PEGGY A. LEEN, Magistrate Judge.
IT IS HEREBY STIPULATED by and between the parties hereto through their respective attorneys of record that Plaintiffs may file a First Amended Complaint, attached hereto as Exhibit "1".
IT IS FURTHER STIPULATED that the defendant ALPS PROPERTY & CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY, waives notice and service of the First Amended Complaint and shall not be required to answer the amendment, and that all denials, responses and affirmative defenses contained in the answer previously filed by defendant ALPS Corporation to the original Complaint shall be responsive to the First Amended Complaint.
IT IS FURTHER STIPULATED that the answer of Defendants Douglas J. Gardner, Esq., Douglas J. Gardner, Ltd., and Rands & South, Ltd. will be filed no later than 10 days after the Order permitting the filing of the First Amended Complaint is signed by the Court.
Plaintiffs, CENTURY-NATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY, a California corporation, PACIFIC PIONEER INSURANCE GROUP, INC., a Delaware corporation, PACIFIC PIONEER INSURANCE COMPANY, a California corporation, and UCA GENERAL INSURANCE SERVICES, a California corporation, allege as follows:
1. This Court has jurisdiction over this action pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332 in that the controversy is between citizens of different states and the matter in controversy exceeds $75,000 exclusive of interest and costs.
2. Venue is proper in this Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1391(b).
3. Plaintiff Century National Insurance Company ("CNIC") is a California licensed insurance company, with its principal place of business located at 16650 Sherman Way, Van Nuys, CA 91406.
4. Plaintiff Pacific Pioneer Insurance Group, Inc. ("PPIG") is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business located at 6363 Katella Avenue, Cypress, California 90630.
5. Plaintiff Pacific Pioneer Insurance Company ("PPIC") is a California corporation with its principal place of business located at 6363 Katella Avenue, Cypress, California 90630. PPIC is a wholly owned subsidiary of PPIG.
6. Plaintiff UCA General Insurance Services, Inc. ("UCA") is a California corporation with its principal place of business located at 6363 Katella Avenue, Cypress, California 90630. UCA is a wholly owned subsidiary of PPIG. Century-National, PPIG, PPIC, and UCA are hereinafter collectively referred to as "Plaintiffs".
7. Plaintiffs are informed and believe and based thereon allege that defendant Douglas J. Gardner, Esq., ("Gardner") is and at all times mentioned in this Complaint was, a resident of Clark County, Nevada, and was an officer in Rands & South, Ltd. and Douglas J. Gardner, Ltd.
8. Plaintiffs are informed and believe and based thereon allege that defendant Douglas J. Gardner, Ltd., a Nevada domestic professional corporation, ("Gardner, Ltd.") is and at all times mentioned in this Complaint was, a law firm with its principal place of business located at 1055 Whitney Ranch Dr., Suite 220, Henderson, Nevada 89014.
9. Plaintiffs are informed and believe and based thereon allege that defendant Rands & South, Ltd. a Nevada domestic professional corporation, ("R&S") is and at all times mentioned in this Complaint was, a law firm with its principal place of business located at 9498 Double R. Blvd., Reno, Nevada 89521. Plaintiffs are informed and believe and, on that basis, allege that Gardner, Ltd. and R&S have been doing business as Rands South & Gardner. Gardner, Gardner, Ltd., and R&S are hereinafter collectively referred to as the "Attorney Defendants".
10. Plaintiffs are informed and believe and thereon allege that Gardner was the agent and/or employee of Gardner Ltd., R&S and/or Rands South & Gardner, and that in doing the things herein alleged, was acting within the course and scope of such agency and employment and with the knowledge, permission and consent, and pursuant to the instruction, of each of Gardner, Ltd. and R&S.
11. Plaintiffs are informed and believe and based thereon allege that defendant ALPS Property & Casualty Insurance Company, a Montana corporation, ("ALPS") is and at all times mentioned in this Complaint was, an insurance company with its principal place of business located at 111 N. Higgins Ave., Suite 200, Missoula, Montana 59802. ALPS is the professional liability insurer for Gardner, Gardner Ltd, R&S and/or RSG.
12. Plaintiffs are ignorant of the true names and capacities of defendants Does 1 through 20, inclusive, and by reason thereof sues said defendants by their fictitious names.
13. Plaintiffs will ask leave of Court to amend this Complaint to allege the true names and capacities of said Doe defendants when the same have been fully and finally ascertained.
14. CNIC is an insurance company licensed in California with its domicile located in California. CNIC issued an insurance policy to Universal Capital Investments, LLC, dba Nema Business Center, LLC ("NEMA"), policy number 77A5001095-00 for the period December 11, 2013 to December 11, 2014. The policy provided a limit of $1 million in coverage for NEMA.
15. PPIG is a group of insurance related entities that contracts with CNIC to provide insurance services to its policyholders. UCA is an insurance program writer and provides property and casualty insurance programs to CNIC and writes commercial package business throughout the western states of California, Arizona, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah and Washington. PPIC is an insurance company currently licensed in 12 states and assumes a quota share of the business produced by UCA. While CNIC provided the insurance policy for NEMA, PPIC reinsured CNIC for the policy and through the agreement between PPIC and UCA, UCA assumed a share of the reinsurance costs that PPIC incurred for the CNIC policy.
16. On or about June 26, 2014, Antoinette Ferris, a tenant at the property owned by NEMA, claimed she slipped and fell in the second-floor bathroom as a result of water on the floor from a leak from the toilet in the restroom. Ms. Ferris claimed to have sustained injury from this fall. Her injuries, however, apparently were not severe enough to stop her from returning to work the next day.
17. Plaintiff's claim was tendered by NEMA to Precision Risk Management ("PRM"), the risk manager and agent for CNIC, (and also a member of PPIG), on or about July 15, 2014.
18. On April 20, 2016, Ms. Ferris filed a complaint against NEMA for negligence (the "Underlying Action") due to injuries she allegedly sustained from her slip and fall in June 2014.
19. On April 29, 2016, NEMA sold the premises where the injury allegedly occurred to a new owner. Michael Palar, the prior building manager for NEMA, remained on site for three months to assist the new owners.
20. On May 3, 2016, PRM received notice that Ms. Ferris had filed her complaint against NEMA.
21. On or about May 7, 2016, PRM, on behalf of Plaintiffs, retained Gardner to represent NEMA in the Underlying Action. Plaintiffs are informed and believed that Gardner was a member, partner or shareholder in the other attorney defendants.
22. Plaintiffs are informed and believe and, on that basis, allege that at the time of the defense assignment Gardner had contracted an illness that prevented him from performing his duties as a lawyer at the standard of care for lawyers practicing in the community in which Gardner practiced. Plaintiffs are informed and believe that during the course of the litigation, Gardner, Ltd. and R&S became aware of Gardner's illness and failed to review his cases, failed to advise Plaintiffs of his illness, failed to supervise Gardner's performance of his duties and failed to assist Gardner to meet the applicable standard of care. During the course of the Underlying Action, Plaintiffs were unaware that Gardner contracted an illness that prevented him from performing his duties as a lawyer at the required standard of care.
23. In the defense assignment from PRM to Gardner, PRM requested that Gardner represent NEMA to defend against Ms. Ferris' claims in the Underlying Action. PRM requested that Gardner immediately appear on behalf of NEMA and make contact with them. Gardner failed to contact the insured until approximately fourteen months after Gardner was engaged. Gardner took the following actions all without first contacting the defendant in the Underlying Action: (1) he prepared the answer to the complaint; (2) he prepared responses to written discovery; (3) he took Ms. Ferris' deposition; (4) he submitted the joint case conference report; (4) and failed to inform the client to insure that the client retained all evidence relevant to Ms. Ferris' allegations.
24. On June 20, 2016, Gardner filed an answer to Ms. Ferris' complaint in the Underlying Action. Gardner did so without contacting the insured or gathering any facts from the insured. Gardner failed to contact Mike Palar, even though PRM had informed him that he was the person that Gardner should contact regarding Ms. Ferris' claims. Gardner had also not spoken to Daniel Dominquez, the person that maintained the restroom and spoke to Ms. Ferris after her fall. The answer that Gardner filed stated that the answering defendants were without sufficient knowledge or information to form a belief as to the truth of the allegations and therefore defendants denied the allegations. Gardner then went on to assert boilerplate affirmative defenses.
25. Gardner also never sent NEMA a litigation hold letter requesting that they retain any evidence related to Ms. Ferris' claim, nor did he seek any maintenance records or repair records from the prior or current owners of the building.
26. On November 9, 2016, Gardner took the deposition of Ms. Ferris. At that time Gardner had not yet obtained Ms. Ferris' medical records or contacted any witnesses and failed to take a competent deposition of Ms. Ferris as a result of his failure to gather the necessary evidence prior to taking the deposition.
27. On November 12, 2016, Gardner, along with Ms. Ferris' counsel, submitted a joint case conference report. In that report, Gardner agreed that the last date for expert disclosures would be June 14, 2017 and July 14, 2017 for rebuttal disclosures. The Court adopted the joint report in its Scheduling Order.
28. On June 14, 2017 Gardner failed to designate any expert witnesses and on July 14, 2017 Gardner failed to designate any rebuttal expert witnesses.
29. On June 30, 2017, Gardner provided responses to Ms. Ferris' first set of requests for production of documents. Gardner provided responses to Ms. Ferris' first set of interrogatories on July 5, 2017. Gardner had never spoken to Mr. Dominquez prior to serving these responses and had made no attempt to obtain the maintenance records for the Property. The discovery responses served on Ms. Ferris by Gardner were wholly deficient.
30. On July 10, 2017, Ms. Ferris submitted a statutory offer for the policy limits of the Century-National policy of $1 million. Gardner failed to provide accurate or candid information to Plaintiffs regarding the status of the above matters, all of which fell below the standard of care and which he had a fiduciary duty to disclose to Plaintiffs so that they could properly evaluate their exposure in the Underlying Action. Gardner advised Plaintiffs that the value of the Underlying Action was in the mid-six figure range and based on Gardner's advice, the Plaintiffs let the statutory offer expire and Plaintiffs were thereby prevented from mitigating their damages in the Underlying Action.
31. On August 25, 2017, Ms. Ferris filed a Motion to Strike Defendants' Answer or in the Alternative for Rebuttal Presumption Due to Defendants' Spoliation of Evidence Related to the Subject Action for failure to produce maintenance records requested by Ms. Ferris. This motion was a direct result of Gardner's failure to properly preserve maintenance records from NEMA or attempt to locate those records from any other sources. On November 27, 2017, the court in the Underlying Action entered an order that a jury instruction be issued on the issue of the spoliation and that the jury be instructed regarding negligent spoliation of evidence, as well as intentional spoliation of evidence.
32. Gardner failed to depose any of the expert witnesses disclosed by Ms. Ferris. As described above, Gardner failed to retain or offer testimony of any defense experts. Gardner failed to depose any witnesses, other than Ms. Ferris. Further, Gardner failed to depose treating doctors identified by Ms. Ferris. As a result of Gardner's failure to timely submit expert reports or depose Ms. Ferris' experts, or to conduct any other discovery, Ms. Ferris' evidence of liability, extent of injury, and economic impact went unchallenged at trial.
33. In the Underlying Action, Ms. Ferris' counsel utilized a never produced statement that counsel obtained from Daniel Dominguez. The deadline for Gardner to file a motion to exclude this statement was October 12, 2017. Gardner failed to timely object or move in limine to have this statement excluded as evidence at trial.
34. Prior to trial, Gardner never communicated with Plaintiffs any accurate valuation of damages and liability so that Plaintiffs could properly evaluate whether to settle this matter with Ms. Ferris. Gardner failed to disclose to Plaintiffs all of the above issues that had resulted in the Underlying Action due to his failure to take the proper action in the case so that Plaintiffs could accurately evaluate the value of Ms. Ferris' case.
35. Gardner further failed to offer the testimony of any witnesses, either percipient or expert, at the trial in the Underlying Action. Gardner failed to timely inform the insured of the trial date and accordingly had no representative from NEMA present with him at any point during the trial. On January 17, 2018, after commencement of trial, Gardner informed PRM that he just recently learned that Mr. Palar and Mr. Dominquez were unable to attend the trial. Plaintiffs are informed and believe that Gardner failed to issue any subpoenas to any witnesses for trial.
36. Gardner also never communicated with NEMA's owner, Michael White, to inform him of the upcoming trial. Instead, Gardner's assistant, Jennifer Meacham, had contact with Mr. White. Mr. White informed Ms. Meacham that he would not be available at all during the week of January 16, 2018, when trial was occurring, because he was having surgery. Nevertheless, Gardner failed to seek a continuance of trial and commenced and concluded trial without a client present.
37. On December 18, 2017, Gardner was informed that if a court reporter was desired, the court reporter needed to be paid $3,000 seven days prior to trial on January 2, 2018. On December 28, 2017, Gardner recommended to PRM that the case be reported, but made no mention of when the payment was due or the amount of the payment. On January 11, 2018, Gardner first requested that PRM advance the reporter's fee of $3,000. In response, PRM requested that Gardner either advance the fees or send an invoice as soon as possible so that the reporter could be paid. Gardner never sent the invoice, and never paid the fees for the reporter. Nevertheless, PRM sent a check via overnight mail which was received by Gardner on January 16, 2018. By this time, the trial had already
38. been ongoing for three days and it was already two weeks past the January 2, 2018 deadline required to have the trial reported. Gardner's failure to have a reporter recording the trial rendered it impossible for NEMA to appeal the judgment that Ms. Ferris obtained in the Underlying Action.
39. After the jury ruled in favor of Ms. Ferris and awarded her damages, Gardner wrote to Plaintiffs that "as the jury went into more detail with the deliberation it determined and agreed that it was almost necessary to punish my client because it presented no live witnesses. This fact was very upsetting to the jury. It gave the jury impression that my client did not care about the case. The failure of these men was extremely angering!"
40. The result of the aforementioned conduct of Gardner was that a verdict in the amount of $4,782,219.00 was entered, of which $4,000,000.00 was, according to Gardner, a punitive assessment. The total amount of the judgment with interest was $4,940,629.74.
41. Plaintiffs are informed and believe that had Gardner met even the minimal standard of care in defending this action, Ms. Ferris' judgment would have been substantially less than $1 million.
42. After judgment was entered, defendants in the Underlying Action filed a motion for a new trial. At the hearing on the motion, Gardner attempted to appear on behalf of defendants, but the court prevented him from appearing because he had been suspended for failure to pay his bar dues. The motion for new trial was denied based at least partially on the basis of Gardner's failure to have the trial recorded by a court reporter.
43. A notice of appeal was thereafter filed on June 11, 2018.
44. Thereafter, Plaintiffs engaged in communications with Ms. Ferris' counsel as well as counsel for Gardner's malpractice insurer, ALPS, to seek a negotiated resolution of the matter. Ms. Ferris and Plaintiffs agreed to attend mediation in an attempt to resolve this matter prior to incurring the expenses of prosecuting an appeal of the Underlying Action.
45. Prior to the mediation, Plaintiffs negotiated with ALPS regarding the mediation. On July 31, 2018, ALPS, sent a letter to NEMA's counsel, Cozen O'Connor in which ALPS agreed to fund $1.5 million in settlement with Ms. Ferris. Further, during a conversation which occurred between ALPS' counsel and NEMA's counsel on August 10, 2018, ALPS reiterated its commitment to fund up to $1.5 million of a total $3 million settlement with Ms. Ferris and stated that its contribution offer would remain open through mediation. In reliance on the representation by ALPS, Plaintiffs entered into a binding agreement with Ms. Ferris at mediation for settlement in the amount of $3 million.
46. ALPS did not attend mediation, however, prior to and during the mediation, and without Plaintiffs' knowledge, ALPS was secretly communicating with Ms. Ferris' counsel, the contents of which are unknown to Plaintiffs, but which greatly undermined Plaintiffs' efforts and ability to negotiate a settlement with Ms. Ferris.
47. After Plaintiffs committed to the settlement at mediation, ALPS refused to honor its agreement to fund the agreed upon contribution of $1.5 million. Due to ALPS' failure to honor its agreement to fund $1.5 million of the settlement with Ms. Ferris, PPIG was forced to put PPIC up for sale and will likely have to accept below market value for the sale of PPIC to avoid PPIC having inadequate surplus after funding the settlement and being subject to an investigation by the California Department of Insurance. PPIC, as the reinsurer of the CNIC Policy was required to cover the amount of the settlement over CNIC's $1 million policy limit, and due to the contractual arrangement between UCA and PPIC, UCA was also required to pay a portion of the settlement. PPIG would not have been forced to take this action, and UCA would not have had to contribute to the settlement with Ms. Ferris, if ALPS had honored its agreement to contribute $1.5 million to the settlement with Ms. Ferris.
48. Plaintiffs reallege the allegations of Paragraphs 1 through 46 of this Complaint as if fully set forth herein.
49. During all times relevant herein, the Attorney Defendants and Plaintiffs were in an attorney-client relationship. Further, the Attorney Defendants continued to represent Plaintiffs in the action in which the malpractice occurred until on or about May 11, 2018 when Attorney Defendants were substituted out for new counsel.
50. Having undertaken the aforesaid representation, the Attorney Defendants owed the Plaintiffs the duty to use such skill, prudence, knowledge, care and diligence as members of the legal profession are required to possess and exercise, including, but not limited to, complying with the requirements of the applicable code or cannons of the legal profession.
51. The Attorney Defendants failed to exercise reasonable care and skill in performing legal services for Plaintiffs because they, among other things, failed to do the following in the Underlying Action: (1) failed to make timely contact with their clients resulting in a spoliation of evidence instruction to the jury; (2) failed to contact witnesses; (3) failed to take proper discovery; (4) failed to timely retain expert witnesses; (5) failed to depose plaintiff's experts; (6) failed to provide an accurate valuation of damages and liability to Plaintiffs regarding settlement; (7) failed to file appropriate pre-trial motions; (8) failed to properly communicate and coordinate with Plaintiffs and witnesses pre-trial; (9) failed to properly procure witnesses for trail; (10) failed to have trial proceedings recorded; and (11) failed to properly interpose objections at trial.
52. The Plaintiffs suffered actual loss and damage as a result of the Attorney Defendants' misconduct, omissions and failure in that the Plaintiffs were forced to settle and pay $3 million, to hire new defense counsel post-judgment, to attempt to have the court reconsider the judgment and to evaluate whether an appeal of the judgment was
53. possible. Due to the Attorney Defendants' failure to have the trial recorded, appeal of the judgment was certain to fail, and Plaintiffs mitigated their damages by entering into a settlement with Ms. Ferris in the amount of $3 million, instead of the $4.9 million judgment awarded to Ms. Ferris. Plaintiffs paid the entire amount of this settlement.
54. Had the Attorney Defendants actions met the minimum standard of care and had the Attorney Defendants taken the above identified actions which they failed to take, judgment in favor of Ms. Ferris would have been substantially less than $1 million. As a proximate result of the Attorney Defendants' breach of their duties as Plaintiffs' counsel, Plaintiffs have been damaged in amount to be determined at the time of trial of this matter.
55. Plaintiffs reallege the allegations of Paragraphs 1 through 52 of this Complaint as if fully set forth herein.
56. In entering into an attorney-client relationship with Plaintiffs, the Attorney Defendants undertook a fiduciary duty to act on behalf of Plaintiffs, free from outside consideration or constraints, and to exercise their abilities constantly and diligently for the protection of the Plaintiffs' interests and not those of any other person.
57. As more fully described herein, the Attorney Defendants breached their fiduciary duties as counsel to Plaintiffs by among other things: (1) failing to make timely contact with their clients resulting in a spoliation of evidence instruction to the jury, including, but not limited to, issuing a litigation hold letter to the client; (2) failing to contact witnesses; (3) failing to take proper discovery; (4) failing to timely retain expert witnesses; (5) failing to depose plaintiff's experts; (6) failing to provide an accurate valuation of damages and liability to Plaintiffs regarding settlement; (7) failing to file appropriate pre-trial motions; (8) failing to properly communicate and coordinate with Plaintiffs and witnesses pre-trial; (9) failing to properly procure witnesses for trail; (10) failing to have trial proceedings recorded; and (11) failing to properly interpose objections at trial.
58. The Attorney Defendants further breached their fiduciary duties to Plaintiffs when Gardner, after receiving Ms. Ferris' statutory offer in the approximate amount of the policy limits, failed to inform Plaintiffs of Gardner's failures to take the appropriate actions to properly defend the Underlying Action, as set forth in detail above. Due to Gardner's failure to be candid with Plaintiffs' regarding his negligent handling of this matter, Plaintiffs did not accept Ms. Ferris' statutory offer and were thereby prevented from mitigating their damages.
59. The Attorney Defendants further breached their fiduciary duties to Plaintiffs when Gardner failed to disclose that he was seriously ill and that his illness affected his ability to defend Plaintiffs in the Underlying Action to the level required to meet the standard of care. Plaintiffs are informed and believe and, on that basis, allege that at some point Gardner, Ltd. and R&S became aware of Gardner's illness and should have taken action to at least review Gardner's active cases to insure that Gardner was still able to perform his services to his clients which met the minimum standard of care and they failed to do so. Further, had they done so, they would have determined that Gardner was unable to provide services that met the standard of care and should have notified his clients, including Plaintiffs, that Gardner could no longer function as their counsel in the Underlying Action.
60. Plaintiffs suffered actual loss and damage as a result of the Attorney Defendants' misconduct and omissions in that plaintiff in the Underlying Action obtained a judgment in the amount of $4.9 million, far in excess of what the verdict would have been for a plaintiff with her injuries. As a result of the Attorney Defendants' breaches of their fiduciary duties, Plaintiffs were left with no choice but to mediate with plaintiff to reach an agreement for an amount less than the full amount of the judgment. Plaintiffs were able to negotiate with plaintiff to settle the matter for $3 million, all of which was paid by Plaintiffs.
61. Had the Attorney Defendants actions met the minimum standard of care and taken the above identified actions which they failed to take, judgment in favor of Ms. Ferris would have been substantially less than $1 million. As a proximate result of the Attorney Defendants' breach of their duties as Plaintiffs' counsel, Plaintiffs have been damaged in amount to be determined at the time of trial of this matter.
62. Plaintiffs reallege the allegations of Paragraphs 1 through 59 of this Complaint as if fully set forth herein.
63. In writing on July 31, 2018 and orally on August 10, 2018 ALPS committed to fund $1.5 million of the $3 million settlement that Plaintiffs reached with Ms. Ferris in the Underlying Action and stated that the commitment would remain open through mediation.
64. After the settlement was reached with Ms. Ferris for $3 million, ALPS refused to contribute its $1.5 million portion of the settlement. Plaintiffs fulfilled all of their obligations under the terms of the agreement with ALPS. Further, when ALPS refused to pay its half of the settlement amount, Plaintiffs paid the entire $3 million settlement to Ms. Ferris.
65. As a proximate result of ALPS breach of the agreement to fund half of the settlement, Plaintiffs have been damaged in amount to be determined at the time of trial of this matter.
66. Plaintiffs reallege the allegations of Paragraphs 1 through 63 of this Complaint as if fully set forth herein.
67. ALPS has a duty of good faith and fair dealing to Plaintiffs. This duty of good faith and fair dealing requires that neither party do anything which will injure the rights of the other to receive the benefits they are entitled to receive.
68. ALPS breached its duty of good faith and fair dealing by first agreeing to fund half of any settlement reached with Ms. Ferris, up to $3 million, but then refusing to do so after such an agreement was reached with Ms. Ferris. Plaintiffs are informed and believe that ALPS never had any intention of honoring its agreement to fund its commitment toward settlement.
69. Plaintiffs are informed and believe and, on that basis, allege that ALPS made the commitment to Plaintiffs to induce them to settle with Ms. Ferris for $3 million, thereby capping ALPS exposure due to Gardner's malpractice, which had Plaintiffs not settled, would have left ALPS exposed to the full amount of the judgment that Ms. Ferris obtained. Once the Plaintiffs' settled for $3 million, ALPS then refused to honor its commitment. Plaintiffs would not have settled with Ms. Ferris, thereby putting PPIC in jeopardy, if they were aware of ALPS true intentions.
70. As a direct and proximate result of ALPS' breaches as set forth above, Plaintiffs funded the entire settlement with Ms. Ferris, a sum in excess of Plaintiffs' policy limits which was due to the negligence of Gardner in his handling of Ms. Ferris' complaint. The entire amount that Plaintiffs were required to pay were as the result of Mr. Gardner's negligence and as his malpractice carrier, the entire settlement amount should be borne by ALPS.
71. As a further direct and proximate result of ALPS' wrongful conduct in breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, Plaintiffs were damaged in an amount to be proved at trial, which amount is in excess of $3 million.
72. Plaintiffs reallege the allegations of Paragraphs 1 through 69 of this Complaint as if fully set forth herein.
73. Plaintiffs entered into an agreement whereby ALPS agreed to fund $1.5 million of the $3 million settlement reached with Ms. Ferris in the Underlying Action.
74. After entering into the agreement with Plaintiffs, ALPS concealed from Plaintiffs the fact that it was directly in settlement discussions with Ms. Ferris without Plaintiffs knowledge and Plaintiffs are informed and believe and, on that basis, allege that ALPS was undermining Plaintiffs position in their settlement negotiations with Ms. Ferris.
75. Plaintiffs are further informed and believe and, on that basis, allege that ALPS, while making the agreement with Plaintiffs to contribute $1.5 million towards settlement with Ms. Ferris, never had any intention of performing its promise to do so and made the false promise to Plaintiffs to induce them to settle with Ms. Ferris.
76. Plaintiffs are informed and believe and, on that basis, allege that ALPS made the commitment to Plaintiffs to induce them to settle with Ms. Ferris for $3 million, thereby capping ALPS exposure due to Gardner's malpractice, which had Plaintiffs not settled, would have left ALPS exposed to the full amount of the judgment that Ms. Ferris obtained. Once the Plaintiffs' settled for $3 million, ALPS then refused to honor its commitment. Plaintiffs would not have settled with Ms. Ferris if they were aware of ALPS true intentions.
77. At the time of the misrepresentations, omissions and concealment referenced herein, ALPS was aware that such misrepresentations, omissions, and concealment was occurring, and allowed them to occur because ALPS benefited from the misrepresentations, omissions, and concealment set forth herein.
78. By reason of said misrepresentations and fraudulent concealment as alleged herein, Plaintiffs have been damaged in an amount of at least $3,000,000.00.
79. In doing the acts herein alleged, ALPS' conduct was willful and intentional, and done in reckless disregard of the possible results. ALPS' conduct evidenced a conscious disregard of Plaintiffs' rights. By reason thereof, Plaintiffs are entitled to exemplary and punitive damages against ALPS.
Wherefore, Plaintiff prays for the following relief:
Plaintiffs demand a jury trial for all claims triable by jury.