Take it to the limit, one more time
In Professional Solutions Insurance Company v. Mohrlang, the issue was whether one limit or two applied to claims against the same attorney. If the claims were “related” one limit applied, if not, two limits applied. Professional Solutions Insurance Company (PSIC) provided single coverage liability of $500,000, up to an annual aggregate limit of $1 million, to one of its insureds. When appellee Bruce Mohrlang submitted a negligence claim against the insured, and appellee Harry Mohrlang submitted another alleging breach of fiduciary duties, PSIC conceded liability of at least $500,000 on each but argued that under the policy definitions, the claims were related and thus subject to the $500,000 single coverage limit. The parties eventually settled, with PSIC agreeing to pay the single coverage limit of $500,000 and pursue a declaratory judgment action to determine any further liability. The sole question was whether the two claims were related to one another so as to cap PSIC’s liability at $500,000, or whether the two claims were unrelated and thus separately covered under PSIC’s annual aggregate limit of $1 million. On a stipulated record, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of the Mohrlangs, and the Tenth Circuit affirmed.
The critical inquiry was whether the claims were “temporally, logically or causally connected by any common fact, circumstance, situation, transaction, event, advice or decision.” Bruce Mohrlang’s claim was based on the insured’s negligence in structuring a corporate stock sale, while Harry Mohrlang alleged breach of fiduciary duties based on the insured’s misrepresentations that caused him to release a deed of trust he held against the corporate entity.
First, the court found that Harry Mohrlang’s claim was not temporally connected to the sale because the insured caused Harry Mohrlang to release his deed of trust some three weeks after the sale closed. Next, the court found no logical connection between the claim and the sale because neither the deed of trust nor the promissory note it secured was incorporated into the final sale agreement and both should have remained unaffected by the sale. Finally, the court determined that no causal connection existed between Harry Mohrlang’s claim and the sale because the promissory note remained a valid, independent obligation even after the sale, and the deed of trust was not released until the insured’s unforeseeable acts severed any causal link that could have existed. Hence, the court ruled that the two claims were unrelated and PSIC was liable under the policy’s $1 million annual aggregate limit.
The Tenth Circuit affirmed for the reasons stated by the trial court.
