Confirm favorite deletion?
Contracts Keyed to Calamari
Protectors Insurance Service, Inc. v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company
Facts
The Plaintiff, Protectors Insurance Service, Inc. (the "Plaintiff") is an insurance agency. Earl Colglazier ("Mr. Colglazier") is the sole owner of Plaintiff's corporate stock. Mr. Colglazier had a written contract authorizing it to "solicit and submit applications" for the Defendant's, United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company (the "Defendant"), insurance contracts. If the Defendant accepts an application, the Plaintiff is paid a commission. During 1979-1992, over 80% of the insurance sold by the Plaintiff were the Defendant's policies. The Plaintiff's contract included a provision regarding termination of the agreement. It stated the parties "agree to make a good faith effort to provide for rehabilitation and thereby avoid termination of this Agreement." In March of 1992, the Defendant, due to profitability concerns, began "establishing a formal rehabilitation program for plaintiff." The program set certain "earned loss ratios" that measured the Plaintiff's profitability to the Defendant with regards to certain personal and commercial lines of insurance. In October of 1992, the Defendant informed the Plaintiff it would terminate the personal lines contract for a period of 180 days unless the Plaintiff met the goals the rehabilitation program by the end of 1992. The Plaintiff wrote to the Defendant and informed him that his personal and commercial accounts were "intertwined", and if the Defendant terminated the personal lines, the Plaintiff would effectively be put out of business. • As a result of the Defendant's demands, Mr. Colglazier decided to sell all the Plaintiff's assets for $148,000. Shortly thereafter, the Plaintiff sued the Defendant alleging that the Defendant did not make a good faith effort "at rehabilitation to avoid termination of the agreement", which lead to him having to sell at a distressed price. During these proceedings, the Defendant's liability was not at issue, only at issue was the calculation of damages. Expert testimony was presented during trial that Mr. Colglazier sold the Plaintiff agency at a distressed price because the "time pressure to make a sale and USF & G's stated intention of terminating the agency's personal lines insurance." It these circumstances were not present, the business would have been worth $175,000. Mr. Colglazier also testified that if the Defendant had not threatened to cancel the parties' contract he would have operated the agency for ten more years. Testimony about the net income of the Plaintiff agency from previous years was also elicited. The Defendant objected to the district court judge's damage instruction arguing it permitted double recovery. Specifically "because the reasonable sale value of the agency was based on the agency's ability to earn future profits and, thus, plaintiff would be compensated twice if it received lost profits on top of the sale price."
Only StudyBuddy Pro offers the complete Case Brief Anatomy*
Access the most important case brief elements for optimal case understanding.
*Case Brief Anatomy includes: Brief Prologue, Complete Case Brief, Brief Epilogue
- The Brief Prologue provides necessary case brief introductory information and includes:
Topic:
Identifies the topic of law and where this case fits within your course outline.Parties:
Identifies the cast of characters involved in the case.Procedural Posture & History:
Shares the case history with how lower courts have ruled on the matter.Case Key Terms, Acts, Doctrines, etc.:
A case specific Legal Term Dictionary.Case Doctrines, Acts, Statutes, Amendments and Treatises:
Identifies and Defines Legal Authority used in this case.
- The Case Brief is the complete case summarized and authored in the traditional Law School I.R.A.C. format. The Pro case brief includes:
Brief Facts:
A Synopsis of the Facts of the case.Rule of Law:
Identifies the Legal Principle the Court used in deciding the case.Facts:
What are the factual circumstances that gave rise to the civil or criminal case? What is the relationship of the Parties that are involved in the case.Issue(s):
Lists the Questions of Law that are raised by the Facts of the case.Holding:
Shares the Court's answer to the legal questions raised in the issue.Concurring / Dissenting Opinions:
Includes valuable concurring or dissenting opinions and their key points.Reasoning and Analysis:
Identifies the chain of argument(s) which led the judges to rule as they did.
- The Brief Prologue closes the case brief with important forward-looking discussion and includes:
Policy:
Identifies the Policy if any that has been established by the case.Court Direction:
Shares where the Court went from here for this case.