Lawyers: Common
pleas decision expands legal malpractice coverage
Judge "Carrier must cover multiple claimants in similar
case"
Tuesday, June 9, 1998
By Michael A. Riccardi
Insurance policy language imposing a per claim coverage limit
does not refer to a single lawsuit, but to each claimant in
a lawsuit. Philadelphia Common Pleas Court Judge Gene D. Cohen
ruled in a declaratory judgment Friday.
Cohen's ruling, which came on a declaratory judgment action
stemming out of coverage for legal malpractice, means that
the insurers of the defendants may be required to tender the
aggregate policy limit of $1 million, rather than the per
claim limit of $500,000, in coverage.
"The coverage available today is different from what
was available yesterday," said Alan
M. Feldman of Feldman
Shepherd & Wohlgelernter, the firm that handled the case
for the plaintiffs seeking to determine coverage. "We
believe that this is an important case, given that Coregis
insures most of the lawyers in Pennsylvania."
The policy issued by Coregis Insurance co. to two law partners
carried a limit of $500,000 per claim, and included language
defining multiple claims arising out of "A single act,
error, omission or PERSONAL INJURY, or a series of related
acts, error, omissions of PERSONAL INJURIES" as "a
single claim."
The carrier wanted to limit its coverage to a grand total
of $500,000 stemming from the insured lawyers' handling of
the case, and not $500,000 per claimant.
"This is a win-win," said Thomas More Marrone of
Feldman Shepherd & Wohlgelernter, who argued the case
before Cohen. "Lawyers should be pleased to get the coverage
they expect. And the victims of legal malpractice will be
able to be better compensated for their injuries."
Two plaintiffs raised legal malpractice claims against their
former lawyers over allegations that they did not properly
represent them in litigation arising from a gas explosion.
The plaintiffs, Kevin H. Scott and Maryanne Sage, retained
the law firm of Greenspan & Gaber to handle their case.
The partners in Greenspan & Gaber were insured by Coregis
with an aggregate coverage limit of $1 million and a per-event
cap of $500,000.
When Scott and Sage sustained damages as a result of the
gas explosion, they were married and living in the same house.
All the same, the two claimants presented differing damage
claims, Marrone explained.
Even though the gas explosion claim was filed by Scott and
Sage in the same complaint, and the alleged legal mistakes
were committed in the same lawsuit, they pressed separate
damage claims in both the injury case and the legal malpractice
case.
"These were separate claims, separate injuries and separate
damages," Marrone said.
Cohen pointed out that nowhere did the Coregis policy make
it clear that "separate lawsuits filed by multiple malpractice
victims based on the same set of underlying facts (would)
be subject to the 'per claim' limit."
Therefore, he said, the policy was ambiguous on the issue
of whether the per claim limit would come into play where
there were multiple claimants in the same lawsuit.
The judge observed that the law firm and attorneys had an
obligation to each of the claimants.
"G & G had separate legal duty to each client, both
clients had individual injuries which were not recoverable
by another," Cohen wrote. "In other words, Scott
and Sage's causes of action were separate, distinct and severable.
Each could have gone to a separate attorney to pursue their
separate causes of action. It would be absurd (to) consider
that if the two claimants went to separate law firms, both
represented by Coregis, there would be a 'per claim' limit
applied to the two claims for coverage."
The parties disagreed over whether the policy language used
by Coregis, which according to Feldman, a former president
of the Philadelphia Trial Lawyers' Association, provides legal
malpractice coverage to most Pennsylvania lawyers, is standard
in the industry.
"It is not as standard as Coregis would lead one to
believe," Marrone said. "Coregis had considered
and rejected policy language that would have been much clearer."
Marrone also argued before Cohen that the terms of the policy
should be construed against its drafter, Coregis.
"These are not manuscript policies," where each
term is negotiated by the parties at arms' length, Marrone
said.
St. Paul Insurance Co. was cited by Marrone as a legal malpractice
insurance carrier which uses simpler language and achieves
of effect of limiting coverage to one event, without regard
to how many claimants are involved, Marrone said.
The St. Paul's policy was cited by Cohen as one of the models
used by Coregis in drafting its form policy.
Local counsel for Coregis, Carl II Delacato Jr. of Hecker
Brown Sherry & Johnson, did not return a telephone message
yesterday seeking comment on the case.
According to the opinion, the Coregis policy was purchased
through the professional insurance brokerage company Colburn
Berholon Rowland.
Marrone said that Scott has resolved his claim in the gas
explosion litigation for an undisclosed sum, but that Sage
has not settled her case in the explosion lawsuit. To date,
there has been no court verdict that the attorneys who formerly
represented Scott and Sage committed legal malpractice.
Marrone said he is expecting and appeal to the Superior Court,
and he mentioned that there is still federal litigation in
the case that has been placed on hold pending the resolution
of the declaratory judgment.
The case decided by Cohen Friday was first filed in federal
court, but Eastern District Judge Edmund V. Ludwig declined
to exercise discretionary jurisdiction and sent the case back
to Philadelphia Common Pleas Court, Marrone said.
Some lawyers may be surprised at the effect of Cohen's ruling,
to effectively increase their legal malpractice coverage,
Marrone said.
"I think lawyers are like most people," he said.
"They don't read their insurance policy until there's
a claim." |