Maronda Homes, Inc. of Florida v. Progressive Express Insurance Company
Filing
48
ORDER granting 31 Motion to Compel ; denying 40 Motion for Protective Order; denying 43 Motion for Protective Order. Signed by Magistrate Judge Thomas B. Smith on 11/21/2014. (SMW)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA
ORLANDO DIVISION
MARONDA HOMES, INC. OF FLORIDA,
Plaintiff,
v.
Case No: 6:14-cv-1287-Orl-31TBS
PROGRESSIVE EXPRESS INSURANCE
COMPANY,
Defendant.
ORDER
The following motions are pending before the Court:
Plaintiff’s First Motion to Compel Discovery with Respect to Deposition Dates
(Doc. 31);
Defendant’s Motion for Protective Order Regarding Plaintiff’s Requests for
Deposition Duces Tecum as to Defendant’s Corporate Representative and
Records Custodian (Doc. 40); and
Defendant’s Motion for Suspension of Discovery or, in the Alternative, to Extend
Time to Respond to Plaintiff’s Discovery Requests until Resolution of Defendant’s
Motion to Dismiss (Doc. 43).
For the reasons that follow, Plaintiff’s Motion to Compel will be GRANTED to the
extent that Progressive shall provide deposition dates for its corporate representative and
records custodian, and Defendants motions will be DENIED.
Background
Carlos Merida was injured when his vehicle was struck by a truck driven by Terry
Chance. (Doc. 2, ¶¶ 6-7). When the accident occurred, Chance was hauling
construction materials to Plaintiff Maronda Homes of Florida, Inc. job sites under a
contract between Maronda and Chance’s employer, AC&L Farms, Inc. and/or Angela S.
Lively d/b/a All Trucking. (Id., ¶¶ 7-8). Following the accident, Merida brought a
negligence action in state court against Chance, Maronda, AC&L, and All Trucking. (Id.,
¶ 6). Maronda, through its lawyer Steven M. Brady (1) filed an answer and affirmative
defenses to Merida’s complaint, (2) informed its insurance carrier, Defendant Progressive
Express Insurance Company about the lawsuit, (3) asked Progressive to provide a
defense, and (4) asked Progressive to provide all of the disclosures required by §
627.4137 Florida Statutes.1 (Id., ¶¶ 11-13).
Progressive directed a staff attorney member of its in-house law firm to appear and
defend all four defendants.2 (Id. ¶ 14). Maronda declined representation by the staff
attorney on the ground that conflicts of interest existed between the four defendants.
1
The statute provides:
(1) Each insurer which does or may provide liability insurance coverage to pay all or a portion of any claim
which might be made shall provide, within 30 days of the written request of the claimant, a statement, under
oath, of a corporate officer or the insurer's claims manager or superintendent setting forth the following
information with regard to each known policy of insurance, including excess or umbrella insurance:
(a) The name of the insurer.
(b) The name of each insured.
(c) The limits of the liability coverage.
(d) A statement of any policy or coverage defense which such insurer reasonably believes is available to
such insurer at the time of filing such statement.
(e) A copy of the policy.
In addition, the insured, or her or his insurance agent, upon written request of the claimant or the claimant's
attorney, shall disclose the name and coverage of each known insurer to the claimant and shall forward
such request for information as required by this subsection to all affected insurers. The insurer shall then
supply the information required in this subsection to the claimant within 30 days of receipt of such request.
(2) The statement required by subsection (1) shall be amended immediately upon discovery of facts calling
for an amendment to such statement.
(3) Any request made to a self-insured corporation pursuant to this section shall be sent by certified mail to
the registered agent of the disclosing entity.
It appears that one or more of the other state court defendants may have also had insurance
policies with Progressive.
2
-2-
(Id., ¶¶ 14–21). It also renewed its request for information made pursuant to § 627.4137.
(Id., ¶ 21). Progressive responded by hiring a second lawyer to only represent Maronda.
(Id., ¶ 24). Maronda desired to amend its answer and affirmative defenses to add
crossclaims against its co-defendants. (Id., ¶ 21). The new lawyer hired by Progressive
told Maronda “he would be reluctant to take positions in litigation that were adverse to
Progressive because he did not want to jeopardize his business relationship with
Progressive.” (Id., ¶ 29). Maronda alleges that because this lawyer’s true allegiances
were to Progressive it “had no choice but to conditionally decline the defense provided by
Progressive as being legally insufficient.” (Id.). In the absence of an acceptable lawyer
supplied by Progressive, Brady has continued to represent Maronda in the state court
case.
On June 27, 2014, Maronda filed this lawsuit in state court, seeking a declaration
that Progressive breached the terms of the parties’ insurance contract and damages for
“insurance benefits, interest, costs, underlying defense fees and costs in the underlying
case..., and attorney fees for this action pursuant to” FLA. STAT. § 627.428. (Doc. 2).
Progressive removed the lawsuit to this Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1332, 1441 and
1446 and moved for dismissal of Maronda’s claims on the grounds that (1) there is no
justiciable case or controversy, (2) Maronda is attempting to prematurely allege a badfaith claim before the underlying action has terminated, (3) Maronda failed to plead facts
sufficient to support a breach of contract claim, and (4) as an insured, Maronda has no
cause of action under FLA. STAT. § 627.4137 for Progressive’s failure to provide insurance
information because the statute only requires that the disclosure be made to claimants.
(Docs. 1, 5).
-3-
Four days after the lawyers for Maronda and Progressive conducted their case
management conference, Maronda sent Progressive a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition notice
with the date left blank, and asked Progressive to provide alternative dates on which its
corporate representative could be deposed. (Doc. 31, p. 2). The following day,
Maronda served interrogatories and requests for the production of documents on
Progressive. (Doc. 31, p. 2; see also Doc. 32). After receiving this discovery,
Progressive notified Maronda that it would seek a protective order against any
depositions prior to resolution of its motion to dismiss. (Doc. 31, p. 3). The next day,
Maronda filed two motions to compel. (Docs. 31-32). The first motion asks the Court to
compel Progressive to provide deposition dates for its corporate representative and
records custodian. The second motion asked the Court to compel Progressive to
provide responses to Maronda’s written discovery. The Court has already denied the
second motion to compel because it was prematurely filed and Maronda’s lawyer failed to
comply with Local Rule 3.01(g) which requires counsel to confer in good faith before most
motions are filed. (Doc. 41).
Progressive responded to Maronda’s motions and moved for two protective orders.
(Docs. 39, 40 and 43). In its first motion for protective order, Progressive is asking the
Court to prevent Maronda from deposing its corporate representative pending resolution
of its motion to dismiss. It has also objected to every area of inquiry and document
request contained in the deposition notice. (Docs. 39-40). In its second motion,
Progressive is asking the Court to enter a protective order suspending all discovery, or in
the alternative extending the time to respond to discovery, until the Court rules on its
motion to dismiss. Maronda has responded to Progressive’s motions. (Docs. 45, 47).
Discussion
-4-
Progressive is asking that the Court to stay discovery pending resolution of its
motion to dismiss. District courts enjoy the discretion to stay discovery during the
pendency of a motion that may dispose of the case. But, “there is no general rule that
discovery be stayed while a pending motion to dismiss is resolved.” Reilly v. Amy’s
Kitchen, Inc., No. 13-21525-CIV, 2013 WL 3929709, at *1 (S.D. Fla. July 31, 2013).
Stays of discovery are disfavored because they tend to delay resolution of cases.
Simpson v. Specialty Reality Concepts, 121 F.R.D. 261, 263 (M.D.N.C. 1988). The
party seeking a stay has the burden of showing good cause and reasonableness. Id.
In deciding whether to grant a stay, courts
must balance the harm produced by a delay in discovery
against the possibility that the motion will be granted and
entirely eliminate the need for such discovery. This involves
weighing the likely costs and burdens of proceeding with
discovery. It may be helpful to take a preliminary peek at the
merits of the allegedly dispositive motion to see if on its face
there appears to be an immediate and clear possibility that it
will be granted.
Id. (citing Hovermale v. School Board of Hillsborough County, 128 F.R.D. 287 (M.D. Fla.
1989).
This Court is not at all certain the district court will grant Progressive’s motion to
dismiss. First, the Court has difficulty finding merit in Progressive’s insistence that there
is not subject matter jurisdiction, particularly since Progressive is the party that invoked
the Court’s jurisdiction by removing the case from state court.3 If Progressive is right
when it says the Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction then it improperly removed the
case and the appropriate remedy is remand, not dismissal. See 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c) (“If
3Progressive’s position on this point is inconsistent with the position it took in opposing Maronda’s
motion to remand when it said “removal [was] appropriate pursuant to” 28 U.S.C. sections 1332, 1441(a)
and (b), and 1446(b).” (Doc. 27, p. 1).
-5-
at any time before final judgment it appears that the district court lacks subject matter
jurisdiction, the case shall be remanded.”). Another problem with Progressive’s nonjusticiability argument is that it is based on Florida law. (See Doc. 5, pp. 3–4). The
Court’s removal jurisdiction turns on federal law. See 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a) (removal
jurisdiction extends to cases that could have been brought in federal court). Whether the
state court had jurisdiction over the action prior to removal is irrelevant. See 28 U.S.C.
§ 1441(f) (abolishing the doctrine of derivative jurisdiction).
Even if the Court construes Progressive’s motion as raising the argument that it
lacks jurisdiction because there is no Article III case or controversy it would still find no
merit in Progressive’s argument. Maronda alleges that it has suffered and continues to
suffer an injury—legal expenses incurred in defending the state-court action—which was
caused by Progressive’s alleged failure to provide conflict-free legal counsel and is
redressable by an award of damages equal to those legal expenses.
For the same reason, the Court disagrees with Progressive’s argument that the
case is moot because the state-court action has settled within policy limits. Assuming
Merida’s claim against Maronda has been settled, Maronda still has a claim for its legal
expenses incurred in that case. Whether the injury is one for which Maronda can
recover under state law goes to the merits, not jurisdiction. Therefore, this suit has
presented an Article III case or controversy from the day it was removed until today,
notwithstanding the purported settlement of the state court action.
Progressive’s merits arguments, although more substantial than its jurisdictional
ones, do not persuade the Court that there is a “strong likelihood” the district court will
dismiss the case. Progressive argument that Maronda is attempting to raise a premature
bad faith insurance claim misapprehends Maronda’s claims. In an ordinary bad faith
-6-
suit, the insurer has refused to settle within the policy limits or otherwise mishandled
settlement negotiations and as a result, the insured has suffered an injury in the form of a
judgment in excess of the policy limits. See Kelly v. Williams, 411 So. 2d 902, 904 (Fla.
App. 5th Dist. 1982). Not surprisingly, Florida courts require a final judgment on
damages in the underlying action before permitting such claims. Blanchard v. State
Farm Mutual Auto Ins. Co., 575 So. 2d 1289 (Fla. 1991). If the damage award falls short
of the policy limits, there is no excess judgment and the insured suffers no monetary
injury, no matter how badly the insurer botched the settlement negotiations.
This case is so factually different that the Court finds the rationale underpinning the
Blanchard rule inapplicable. While Maronda is alleging that Progressive breached the
insurance contract, the nature of the breach and the harm suffered are different.
Progressive’s alleged breach concerns its choice of counsel to defend Maronda which
responded by obtaining representation on the open market. Maronda’s claimed injury is
the expenses it incurred for substitute counsel. This damage is present regardless of the
outcome of the underlying state court case and therefore, there is no reason to force
Maronda to wait until after the underlying suit is resolved to bring this lawsuit.
The Court also finds no reason to stay discovery based on Progressive’s argument
that Maronda has not adequately pled the elements of a breach of contract claim.
Progressive contends that Maronda “failed to plead any material breach resulting in
damages.” (Doc. 5, p. 7). The complaint alleges a contract under which Progressive
agreed to defend Maronda against claims arising from motor vehicle accidents. (Doc. 2,
¶ 12). Maronda alleges that after it notified Progressive that it was being sued on claims
both parties agree fall within the scope of coverage, Progressive hired attorneys who
Maronda properly rejected. (Doc. 2, ¶¶ 14, 29). While the Court does not have a copy
-7-
of the insurance policy, it seems unlikely that Progressive could discharge its contractual
duty to defend Maronda by furnishing a lawyer who expressly refused to put Maronda’s
interests before Progressive’s should their interests conflict. And, as the Court has
already explained, Maronda has certainly pled damages.
The remaining argument in Progressive’s motion—that Maronda cannot bring suit
under FLA. STAT. § 627.4137—does not provide grounds for disposing of the entire case.
Therefore, the Court believes it is unlikely that the district court will dismiss the case and
“entirely eliminate the need for ... discovery,” and thus, there is not a valid basis to stay
discovery pending resolution of Progressive’s motion to dismiss. Simpson, 121 F.R.D. at
263.
Separately, Progressive objects to each and every area of inquiry and document
request in Maronda’s notice of deposition of Progressive’s corporate representative. The
Court finds it unnecessary to address the 19 areas of inquiry and 15 document requests
seriatim. Instead, the Court will articulate general guidelines to inform the parties of what
is discoverable and what is not.
First, the Court rejects all of Progressive’s objections that mirror their arguments
that the case should be dismissed. Second, some basic information—such as the
insurance contracts for each of the insured parties and Progressive’s communications
with Maronda—is unquestionably discoverable. Third, the Court rejects Progressive’s
argument that the claim files are not discoverable because Maronda has not brought “a
valid claim for insurance bad faith.” The cases Progressive cites in support of this
argument all hold that discovery of the claim file is inappropriate before coverage is
established. See Allstate Ins. Co. v. Baughman, 741 So. 2d 624, 625 (Fla. App. 2d Dist.
1999); Hartford Ins. Co. v. Mainstream Construction Group, Inc., 864 So. 2d 1270 (Fla.
-8-
App. 5th Dist. 2004); Old Republic National Title Ins. Co. v. Home American Credit, Inc.,
844 So. 2d 818 (Fla. App. 5th Dist. 2003); U.S. Fire Ins. Co. v. Clearwater Oaks Bank,
421 So. 2d 783 (Fla. App. 2d Dist. 1982). These cases are inapposite because the
parties agree Merida’s claim against Maronda is covered under the policy.
On the other hand, several of Maronda’s proposed areas of inquiry—for example,
No. 1, “The matters alleged in Plaintiff’s Complaint”—are unacceptably broad. Rule
30(b)(6) requires that a deposition notice state the topics the corporate representative will
be questioned about with “reasonable particularity.” In addition, some of the topics for
inquiry appear to be designed to extract privileged communications and attorney work
product related to Progressive’s representation of the other defendants in the state court
case. Maronda’s request that Progressive disclose its communications with other
defendants strikes the Court as an attempt to engage in a fishing expedition into the
litigation strategies of the Maronda’s co-defendants in state court, against whom Maronda
has asserted cross-claims. While Maronda is entitled to discovery of what Progressive
did or did not say to Maronda, it is not entitled to rummage through its co-defendants’
case files in an effort to gain an unfair advantage over them on its state court crossclaims.
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(a)(5)(A) provides for the recovery of legal
expenses, including attorney’s fees, in connection with a motion to compel disclosures or
discovery. But, the Rule does not extend to motions to compel dates for taking
depositions. Therefore, Maronda’s request for attorney’s fees in connection with its
motion to compel will be denied.
Rule 37(a)(5)(B) provides that if a motion for protective order is denied “the court ...
must, after giving an opportunity to be heard, require the movant, the attorney filing the
-9-
motion, or both to pay the party or deponent who opposed the motion its reasonable
expenses incurred in opposing the motion, including attorney's fees. But the court must
not order this payment if the motion was substantially justified or other circumstances
make an award of expenses unjust.” While Maronda has prevailed on both of
Progressive’s motions for protective orders, some of Progressive’s objections to the
deposition notice served by Maronda were substantially justified. Therefore, the Court
apportions the reasonable expenses of these motions with the net balance being in
Maronda’s favor.
In its Order on Maronda’s motion to compel responses to its interrogatories and
document requests, the Court found that Progressive was entitled to its attorney’s fees
but reserved decision on the amount pending a ruling on the discovery motions decided
in this Order. Consequently, the parties are entitled to recover legal expenses from
each other in connection with their discovery motions. The work in connection with
these motions does not appear to be substantial, and it is unlikely that there is any
material difference in the amounts owed to the parties. Therefore, the Court finds that
no party shall recover attorney’s fees, costs or other legal expenses in connection with
the motions at docket entries 31, 32, 40 and 43.
The Court is concerned that counsel may not be complying with Local Rule
3.01(g) before motions are filed. Rule 3.01(g) provides that before filing most motions in
a civil case, the moving party shall confer with the opposing party in a good faith effort to
resolve the issues raised by the motion, and shall file with the motion a statement
certifying that the moving party has conferred with the opposing party, and that the
parties have been unable to agree on the resolution of the motion. The term “confer” in
Rule 3.01(g) requires a substantive conversation in person or by telephone in a good
- 10 -
faith effort to resolve the motion without court action and does not envision an email, fax
or letter. Counsel who merely “attempt” to confer have not “conferred.” A certification to
the effect that opposing counsel was unavailable for a conference before filing a motion is
insufficient to satisfy the parties' obligation to confer. See Local Rule 3.01(g).
Counsel must respond promptly to inquiries and communications from opposing counsel.
Board of Governors of the Florida Bar, Ideals and Goals of Professionalism, ¶ 6.10 and
Creed of Professionalism ¶ 8 (adopted May 16, 1990), available at www.floridabar.org
(Professional Practice - Henry Latimer Center for Professionalism). A party who, due to
time constraints, must file a motion before complying with Rule 3.01(g), is under a duty to
contact opposing counsel expeditiously after filing the motion and supplement the motion
promptly with a completed Rule 3.01(g) certificate.
Conclusion
Now, it is ORDERED that:
1. Plaintiff Maronda Homes Inc.’s Motion to Compel (Doc. 31) is GRANTED.
Within seven days from the rendition of this Order, Progressive shall provide alternate
dates upon which its corporate representative and records custodian are available to be
deposed by Maronda. Progressive shall produce documents consistent with the
guidance provided in this Order.
2. Progressive’s motion for protective order (Doc. 40) is DENIED.
3. Progressive’s motion for suspension of discovery (Doc. 43) is DENIED.
DONE and ORDERED in Orlando, Florida on November 21, 2014.
- 11 -
Copies furnished to Counsel of Record
- 12 -
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?