Douglas F. Warner v. Donat Rossignol v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, Intervenor-Appellee

513 F.2d 678, 1975 U.S. App. LEXIS 15269
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedApril 7, 1975
Docket74-1329
StatusPublished
Cited by89 cases

This text of 513 F.2d 678 (Douglas F. Warner v. Donat Rossignol v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, Intervenor-Appellee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Douglas F. Warner v. Donat Rossignol v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, Intervenor-Appellee, 513 F.2d 678, 1975 U.S. App. LEXIS 15269 (1st Cir. 1975).

Opinion

LEVIN H. CAMPBELL, Circuit Judge.

This appeal involves the aftermath of a settlement which, to use the vernacular, became unstuck. Douglas F. Warner sued Donat Rossignol in tort under the diversity jurisdiction for injuries resulting from an accident. The issue of liability was tried first; and a jury returned special findings that Rossignol’s servant was “guilty” of negligence which was a proximate cause of the accident, and that plaintiff Warner was not so guilty. On March 1, 1974, the district court entered “judgment” for plaintiff against defendant “in an amount of damages to be determined by the court after further jury trial”. The damages trial was scheduled for March 14 at 9:30 a. m. before the same jury. However, on March 13, counsel for defendant notified the court that the case was settled, and the court accordingly removed it from the trial calendar and dismissed the jury.

Under the settlement orally concluded by counsel, Rossignol was to pay Warner $6,000 and Warner was to furnish releases to Rossignol, following which counsel would file a stipulation of dismissal of the action with prejudice and without costs.

All proceeded smoothly for sometime thereafter: defendant’s attorney mailed releases and stipulations of dismissal to plaintiff’s attorney on March 27, stating,

“Upon receipt of all these documents properly executed, I will deliver or remit (in accordance with your instructions) our certified or bank check (again in accordance with your instructions) forthwith. I would appreciate it if you would obviously [sic] give me instructions as to how you desire the check to be made out.”

Warner’s attorney responded on April 3, transmitting the executed dismissals and Warner’s release, but declining to furnish a requested release from Warner’s parents. He wrote,

“Please hold the enclosed release and Stipulations of Dismissal in escrow and let them be of no effect until I receive a certified check payable to me as Attorney for Douglas Warner for $6,000.”

On April 5, 1974, Warner’s attorney furnished Rossignol’s attorney by mail with a requested discharge of real estate attachment.

On April 9, 1974, Rossignol’s attorney wrote Warner’s attorney acknowledging receipt of the foregoing, questioning the absence of a parental release, and stating that he had forwarded the Stipulation of Dismissal of the District Court case to defendant’s insurer’s attorney for his signature,

“all upon condition that these Stipulations are to be in no way construed to be effective until you have received the total settlement amount of $6,000.00.”

*681 In his letter of even date to the insurer’s attorney, defendant’s attorney reiterated that the stipulations “cannot, under no [sic] circumstances, be considered as effective until [plaintiff] has received the settlement check in the amount of $6,000.00”.

On April 11, 1974, Warner’s attorney forwarded a release from Warner’s parents, thus terminating the one disagreement that had ruffled the so far placid waters.

Rossignol did not, however, immediately tender the $6,000 although his attorney acknowledged by letter of April 21 that plaintiff’s obligations had been fulfilled. When plaintiff’s counsel pressed for payment in May, he was told by Ros-signol’s attorney that Rossignol had been seeing other attorneys and had resisted the attorney’s pleas for a check.

On May 12, after forewarning defendant that he intended to do so, plaintiff’s attorney wrote to the Clerk of the District Court that plaintiff “withdraws his willingness to enter this compromise”, assigning as the principal reason Rossig-nol’s unwillingness to pay the $6,000. Plaintiff’s attorney insisted that the original settlement had contemplated payment within two weeks from March 13, 1974. Plaintiff requested that the case be scheduled for jury trial on damages only.

On May 27, defendant’s attorney wrote to the Clerk confirming that a settlement had been made and his own authority to settle, but denying that the settlement had included any discussion regarding timing of payment. The attorney wrote that he had,

“requested payment several times from my client. . . . My client has also apparently consulted with allegedly a ‘dozen’ other attorneys. He appears at junctures to be quite disturbed. ... I forwarded a copy of [plaintiff’s counsel’s letter demanding payment] to my client. He has contacted this office twice without speaking to me, the last time indicating that there was a death in the family and that he would contact me in a day or two. . . I do not know what my client’s current position is.”

The letter ended with the statement that in the absence of arrangements for payment, counsel felt he should withdraw.

On May 30, Rossignol finally provided his attorney with a Treasurer’s check for $6,000 payable to plaintiff, which the attorney undertook to deliver. Plaintiff, however, refused to accept it, taking the position that the settlement had been terminated, and that he would proceed with assessment of damages in his original action. Thereupon Rossignol filed a motion entitled “Motion to Enforce Settlement and for Entry of Order Concerning Payment of Judgment in Full” to which he attached the $6,000 check and the various executed releases and dismissal documents. In the motion, Ros-signol requested an order “enforcing the settlement and providing that said judgment be satisfied in full and that said check be turned over to the attorney for the Plaintiff.”

Plaintiff, in response, moved for summary judgment both on his earlier requests for assessment of damages in the original action and on defendant’s motion to enforce the settlement. Plaintiff also requested that if the matter could not be summarily resolved in his favor, he be granted a jury trial on the factual issues raised by the parties’ motions.

The motions were heard by the court on June 21 at an unreported proceeding attended by counsel. On the basis of a review of the documents on file in the case, and of the oral representations of counsel, but without hearing any, evidence, the court found, in essence, that there was a settlement; that by April 23 releases and a dismissal had been executed; that by May 30 defendant delivered a Treasurer’s check for $6,000 to his attorney, who notified plaintiff’s attorney; and that plaintiff’s attorney had refused to accept the cheek in satisfaction of the settlement. The court made no findings as to whether or not defendant had by his actions and those of his attorney repudiated or committed a *682 breach of the original compromise agreement, so as to permit plaintiff to withdraw. The court denied plaintiff’s motion for a jury trial on damages, and granted defendant’s motion to enforce the settlement. The clerk was ordered to deliver the $6,000 check to plaintiff’s counsel in full satisfaction of the agreement for settlement, and to deliver and file the appropriate releases and stipulation of dismissal.

On appeal, plaintiff argues that he was at liberty to revoke the settlement, both because parties to an unconsummated accord and satisfaction can always revoke prior to satisfaction and, more plausibly, because defendant repudiated and failed to perform his part of the bargain.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
513 F.2d 678, 1975 U.S. App. LEXIS 15269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglas-f-warner-v-donat-rossignol-v-state-farm-mutual-automobile-ca1-1975.