Ben Lewis Plumbing, Heating & Air Conditioning, Inc. v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co.

731 A.2d 904, 354 Md. 452, 1999 Md. LEXIS 332
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 15, 1999
Docket91, Sept. Term, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 731 A.2d 904 (Ben Lewis Plumbing, Heating & Air Conditioning, Inc. v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ben Lewis Plumbing, Heating & Air Conditioning, Inc. v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co., 731 A.2d 904, 354 Md. 452, 1999 Md. LEXIS 332 (Md. 1999).

Opinion

RODOWSKY, Judge.

In this creditor’s action on a running account to which the debtor pled, inter alia, a general denial we hold that a defense based on negligent misrepresentation is not precluded by want of a special plea asserting that defense. We also hold, however, that there is no negligent misrepresentation as a matter of law.

The petitioners, defendants in the trial court, are Ben Lewis Plumbing, Heating & Air Conditioning, Inc. and related companies and their principal (collectively Lewis). The respondents are Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. and other companies of the Liberty Mutual Group (collectively Liberty). Liberty’s action against Lewis was filed in February 1993 seeking the balance due for premiums on policies issued by Liberty to Lewis that provided a variety of coverages, including workers’ compensation. The latter covered Lewis’s activities in Maryland and in other nearby jurisdictions where Lewis also did business. The net balance on all lines claimed at trial by Liberty from Lewis was $63,725.70.

Only workers’ compensation coverage for the policy period July 1, 1986, through June 30, 1987, under Policy WC-7-581-962477-046 (the Policy) is involved in the dispute between the parties. The premium on the Policy was determined by *454 retrospective rating. 1 Liberty is a mutual insurance company, and its board of directors historically had declared dividends payable to policyholders, and, on retrospectively rated policies, dividends are credited against premium, or, if no additional premium is payable, dividends are paid in cash. The relationship between dividends for a workers’ compensation policy period and losses incurred in years subsequent to the policy period based on compensable accidents that occurred during the policy period was governed by the type of plan offered by Liberty and selected by the policyholder. All of the issues in the instant matter revolve around whether Liberty, having credited Lewis with a dividend in the first adjustment of the Policy premium, could, in later adjustments and because of increased losses chargeable to the Policy period, recover back an amount equal to dividends previously paid.

I

The dispute arises out of the following facts. Lewis annually requested proposals on its insurance requirements, and *455 Liberty had provided Lewis’s insurance for the two years preceding July 1, 1986. The workers’ compensation policy for the year ending June 30, 1986, was written on a plan under which dividends paid on the first readjustment were not subject to repayment based on losses determined at later readjustments. The workers’ compensation policy for that period ending June 30, 1986, is not in evidence. Part of the record, however, is a form letter prepared by Liberty and accepted by Lewis by its corporate secretary’s signature that presents the dividend plan for that policy period. In relevant part it reads:

“WORKERS’ COMPENSATION RETENTION DIVIDEND PLAN CONFIRMATION LETTER
“RE: POLICY(IES) # Eff. Date 7/1/85
“An initial computation of dividends is made in conformity with the Directors’ vote approximately ten months after expiration of the policy subject to all applicable legal requirements. The first computation will be considered final, if all claims under the policy are closed. If at the time of the first computation of dividends, there are any open cases such cases will be increased by 25% to determine the indicated dividend.
“If the first computation of dividends is not final, a second computation will be done approximately twelve months after the first.
“The second computation will be considered final if all claims under the policies are closed. If open cases exist at the time of the second adjustment, such cases will be increased by 10% to determine the applicable dividend.
“If the second computation of dividends is not final, a third computation will be done approximately twelve months after the second. If open cases exist at the time of the third adjustment, such cases will not be increased to determine *456 the applicable dividend. The third computation of dividends will be final.
“In addition, adverse loss development on the second or third adjustment will not reduce any dividend previously paid to you.”

(Emphasis added).

For the year beginning July 1, 1986, Liberty submitted a proposal to Lewis that included workers’ compensation insurance based on Lewis’s estimated payroll of $1.82 million. Liberty estimated that the minimum net premium on the Policy would be approximately $82,000 if there were no losses and the maximum net premium would be approximately $140,-000 if losses' reached or exceeded $89,600. This proposal contemplated that the coverage would be written on the “Regular Variable Dividend Plan,” but that plan’s treatment of any dividend to policyholders was not described in the proposal.

As in the two prior years, Liberty’s proposal for all lines was submitted to Lewis’s corporate secretary, Sally Fink, by an employee representative of Liberty. The employee who submitted the proposal in 1986 was not a witness at trial. Ms. Fink testified that when the Liberty representative delivered the proposal, Ms. Fink asked if “it was the same coverage as we’d gotten. We were with them two years before that, so we could be very brief. She said, Tes.’ ” On or about August 27, 1986, all of the policies, including the thirty-seven page Policy, were delivered to Lewis in a large binder. Also transmitted at that time was a one-page, Liberty-form, confirmation letter referencing the Policy and dated July 1, 1986. Ms. Fink testified that “[o]n receipt of the binder of policies” she telephoned the Liberty representative and “asked her if there was anything I needed to know about them. She said, ‘No,’ and she requested that I ... sign this form [the confirmation letter], and get it back to her for her files.” Ms. Fink signed on behalf of Lewis next to the printed words “Accepted by” and returned the confirmation. That letter in relevant part reads as follows:

*457 “ALL STATES WORKERS’ COMPENSATION RETENTION DIVIDEND PLAN CONFIRMATION LETTER WITH REDETERMINATION
“RE: POLICY(IES) # WC7-581-962477-046 Eff. Date 7/1/86
“An initial computation of dividends is made in conformity with the Directors’ vote approximately ten months after expiration of the policy subject to all applicable legal requirements. The first computation will be considered final, if all claims under the policy are closed.
“Upon any computation of dividends subsequent to the initial, if the redetermined dividend is greater than the dividend previously computed, the company shall immediately pay to the insured the additional dividend shown to be due, whereas,

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Bluebook (online)
731 A.2d 904, 354 Md. 452, 1999 Md. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ben-lewis-plumbing-heating-air-conditioning-inc-v-liberty-mutual-ins-md-1999.