Cagle v. The James Street Group

400 F. App'x 348
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedOctober 28, 2010
Docket09-6262
StatusUnpublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 400 F. App'x 348 (Cagle v. The James Street Group) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cagle v. The James Street Group, 400 F. App'x 348 (10th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

TERRENCE L. O’BRIEN, Circuit Judge.

Robyn Cagle appeals from the dismissal of her claims against attorneys and an insurance broker. She sought damages based upon the defendants’ alleged failure to timely finalize the paperwork for an annuity contract purchased by her since deceased same sex partner, Shavon Norris, naming Cagle as beneficiary. The district court entered summary judgment in favor of the defendants.

Cagle’s claims against the attorneys turn on choice of law principles. As the district court properly concluded, under the applicable state law, in this case that of Texas, the attorneys had no duty to Cagle under either tort or contract principles. As to the claims against the insurance broker the court held she failed to establish the breach of any legally-cognizable duty to her. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

Prior to her death, Norris was Cagle’s same-sex life partner; they lived together in Oklahoma. In 1996, Norris obtained a prescription for and used fenfluramine (Pondimin) and phentermine (together known popularly as “fen phen”), diet drugs manufactured by the Wyeth Corporation (Wyeth). After taking the drugs, she developed severe pulmonary arterial hypertension, an uncurable, life-threatening condition.

*351 Norris was diagnosed with pulmonary hypertension in the summer of 2004. In October or November of that year, defendant Shelly V. Hutson, a Texas attorney, traveled to Oklahoma to discuss with Norris the “fen phen” litigation against Wyeth. Norris agreed to join in the litigation and employed Hutson, Hutson’s firm (the Hut-son law firm), and Clayton A. Clark and his firm (Clark, Depew & Tracey, Ltd., L.L.P.) (collectively, the “Lawyer Defendants”), to represent her in litigation against Wyeth.

In early 2006, after filing suit against Wyeth, the Lawyer Defendants verbally settled Norris’s fen phen claim. On June 14, 2006, Hutson met with Norris at an Oklahoma City hotel to obtain her agreement to the settlement. Cagle also attended the meeting. During the meeting, Hutson suggested some of the settlement proceeds be used to purchase a structured settlement annuity. Hutson referred them to defendant The James Street Group (TJSG), a Texas insurance broker, for the purpose of purchasing such an annuity.

A key purpose of the annuity, which included a number of large annual payments as well as smaller monthly payments, was to help defray Norris’s anticipated medical expenses. As part of the treatment of her condition, Norris was obligated to purchase expensive medicines on an ongoing basis. She was also a potential candidate for a lung transplant, a very expensive procedure.

Cagle and Norris contacted Jeanie McIntyre of TJSG. McIntyre provided them with a number of rate quotes and illustrations of annuity policies from various companies. In calculating annuity benefits, these companies “rated” Norris in terms of her remaining life expectancy. None of them rated her condition as immediately fatal.

On June 28, 2006, Norris notified McIntyre of her desire to purchase a MassMu-tual annuity. On the same day, the Lawyer Defendants signed a settlement agreement with Wyeth under Rule 11 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. Two days later, by email, McIntyre supplied the Lawyer Defendants with wire transfer instructions for funding the annuity. At some point, Norris instructed McIntyre the annuity should identify Cagle as the beneficiary of its required payments in the event of Norris’s death.

As directed, Wyeth disbursed $8 million of Norris’s settlement funds to MassMutual to purchase the annuity. In order to complete the paperwork for issuance of the annuity policy, MassMutual required Norris or her agents to furnish two additional documents: an Addendum to the Confidential Release, Indemnity and Assignment (Addendum) Norris had previously signed, and a Uniform Qualified Assignment and Release (UQAR) signed by Wyeth, MassMutual, and Norris. See Aplt.App., Vol. V at 2037-40.

On July 3, 2006, McIntyre drafted a letter to Norris at her address in El Reno, Oklahoma, enclosing the Addendum and the UQAR for her signature. But she did not send it. Instead, she contacted Clark to obtain his approval of the Addendum and UQAR before sending them to Norris.

The Lawyer Defendants approved these documents by email on July 7, 2006, but did not give McIntyre permission to immediately send them to Norris for signature. Clark’s legal assistant sent an email to McIntyre, stating the attorneys had reviewed the documents but “have decided to wait and take care of it after the money comes in.” Id., Vol. VII at 2795. The legal assistant then asked “Will that be a problem?” Id.

McIntyre responded it was fine with her and she would “just send the [Ajddendum *352 and [UQAR] to all the parties when [the annuity] funds.” Id. Attorney Clark later explained he did not want the UQAR sent to Norris for signature until MassMutual made its first scheduled periodic payment on the annuity. 1 Knowing the UQAR released Wyeth from its obligation to make the periodic payments, he did not want to take the risk having the signed UQAR provided to Wyeth before MassMutual began making payments.

The Lawyer Defendants did not inform Norris or Cagle, however, that the Addendum and UQAR were part of the paperwork for issuance of the annuity policy. Nor did they tell either Norris or Cagle they had instructed TJSG to hold these documents until after funding. But the Lawyer Defendants did accede to McIntyre’s request that TJSG at least be allowed to submit the application information so MassMutual would begin making annuity payments to Norris and to “reassure them and make them comfortable that their benefits are locked and they are all set up.” Id. at 2795, 2865.

MassMutual made its first payment to Norris under the annuity contract on September 1, 2006. The payment was deposited directly to a joint checking account Norris shared with Cagle. On September 7, McIntyre again asked the attorneys if she could send the Addendum and UQAR to Norris for her signature. On September 11, 2006, the Lawyer Defendants finally informed McIntyre via email she could send these documents to Norris.

In the interim, Norris and Cagle moved from El Reno, Oklahoma, to a new home in Edmond, Oklahoma, which they purchased with a portion of the Wyeth settlement proceeds. They notified the United States Post Office of their change of address, but not the Lawyer Defendants or TJSG.

On September 12, 2006, TJSG sent the Addendum and UQAR via second-day United Parcel Service (UPS) to Norris at her prior address in El Reno. UPS left the package containing the documents at the front door of the El Reno address on September 15. The documents never made it to Norris for signature.

Norris unexpectedly entered the hospital on September 15, 2006. She remained there until her death two weeks later on September 28. According to Cagle, on September 19, she contacted TJSG to verify the paperwork for the annuity was complete, and an unidentified person with TJSG told her it was.

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400 F. App'x 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cagle-v-the-james-street-group-ca10-2010.