Northern Maine Transport LLC v. Onebeacon America Insurance

820 F. Supp. 2d 139, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 120688, 2011 WL 5009470
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedOctober 19, 2011
Docket1:10-cv-00370-JAW
StatusPublished

This text of 820 F. Supp. 2d 139 (Northern Maine Transport LLC v. Onebeacon America Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northern Maine Transport LLC v. Onebeacon America Insurance, 820 F. Supp. 2d 139, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 120688, 2011 WL 5009470 (D. Me. 2011).

Opinion

ORDER ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO ENFORCE SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT

MARGARET J. KRAVCHUK, United States Magistrate Judge.

Defendant OneBeacon America Insurance Company removed this matter from the Aroostook County Superior Court in August 2010. Plaintiff Northern Maine Transport’s complaint recites three counts arising under Maine statutory law and alleging an entitlement to over $800,000 in insurance proceeds. On May 10, 2011, Defendant requested court enforcement of a purported settlement agreement. The parties have entered a limited consent authorizing the undersigned to hear evidence and resolve the pending motion to enforce. The matter came on for hearing October 12, 2011. I now make the following findings of fact and conclusions of law.

Findings of Fact

Plaintiff Northern Maine Transport LLC has two owners/managers, Paul Beaudry and Tyler Hallett. Plaintiff retained Attorney Alan Harding to represent it in its efforts to obtain insurance proceeds from Defendant OneBeacon America Insurance Company following a fire at Plaintiffs premises. Given multiple coverage options and various insured loses, Attorney Harding enlisted assistance from Shawn Manter, an independent insurance adjuster, to help Plaintiff calculate and advance its claim in the most advantageous manner possible.

On March 14, 2011, the parties participated in a mediation session with Eugene Coughlin serving as mediator. Messrs. Beaudry, Hallett, Harding and Manter appeared at the mediation on behalf of Plaintiff. Each of these men appeared as a witness at the hearing on the pending motion. Also present at the mediation were counsel for Defendant OneBeacon, Peter Marchesi, as local counsel, and William Stewart of Pennsylvania. Mr. Stewart appeared as a witness at the hearing. Although Defendant had personnel in attendance at the mediation, none of these individuals appeared to testify at the hearing. The hearing was conducted by Attorney Marchesi on behalf of Defendant/Movant, and by Attorney Roger Brunelle, Jr., on behalf of Intervenor Plaintiff Paul Beaudry, the sole party in opposition to the motion. Attorney Samuel Lanham, Jr., appeared on behalf of Intervenor Plaintiff Tyler Hallett, who joined in support of the motion. The testimony of the witnesses demonstrates, by a preponderance of the evidence, the following facts.

Paul Beaudry and Tyler Hallett are the two managers of Plaintiff Northern Maine Transport LLC. Neither man possesses exclusive authority to bind the company to a settlement agreement. They both agreed to hire Attorney Harding to represent Plaintiff, but based on Beaudry’s testimony, as of the March 14, 2011, mediation session, Beaudry was considering that he might want to hire different counsel. The testimony of Beaudry, Harding, and Manter indicates that Beaudry’s personal assumption about the value of Plaintiffs insurance claim was appreciably higher than the assessments of value indicated by Manter. Mr. Harding testified that the claims were complex and that it was difficult to assess how to value and distribute Plaintiffs various losses across multiple coverage provisions. According to Harding, Beaudry was not happy that maximum coverage could not be paid for “coverages that were not at stake.” Similarly, Mr. Manter testified that Beaudry’s expec *142 tations were significantly higher than what was likely to be achieved. Based on the pleadings in this action, OneBeacon initially denied the claim altogether, although there was no evidence presented regarding the circumstances surrounding that initial denial of the claim.

Despite his frustrations, Beaudry agreed to go to the mediation with Hallett, Harding, and Manter. On March 14, 2011, they gathered at Coughlin’s office and met with OneBeacon’s representatives in a conference room that permitted some OneBeacon representatives to appear by videoconference. Mr. Coughlin later separated the parties by relocating Plaintiffs party to another room. The mediation then proceeded through a series of competing demands and offers. Mr. Beaudry participated in the process in a limited fashion. Mr. Manter described him as “noncommittal” and not very vocal, but indicated that Beaudry agreed to the value of some demands during the process. However, Beaudry was growing tired of the process when it got to the point at which their demand was in the $400,000 range. He abruptly stood up while Mr. Coughlin was in their room and began preparing to depart. Attorney Harding asked him where he was going and Mr. Beaudry replied that he was tired, had “had enough,” and was going home. Mr. Beaudry did not tell the others or Mr. Coughlin that the mediation should cease. Instead, based on the testimony of Hallett, Harding, Manter, and Beaudry himself, Mr. Beaudry told them either “do whatever you want to do” or “do whatever you need to do.” He then departed.

The testimonial evidence does not provide a clear picture of what was said to Mr. Beaudry by the others in the room prior to his indication that they should do whatever needed to be done. 1 However, based on the testimony of Hallett, Harding, Manter, and Coughlin, everyone who remained in the room believed from the context of the exchange that Beaudry understood that they were going to continue with the mediation and that Beaudry had allowed that they might do so. The remaining group, including Mr. Coughlin, had a brief conversation about the existence of authority to proceed and unanimously assessed that they should continue. Due to Mr. Beaudry’s communication style, this was not crystal clear, but there was a unanimous assessment by Hallett, Harding, and Manter that Beaudry had “authorized” them to continue and simply did not wish to participate in the process. Mr. Coughlin agreed with this assessment. He testified that he “definitely” recollects that Beaudry authorized the others to continue and stated that he would have called the process off if that had not been clear to him. According to Mr. Coughlin, words were exchanged indicating that Beaudry would be reachable by phone. In fact, Mr. Hallett and Mr. Manter contacted Mr. Beaudry by phone subsequent to his departure and it was apparent to everyone, including Mr. Beaudry, that the mediation was continuing apace. On this evidence, I am unable to find that Mr. Beaudry’s communication was sufficiently “clear” for anyone to infer that Mr. Beaudry authorized them to enter into a final settlement agreement without his assent, but the communication was sufficient to permit the mediation to continue in Beaudry’s absence. Beaudry told Mr. Hallett, in effect, that he could do whatever needed to be *143 done. Arguably, this was open-ended enough to permit Mr. Hallett to settle Northern Maine Transport’s claims. However, Beaudry did not expressly delegate authority to finally settle the case and it appears that the parties were still in the negotiating phase when Beaudry absented himself from the mediation, although the gap had been significantly narrowed. What Beaudry did do was give his consent for the mediation to proceed in his absence.

After Beaudry’s departure, those remaining at the mediation arrived at settlement terms mutually agreeable to Mr. Hallett and OneBeaeon and these terms were reduced to writing by Attorney Marchesi. Defendant introduced the original handwritten settlement agreement during the testimony of Mr. Hallett and it was admitted without objection. (Def.’s Ex. 1.) The terms of the settlement agreement are incorporated into this order by reference.

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Bluebook (online)
820 F. Supp. 2d 139, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 120688, 2011 WL 5009470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-maine-transport-llc-v-onebeacon-america-insurance-med-2011.