Twin City Fire Insurance Company v. AXIS Insurance Company

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedDecember 11, 2023
Docket1:22-cv-00769
StatusUnknown

This text of Twin City Fire Insurance Company v. AXIS Insurance Company (Twin City Fire Insurance Company v. AXIS Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Twin City Fire Insurance Company v. AXIS Insurance Company, (D. Md. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MARYLAND

TWIN CITY FIRE INSURANCE * COMPANY, * Plaintiff, * v. * Civil Case No: 1:22-cv-00769-BAH AXIS INSURANCE COMPANY, * Defendant. * * * * * * * * * * * * MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Plaintiff, Twin City Fire Insurance Company (“Twin City”), filed the present action on March 31, 2022, against Defendant, AXIS Insurance Company (“AXIS”), seeking declaratory relief regarding (1) Defendant’s alleged obligation to reimburse Plaintiff for costs paid to defend an underlying personal injury lawsuit; and (2) Defendant’s alleged obligation to indemnify one of Plaintiff’s insureds in connection with the same. (ECF No. 1). Plaintiff then filed an Amended Complaint on July 25, 2022, retracting its indemnity claim. (ECF No. 21). United States District Judge Lydia K. Griggsby subsequently referred the case to the undersigned for discovery disputes on September 29, 2023, before the case was reassigned to United States District Judge Brendan A. Hurson for all proceedings on October 23, 2023. (ECF No. 58). Presently before the Court is Defendant’s Motion to Compel Production of Documents That Plaintiff, Twin City Fire Insurance Company and Non-Party Bodie, Dolina, Hobbs, Friddel & Grenzer, P.C. Have Withheld on Grounds of Attorney Work Product and Common Interest Doctrine (the “Motion”). (ECF No. 60). The Court has considered the Motion, Plaintiff’s Opposition thereto (ECF No. 61), and Defendant’s Reply (ECF No. 63). The Court has also conducted its own in camera review of the disputed documents. See (ECF No. 64). No hearing is necessary. See Loc. R. 105.6 (D. Md. 2023). For the reasons explained below, Defendant’s Motion is DENIED. I. BACKGROUND A. General Background In March 2016, Atlas West End Silver Hill, LLC (“Atlas”) entered into a property

management agreement with Gates Hudson & Associates, Inc. (“Gates Hudson”) regarding residential property in Prince George’s County, Maryland, as owner and manager, respectively. (ECF No. 21 at 3).1 AXIS then issued a commercial general liability policy providing coverage to Atlas, and Zurich American Insurance Company (“Zurich”) issued Atlas’ excess liability policy. (ECF No. 60-1 at 3–4). A lawsuit was filed in August 2020 against Gates Hudson and Atlas alleging damages from carbon monoxide poisoning at the residences managed by Gates Hudson and owned by Atlas, which the parties label as the “Padmore Action.” Id. at 4. In approximately August 2021, Plaintiff retained Lou Grenzer of Bodie, Dolina, Hobbs, Friddell & Grenzer, P.C. (“Bodie”) to represent

Gates Hudson in the Padmore Action and, just prior to a mediation in the Padmore Action, retained Ezra Gollogly of Kramon & Graham, P.A. to act as Plaintiff’s coverage counsel. Id. According to Defendant, Kristin Gallagher of the Kennedys law firm advised Gollogly that she represented AXIS as coverage counsel on January 12, 2022. Id. at 5. Plaintiff initially paid Grenzer of Bodie to provide the underlying defense to Gates Hudson in the Padmore Action, but then filed a lawsuit on January 13, 2022, alleging that Plaintiff had no duty to defend or indemnify Gates Hudson for the relief sought in the Padmore Action. Id. at 4–

1 When the Court cites to a specific page number or range of page numbers, the Court is referring to the page numbers located in the electronic filing stamps provided at the top of every electronically filed document. 5, 14. Following a private mediation on January 13, 2023, at which no settlement was reached, the Padmore Action ultimately settled in follow up with that mediator on February 10, 2022, subject to finalizing a written settlement agreement among the parties, before being dismissed in May 2022 once that settlement agreement was finalized and signed. Id. at 4–5. As part of that settlement, both Plaintiff and Gates Hudson contributed funds to the settlement, but reserved their

rights to proceed against Defendant for reimbursement. (ECF No. 61 at 6). Plaintiff filed the present lawsuit against Defendant in the interim in March 2022, raising a reimbursement claim for the defense costs incurred by Plaintiff in defending Gates Hudson. Id. at 5. B. The Present Discovery Dispute Defendant alleges that Grenzer’s communications with Plaintiff and with Gollogly, both before and after the Padmore Action settled, are critical to adjudicating this case because they demonstrate that Plaintiff failed to preserve its rights to seek reimbursement from AXIS as part of the Padmore Action settlement. Id. at 6. Accordingly, Defendant served a request for production of such documents to Plaintiff in October 2022. (ECF No. 61 at 7). Plaintiff avers that it collected

and produced some documents in response to the discovery request, withheld others, and informed Defendant as much via a privilege log detailing the basis for its withholding on November 16, 2022. Id. at 7–8. Defendant did not object to Plaintiff’s privilege log designations until August 2023 after Defendant issued a subpoena to Bodie asking for production of the same documents Plaintiff had already withheld or produced. Id. at 8. Specifically, Defendant’s subpoena requested that Bodie produce Grenzer’s communications with Plaintiff concerning the Padmore Action negotiation and settlement from December 1, 2021, to March 31, 2022. (ECF No. 60-1 at 6). The subpoena also requested Grenzer’s communications with Gollogly concerning the same subject for the same time period as well as “similar communications with Zurich and defense counsel retained by AXIS for Atlas, Jennifer King of DeCaro Doran.” Id. Bodie produced no documents in response to the subpoena. Rather, Bodie refused to produce Grenzer’s communications with Plaintiff and Gollogly on the ground that such communications are “privileged communications or subject to common-interest work product

protection.” Id. at 7. Plaintiff then provided Defendant with a revised privilege log on September 8, 2023, that identified 115 withheld communications involving Bodie. Id. Of those 115 communications, Defendant seeks compulsion of 43: (1) 10 emails between Grenzer and Gollogly or Plaintiff, dated January 10, 2022, through January 12, 2022, relating to “global mediation of underlying case and Twin City’s and Gates Hudson’s mutual interest in AXIS and Zurich resolving claims against Gates Hudson” (the “Pre-Mediation Emails”); (2) 11 emails between Grenzer and Gollogly or Plaintiff dated January 13, 2022, through February 10, 2022, with the same description (the “Post-Mediation/Pre-Settlement Emails”); and 22 emails between Grenzer and Gollogly or Plaintiff dated February 20, 2022, through March 29, 2022, relating to “drafting of the underlying

settlement agreement and Twin City and Gates Hudson’s interest in pursuing AXIS and Zurich for reimbursement of defense and indemnity costs” (the “Settlement Agreement Drafting Emails). Id. at 8–9. II. LEGAL STANDARD “As set forth in Rule 26(b)(3), the work product doctrine prohibits a party from obtaining discovery of materials prepared in anticipation of litigation, absent a showing both of substantial need and of an inability to obtain, without undue hardship, the substantial equivalent of the materials sought.” LaSalle Bank Nat. Ass’n v. Lehman Bros. Holdings, 209 F.R.D. 112, 115 (D. Md. 2002). Determining whether certain materials constitute protected work product requires assessing “whether in light of the nature of the documents and the particular facts of a given case, the documents can be fairly said to have been prepared or obtained because of the prospect of litigation or whether they must be deemed to have been prepared in the ordinary course of the company’s business.” Id. (citing APL Corp. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., 91 F.R.D. 10, 18 (D. Md. 1980)); see also Paice, LLC v. Hyundai Motor Co., 302 F.R.D. 128, 133 (D. Md. 2014)

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Twin City Fire Insurance Company v. AXIS Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/twin-city-fire-insurance-company-v-axis-insurance-company-mdd-2023.