Court Opinion

ID: 9955621
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-03-28 20:17:20.517675+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:15:08.612184
License: Public Domain

VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT                                                            CIVIL DIVISION
 Washington Unit                                                                 Case No. 88-2-20 Wncv
 65 State Street
 Montpelier VT 05602
 802-828-2091
 www.vermontjudiciary.org

                            Mountainside Condominium vs. Jamieson Risk Service

                          Opinion and Order on Plaintiffs’ Motion to Strike

        One of the three condominium buildings owned by the Mountainside

Condominium Association (MCA) was destroyed by fire in 2014. The buildings were

insured by Vermont Mutual Insurance Company at the time. In 2016, several owners of

the destroyed condominiums (known as the Barsomian plaintiffs) sued MCA (No. 174-3-

16 Wncv) claiming that MCA was taking too long to rebuild. While it was pursuing

coverage with Vermont Mutual, MCA filed this case in 2020 against Defendant Jamieson

Risk Service claiming that it breached a duty owed to MCA to procure full replacement-

value insurance coverage in the event of fire. It alleged that the actual insurance

coverage Jamieson procured fell well short of that, leading to reconstruction delays and

unforeseen expenses. MCA and Jamieson then stipulated to stay this case pending the

outcome of MCA’s coverage dispute with Vermont Mutual, whether by mediation or

arbitration, which would determine the extent of the asserted deficiency. The coverage

dispute was resolved with an arbitration award, which lifted the stay in this case, and

that award has been confirmed in the case docketed at No. 22-CV-4513. The arbitration

award does not make MCA whole. MCA and the Barsomian plaintiffs settled their suit

in 2022. Part of the settlement included an assignment to the Barsomian plaintiffs of

MCA’s right to pursue this litigation against Jamieson. The Barsomian plaintiffs then

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88-2-20 Wncv Mountainside Condominium vs. Jamieson Risk Service
were substituted for MCA in this case. As a result, MCA is no longer a party in this case,

which is between the Barsomian plaintiffs and Jamieson only.

        The arbitration panel issued its award in the coverage dispute on November 4,

2022, and the stay in this case was promptly lifted. More than a year later, on December

11, 2023, nearly four years after this case was filed, Jamieson filed in this case a

purported Rule 14 third-party complaint (impleader) against Vermont Mutual, amending

it on December 20. There is no proof or waiver of service in the record, and Jamieson has

not sought a default judgment against Vermont Mutual. The Court infers that Jamieson

has not completed service on Vermont Mutual, which has neither appeared nor defended.

See 6 Mary Kay Kane, et al., Fed. Prac. & Proc. Civ. § 1445 (3d ed.) (“It is sufficient to

note here that with one exception [irrelevant here] the requirements for valid service of

process and the acquisition of personal jurisdiction in a third-party action are the same

as they are in any other type of litigation.”).1

        Within days of the filing of Jamieson’s amended third-party pleading, Plaintiffs

filed a Rule 14(a) motion to strike it. They argue that the proposed declaratory claims

against Vermont Mutual are inappropriate for impleader, the indemnification claim

should be pursued separately if at all, and impleader at this time comes too late and will

bog this case down to a prejudicial degree.

        Jamieson responds that, in its view, its declaratory claims appropriately seek

declarations to the effect that Vermont Mutual, not it, is properly liable to Plaintiffs and

that properly seeks indemnification. It further argues that its pleading against Vermont

1
 Accordingly, as Vermont Mutual has not technically been impled at this juncture, the
Court analyzes the motion solely based on the contentions and positions of the existing
parties.
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Mutual is timely because under the Vermont rule it is allowed to bring in third parties at

any time and, otherwise, despite this case’s age, the litigation is in its early stages.

        Impleader is controlled by Rule 14. Unlike its federal counterpart, which requires

prospective leave of the Court if the defendant seeks to implead more than 14 days after

the answer is served, Vermont’s rule says that a defendant may do so “[a]t any time after

commencement of an action,” and leave of the Court is never required. Vt. R. Civ. P.

14(a). Jamieson is incorrect, however, to the extent that it suggests that the “at any

time” language means that there are no temporal considerations. Though prospective

leave of the Court is not required for impleader, the Court can act to protect other

parties, and prejudicial delay can be the reason protection is needed.

        Rule 14(a) allows any party to “move to strike the third-party claim, or for its

severance or separate trial.” Rule 14(c) further provides: “The court may make such

orders as will prevent a party from being embarrassed or put to undue expense, or will

prevent delay of the trial or other proceedings, by the assertion of a third-party claim,

and may dismiss the third-party claim, order separate trials, or make other orders to

prevent delay or prejudice.”

        Here, Plaintiffs’ motion to strike is granted because Jamieson’s proposed

declaratory claims are largely inappropriate for impleader, the indemnification claim is

conclusory at best, and there is neither explanation nor excuse for the extraordinary

delay in Jamieson’s attempt at bringing in a third party.

        By its terms, impleader is available to the first-party defendant/third-party

plaintiff when the third-party defendant “is or may be liable to such third-party plaintiff

for all or part of the [first-party] plaintiff’s claim against the third-party plaintiff.” Vt. R.

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Civ. P. 14(a) (emphasis added); see also 6 Mary Kay Kane, et al., Fed. Prac. & Proc. Civ. §

1453 (3d ed.) (footnotes omitted) (“[T]he complaint must indicate that the third-party

defendant is or may be liable to the third-party plaintiff for all or part of plaintiff’s claim

against defendant. . . . [I]t is not sufficient to allege that the third-party defendant is

liable to plaintiff for all or part of plaintiff's claim.”).

         The claims for declaratory relief in the third-party complaint are largely

inappropriate for impleader. By Jamieson’s own description, they represent an effort by

Jamieson to establish that Vermont Mutual has (or had) direct liability to MCA for the

entire supposed coverage deficiency that Plaintiffs blame on Jamieson. In other words,

Jamieson is not alleging that Vermont Mutual is liable to it, but that it is liable to

Plaintiffs. Such claims fall outside the proper scope of impleader.

         Jamieson does assert a claim of indemnification against Vermont Mutual, which is

a claim that Vermont Mutual is directly liable to it in the event that it is liable to

Plaintiffs. The indemnification claim, however, is not fully supported by separately pled

allegations making the cause of action clear, especially in the context of Plaintiffs’

specific claims in this case. Plaintiffs allege that the coverage deficiency resulted from

express, false representations by Jamieson. If so, Vermont Mutual’s liability to Jamieson

by way of indemnification is far from clear, raising the prospect that impleader may

accomplish little other than delay resolution of the matter for the existing parties. See

Knisely v. Cent. Vermont Hosp., 171 Vt. 644, 646 (2000) (implied indemnification limited

to parties whose conduct occurred “without active fault”).2

2
    The Court makes no actual ruling as to the ultimate merits of such a claim, however.
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88-2-20 Wncv Mountainside Condominium vs. Jamieson Risk Service
        “Ideally, motions for leave to implead a third party under Rule 14 should be made

promptly or as soon as possible after the filing of pleadings in the suit.” Stingley v.

Raskey, No. A95-0242 CV (HRH), 1995 WL 696591, at *5 (D. Alaska Nov. 20, 1995)

(internal quotation omitted). It may be denied “when prejudice to the parties or delay of

the trial will result, or when the movant cannot reasonably explain the delay.” 6 Mary

Kay Kane, et al., Fed. Prac. & Proc. Civ. § 1454 (3d ed.) (emphasis added and collecting

cases). Jamieson does not attempt to explain the extraordinary delay in seeking to bring

Vermont Mutual into this case. If it thought that Vermont Mutual would have liability

to it for any liability Jamieson might have to MCA (and now Plaintiffs), that should have

been apparent the minute the original complaint was filed. Nothing has changed since

then to justify any sudden revelations as to Vermont Mutual’s indemnification liability to

Jamieson.

        The Court bears in mind that, although this case currently remains in discovery,

the underlying injury that led to the filing of this suit by MCA, and Plaintiffs’ eventual

substitution for MCA, was the fire in 2014 that destroyed the building. Plaintiffs have

been seeking redress, one way or another, ever since. The Court is very mindful of the

lengthy delays that can accompany the addition of a third party to an existing lawsuit.

There may be litigation by Vermont Mutual at the outset of the case, and there surely

would be a need for an extended period of discovery. Such additional delay in this case

by way of the instant indemnification claim against Vermont Mutual would be wholly

inconsistent with the overarching goals of Vt. R. Civ. P. 1, which require that the Rules

be “construed, administered, and employed by the court and the parties to secure the

just, speedy, and inexpensive determination of every action.”

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        Further, Jamieson is not without a potential remedy. If Jamieson wishes to

pursue its claims against Vermont Mutual, it may attempt to do so in a separate suit.

                                                  Conclusion

        For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiffs’ motion to strike is granted. Jamieson’s third-

party complaint against Vermont Mutual shall be treated as stricken from the record.

The ruling is without prejudice to the claims proposed to be brought against Vermont

Mutual by Jamieson.

        Electronically signed on Thursday, February 8, 2024, per V.R.E.F. 9(d).

                                                          _______________________
                                                          Timothy B. Tomasi
                                                          Superior Court Judge

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