STEVEN D. MERRYDAY, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE.
Citrus-grove owner Richard Hermanns attempts to squeeze $2.965 million from Travelers Indemnity Company based on Hermanns's consent judgment against Richard McKenzie, the former manager of Hermanns's grove and a former insured under a Travelers Commercial General Liability (CGL) policy with a "farm care-taker liability" endorsement. The consent judgment results from an episode in which McKenzie — according to Hermanns's allegations in earlier civil and criminal actions — allegedly misappropriated fuel, trees, and fertilizer from the grove and breached the parties' contract. Hermanns's effort to concentrate on the endorsement yields no fruit: The insurance policy excludes coverage, the consent judgment is unreasonable, and the insurer owed no duty to defend.
Convinced that citrus growing would yield a large profit, Richard Hermanns bought 265 acres of citrus groves in Polk County in 2010 and 2011. Before the first purchase, Hermanns (through his partnership, Hermanns Real Estate Ventures) requested an appraisal from Brent Burris, a knowledgeable appraiser of agricultural real estate. Burris questioned the suitability of the tract for growing and observed that the land was prone to cold and standing water and that the sandy soils were not conducive to growing citrus. (Doc. 107-3 at 19-30) Despite Burris's appraisal, Hermanns bought a 100-acre grove in 2010, and the next year Hermanns bought a 165-acre grove contiguous to the first grove. Soon after buying the first grove, Hermanns hired Richard McKenzie's company, Richard McKenzie & Sons, to "maximize the grove's profit"
McKenzie hired Matthew Carter, another grove caretaker, to re-plant a fraction of the grove, which the parties call the "Sinkhole Road grove," and to spray pesticide on the trees. From January 2013 until July or August 2013, Carter worked on the grove, but late that summer McKenzie stopped paying Carter, who inquired directly with Hermanns about the money owed to Carter for working on Hermanns's grove. (Carter Depo. at 25, 37, 64-66)
Carter's inquiry prompted Hermanns to scrutinize McKenzie's bills. After reviewing the bills and consulting with Carter (who identified several instances in which McKenzie charged Hermanns for "Carter services" never provided by Carter) Hermanns pressed the State Attorney for Polk County to charge McKenzie with theft. Finding probable cause to suspect that McKenzie deliberately billed Hermanns for $113,000 in trees never delivered to the Sinkhole Road grove, billed Hermanns for fuel that McKenzie used for his own purposes, and billed Hermanns for fertilizer and other products not applied to Hermanns's crop, the State Attorney charged McKenzie with a scheme to defraud and with grand theft exceeding $100,000. These criminal charges remain pending in state court.
Before the criminal action, Hermanns asked Kyle Story, another grove care-taker, to assess the condition of the grove. Several sights struck Story. First, the groves appeared "thinly" planted. In 2010 and 2011, most growers planted about 150 trees per acre, but Story counted just 115 trees per acre. Second, many trees appeared injured by water saturation. Story later concluded that inadequate drainage and improper maintenance of the irrigation system left stagnant water in the grove for days or weeks. Third, most of the trees appeared infected by "huanglongbing," more commonly known as greening, a disease that impedes a root's absorption of nutrients. The incurable disease reduces a tree's yield, and the remaining fruit is misshapen, unsightly, and unsuitable for sale except to an orange-juice producer. (Story Depo. at 18-19) Eventually, greening kills the tree. Story and Carter initially thought that greening affected at least 80% of the grove, an infection rate similar to most groves in Florida. Hermanns concluded that greening affected most if not all of his trees. (Hermanns Depo. at 101) Late in 2013, Hermanns fired McKenzie and hired Story to manage the grove.
In February 2015, Hermanns sued McKenzie in the Circuit Court for Polk County. Hermanns alleged breach of an oral contract (count one) and breach of fiduciary duty (count three) and demanded an equitable accounting (count two) for the money paid to McKenzie under the contract. In the breach-of-contract claim, Hermanns alleged that his damages included the money paid to McKenzie and the profit lost because of McKenzie's mismanagement. In the accounting claim, Hermanns alleged that McKenzie acted "with the intent to permanently deprive" Hermanns of "its monies and profits[,] otherwise appropriating same as its own or for its own uses." Through discovery, Hermanns learned that from 2009 to 2013 Travelers Indemnity Company insured McKenzie's company under a CGL with an endorsement for "farm care-taker liability." Although the CGL obligated McKenzie to
In February 2016, less than two weeks after the State Attorney charged McKenzie with grand theft and a scheme to defraud, Hermanns amended the civil complaint to add a negligence claim (count four). Hermanns cannot explain the purpose of the amendment and cannot recall "any new facts or evidence" that warranted the amendment. (Hermanns Depo. at 70) As in the breach-of-contract claim, Hermanns sought in the negligence claim profit lost because of McKenzie's conduct. After the amended complaint, Hermanns provided McKenzie with an "expert" opinion letter (Doc. 107-21) signed by Story, the manager whom Hermanns hired to replace McKenzie. Without receiving compensation other than that paid for managing the grove (Story Depo. at 56), Story opined in the letter that Hermanns lost at least $464,625 in "net income" in 2016 from McKenzie's purportedly "negligent" care and maintenance. Story wrote that these damages "will continue for the next 20 years because of the thin planting" and concluded that Hermanns incurred "damages in excess of $2,965,750." Despite claiming that damages would continue for twenty years, Story never calculated the damages beyond 2021 because Story felt that "reaching out beyond that period of time was irresponsible." (Story Depo. at 104) Erin Moore, Travelers' corporate representative, testified that Travelers learned about the state-court action when Hermanns's counsel demanded coverage for McKenzie based on the amended complaint. (Moore Depo. at 26)
McKenzie's attorney in the state-court civil action, Ken Waterway, never retained a rebuttal expert to analyze and refute Story's damages calculation. Waterway's "investigation" of the claimed damages consisted only of providing the Story letter to McKenzie and asking for McKenzie's thoughts on the letter. Sometime in the fall of 2016, Hermanns and McKenzie agreed to settle the civil action. Under the settlement, McKenzie agreed to pay $200,000 to resolve the claims for breach of contract, for an equitable accounting, and for breach of fiduciary duty. On count four, the negligence claim, McKenzie agreed to a consent judgment against him for $2,965,750, but Hermanns agreed not to execute against McKenzie. Instead, McKenzie assigned to Hermanns all of McKenzie's rights under the Travelers CGL, including the right to sue for breach of contract and, if Hermanns successfully establishes coverage in this action, for bad faith. Finally, Hermanns agreed to recommend to the State Attorney the resolution "most favorable" to McKenzie in the criminal action. (Doc. 107-19 at 6) Hermanns understood the provision as obligating Hermanns — assuming McKenzie pays the $200,000 — to discourage the State Attorney's pursuing jail time, and McKenzie contemplated a pretrial diversion in which he would serve no jail time.
In this coverage action (the second in the Coblentz tryptych), Travelers sues (Doc. 9) for a declaration exonerating Travelers from liability to Hermanns under the CGL. As the assignee of McKenzie's rights under the CGL, Hermanns counterclaims (Doc. 39) for breach of the insurance policy and for a declaration that Travelers owes a duty to indemnify McKenzie for the $2.965 million consent judgment. Moving for summary judgment, Travelers argues (Doc. 108) that the policy excludes expected or intended damage, that the settlement is unreasonable and resulted from collusion between Hermanns
To recover from Travelers under the Coblentz agreement, Hermanns must show that the CGL covers the settlement, that Travelers wrongfully refused to defend McKenzie in the state-court civil action, that the settlement is reasonable, and that McKenzie and Hermanns settled "in good faith" and without colluding. Mid-Continent Cas. Co. v. Royal Crane, LLC, 169 So.3d 174 (Fla. 4th DCA 2015). To the extent Travelers requests exoneration based on an exclusion, Travelers must show the applicability of the exclusion. LaFarge Corp. v. Travelers Indem. Co., 118 F.3d 1511, 1516 (11th Cir. 1997).
Among other items, the policy covers "property damage" caused by an "occurrence," which means "an accident, including continuous or repeated exposure to substantially the same general harmful conditions." (Doc. 105-10 at 46 and 59) Under the policy, "property damage"
(Doc. 105-10 at 60) But the policy excludes coverage for "property damage" to:
(Doc. 105-10 at 49)
In arguing for coverage under the CGL, Hermanns finds himself in an intractable bind. The CGL excludes property damage "expected or intended" from
Travelers correctly observes the impracticability of distinguishing between damage that resulted from the purported "negligence" and damage that resulted from McKenzie's "intentional" misconduct. For example, Story attributes the grove's "thin" planting to negligence, but Hermanns's allegations in the other action and his communications with the State Attorney establish that the Sinkhole Road grove lacked the industry-standard 150 trees per acre partly because (to quote Hermanns) McKenzie "intentionally" diverted to his own use trees that belonged to Hermanns. Because the damage from McKenzie's calculated theft and the damage from McKenzie's so-called negligence appear indistinguishable, Hermanns cannot recover under the CGL. See Bradfield v. Mid-Continent Cas. Co., 143 F.Supp.3d 1215, 1245-48 (M.D. Fla. 2015) (Hodges, J.) (holding that the failure to apportion between covered and uncovered damages precludes recovery under a CGL); Highland Holdings, Inc. v. Mid-Continent Cas. Co., 2016 WL 3447523 (M.D. Fla. June 23, 2016) (same), aff'd, 687 Fed.Appx. 819 (11th Cir. May 2, 2017).
Provision j(5) excludes property damage to "[t]hat particular part of real property on which you ... are performing operations." Similar to the exclusions in Weedo, this "business risk" exclusion excludes coverage for property damage that "aris[es] from ongoing work." Oak Ford Owners Ass'n v. Auto-Owners Ins. Co., 510 F.Supp.2d 812, 819 (M.D. Fla. 2007) (Whittemore, J.). Throughout this action, Hermanns admitted that McKenzie managed the entire 265-acre grove and that the grove incurred damage during McKenzie's tenure. The amended state-court complaint alleges that Hermanns suffered damage from McKenzie's "negligently performing [] services" on the grove. (Doc. 107-12 at 9) Because Hermanns claims damage to the "particular part" of the "real property"
Citing Essex Ins. Co. v. Kart Const., Inc., 2015 WL 4730540 (M.D. Fla. Aug. 10, 2015), Hermanns argues that interpreting "that particular part" to mean the 265-acre grove "falls well short of the granular dissection" required by the exclusion. In Essex, which involves facts decisively different from this action, a company hired a contractor to weld a 10-foot section of a 127-foot cellular tower. In preparation for the welding, the contractor removed debris
2015 WL 4730540 at *6. Essex holds that provision j(5) excludes damage to the 10-foot section because "at the time of the accident [the contractor's] (relevant) operations occurred only on a ten-foot portion of the tower." Unlike in the insurer's (unsuccessful) argument in Essex, McKenzie's "operations" consisted of more than watching or monitoring the grove. McKenzie cleared debris, planted trees, installed and repaired the irrigation system, sprayed pesticides, and applied (or sometimes misapplied) fertilizer to the entire grove. (Hermanns Depo. at 33, 36, 57; McKenzie Depo. at 32-36 and 52) These purportedly deficient operations allegedly damaged Hermanns. In this instance, "that particular part" of the real property on which McKenzie operated spans 265 acres, and the j(5) provision excludes all of the damage to the entire grove.
A settlement is unreasonable if the settlement exceeds the amount for which a reasonably prudent defendant would settle after weighing the uncertainty of litigation and the plaintiff's prospective recovery at trial. Indep. Fire Ins. Co. v. Paulekas, 633 So.2d 1111 (Fla. 3d DCA 1994). In an attempt to show the reasonableness of the $2.965 million consent judgment, Hermanns submits affidavits from the counsel who crafted the settlement agreement (Docs. 125-4 and 125-5), but the record reveals a settlement that inadequately accounts for Story's confusing and erroneous damages calculation, inadequately accounts for the reduction in crop yield attributable to greening, and inadequately accounts for the fact that Hermanns's damages resulted either from McKenzie's alleged theft or McKenzie's alleged breach of contract, not from "negligence." Considered separately or collectively, these defects render the settlement unreasonable. Even viewing the record favorably to Hermanns, no reasonable jury could conclude that a reasonably prudent defendant facing personal liability would agree to a judgment in the ballpark of $2.965 million. See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248, 106 S.Ct. 2505, 91 L.Ed.2d 202 (1986) (explaining that Rule 56, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, precludes summary judgment if a dispute of material fact "is genuine, that is, if the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party").
If a plaintiff identifies damages calculable with reasonable certainty and likely caused by the defendant's misconduct, the plaintiff might recover lost "net" profit (that is, revenue minus expenses), not "lost revenue" or "lost income" or "lost gross profit" or any other figure. Del Monte Fresh Produce Co. v. Net Results, Inc., 77 So.3d 667 (Fla. 3d DCA 2011); Born v. Goldstein, 450 So.2d 262, 264 (Fla. 5th DCA 1984). Story admittedly calculated damages based on "lost revenue" (Story Depo. at 95), an error that inflates Hermanns's damages estimate by several orders of magnitude.
The numbers show the severity of the error on which Story's opinion and the $2.965 million consent judgment rest. According to Story, a 90-pound box of oranges commands about $9, and the Sinkhole Road grove is 265 acres. Story assumed that each acre will produce 225 boxes, an assumption at the top end of Story's estimate that a grove infected by greening will produce between 77 and 236 boxes per acre. During McKenzie's tenure, the grove typically produced no more than 20 or 30 boxes per acre. In the 2016 season, Story estimated that McKenzie's mismanagement cost Hermanns $464,625 in "net income." (Doc. 107-21 at 2)
But citrus growing, like every other commercial agricultural pursuit, costs money, a fact of which McKenzie and Hermanns are acutely aware. On average, Florida citrus growers spend about $2,036 per acre for fertilizer, pesticides, irrigation, and other expenses every growing season. Story's "internal numbers" show growing costs of about $1,200 per acre for a young grove. (Story Depo. at 93-94) As the grove nears maturity (about five years after planting), the cost of care-taking increases by twenty to thirty percent (according to Story). (Story Depo. at 42)
Even if Story could grow a citrus crop for forty percent less than the typical citrus farmer in Florida, Hermanns's "net profit" between 2014 and 2021 amounts to far less than $2.965 million.
Season Estimated "loss of Costs atNet profit income" (per $1,200 per Story) acre 2014-15 $167,835.74 $318,000 ($150,164.26) 2015-16 $359,676.50 $318,000 $41,676.50 2016-17 $514,530.38 $318,000 $196,530.38 2017-18 $738,775 $318,000 $420,775 2018-19 $752,050 $318,000 $434,050 2019-20 $594,360 $318,000 $276,360 2020-21 $508,525 $318,000 $190,525 Total $3,635,752.62 $2,226,000 $1,409,752.62
Even under a cost estimate inordinately charitable to Hermanns, the "lost profit" calculation is far too high — before accounting for the present-value defect in Story's damages calculation. Both sides agree that "future" damages must be discounted to present value to account for the interest that the money would earn if invested today and agree that Story failed to discount his damages calculation to the present value. The parties quarrel over the applicable discount rate; Travelers borrows the 12% rate used by Burris, the agricultural appraiser, while Hermanns cites a 10.5% rate. In either event, the present value of Hermanns' "lost profit" is no more than (and likely significantly less than) a million dollars.
Hermanns cites the opinion of William Todd Russell, an accountant, to support the reasonableness of the $2.965 million consent judgment. Like Story, Russell admittedly declined to include the costs of growing a citrus crop in the "lost profit" calculation. (Russell Depo. at 27 and 71) Contending that "lost profit" equals "lost revenue" minus "lost avoided costs," Russell testifies that "fixed costs" warrant exclusion from the lost-profit calculation.
Russell's opinion misconstrues Florida law, which requires subtracting necessary costs — like the cost of fertilizing and irrigating a crop — from "lost revenue." In RKR Motors, Inc. v. Associated Uniform Rental & Linen Supply, Inc., 995 So.2d 588 (Fla. 3d DCA 2008), a trial court awarded more than $80,000 in "lost profit" based on an expert opinion that failed to account for necessary costs. The appellant's expert determined that the plaintiff's "lost profit" amounted to about $10,000 after subtracting costs. Reversing the
Legal and accounting jargon aside, all of this states the obvious. Assume that McKenzie managed the grove in accord with the oral contract, that in 2019 the grove produced 220 boxes per acre, and that each box netted $9 (the figure provided by Story). Hermanns would earn $524,700 in revenue that season.
Recognizing the inaccuracy of the "lost profit" estimate, Hermanns repairs to arguing that the $2.965 million judgment is reasonable because Hermanns could have requested millions more in damages. Hermanns states that he paid McKenzie at least a million dollars to manage the grove, money for which Hermanns purportedly received inadequate services in return. But the $2.965 million consent judgment resolved only the negligence claim; Hermanns agreed to dismiss the breach-of-contract claim in exchange for McKenzie's promise to pay Hermanns $200,000. The suggestion that Hermanns settled the breach-of-contract claim for too little says nothing favorable to Hermanns's position. On the contrary, Hermanns's attempt to defend the reasonableness of the negligence settlement by claiming contract damages far in excess of $200,000 suggests that the parties impermissibility attributed to the negligence claim damages that resulted from McKenzie's alleged breach of contract.
In another effort to justify the reasonableness of the $2.965 million consent judgment, Hermanns contends that the
Between 2011 and 2015, greening devastated Florida's citrus crop — a point known to McKenzie, to Story, to Hermanns, and to every citrus grower in Florida at the time of the state-court litigation. Alan Morris, an agricultural economist, states that "virtually all Florida citrus growers are not making nearly the profits they expected as recently as 2010, and most are incurring losses." (Doc. 115-1 at 9) McKenzie testified that greening and weather, but mostly greening, recently destroyed three-quarters of his citrus crop. (McKenzie Depo. at 66-67) Despite knowing that greening infected the majority of Hermanns's grove and despite recognizing that greening would diminish both the citrus yield and the marketability of the remaining fruit (Story Depo. at 16-18, 46), Story never mentioned greening in the opinion letter that claimed damages of $2.965 million. Asked why he omitted greening, Story said: "No particular reason." (Story Depo. at 69)
In his deposition, Story acknowledged the effect of greening on citrus production. (Story Depo. at 105) Story's testimony prompted this exchange:
(Story Depo. at 153-55) Similarly, Hermanns admits that greening is the "biggest factor" in the grove's diminished yield. (Hermanns Depo. at 71)
To prevail on a negligence claim under Florida law, the plaintiff must show that the defendant's conduct more likely than not caused the plaintiff's injury. Gooding v. Univ. Hosp. Bldg., Inc., 445 So.2d 1015, 1018 (Fla. 1984). The sole "expert" opinion on which the parties based the $2.965 million consent judgment failed to distinguish the damages attributable to greening from the damages attributable to McKenzie's misconduct, even though the parties to the litigation understood at the time that greening had (in Story's words) "devastated" the citrus industry. Even viewing the record favorably to Hermanns, no reasonable jury could conclude that a reasonably prudent defendant would settle the negligence claim for the plaintiff's asking price, which circumvents the brutal economic fact of greening.
The $2.965 million consent judgment is unreasonable for another reason: The consent judgment fails under the economic-loss rule. (Doc. 107-27) Citing Tiara Condo. Ass'n, Inc. v. Marsh & McLennan Cos., Inc., 110 So.3d 399 (Fla. 2013), which ostensibly limits the economic-loss rule to products-liability actions, Hermanns responds that Waterway, McKenzie's counsel, reasonably concluded that the defense lacked merit.
The distinction between a breach of contract and a tort is the source of the duty breached by the defendant. If a contract imposes a duty and the defendant breaches that duty, the plaintiff must sue for breach of contract. If society imposes the duty, the plaintiff must sue in tort. In other words, if the allegedly breached duty is contractual, the economic-loss rule prevents suing in tort. See, e.g., Detwiler v. Bank of Central Fla., 736 So.2d 757 (Fla. 5th DCA 1999) (Antoon, J.); Woodson v. Martin, 663 So.2d 1327, 1331 (Fla. 2d DCA 1995) (Altenbernd, J., dissenting) (explaining that a tort "must be based upon some broader societal interest and not merely on the obligations between the parties established in their contract"); Hotels of Key Largo, Inc. v. RHI Hotels, Inc., 694 So.2d 74 (Fla. 3d DCA 1997) (Gersten, J.). A corollary to the economic-loss rule is the rule that the plaintiff in a breach-of-contract action cannot recover damages available only in tort, for example, punitive damages.
Tiara claims to "limit the application of the economic loss rule to cases involving products liability." 110 So.3d at 407. In a telling dissent, Justice Canady praised the economic-loss rule as a bulwark that prevents "contract law from drowning in a sea of tort." 110 So.3d at 413. In response to Justice Canady's dissent, Justice Pariente wrote in a concurrence that the fear of contract-drowning-in-tort will not materialize because a tort claim requires a tort "independent of any breach of contract claim." 110 So.3d at 408. Because the economic-loss rule requires a tort "independent of" the breach of contract, the concurrence has mystified the bar and the bench. (Nothing in the concurrence or the applicable precedent offers helpful guidance about distinguishing an "independent" tort from a "dependent" tort.)
The post-Tiara decisions continue to apply the economic-loss rule to bar a tort claim dependent on a contractual duty — but instead of saying "economic-loss rule," some decisions now say that the plaintiff
In this instance, Hermanns failed to state a negligence claim because Hermanns's claim against McKenzie depended on a contractual duty.
If the allegations of fact in the complaint might trigger coverage, the insurer owes a duty to defend the insured. Marr Invest., Inc. v. Greco, 621 So.2d 447 (Fla. 4th DCA 1993); State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Tippett, 864 So.2d 31, 35-36 (Fla. 4th DCA 2003) ("The allegations ... must state a cause of action that seeks recovery for the type of damages covered by the insurance policy."). The duty to defend depends on the facts alleged in the complaint, not the labels or conclusions in the complaint. Cabezas ex rel. Ferrer v. Fla. Farm Bur. Cas. Ins. Co., 830 So.2d 156 (Fla. 3d DCA 2002); Trailer Bridge, Inc. v. Ill. Nat. Ins. Co., 657 F.3d 1135, 1145 (11th Cir. 2011) ("The theories advanced and labels used in a complaint are subordinate to the facts alleged for the purpose of determining the duty to defend.").
Excluding prefatory allegations, the negligence claim comprises four paragraphs. Paragraph twenty alleges that Hermanns hired McKenzie to manage the grove, and paragraph twenty-one alleges that McKenzie owed a duty to "ensure that the groves were properly planted, watered, fertilized, treated, and harvested." (Doc. 107-12 at 9) Although the paragraph fails to specify the source of the duty, a "fair reading" of the complaint reveals a duty based on the parties' oral contract. Whatever the source of the duty, nothing (so far) triggers the duty to defend. Paragraph twenty-two alleges that McKenzie "deviated from the duty it owed Plaintiff, negligently performing [] services and has caused damages to [Hermanns]." Finally, paragraph twenty-three alleges that McKenzie's negligence caused damages "including but not limited [to] having to [clear] between 70 and 100 acres of land to compensate for the past improper care and consequential damages and lost profits by virtue of having an immature and underplanted grove." Excepting labels and conclusions, no factual allegation in this paragraph "potentially" suggests damage coverage by the CGL.
A "fair reading" of the allegations of fact in the amended complaint reveals damage from an intentional scheme to misappropriate Hermanns's money and property (the CGL excludes damage from an "expected or intended" injury). Although the amended complaint appears to include several allegations not dependent on McKenzie's intentional theft, the amended complaint alleges only damage from McKenzie's "operations" on the grove — damage allegations excluded by the j(5) provision. In sum, the allegations in the amended complaint triggered no duty to defend McKenzie in the state-court civil action.
If a settlement results from collusion or bad faith, the assignee of the insured's rights cannot recover under the insurance policy. Sidman v. Travelers Cas. and Surety, 841 F.3d 1197 (11th Cir. 2016) (citing Steil v. Fla. Physicians' Ins. Reciprocal, 448 So.2d 589 (Fla. 2d DCA 1984)). Bad faith includes an insured's willingness to "accept a judgment of any amount so long as it would not be on the hook to satisfy the judgment." Sidman, 841 F.3d at 1206.
Even viewed favorably to Hermanns, the record reveals a collusive and bad-faith settlement in which McKenzie accepted the plaintiff's asking price of $2.965 million, although several available defenses likely would have diminished or eliminated McKenzie's liability for negligence. See Sections II(A), (B), and ©. Under the settlement, Hermanns agreed not to initiate "post-judgment financial discovery" into McKenzie's assets and agreed not to attempt collection on the $2.965 million consent judgment. (Doc. 107-19 at 6) As the Florida decisions explain, this agreement renders the settlement "suspect" from the outset. Steil, 448 So.2d at 592.
Perhaps in a moment of unusual candor, McKenzie's counsel wrote in a draft of the settlement agreement that "RMS has made no independent investigation relating to the amount of alleged damage of the Groves, and relies solely on Hermann's investigation and representations when calculating the figure reached in the consent judgment." (Doc. 107-20 at 10) That provision disappeared from the final agreement after Hermanns's attorney asked to remove it. (Waterway Depo. at 61-62) Asked to describe McKenzie's "investigation" into the alleged damages, Waterway "point[ed] to Mr. McKenzie's deposition," in which McKenzie "appreciated that the Story opinion was within the realm of possibility and could be persuasive with a Central Florida jury." (Waterway Depo. at 62) Although Waterway states that he anticipated that Hermanns could have retained an economist to "turn [the numbers] into something bigger," Waterway knew at the time of the settlement that Story erroneously measured "lost revenue" instead of "lost profit" and knew that Story erroneously failed to discount his calculation to the present value.
After Hermanns and McKenzie contracted for McKenzie to manage Hermanns's citrus groves, McKenzie allegedly stole trees, fuel, fertilizer, and other products that belonged to Hermanns and allegedly breached the contract. Hermanns and McKenzie settled the breach-of-contract claim for $200,000 but settled a so-called "negligence claim" for $2.965 million. Under the settlement agreement, McKenzie assigned to Hermanns the rights under a Travelers CGL. Even viewed favorably to Hermanns, the record reveals no genuine dispute of material fact, and Travelers is entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law because (1) the CGL excludes damage from an "expected or intended" injury, (2) the j(5) provision excludes coverage, (3) the settlement is unreasonable for at least three reasons, (4) the factual allegations in the amended state-court complaint failed to trigger the duty to defend, and (5) both collusion and bad faith taint the settlement.
ORDERED in Tampa, Florida, on June 28, 2018.