Boomerang Recoveries, LLC v. Guy Carpenter & Co.

182 F. Supp. 3d 212, 2016 WL 1594954, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 53795
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 21, 2016
DocketCIVIL ACTION NO. 16-0222
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 182 F. Supp. 3d 212 (Boomerang Recoveries, LLC v. Guy Carpenter & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boomerang Recoveries, LLC v. Guy Carpenter & Co., 182 F. Supp. 3d 212, 2016 WL 1594954, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 53795 (E.D. Pa. 2016).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Savage, District Judge.

Moving to remand this action, plaintiff Boomerang Recoveries, LLC (“Boomerang”) contends removal was improper under the forum defendant rule, 28 U.S.C. § 1441(b)(2), because one of the defendants is a citizen of Pennsylvania where the action was originally filed. Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. (“MMC”), the defendant who removed the action, counters that removal was proper because we must disregard the citizenship of the sole forum state defendant, Eric Yeager, who was fraudulently joined in this action to invoke the forum defendant rule as a device to defeat removal.1

We conclude that Yeager, a Pennsylvania citizen, was not fraudulently joined as a defendant. Consequently, removal violates the forum defendant rule. Therefore, we shall remand this action.

Background

Boomerang is in the business of reviewing reinsurance programs for insurance companies to identify overpaid premiums and underutilized claim recoveries. Guy Carpenter & Co., LLC (“Carpenter”) is a reinsurance broker providing broking and advisory services to insurance companies seeking to purchase reinsurance, MMC is the sole member of Marsh USA, which is the sole member of Carpenter, David Thomas is a managing director of Carpenter. Eric Yeager is a senior vice president.2

This case arises out of a contract between Boomerang and non-party Farmers Insurance Co. of Flemington (“Farmers”), Boomerang agreed to review Farmers’ re[215]*215insurance contracts from 2003 to 2013 to identify premiums which Farmers had been overcharged. Boomerang was to receive 35% of overcharges recovered as a result of Boomerang’s review. The contract did not require Boomerang to identify any-underpaid premiums Farmers owed to its reinsurers.

In reviewing Farmers’ reinsurance contracts, Boomerang identified $2,246,014.65 in reinsurance premiums that Farmers had been overcharged. Boomerang cited errors made by Carpenter that resulted in Farmers paying higher premiums than were owed.3

Farmers submitted requests to Carpenter for reimbursements based on Boomerang’s review. Carpenter, through which Farmers had purchased the reinsurance policies, was to submit the requests to the reinsurance carriers identified in Boomerang’s review as having overcharged Farmers. Yeager and Thomas were the Carpenter employees assigned to manage the Farmers’ account.4

Boomerang alleges that instead of immediately submitting the request for reimbursements to the participating reinsurance carriers, as they were contractually required to do, Carpenter, Thomas and Yeager performed an internal audit of Farmers’ reinsurance contracts for the 2003-2013 review period. This audit purportedly identified over two million dollars in premiums owed by Farmers to its rein-surers, effectively reducing Farmers’ recovery and Carpenter’s request for reimbursement from reinsurance carriers from $2,246,014.65 to $273,989.97.

Boomerang contends that Thomas and Yeager told Farmers that Boomerang had performed an incomplete review because it did not conduct a “net audit,” which would have identified underpaid premiums Farmers owed to the reinsurers. Had Boomerang done so, the overcharges would have been offset by the underpayments. Boom-prang alleges that Thomas and Yeager told Farmers that Boomerang’s methods, calculations and findings were incorrect, improper and unethical.5

According to Boomerang, Carpenter had no justification for performing the audit and disputing Boomerang’s findings. Yet, the defendants disparaged Boomerang and disputed its findings. Their goal was to reduce the amount Farmers had been overcharged in order to avoid both damage to Carpenter’s reputátion and the return of sales commissions. Boomerang claims that the “threat by Thomas and Yeager that Farmers owed over $2,000,000.00 in back premiums” induced Farmers not to pursue a substantial portion of the recoveries identified by Boomerang, causing Farmers to breach its agreement with Boomerang.6

Boomerang filed this action on December 9, 2014 in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas, naming as defendants Carpenter, Thomas and Yeager. In its initial complaint, Boomerang asserted a claim for tortious interference with a contractual relationship against Thomas and Yeager, and a claim for respondeat superior against Carpenter, In the counts against Thomas and Yeager, it alleged that they intentionally interfered with the contract between Boomerang and Farmers by falsely telling Farmers that it owed over two million dollars in underpaid premiums to reinsur-ers, causing Farmers to breach its agreement with Boomerang.7 It also claimed that Thomas and Yeager, without privilege [216]*216and justification, acted with -the intention of preventing Farmers from getting paid for the purpose of avoiding damage to Carpenter’s reputation and the need to refund sales commissions. As a direct result of Thomas and Yeager’s “intentional and unjustified interference with Boomerang’s contract,” Boomerang claims it suffered damages in the amount of $786,105.13.8

In its claim against Carpenter, Boomerang alleged that Thomas and Yeager were “officers, directors, employees and/or agents” of Carpenter, and acted within the course and scope of their employment with Carpenter and in the furtherance of Carpenter’s business “by protecting Carpenter’s reputation, profits and. commissions.” As a result, Carpenter1 is vicariously liable for the conduct of Thomas and Yeager.9

Eight days after the initial complaint was filed, Carpenter removed the action, contending that it was removable- because defendant Yeager, a citizen of the forum state, had not yet been served and had been fraudulently joined. Boomerang moved to remand. It argued that the forum defendant rule applied to defeat removal jurisdiction even though the forum defendant had not yet been served. Carpenter countered that Yeager had been fraudulently joined to avoid federal jurisdiction.

Three weeks after the case was removed, Carpenter filed a motion to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim. Yeager was served with process two days after the motion to dismiss was filed. He filed his own motion to dismiss, incorporating the grounds raised in Carpenter’s motion. Boomerang responded by filing an amended complaint, mooting the motions to dismiss.

Two days later, we granted the motion to remand. Without reaching the fraudulent joinder issue, we held that we could not determine whether there was complete diversity between Boomerang and Carpenter because the citizenship of each of the members of the plaintiff limited liability company was not alleged.

Since the action was remanded, four amended complaints, each followed by either a stipulation to amend or preliminary objections, were filed. The second and third amended complaints contained no new claims, but the fourth amended complaint added a claim against Thomas and Yeager for commercial disparagement; a direct claim for tortious interference against Carpenter; and a direct claim and vicarious liability claim against Carpenter for commercial disparagement. The defendants filed preliminary objections, in response to which Boomerang filed a fifth amended complaint.

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Bluebook (online)
182 F. Supp. 3d 212, 2016 WL 1594954, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 53795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boomerang-recoveries-llc-v-guy-carpenter-co-paed-2016.