STATE FARM FIRE AND CASUALTY COMPANY v. CLARK
Filing
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MEMORANDUM OPINION. Signed by Judge Mark R. Hornak on 6/17/13. (bdb)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
STATE FARM FIRE AND CASUALTY
COMPANY,
Plaintiff,
v.
PHILLIP L. CLARK, Administrator of the
Estate of JOHN F. SCHICK, Deceased,
Defendants.
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Civil Action No.2: 13-cv-00067
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Mark R. Hornak, United States District Judge
Plaintiff State Farm Fire and Casualty Company ("State Farm") has objected to the ruling
of United States District Magistrate Judge Kelly on April 5, 2013 that permitted Kathryn F.
Leight and John L. Leight (collectively, "Leights") to intervene in the instant action pursuant to
Fed. R. Civ. P. 24. The Court will affirm that ruling on the basis of Fed. R. Civ. P. 24(b).
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Because the Court writes primarily for the parties, it will only outline the facts essential
to this memorandum opinion. On March 8, 2012, decedent John F. Schick allegedly shot and
injured numerous strangers at the Western Psychiatric Institute in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Am.
CompI.
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24, ECF No.1. Mr. Schick was shot dead by a responding police officer, and Phillip
Clark was appointed as Administrator of his estate. [d.
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6, 25. One of the alleged victims
injured in that shooting was Kathryn Leight, who along with her husband John Leight filed a tort
action against Mr. Schick for her injuries in the Court of Common Pleas for Allegheny County,
captioned Leight v. Clark, No. GD-12-9942 ("Underlying Action"). Id.
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11.
The Leight
Complaint included at least two alternative theories for Schick's/Clark's liability: (1) that Mr.
Schick "intentionally shot and injured" Ms. Leight, id.
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24-27; and (2) that several years before
the shooting, Mr. Schick had been diagnosed with schizophrenia, had previously been committed
on multiple occasions on mental health issues, and had "negligently failed and/or refused to
follow medical advice" which led to his schizophrenia becoming "full blown" and culminated in
his shooting of Ms. Leight "without consciously and/or knowing expecting or intending" her
resulting injury, id.
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28-34.
Mr. Clark, as Administrator, sought indemnity from State Farm for the Underlying
Action based on a policy it had provided Mr. Schick covering his rental property and including
limited personal liability coverage ("Policy"). Id.
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12-13. State Farm filed the instant action in
this Court seeking a declaratory judgment that it does not have the obligation to defend or
indemnify in the Underlying Action Mr. Clark as the administrator of Mr. Schick's estate. Id.
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16-19. State Farm argues that Mr. Schick's actions were outside the scope of the Policy
because (1) they did not constitute an "occurrence" under the Policy because they were not
accidental, unexpected, or fortuitous, but rather, intentional, id.
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38-45; and (2) they fell within
the Policy's exclusion for "intentional acts" of the insured, because Ms. Leight's injuries were
expected or intended by Mr. Schick, id.
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52-59.
The Magistrate Judge granted the Leights' motion to intervene in the instant action on
April 5, 2013, finding that intervention was warranted under Fed. R. Civ. P. 24(a) and its
accompanying test in this Circuit, as outlined in Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. v. Treesdale, Inc., 419 F.3d
216 (3d. Cir. 2005); and additionally under Fed. R. Civ. P. 24(b). Order dated Apr. 5, 2013, ECF
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No. 13 ("Order"). State Farm timely objected to that Order, ECF No. 14, and the Leights filed a
Response, ECF No. 20. 1
II. DISCUSSION
When a party appeals the nondispositive motion of a magistrate judge, the district court
must review the record to determine whether the magistrate judge's order was "clearly erroneous
or contrary to law." 28 U.S.C. 636(b)(l)(A); Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(a). "[T]he standard of review is
circumscribed: [t]he district court is bound by the clearly erroneous rule in findings of fact; the
phrase 'contrary to law' indicates plenary review as to matters of law." Haines v. Liggett Group
Inc., 975 F.2d 81, 91 (3d Cir.1992).
Here, the Magistrate Judge found two independent bases for granting intervention: Rules
24(a) and 24(b). Rule 24(a) governs intervention ofright, while Rule 24(b) governs "permissive
intervention," and provides: "[o]n timely motion, the court may permit anyone to intervene
who... has a claim or defense that shares with the main action a common question of law or
fact." Fed. R. Civ. P. 24(b)(1)(B). A Rule 24(b) decision is afforded an even more deferential
review than a 24(a) decision: "[w]e are more reluctant to intrude into the highly discretionary
decision of whether to grant permissive intervention." Treesdale, 419 F.3d at 227 (quoting Brody
By & Through Sugzdinis v. Spang, 957 F.2d 1108, 1115 (3d Cir. 1992)).
lOur Local Rules permit objections to nondispositive determinations of Magistrate Judges, which must be filed
within fourteen (14) days of the date of service, and must "specifically designate the order or part thereof objected to
and the basis for objection thereto." W.D. Pa. Civ. R. 72(C)(2). The objection filed by State Farm amply fulfilled
those requirements, laying out an argument for why the Magistrate Judge erred in her determinations under Rules
24(a) and 24(b) under the case law of this Circuit, as well as rebutting the Leights' anticipated reassertion of an
argument they had made in the prior briefing - that Rule 19 joinder could alternatively be used to attach the Leights
to the action
by discussing a case decided after the Order that rejected the reasoning of a case relied upon by the
Leights. See ECF No. 14 at 4, 12. According to the Leights, however, this "attempted appeal" of the Order is "a
nullity and of no force or effect," for the reason that it was the "equivalent of a Circuit Court Brief' that flouted the
"concise and specific objections contemplated by [LCvR 72]." ECF No. 20 at 1-2. In the Court's view, State Farm's
objections were quite specific and engaged in a nuanced discussion of unsettled law in this Circuit pertaining to a
very important question before the Court. While concise writing is often the most effective, and is always
appreciated by the Court, the language of LCvR 72 does not explicitly mandate it, and rather, in cases like this
where there remain areas of unsettled law in this Circuit, detailed and careful discussions can be quite helpful. The
Court does not share the Leights' view that briefs that discuss the law too thoroughly should be stricken.
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The Magistrate Judge's ruling permitting intervention under Rule 24(b) was well within
her discretion, and was not erroneous at all. A comparison of the Underling Action and the
instant action reveals several "common questions of law or fact." Crucial to both the Leights'
tort action and the instant action is the intentionality vel non of Mr. Schick's conduct: what was
running through Mr. Shick's mind at the time he allegedly shot Ms. Leight will be imperative in
determining both (1) under which theory of tort liability, if any, he is liable to the Leights
(especially given that intentional torts and negligence carry different requirements of the
tortfeasor's mental state); and (2) whether that action was fortuitous, accidental, unexpected, or
unintended under the Policy. Such questions may be especially complex in this case, where a
mental illness such as schizophrenia is alleged, and detailed medical opinions and analyses may
be necessary to help illuminate what may have been Mr. Schick's mental state at the time of the
shooting.
This fact puts the Leights' motion on different footing from other insurance intervention
cases such as Treesdale, where the facts of the insured's underlying liability to the injured party
had little, if anything, to do with whether the insurer has the obligation to defend the insured.
(1
Treesdale, 419 F.3d at 219, 227 (whether insured's asbestos caused underlying plaintiffs'
injuries vs. whether insurer had exhausted its coverage of insured). It is far closer to the facts of
Travelers Indem. Co. v. Bastianelli, 250 F.R.D. 82 (D. Mass. 2008), which permitted Rule 24(b)
intervention where an employee of an insured company hit the underlying plaintiff with a pickup
truck, and the question whether the employee was using the truck for commercial purposes was
relevant both to determine the insured employer's liability in the underlying action and the
insurer's coverage of the insured.
Therefore, the Magistrate Judge acted well within her
discretion in determining that the two actions hold common questions of fact or law that warrant
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intervention under Rule 24(b), a determination which was not at all clearly erroneous nor
contrary to law.
Because the Court has determined that the Magistrate Judge's decision to grant
intervention was fully merited under Rule 24(b), it need not address the more nuanced questions
of whether Rule 24(a) and the Treesdale factors, or Rule 19 (as argued by the Leights), could
also serve as alternative bases for intervention or joinder. Therefore, the Order is affirmed.
An appropriate order will follow.
United States District Judge
Dated: June Q,2013
cc:
All counsel of record
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