty.
The district court granted Wachovia judgment as a matter of law on all claims except the assigned claim for breach of fiduciary duties owed by Wachovia to IMC, which was submitted to the jury. The district court ruled that based on the Fourth District's decision in Moss,
*984 With regard to the breach of fiduciary duty claims, the district court instructed the jury that they were to consider whether Wachovia breached its fiduciary duty owed to IMC and Holman and Toomey as assignees of IMC. The district court explained when a fiduciary obligation exists, and further explained that when a person undertakes the responsibility to act for another in a fiduciary relationship, "the law forbids the fiduciary from acting in any manner adverse or contrary to the interests of the client, or from acting for the fiduciary's own benefit in relation to the subject matter of their relationship." The district court also laid out the three elements that Holman and Toomey were required to prove to recover on the claim, which included: (1) the existence of a fiduciary relationship between IMC and Wachovia; (2) a violation of that fiduciary obligation by Wachovia; and (3) damages suffered by Holman and Toomey as a proximate result of one or more of these violations of the fiduciary obligation. The court also told the jury that under the first element, they "must accept the fact that a fiduciary relationship existed between IMC and Wachovia as proven" because as an insurance broker, Wachovia stood in a fiduciary relationship with its clients by operation of law. Under the second element, the court listed several ways in which Wachovia could have violated its fiduciary obligation, such as "failing to adequately explain to IMC that the employment practices liability insurance policy covered claims alleging the breach of a written employment contract," "failing to obtain proper approval from IMC to add the endorsement," and "failing to advise IMC about the impact of the proposed endorsement on IMC's risk exposure and existing employment relationships." The jury returned a verdict of $1,069,200.00 in favor of Holman and Toomey on this claim.
Wachovia appealed to the Eleventh Circuit, arguing that the district court erred because (1) Holman and Toomey released IMC, thereby also releasing Wachovia of liability; (2) claims for breach of fiduciary duty cannot be assigned; and (3) Holman and Toomey should not be allowed to receive attorney's fees on behalf of IMC where IMC failed to assign attorney's fees to Holman and Toomey, and where Holman and Toomey failed to prove the specific amount of attorney's fees incurred by IMC. Holman and Toomey cross-appealed, arguing that the district court erred in granting judgment as a matter of law to Wachovia on their other claims. Id. at 1228. On appeal, the Eleventh Circuit found that dispositive questions regarding Holman and Toomey's release of IMC and the assignability of a claim for breach of fiduciary duty are unsettled under Florida law, and certified both questions to this Court.
DISCUSSION
ISSUE I: Simultaneous Release of IMC and Assignment of IMC's Causes of Action against Wachovia to Holman and Toomey
The Eleventh Circuit's first certified question asks how to treat a settlement agreement that includes both a release of the insured company by the injured third party on a cause of action and an assignment by the insured company in favor of the injured party to permit the injured party to sue the insurer on the same cause of action. Wachovia contends IMC had no valuable rights left to assign to Holman because *985 Holman and Toomey released IMC from all liability in their settlement agreement, IMC paid no portion of the $1.8 million judgment entered against it, and IMC suffered no damage from any breach of fiduciary duty by Wachovia. On the other hand, Holman and Toomey assert that the same settlement agreement, by simultaneously reserving their rights to pursue Wachovia and others for their unpaid judgment against IMC, expressly did not release Wachovia from suit.
The settlement agreement in question was entered into in April 2001. Subsequently, in August 2001, Holman and Toomey and IMC executed the assignment pursuant to the provisions of the settlement agreement. Further, in August 2001, the United States District Court for the District of Maryland entered an order, which included both a $1.8 million judgment in favor of Holman and Toomey and a dismissal with prejudice of all other claims against IMC. After reviewing the settlement agreement, we find that although Holman and Toomey released IMC from liability in the agreement, the agreement also simultaneously assigned IMC's claims against Wachovia to Holman and Toomey.[2] The inclusion of the assignment in the settlement agreement permits Holman and Toomey to bring suit against Wachovia for any assigned claims that IMC had against Wachovia.
The Eleventh Circuit certified this question regarding the settlement agreement after finding no precedential authority in Florida law. The Eleventh Circuit stated that even though both Wachovia and Holman and Toomey cited to relevant Florida case law, none of the cases addressed the question of "whether a settlement agreement between two parties that explicitly contains both an assignment of causes of action against a third party (from IMC to Holman and Toomey) and an immediate release (by Holman and Toomey of IMC) allows the assignee to bring a cause of action for breach of fiduciary duty against the third party." Toomey,
In Cope, the personal representative of a third party killed in a car accident brought an excess judgment action against the driver's insurer, alleging that the insurer negligently and in bad faith refused to negotiate a settlement of a previous *986 wrongful death claim. However, prior to filing suit, the personal representative executed a release and satisfaction of judgment in favor of the insured. The release was not preceded or accompanied by an assignment to the injured party of any bad faith claim then existing in favor of the insured. In this circumstance, we found that the personal representative could not bring action against the insurer of the driver because the excess judgment had been satisfied prior to filing suit. In addition, the cause of action had not been assigned prior to satisfaction of judgment. Id. at 461. In making this ruling, we held that "absent a prior assignment of the cause of action, once an injured party has released the tortfeasor from all liability, or has satisfied the underlying judgment, no such action may be maintained." Id. at 459.
We find that our decision in Cope does not apply in the instant case. Cope did not involve an assignment, much less a settlement agreement containing both a simultaneous assignment and release. In fact, we specifically noted in our decision in Cope that the insured never assigned his claim against the insurer to the injured party. Id. at 459 n. 1. Because Cope did not involve any assignment of an insured's claim against an insurer, Cope cannot directly answer the instant certified question regarding the effect of a settlement agreement between two parties that explicitly contains both an assignment of causes of action against a third party insurer and an immediate release of the insured on the same causes of action.
It seems that our use of the term "prior" in our decision in Cope may have been misunderstood to mean that an assignment of a claim cannot occur simultaneously with a release or satisfaction. Because an injured party's claim is derivative of the insured's claim against its insurer, our decision in Cope was meant to demonstrate that an injured party cannot maintain a claim against an insurer without an assignment from the insured if the injured party has released the insured from liability or if the injured party's judgment against the insured has been satisfied. Thus, an assignment of a claim against the insurer cannot occur after the release or satisfaction of the insured's claim because once the breach of duty is released or satisfied, the elements of the cause of action no longer exist. However, there is nothing in the language of the Cope decision that prohibits a simultaneous assignment of a claim with a release or satisfaction of the judgment.
Furthermore, the parties to the settlement agreement, Holman and Toomey and IMC, clearly intended to assign IMC's claims against Wachovia to Holman and Toomey. The parties did not intend to release Wachovia from liability. The appellate courts in Florida have recognized the "deeply rooted principle of Florida law that the intent of the parties controls interpretations of their releases." Rosen v. Fla. Ins. Guar. Ass'n,
In the same paragraph where Holman and Toomey released IMC from its liability, *987 they emphasized that "nothing contained herein shall operate to release or waive any claims the Releasors might have or herein acquire against the insurance companies specified in Sections 3(d) and (e) below." Thus, we find that the intent of the parties to the settlement agreement, Holman and Toomey and IMC, was not to release Wachovia from liability. Wachovia should not be allowed to escape liability by relying on a document executed by others when those parties did not intend to release Wachovia from liability.
Accordingly, we hold that a settlement agreement between two parties that explicitly contains both an assignment of causes of action against a third party (from IMC to Holman and Toomey) and an immediate release (by Holman and Toomey of IMC) allows Holman and Toomey to bring the assigned causes of action against Wachovia.
ISSUE II: Assignability of a Claim for Breach of Fiduciary Duty
The Eleventh Circuit's second certified question asks whether a claim for breach of fiduciary duty against an insurance broker may be assigned. Wachovia contends that this Court's recent decision in Cowan Liebowitz & Latman, P.C. v. Kaplan,
Wachovia contends that in determining whether the cause of action is assignable, it is the type of duty allegedly breached that has to be identified, not the parties. On the other hand, Holman and Toomey contend that only identifying the duty sets out a bright line rule that all breaches of fiduciary duty are non-assignable. Holman and Toomey argue that instead the relationship between the parties should be examined to determine whether the cause of action is assignable. After reviewing comparable cases, we find that both the duty and the relationship must be examined to determine whether the cause of action is assignable. In the instant case, both the examination of the relationship between the parties and the duty breached lead to the conclusion that the cause of action against Wachovia is assignable.
The relationship between IMC and Wachovia was that of an insurance broker and insured. Therefore, Wachovia had the duty to inform and explain the coverage it was providing to IMC and to advise IMC of the changes Wachovia was making to IMC's insurance policy. This Court analyzed the nature of a similar type of relationship in Forgione. We compared the relationship between a prospective insured and an insurance agent to that of an attorney and client. We explained in dicta that an attorney-client relationship is a very personal and confidential relationship because of the constraints placed on communication of the client's information to others. On the other hand, we found that "the relationship between a prospective insured and an insurance agent is substantially different" because "[t]he law does not impose similar constraints on communications between an insurance agent and an insured" as it does on communications between an attorney and a client.
Second, an assessment of the duty breached by Wachovia also weighs in favor of assignability. In Cowan, this Court made a similar assessment concerning the duty breached in regard to the legal services an attorney provided to determine whether a legal malpractice claim could be assigned to a third party. In Cowan, we receded from the dicta in Forgione prohibiting the assignment of all legal malpractice claims.
In Forgione, the district court certified the question of whether a claim for negligence by an insured against an insurance agent for failure to obtain proper insurance coverage could be assigned to a third party. In examining this question, we distinguished particular claims that could be assigned and those that were considered personal. We held that causes of action based on a contract or a statute could be assigned. Forgione,
In the district court, the jury found Wachovia to have violated its fiduciary duty to IMC in one of several ways.[3] In examining *989 the particular ways in which Wachovia breached its duty to IMC, the breach of fiduciary duty claim appears to actually be a "bad faith" claim, which Florida courts have held to be assignable. As explained by this Court in Cope, "[t]he essence of a `bad faith' insurance suit (whether it is brought by the insured or by the injured party standing in his place), is that the insurer breached its duty to its insured by failing to properly or promptly defend the claim ... all of which results in the insured being exposed to an excess judgment." Cope,
Because the insurance broker-insured relationship between IMC and Wachovia was not a confidential relationship, and because the breach of duty claim against Wachovia was essentially a bad faith claim, the cause of action in the instant case is assignable by IMC to Holman and Toomey. Accordingly, for purposes of the instant case, we answer the second certified questioncan a claim for breach of fiduciary duty against an insurance broker be assignedin the affirmative.
ISSUE III. Negligence Claims Against an Insurance Broker
We also address one of the issues raised on cross-appeal. As more fully explained, we conclude that the jury in this case should have been allowed to consider Holman and Toomey's negligence claim, a claim that is assignable under Florida law. Because the Eleventh Circuit's decision has provided us with broad latitude to address the determinative, substantive issues of Florida law, our conclusion regarding a breach of fiduciary duty claim does not end our analysis. See Toomey,
After reviewing the record, it is clear that the federal district court dismissed the negligence claim as a matter of Florida law. The district court ruled that under Moss v. Appel,
Furthermore, under Florida law, negligence claims against an insurance broker are assignable. See, e.g., Forgione,
CONCLUSION
In answering the first certified question, we hold that the settlement agreement properly assigned IMC's cause of action against Wachovia to Holman and Toomey because the assignment of the causes of action against Wachovia was done simultaneously with the release of IMC from all liability. However, we also conclude that, under Florida law, the jury in this case should have been allowed to consider Holman and Toomey's assignable negligence claim. Lastly, we answer the second certified question in the affirmative. We find *991 that a claim for a breach of fiduciary duty against Wachovia is comparable to a bad faith claim and it thus constitutes an assignable claim. We return this case to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit with these answers to the certified questions.
It is so ordered.
QUINCE, C.J., and ANSTEAD and PARIENTE, JJ., concur.
ANSTEAD, J., specially concurs with an opinion.
LEWIS and Bell, JJ., concur in part and dissent in part with an opinion.
CANTERO, Senior Justice, concurs in part and dissents in part.
WELLS, J., recused.
ANSTEAD, J., specially concurring.
I concur in the majority opinion in all respects, except that I concur in conclusion only in the majority's holding that the breach of fiduciary duty claim is assignable.
LEWIS, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part.
I write separately because, in my view, our decision in Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York v. Cope,
Nevertheless, since the majority has overlooked Cope II and improperly characterized the prior-assignment rule as immaterial dicta, I also express my position with regard to issues II and III. As further explained in my analysis, IMC's fiduciary-duty claim is assignable based on our case-by-case relationship-duty analysis because this claim involves an insured-insurance broker relationship, and the duties allegedly breached involve the negligent procurement of insurance coverage, which is an assignable cause of action under Florida law. Consequently, I agree in principle with the majority concerning issue II, but I do not agree that a relationship involving an insured and an insurance brokeras opposed to an insured and an insureris akin to a bad-faith claim. Finally, with regard to issue III, I agree with the majority that Moss v. Appel,
Accordingly, I:(A) dissent with regard to issue I; (B) concur in the result only with regard to issue II; and (C) fully concur in the majority's position with regard to issue III.
I. BACKGROUND
This case involves a 2001 settlement agreement between IMC (the former employer) and Holman and Toomey (the former employees). The majority interprets the agreement as an attempt to simultaneously release IMC from all liability with regard to Holman and Toomey's employment-contract claims and to assign to Holman and Toomey all potential causes of *992 action IMC may have had against its insurers "or others" concerning coverage under an employment-practices-liability insurance policy. This policy would have provided insurance coverage for these released employment-contract claims, but such coverage was not obtained due to the alleged failure of Wachovia to fulfill IMC's coverage request. The release portion of the settlement agreement provided as follows:
The Releasors [i.e., Holman and Toomey], for so long as this Settlement Agreement and Release is not rescinded pursuant to Section 6 below, do hereby release, acquit, and forever discharge the Releasees [i.e., IMC] from and against any and all claims, demands, proceedings, actions, causes of action, damages, debts, sums of money, costs, attorneys' fees, obligations, contracts, agreements, and liabilities of whatsoever nature, whether known or unknown, suspected or unsuspected, both at law and at equity, and whether based on contract, tort, fraud, intentional act or violation of any securities or other law, having already resulted or to result in any time in the future; provided, however, that nothing contained herein shall operate to release or waive any claims the Releasors [i.e., Holman and Toomey] might have or herein acquire against insurance companies specified in Sections 3(d) and (e) below, Wachovia Davis Baldwin, or any partner, shareholder, associate, employee, servant, agent or broker of Chubb/Federal Insurance Company or Wachovia Davis Baldwin for claims which arise out of the claims referenced in Sections 3(d)-(e) below, including, but not limited to, any claims which may be made directly or indirectly to satisfy the $1.8 million judgment awarded by the Court in the Litigation, and further provided that nothing contained herein shall operate to release any obligations of the parties to this Agreement arising under this Agreement.
The alleged assignment portion of the settlement agreement provided for future documents as follows:
The Plaintiffs [i.e., Holman and Toomey] contend that their claims for improper termination of their employment agreements are or should have been covered under the terms of [the employment-practices-liability insurance policy]. IMC will promptly execute the necessary documents to assign to Plaintiffs, without recourse and without representations or warranties whatsoever, all its rights, including its choses in action, which rights IMC may have under or because of the existence of that policy against Chubb/Federal Insurance Company or others to secure indemnification sufficient to satisfy the $1.8 million judgment awarded Plaintiffs by the Court in the Litigation[.]
(Emphasis supplied.)
After Holman and Toomey filed an action based on the assigned claims against Wachovia in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida, and cross-appeals to the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, the federal appellate court certified two dispositive questions of Florida law to this Court concerning: (1) the effect of a settlement agreement that contains both an assignment of claims and a release from liability; and (2) the assignability vel non of a fiduciary-duty claim. See Toomey v. Wachovia Ins. Servs., Inc.,
With regard to the first certified question, the majority incorrectly holds that the "prior-assignment" language appearing in Cope II constitutes dicta as applied to cases involving an attempted simultaneous release from liability and an assignment of claims:
*993 It seems that our use of the term "prior" in our decision in Cope [II] may have been misunderstood to mean that an assignment of a claim cannot occur simultaneously with a release or satisfaction.... However, there is nothing in the language of the Cope [II] decision that prohibits a simultaneous assignment of a claim with a release or satisfaction of the judgment.
Majority op. at 986 (emphasis supplied). However, the majority also correctlyalthough incompletelyobserves:
[O]ur decision in Cope [II] was meant to demonstrate that an injured party cannot maintain a claim against an insurer without an assignment from the insured if the injured party has released the insured from liability.... Thus, an assignment of a claim against the insurer cannot occur after the release ... because once the breach of duty is released..., the elements of the cause of action no longer exist.
Majority op. at 986 (emphasis supplied). The majority's mixed message leaves Florida law concerning Cope II uncertain at best (especially given that the release and assignment involved here were not executed simultaneously).
II. ANALYSIS
A. The Prior-Assignment Rule of Cope II and Kelly
The majority's attempted marginalization of Cope II's prior-assignment rule ignores the impetus for our decision in that case and further ignores the conflicting district-court opinions that prompted this Court's action in Cope II. The express-and-direct conflict of decisions that preceded Cope II clearly demonstrates that this Court addressed and resolved a clear rule of law with regard to the order in which parties must execute releases and assignments if they intend to ensure the effective transfer of derivative causes of action. If we were writing on a clean slate, I would whole heartedly disagree with the holding of Cope II because of its tendency to thwart the intent of the parties and its contradiction of general principles of contract law. However, a clear reading of the conflicting decisions resolved in Cope II demonstrates that we undoubtedly articulated and adopted the prior-assignment rule as the law of Florida, and to implicitly, rather than explicitly, address this central aspect of the decision will only create undue confusion in our jurisprudence.
A review of the conflict decisions resolved in Cope IIKelly v. Williams,
[I]t is also stipulated and agreed that the payment of the Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000) to Plaintiff as agreed herein, and the agreement to satisfy judgment contained herein and the agreement not to execute as contained herein, will not operate to prevent or hinder [the insured] and/or Plaintiff *994 from filing a legal action against [the insurer] for alleged bad-faith.
Id. at 904 (emphasis supplied).
Despite this apparent simultaneous execution of a release and a reservation of rights, the Fifth District held that the injured claimant never received a viable bad-faith claim. The simultaneous release eliminated the underlying cause of action. The district court acknowledged that its construction of the settlement agreement frustrated the stated intent of the parties (i.e., to settle the claim against the insured in exchange for a simultaneous reservation of rights against the insurer), but stated that this construction was the only sound legal disposition given the wholly derivative nature of a third-party bad-faith claim:
Under the arrangement stipulated to by the parties in this case, the insured could not be exposed to an excess judgment under any circumstances. If one was obtained, the insured was entitled to a complete satisfaction of it, as soon as the judgment became final or enforceable. The stipulation completely safeguarded the insured, and therefore it completely discharged the insurer's duty to its insured.
Id. at 904 (emphasis supplied). "Kelly's attempted reservation of his rights against the insurer w[as] not effective, since in the body of the stipulation, the baby was thrown out with the bath water." Id. at 905. Applying the principle of Kelly to the instant case, IMC cannot be exposed to a judgment under any circumstances. "The stipulation completely safeguarded the insured, and therefore it completely discharged the insurer's duty to its insured."
In 1984, the Second District decided Cope I in which it disagreed with Kelly and articulated its own approach to this issue. In Cope I, the parties executed a settlement agreement through which they released and intended to release only the insured and the primary insurer (Hartford), not an additional insurer (Fidelity). See
an injured party/judgment creditor may maintain suit directly against a tortfeasor's liability insurer for judgment in excess of the policy limits based upon bad faith of the insurer in the conduct or the handling of the original claim. Hence, it is a separate and distinct cause of action.
Cope I,
*995 Therefore, in Cope II, this Court encountered two opposing conceptions of derivative actions: (i) a concurrent settlement with and release of an insured did not preclude a derivative action against the insurer-wrongdoer (Cope I), versus (ii) a settlement with and release of an insured precluded a derivative action against the insurer-wrongdoer when accomplished in the same document (Kelly). This Court specifically rejected the Second District's holding in Cope I, which clearly would have permitted the simultaneous exchange of a release and an assignment based upon the intent of the parties and, instead, held that when causes of action are wholly derivative of the rights of the insured, the prior-assignment rule of Kelly supplies the only approach to preserve the cause of action. See Cope II,
Our rule and rationale in Cope II require that the assignment definitively precede the release regardless of the true intent of the parties. See
IMC will promptly execute the necessary documents to assign to Plaintiffs, without recourse and without representations or warranties whatsoever, all its rights, including its choses in action, which rights IMC may have under or because of the existence of that policy against Chubb/Federal Insurance Company or others to secure indemnification sufficient to satisfy the $1.8 million judgment awarded Plaintiffs by the Court in the Litigation[.]
(Emphasis supplied.) In clear, unambiguous terms, this contractual language provides that any assignment would occur subsequent to the execution of the settlement agreement through the use of separate "necessary documents." (Emphasis supplied.) Reference to the actual documents involved in this case confirms this *996 interpretation. Further, the majority itself explains the pertinent timeline: "The settlement agreement in question was entered into in April 2001. Subsequently, in August 2001, Holman and Toomey and IMC executed the assignment pursuant to the provisions of the settlement agreement." Majority at 985 (emphasis supplied). Even from the facts presented in the majority opinion, it is apparent that the settlement agreement affected a release, which contemplated a future assignment of claims against Wachovia and "others," but which did NOT actually contain the assignment. According to the majority, the separate assignment was not executed until four months later. Under Cope II, which adopted the Kelly approach, it is of no legal significance that a previously executed release contemplated a future assignment or a reservation of rights, which the parties subsequently documented: "[A]bsent a prior assignment of the cause of action, once an injured party has released the tortfeasor from all liability... no such action may be maintained." Cope II,
It clearly appears that IMC and Holman and Toomey executed their "Settlement Agreement and Release" on March 30, 2001, and executed a separate assignment agreement with the approval of the United States District Court for the District of Maryland on August, 1, 2001. The actual assignment at issue in this case occurred approximately four months after the release.[6] This subsequent assignment clearly violates the prior-assignment rule of Cope II, which renders the purported exchange null and void. See
The formalistic prior-assignment rule of Cope II remains the law in Florida no matter how much I disagree with it. Cf. Chames v. DeMayo,
In my opinion, when Cope II was decided, it represented a poorly reasoned departure from longstanding precedent with regard to contract interpretation as well as *997 prior decisions from this Court with regard to the rights of third parties to file actions against insurers. For example, it had been established in Florida that contracts are interpreted according to the mutual intent of the parties. See, e.g., Scotch Mfg. Co. v. Carr,
Moreover, Holman and Toomey here, and the petitioner in Cope II, should have been permitted to pursue their claims against the insurance companies in their respective matters. Prior precedent had established that an assignment was not legally required because of the right of the injured claimant to bring these actions as a real party in interest. For example, in Shingleton v. Bussey,
While this rule has the obvious tendency to frustrate the intent of the parties to many settlement agreements, it at least had the benefit of being relatively clearto be effective, an assignment of rights with regard to a derivative claim must precede a release of the assignor (assignment → release = permissible; release → assignment = impermissible). *998 Conversely, the attempt of the majority to distinguish Cope II by identifying the central portion of its holding as dictaand its non-factual claim that this case involves a simultaneous exchange of a release and an assignment of claimswill leave practitioners and judges uncertain of Florida law. Cope II, despite all its shortcomings, should control the outcome of this case. The assignment, which occurred on August 1, 2001, did not precede Holman and Toomey's release of IMC, which had previously occurred on March 31, 2001. Therefore, Holman and Toomey did not receive any viable derivative causes of action against Wachovia.
For these reasons, I dissent with regard to issue I. However, because the majority has seen fit to address issues II and III, I will also express my position on these matters.
B. The Assignability of the Fiduciary-Duty Claim
I agree with the majority that, in Florida, the proper test for determining whether a given fiduciary-duty[7] claim is assignable or wholly personal involves a case-by-case inquiry with regard to the relationship and duties between the assignor-principal and the alleged tortfeasor-agent. See majority op. at 987-89. However, I disagree that the duty involved in this case is similar to that owed by an insurer to an insured in a bad-faith action, as this case does not involve an insurer. Rather, here, Wachovia indisputably acted as an insurance broker. See Toomey,
The essence of a "bad faith" insurance suit (whether it is brought by the insured [i.e., first-party] or by the injured party standing in his place [i.e., third-party]), is that the insurer breached its duty to its insured by failing to properly or promptly defend the claim (which may encompass its failure to make a good faith offer of settlement within the policy limits)all of which results in the insured being exposed to an excess judgment.
In contrast to the majority, I would analyze the duty prong of our case-by-case assignability test by recognizing that the allegations falling under Holman and Toomey's assigned fiduciary-duty cause of action are akin to negligent-procurement claims, not bad-faith claims. For example, the majority states:
Holman and Toomey asserted that Wachovia had breached its duty to IMC by (1) failing to adequately explain to IMC that the Employment Practices Liability Insurance Policy covered claims alleging the breach of a written employment contract as well as defense costs for such claims; (2) failing to obtain proper approval from IMC to add the endorsement excluding coverage for breach of written employment contract claims to the Policy; (3) failing to advise IMC about the impact of the proposed Endorsement on IMC's risk exposure and existing employment relationships; (4) failing to ask IMC about the existence of any written employment contracts between IMC and any of its employees; (5) failing to ask IMC about existing or pending claims or litigation alleging the breach of a written employment contract; (6) failing to seek or offer replacement coverage or other alternatives by which IMC could preserve coverage for breach of written employment contract claims; (7) failing to explain to IMC that the proposed Endorsement would preserve defense costs for breach of written employment contract claims; (8) failing to protect IMC from reasonably anticipated liability; or (9) engaging in a conspiracy to eliminate IMC's insurance coverage for breach of written employment contract claims.
Majority op. at 988 n. 3. With the possible exception of claim (9), each of these claims relates to Wachovia's alleged negligent failure to obtain requested insurance coverage for the breach of written employment contracts. Further, such claims are assignable in Florida. See, e.g., Forgione v. Dennis Pirtle Agency,
Accordingly, I would modify the majority's holding with regard to issue II as follows:
Because the insurance broker-insured relationship between IMC and Wachovia was not a confidential relationship, and because the [fiduciary-]duty claim against Wachovia was essentially a [negligent-procurement] claim, the cause of action ... is assignable by IMC to Holman and Toomey.
Majority op. at 989 (emphasis supplied). For this reason, I concur in the result only with regard to the majority's analysis of issue II.
C. Pleading Negligent Procurement and Breach of Fiduciary Duty in the Alternative
I fully concur with the majority with regard to its analysis of issue III, as Moss v. Appel,
[I]nsurance brokers will often have both a fiduciary duty to their insured-principals *1000 and a common-law duty to properly procure requested insurance coverage. As a result, negligence and breach of fiduciary duty [claims] can be pled in the alternative.
Majority op. at 990 (citations omitted).
III. CONCLUSION
I would answer the first certified question (i.e., issue I) by holding that the central aspect of our decision in Cope II was the prior-assignment requirement: to be effective, an assignment of rights with regard to an underlying derivative claim must precede a release of the assignor. In this case, the assignment occurred approximately four months after the release (August 1, 2001 versus March 31, 2001). Therefore, Cope II should control, and Holman and Toomey have not received any viable derivative causes of action from IMC. If the majority intends to recede from Cope II, I suggest that they should do so transparently to avoid confusing the courts and practitioners of Florida for the next decade. Further, if the intent of the contracting parties is to control in these situations, reformation principles (which Cope II and Kelly explicitly abjured) must apply to settlement agreements such as the one involved in this case. Nonetheless, as our precedent stands, the mechanistic prior-assignment rule of Cope II contravenes these general principles of contract law. Despite the admitted deficiencies of Cope II, stare decisis prohibits unilateral retreat from that decisionit is simply the law of Florida. Therefore, I dissent with regard to issue I.
However, since the majority does not view Cope II as dispositive or even applicable, I agree for the sake of this decision that IMC could assign its fiduciary-duty claim to Holman and Toomey because it is analogous to a negligent-procurement cause of action. For similar reasons, I agree that Holman and Toomey were entitled to plead a standard negligent-procurement claim in the alternative (although they would only be entitled to one recovery).
BELL, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I agree with the majority that this Court's opinion in Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York v. Cope,
NOTES
Notes
[1] In Moss, the insureds brought suit against their insurance brokers, raising a breach of fiduciary duty claim and a negligence claim. Moss,
First, there was no error involving the negligence claim. Second, now that we know that there was a fiduciary relationship as a matter of law, there is no reason for a jury to consider the negligence claim. If the jury finds that the fiduciary duty was breached, there will be no reason for it to reach the negligence claim because the damages in this case would be the same. If the jury finds that the defendants did not breach a fiduciary duty, which is higher than the duty in a negligence case, it could not consistently find negligence. We therefore limit the new trial to breach of fiduciary duty.
Id. at 201-02.
[2] The relevant part of the agreement between Holman and Toomey and IMC reads as follows:
The Releasors, for so long as this Settlement Agreement and Release is not rescinded pursuant to Section 6 below, do hereby release, acquit and forever discharge the Releasees from and against any and all claims, demands, proceedings, actions, causes of action, damages, debts, sums of money, costs, attorneys' fees, obligations, contracts, agreements, and liabilities of whatsoever nature, whether known or unknown, suspected or unsuspected, both at law and in equity, and whether based on contract, tort, fraud, intentional act or violation of any securities or other law, having already resulted or to result at any time in the future; provided, however, that nothing contained herein shall operate to release or waive any claims the Releasors might have or herein acquire against the insurance companies specified in Sections 3(d) and (e) below, Wachovia Davis Baldwin, or any partner, shareholder, associate, employee, servant, agent or broker of Chubb/Federal Insurance Company or Wachovia Davis Baldwin for claims which arise out of the claims referenced in Sections 3(d)-(e) below, including, but not limited to, any claims which may be made directly or indirectly to satisfy the $1.8 million judgment awarded by the Court in the Litigation, and further provided that nothing contained herein shall operate to release any obligations of the parties to this Agreement arising under this Agreement.
[3] Holman and Toomey asserted that Wachovia had breached its duty to IMC by (1) failing to adequately explain to IMC that the Employment Practices Liability Insurance Policy covered claims alleging the breach of a written employment contract as well as defense costs for such claims; (2) failing to obtain proper approval from IMC to add the endorsement excluding coverage for breach of written employment contract claims to the Policy; (3) failing to advise IMC about the impact of the proposed Endorsement on IMC's risk exposure and existing employment relationships; (4) failing to ask IMC about the existence of any written employment contracts between IMC and any of its employees; (5) failing to ask IMC about existing or pending claims or litigation alleging the breach of a written employment contract; (6) failing to seek or offer replacement coverage or other alternatives by which IMC could preserve coverage for breach of written employment contract claims; (7) failing to explain to IMC that the proposed Endorsement would preserve defense costs for breach of written employment contract claims; (8) failing to protect IMC from reasonably anticipated liability; or (9) engaging in a conspiracy to eliminate IMC's insurance coverage for breach of written employment contract claims.
[4] The negligent failure to procure requested insurance coverage is a valid claim in Florida. See Romo v. Amedex Ins. Co.,
[5] The Eleventh Circuit noted that it could not decide this issue without the answers to the certified questions. Toomey,
[6] Paragraph 2(h) of the settlement agreement states that "the Releases provided above shall be effective immediately [i.e., effective on March 30, 2001]." (Emphasis supplied.)
[7] Black's Law Dictionary defines "fiduciary relationship" as follows:
A relationship in which one person is under a duty to act for the benefit of another on matters within the scope of the relationship. Fiduciary relationshipssuch as ... principal-agent... require an unusually high degree of care. Fiduciary relationships usu[ally] arise in one of four situations: (1) when one person places trust in the faithful integrity of another, who as a result gains superiority or influence over the first, (2) when one person assumes control and responsibility over another, (3) when one person has a duty to act for or give advice to another on matters falling within the scope of the relationship, or (4) when there is a specific relationship that has traditionally been recognized as involving fiduciary duties, as with a lawyer and a client or a stockbroker and a customer.
Black's Law Dictionary 1315 (8th ed.2004) (emphasis supplied); see also Randolph v. Mitchell,
