Coregis Insurance v. Law Offices of Carole F. Kafrissen, P.C.

140 F. Supp. 2d 461, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6137, 2001 WL 503385
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 9, 2001
DocketCIV. A. 98-6769
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 140 F. Supp. 2d 461 (Coregis Insurance v. Law Offices of Carole F. Kafrissen, P.C.) 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
Coregis Insurance v. Law Offices of Carole F. Kafrissen, P.C., 140 F. Supp. 2d 461, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6137, 2001 WL 503385 (E.D. Pa. 2001).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

EDUARDO C. ROBRENO, District Judge.

In 1998, Cynthia Clark brought a legal malpractice suit against Carole F. Kafris-sen, Esquire, and the Law Offices of Carole F. Kafrissen, P.C. (collectively, “Kafris- *462 sen”) in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas. Kafrissen had previously represented Clark in a medical malpractice action against various health care providers. In response to Clark’s suit against her, Kafrissen requested that Coregis Insurance Company (“Coregis”), Kafrisseris malpractice insurance carrier, defend and indemnify her against Clark’s claim pursuant to her policy with Coregis. In turn, Coregis undertook Kafrissen’s defense, but also filed suit in this court, seeking a declaratory judgment that it was not required to defend or indemnify Kafrissen under the terms of Kafrissen’s malpractice policy and requesting rescission of the policy contract. Coregis claimed that Kafris-sen’s application for malpractice insurance had failed to disclose the existence of Clark’s potential claim against her.

Even though Clark’s malpractice suit against Kafrissen was stayed in the Court of Common Pleas pending resolution of the coverage question presented in this case, Kafrissen, Clark, and Coregis continued to discuss settlement of Clark’s underlying claim. In a letter dated January 13, 2000, Kafrissen’s attorney in this case, Ronald Kidd, Esquire, informed Coregis that if Coregis did not discontinue the instant declaratory judgment action, Kafrissen would tender a settlement proposal to Clark on January 14, 2000, the following day. The settlement proposal provided that: (1) Clark and Kafrissen would enter a consent judgment against Kafrissen and in favor of Clark in the amount of $3,000,000; (2) Kafrissen would make no admission of liability to Clark; and (3) Clark would execute a covenant not to execute the judgment against any of Kaf-rissen’s assets. See Letter from Kidd to Ball of 1/13/00, at 1. The clear implication underlying the settlement proposal was that following the execution of such a settlement, Clark would be able to proceed against Coregis directly to satisfy the $3 million judgment.

By letter dated the very next day, January 14, 2000, Coregis’s attorney took strong exception to the proposed settlement of Clark’s claim contained in Kidd’s letter. In the letter, Coregis’s attorney cited specific language in Kafrissen’s policy that expressly prohibited Kafrissen from settling any claims made against her under the policy without Coregis’s consent. See Defs.’ Mot. for Summ. J. on Pl.’s Action for Recoupment/Rescission Ex. D at 2. 1 In addition, Coregis’s letter put Kafrissen on notice that, should she agree to the entry of the consent judgment seeking to bind Coregis, Coregis reserved the right to “pursue affirmative relief against Ms. Kaf-rissen for breach of contract, collusion, breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and any other remedies Core-gis may have against Ms. Kafrissen.” Id. at 3.

Following this exchange of letters between Kafrissen and Coregis, no consent judgment between Clark and Kafrissen was ever entered, nor did Clark and Kaf-rissen otherwise reach a settlement of Clark’s malpractice claim. Instead, two months later in March, 2000, Coregis and Clark reached a settlement agreement for $1,000,000 in the underlying action, that was contingent upon Kafrissen consenting to the settlement. 2 Kafrissen agreed to *463 consent to an $800,000 settlement amount, provided that the settlement was “in full and final settlement of all claims, including (a) Cynthia Clark’s claims against Carole Kafrissen and Carole F. Kafrissen, P.C. in the underlying legal malpractice action in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County and (b) Coregis’s claims against Carole Kafrissen and Carole F. Kafrissen, P.C. in [the instant case].” See Defs.’ Mot. for Summ. J. on Pl.’s Action for Recoupment/Rescission Ex. F (emphasis in original).

Despite Kafrissen’s refusal to consent to the settlement without Coregis’s agreement to drop its claim for rescission of its policy with Kafrissen, Coregis subsequently entered into a settlement with Clark dated April 14, 2000 in which Coregis agreed to pay Clark $800,000 in consideration for Clark’s release of all claims against Kafrissen. 3 With leave of the court, Coregis then amended its complaint to seek “reeoupment/restitution” from Kaf-rissen for the $800,000 it paid to Clark pursuant to the April 14, 2000 settlement.

Kafrissen now contends in her motion for summary judgment that Coregis is not entitled to recover from her the $800,000 that it paid to Clark to settle Clark’s claims against Kafrissen, because Coregis’s payment to Clark was a voluntary payment. “[I]t is elementary that one who voluntarily pays money with full knowledge of the facts, without any fraud having been practiced upon him, cannot recover it back.” Ochiuto v. Prudential Ins. Co., 356 Pa. 382, 384, 52 A.2d 228, 230 (Pa.1947). 4 Coregis argues that Kafris-sen’s threat to enter into a consent judgment with Clark, that would purportedly expose Coregis to a $3 million judgment, effectively forced Coregis to enter into the settlement with Clark in order to protect itself from the jeopardy of the possible $3 million consent judgment.

This argument is entirely without merit. One, the threatened “consent judgment” would not have required Coregis to pay $3 million to Clark. As Coregis’s own attorney persuasively stated in his letter to Kidd dated January 14, 2000, the terms of the policy prohibited Kafrissen from entering into such an agreement with Clark and Coregis would have had legal recourse against Kafrissen if she had done so. See Defs.’ Mot. for Summ. J. on Pl.’s Action for RecoupmenVRescission Ex. D. Two, under Pennsylvania law, absent an insurer’s consent to the entry of judgment against the insured, “any judgment secured by the insured cannot be enforced against the insurer.” Sands v. Andino, 404 Pa.Super. 238, 248 590 A.2d 761, 765 (1991). 5 Therefore, it is clear that, as Coregis pointed out when the subject was first broached in January, 2000, a consent judgment agreed upon by Clark and Kafrissen would have had no legal effect upon Coregis.

To the extent that Coregis subjectively believed that the threat of the consent judgment was not illusory but in fact real, a contention the court finds difficult to countenance in light of Coregis’s own

*464 persuasive letter of March 24, 2000, to Kidd, Coregis would have been mistaken as to the law concerning Kafrissen’s ability to bind Coregis under the insurance contract that Coregis had issued to Kafrissen. “[MJoney paid voluntarily, although under a mistake of law as to the interpretation of a contract, cannot be recovered.” Acme Markets, Inc. v. Valley View Shopping Center, Inc., 342 Pa.Super.

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140 F. Supp. 2d 461, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6137, 2001 WL 503385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coregis-insurance-v-law-offices-of-carole-f-kafrissen-pc-paed-2001.