Daly's Case

537 N.E.2d 1224, 405 Mass. 33, 1989 Mass. LEXIS 160
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 9, 1989
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 537 N.E.2d 1224 (Daly's Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daly's Case, 537 N.E.2d 1224, 405 Mass. 33, 1989 Mass. LEXIS 160 (Mass. 1989).

Opinion

Abrams, J.

The main issue is the correctness of a decision by the Department of Industrial Accidents (DIA) approving the terms of a settlement of a third-party action. See G. L. *34 c. 152, § 15 (1986 ed.). 2 The injured claimant, Thomas L. Daly, agreed to pay his attorney, Mr. James N. Esdaile, Jr., a contingent legal fee of one-third of any third-party recovery. Travelers Insurance Company (Travelers), which insured Daly’s employer, was fully reimbursed out of the third-party settlement for the compensation it paid Daly. The settlement apportioned Esdaile’s fee between Daly and Travelers. Travelers appealed the DIA’s decision, asserting that it cannot be held liable to pay Esdaile a fee out of its share of the settlement because it has not retained Esdaile to represent it, nor agreed to pay Esdaile a contingency fee; and because Esdaile’s representation of both Travelers’ and Daly’s interests in the third-party action would constitute a conflict of interest in violation of S.J.C. Rule 3:07, Canon 5, DR 5-105, as appearing in 382 Mass. 781 (1981). We transferred the case to this court on our own motion. We must determine if the DIA erred as a matter of law in apportioning Esdaile’s fee between Travelers and Daly. See Attorney Gen. v. Department of Pub. Utils., 390 Mass. 208, 228-229 (1983). See also G. L. c. 152, § 12 (2); G. L. c. 30A, § 14 (7). We conclude there was no error. We affirm.

Daly was injured July 2, 1983, in the course of his employment when a tractor-trailer he was driving skidded off the highway in Troy, New Hampshire, and fell down an eighty-foot embankment. Travelers eventually paid Daly a total of $92,000 in workers’ compensation. Daly meanwhile retained Esdaile to represent him in a third-party action against the highway construction company which allegedly was responsible for the slippery condition of the road on which Daly was injured. That action was filed in the United States District Court for the District of New Hampshire in December, 1983. Esdaile conducted extensive discovery, including approximately twelve depositions.

*35 In January, 1984, Esdaile wrote to a Joseph Leary at Travelers, stating Esdaile’s position that Travelers’ “retention of additional counsel [in the third-party action would] be at the expense of Travelers and [would] not alter or amend [Esdaile’s firm’s] right to [its] one-third fee to be proportionately divided between the insurer and the recipient of the workers’ compensation.” Leary replied on April 4, 1984, stating that Travelers disagreed with Esdaile’s interpretation of G. L. c. 152, § 15, and that it intended to retain its own counsel. Leary’s letter continued: “Nor do we feel bound by any fee arrangement which you may have made with the plaintiff, and wish to make it plain that any legal fees payable by the insurer under [G. L. c. 152, §] 15 on this case, will be paid to counsel of our choice and not to your firm, whom we have never retained and with whom we have in fact no agreement whatsoever. While it is in the interest of both the employee and the insurer to cooperate in order to obtain a recovery from the [t]hird-party, circumstances may arise and indeed have with other counsel, especially in a negotiation of a settlement, where there could be a real conflict of interest on the part of your office in representing both parties.”

Travelers’ attorney, Mr. Peter D. Cole, filed an appearance in the pending third-party action on April 3, 1984, purportedly appearing on behalf of Daly, although he had no agreement with Daly to do so. On April 5, 1984, Esdaile wrote to Cole, reiterating the position he had taken with Leary. Esdaile also noted the weaknesses he perceived in his client’s third-party action and expressed his concern that Travelers disputed its liability for its proportionate share of the contingent fee.

In May, 1986, and then again in October, 1986, Esdaile wrote to Cole outlining the settlement negotiations he had had with the third-party defendants and requesting that Travelers consider reducing its claim for reimbursement. Travelers refused to reduce its claim.

On October 7, 1986, Daly signed a release settling the third-party action for $225,000. Cole and Esdaile continued to correspond concerning their disagreement over Travelers’ liability for Esdaile’s fee. On October 15, 1986, Esdaile advised Cole *36 that Travelers’ “unwillingness ... to comply with the provisions of [G. L. c. 152, § 15,] constitutes an unfair claims settlement practice under the provisions of [G. L. c. 176D, § 3 (9)], and in particular subsections 3(9)f and 3(9)g. As you know, a violation of the unfair claims practices act constitutes an unfair trade practice under the provisions of [G. L. c.] 93A.” Esdaile expressed his intention to bring an action against Travelers if it did not “cease and desist [its] efforts to shift the legal fees incurred directly by the Travelers . . . to . . . Daly” and “to obstruct the third-party settlement now available to . . . Daly.” Travelers thereafter agreed to let the settlement proceed, with the amount assertedly due Esdaile out of Travelers’ portion (i.e., one-third of $92,000) to be held in escrow pending resolution of that issue.

The DIA approved the third-party settlement in February, 1987. In May, 1987, the DIA ordered that the escrowed sum be paid to Esdaile. The DIA noted that Travelers “[did] not claim to be dissatisfied with the terms of the settlement, nor [did] it contend that its counsel performed any services in the tort action.” The DIA concluded that Travelers’ obligation to pay Esdaile out of its share of the settlement arose by statute and could not be disavowed unilaterally.

Travelers argues that the language of G. L. c. 152, § 15, does not anticipate cases in which two attorneys are necessary in the third-party action to represent the divergent interests of the employee and the insurer. In such circumstances, Travelers argues, if the insurer were required to pay part of the employee’s attorney’s fee, the insurer would in effect be forced into an attorney-client relationship with an attorney not of the insurer’s choosing, and with an attorney who represents an interest in conflict with the insurer’s own. Alternatively, Travelers argues that, if it is liable to Esdaile at all, it cannot be held to the one-third contingency rate agreed to between Daly and Esdaile, in as much as Travelers was not a party to that agreement.

General Laws c. 152, § 15 (1986 ed.), mandates reimbursement of an insurer out of a third-party recovery. We have said it would be unfair to permit the employee to recover twice for the same injury. Hunter v. Midwest Coast Transp., Inc., 400 *37 Mass. 779, 783 (1987), citing Richard v. Arsenault, 349 Mass. 521, 524 (1965). In Hunter, we also said that there is no “unfairness to an insurer in a system that reimburses the insurer for benefits paid . . . but requires it to pay the legal freight for the benefits it realizes.” Hunter v. Midwest Coast Transp., Inc., supra at 785. 3 In Hunter,

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Bluebook (online)
537 N.E.2d 1224, 405 Mass. 33, 1989 Mass. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dalys-case-mass-1989.