AAS-DMP MANAGEMENT, LP LIQUIDATING TRUST v. Acordia Northwest, Inc.
This text of 63 P.3d 860 (AAS-DMP MANAGEMENT, LP LIQUIDATING TRUST v. Acordia Northwest, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
AAS-DMP MANAGEMENT, L.P. LIQUIDATING TRUST, a Washington liquidating trust, Appellant,
v.
ACORDIA NORTHWEST, INC., a Washington corporation, Respondent.
Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.
*862 Karien L. Balluff, Young Denormandie & Oscarsson, Seattle, WA, for Appellant.
Stephen G. Skinner, Pamela M. Andrews, Johnson Christie Andrews & Skinner, Seattle, WA, for Respondent.
*861 BAKER, J.
Acordia acted as AAS-DMP's exclusive maritime insurance broker. The particular nature of this relationship created an enhanced duty of care on the part of Acordia. After a boat fire, AAS-DMP asked Acordia if there was a time limit for submitting claims to the underwriter. Acordia breached its duty by failing to properly advise AAS-DMP about a clause limiting suits. Because this breach may have proximately caused AAS-DMP to lose its right to sue the underwriters for noncoverage of the loss, we reverse the trial court's summary judgment for Acordia.
I
In the mid-1990s, All Alaskan Seafoods, Inc. (AAS) merged with Dalemoproduct (DMP), creating one of the largest crabbing entities in the world. The new company, AAS-DMP, operated in both Russian and American waters.
Peter Evich, an insurance broker with Acordia, began placing insurance for AAS in the early 1980s. After the merger, he acted as AAS-DMP's exclusive insurance broker. Because of the nature and size of AAS's business, Evich spoke nearly every day with AAS-DMP about coverage issues.
In early 1996, Evich procured a policy for AAS-DMP which, among other coverages, insured anticipated profits from AAS-DMP's crab processing operations. In addition to his commission, Evich received a fee from the underwriters to service the policy.[1]
Acordia did not provide AAS-DMP with a copy of the policy, but did prepare and give to AAS-DMP an 80-page policy summary. The summary referenced a two-year "suit or action" clause which required that suits or actions on claims must be brought within two years from the date of the underlying loss.[2] The summary also contained a provision for resolving lost profit claims by requiring the underwriter to accept a loss valuation performed by a mutually selected certified public accountant.
In July 1996, a fire damaged AAS-DMP's crab processor. The ship was inoperable for a month while the damage was repaired. AAS-DMP informed Evich of the loss, but *863 did not immediately submit a claim for lost profits.
In February 1998, AAS-DMP presented a lost profits claim to Acordia, but with instructions to wait for further instructions before submitting the claim to the underwriter. At a meeting held shortly afterwards, an AAS-DMP employee asked Evich if there were any deadlines or time limits within which it had to submit its lost profits claim. Evich said there was no time limit.[3]
In September 1999, more than two years after the loss, AAS-DMP asked Evich to formally submit its lost profits claim to the underwriters. The underwriters advised that they anticipated denying the claim because AAS-DMP had not filed the claim within two years. After negotiating with the underwriters, AAS-DMP settled its claim for a fraction of its original loss estimate.
AAS-DMP then sued Acordia, claiming that Acordia breached its duty of care by failing to inform it of the two-year limit on suits contained in the policy. Both AAS-DMP and Acordia brought summary judgment motions.
The court granted Acordia's motion, and AAS-DMP appeals.
II
When reviewing an order granting summary judgment, an appellate court engages in the same inquiry as the trial court.[4] This court will affirm an order granting summary judgment if there are no genuine issues of material fact, and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.[5]
Generally, an insurance agent represents the insurer, while an insurance broker represents an insured.[6] Because a broker is not employed by the insurer, his or her breach will not support an action for reformation. Rather, when a broker's negligence leads to inadequate coverage, he or she is liable for money damages to the insured for the resulting loss.[7]
In a negligence action, determining whether a defendant owes a legal duty is initially a question of law for the court.[8] Generally, an insurance agent or broker assumes only those duties normally found in any agency relationship. Those duties include the obligation to exercise good faith and carry out instructions.[9]
But when an insurance buyer and his agent or broker have a special relationship, courts have declared that the broker or agent owes an enhanced duty of care. This enhanced duty may include the obligation to render advice to the principal.[10] This enhanced duty has been termed a fiduciary duty. We have recognized two situations giving rise to a fiduciary duty of care in this context. First, a duty may arise when "an agent holds himself out as an insurance specialist and receives compensation for consultation and advice apart from the premiums paid by the insured."[11] Second, a special relationship may be shown by a longstanding relationship, and some type of interaction on the question of coverage, coupled with the *864 insured's reliance on the expertise of the insurance agent, to the insured's detriment.[12]
A number of facts support the conclusion that Acordia had a special relationship with AAS-DMP. At the time of the loss, Evich had been AAS's (and later AAS-DMP's) broker for between 10 and 15 years. Evich sold Maritime insurance, which is a specialized and complex area of insurance. Evich brokered and managed all of AAS-DMP's policies. Evich and AAS-DMP spoke almost daily about insurance and insurance risk matters. Evich traveled to London to negotiate the policy with an underwriting syndicate.
We hold that the nature of the relationship between AAS-DMP and its broker established an affirmative duty for the broker to competently advise the insured. More specifically, we hold that if a broker gives advice, he must provide carefully considered and responsive advice.[13] We agree with other jurisdictions that have considered the issue and conclude that "if an insurance broker has a duty to volunteer advice to a client, he has a duty to render correct advice."[14]
Generally, when one holds oneself out as an expert having skill and knowledge in a particular area, they may be held liable if the information given is inaccurate and the second party justifiably relies upon the information.[15] AAS-DMP asked Evich if there were any deadlines in the policy for filing a lost profit claim. Although Evich's response that there was no time limit for submitting a claim was technically correct, he did not explain that the policy contained a two-year restriction on bringing a lawsuit. A prolonged delay in submitting a proof of loss might well implicate that restriction.
Evich and Acordia claim that the two-year suit restriction was irrelevant because it was unenforceable. The record before us does not permit a reasoned resolution of that question. Therefore, summary judgment is not appropriate on whether the two-year suit restriction was enforceable.[16]
Acordia further argues that the two-year suit limitation was irrelevant because the policy contained a provision requiring the parties to submit lost profits claims to a form of mandatory arbitration.
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63 P.3d 860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aas-dmp-management-lp-liquidating-trust-v-acordia-northwest-inc-washctapp-2003.