St. Paul Surplus Lines Insurance v. Feingold & Feingold Insurance Agency, Inc.

427 Mass. 372
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 4, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 427 Mass. 372 (St. Paul Surplus Lines Insurance v. Feingold & Feingold Insurance Agency, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Paul Surplus Lines Insurance v. Feingold & Feingold Insurance Agency, Inc., 427 Mass. 372 (Mass. 1998).

Opinion

Wilkins, CJ.

In 1990, the third-party plaintiff (St. Paul) issued a policy of liquor liability insurance to Chopsticks Restaurant of Leominster, Inc. (Chopsticks). St. Paul reasonably relied on information in an application for insurance signed by the president of Chopsticks and prepared by the defendant (Feingold), an independent insurance broker acting for Chopsticks.

The application contained materially false information. If the true facts had been disclosed to St. Paul, it would not have issued the policy. Among the false information on the application were the following statements: (1) Chopsticks’s closing hour was 11 p.m. (it was in fact 12:30 a.m. on weekdays and 1:30 a.m. on weekends); (2) Chopsticks had no doorman (it did); (3) Chopsticks had no entertainment (it had a live band three nights a week); (4) there was no dancing (there was a dance floor that was regularly used); (5) there was no television set for patrons (there were two, one of which was a large screen suspended above the dance floor); (6) Chopsticks’s annual sales of alcoholic beverages was $180,000 (Feingold knew that Chopsticks’s sales for the year ended October 8, 1988, had been more than $341,000); and (7) Chopsticks’s annual liquor liability premium was $9,000 (for the 1988-1989 policy year the premium paid to the Liquor Liability Joint Underwriting Association for Chopsticks’s coverage had been more than $17,900).3

During the policy period, a woman was injured in a motor vehicle accident allegedly caused by the negligence of a driver to whom Chopsticks had overserved alcoholic beverages. A tort action was commenced in February, 1992, against Chopsticks and St. Paul. By third-party complaints, Feingold and the allegedly negligent driver were added as parties. Among the claims was St. Paul’s third-party complaint against Feingold alleging that Feingold intentionally misrepresented material facts on Chopsticks’s application for insurance, negligently caused the misstatements or errors in the application, and violated G. L. c. 93A. St. Paul also cross-claimed against Chopsticks seeking rescission or indemnification because of alleged wilful and intentional misstatements and errors in the application.

Before trial, most claims were settled but not St. Paul’s claims against Feingold. St. Paul made payments in settlement of the underlying tort claims against Chopsticks. Disagreements [374]*374between St. Paul and Chopsticks were among those settled. In a partial settlement agreement, Feingold acknowledged that the agreement did not limit or restrict St. Paul’s right to pursue its claims against Feingold.

St. Paul did pursue those claims. Feingold agreed that the amounts that St. Paul paid in settlement of the underlying tort claims were fair and reasonable. The case was tried on the question of Feingold’s liability to St. Paul. A jury found in a special verdict that Feingold had been negligent in its handling of the application for insurance and that that negligence proximately caused financial injury to St. Paul. The jury also found that Feingold knowingly made false representations to St. Paul concerning an important fact or facts, that Feingold intended or expected that St. Paul would rely on the representations, and that St. Paul reasonably relied on the misrepresentations to its financial detriment. The judge, who had reserved to himself the count based on St. Paul’s G. L. c. 93A claim, ruled that Feingold had violated G. L. c. 93A, § 11, that Feingold’s conduct had been wilful and knowing, and that an award of double damages was appropriate. Feingold appealed from judgments entered on the jury’s special verdict and on St. Paul’s G. L. c. 93A claim.

The Appeals Court, in an unpublished memorandum and order, affirmed the judgments except the trial judge’s decision to calculate interest in St. Paul’s claim against Feingold from the date of commencement of the tort action rather than from the later date on which St. Paul actually paid amounts pursuant to the settlement agreement. See 43 Mass. App. Ct. 1105 (1997). We granted Feingold’s application for further appellate review to consider its claim that it had no duty to St. Paul with respect to misstatements in an application that only Chopsticks, the insured, signed. Feingold asserts that we should not hold an independent broker, acting solely as agent for an insured, liable in tort to an insurer for negligent or intentional misrepresentations in a policy application signed only by the insured. We agree with the Appeals Court that the facts of this case, involving Feingold’s knowing participation in the delivery of misinformation to St. Paul, warrant the imposition of liability on Feingold.

The Appeals Court decided a variety of issues. We agree with its conclusions on issues that we do not discuss, none of which would have prompted us to grant further appellate review. We [375]*375shall discuss Feingold’s claim that it should not have been found liable for negligence, for intentional misrepresentation, or under G. L. c. 93A. Feingold’s burden is to demonstrate that none of these three theories warrants finding it liable to St. Paul. Feingold does not point to a particular legal error that the judge committed. We nevertheless treat Feingold as asserting that it was entitled to a directed verdict or judgment notwithstanding the verdict on the negligence and misrepresentation counts and to a ruling that the evidence did not warrant a finding of liability under G. L. c. 93A of single, much less double, damages. Feingold’s argument should have, but did not, focus on the evidence favorable to St. Paul.

Before we consider these questions, we must establish a point that bears on Feingold’s liability to St. Paul. St. Paul had a claim against Chopsticks for material misrepresentations which, if valid, would have relieved St. Paul of its obligations under Chopsticks’s policy and thus make any fault of Feingold largely inconsequential because that fault would have caused no harm to St. Paul.4 The settlement agreement expressly preserved St. Paul’s claim against Feingold in spite of St. Paul’s abandonment of its claim against Chopsticks. The Appeals Court adequately dealt with this subject, properly rejecting Feingold’s claims that St. Paul waived its rights against Feingold and that Feingold did not cause St. Paul’s losses. If Feingold had believed that the settlement was intended to bar or limit St. Paul’s claim against Feingold, the agreement would have said so, and obviously there would have been no need for the trial of that issue.

To assess Feingold’s claim that the evidence did not warrant a finding that it was liable to St. Paul, we recite the crucial evidence. We have already listed the numerous errors on the application for insurance which Feingold prepared and sent to St. Paul after Chopsticks’s president signed it. The jury were warranted in finding that, if the application had been accurate, St. Paul, which was seeking to underwrite only certain kinds of restaurants, would not have issued a liquor liability policy to Chopsticks. An employee of Feingold put the misinformation on the application. Chopsticks’s owner and president was bom in China and at times had trouble reading and understanding English. He signed the application in the presence of Feingold’s [376]*376president without reading it, and handed it back to him.5 Feingold had information, in its files and from personal observation by its president, that there were errors in the application. Feingold’s president knew that there was dancing at Chopsticks and had visited its premises.

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Bluebook (online)
427 Mass. 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-paul-surplus-lines-insurance-v-feingold-feingold-insurance-agency-mass-1998.