Kane v. Stewart Tilghman Fox & Bianchi, P.A.

485 B.R. 460, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7775, 2013 WL 226891
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedJanuary 18, 2013
DocketNos. 12-cv-80750-KMM, 09-ap-01838-EPK, 09-ap-01839-EPK
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 485 B.R. 460 (Kane v. Stewart Tilghman Fox & Bianchi, P.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kane v. Stewart Tilghman Fox & Bianchi, P.A., 485 B.R. 460, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7775, 2013 WL 226891 (S.D. Fla. 2013).

Opinion

ORDER

K. MICHAEL MOORE, District Judge.

THIS CAUSE is before the Court on an appeal from the Final Judgment and Memorandum Opinion, which were entered by the Bankruptcy Court on May 10, 2012.1 This Court has jurisdiction over the appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1) and Fed. R. Bankr.P. 8001. For the reasons stated herein, the Bankruptcy Court’s Final Judgment and Memorandum Opinion are affirmed.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND2

Harley Kane and Charles Kane (collectively, the “Appellants”) are attorneys and were the only partners in the general partnership of Kane & Kane (the “Partnership”). Appellants worked together with a separate group of lawyers (collectively, the “PIP Lawyers”) to file thousands of lawsuits in the State of Florida on behalf of medical providers against the Progressive Insurance Companies (“Progressive”). The PIP Lawyers brought various claims under insurance policies issued by Progressive on behalf of their clients (the “PIP Claims”). All of the PIP Lawyers jointly represented all of the clients for the purpose of bringing claims on behalf of as many clients as possible. In order to further pressure Progressive into settlement, the PIP Lawyers decided to also file lawsuits for bad faith refusal to settle claims (the “Bad Faith Claims”). In order to pursue the Bad Faith Claims on behalf of their clients, the PIP Lawyers engaged Appellees to serve as counsel. The PIP Lawyers and Appellees entered into an engagement agreement for Appellees to file Bad Faith Claims for the clients repre[465]*465sented by the PIP Lawyers. Although Appellees never signed engagement agreements with all of the clients represented by the PIP Lawyers, Appellees effectively represented the interests of every client asserting PIP Claims because the eventual goal was to bring Bad Faith Claims on behalf of as many clients as possible. Under a contingency fee arrangement, Appel-lees would receive sixty percent of all attorney’s fees received from the Bad Faith Claims. The overwhelming evidence demonstrates that the PIP Claims and Bad Faith Claims were inextricably intertwined and not considered separate actions by any party.3 Appellees, however, were the only lawyers addressing the Bad Faith Claims or those clients who had potential bad faith claims.

Appellees successfully litigated the Bad Faith Claims and exerted control over their negotiation and settlement. In January 2004, Progressive and Appellees entered into negotiations to settle the Bad Faith Claims and any potential bad faith claims held by other clients with PIP Claims. Following Appellees’ offer of twenty million dollars to settle all of the bad faith claims and a counter-offer of two million dollars by Progressive, a formal mediation was scheduled for April 2004 to settle all potential claims. In order to avoid a conflict of interest between the clients and counsel, Appellees suggested that the Bad Faith Claims be addressed before the PIP Claims were addressed. Appellees were concerned that any apportionment in an aggregate settlement between the PIP Claims and Bad Faith Claims would create a conflict of interest between the clients and counsel. Appel-lees were apprehensive because ninety percent of any recovery of the PIP Claims would go to counsel, while only ten percent would go to the clients. Whereas in the Bad Faith Claims, the clients would receive sixty percent of any potential recovery and counsel would receive the remainder.

Prior to the mediation, Appellees and the PIP Lawyers met to discuss the claims and negotiation strategies. Appellees were authorized to not only negotiate and settle all the Bad Faith Claims, but also the PIP Claims. As a result, the PIP Lawyers agreed in writing to increase Ap-pellees contingent fee to seventy-five percent of any recovery of the Bad Faith Claims.4

At the mediation, Progressive made an offer to settle the Bad Faith Claims for $3.5 million while Appellees made a counter offer of $18.5 million. The mediation resulted in an impasse, and Appellees reported this result to the PIP Lawyers.5 After the mediation, Appellees continued to successfully pursue the Bad Faith Claims in state court and achieved numer[466]*466ous material adverse rulings against Progressive.

While Appellees were actively pursuing the Bad Faith Claims in state court, the PIP Lawyers — without notifying Appel-lees — met with Progressive and settled all claims, including all PIP Claims, Bad Faith Claims, and any potential bad faith claims held by clients with PIP Claims (the “Settlement”). The Settlement, written in a document called the Memorandum of Understanding, was for approximately $14.5 million, of which more than $10.9 million was allocated to attorney’s fees and costs for the PIP Claims. No specific amount of the aggregate settlement was allocated to any bad faith claims. The PIP Lawyers then prepared a joint letter to the clients, which omitted numerous material details, in order to obtain the necessary releases.

Appellees did not learn of the Settlement until after it was executed. The PIP Lawyers refused to provide the documents related to the Settlement or even the terms of the Settlement to Appellees. Only after a state court issued an order compelling the documents did Appellees learn of the terms of the Settlement.

The PIP Lawyers and Progressive subsequently amended the Settlement in a document called the Amended Memorandum of Understanding, which was also executed without notifying Appellees. This document arbitrarily allocated $1.75 million for the Bad Faith Claims out of the aggregate settlement amount of approximately $14.5 million.6 The vast majority of clients, however, still did not have an apportionment of the aggregate settlement allocated to their potential bad faith claims even though it required a release of such claims.7 The PIP Lawyers then notified the clients about the conflict between the PIP Lawyers and Appellees over attorney’s fees, terminated the Appellees’ representation, appeared in the Bad Faith Claims as counsel for the clients, and voluntarily dismissed the Bad Faith Claims.

Following these events, Appellees filed a lawsuit asserting various claims against the PIP Lawyers in Florida state court (the “State Court Action”). After a ten-week bench trial, the state court entered a final judgment in favor of Appellees and against Appellants, jointly and severally, in the amount of $2 million plus interest on the claim of quantum meruit and unjust enrichment (the “State Court Judgment”). See State Court Judgment (ECF No. 2-30, at 10).

On November 17, 2008, each Appellant and the Partnership filed voluntary petitions under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code (the “Chapter 11 Proceeding”). After a hearing on Appellees’ motion to dismiss on March 20, 2009, the Bankruptcy Court orally ruled that all three petitions were dismissed because they were filed in bad faith. However, the Bankruptcy Court ordered that the effective date for dismissal would be March 30, 2009. In the interim, the Partnership was authorized to only pay for goods and services in the ordinary course of business and no distributions were to be made to Appellants unless authorized by the Bankruptcy Court. See Mar.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
485 B.R. 460, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7775, 2013 WL 226891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kane-v-stewart-tilghman-fox-bianchi-pa-flsd-2013.