Cape Christian Fellowship, Inc. v. Landmark American Insurance Company

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedApril 7, 2021
Docket2:20-cv-00410
StatusUnknown

This text of Cape Christian Fellowship, Inc. v. Landmark American Insurance Company (Cape Christian Fellowship, Inc. v. Landmark American Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cape Christian Fellowship, Inc. v. Landmark American Insurance Company, (M.D. Fla. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA FORT MYERS DIVISION

CAPE CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP, INC.,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No. 2:20-cv-410-JLB-NPM

LANDMARK AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY,

Defendants.

ORDER Before the Court are Plaintiff’s Motion for Relief from Order (Doc. 27) and Plaintiff’s Response to Defendant’s Motion to Quash and Motion for Protective Order (Doc. 28). For the following reasons, Plaintiff’s Motion for Relief from Order (Doc. 27) is granted, and, upon reconsideration, Defendant’s Motion to Quash and for Protective Order (Doc. 19) is denied. I. Factual and Procedural Background This case concerns an insurance dispute for a loss allegedly caused by Hurricane Irma on or about September 10, 2017. (Doc. 3). Plaintiff Cape Christian Fellowship, Inc. retained the services of Day Adjusting & Consulting (“Day Adjusting”) to assess and administer the insurance claim on Cape Christian’s behalf. (Doc. 28, p. 2). On September 18, 2019, Day Adjusting submitted a claim for the loss to the insurer, Defendant Landmark American Insurance Company. (Doc. 28, p. 2; Doc. 28-1, p. 2). As part of the claim-investigation process, Landmark hired

GHD Services Inc. (“GHD”), a professional engineering company, to inspect the property. (Doc. 28, p. 3). Landmark’s insurance adjuster, Brian O’Connor, coordinated the inspection of the property with Day Adjusting. (Doc. 28, p. 3; Doc.

28-1, pp. 2-3). The in-person property inspection took place on October 28 and 29 of 2019, with Blake Day of Day Adjusting present alongside two GHD employees— a professional engineer, Michael Linehan, and an engineering assistant, Brian Elliot. (Doc. 28, p. 3; Doc. 28-1, p. 3).

On several occasions, Day contacted Landmark to request a coverage determination. (Doc. 28, pp. 3-4; Doc. 28-1, pp. 3-4). On April 29, 2020, Landmark’s adjuster contacted Day, stating: “Once the experts’ report is finalized

and submitted, a coverage determination will be made shortly thereafter.” (Doc. 28, p. 4; Doc. 28-1, p. 4). Cape Christian then hired counsel, sent Landmark a letter of representation, and initiated this action on May 15, 2020. (Doc. 1; Doc. 28, p. 4). On July 13, 2020, Landmark’s adjuster directly emailed Cape Christian’s counsel three

documents: (1) a letter constituting a determination of the Claim; (2) an engineering report prepared by Michael Linehan (the “claim-determination report”); and (3) an estimate of repair costs from a firm called Building Solutions & Consulting Inc.

(Doc. 28, pp. 4-5; Doc. 28-2, pp. 5-6, 8-18, 20-119, 121-180). On July 30, 2020, and August 3, 2020, Cape Christian served deposition-and- document-production subpoenas on Michael Linehan and his current and former

engineering firms, GHD and NV5,1 seeking information related to the claim- determination report supplied to Cape Christian’s counsel as justification for mostly denying the insurance claim. (Docs. 15, 16, 17, 18). Neither Linehan nor his current

or former engineering firms lodged any objections to the subpoenas.2 On August 28, 2020, Landmark filed a motion to quash, or for protection from, the subpoenas. (Doc. 19). Seeking to quash the subpoenas, Landmark argues the claim-determination report and any related information constitute work-product

that should be shielded from discovery (even though the claim-determination report was intentionally sent directly to opposing counsel—a detail misleadingly omitted from Landmark’s motion and revealed to the Court only in Cape Christian’s

response). In the alternative, and seeking protection from the subpoenas, Landmark argues the depositions should not take place until after its expert-disclosure deadline

1 Landmark had engaged Linehan while he was employed by GHD, but by the time the claim- determination report was issued by Linehan, he worked for NV5, Inc. (Doc. 19, p. 3). 2 Given the deposition dates and locations set forth in the subpoenas, they appear to have been coordinated with the subpoenaed parties. (Doc. 15). GHD, which is based in Tallahassee (Doc. 15, p. 1), was scheduled to be deposed in Tampa on September 8, 2020 (Doc. 16, p. 2). NV5, which is also based in Tallahassee (Doc. 15, p. 1), was scheduled to be deposed in Hollywood, Florida, on September 30, 2020 (Doc. 17, p. 2). And Michael Linehan, who is apparently based in Temple Terrace, Florida, was scheduled to be deposed in New Port Richey, Florida, on October 20, 2020. (Doc. 18). Nonetheless, Landmark asserts that Cape Christian scheduled the depositions without any prior coordination with the defense (Doc. 19, pp. 1-2), which is contrary to the practices expected of counsel in this District. See M.D. Fla. Discovery Manual §§ I.A.1, I.A.3, II.A.1, II.C.1 (2021). because it might retain Linehan as a testifying expert, and—reiterating the point advanced in support of quashing the subpoenas altogether—it further argues that

matters related to the claim-determination report should not be subject to discovery because it constitutes work-product. (Doc. 19, pp. 2-5). Three days after the filing of Landmark’s motion, and with the first of the

three depositions noticed to take place just eight days later, the Court cancelled the depositions to allow sufficient time for the Court to receive Cape Christian’s response and then rule on the motion. (Doc. 20). But Cape Christian failed to file a timely response by September 11, 2020. About two weeks later, on September 23,

2020, the Court conducted a Rule 16 conference to discuss the parties’ discovery plan and fashion an appropriate scheduling order. (Doc. 23). Cape Christian still failed to voice any objection to Landmark’s motion. So, upon the conclusion of the

conference, the Court entered an endorsed order granting Landmark’s motion as unopposed (Doc. 26). The next day, Cape Christian filed a Motion for Relief from Order (Doc. 27) along with a Response to Defendant’s Motion to Quash (Doc. 28). Cape Christian

subsequently filed an affidavit of paralegal Brenna Bukaty in support of its motion for relief from the Court’s order (Doc. 30), and Landmark filed a response (Doc. 31). II. Cape Christian’s Motion for Relief from Order

Invoking Rule 60(b), Cape Christian essentially argues that its three attorneys of record overlooked the need to voice any timely objection to Landmark’s motion due to a calendaring mishap committed by a paralegal. Even if there was some form

of administrative error by office staff, it is difficult to fathom how all three attorneys somehow lost track of the motion. They served Linehan and his engineering firms with subpoenas; noticed the depositions; went the extra step of filing the notices,

subpoenas and returns of service with the Court (even though Rule 5(d)(1)(A) tells them not to); and had their September 8, 2020 deposition of GHD cancelled by the Court just before their September 11 deadline to respond to the motion. Worse yet, when they presumably reviewed the file in preparation for the September 23

conference with the Court, they still managed to somehow overlook the motion to quash. Compounding the problem, Cape Christian’s counsel repeatedly failed to

confer with opposing counsel about these issues. They failed to respond to defense counsel’s meet-and-confer requests prior to the filing of the motion to quash. (Doc. 19, p. 6). And then they apparently made no attempt to comply with the Court’s meet-and-confer requirement before filing their motion for relief (Doc. 31, p. 4),

which also failed to include the meet-and-confer certification required by Local Rule 3.01(g). Notably, the importance of complying with Local Rule 3.01(g) is underscored here, because, if Cape Christian had conferred with Landmark prior to

filing its motion for relief, it would have learned that its motion is essentially unopposed. (Doc 31, p.

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