• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
  • Contact Us

Agency Checklists

Massachusetts Insurance News & Job Opportunities

You are here: Home / Insurance Law | Massachusetts / MA Insurance Law | Insurance Coverage Cases / Appeals Court Affirms Trial Decision On Commissions Due To Insurance Agent

Appeals Court Affirms Trial Decision On Commissions Due To Insurance Agent

March 8, 2015 by Nina Kallen

Nina Kallen writes a blog about insurance coverage issues in Massachusetts

We love Kallen’s blog and have asked her to let us reprint her posts on things we think might be of interest to the independent agents of the Commonwealth. Here is her latest posted on March 8th, 2015:

Appeals Court affirms trial decision on commissions due to insurance agent

Marguerite Cocco owned an insurance agency.  In 2002 she contracted with another insurance agency, LJM Insurance Agency, to refer customers to it in exchange for fifty percent of commissions received from her referrals.

After a number of years LJM reduced the percentage of commissions paid and then abruptly ceased paying all commissions.  Cocco sued.

The trial judge allowed LJM’s motion to preclude any evidence of unpaid commissions owed prior to August 13, 2004, based on the six year statute of limitations for breach of contract.

After the jury-waived trial the judge found in favor of Cocco and awarded her damages for commissions due from and after August, 2004.  The judge offset the amount due by $2,000 on the ground that LJM had paid that amount in 2008. The total amount awarded to Coco for the LJM Agency’s breach of contract was $41453.40, consisting of $23,058.57 for commissions unpaid and interest at 12% from January 1, 2005, in the amount of $18,394.83.

Cocco appealed the preclusion of evidence and the offset.

In Cocco v. LJM Ins. Agency, Inc., 87 Mass. App. Ct. 1106, 2015 WL 709623 (unpublished), the Massachusetts Appeals Court affirmed the rulings of the trial court.

The Appeals Court held that, contrary to Cocco’s argument, nothing in LJM’s 2008 payment was intended to renew its promise to her so that the statute of limitations would be reset.

The court also held that the judge properly offset the 2008 payment from the judgment.  Cocco argued that the payment should have been applied to payments due prior to 2004.  The court held, “as the judge excluded all evidence of debts prior to 2004 on statute of limitations grounds, there was no evidence properly before the court of debts prior to August, 2004.”  This ruling only makes sense if Cocco made no proffer of evidence of the pre-2004 debt for the purpose of showing that the 2008 payment was for the older debts.  The exclusion of evidence of debts prior to 2004 for the purpose of recovering those debts does not equal the exclusion of debts prior to 2004 for the purpose of showing that certain payments were to offset those debts.

It is worth noting that the court also held that both of  Cocco’s arguments were deemed waived as not properly preserved for appeal.

One of the hats I wear is as an appellate lawyer.  This case serves as a reminder that the time to start thinking about an appeal is at the beginning of the case..

About Nina Kallen and her blog Insurance Coverage law in Massachusetts.

Nina Kallen has been an attorney in Massachusetts since 1994. Her practice focuses mainly on general litigation and in particular insurance coverage issues.  You can learn more about her, and find links to her published opinions, at www.kallenlawyer.com. In 2008, Kallen began her blog Insurance Coverage Law in Massachusetts which was named a Top 50 Insurance Community Law blog in 2008, 2009 and 2011 by LexisNexis.

Filed Under: MA Insurance Law | Insurance Coverage Cases, Massagent | News & Announcements Tagged With: mass insurance news, nina kallen

Footer

Agency Checklists

Contact us

We offer a variety of ways to get help promote your company or product.

Announcements
Email Sponsorships
Partnerships
Custom Collaborations

*Affiliate Disclosure

Please note that any of Agency Checklists’ articles might contain one or more affiliate links. This means that any subsequent purchase resulting from these links may result in a commission for us, but at no additional cost to you. For example, as an Amazon Associate, Agency Checklists earns a commission from all qualifying purchases. By working with affiliates we can continue to keep Agency Checklists subscription free. Thank you for your support.

Explore Our Archives

Copyright © 2025 · Agency Checklists · All rights reserved.

 

Loading Comments...