Philadelphia Indemnity Ins Co v. 1961 Boston Post Rd LLC

CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedMay 4, 2021
Docket3:19-cv-01943
StatusUnknown

This text of Philadelphia Indemnity Ins Co v. 1961 Boston Post Rd LLC (Philadelphia Indemnity Ins Co v. 1961 Boston Post Rd LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philadelphia Indemnity Ins Co v. 1961 Boston Post Rd LLC, (D. Conn. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF CONNECTICUT

Philadelphia Indemnity Ins. Co. A/S/O Settlers Landing Association, Civil No. 3:19-cv-01943 (TOF) Plaintiff,

v. May 4, 2021 1961 Boston Post Rd. LLC et al,

Defendants.

ORDER ON MOTION TO COMPEL This is a discovery dispute in an insurance subrogation case. The defendant, Anchor Insulation Co., Inc. (“Anchor”), has moved the Court for an order compelling the plaintiff, Philadelphia Indemnity Insurance Company (“PIIC”), to produce full and unredacted copies of two adjustment reports from its independent adjuster, Edward D. Phinney of RW Adjustment Services. (ECF No. 63.)1 PIIC objects to producing the unredacted versions of these reports, claiming that the redactions are protected by the work product doctrine and attorney-client privilege. (ECF No. 64.) Neither party requested oral argument on the motion. (See ECF Nos. 63, 64.) Upon its initial review of the parties’ submissions, the Court ordered PIIC to submit the

1 RW Adjustment Services wrote two reports—the first dated February 10, 2019 (“February Report”) and the second dated March 21, 2019 (“March Report”). (ECF No. 64-1, Exs. A & B.) PIIC produced both reports, albeit redacted, to the defendants as part of its initial disclosures. (ECF No. 64, at 1.) Anchor’s motion does not specifically reference the February Report, requesting a “complete, unredacted copy of the RW Adjustment Services report dated March 21, 2019.” (ECF No. 63, at 1-2.) However, Anchor also stated that “upon information and belief, this March 21, 2019 report is a second report/second draft” and requested the Court to compel the production of an unredacted copy of the prior report, “[t]o the extent a prior report exists . . . .” (Id. at 2.) In its opposition brief, PIIC clarified that the February Report is the “prior report” that Anchor referenced. (ECF No. 64, at 2.) PIIC then proceeded to interpret Anchor’s motion as requesting unredacted copies of both the February and March Reports. (See id. at 2, 7.) The Court will do the same. unredacted adjustment reports for an in camera review. (ECF No. 67.) Having now reviewed the parties’ submissions and the documents produced in camera, the Court concludes that PIIC has not met its burden to show that the adjustment reports at issue are protected by the work product doctrine or by the attorney-client privilege. Therefore, Anchor’s Motion to Compel is GRANTED.

I. BACKGROUND This case concerns a water loss which occurred in an apartment complex located at 1961 Boston Post Road in Westbrook, CT (the “subject property”). PIIC provided property insurance to the owners of the subject property, Settlers Landing Association. (Pl.’s Amend. Compl., ECF No. 45, ¶¶ 1-2.) PIIC alleges that on January 23, 2019, a water-supply line for the apartment complex’s fire suppression sprinkler system froze and burst, causing substantial water damage. (Id. at ¶¶ 13-17.) PIIC claims that the line burst due to the “improper design, installation, and/or insulation of the sprinkler system . . . .” (Id. at ¶ 16.) PIIC brought suit, in its capacity as subrogee, against 1961 Boston Post Rd., LLC; Salt Island Properties, LLC, “the general contractors overseeing the construction of the apartment complex” (id. at ¶ 11); Central Connecticut Fire

Protection, Inc., a subcontractor who was hired to design and install the sprinkler system (id. at ¶ 12); and Anchor, a subcontractor who was hired to install insulation for the sprinkler system. (Id. at ¶¶ 7, 13.) On or around January 23, 2019, PIIC hired an independent adjuster, Edward D. Phinney from RW Adjustment Services, to conduct an inspection of the subject property and provide an adjustment report. (ECF No. 64-1, Ex. B, at 1.) His initial report was dated February 10, 2019 and sent directly to PIIC. (Id. (the “February Report”).) The February Report noted that RW Adjustment Services had been in contact with PIIC’s subrogation attorney, Jeffrey Zielinski, “with regards to the circumstances surrounding the sprinkler pipe break . . . .” (Id. at 4.) Attorney Zielinski had hired a separate cause-and-origin investigator to inspect the sprinkler system, and that investigator was “reporting directly to Mr. Zielinski’s office.” (Id. at 4-5.) On March 21, 2019, Mr. Phinney submitted a second and final adjustment report to PIIC. (ECF No. 64-1, Ex. A, at 1 (the “March Report”).) PIIC produced partially redacted copies of the February and March Reports to the

defendants as part of its initial disclosures. (ECF No. 64, at 1-2.) Two sections of the February Report, labeled “cause of loss” and “subrogation,” were redacted. (ECF No. 64-1, Ex. B, at 2-3.) One section of the March Report, labeled “cause of loss,” was redacted. (ECF No. 64-1, Ex. A, at 1.) PIIC’s privilege log claimed that the redacted portions of the February and March Reports were protected from discovery because they were work product, attorney-client privileged, and mental impressions of the plaintiff’s representatives. (ECF No. 64-1, Ex. C.) Anchor disagreed, and this motion ensued. II. DISCUSSION Anchor seeks to compel the production of full, unredacted copies of the adjustment reports. (ECF No. 63, at 2.) It asserts that these reports are not work product or attorney-client privileged,

since they were “created in the normal course of business and regardless of whether litigation would eventually result,” and therefore must be disclosed in full. (Id. at 2, 5.) In response, PIIC contends that the reports were properly redacted, since the “cause of loss” and “subrogation” portions of the reports were created “in connection with the already-made decision to pursue subrogation.” (ECF No. 64, at 6.) It states in a footnote that the Court “need not reach” the issue of attorney-client privilege, “given that the work-product doctrine protects the redacted information,” but requested an in camera review on the privilege issue “to the extent the Court disagrees.” (ECF No. 64, at 7 n. 2.) The Court first considers the arguments implicating the work product doctrine. A. Work Product Anchor argues that PIIC has improperly designated the adjustment reports as being protected by the work product doctrine. (See generally ECF No. 63, at 2-3.) It contends that the reports were “not created because of litigation and would have been created regardless of litigation,” since “[t]he entire purpose . . . was to determine the scope of damage and cost of repair.”

(Id. at 4 (emphasis in original).) It states that, even though the February Report indicated that PIIC had hired an attorney that was investigating its subrogation rights, there was “no evidence that [PIIC] planned to seek subrogation at any time prior to March 21, 2019.” (Id. at 4.) In response, PIIC argues that the redacted portions of the reports are protected work product because they were created after it had already decided to pursue subrogation. (ECF No. 64, at 6.) It points to the fact that it hired Attorney Zielinski as subrogation counsel before the February Report was written. (Id.) It asserts: “The cause-and-origin investigation here was undertaken under the auspices of (undersigned) subrogation counsel’s office. . . . it is clear on the face of these reports that Plaintiff had decided to pursue subrogation no later than February 10, 2019—the date of Phinney’s first report. In other words, by that point, undersigned counsel was intimately

involved in the cause-and-origin investigation in connection with the already-made decision to pursue subrogation.” (Id. (emphasis in original).) PIIC also contends that Anchor has failed to establish a substantial need for documents withheld on the grounds of the work product doctrine. (Id. at 7.) 1.

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