Allen v. Montalvan

201 So. 3d 705, 2016 Fla. App. LEXIS 13214
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedAugust 31, 2016
DocketNo. 4D15-675
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 201 So. 3d 705 (Allen v. Montalvan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Montalvan, 201 So. 3d 705, 2016 Fla. App. LEXIS 13214 (Fla. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

ON MOTIONS FOR REHEARING AND CLARIFICATION

FORST, J.

We deny the Motion for Rehearing filed by Appellees Debusk and Montalvan, and the Motion for Rehearing filed by Appellee Progressive Insurance Company. However, we grant the respective Motions for Clarification, withdraw our previously issued opinion dated June 22, 2016, and replace it with the following:

Appellants Latasha Fulton Allen (“the mother”) and Travis Allen (“the father”), on behalf of minors, T.A.,. T.S., and S.K. (collectively “the children”), appeal the trial court’s order enforcing a settlement agreement and dismissing their suit against appellees Oscar Montalvan and Claudia Debusk (Montalvan’s former wife). Because we agree that the settlement agreement was invalid as to the claims of the children, we reverse the trial court’s order and remand for further proceedings.

[707]*707BACKGROUND

The children were three of six passengers in an automobile that was involved in an accident with the appellees. The driver of the automobile, the grandmother of two of the children and the mother of the third, was killed in the crash. The other passengers, including the mother and another minor, suffered varying degrees of injuries.

Within two days of the accident,' the mother entered into an agreement with Miller & Jacobs, P.A., to represent herself and her family members, including the children, injured in the accident. As part of the representation agreement, the mother granted Miller & Jacobs the aur thority to “prosecute any suits or actions ... and to settle, compromise, dismiss, or discontinue same.”

Miller & Jacobs sent a letter to the appellees’ insurance carrier, Progressive (also an appellee in this action), seeking coverage information. The appellees’ coverage had limits of $25,000 per person and $50,000 per incident. A Progressive employee spoke with Jacobs to discuss possible claims against the appellees.

The details of the conversation between Progressive and Miller & Jacobs are disputed. The Progressive employee claims she told Jacobs that Progressive would be “globally tendering our policy limits to extinguish all bodily injury claims.” She recounted that Jacobs requested the payment to be made as two checks, for $25,000 each, made payable to Miller & Jacobs’s' trust account. One check would be to settle the wrongful death claim of the grandmother’s estate, while the remaining $25,000 was to settle the claims of the five surviving passengers. The Progressive employee stated that, how Miller & Jacobs chose to divide the monies between these remaining claimants was left to the law firm’s discretion. Progressive sent release forms to be signed, by the mother on behalf of the grandmother’s estate, herself, and the four minors. Because of the uncertainty of how the funds were going to be allocated, Progressive left the amounts in each release blank for the lawyers to fill in. , The Progressive employee testified that she did not even contemplate that the money would be dispersed in such a manner that certain claimants would not receive any funds.

Jacobs’s recollection of the conversation is different. He testified that' Progressive’s. employee offered to tender the full policy limit. Jacobs and the employee did not “go into specifics, as far as dollar amounts per claim. We didn’t go into specifics about whose claims we were settling. She just said, I’m globally tendering the rest of the $25,000, and I’m going to send you blank releases. And I said okay.” Jacobs recalled that he told the Progressive representative to make, the checks payable to his firm’s trust account. He did not recall if he spoke with the employee about the releases, as he sometimes settled cases without a release. He further, stated that while he considered the $25,000 and release naming the deceased to be a settlement of the wrongful death claim, he did not consider tljie second $25,000 and releases for the other parties to be a settlement, but rather considered it an “insurance tender.” Miller echoed this testimony, stating that he did not consider the tender to be a resolution of the claims, but was merely a tender of the policy limits.

Progressive sent Miller & Jacobs a letter to memorialize the aforementioned discussion. The letter stated:

Based on the information we have obtained with regard to this loss we are globally tendering our insured’s [sic] $50,000 bodily injury policy limits to settle the following claims: [listing all six of [708]*708the parties’ names, including the deceased driver]. This settlement is being made in exchange for a Full and Final Release of our insured’s- [sic], Claudia Montalvan and Oscar Montalvan.”

Attached to the lettér were two checks for $25,000 each, payable to the Miller <& Jacobs Trust Account, as well as six releases, each naming one of the occupants of the car. The release form naming the deceased stated consideration in the amount of $25,000. The other five releases left the consideration amounts blank. Each release was entitled “Bodily Injury Release” and stated the signatory/party:

hereby for myself, and for my heirs[,] executors, administrators, successors and assigns release and forever discharge Claudia Montalvan and Oscar Montalvan' from any and all- claims, actions, causes of action, • demands, damages, costs, and any compensation whatsoever, including any claims for loss of consortium, which the undersigned now has/have or which may hereafter accrue on account of or in any way arising out of an accident which occurred on or about August 12, 2009, at or near Andrews Ave & N.E. 56 Street, Oakland Park, Broward County, Florida.

The checks were deposited into the law firm’s trust account on August 26, 2009, and payments fi*om those funds were made to the mother by sometime in 2011. The mother arid father testified that these funds were used for household éxpenses, including furniture, clothés, and food for the children.

Roughly two years later, in August 2011, Miller & Jacobs sent the completed releases back to Progressive, with each release signed by the mother and a witness. Each release was accompanied by a letter, stating that it was a “release of all claims with regard to the settlement of the above-referenced ' claim.” The blank consideration amounts were now filled in, with the mother’s claim stating it was released for $25,000, while all the minors’ claims showed consideration in the amount of $0. Everyone involved, including Miller, Jacobs, and the mother, claimed to have no knowledge as to who filled in these blanks, although the figures were apparently added while the documents were in Miller & Jacobs’s control. In his deposition, Miller stated that his representation of the plaintiffs “was completed” in August 2011, after the releases had been returned.

Approximately two weeks after the return of the releases, the mother, now represented by new attorneys, filed a complaint that,' after multiple amendments, alleged a claim for damages against the appellees arising from the auto accident. The appellees answered the complaint and raised a number of affirmative defenses, including that the claims were barred by settlement or accord and satisfaction arising from the prior release, as well as contributory negligence on the part of the mother and deceased driver. Progressive intervened in the action to address the limited issues of settlement, accord , and satisfaction, and release.

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Bluebook (online)
201 So. 3d 705, 2016 Fla. App. LEXIS 13214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-montalvan-fladistctapp-2016.