Culligan v. James Erskine Company, No. Cv 91-0323816 (Dec. 10, 1991)

1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 10709, 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 121
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1991
DocketNo. CV 91-0323816 CV 91-0324058
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 10709 (Culligan v. James Erskine Company, No. Cv 91-0323816 (Dec. 10, 1991)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Culligan v. James Erskine Company, No. Cv 91-0323816 (Dec. 10, 1991), 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 10709, 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 121 (Colo. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The above-captioned cases come before the court on the plaintiff's application for a prejudgment replevin of certain documents (as to Civil No. 91-0324058) and his application for a temporary injunction to prevent the defendant from denying him access to certain files and business information in the defendant's possession. The two applications were heard together in a hearing that spanned two days. CT Page 10710

The facts are found to be as follows.

The plaintiff, Patrick Culligan, has made his living since 1984 by selling insurance in various capacities with various employers.

In 1988, the plaintiff was working at the Malcolm Insurance Agency in Milford, finding customers and then securing insurance for them through the agency, which was authorized to write insurance for several insurers. The plaintiff was not then and has never become an authorized agent of any insurance company but has been what is termed a "producer" who brings business to such agents. The plaintiff is, however, licensed to write insurance directly with the state's assigned risk pool.

James Erskine worked at the Malcolm Agency at the same time as the plaintiff. Erskine was an agent for at least one insurer and began planning to set up his own agency. This plan came to light and he was fired by the Malcolm Agency, which also fired the plaintiff out of suspicion that he was involved in Erskine's plan. On President's Day 1989, the day the plaintiff was fired, Erskine visited him at home and proposed that the plaintiff join him in his new business venture. Though two proposed drafts of a written agreement as to the arrangement were subsequently drafted, no formal written agreement was ever signed by the parties, and the plaintiff began to work with the defendant on the basis of the oral agreement reached at his home on President's Day 1989.

The parties have differing recollections of the terms of that agreement, however the court finds that their agreement included the following terms:

1. The defendant could not offer the plaintiff a salary or its so agreed to pay him fifty percent of the commissions the agency received from insurers for property and casualty policies he initiated or helped initiate and eighty percent of such commissions on life and health policies.

2. The plaintiff's "book of business", that is, the names of his customers and information helpful to selling them insurance in the future, including the expiration dates of their policies, would be the plaintiff's to keep and would not become the exclusive property of the agency (in contrast to the plaintiff's situation at the Malcolm Agency).

3. If business identified as the plaintiff's account was cancelled, he would owe the defendant his share of any unearned commission paid, and adjustments would be made to reflect such cancellation. CT Page 10711

4. The plaintiff was not required to spend any particular amounts of time at the agency's office, which Erskine set up in his home.

The day after the parties reached the above agreement, the Malcolm Agency offered the plaintiff his salaried job back. The plaintiff refused this offer because he believed that by owning his own book of business he would, over time, be in a better position than if his efforts merely enriched an agency which paid him a fixed salary.

On July 9, 1991, Erskine confronted the plaintiff with his discovery that the plaintiff had been writing business directly with the Connecticut Assigned Risk Pool instead of writing it through the agency so that there would be a fifty-fifty split of resulting commissions. The plaintiff denies that the oral agreement he reached with Erskine included a requirement that he not write any business outside the agency. Erskine testified that such exclusivity was his "expectation" but he did not testify that this expectation was ever made an express part of the parties' agreement. Since Erskine was not paying the plaintiff a salary or benefits, there is no reason to regard an exclusivity agreement as a natural and logical feature of the agreement between the parties, and it appears that there was simply no meeting of the minds as to exclusivity.

The defendant advised the plaintiff on July 9, 1991, that their arrangement was at an end.

The plaintiff claims that he is entitled to his "book of business" in the form of copies of customer records and expiration information to give effect to the agreement that he would have an ownership interest in his efforts whether or not he stayed with Erskine. The plaintiff's "book of business" consists of those clients whose business was brought to the Erskine agency by the plaintiff or who were designated as clients of the plaintiff after joint efforts by the plaintiff and Erskine and as to whom the plaintiff was accorded a portion of the commission in the past.

Except as to customers who have filed formal "broker of record letters" requesting that the insurance company transfer their account from the defendant to the agency with which the plaintiff is now affiliated, the defendant has refused to give any effect to the agreement that the plaintiff would have an ownership interest in his "book of business." The defendant has, however, continued to pay the plaintiff commissions and to adjust for unearned commissions as to accounts previously designated as being the plaintiff's accounts at the defendant agency, and the defendant recognizes an obligation to pay the plaintiff fifty percent of commissions received by the agency as to renewals of CT Page 10712 such business.

The plaintiff is now affiliated with another insurance agency through which he is able to secure insurance for clients.

The defendant has sent out notices to insureds who were the plaintiff's customers (that is, customers as to whom plaintiff was to receive half of the agency's commission) stating that the plaintiff had left the Erskine agency and, by their wording, suggesting that the plaintiff was no longer available to sell them insurance and that Erskine would handle the customers' accounts.

REPLEVIN

The plaintiff's application for a prejudgment remedy seeks replevin of "copies of Patrick Culligan's insurance client files and his `x-date' files [expiration date records] which contain names, addresses, and other relevant information of prospective clients."

The statutory remedy of replevin exists to achieve the return to the rightful owner of goods wrongfully taken or detained by another. 52-523 et seq. C.G.S. Prejudgment replevin is among the prejudgment remedies authorized pursuant to 52-278a et seq. C.G.S., upon a showing of probable cause that the plaintiff will prevail on his claims. International Harvester Credit Corp. v. Gillis, 4 Conn. App. 510, cert. denied, 197 Conn. 808 (1985).

The plaintiff has failed to establish that the documents he seeks to replevy, that is, copies of the records of customers insured through the defendant agency, in fact exist. He does not seek to replevy the actual records, but only copies, a limitation that recognizes the need of the customers for continuous record keeping by a duly authorized agent of the insurance companies that wrote their coverage.

In actuality, the plaintiff seeks an order requiring the defendant to create new property, that is, copies of the insurance records as to those insureds who were designated as his customers before his termination. The relief he seeks is not within the ambit of the replevin statute. Replevin is a purely statutory action, Staub v. Anderson, 152 Conn. 694

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Berin v. Olson
439 A.2d 357 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1981)
Moore v. Serafin
301 A.2d 238 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1972)
Staub v. Anderson
211 A.2d 691 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1965)
Robertson v. Lewie
59 A. 409 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1904)
City of New London v. Perkins
87 A. 724 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1913)
Case v. Zeiff
10 Conn. Super. Ct. 530 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1942)
Covenant Radio Corporation v. Ten Eighty Corporation
390 A.2d 949 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1977)
Dukes v. Durante
471 A.2d 1368 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1984)
Cummings v. Tripp
527 A.2d 230 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1987)
International Harvester Credit Corp. v. Gillis
495 A.2d 295 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1985)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 10709, 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/culligan-v-james-erskine-company-no-cv-91-0323816-dec-10-1991-connsuperct-1991.