Cowan v. Fidelity Interstate Life Insurance

89 B.R. 564, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6402, 1988 WL 85935
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedJune 28, 1988
DocketCiv. A. 87-4902
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 89 B.R. 564 (Cowan v. Fidelity Interstate Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cowan v. Fidelity Interstate Life Insurance, 89 B.R. 564, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6402, 1988 WL 85935 (E.D. La. 1988).

Opinion

ORDER AND REASONS

CHARLES SCHWARTZ, Jr., District Judge.

This diversity matter is before the Court on motion of defendants Fidelity Interstate Life Insurance Company a/k/a Americare Insurance Company (“Fidelity Life”) and Beneficial Standard Life Insurance Company (“Beneficial Life”) to dismiss, or, in the alternative, for a more definite statement, and to strike pursuant to Rule 12. By consent of counsel, the Court took the matter under submission without oral argument. For the following reasons, the Court now grants the motion in part and denies it in part.

I.

E.H. “Bert” Rhodes was allegedly a Louisiana insurance sales agent who was under appointment to sell life insurance policies issued by Fidelity Life during a period from 1980 to 1982. Mr. Rhodes has filed bankruptcy proceedings in this District, and Dorothy Cowan, who is plaintiff herein, has been appointed his Bankruptcy Trustee.

On November 24, 1986, Mr. Rhodes sued defendants Fidelity Life and Beneficial Life along with ADCO Ltd. a/k/a Assurance Distributing Company (“ADCO”) in the United States District Court for the Central District of California (“the Rhodes matter”). In his complaint, he alleged a slew of tort and contract claims arising out of his apparently unsuccessful dealings with the defendants. As defendants admit, “[essentially, the complaint alleges that defendants willfully and fraudulently breached a contract with Elbert Rhodes and conspired with one another to make fraudulent misrepresentations with the intent to destroy Rhodes’ present and future business.”

In early 1987, the defendants in the Rhodes matter apparently moved for summary judgment on the pleadings. While this Court does not have the record from the Rhodes matter, these defendants apparently moved on the ground (perhaps, among other grounds) that the Bankruptcy Trustee, not the debtor, was the proper person to pursue at least some of the claims alleged in the Rhodes matter. Judge Gadbois, to whom the matter was assigned, granted the motion, but it is unclear exactly which claims he dismissed. On the one hand, an Order Transferring Proceedings, prepared by counsel for Ms. Cowan and Mr. Rhodes and signed on January 7, 1988, states that “plaintiff Bert Rhodes was dismissed as a party plaintiff *566 for certain causes of action.” On the other hand, a Notice of Ruling, prepared by counsel for defendants and filed May 21, 1987, states that “the Court ruled that plaintiffs Complaint be dismissed without prejudice” on May 4, 1987. These two texts are obviously ambiguous on the issue of whether Judge Gadbois dismissed all or merely part of the claims in the Rhodes matter.

On June 15, 1987, counsel for Ms. Cowan and Mr. Rhodes filed in the Los Angeles Courthouse a certain pleading, which recites the same counts found in the Rhodes complaint, names the same three defendants, but names Ms. Cowan, instead of Mr. Rhodes, as the sole party-plaintiff. The clerk accepted the pleading (along with a filing fee of $120 and a notice of a related matter, namely the Rhodes matter) as commencing a new matter (namely, the instant matter, occasionally also referred to as “the Cowan matter”) and assigned it a new docket number. Suggesting that this pleading was intended merely to amend the Rhodes complaint, counsel for Ms. Cowan and Mr. Rhodes argue that this opening of a second matter was “an error on the part of the clerk at the filing window.” Whether the clerk opened a new matter in error or not, no party has moved the court in California to correct any “error.”

On July 24, 1987, in lieu of filing an answer, defendants Fidelity Life and Beneficial Life moved in the Cowan matter to dismiss and/or for a more definite statement and/or to strike. Soon thereafter, on July 31, 1987, they further moved for a transfer of venue to this Court under 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a). Without ruling on the former motion and without any explanation for his disposition of the latter motion, Judge Gadbois granted the latter motion on October 8,1987; pursuant to this order, the matter (which is the instant, Cowan matter) was transferred to this Court on October 14, 1987.

Referring to the above-mentioned Order Transferring Proceedings, counsel for Ms. Cowan and Mr. Rhodes assert that Judge Gadbois also transferred the Rhodes matter to this Court. A close reading of the order, however, belies their argument, for the order states that “the companion case of Rhodes v. Fidelity, U.S.D. C Case No. 87 03834 SVW (GHKx) be and hereby is ORDERED TRANSFERRED to the Eastern District of Louisiana forthwith.” In other words, as the docket number indicates, the order purports to transfer the Cowan matter, not the Rhodes matter. 1 This conclusion is confirmed by a simple look at the record that was transferred to this Court: the Cowan record was sent to this Courthouse, the Rhodes record was not.

The Cowan complaint alleges diversity jurisdiction and asserts twelve purported causes of action under California law: 2 (1) breach of contracts between Fidelity Life and Rhodes, (2) breach of contract between defendants Fidelity Life and AD CO wherein Rhodes was a third-party beneficiary as *567 “an ADCO agent,” (3) accounting of the moneys due Rhodes under these contracts, (4) tort breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing in the contracts between Fidelity Life and Rhodes, (5) bad faith tort denial of contractual obligations in the contracts between Fidelity Life and Rhodes, (6) fraud and deceit, (7) intentional interference with economic advantage, (8) negligent interference with economic advantage, (9) negligent infliction of emotional distress, (10) intentional infliction of emotional distress, (11) conspiracy among defendants to commit the acts alleged in Counts 1-10, and (12) declaratory relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2201. Plaintiff has demanded a jury.

Having still never filed an answer, defendants Fidelity Life and Beneficial Life 3 now reurge their former motion. They raise five points: 4 (A) dismiss the entire complaint for impermissible vagueness or, alternatively, require plaintiff to plead a more definite statement; (B) dismiss Count 6 for failure to plead with particularity or, alternatively, require plaintiff to plead fraud with particularity; (C) dismiss Counts 7-8 for lack of standing by plaintiff; (D) dismiss Counts 9-10 and strike the punitive damages claims in Counts 4-6 for lack of standing by plaintiff; and (E) dismiss Counts 4 and 5 for failure to state causes of action upon which relief can be granted.

II.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 B.R. 564, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6402, 1988 WL 85935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cowan-v-fidelity-interstate-life-insurance-laed-1988.