Partitions v. Blumberg Associates, No. Cv 98 0576664 S (Oct. 9, 2001)

2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 14111
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedOctober 9, 2001
DocketNo. CV 98 0576664 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 14111 (Partitions v. Blumberg Associates, No. Cv 98 0576664 S (Oct. 9, 2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Partitions v. Blumberg Associates, No. Cv 98 0576664 S (Oct. 9, 2001), 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 14111 (Colo. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
In this action tried to the court, the plaintiff is a corporation which is and has been engaged primarily in the business of interior CT Page 14112 construction. The defendant Ned Wentworth was, for most of the relevant times, the insurance agent who placed the plaintiff's workers' compensation and other business insurance policies, and the defendant Blumberg Associates was the agency for which Wentworth worked.1 A third party action brought against Maryland Casualty, the workers' compensation insurer, was withdrawn after trial. The gravamen of the complaint is that the defendants improperly failed to recognize that no experience modification factor had. been generated for the 1988-89 and 1989-90 policy years, and that had such a modification factor been generated, the plaintiff would have been spared considerable expense. The defendants claim that they acted properly and, in any event, any action is barred by applicable statutes of limitation.

A brief overview of the process by which workers' compensation premiums are computed may be useful as an introduction to the problem presented by this case. Testimony and exhibits introduced at trial indicate the following process. An initial premium is determined simply by multiplying the insured's payroll by a classification percentage, which factor varies according to the category of each job. Thus, roofers have higher factors than clerical workers. This number is retroactively adjusted by the insurer following an audit, which is designed to show the precise amount of payroll in each classification during the actual policy year. For larger accounts, a final adjustment is made still later to reflect the losses incurred and the reserves established during the policy year, so that safe workplaces receive a benefit and unsafe workplaces receive a bill. Within six months after the end of a policy year the insurer sends to the National Council on Compensation Insurance ("NCCI") data regarding claims during the policy period. The NCCI, using a reportedly complex set of calculations, computes an experience modification factor which reflects both the number and severity of losses. The factor is calculated by using data looking back four years, but the last current year is excluded from the calculations. An experience modification factor of 1.00, a "unity mod", results in no retroactive change in premium. A factor of less than one results in a retroactive reduction of premium and a refund from the insurer, and a factor greater than one results in a retroactive increased premium and a bill from the insurer. Until 1990, new owners were automatically assigned unity modification factors until the appropriate look back period could be established under the new ownership; the theory was that new owners may or may not be conscious of safety and thus should be assigned industry averages until they establish their own track records. Because of the potential and presumably actual abuse on the part of some, in that ownership can be changed creatively, the NCCI now generates experience modification ratings regardless of changes of ownership.

The events in this case begin in the mid-1980's. Richard Christofer and CT Page 14113 Andre LaCroix purchased the plaintiff corporation in 1986 and arranged for business insurance, including workers' compensation coverage, through the defendants. Wentworth dealt with Christofer for the first few years; by 1990, he dealt with LaCroix, who was not as sophisticated in business matters. Wentworth discussed the experience ratings with Christofer and LaCroix periodically, and told LaCroix, when unity mods were reported for the 1988-89 and 1989-90 policy years, that it would be wise not to question the rating because Partitions had experienced a number of losses. Wentworth thought that if the unity mod were challenged, a higher retroactive premium would probably result.

In February, 1991, Dale Kaye and Donald Cyr purchased the plaintiff corporation from LaCroix, who apparently was the sole owner at the time of the transaction. Shortly after the purchase of the corporation, the experience modification for the 1990-91 policy year was received: because it had been calculated at 0.72, a refund of approximately $90,000 was received by the plaintiff in April, 1991. Because of higher losses in the late eighties and 1990, the experience rating increased in the next several years. Kaye, Cyr and Wentworth never revisited the unity ratings for the 1988-89 and 1989-90 policy years, and there was no evidence that they ever discussed the experience modification ratings for those years.

In September, 1994, Kaye and Cyr terminated Partitions' relationship with the defendants and took their insurance business elsewhere. In 1995 the plaintiff entered into an agreement with Accu-Comp, a business entity spearheaded by Philip Johnson, an expert in workers' compensation matters. Johnson agreed to examine Partitions' workers' compensation premium history with an eye to securing a refund. Johnson and Partitions agreed that Johnson's fee would consist of forty percent of the refund.

Johnson entered the rather arcane world of appealing prior experience modification ratings with the NCCI. Although the testimony was not entirely clear on the matter, apparently there is a window of opportunity several years2 after the promulgation of an experience modification rating in which a change of rating can only benefit the insured; but it is difficult to convince the NCCI to consider changing a rating at this time. In any event, after considerable effort Johnson persuaded the NCCI to change the ratings for the policy years in issue, 1988-89 and 1990-91, and in September, 1997, Partitions received refunds in the amount of approximately $185,000. The insurer, Maryland Casualty, was not notified of the actual hearing and apparently did not present its information and argument to the NCCI. The defendants apparently had no notice of the entire appeal process, or indeed of Johnson's efforts at all, until suit was brought in 1998.

Service of the present action was effected on January 7, 1998. CT Page 14114 Partitions alleges in the first count that the defendants Wentworth and Blumberg Associates was professionally negligent, in that it should have requested that experience modification worksheets should have been prepared for the policy years in issue. Had the worksheets been prepared, the claim asserts, the credit modifications" would have been applied earlier and the plaintiff would have had the use of the $185,000 for a period of years and it would not have had to pay Johnson his 40% of the recovery. The second count sounds in indemnification, and the third in unjust enrichment. The fourth count alleges negligent misrepresentation, in that the defendants had represented that they would seek the lowest cost policies, and had it known that the defendants were not supplying the lowest cost policy, the plaintiff would have used different insurance agents. The fifth count asserts a violation of the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act ("CUTPA"), §§ 42-11Oa et seq. of the General Statutes.

The defendants have answered the complaint and have asserted as special defenses the applicable statute of limitations and the plaintiff's own negligence. It is agreed that the applicable statutes of limitations are all for periods of three years, and they are statutes of repose.3 It does not matter, then, when the injury occurred or when the cause of action accrued. Prokolkin v. General Motors Corp., 170 Conn. 289,

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Bluebook (online)
2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 14111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/partitions-v-blumberg-associates-no-cv-98-0576664-s-oct-9-2001-connsuperct-2001.