Mobile Telecommunication Technologies Corp. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.

962 F. Supp. 952, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6391
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Mississippi
DecidedFebruary 18, 1997
DocketCivil Action 3:96CV685LN
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 962 F. Supp. 952 (Mobile Telecommunication Technologies Corp. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mobile Telecommunication Technologies Corp. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., 962 F. Supp. 952, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6391 (S.D. Miss. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

TOM S. LEE, Chief Judge.

This cause is before the court on the motion of plaintiff Mobile Telecommunication Technologies Corp. (Mtel) to dismiss the counterclaim filed by defendant Aetna Casually and Surety Company (Aetna). Aetna has responded to the motion and the court, having considered the memoranda of authorities, together with attachments, submitted by the parties, concludes that Mtel’s motion is well taken and should be granted.

Following a dramatic drop in Mtel’s stock price on January 5, 1994 on the heels of Mtel’s announcement of a substantial cut in its prices for nationwide paging service and expected operating losses for 1994 and 1995, a number of Mtel shareholders filed securities fraud lawsuits against Mtel, its chairman and chief executive officer, its chief financial officer and its executive vice president. Those suits were consolidated, and a consolidated class action complaint alleging securities fraud was then filed against Mtel. In December 1995, this court dismissed the complaint on Mtel’s motion. The plaintiffs noticed an appeal, but withdrew it immediately.

In that securities litigation, Mtel was represented by the Washington D.C. office of the Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue (Jones, Day) law firm. For its work in the case, the firm billed Mtel for legal fees and expenses totaling a shocking $1,916,012.45. Mtel paid Jones, Day, and in January 1996, demanded payment of these fees, less a $250,000 deductible, from Aetna, which provided insurance coverage to Mtel for securities fraud lawsuits, including defense expenses, under an “Insured Persons and Company Reimbursement Policy” (commonly called a Directors and Officers policy). 1 While disputing the amount properly payable for Mtel’s defense of the suit against it, in what Aetna characterizes as an “effort to resolve Mtel’s claim for reimbursement of defense costs,” Aetna paid Mtel $1,000,000 on March 12, 1996, but reserved the right to seek reimbursement for amounts that were determined not to be properly subject to reimbursement under the policy. 2 Thereafter, in September 1996, Mtel filed suit against Aetna seeking to recover from Aetna the balance of the defense expenses it had demanded and which it contended remained due. In its answer, Aet-na not only denied that it owed additional monies to Mtel, but it counterclaimed to re *954 cover an unspecified portion of the $1,000,000 it had paid on the basis that it had paid more than was properly due and owing under the policy. Mtel has moved to dismiss Aethers counterclaim on the basis that “Aetna was, in the contemplation of the law, a volunteer when it paid $1,000,000 in partial satisfaction of Mtel’s $1.6 million claim.” In response, Aetna asserts that the volunteer doctrine, which generally precludes recoupment of monies voluntarily paid, is inapplicable in this case because it paid the $1,000,000 under coercion and/or duress, and based on a mistake of fact.

Explaining the volunteer doctrine, the Mississippi Supreme Court in McLean v. Love, 172 Miss. 168, 157 So. 361, 362 (1934), stated:

It is the general rule in this state, as elsewhere, that a voluntary payment within the meaning of the rule is a payment made, without compulsion or fraud, and without any mistake of fact, of a demand which the payor does not owe, and which is not enforceable against him, instead of invoking the remedy or defense which the law affords against such demand, and when there has been no agreement between the parties at the time of payment, that any excess will be repaid....
There is no hardship in the rule in regard to voluntary payment; on the contrary, its foundation rests among the fundamentals of judicial procedure____ [I]t precludes the Court being occupied in undoing the arrangements of parties, which they have voluntarily made, and into which they have not been drawn by fraud or accident, or by any excusable ignorance of their legal rights and abilities____ [Wjhere an unjust demand has been made upon a party, a demand for a debt which he does not owe, or for more than he owes, he must, when he known or ought to know the facts, avail [himself] of the means which the law affords him to resist the demand, and if he do not, and make the payment demanded, he has not taken due care.

See also Presley v. American Guarantee & Liability Ins. Co., 237 Miss. 807, 116 So.2d 410, 416 (1959).

As indicated, Aetna asserts that its payment of $1,000,000 to Mtel is excepted from the volunteer doctrine because it paid that amount “under duress and/or as a result of a mistake of fact regarding the amount actually due and owing to Mtel.” It alleges that at the time it made the payment, it did not know and had no way of determining the amount of fees and expenses that were properly payable under its policy, and merely succumbed to Mtel’s demand for payment because of “unwarranted threats” by Mtel. According to Aetna, Jones, Day’s billing statements “provided only a generic and partial description of the services for which fees were charged,” cryptically referring to “research,” “review of mateiials,” or “interview witness.” It submits that the statements thus “failed to contain sufficient detail or information to permit Aetna to make a determination of the reasonableness of the fees,” which prompted Aetna to seek additional explanation and information relating to the statements. But throughout the pendency of the securities litigation and even after the case was fully and finally dismissed with prejudice, “Mtel refused to provide Aetna with additional detail or description regarding the daily time entries, allegedly on the grounds that it could not do so without jeopardizing its attorney-client privilege.” Additionally, Aetna states that whereas Mtel had demanded payment of over $100,000 in fees and expenses alleged to be attributable to Mtel’s efforts to have Aetna fulfill its contractual obligations, Mtel “failed to provide any documentation relating to these fees and expenses.” Yet in spite of Mtel’s failure to furnish information that would have enabled Aetna to determine its liability for the Jones, Day fees and expenses, Mtel demanded payment and threatened to hold Aetna liable for interest which Mtel would incur were it required to secure short-term financing to meet its cash needs,

Aetna maintains based on these facts that while on the one hand, it know that some amount of fees and expenses had been reasonably and necessarily incurred in defending Mtel and thus would be owing under its policy, on the other hand, it could not determine the amounts properly owing because of Mtel’s obstructionist conduct. And, since “no *955 legal remedy was readily available to Aetna by which the proper amount of reasonable legal fees and costs could be determined expeditiously enough to permit payment of the proper amount before Mtel incurred further costs due to its professed need to borrow funds,” it had no reasonable alternative other than to estimate as best it could the amount properly owing and to pay that amount, reserving its rights to recover any amount which it overpaid.

In the court’s opinion, Aetna’s claim of coercion and/or duress as a basis for avoiding the volunteer rule is not well founded.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Utica Mut. Ins. Co. v. Munich Reinsurance Am., Inc.
381 F. Supp. 3d 185 (N.D. New York, 2019)
Union Ins. Co. v. Travelers Indem. Co. of Conn.
350 F. Supp. 3d 563 (S.D. Mississippi, 2018)
American & Foreign Insurance v. Jerry's Sport Center, Inc.
2 A.3d 526 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2010)
Genesis Insurance v. Wausau Insurance Companies
343 F.3d 733 (Fifth Circuit, 2003)
Horne v. Time Warner Operations, Inc.
119 F. Supp. 2d 624 (S.D. Mississippi, 1999)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
962 F. Supp. 952, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mobile-telecommunication-technologies-corp-v-aetna-casualty-surety-co-mssd-1997.