Carolina Casualty Insurance, Apps. v. Mww, Pllc, Et Ano., Resps.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 13, 2014
Docket69109-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Carolina Casualty Insurance, Apps. v. Mww, Pllc, Et Ano., Resps. (Carolina Casualty Insurance, Apps. v. Mww, Pllc, Et Ano., Resps.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carolina Casualty Insurance, Apps. v. Mww, Pllc, Et Ano., Resps., (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

MWW, PLLC, a Washington No. 69109-1- Professional Limited Liability Company and DENNIS MORAN, DIVISION ONE

Respondents,

v.

KIRIBATI SEAFOOD COMPANY, LLC, a Washington Limited Liability UNPUBLISHED OPINION Company; OLYMPIC PACKER, LLC,

Defendants,

MONITOR LIABILITY MANAGERS LLC and CAROLINA CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY,

Appellants. FILED: January 13, 2014

Schindler, J. — Carolina Casualty Insurance Company, the legal malpractice

liability insurer for Moran, Windes, and Wong PLLC (MWW); and Monitor Liability

Managers LLC, the managing general underwriter for Carolina, appeal the "Order

Determining Reasonableness of Settlement" between MWW, Kiribati Seafood Company

LLC, and Olympic Packer LLC. We affirm. No. 69109-1-1/2

FACTS

Nicholas Coscia and Charles Crovo own Kiribati Seafood Company LLC and

Olympic Packer LLC (Kiribati). Dennis Moran and Moran, Windes, and Wong PLLC

(MWW) represented Kiribati in several legal matters, including a lawsuit against the

Tahiti Port of Papeete for damage to a Kiribati fishing vessel. The December 18, 2004

fee agreement required Kiribati to pay $10,000 each month plus costs and expenses

and a 25 percent contingency fee on the Tahiti judgment.

In September 2008, Kiribati and Moran modified the terms of the December 2004

fee agreement to provide for a liquidated sum of $250,000 and 18.5 percent

contingency fee. Kiribati also agreed that Moran was entitled to "a first priority lien on

. . . any Gross Recovery" from the Tahiti case. The agreement states, in pertinent part:

The Gross Fee shall be due when any Gross Recovery is received by or controlled by the client, its principals or agents .... Client grants Moran a first priority lien on the cases, files and any Gross Recovery and proceeds to secure the Gross Fees and expenses.

In January 2008, the Tahiti court entered a judgment in favor of Kiribati for

approximately $7 million. MWW served notice of the lien on Dechert LP, the Paris law

firm representing Kiribati.

On May 5, 2010, Dechert advised MWW that Kiribati would receive the first

payment on the judgment in the Tahiti case in the amount of $864,000, and requested

verification of the amount owed to MWW. After Kiribati "refused to discuss when, then

if, they would pay MWW," Dechert's managing partner "advised MWW that it would not

respect MWW's lien." No. 69109-1-1/3

On May 25, MWW filed a breach of contract and lien foreclosure action against

Kiribati Seafood Company LLC, Olympic Packer LLC, Lawrence Crovo, Charles Crovo,

and Nicholas Coscia (collectively Kiribati). MWWalleged that the proceeds from the

judgment in the Tahiti lawsuit were subject to its first priority lien.1 MWW claimed

Kiribati owed approximately $1 million in attorney fees and costs.

Shortly after filing the complaint, MWW filed a motion asking the court to order

the transfer of $582,434 from the proceeds of the Tahiti judgment into the King County

Superior Court registry and appoint a receiver. The court granted the motion. The court

ordered Kiribati to transfer the funds by July 25, 2010 and appointed a receiver.

Kiribati filed an answer and counterclaims against MWW and Moran. Kiribati

denied the Tahiti judgment was subject to the lien foreclosure action. Kiribati asserted

as an affirmative defense that the contingency fee agreement violated the Rules of

Professional Conduct and was void. In the counterclaim against MWW, Kiribati alleged

Moran was negligent in "failing to perform his legal services in a manner in conformity

with the applicable standards of care," breach of fiduciary duty, and violation of the

Washington Consumer Protection Act, chapter 19.86 RCW. Kiribati sought damages

against MWW and Moran in excess of $2.5 million.

Carolina Casualty Insurance Company was the legal malpractice carrier that

insured MWW and Moran. Monitor Liability Managers LLC was the managing general

underwriter for Carolina (collectively Carolina). The malpractice insurance policy had an

aggregate limit of $1 million. Carolina agreed to defend MWW and Moran under a

reservation of rights.

1MWW also alleged that Kiribati violated the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act, chapter 19.40 RCW. MWW's amended complaint added the individual defendants and claims for theft of services, conversion, and fraud. No. 69109-1-1/4

Because Kiribati did not comply with the court order to deposit the Tahiti

proceeds into the court registry, the receiver filed a motion for contempt. The court

granted the motion for contempt. The court found that Charles Crovo on behalf of

Kiribati "intentionally violated this Court's Order." The August 26, 2011 order directs

Crovo to deposit funds into the court registry and imposes a $2,000 per day sanction for

failure to do so. Crovo deposited $315,000 into the court registry: $75,000 on

September 30 and $240,000 on October 3. On December 14, Dechert deposited into

the court registry a payment from the Port of Papeete of $511,611.42. Dechert told the

receiver additional payments were "expected soon."

Several of Kiribati's creditors intervened in the lawsuit and asserted claims

against Kiribati. As of March 2, 2012, there was approximately $1.3 million in the court

registry. The receiver reported to the court, "It appears that the potential sum of claims

of all creditors exceeds the Tahiti Court proceeds by hundreds of thousands of dollars."

For more than two years, Kiribati, MWW, and Moran engaged in contentious

litigation, including extensive discovery, joinder of multiple parties, and a number of motions for summary judgment. The three-week trial was scheduled to begin on June

11,2012.

On April 17, Kiribati filed a motion for partial summary judgment arguing MWW

could not recover under the fee agreement or establish fees under a quantum meruit

theory. MWW filed a motion for partial summary judgment to dismiss Kiribati's legal

malpractice counterclaims. No. 69109-1-1/5

On April 18, MWW, Moran, and Kiribati spent more than 12 hours in settlement

negotiations with mediator Lou Peterson. Carolina's coverage attorney Paul Fogarty

attended the mediation. Carolina's senior claims attorney Temperance Walker

participated by phone. The parties tentatively agreed to settle the attorney fee claims

for $600,000 and the counterclaims for $400,000. Despite the mediator's "efforts over

the next few weeks to hammer out a deal," the parties did not finalize the agreement.

On April 19, the court entered a judgment for CR 37 sanction against Kiribati in

the amount of $28,395.43. On May 18, the court heard oral argument on the motions

for summary judgment. The court denied the motion to dismiss the counterclaims. The

court reserved ruling on Kiribati's motion for partial summary judgment.

Over the next four days, the parties renewed efforts to settle. The parties

exchanged several offers through the mediator and on May 22, entered into a

settlement agreement and release. MWW agreed to settle the attorney fee claim for

$550,000 and to execute a satisfaction of the April 19 CR 37 judgment against Kiribati.

Kiribati agreed to settle the counterclaims against MWW for $550,000. The parties

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