Reyes v. Infinity Indemnity Insurance Co.

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJanuary 18, 2017
Docket15-0194 & 15-0183
StatusPublished

This text of Reyes v. Infinity Indemnity Insurance Co. (Reyes v. Infinity Indemnity Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reyes v. Infinity Indemnity Insurance Co., (Fla. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida

Opinion filed January 18, 2017. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

________________

Nos. 3D15-194 & 3D15-183 Lower Tribunal Nos. 13-19660 & 11-62 ________________

In re: The Estate of Jorge Luis Arroyo, Jr.;

Delia Reyes, an incapacitated person, by and through Marta Reyes, her natural mother and court-appointed guardian, and Marta Reyes, as court-appointed guardian of Ignacio Reyes, a minor, and Isabella de Armas, a minor, Appellants,

vs.

Infinity Indemnity Insurance Company, a foreign corporation, et al., Appellees.

Appeals from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Michael A. Genden and Bronwyn C. Miller, Judges.

Ross & Girten, and Lauri Waldman Ross and Theresa L. Girten; DeMahy, Labrador, Drake, and Pete L. DeMahy and Frank L. Labrador, for appellants.

White & Case LLP, and Raoul G. Cantero and Christopher W. Swift-Perez; GrayRobinson, P.A., and Charles T. Wells (Orlando), for appellee Infinity Indemnity Insurance Company. Before ROTHENBERG, LAGOA, and SALTER, JJ.

ROTHENBERG, J.

Delia Reyes (“Reyes”) appeals: (1) the probate court’s order granting Infinity

Indemnity Insurance Company’s (“Infinity”) motion to intervene in the probate

proceedings in the Estate of Jorge Luis Arroyo, Jr. (“the Estate”); (2) the probate

court’s subsequent order finding that the personal representatives of the Estate did

not have the authority to settle Reyes’s lawsuit against the Estate by entering into a

Coblentz agreement 1; and (3) the circuit court’s final judgment incorporating its

order granting summary judgment in favor of Infinity on Reyes’s bad-faith claim

against Infinity.

We reverse the probate court’s orders granting Infinity’s motion to intervene

and its subsequent determination regarding the authority of the personal

representatives to settle Reyes’s lawsuit because Infinity’s alleged interest was not

at issue in the probate proceedings at the time Infinity moved to intervene. We also

conclude that even if intervention was properly granted, the probate court erred by

determining the authority of the personal representatives to settle Reyes’s lawsuit

because when Reyes filed the lawsuit against the Estate, and the Estate tendered its

defense to Infinity, its insurer, Infinity declined to defend the claim. Thus, the

defenses Infinity subsequently raised in the probate court were barred and Infinity

1 See Coblentz v. Am. Surety Co. of New York, 416 F.2d 1059 (5th Cir. 1969).

2 was prohibited from raising these defenses as a matter of law. We similarly find that

the circuit court erred by considering and then granting Infinity’s motion for

summary judgment based on these barred defenses in the bad-faith lawsuit against

Infinity. Accordingly, we reverse all three orders on appeal.

BACKGROUND

As the result of a car accident on October 9, 2009, Jorge Luis Arroyo, Jr.

(“Arroyo”) died and Reyes suffered severe incapacitating injuries. Arroyo’s parents

petitioned the probate court to open the Estate and to act as the Estate’s personal

representatives, which the probate court granted in January 2011.

On February 11, 2011, Reyes filed a personal injury negligence lawsuit (“the

negligence lawsuit”) in the circuit court against the Estate, but never filed a written

claim in the probate court. Although the Estate tendered the defense of the

negligence claim to Infinity, Infinity declined to defend the claim. In January 2013,

the Estate settled the negligence lawsuit by entering into a Coblentz agreement with

Reyes, in which Reyes and the Estate agreed to the entry of a consent judgment,

Reyes agreed not to execute the judgment against the Estate, and the Estate assigned

any rights it had against Infinity to Reyes. After Reyes and the Estate entered into

the Coblentz agreement and obtained the consent judgment, Reyes sued Infinity in

circuit court pursuant to the assignment of rights provision in the Coblentz

3 agreement, alleging in part that Infinity had demonstrated bad faith by failing to

defend the Estate in the negligence lawsuit (“the bad-faith lawsuit”). 2

Infinity attacked the bad-faith claim on two fronts. First, Infinity moved for

entry of summary judgment in the circuit court’s bad-faith lawsuit, arguing that,

because Reyes failed to file a statement of claim in the probate court regarding the

negligence lawsuit, she could no longer do so because the negligence lawsuit was

barred by the statute of limitations, § 733.702, Fla. Stat. (2011), and the statute of

repose, § 733.710, Fla. Stat. (2011), set forth in the probate code. Accordingly,

Infinity claimed that: (1) the Estate was immune from Reyes’s negligence suit at

the time the personal representatives of the Estate settled the lawsuit; (2) the

Coblentz agreement and the subsequent consent judgment were therefore

unenforceable against the Estate; (3) the Estate was not exposed to an excess

judgment because neither the Coblentz agreement nor the consent judgment were

enforceable against the Estate; and (4) in order for Reyes to succeed in its bad-faith

claim against Infinity, the Estate would need to be exposed to an excess judgment.

Thus, Infinity contended that Reyes’s bad-faith claim against Infinity failed because

Reyes, standing as the assignee of the Estate, could not prove that the Estate was

exposed to an excess judgment.

2 Reyes also sued Insurance USA & Associates, Inc. and Nicole Marie Antini, but those claims were later voluntarily dismissed without prejudice and are not at issue in this appeal.

4 Infinity’s second front for attacking the bad-faith claim was waged in the

probate court. Infinity filed a motion for leave to intervene in the Estate proceedings

pursuant to Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.230 for the purpose of determining

whether the Estate’s personal representatives had the authority to settle the

negligence lawsuit in the circuit court by entering into the Coblentz agreement.

When Infinity moved to intervene, the Estate’s proceedings in probate court were

uncontested, with no adversarial motions pending before it and minimal record

activity. The probate court granted Infinity’s motion to intervene after concluding

that Infinity was an interested party regarding the Coblentz agreement, but limited

Infinity’s intervention to the issue of “the applicability of Part VI of Florida Statute

Chapter 733 to the Personal Representative’s execution of the Settlement

Agreement.” Infinity then filed a motion to determine the personal representatives’

right to enter into the Coblentz agreement (“motion to determine”), and Reyes was

also permitted to intervene to oppose this motion.

After allowing Infinity to intervene, the probate court ruled on Infinity’s

motion to determine and entered an order finding that section 733.710 of the Florida

Statutes protects an estate from any claim filed more than two years after the death

of the decedent, and that Reyes failed to file a claim against the Estate within two

years of Arroyo’s death. Accordingly, the probate court concluded that the personal

representatives did not have the authority to enter into the Coblentz agreement in the

5 negligence lawsuit because at the time the personal representatives entered into the

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