PATTI B. SARIS, Chief District Judge.
Plaintiff Garrick Calandro, as administrator of the estate of Genevieve Calandro, alleges that Sedgwick Claims Management Systems, Inc. ("Sedgwick") violated Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 176D ("Chapter 176D") and Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 93A ("Chapter 93A") by failing to make any reasonable attempt — both pre-verdict and post-verdict — to settle the negligence and wrongful death claims involving his mother who died at a nursing home in Danvers, Massachusetts.
After a four-day bench trial, the Court finds that Sedgwick did not violate Chapters 176D and 93A. The evidence presented at trial showed that, although both sides engaged in tough litigation tactics, the element of causation on Calandro's wrongful death claim was never reasonably clear. Even though causation was reasonably clear on Calandro's conscious pain and suffering claim, Sedgwick made two reasonable settlement offers when causation on that claim was reasonably clear. Sedgwick also attempted to engage in negotiations one month before trial, but was rebuffed by Calandro's attorney. Calandro also alleges statutory violations stemming from post-verdict or post-judgment settlement offers. For the reasons set forth below, Sedgwick's conduct at those times did not violate Chapters 176D and 93A.
Therefore, the Court finds that Sedgwick did not violate Chapters 93A and 176D. Judgment shall enter for Defendant.
The plaintiff, Garrick Calandro ("Calandro"), is the administrator of his mother Genevieve Calandro's estate. Sedgwick Claims Management Services, Inc. ("Sedgwick") is a third-party administrator ("TPA") of insurance claims. Hartford Insurance Company, through its subsidiary, Pacific Insurance Company ("Hartford"), issued a liability insurance Policy No. 2Y0004802 naming four out of five of the "Radius Entities" as insureds excluding Roush & Associates, Inc. The policy was an occurrence policy in the amount of $1 million, covering the period June 1, 2008 to June 1, 2009.
There were five "Radius Entities": Radium Management Services, Inc., Radius Management Services II, Inc., Roush & Associates, Inc., Radius Danvers Operating, LLC, and Radius BD. For convenience, the Court refers to the entities collectively as "Radius". In connection with its healthcare line of business, Hartford engaged Sedgwick as a TPA pursuant to written contract(s). Under the terms of those written contracts, Sedgwick must undertake certain actions in adjusting claims, and has contractual reporting requirements vis-à-vis a claim involving a fatality. The operative contract at the time of Calandro's claim set forth a list of standards for handling and adjusting that claim and others similar to it.
Dr. David Wahl was Ms. Calandro's personal physician at all times relevant to Calandro's underlying negligence claims.
Genevieve Calandro died on August 16, 2008 at age 91, five weeks after she last resided at Radius Danvers, a long-term skilled nursing facility where Ms. Calandro had lived for a six-month period between late December 2007 and July 10, 2008.
On July 10, 2008, at the Radius Danvers facility, Ms. Calandro fell from her wheelchair, hit her head, and was taken by ambulance to Beverly Hospital. Upon her admission to Beverly Hospital, Ms. Calandro was dehydrated, had undiagnosed acute appendicitis, renal failure, uncontrolled diabetes, a severe bed sore, a urinary tract infection ("UTI"), and a high white blood cell count. She also had dementia. She was discharged from Beverly Hospital on July 22, 2008 and admitted to a different nursing home. Ms. Calandro died on August 16, 2008. Her death certificate lists congestive heart failure and acute renal failure as the causes of death, along with various other conditions that contributed to her death.
On August 16, 2011, Calandro filed suit against Radius alleging negligence, gross negligence, and wrongful death. The complaint included a prayer for punitive damages. Calandro served the summons and complaint on Radius in October 2011. In July 2012, the plaintiff amended the complaint to add Dr. Wahl as a defendant. Calandro's lead trial counsel was David Hoey.
The terms under which Sedgwick acted as a TPA for Hartford are set out in a Third Party Administrator Agreement and the Service Requirements in that Agreement. After Radius received service of the summons and complaint in October 2011, Sedgwick assigned Mary Blair ("Blair"), an experienced claims adjuster at Sedgwick who had previously worked at Hartford, to adjust the claim. Blair engaged Bistany Adjustment Service ("Bistany") to investigate the claim. Hartford, via Blair, hired attorney Lawrence Kenney ("Kenney") to serve as counsel for the insureds in the litigation.
Bistany filed two investigative reports. At the time of its investigation, Radius, including the Danvers facility, was winding up operations or in the process of sale. This fact made the investigation difficult, both in terms of securing documents and identifying witnesses. Indeed, no incident report of Ms. Calandro's fall from her wheelchair was ever found.
Bistany conducted interviews with two nurses who worked at the Danvers facility at the time of Ms. Calandro's fall, one of whom told him that she remembered the fall and stated that a contemporaneous incident report was prepared. Bistany found the names of the two nurses in Ms. Calandro's clinical chart, which Calandro's attorney already had in his possession.
Although Bistany conducted interviews with the two nurses, Radius — via Blair and Kenney — did not disclose their names in response to Calandro's very-late filed interrogatories in the underlying case. Instead, Kenney objected to the interrogatories as untimely (they were), separately writing a letter to Hoey advising him of the difficulty of obtaining responsive information in light of the winding up of Radius entities. Calandro filed a motion to compel, but that motion was never granted. The discovery period was, however, extended.
The nurses' identities and contact information were never disclosed to Calandro before or during the underlying trial. The nurses were not called as witnesses. Defendant (Blair and Kenney) made a strategic decision to not disclose the information about the nurses.
In October 2011, when the summons and complaint were received, the plaintiff demanded $500,000 to settle the case against Radius. No settlement activity happened for two years.
In November 2013, at the deposition of Dr. Wahl, Hoey demanded $500,000 total to settle with all defendants. There were just two notable intervening events between when Radius was served and this demand. First, Dr. Wahl was added as a co-defendant in July 2012. Second, the plaintiff's put forward an offer of proof at the medical malpractice tribunal in May 2013.
On February 6, 2014, the defendants (Radius and Wahl) made a joint settlement offer of $275,000, with $150,000 attributed to Wahl and the remainder to Radius. Joe Pacheco ("Pacheco"), a claims adjuster for Coverys, Dr. Wahl's malpractice insurer conveyed the offer to Hoey. At that point, Blair had settlement authority of $125,000. Plaintiff's counsel rejected the offer on February 17, 2014, indicating that the $500,000 demand was non-negotiable.
On February 7, 2014, Kenney sent Blair a pre-trial report which attached a verdict value to the case of between $300,000 and $500,000. This value was attributable pro rata to Radius and Dr. Wahl. Kenney described the case as involving the "usual wrongful death damages." Trial Ex. 51 at 4. At that time, Kenney was preparing to admit to breach of the standard of care (which he and Blair generally referred to as "liability") and to try the case on proximate cause and damages, although no formal stipulation or admission had yet been filed. Going forward from mid-February 2014, Radius, via Kenney, Sedgwick, and Hartford, never changed its valuation of the case.
On February 18, 2014, Pacheco again contacted Hoey indicating that the $275,000 was an initial offer and that the defendants had room to move but would not bid against themselves. On March 27, 2014, the plaintiff withdrew the $500,000 demand.
On April 8, 2014, the plaintiff demanded $2 million total in settlement of the entire case collectively against the Radius Entities and Dr. Wahl. Radius and Dr. Wahl each carried $1 million insurance policies. Thus, this demand constituted a "policy demand" on each defendant.
In May 2014, Radius and Wahl extended a joint offer of $300,000 — a $25,000 increase over their prior joint offer. Hoey rejected this offer in a letter to Pacheco dated June 4, 2014. Hoey expressed frustration with the tenor of settlement negotiations and suggested that the adjusters (Pacheco and Blair) may be engaging in conduct that violated Chapter 176D.
On May 27, 2014, Radius disclosed its medical expert opinion. Dr. Terrence O'Malley of Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School wrote an expert opinion that Radius' conduct did not cause Ms. Calandro's death. Kenney testified that Radius did not seriously dispute that its conduct caused Genevieve Calandro conscious pain and suffering before her death.
In mid-June 2014, while attending a mediation on another matter, Blair told Kenney that she wanted to settle the Calandro suit. Kenney gave Hoey's office phone number to Blair. Kenney observed Blair make the phone call, and heard her end of the conversation in which she told Hoey that she wanted to settle the Calandro case. Hoey refused to hear the amount of her settlement offer until he spoke with his client.
Emails between Pacheco and Blair in early June suggest that both defendants' adjusters remained hopeful for a joint settlement. However, in early July 2014, unbeknownst to Sedgwick, Dr. Wahl separately settled with Calandro for $250,000. On July 3, 2014, Hoey's associate sent Kenney an email renewing a $1 million demand on Radius. The associate said that unless an offer in excess of $500,000 was made by July 9 all settlement discussions would cease. Kenney was out of the office from July 3 through July 7 taking family vacation. He did not see the email until the morning of July 8, when he forwarded the message to Blair.
That day, Blair contacted Shingleton. At that time, Blair requested settlement authority of $300,000 and recommended a reserve of $350,000. Shingleton assented to the request.
On July 14, Kenney made an oral offer of settlement of $250,000 to Hoey. Kenney also relayed that, although he did not have higher settlement authority at that time, he thought that Blair could get more — perhaps up to $350,000 — if needed. There is no evidence that Hoey replied at all, and he never made a counteroffer on July 14 or any date thereafter.
Jury selection began on July 16 and the trial commenced on July 17. Blair told Shingleton that she would not attend empanelment because she did want to be present with settlement authority before trial began, given how well she knew Hoey. In a July 16 email, Blair asked Shingleton if she still had $250,000 in settlement authority going in to the first day of trial. Shingleton confirmed that she did. However, no further settlement negotiations took place after Kenney's July $250,000 offer to Hoey on July 14.
Over the course of negotiations among these repeat players, tempers flared on both sides, whether it be from tactics deemed hardball, lack of progress in other cases, or other grudges. Regardless, Radius, via Sedgwick, made reasonable offers at key points leading up to trial, all of which Calandro rejected. Throughout, causation and damages were hotly contested, especially as to Calandro's wrongful death claim.
The compensatory portion of the trial took place on July 17, 18, and 21. The jury received a verdict form that required a finding on causation (not differentiated between wrongful death and conscious pain and suffering) and damages. Radius admitted to a breach of the duty of care on a number of facts.
After the verdict, Hartford took control of the claim away from Blair. Shingleton reached out to Blair with a series of questions, including asking whether she thought Calandro would accept a policy limit ($1 million) settlement offer to release all claims despite the verdict. Blair responded that she thought Calandro would, noting that it would be time consuming and expensive to collect on the judgment. Whatever Blair may have counseled, the Court finds that Sedgwick no longer controlled the claim on a day-to-day basis. Instead, Hartford handled the claim from that point forward.
On September 30, 2014, Calandro sent a demand letter under Chapter 93A, §9 to Hartford, Pacific Insurance Company, and Sedgwick alleging violations of Chapter 176D and demanding $40 million. Sedgwick received the demand on October 2, 2014 and responded on October 30, 2014. In its response, Sedgwick made a settlement offer of $1,990,197, reflecting the compensatory damage award, as well as costs and pre- and post-judgment interest. Calandro rejected the settlement offer and filed this lawsuit. At the time of the offer, Kenney advised Radius to appeal on a number of issues including the gross negligence finding against Radius and the punitive damages award,
In November 2014, Hartford and Calandro mediated the case. At the mediation, Hartford settled by paying the full amount of the judgment plus an additional amount, totaling $16 million. Hartford obtained releases of the Radius Entities and itself. It did not obtain a release for Sedgwick.
The Court does not credit Plaintiff's expert testimony that Sedgwick's conduct was below insurance industry standards. In fact, Kiriakos's opinion and credibility were undermined by his failure to include, despite his admitted knowledge, Blair's attempt to make an offer to Hoey in June 2014, and Kenney's offer to Hoey three days before the underlying trial. Trial Tr. 4:44-45; 4:84-85. Therefore, the Court does not adopt Kiriakos's opinion that Sedgwick's actions deviated from acceptable insurance adjustment practices.
Chapter 176D was "designed to remedy a host of possible violations in the insurance industry and to subject insurers committing violations to the remedies available to an injured party under G.L. c. 93A."
Liability is not reasonably clear if the elements of the claim are "still the subject of good faith disagreement."
"[A]ny person whose rights are affected by another person violating the provisions of [Chapter 176D, § 3(9)(f)]" is entitled to bring an action to recover for the violation under Chapter 93A section 9.
Based on the Court's findings of fact during the trial and recounted above, there was no Chapter 176D violation.
To the extent Calandro alleges a Chapter 176D violation based on failure to investigate, it has not shown that Sedgwick's actions constitute an unfair practice. Sedgwick retained an investigator promptly, and investigated the claim to the extent possible given the sale and dissolution of the various Radius entities. The failure to disclose the two nurses Bistany interviewed did not display a cooperative approach to pretrial discovery, but Kenney's timeliness objection was in good faith, and Calandro's motion to compel was not allowed.
With the two major prongs of Calandro's claim foreclosed by the facts found above, his closing argument focused on one newly raised toehold to a Chapter 176D violation: Radius' failure to respond with an offer of settlement after receipt of plaintiff's offer of proof to the medical malpractice tribunal in May 2013.
But Calandro's Hail Mary falls short. First,
Plaintiff's offer of proof to the medical malpractice tribunal in May 2013 did not make liability, as the term is defined in Chapter 176D, reasonably clear. Sedgwick's investigation was ongoing, and after Calandro's expert disclosure in late April 2014, Sedgwick obtained its own expert opinion in May 2014, which kept causation in dispute for wrongful death.
Beyond the lack of an affirmative duty to make a settlement offer before liability is reasonably clear, Calandro's own behavior shows his offer of proof to the medical malpractice tribunal was not the game changer his attorney would have the Court believe. Five months after the offer of proof to the medical malpractice tribunal, in November 2013, Hoey made a joint settlement demand of $500,000 — exactly the same demand he made at the time the suit was filed in October 2011.
Calandro has not presented evidence of a Chapter 176D violation after the verdict. The evidence at trial was that Hartford directed and authorized the $1 million post-verdict settlement offer complained of. Therefore, even if that offer constituted a Chapter 176D violation, Sedgwick is not liable. Furthermore, Sedgwick's separate post-judgment settlement offer of $1,990,197 was reasonable considering the likelihood of an appeal on the basis for and amount of the punitive damage award.
For the reasons stated above, the Court finds that Sedgwick did not violate Chapters 176D and 93A. Judgment for Defendant.