Farmers Property and Casualty Insurance Company v. Fallon

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedAugust 3, 2023
Docket2:21-cv-06022
StatusUnknown

This text of Farmers Property and Casualty Insurance Company v. Fallon (Farmers Property and Casualty Insurance Company v. Fallon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers Property and Casualty Insurance Company v. Fallon, (E.D.N.Y. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 10:37 am, Aug 03, 2023

EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK U.S. DISTRICT COURT X EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK FARMERS PROPERTY AND CASUALTY LONG ISLAND OFFICE INSURANCE COMPANY formerly doing business as METROPOLITAN PROPERTY MEMORANDUM AND CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY, OF DECISION & ORDER Plaintiff, 21-CV-6022 (GRB)(ARL) - against –

EDMUND F. FALLON, BEATRICE FALLON, JASON PETER TAYLOR and PRATT TRUCKING AND EXCAVATING, LLC,

Defendants. X

GARY R. BROWN, United States District Judge: In this action, which can well be described as Daedalean, plaintiff Farmers Property and Casualty Insurance Company seeks a declaratory judgment absolving it from duties to defend and indemnify arising from a homeowners’ policy in relation to an automobile collision that has given rise to at least three sets of claims being litigated in at least two courts. While the insured homeowners have failed to appear, plaintiff has not sought a default but rather moved for summary judgment, while the remaining defendants—the owner and the operator of the other vehicle involved in the collision—have opposed. Against this labyrinthian backdrop, with a skeletal factual record, and for the reasons that follow, the Court exercises its discretion, as defined in statute and case law, to decline to render a declaratory judgment. As a result, the action is dismissed. Facts and Procedural History To the extent they can be extricated from the filings, the tangled web of facts and legal maneuvers seem drawn from a law school torts exam, and include the following: On October 21, 2019, an automobile accident occurred on Lakeshore Drive in either Silver Bay, New York, or Hague, New York.1 Docket Entry (“DE”) 1 at 4. These locations, nestled somewhere near Lake George, lie well outside the geographical jurisdiction of this Court.2 Based on the materials and record submitted, one can only draw deductions and conjecture about the underlying facts. It seems that the collision involved a vehicle operated by Edmund Fallon (the “Fallon Vehicle”)—probably a car—and a conveyance owned by Pratt Trucking—likely a truck of some kind. DE 32-8 ¶¶ 3-5. Jason Taylor, who operated the Pratt Trucking vehicle, is alternatively characterized as an employee, lessee, agent and independent contractor. DE 1 at 13. The accident happened near the driveway of a home owned by Edmund, Beatrice and Michael

Fallon, an egress onto Route 9N, and may have been caused by hedges or other landscaping which presumably blocked the drivers’ views. See id. at 36-37. Edmund Fallon seems to have been the owner of the car, and Kathleen Durando, his passenger and likely guest; both sustained injuries in the accident. See DE 32-8 ¶¶ 4, 5. That the Court has been kept in the dark about so many details has some bearing on the appropriate outcome here. Via a Verified Complaint, Edmund Fallon and Durando commenced an action against Taylor and Pratt Trucking in a state court in Nassau County in December 2019, claiming unspecified negligence and injuries in connection with the accident (the “Car Crash Action”). DE 1 at 12. On July 22, 2021, apparently as a result of matters learned in discovery in the Car Crash Action, Taylor and Pratt Trucking commenced a third-party action against Edmond,

Beatrice and Michael Fallon, owners of the Lakeshore home, contending that the accident was “caused solely” by the owners’ collective negligence in failing to maintain the driveway and

1 The location of the relevant home (and the collision) is listed, without explanation, in these two different locations on the very same page of the complaint. DE 1 at 4. 2 While venue appears appropriate because, at least allegedly, Edmund and Beatrice Fallon reside in Nassau County, the filing of the case in this Court—like many aspects of this case—remains curious, though probably irrelevant. foliage at the property (the “Foliage Action”). See id. at 37. As a result of this purported failure, the Foliage Action seeks “full indemnification” and contribution by and from the three property owners in four articulated claims, two of which are alleged against “Beatrice Fallon and Michael Fallon only.” Id. at 37-39. Edmond and Beatrice Fallon maintained a homeowners’ insurance policy with Farmers. Id. at 4. Michael Fallon, identified as an owner of that property in the Foliage Action, is not a listed insured on the Farmers policy. See id. That fact, along with whether he could be entitled to coverage under the policy and, for that matter, everything else about Michael Fallon, remains a mystery, as the record is all but silent as to his involvement here. Since the third-party action

seeks recovery in connection with negligence in maintaining the driveway and adjacent foliage, Edmond and Beatrice Fallon filed a claim with Farmers, seeking defense and coverage. See DE 32-8 at 2-3. Farmers denied both, principally on the ground of a “Motor Vehicle Exclusion” in the policy, though agreed to provide a conditional defense in the third-party action while reserving its right to bring a declaratory judgment action.3 Id. at 3-4. In October 2021, Farmers filed the instant action, which it apparently served on the Fallons personally, but seemingly did not serve either (1) Mr. Fallon’s counsel in the state court action, or (2) the counsel provided by Farmers to represent them in the Foliage Action. See DE 1-1; DE 1-2; DE 1-3; DE 1-4. There is at least one more claim issue—which may have or could well ripen into another declaratory judgment action—growing out of these circumstances. Because plaintiff alleged and

argued that this incident arose from motor vehicle operation rather than risks traditionally

3 Like so many other aspects of this case, the amount spent on the conditional defense remains unavailable to the Court—despite an inquiry on this topic—as plaintiff selected different counsel to represent this action from the counsel handling the third-party action. See DE 31 at 7:1-2 (“I don’t know because we’re not handling the defense.”). Indeed, it seems unlikely that counsel retained to represent the Fallons has been made aware of the instant action. associated with home ownership and maintenance,4 the Court inquired as to the status of automobile insurance coverage of the Fallon Vehicle, leading to the following colloquy with Farmer’s counsel:

The Court: Where is the auto insurer in all of this?

Counsel: [] I believe the auto insurer has denied coverage . . . [T]hey’ve taken the position that since the third party action is a claim for, is a claim based on the improper maintenance of the property, that therefore there’s no coverage under the auto policy. DE 31 at 6:5-13. Thus, it would seem, Edmond Fallon paid for two insurance policies from different carriers, yet finds neither willing to provide coverage. In sum, then, the roles of the relevant parties, to the extent they may be ascertained, are summarized in the following table:5

Farmers Edmund Beatrice Michael Jason Pratt Kathleen Unknown Fallon Fallon Fallon Taylor Trucking Durando Insurance Company Role in Insurer, Owner & Owner, Owner, Driver, Pratt Owner Passenger, Insurer, Collision Fallon Driver, Fallon Fallon Vehicle and Fallon Fallon home Fallon Home Home Lessor, Vehicle, Vehicle Vehicle, Pratt Injured Injured Vehicle Relationship Owner Owner Owner to Real Property Vehicular Owner Employee, Owner of Passenger, Insurer, Involvement and Lessee, Vehicle Fallon Fallon Driver Agent or Vehicle Vehicle Independent Contractor

Role in Litigation and Claims Car Crash Plaintiff Defendant Defendant Plaintiff Insurer Action Foliage Providing Defendant Defendant Defendant Plaintiff Plaintiff Denied Action Conditional Coverage Defense

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Farmers Property and Casualty Insurance Company v. Fallon, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-property-and-casualty-insurance-company-v-fallon-nyed-2023.