Vermont Mutual Insurance v. Maguire

662 F.3d 51, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 22024, 2011 WL 5120686
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedOctober 31, 2011
Docket10-1542
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 662 F.3d 51 (Vermont Mutual Insurance v. Maguire) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vermont Mutual Insurance v. Maguire, 662 F.3d 51, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 22024, 2011 WL 5120686 (1st Cir. 2011).

Opinion

LIPEZ, Circuit Judge.

Boris Maguire (“Maguire”) and his parents, Desmond and Josephine Maguire (collectively, “the Maguires”), challenge the district court’s determination that Vermont Mutual Insurance Company had no duty to defend a claim made against them by a young man whom Maguire had injured during a bar fight. The district court concluded that the Maguires’ homeowners’ insurance policy did not require Vermont Mutual to provide a defense until a lawsuit had been filed, and thus the duty to defend had not been triggered. The court also held, in the alternative, that Vermont Mutual did not breach its duty to defend.

We agree that Vermont Mutual did not breach its duty to defend, and we therefore affirm on that alternative basis.

I.

A. The Bar Fight and the Claim

During his Thanksgiving vacation from college in November 2007, Maguire was *52 socializing with friends in Boston. After drinking at two other establishments, the group, which included a young man named William Schaetzl, arrived at the Pour House Bar and Grille. Another group of young adults, including Robert KalsowRamos, was also drinking at the Pour House. Although the details of what ensued are not clear, the parties agree that what began as an altercation between Schaetzl and Kalsow-Ramos ended abruptly when Maguire hit Kalsow-Ramos in the face with a glass beer mug. The glass shattered, cutting the side of Kalsow-Ramos’s face and the muscle, tissue, and saliva duct below. Kalsow-Ramos underwent emergency surgery and recovered, but the incident left him with permanent scars.

Within weeks, Maguire received notice of a criminal hearing at the Boston Municipal Court scheduled for January 4, 2008, to address whether there was probable cause to charge Maguire. The Maguire family retained Attorney Max Stern to represent Boris at the hearing.

When Stern arrived at the courthouse, he met Attorney Paul Rufo, who represented Kalsow-Ramos. Rufo and Stern discussed the possibility of settling any potential civil claims and requested that the hearing be postponed. The hearing was rescheduled for February 29.

On January 9, Rufo sent Stern a letter stating that Kalsow-Ramos intended to seek legal remedies against Maguire. That letter was followed by a more detailed one, dated January 16, in which Rufo outlined his client’s view of the facts, enclosed medical records and photographs of Kalsow-Ramos’s injuries, and made a formal “demand for settlement of [KalsowRamos’s] claim for personal injury.” Rufo offered to settle for a payment of $800,000, and stipulated that the offer expired on February 1.

During the subsequent negotiations, Rufo emphasized to Stern that KalsowRamos wanted to avoid participating in any criminal proceedings, and thus he was willing to accept a lower settlement pay-' ment. However, any such settlement had to be finalized before the probable cause hearing on February 29. On February 6, Rufo sent a revised settlement offer to Stern, calling for a $475,000 payment in exchange for release of all criminal and civil liability. The Maguires’ new attorney, John Markham, reached an agreement with Rufo on February 12 contingent upon Vermont Mutual waiving a particular provision — the “voluntary payment” provision, discussed below — in the Maguires’ homeowners’ insurance policy. When Vermont Mutual refused to do so, the Maguires and Kalsow-Ramos continued to negotiate. On February 26, they signed an agreement obligating the Maguires to pay $425,000 to Kalsow-Ramos, who agreed not to pursue criminal or civil claims against Boris. 2

B. Vermont Mutual’s Involvement

Vermont Mutual had issued a homeowners’ insurance policy to Desmond and Josephine that was in effect in November 2007 and covered the Maguires’ personal liability for bodily injury in certain specified circumstances. Three provisions of that policy are pertinent here. First, Vermont Mutual was obligated to pay only if the injury was inflicted accidentally. Second, under the so-called “voluntary payment” clause, the Maguires were not allowed, except at their own cost, to make *53 any payments or assume obligations to others in connection with an otherwise covered incident. The third provision set forth Vermont Mutual’s defense and indemnity obligations when “a claim is made or a suit is brought against an insured for damages.”

Vermont Mutual became aware of the Pour House incident on January 10, when it received Rufo’s January 9 correspondence, forwarded by Stern. A claim file was opened and assigned to Mark McGreevy, a claims investigator. McGreevy called Stern to acknowledge receiving his letter and to speak with him about the incident. The following day, Stern forwarded the police report of the incident to McGreevy.

Several days later, on Thursday, January 17, Stern forwarded Rufo’s detailed demand letter to McGreevy by email. McGreevy responded within minutes, requesting an interview with Maguire the following week. Without explicitly agreeing to an interview, Stern wrote back on January 18, saying that, “[i]n view of the possibility of a criminal charge, we would need the statement to be attorney-client privileged,” and explaining that Maguire had already returned to college in North Carolina.

The following Tuesday, January 22, McGreevy and Rufo discussed the claim. Acknowledging the January 16 demand letter, McGreevy told Rufo that Vermont Mutual did not yet know enough about the case to make an offer and would not be in a position to do so by Rufo’s February 1 deadline. In the claim file, McGreevy noted that he planned to meet with Rufo on January 28.

McGreevy then visited the Pour House on January 24 and tried to speak with the bar’s general manager, who refused on advice of his attorney. Over the next few days, he called various individuals and attorneys, including the police officer who investigated the incident and the insurance carrier for the Pour House.

McGreevy then continued his investigation by calling the witnesses listed in the police report and attending a Boston Licensing Board hearing concerning the incident. Most of the witnesses refused to speak with McGreevy or were advised by counsel against doing so. All told, McGreevy was able to speak to just one witness, who saw only the aftermath of the altercation on the street. McGreevy did, however, hear the testimony of Pour House employees at the Licensing Board hearing, which took place on February 4. He also requested, from the City of Boston, a copy of the transcripts of the licensing hearing and a copy of the incident reports that the bar’s attorney provided at the hearing.

On February 4, McGreevy sent Stern a “reservation of rights” letter saying that Vermont Mutual might not pay the claim because the injury might have been intentional, and because Stern had refused to allow McGreevy to interview Maguire. McGreevy explained, however, that Vermont Mutual was “currently investigating [the Kalsow-Ramos] claim” and that the company would “continue to handle th[e] claim even though a coverage question exists.”

At 5:08 p.m. on February 7, Stern forwarded to McGreevy the February 6 message from Rufo containing the $475,000 settlement proposal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
662 F.3d 51, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 22024, 2011 WL 5120686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vermont-mutual-insurance-v-maguire-ca1-2011.