Anthony v. Independent Insurance Advisors

56 V.I. 516, 2012 V.I. Supreme LEXIS 30
CourtSupreme Court of The Virgin Islands
DecidedApril 2, 2012
DocketS. Ct. Civ. No. 2010-0002 Consolidated Cases S. Ct. Civ. Nos. 2010-0002, 2010-0003
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 56 V.I. 516 (Anthony v. Independent Insurance Advisors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anthony v. Independent Insurance Advisors, 56 V.I. 516, 2012 V.I. Supreme LEXIS 30 (virginislands 2012).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

(April 2, 2012)

CABRET, Associate Justice.

This consolidated appeal concerns appellant Patrick Anthony’s appeal from an order of the Superior Court granting summary judgment and appellant Verna Dagou’s appeal from an order denying her motion to intervene. The case revolves around a condominium that was destroyed by Hurricane Marilyn in 1995. The condominium association and several individual owners, including Anthony, sued the insurance broker who had provided the contact to an Illinois insurance company who subsequently became insolvent without paying insurance premiums. Two and a half years after the case was filed, defendants moved for summary judgment. Similarly, three years after the case was initially filed, Dagou moved to intervene. Thereafter, before the Superior Court addressed either outstanding motion, all of the plaintiffs except Anthony settled the case and signed a release of their claims against the defendants. Approximately eight years after the settlement with the other plaintiffs, the Superior Court granted the summary judgment motion against Anthony and denied Dagou’s application to intervene as untimely. For the reasons which follow, we affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment against Anthony and its denial of Dagou’s motion to intervene, but remand to permit the Superior Court to consider Anthony’s motion to amend the complaint.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

We begin by recounting the facts that are common to both appellants, and then set out, below, those facts important to their individual issues on appeal. This appeal stems from a complaint filed on April 23, 1998 [521]*521alleging negligent misrepresentation, fraudulent misrepresentation, breach of fiduciary duties, bad faith, and breach of contract against each defendant.2 The three defendants listed in the complaint are Independent Insurance Advisors, Inc. (“Independent”), a Pennsylvania Corporation engaged in the insurance business; Paul Lichtman, the President of Independent; and C.E. Brathwaite and Associates, a Virgin Islands Corporation in the insurance business. The four plaintiffs listed in the original complaint are the Contant View Condominium Association (“Association”), for itself and on behalf of the individual unit owners; Frank McLaughlin, a resident of the Virgin Islands; McLaughlin Management, Inc., a Virgin Islands corporation through which McLaughlin conducted his business; and Arthur Pomerantz, Esq., a resident of the Virgin Islands and the attorney who signed the initial complaint.

The plaintiffs amended the complaint on My 27, 1999. The first amended complaint added many of the individual unit owners, including Anthony, as plaintiffs, removed the Association as a plaintiff, and made McLaughlin the lead plaintiff, individually and as manager of the Association. The plaintiffs amended the complaint for a second, and final, time on June 14, 2000, which restored the Association as a plaintiff on the suit, retained the individual owners, and removed McLaughlin’s status as manager. On May 9, 2001, Anthony filed a motion to amend the pleadings yet another time, to include crossclaims against the Association, McLaughlin, and Pomerantz. The plaintiffs, except Anthony, settled and and signed a release of their claims against Independent and Lichtman on January 16, 2002.

The crux of the plaintiffs’ claims centered around an insurance policy purchased by the Association on behalf of the condominium for the common areas of the building. Plaintiffs alleged that McLaughlin, on behalf of the Association, sought the assistance of Independent and Lichtman in purchasing disaster insurance, which the Association subsequently purchased on April 28, 1995. Independent and Lichtman used Geneva Assurance Syndicate Inc. (“Geneva”), a corporation that was [522]*522a member of the Illinois Insurance Exchange, as the lead syndicate for the policy sold to the Association. Less than a month after the purchase, in May 1995, the Illinois Insurance Exchange declared Geneva insolvent. Four months later, on September 15, 1995, Hurricane Marilyn caused extensive damage to the Contant View Condominiums. When Geneva was unable to pay on the Association’s claim, the plaintiffs initiated this suit against Independent and Lichtman for negligent misrepresentation, fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, bad faith, and breach of contract. The Association was the only entity listed as insured on the Declaration Page for the insurance.

1. Appellant Patrick Anthony.

The defendants first moved for summary judgment on October 30, 2000. After the settlement that released the defendants from the claims of all of the other plaintiffs, defendants again moved for summary judgment against Anthony on January 24, 2002. After three renewals of that motion on April 17, 2002, October 8, 2002, and January 7, 2003, the Superior Court entered an order on December 17, 2009 granting the motion for summary judgment and dismissing Anthony’s claims with prejudice.

In granting the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, the Superior Court focused on three issues: (1) the Association’s settlement bound Anthony and barred his suit; (2) the defendants never made any representations to Anthony on which he could rely;3 and (3) Anthony did not own Unit 2D as of September 15, 1995 and thus no fiduciary duty extended to him nor could there be any breach to him for the purposes of bad faith insurance practices or contract law. The Superior Court found that there was no material issue of genuine fact on any of those issues.

Thus, having determined that Anthony failed to present a material issue of genuine fact, the Superior Court granted summary judgment to the defendants and dismissed the case.4 Anthony timely filed a Notice of Appeal on January 15, 2010. In his appeal, Anthony argues (1) that [523]*523summary judgment was inappropriate on all claims and (2) that the Superior Court erred by dismissing the case without allowing him leave to file crossclaims against the Association, McLaughlin, and Pomerantz.

2. Appellant Verna Dagou.

Dagou moved to intervene as of right on May 9, 2001, the same day Anthony moved to amend the pleadings to assert crossclaims against Pomerantz, McLaughlin, and the Association. The Superior Court’s docket indicates that her motion to intervene followed approximately three years after the original complaint’s filing, and approximately eleven months after the filing of the last amended complaint. The Superior Court issued a Scheduling Order on October 12, 2000, which set the deadline for completion of factual discovery at October 30, 2000 and for expert discovery at January 31, 2001. The Superior Court’s docket indicates that the parties largely followed those timelines and that discovery was complete as of January 31, 2001, four months prior to Dagou’s motion to intervene. The defendants filed the first dispositive motion, a motion for summary judgment, with the Superior Court on October 30, 2000. That motion was still pending at the time of both Dagou’s motion and the settlement. However, despite not being an individually named plaintiff, counsel represented Dagou at all depositions and at the settlement discussions.

On December 17, 2009, the Superior Court entered an order, accompanied by a memorandum opinion, denying Dagou’s motion to intervene.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 V.I. 516, 2012 V.I. Supreme LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anthony-v-independent-insurance-advisors-virginislands-2012.