State Ex Rel. Erie Insurance Property & Casualty Co. v. Mazzone

648 S.E.2d 31, 220 W. Va. 525
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 25, 2007
Docket33209
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 648 S.E.2d 31 (State Ex Rel. Erie Insurance Property & Casualty Co. v. Mazzone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Erie Insurance Property & Casualty Co. v. Mazzone, 648 S.E.2d 31, 220 W. Va. 525 (W. Va. 2007).

Opinions

ALBRIGHT, Justice.

For a second time in the underlying third-party bad faith action, Erie Insurance Property & Casualty Company (hereinafter referred to as “Erie”) invokes the original jurisdiction of this Court1 in order to obtain a writ of prohibition to bar the enforcement of a discoveiy order of the Ohio County Circuit Court requiring disclosure of relevant reserves information to the plaintiff below, Elizabeth Murfitt. This Court had granted Erie’s earlier request to prohibit the enforcement of a March 30, 2005, order regarding the reserves information. State ex rel. Erie Ins. Prop. & Cas. Co. v. Mazzone, 218 W.Va. 593, 625 S.E.2d 355 (2005) (hereinafter referred to as “Eñe I”). While Erie had asserted in Ene I that the reserves information was protected from disclosure as opinion work product, we did not reach the work product argument and instead granted the writ based on the more fundamental problem that the threshold inquiry regarding relevancy had not been completed by the lower court. See id. at Syl. Pt. 4. Erie renews its opinion work product argument in the request now before this Court to prohibit the enforcement of the lower court’s June 29, 2006, order, which again requires disclosure of the reserves information. For the reasons explained below, the relief in prohibition is denied.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

The original negligence claim in this case was brought by Ms. Murfitt against a driver whose automobile insurer was Erie. During the course of the jury trial on the negligence action, the parties settled the claim. Ms. Murfitt then filed an amended complaint alleging that the manner in which Erie had handled her claim evidenced bad faith.2

When Erie objected to discovery requests of Ms. Murfitt, including documents containing Erie’s reserves information regarding the claim, Ms. Murfitt filed a motion to compel discovery. The ruling on the motion took the form of a lower court order dated March 30, 2005. In that order the court below directed that “any documents pertaining to ‘reserves’ are to be disclosed to the extent of reserve amounts and dates on which any such amounts were placed.” The March 30, 2005, order was the object of our attention in Erie I.

Following our decision in Erie I, the lower court held a hearing on May 12, 2006, to address Ms. Murfitt’s Renewed Motion to Compel Production of Reserve Information. After hearing oral argument, the trial court, adhering to the direction provided in Erie I, determined that the reserves information is relevant to Ms. Murfitt’s claim that Erie intentionally undervalued her claim in its settlement offers.3 Thereafter, the lower court reaffirmed its previous determination that the reserves information was not excluded from discovery under the principles of the work product doctrine. As indicated in the Memorandum Opinion and Order dated June 29, 2006, the lower court found the doctrine inapplicable because only the raw data regarding the reserves amounts and the dates those amounts were calculated were being ordered disclosed rather than the reasoning and thought process behind the reserves numbers. Additionally, the lower court in its June 29, 2006, order found that “anticipation of litigation is not the primaiy motivating purpose for establishing insurance re-serves_” The court below alternatively found that disclosure was appropriate even if the reserves information was work product because Ms. Murfitt had established the requisite level of need.

[530]*530On August 14, 2006, Erie petitioned this Court for a writ of prohibition to bar enforcement of the June 29, 2006, order. The petition asserts that by again issuing the discovery order the lower court exceeded its legitimate powers and abused its discretion because the material ordered to be produced is opinion work product, which Erie contends should be treated as privileged material that Erie maintains should rarely, if ever, be subject to disclosure. After finding a prima facie case had been established, on October 26, 2006, this Court issued a rule against the circuit judge and Ms. Murfitt as respondents to show cause why the writ prayed for should not be awarded. W.Va.Code § 53-1-5 (1933) (Repl.Vol.2000).

II. Standard of Review

The requested extraordinary relief is sought to stop the enforcement of an order directing release of information at the discovery phase of a civil proceeding. As we held in syllabus point three of State ex rel. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Canady, 194 W.Va. 431, 460 S.E.2d 677 (1995), “[w]hen a discovery order involves the probable invasion of confidential materials that are exempted from discovery under Rule 26(b)(1) and (3) of the West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure, the exercise of this Court’s original jurisdiction is appropriate.”

As a general rule,

[a] circuit court’s ruling on discovery requests is reviewed for an abuse of discretion standard; but, where a circuit court’s ruling turns on a misinterpretation of the West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure, our review is plenary. The discretion that is normally given to a trial court’s procedural decisions does not apply where the trial court makes no findings or applies the wrong legal standard.

Syl. Pt. 5, State ex rel. Medical Assurance of West Virginia v. Recht, 213 W.Va. 457, 583 S.E.2d 80 (2003). Furthermore, when presented with a challenge to the compelled disclosure of materials alleged to be privileged, we conduct “a hard and more stringent examination” of whether the circuit court abused its discretion. Syl. Pt. 5, Canady, 194 W.Va. at 433, 460 S.E.2d at 679..

III. Discussion

Erie urges us to find that the lower court erred as a matter of law when it ordered disclosure of the subject reserves information because it maintains that the information is protected from discovery pursuant to Rule 26(b)(3) of the West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure as opinion work product that was prepared in the context of anticipated or existing litigation. With like force Ms. Mur-fitt urges us to uphold the ruling because it neither demonstrates improper application of the law nor an abuse of discretion by the court below. Ms. Murfitt specifically maintains that Erie failed to substantiate its claim that the reserves information was protected from disclosure under the work product doctrine because the primary motivating purpose for creating the reserves information was not “in anticipation of litigation or for trial.” W. Va. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(3).

In reaching its conclusion that the reserves information is subject to discovery, the lower court made the following relevant findings, as manifested in the June 29 order:

The Court FINDS and CONCLUDES that the raw data indicating the reserve amounts and the dates said reserve amounts were placed on the claim are not privileged. However, the reasoning and the thought process behind the reserve numbers are privileged as work product. ...

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State Ex Rel. Erie Insurance Property & Casualty Co. v. Mazzone
648 S.E.2d 31 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 2007)

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Bluebook (online)
648 S.E.2d 31, 220 W. Va. 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-erie-insurance-property-casualty-co-v-mazzone-wva-2007.