Associated Underwriters of America Agency, Inc. v. McCarthy

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 31, 2005
Docket1-03-0577 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Associated Underwriters of America Agency, Inc. v. McCarthy (Associated Underwriters of America Agency, Inc. v. McCarthy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Associated Underwriters of America Agency, Inc. v. McCarthy, (Ill. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION

March 31, 2005

No. 1-03-0577

ASSOCIATED UNDERWRITERS OF AMERICA AGENCY, ) Appeal from the

INC., ) Circuit Court of

) Cook County.

Plaintiff-Appellant, )

)

v. )

RICHARD McCARTHY, LLOYD’S OF LONDON ) No. 96 CH 7091

SYNDICATE No. 51, a/k/a A.N. Taylor Syndicate, )

Defendants-Appellees )

(Moore Brown Barnes, Ltd., ) Honorable

) Patrick E. McGann,

Defendant.) ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE GREIMAN delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff, Associated Underwriters of America Agency, appeals from the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to defendants Richard McCarthy and Lloyd’s of London (Lloyd’s) Syndicate No. 51 and from the court’s subsequent denial of plaintiff’s motion to reconsider.  For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

Plaintiff initially filed suit against McCarthy, Lloyd’s, and Moore Brown Barnes, Ltd., alleging a violation of the Illinois Insurance Code (215 ILCS 5/1 et seq . (1994)) and retaliatory termination of contract.  Defendants moved to dismiss, and plaintiff acquired new counsel and was granted leave to file an amended complaint.  

The following facts were undisputed.  In the early 1990s, a company called Republic Hogg Robinson of Florida (Republic) developed a market for the insurance of hotels and related properties by organizing a network of subproducers, contacts, leads, expirations, renewals and related information that came to be known as the National Hotel Program (the Program).  Republic asked defendant McCarthy, then the lead underwriter for Lloyd’s Syndicate No. 212, to underwrite and act as the insurance carrier for the Program.  McCarthy agreed and the parties arranged for Lloyd’s to have access to Program information for purposes of underwriting insurance policies and for Republic to receive commissions for the premiums it generated for the Program.  Premiums were placed through Lloyd’s London broker, Steel Burrill Jones.

In 1993, plaintiff, an Illinois insurance wholesaler, purchased several of Republic’s assets, including the National Hotel Program and its appurtenant information.  At that time, Elizabeth Rhodes was the authorized underwriter for the Program.  As part of the purchase agreement, plaintiff employed Rhodes to administer the program and assumed the same terms and conditions with respect to the underwriting and operation of the National Hotel Program as had been in effect between Lloyd’s and Republic.  Also at that time, McCarthy was associated with Lloyd’s Syndicate No. 51, which assumed the duties Syndicate No. 212 had performed under the Program between Republic and McCarthy.  Plaintiff resumed acting as Lloyd’s broker for the National Hotel Program.

In March 1994, Moore Brown Barnes acquired Steel’s North American operations and assumed Steel’s duties as Lloyd’s London broker.  Through Moore Brown Barnes, plaintiff became "tribunalized,” meaning it was granted certain access to the London insurance market in addition to the properties it insured in the United States.  In November 1994, Moore Brown Barnes issued a renewal cover note to plaintiff on behalf of Lloyd’s effective for one year, beginning in August 1994.  The cover note granted plaintiff binding authority to underwrite insurance on behalf of Syndicate No. 51 for United States hotel properties.

That same year, Rhodes met with Harvey Sheldon, vice president of Advanced Insurance Underwriters (Advanced), and inquired whether Advanced might be interested in participating in the National Hotel Program.  Sheldon agreed to participate and was advised that the Program would be insured by Lloyd’s, though he was not apprised of the particular syndicates, underwriters, or brokers associated with the Program.  In February 1995, plaintiff and Advanced entered into a brokerage agreement providing that Advanced would retain independent ownership of the business produced during the companies’ relationship as well as expirations, billing information, and sales data.  The agreement was nonexclusive and terminable by either party at any time.  The majority of the business Advanced placed with plaintiff were hotels located in Florida.

In summer 1994, McCarthy expressed concern over the profitability of the National Hotel Program and advised Rhodes that continued losses could affect its continuation.  In January 1995, McCarthy directed plaintiff to cancel the insurance policy for Regency Windsor Management, a Program insured that had experienced a bad year financially, based on a measurable risk increase.  Plaintiff refused to cancel the policy and instead found a substitute insurer for Regency.  In March 1995, McCarthy, through Moore Brown Barnes, notified plaintiff that he had decided to cancel the Program because it had not been profitable for some time.  Rhodes informed Sheldon, who at that time was seeking new insurers for many of his Florida apartment and condominium building customers.  

Sheldon worked in the same building as John Nava, owner of the Florida Adjustment Bureau, which served as the third-party administrator of the National Hotel Program.  Shortly after McCarthy terminated the Program, Nava informed Sheldon that Robert Brown of Moore Brown Barnes would be in Florida in the near future and suggested that the two meet.  Sheldon met with Brown and discussed the possibility of Advanced serving as a Lloyd’s cover holder through a program of insurance for condominiums and apartment buildings.  In April 1995, Sheldon traveled to London to meet with several Lloyd’s underwriters and was introduced to members of the Moore Brown Barnes staff as well as McCarthy.  As a result of those meetings, Advanced began placing policies with McCarthy and Syndicate No. 51, mainly to insure apartments and condominiums.  Advanced insured a few hotels in London through its affiliation with Lloyd’s.

In its complaint, plaintiff alleged that Moore Brown Barnes and Lloyd’s relationship with Sheldon and Advanced amounted to an effort to solicit plaintiff’s subproducers and place insurance through the subproducers to plaintiff’s exclusion, and that such business was executed using Program information.  Plaintiff alleged that such solicitation was in accordance with a scheme by defendants to misappropriate and convert Program information in an effort to market insurance and place insurance business through plaintiff’s confidential subproducers.  

Plaintiff contended that defendants’ actions constituted a violation of the Illinois Trade Secrets Act (765 ILCS 1065/1 et seq. (West 1994)), a breach of its confidentiality and exclusivity agreement with Lloyd’s, breach of contract, tortious interference with its prospective economic advantage, a violation of the Uniform Deceptive Trade Practices Act (815 ILCS 510/2 (West 1994), and civil conspiracy.  In relief, plaintiff sought a permanent injunction barring defendants from making false or misleading statements to plaintiff’s customers and subproducers and compensatory damages.

Defendants McCarthy and Lloyd’s Syndicate No.

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Associated Underwriters of America Agency, Inc. v. McCarthy, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/associated-underwriters-of-america-agency-inc-v-mc-illappct-2005.