Pisa v. Underwriters

USCA1 Opinion









July 8, 1992
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

___________________




No. 92-1326

ANTHONY PISA
Plaintiff, Appellant,

v.

UNDERWRITER AT LLOYDS, LONDON
Defendant, Appellee.

__________________________



ERRATA SHEET


Please make the following corrections on opinion issued July
2, 1992:


Cover sheet: delete the number 1 from bottom front page.

On page 3, Line 13 add "d" to "produce";
On Page 3, Line 21 "was" instead of "were;

On page 5, Line 20 "was" instead of "were;
On page 5, Line 22 strike "ing" on "identifying."

July 2, 1992
[NOT FOR PUBLICATION]








___________________


No. 92-1326












ANTHONY PISA,

Plaintiff, Appellant,

v.

UNDERWRITERS AT LLOYDS, LONDON,

Defendant, Appellee.


__________________

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND


[Hon. Ronald R. Lagueux, U.S. District Judge]
___________________

___________________

Before

Selya, Chief Judge,
___________
Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge,
____________________
and Cyr, Circuit Judge.
_____________

___________________

Anthony Pisa on brief for appellant.
____________
Lawrence A. Dugan, and Morrison, Mahoney & Miller on Motion
__________________ __________________________
to Dismiss or in the Alternative for Summary Affirmance and
Memorandum in Support for appellee.

__________________

__________________



































Per Curiam. Plaintiff sought recovery under a
__________

fire insurance policy. The district court granted summary

judgment for defendant insurer on the ground that plaintiff

had failed to comply with the policy's statutory cooperation

clause1.

Plaintiff has several arguments which we address in

turn.

First, plaintiff claims that the district court

improperly resolved factual issues by concluding that

plaintiff's inability to remember financial details when

deposed by the insurer was evasive conduct violative of the

policy's cooperation clause. Plaintiff argues that he

answered to the best of his ability and that it is a jury

question whether his answers were evasive, on the one hand,


____________________

1. By statute, the policy required in material part as
follows:
The insured, as often as may be
reasonably required, shall . . . submit
to examinations under oath . . . and
subscribe the same; and, as often as may
be reasonably required, shall . . .
produce for examination all books of
account, bills, invoices and other
vouchers, or certified copies thereof if
originals are lost, at such reasonable
time and place as may be designated by
[the insurer].

No suit or action on this policy for
the recovery on any claim shall be
sustainable in any court of law or equity
unless all the requirements of this
policy have been complied with.

R.I. Gen. L. 27-5-3.

-2-















or a sincere inability to remember past matter, on the other.



The court did not resolve disputed factual issues.

To be sure, the court did state that at the deposition

plaintiff had "managed to avoid giving [the insurer] any

information that could help them understand [plaintiff's]

finances at the time of the fire." But, the court

subsequently specifically noted that it could not resolve

credibility matters and pointed out that plaintiff had not

produced any requested document or authorization to obtain

records. Viewed in context, the court's reference to

plaintiff's deposition testimony was not a credibility

determination that plaintiff had not testified truthfully,

but rather background underscoring the insurer's need for the

checkbook and authorizations given that plaintiff's testimony

had produce little or no information concerning his or the

restaurant's finances.

Second, plaintiff contends that plaintiff's failure

to produce the checkbook and authorization for release of tax

information and financial records was not wilful

noncooperation but rather the product of misunderstanding.

He claims he never refused to produce either. Rather, he

maintains that neither was clearly requested. Moreover, he

asserts, without any record support, that he did eventually

produce the checkbook. As for a release for financial



-3-















records or tax returns, plaintiff contends that he was

willing to cooperate, but, being pro se, did not know how to

draft an authorization or go about getting bank records, felt

any expense in document gathering should be borne by the

insurer, and was waiting for the insurer to forward an

authorization for plaintiff to sign. At the very least,

plaintiff argues, a jury should be permitted to determine

whether plaintiff willfully refused to cooperate or rather

stood ready to cooperate and to sign any authorization the

insurer might prepare, but failed to meet the insurer's

expectation through misunderstanding and inadvertence.

We conclude both that the record belies plaintiff's

present assertions of no clear demand and misunderstanding

and that plaintiff failed timely to raise these claims in

opposition to defendant's motion for summary judgment.

Plaintiff was directed to bring to his December 6,

1990 deposition his and his business's tax returns as well as

enumerated business records. He did not do so, explaining

that all but the checkbook had been destroyed by fire. The

December 6, 1990 deposition (at which plaintiff was

represented by an attorney) concluded with the insurer's

lawyer stating his understanding that plaintiff would look

for the checkbook, give it to his lawyer, and discuss with

his lawyer whether to provide an authorization to obtain tax

returns. Plaintiff did not controvert that understanding at



-4-















that time. The insurer clearly stated his position at the

deposition that the policy required plaintiff to provide an

authorization for release of tax returns. The insurer

reiterated this position in a letter several weeks later to

plaintiff's attorney and once again demanded the checkbook as

well as an "authorization to obtain copies of all financial

records which [plaintiff] alleges are not presently within

his possession as well as Federal and State Income Tax

returns . . . [for] 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989." Ten months

later (October 8, 1991), the insurer's lawyer stated by

affidavit that plaintiff had not produced the checkbook and

had not provided any authorization for defendant to obtain

financial records or tax returns. So far as the record

reveals, plaintiff made no timely cooperative response. He

did not controvert the insurer's affidavit that the checkbook

had not been turned over, he did not offer to produce

anything, and he did not claim financial inability or

confusion due to his pro se status. On December 12, 1991, a

hearing on the motions for summary judgment was scheduled for

January 16, 1992. Still, plaintiff made no overture toward

cooperation. Plaintiff's present claim of confusion comes

too late. Plaintiff was clearly on notice that he was

required to produce relevant records. The insurer's demand

for the checkbook and authorizations was reasonable under the

circumstances as a matter of law. Plaintiff's failure either



-5-















to comply or to identify his reservations violated the

cooperation clause.

Third, plaintiff argues he should have been given a

further chance to cooperate. An hour after the summary

judgment hearing concluded, plaintiff filed a handwritten

paper authorizing defendant "to retrieve any financial

document or any other pertinent information" and requesting

defendant to send any authorization to plaintiff's home for

plaintiff to sign. The district court ruled that plaintiff's

offer came too late.

Plaintiff relies on New York cases, particularly

Pogo Holding Corp. v. New York Property Ins. Underwriting
__________________ _____________________________________

Assoc., 73 A.D.2d 605, 422 N.Y.S.2d 123 (1979), for his claim
_____

that he should be given another chance. There, after the

insured's treasurer had been examined under oath, the insurer

requested the insured's president similarly to submit to

examination and to produce certain documents. When the

president refused, the insurer sought summary judgment. Even

though plaintiff did not satisfactorily explain its failure

of cooperation, the court, "reluctant to exact the extreme

penalty of dismissal," gave plaintiff one last chance to

comply. Plaintiff argues the district court should have

done the same here particularly as, plaintiff claims,

defendant has not been prejudiced by the delay.





-6-















It is true that under Rhode Island law "an

insurance company must show that it has been prejudiced

before an insured's failure to comply with the procedural

requirement in a policy will bar recovery." Pickwick Park,
______________

Ltd. v. Terra Nova Ins. Co., 602 A.2d 515, 518 (R.I 1992);
___ ___________________

Corrente v. Fitchburg Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 557 A.2d 859, 863
________ ____________________________

(R.I. 1989). In the present case, however, prejudice was

manifest as a matter of law on the record as it existed up to

the time of the hearing on the motion for summary judgment.

Defendant insurer had received no documents concerning
__

plaintiff's or the restaurant's financial condition and very

little oral information concerning finances given plaintiff's

purported memory lapse. Plaintiff's position now, however,

is that in view of his post-hearing offer of cooperation, the

insurer will be able to obtain tax returns and financial

documents and hence will not ultimately be prejudiced.

We agree with the district court's response to

plaintiff's late offer:

A Rule 56 motion puts an end to pre-trial
maneuvering and compels the litigants to
show the court what they can prove at
trial. The rule gives the plaintiff a
deadline to come forth with his case, and
it provides the strict penalty of
dismissal for those who cannot prove a
case. Delaying the performance of his
contractual obligations in the apparent
hope that he would not have to disclose
damaging information, [plaintiff] has
missed his chance.




-7-















Pogo Holding has not been invariably followed by
____________

New York courts. When an insured's lack of cooperation is

egregious, unconditional summary judgment has been granted

for the insurer. See, e.g., Evans v. International Ins. Co.,
___ ____ _____ _____________________

168 A.D.2d 374, 562 N.Y.S.2d 692 (1990); Pizzirusso v.
__________

Allstate Ins. Co, 143 A.D.2d 340, 532 N.Y.S.2d 309 (1988);
________________

Rosenthal v. Prudential Property & Casualty Co, 928 F.2d 493,
_________ _________________________________

495 (2d Cir. 1991) (noting that New York courts have

retreated from affording an insured a last chance when the

insured's failure to cooperate is wilful). In any event,

regardless whether a New York court would afford a further

chance to plaintiff, who filed no timely satisfactory reply,
______

offer to cooperate, or excuse for non compliance in response

to defendant's affidavits and motion for summary judgment, it

is Rhode Island law which controls this case. Plaintiff has

pointed to no Rhode Island case law which would tolerate

plaintiff's foot dragging. In these circumstances, we

summarily affirm the judgment below.2 First Circuit Rule

27.1.

Affirmed.
________





____________________

2. As we summarily affirm the judgment on the merits, we do
not pass on defendant's claim that the appeal should be
dismissed because plaintiff's brief and appendix do not
comply with rules of appellate procedure. Defendant's
request for costs and attorney's fees pursuant to Fed. R.
App. P. 38 is denied.

-8-