HIGHLAND PARK CARE CENTER v. CAMPMED CASUALTY & INDEMNITY COMPANY OF MARYLAND

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 8, 2020
Docket2:18-cv-01673
StatusUnknown

This text of HIGHLAND PARK CARE CENTER v. CAMPMED CASUALTY & INDEMNITY COMPANY OF MARYLAND (HIGHLAND PARK CARE CENTER v. CAMPMED CASUALTY & INDEMNITY COMPANY OF MARYLAND) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
HIGHLAND PARK CARE CENTER v. CAMPMED CASUALTY & INDEMNITY COMPANY OF MARYLAND, (W.D. Pa. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA HIGHLAND PARK CARE ) ) CENTER, LLC, ) )

Plaintiff, ) 2:18-cv-1673 )

vs. ) )

) CAMPMED CASUALTY & ) INDEMNITY COMPANY OF ) ) MARYLAND, ) ) Defendant. ) ) OPINION J. Nicholas Ranjan, United States District Judge This lawsuit mainly involves two insurance-coverage issues. One, when does an insurer’s duty to defend end? And, two, can an insurer limit its liability to pay ongoing post-judgment interest on a verdict under a standard-interest clause by tendering that verdict? The material and undisputed factual allegations are as follows. In 2005, Richard Scampone brought a personal-injury action in Pennsylvania state court against the policyholder (Highland Park). The lawsuit alleged negligence and sought compensatory and punitive damages. Highland Park’s insurer (Campmed) defended, but disclaimed any liability for punitive damages, as there was a punitive-damages exclusion under the policy. In 2007, the jury rendered a verdict of about $200,000 in compensatory damages against Highland Park. This was reduced to a judgment, which included an award for interest and costs. This was all covered by the policy. In 2015, after a second trial on punitive damages (that led to a defense verdict) and an appeal, the case returned to the trial court. At that time, Campmed, on behalf of Highland Park, paid the verdict amount into a state- court account, plus the post-judgment interest that had accrued to that point. It did so to stop the clock on its post-judgment interest liability. Mr. Scampone, however, never collected that money or asked the clerk to mark the money judgment as “satisfied.” And post-judgment interest continued to accrue beyond that date, as made clear by an order of the trial court entered a few years later. In 2018, after another appeal, the case returned to the trial court. Mr. Scampone and Highland Park were set to proceed to trial solely on punitive damages. In September 2018, Campmed withdrew its defense, claiming that because only punitive damages remained and because the policy excluded coverage for those damages, Campmed owed no defense.1 That trial never happened because the case settled in 2020. When the Scampone case settled, the clerk disbursed the funds for the earlier judgment to Mr. Scampone and marked the judgment satisfied. Highland Park and Campmed have now cross-moved for partial summary judgment on the issues noted above dealing with the duty to defend and duty to pay post-judgment interest on the verdict. For the reasons below, and applying the familiar standard of review under Rule 56, the Court grants Highland Park’s motion and finds that: (1) Campmed’s duty to defend continued until satisfaction of the unpaid covered verdict; and (2) Campmed must pay all post-judgment interest added to that covered verdict under the

1 Campmed resumed its defense on June 18, 2019 because, at that point, a co- defendant asserted a new covered cross-claim against Highland Park. [ECF 50, ¶ 52; ECF 56, ¶ 52]. Thus, Campmed was without a defense for about nine months during fourteen years of litigation in state court. policy’s standard-interest clause because Campmed’s 2015 payment of the verdict into a state-court account did not extinguish its interest obligation. DISCUSSION & ANALYSIS I. Campmed’s duty to defend extended until satisfaction of the unpaid covered verdict. Highland Park claims that Campmed breached its duty to defend when it withdrew its defense of Highland Park in September 2018 because, at that point, there were still covered claims in the lawsuit— , the unsatisfied compensatory-damages verdict. The Court agrees based on the policy language, Pennsylvania law, and the undisputed, material facts of this particular case. The policy provides that Campmed has a duty to defend Highland Park in any “suit” seeking covered damages.2 [ECF 66-1, Section I(a)]. “Suit” is defined as a “civil proceeding in which damages because of ‘bodily injury’ . . . to which this insurance applies are alleged.” [ ]. To “allege” means to “assert,” “declare,” or “plead.” DICTIONARY.COM, https://www.dictionary.com/browse/allege?s=t (last visited May 8, 2020). Thus, for Campmed to have a duty to defend Highland Park, (1) there must be a pending civil proceeding, and (2) in that proceeding, there must be allegations seeking damages for bodily injury that are covered under the policy.

2 The insuring agreement of the policy provides that Campmed will “pay those sums that the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as damages because of ‘bodily injury’. . . to which this insurance applies. We will have the right and duty to defend the insured against any ‘suit’ seeking those damages. However, we will have no duty to defend the insured against any ‘suit’ seeking damages for ‘bodily injury’. . . to which this insurance does not apply.” [ECF 66-1, Section I(a)]. If there are no longer any covered damages ( ., there is no pending “suit,” or the suit no longer seeks damages that are covered under the policy), then the policy language dictates that Campmed no longer has a duty to defend. ., 691 F.3d 500, 517 (3d Cir. 2012) (“The insurer’s duty to defend exists until the claim is confined to a recovery that the policy does not cover.”) (cleaned up). Thus, starting with this policy language, in September 2018, when Campmed withdrew its defense, there was a pending “suit” in which covered damages were “alleged.” Specifically, the Scampone suit asserted covered compensatory damages— ., the $200,000 verdict. That those damages were reduced to a judgment by verdict does not mean that those damages were excised from the proceeding. And nothing in the policy suggests that damages are no longer being “alleged” ( ., asserted, declared, or pleaded) once reduced to a verdict. Further, there still remained the possibility of additional litigation related to the compensatory-damages award, including disputes over execution and payment of the judgment. In fact, those disputes occurred. [ECF 66- 7, at Ex. R]. Until those damages were finally resolved through satisfaction, covered damages were being alleged in the suit. 42 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. § 8104(a) (establishing that, under Pennsylvania law, a money judgment is not discharged until the point of satisfaction).3 Campmed therefore had a duty to

3 At oral argument, the Court raised the following hypothetical. What if an insurer pays a covered judgment to the plaintiff, but the check gets lost in the mail? The plaintiff then proceeds to file writs of garnishment and other collection motions against the policyholder. Would the insurer have the duty to defend the policyholder against that litigation over the payment? MSJ Hr’g Tr. Apr. 29, 2020, 32:13-33:10. A liability insurer cannot, in good faith, leave its policyholder exposed, by withdrawing its defense when a covered judgment remains unsatisfied and subject to dispute. This case is no different. defend Highland Park until the judgment was paid, received by Mr. Scampone, and marked satisfied by the clerk.4 This differs from the more common situation in which a duty to defend ends in the middle of a pending suit. That situation occurs when a suit asserts both covered and uncovered claims, and the court dismisses the covered claims. At that point, the remaining claims are uncovered ones, and, depending on the language of the policy, the insurer’s duty to defend may cease. This is because the covered claims are completely eliminated from the lawsuit. , ., 789 F.2d 214, 218 (3d Cir. 1986) (noting that insurer’s duty to defend ceases “when a claim clearly within the policy coverage is withdrawn and one outside the policy coverage remains”); , No.

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Bluebook (online)
HIGHLAND PARK CARE CENTER v. CAMPMED CASUALTY & INDEMNITY COMPANY OF MARYLAND, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/highland-park-care-center-v-campmed-casualty-indemnity-company-of-pawd-2020.