In
its recent decision in Philadelphia
Indem. Ins. Co. v. Hamic, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 150067 (M.D. Fla. Oct. 18,
2012), the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida had
occasion to consider whether a legal malpractice insurer has a duty to defend a
civil conspiracy claim.
The
insured law firm of Hamic,
Jones, Hamic & Sturwold, P.A., and an individual member of the firm, were sued
for alleged civil conspiracy to commit malicious prosecution, extortion and
other harms. The complaint was
subsequently amended to include a malicious prosecution claim only against the
individual attorney, and the Middle District of Florida held on summary
judgment that the malicious prosecution claim triggered Philadelphia Indemnity
Company’s duty to defend the entire suit.
Philadelphia moved for reconsideration solely on the issue of whether it
had a duty to defend the Hamic law firm, against which a claim for malicious
prosecution had not been asserted. In
other words, Philadelphia sought a ruling that a civil conspiracy claim, in and
of itself, did not trigger its policy’s coverage.
In support of this argument,
Philadelphia relied on case law in the general liability context standing for
the proposition that claims for intentional torts are not covered. The court acknowledged that most, but not
all, claims of intentional torts are not insured under a general liability
policy. The court distinguished typical
professional liability policies from general liability policies, finding that
professional liability policies typically do provide coverage for intentional
torts unless specifically excluded. It
further noted that Philadelphia’s policy did not contain an intentional acts
exclusion and therefore provided coverage for intentional torts, although “not
specifically malicious prosecution or conspiracies.”
With this in mind, the court
considered the nature of a claim for civil conspiracy, the gist of which, it
explained, is not the conspiracy itself, but instead the civil wrong accomplished
by the conspiracy. In this case, the “civil
wrong” giving rise to the underlying plaintiff’s claim was alleged malicious
prosecution, which the court had previously concluded on summary judgment was
covered under Philadelphia’s policy. The
court therefore held that the civil conspiracy claim necessarily was covered,
explaining that:
Because
malicious prosecution falls within the coverage of the policy at issue under
the facts as alleged in this case, there is also coverage for the conspiracy to
commit malicious prosecution. The tort of civil conspiracy does not require a
finding of specific intent to harm the plaintiff or to extract an intended
result. Essentially the intent to commit the tort does not also mandate an
intent to do the harm that resulted, which was an arrest. Based on these
principles, Philadelphia owes a duty to defend the insureds on the claim of
conspiracy.
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