K. GARY SEBELIUS, Magistrate Judge.
This matter comes before the court upon Plaintiffs' Motion to Compel Attendance of Persons with Settlement Authority to Attend Mediation, filed in each of the above-captioned cases. In the interest of expediency, the court addresses all of these motions in this order. Plaintiffs seek a court order compelling representatives from certain insurance companies to attend court-ordered mediation, which is to take place September 9, 2014. For the reasons stated below, plaintiffs' motions are denied.
Plaintiffs in the above-captioned actions are the individuals or surviving heirs of individuals who filed state court suits against Robert Courtney—a Missouri pharmacist who diluted chemotherapy drugs—and against drug manufacturers Eli Lilly & Company and Bristol-Myers Squibb Company. Defendant represented many of the three-hundred-plus plaintiffs in these Missouri state court suits, including the plaintiffs who subsequently filed suits against him in this district. Highly summarized, plaintiffs contend that defendant's actions related to an alleged aggregate settlement resolving the Missouri state court actions constitute legal malpractice.
Plaintiffs served on defendant discovery requests seeking insurance policies that defendant contends provide coverage for plaintiffs' claims. In response, defendant produced eight policies issued by seven different insurers. Among those insurers are Atlantic Insurance Company, which was a member of the Gulf Insurance Group, which, in turn, was a member of the Travelers Group (collectively "the Travelers insurers"). A representative associated with these insurers plans to appear for court-ordered mediation. Defendant states that the remaining nonparty insurers maintain they have no coverage for plaintiffs' claims, and therefore they do not plan to participate in mediation. The insurance representative who plans to participate in mediation has a policy limit of far less than plaintiffs' claimed damages. Because of this, plaintiffs argue that unless the court compels the other insurers to appear for mediation, there will not be an individual with full settlement authority present for mediation, as plaintiffs contend the local rules require.
D. Kan. Rule 16.3 governs alternative dispute resolution. Section (c)(2) applies to attendance at a mediation session by persons with settlement authority. It provides,
D. Kan. Rule 16.3(c)(2) is written in the disjunctive. It requires attendance "by a party or its representative with settlement authority." It does not require the attendance of nonparty insurance carriers when the party plans to personally appear at mediation.
Chief Magistrate Judge James P. O'Hara drafted the often-cited opinion in Turner v. Young interpreting this local rule.
Plaintiffs rely on Turner in support of their position that because the policy or policies issued by the Travelers insurers are for policy limits far less than plaintiffs' claimed aggregate damages, the other insurers must participate in mediation in order to have individuals present with full settlement authority.
Turner, however, involved the situation in which a representative of a party appeared at mediation.
In this case, defendant plans to personally appear at the mediation, which satisfies the local rules' requirement. Subsection (c)(3) separately addresses notice to interested nonparties, such as insurers. It requires that attorneys must provide written notice of the mediation to all interested nonparties, including primary and excess liability carriers.
Moreover, the insurers that have declined to participate in mediation have maintained that they have no coverage for plaintiffs' claims.
Accordingly,