Rivelli v. Twin City Fire Insurance ( 2009 )


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  •                                                                          FILED
    United States Court of Appeals
    Tenth Circuit
    October 26, 2009
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    Elisabeth A. Shumaker
    Clerk of Court
    FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT
    LOUIS E. RIVELLI; RODNEY B.
    JOHNSON; STEPHEN G. BURKE;
    TERESA W. AYERS; CRAIG L.
    STEVENSON; ROBERT T.
    HOFFMAN,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.                                                     No. 08-1480
    (D.C. No. 1:08-CV-01225-RPM)
    TWIN CITY FIRE INSURANCE                                (D. Colo.)
    COMPANY, an Indiana corporation,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ORDER AND JUDGMENT *
    Before TYMKOVICH and ANDERSON, Circuit Judges, and BRORBY, Senior
    Circuit Judge.
    Plaintiffs filed this diversity case arising under Colorado law to compel the
    continued advancement of defense costs under an excess Directors and Officers
    *
    After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined
    unanimously to grant the parties’ request for a decision on the briefs without oral
    argument. See Fed. R. App. P. 34(f); 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G). The case is therefore
    ordered submitted without oral argument. This order and judgment is not binding
    precedent, except under the doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, and
    collateral estoppel. It may be cited, however, for its persuasive value consistent
    with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1 and 10th Cir. R. 32.1.
    (D&O) liability insurance policy provided by defendant Twin City Fire Insurance
    Company (“Twin City”). Plaintiffs appeal from the district court’s order denying
    their motion for a preliminary injunction and partial summary judgment on their
    claim for declaratory relief and granting Twin City’s cross-motion for summary
    judgment. The district court certified its decision on this claim for appeal under
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(b). We exercise jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
     and
    affirm.
    I.
    Plaintiffs were directors or officers of Fischer Imaging Co., a firm that
    carried D&O insurance. Federal Insurance Company (“Federal”) provided
    Fischer $5 million in primary D&O coverage, and Twin City initially provided
    Fischer $2.5 million in excess D&O coverage. In April 2002, plaintiffs renewed
    their Twin City policy and increased their excess coverage by another $2.5
    million. In order to obtain the “top” $2.5 million in coverage, Fischer supplied
    Twin City with a Warranty Letter representing that “[n]o person or entity for
    whom this insurance is intended has any knowledge or information of any act,
    error, omission, fact or circumstance which may give rise to a claim which may
    fall within the scope of the proposed insurance detailed above.” Aplee. Supp.
    -2-
    App., Vol. 1, at 127. 1 The Warranty Letter further stated that it was “AN
    EXPRESS WARRANTY FOR ALL INSUREDS[.]” 
    Id.
    Fischer was sued by stockholders in April 2003. One of these actions was
    voluntarily dismissed; the other action was dismissed by the district court after
    two years of litigation and was not refiled. In June 2005, the Securities and
    Exchange Commission (SEC) filed a civil enforcement action against plaintiffs
    alleging securities fraud. SEC v. Rivelli, No. 05-cv-01039-RPM-MJW, Doc. 1.
    In May 2008, the SEC filed its first amended complaint, asserting that from
    January 2000 through September 2002, plaintiffs engaged in a scheme to
    fraudulently inflate the company’s stock price for their personal enrichment by
    repeatedly and improperly recognizing revenue from sales contrary to Generally
    Accepted Accounting Principles, by materially misstating its financial reports,
    and by misleading outside auditors to hide their accounting improprieties.
    See generally 
    id.,
     Doc. 113.
    In defending against these suits, plaintiffs have used all $5 million of their
    primary D&O insurance provided by Federal, and they have also used the original
    1
    The Warranty Letter was originally signed on May 1, 2002, by Fischer’s
    then-Chief Financial Officer (“CFO”), defendant Rodney B. Johnson, and by
    Fischer’s then-Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”), Gerald Knudson, who is not a
    party to this suit. See 
    id.
     At some point, Mr. Johnson’s signature was crossed
    out, and the signature of defendant Stephen G. Burke was added as “EVP”
    (Executive Vice President) and CFO. See 
    id.
     Mr. Burke became Fischer’s EVP
    and CFO in October 2002. See SEC v. Rivelli, No. 05-cv-01039-RPM, Doc. 113,
    at 4 ¶ 10.
    -3-
    $2.5 million in excess D&O insurance provided by defendant Twin City. Both
    Federal and Twin City paid these amounts under a reservation of rights to
    challenge these payouts later, as allowed by Colorado law. See Pompa v. Am.
    Family Mut. Ins. Co., 
    520 F.3d 1139
    , 1145-46 (10th Cir. 2008). Twin City
    concedes that the SEC’s amended complaint obligated it to advance defense costs,
    in the absence of the “prior knowledge” exclusion in the Warranty Letter
    applicable to the “top” $2.5 million. See Aplee. Br. at 14, 16. Twin City refused
    to pay the $2.5 million increase based on the exclusionary language added to the
    policy in April 2002, however. Twin City asserts that the SEC’s complaint and
    amended complaint show that when Fischer increased its excess D&O coverage in
    April 2002, plaintiffs had been fraudulently inflating reported company revenues
    for over a year. See Aplee. Br. at 1, 6.
    Plaintiffs filed this suit, and the parties eventually filed their cross-motions
    for summary judgment on the issue of whether Twin City is obligated to advance
    to plaintiffs the $2.5 million increase in excess liability coverage. The district
    court held that the exclusion in the Warranty Letter was triggered by the
    allegations in the SEC’s amended complaint that, “when read together, show that
    [plaintiffs] Rivelli and Johnson knew of wrongful activities at Fischer that could
    give rise to a claim under the Twin City Policy before May 1, 2002.” Rivelli v.
    Twin City Fire Ins. Co., No. 08-cv-01225-RPM, 
    2008 WL 5054568
    , at *8
    (D. Colo. Nov. 21, 2008) (unpublished). The court concluded that Twin City was
    -4-
    therefore not obligated to advance the “top” $2.5 million in defense costs.
    Because plaintiffs’ other claims did not depend on the exclusion-of-coverage
    issue, the court certified the issue for appeal under Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(b).
    II.
    We review the grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the same
    legal standard as the district court applied under Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). Pompa,
    
    520 F.3d at 1142
    . A summary judgment is appropriate “if the pleadings, the
    discovery and disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits show that there is no
    genuine issue as to any material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment
    as a matter of law.” Rule 56(c). In making this determination, “[w]e view the
    evidence and draw reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to
    the nonmoving party.” Weigel v. Broad, 
    544 F.3d 1143
    , 1151 (10th Cir. 2008)
    (quotation omitted) (emphasis added).
    The parties agree that Colorado law governs this dispute. The district court
    correctly stated that, “[i]n coverage disputes, the insured has the burden of
    proving that an asserted claim comes within the coverage of the policy, and the
    insurer has the burden of proving that the facts fall within the policy’s
    exclusions.” Rivelli, 
    2008 WL 5054568
    , at *4 (citing Hecla Mining Co. v.
    N.H. Ins. Co., 
    811 P.2d 1083
    , 1090 (Colo. 1991) (en banc)). The district court
    also correctly noted that “Twin City does not dispute that the claims asserted by
    -5-
    the SEC fall within the coverage provided by the Twin City Policy. The issue is
    whether the exclusion set forth in the Warranty Letter applies to exclude the ‘top’
    $2.5 million of coverage, thereby relieving Twin City of any obligation to pay
    additional defense costs.” 
    Id.
     Under the so-called Colorado “complaint rule,”
    “the insurer’s duty to defend is determined by examination of solely the policy
    and the complaint[ filed against the insureds].” Pompa, 
    520 F.3d at 1145
    . 2 To
    avoid coverage, “an insurer must establish that the exemption claimed applies in
    the particular case, and that the exclusions are not subject to any other reasonable
    interpretations.” Hecla, 811 P.2d at 1090. In light of the exclusionary language
    of the Warranty Letter, Twin City “has a duty to defend unless [it] can establish
    that the allegations in the complaint [made against any one of the insureds] are
    solely and entirely within the exclusions in the insurance policy.” Id.
    Plaintiffs argue that the district court did not properly apply Colorado’s
    complaint rule in determining that Twin City was excused from advancing the
    “top” $2.5 million in defense costs under their D&O liability policy because:
    (1) the district court assumed the existence of disputed matters not alleged in the
    SEC’s amended complaint; (2) the district court failed to adopt a reasonable
    2
    Twin City argues that, for purposes of the complaint rule, there is a
    distinction between a duty to defend and a duty to advance defense costs. Aplee.
    Br. at 18 n.10, 26. Twin City waived any distinction, however, by stating that it
    “will assume, as it did below, that the legal standard for determining the existence
    vel non of a duty to advance defense costs is the same as that governing the duty
    to defend.” Id. at 23 n.12.
    -6-
    construction of ambiguous language in the exclusion in the Warranty Letter;
    (3) the district court construed alternative and contradictory allegations in the
    SEC’s amended complaint as establishing that the claims were solely and entirely
    within the prior knowledge exclusion; and (4) the district court failed to
    acknowledge that the claims stated in the complaint in the underlying SEC action
    could be satisfied by mere negligence or recklessness insufficient to trigger the
    policy exclusion, not knowing conduct. Plaintiffs also argue that: (5) the district
    court erred in determining that the word “claim” in the prior knowledge exclusion
    is broader in meaning than a single claim for relief; and (6) the district court
    incorrectly “held that the existence of any allegation of fact raising an inference
    of knowing wrongdoing establishes a prior knowledge exclusion as a matter of
    law, and eliminates a duty to defend in its entirely[,]” Aplt. Opening Br. at 31.
    We reject plaintiffs’ assertions of error.
    First, plaintiffs argue that the district court did not properly apply
    Colorado’s complaint rule because “the District Court assumed the existence of
    disputed matters not alleged in the [SEC’s amended complaint].” Aplt. Opening
    Br. at 2. In arguing this issue, plaintiffs assert that Twin City relied on “matters
    developed in discovery in the Underlying SEC Action[.]” Id. at 17. Twin City
    asserts that this argument is a “sideshow” because the district court did not rely
    on extrinsic evidence. Aplee. Br. at 27. We agree with Twin City.
    -7-
    We have carefully reviewed the district court’s decision and are confident
    that the court confined its legal analysis to the allegations in the SEC’s amended
    complaint. The court stated that it was required to review the four corners of the
    SEC’s amended complaint “without resort to extrinsic evidence.” Rivelli,
    
    2008 WL 5054568
    , at *5. The court then outlined in great detail the allegations
    from the SEC’s amended complaint upon which it based its conclusion that
    “[t]hese allegations and others, when read together, show that [plaintiffs] Rivelli
    and Johnson knew of wrongful activities at Fischer that could give rise to a claim
    under the Twin City Policy before May 1, 2002.” 
    Id. at **6-8
    . Twin City points
    out that the SEC’s allegations specifically reference wrongful actions done before
    May 1, 2002. See, e.g., SEC v. Rivelli, No. 05-cv-01039-RPM, Doc. 113, at 15
    ¶ 44-17 ¶ 46. Plaintiffs point to the district court’s reference to extrinsic
    evidence upon which Twin City’s counsel relied in a letter notifying plaintiffs’
    counsel that Twin City would not pay plaintiffs the $2.5 million increase in
    coverage. Aplt. Opening Br. at 17 (citing Rivelli, 
    2008 WL 5054568
    , at *3).
    That passing reference—in the court’s summary of the procedural history—does
    not convince us that the court improperly relied on any extrinsic evidence when it
    granted summary judgment to Twin City. We reject plaintiffs’ first contention of
    error.
    Second, plaintiffs argue that the district court did not properly apply
    Colorado’s complaint rule because the court failed to adopt a reasonable
    -8-
    construction of ambiguous language in the exclusion in the Warranty Letter.
    Plaintiffs argue that the court improperly interpreted the exclusion to have been
    triggered by “what an insured objectively should have known, or had reason to
    believe[.]” Aplt. Opening Br. at 18. We note that Twin City’s argument that
    plaintiffs failed to raise their ambiguity argument in the district court is without
    merit. See Aplee. Supp. App., Vol. 1, at 45-46. We do not agree that the district
    court erred, however.
    We have reviewed the contested language in the Warranty Letter and
    conclude that it is not ambiguous. We accept plaintiffs’ contention that the
    exclusion clearly calls for a subjective standard to be applied, but we hold that the
    district court properly interpreted it under a subjective standard. As we indicated
    above, the Warranty Letter states that it is “AN EXPRESS WARRANTY FOR
    ALL INSUREDS.” Aplee. Supp. App., Vol. 1, at 127. It also states: “No person
    or entity for whom this insurance is intended has any knowledge or information of
    any act, error, omission, fact or circumstance which may give rise to a claim
    which may fall within the scope of the proposed insurance detailed above.” 
    Id.
    The exclusionary language thus unambiguously refers to the “insureds” and their
    “knowledge or information of any act, error, omission, fact or circumstance which
    may give rise to a claim.” 
    Id.
    Plaintiffs incorrectly conclude that the district court used an objective,
    “reasonable person” knowledge standard, rather than the required subjective
    -9-
    knowledge standard of the insured. As we have already noted, the district court
    outlined in great detail plaintiffs’ subjective knowledge of facts that indisputably
    could give rise to a claim under the policy, as alleged in the SEC’s amended
    complaint. See Rivelli, 
    2008 WL 5054568
    , at **6-8. While the district court did
    not use the term “subjective knowledge” when it recounted the allegations, its
    reliance on those allegations about each director’s or officer’s knowledge about
    and participation in Fischer’s irregular accounting practices establishes that the
    court properly applied a subjective knowledge standard. In addition, we agree
    with Twin City that even if “the court improperly strayed into ‘objective’ territory
    when examining one appellant’s knowledge, appellants have nothing to say about
    the extensive list of all of the other appellants’ actual, subjective knowledge at
    the time the Warranty Letter was signed of information that could give rise to a
    claim under the Twin City policy.” Aplee. Br. at 21-22. Plaintiffs “never address
    this litany of facts.” 
    Id. at 29
    .
    Third, plaintiffs argue that the district court did not properly apply
    Colorado’s complaint rule because the court construed alternative and
    contradictory allegations in the SEC’s amended complaint as establishing that the
    SEC’s claims were solely and entirely within the prior knowledge exclusion.
    They assert that “[t]here is nothing that suggests that the Insureds, or any
    reasonable insured, had or could have an expectation that Twin City’s obligation
    to advance defense costs up to the full $5 million policy limit could be summarily
    -10-
    excused by disputed, inconsistent and potentially frivolous allegations, the proof
    of which would not be necessary to the establishment of any claim.” Aplt.
    Opening Br. at 25. Plaintiffs have not pointed us to these allegedly inconsistent,
    contradictory, or frivolous allegations, however, nor have they shown us how any
    portion of the SEC’s allegations could even arguably support a claim separate and
    apart from the alleged fraudulent scheme. As Twin City points out, the district
    court explained that the SEC’s amended complaint alleged that plaintiffs
    “directed or participated in a fraudulent scheme involving the improper
    recognition of revenue for sales transactions having contingent terms contained in
    side letters that were not disclosed to Fischer’s accounting department or outside
    auditors, and the improper recognition of revenue for sales of equipment shipped
    to and stored in a Fischer-controlled warehouse.” Rivelli, 
    2008 WL 5054568
    ,
    at *5. We believe that the district court correctly concluded that the SEC’s
    claims, “when read together,” 
    id. at *8
    , compelled the conclusion that the SEC’s
    allegations were within the exclusion in the Warranty Letter. We are unpersuaded
    that the district court erred.
    Fourth, plaintiffs argue that the district court did not properly apply
    Colorado’s complaint rule because the court failed to acknowledge that the claims
    stated in the SEC’s amended complaint could be satisfied not just by knowing
    conduct, but by mere negligence or recklessness insufficient to trigger the policy
    exclusion. In describing this argument, the district court explained that the
    -11-
    directors and officers claimed that Twin City had to show not only that they knew
    of the facts related to acts that could give rise to a claim under the policy, but that
    they “appreciated that those facts could give rise to a claim under the policy.”
    
    Id. at *8
     (emphasis added).
    The district court rejected plaintiffs’ argument that the scienter requirement
    of the SEC’s claims for securities fraud was relevant to the interpretation of the
    exclusion in the Warranty Letter. See 
    id. at *9
    . In responding to plaintiffs’
    argument, the district court stated that, considering the SEC’s allegations, any
    CEO or CFO
    could not fail to appreciate the potential for liability created by
    activities such as recognizing income on transactions having
    contingencies due to disguised side agreements, or recognizing
    income on products held in a company-controlled warehouse, while
    the company paid for the storage costs. All of the claims set forth in
    the SEC’s Amended Complaint arise from and incorporate those
    factual allegations.
    
    Id.
    It is untenable for plaintiffs to suggest that the allegations in the SEC’s
    amended complaint support a reasonable inference that each and every one of
    them could have failed to appreciate the potential for liability from the actions
    they are alleged to have taken prior to May 1, 2002. As Twin City points out, the
    allegations in the SEC’s amended complaint are overwhelming in outlining what
    plaintiffs knew at the time they entered into the Warranty Letter. See Aplee. Br.
    at 33.
    -12-
    Furthermore, under the exclusionary language, it does not matter what the
    insureds believed, only what the SEC’s amended complaint alleged they knew.
    Plaintiffs have incorrectly equated the mens rea (scienter) requirement of the
    SEC’s securities fraud claims with the mens rea requirement of the exclusionary
    language in the Warranty Letter. The requirements are different. The exclusion
    requires only that the insureds had knowledge or information that could give rise
    to a claim under their insurance policy. As we have already determined, the
    language does not require that the SEC’s allegations show that plaintiffs
    appreciated that what they are alleged to have known could give rise to a claim.
    Fifth, we reject as moot plaintiffs’ contention that the district court erred in
    determining that the word “claim” in the prior knowledge exclusion is broader in
    meaning than a single claim for relief. As Twin City puts it, the district court
    simply found it “beyond belief, not to mention belied by the plain facts of the
    Complaint[,]” that plaintiffs maintained that Rivelli and Johnson could have
    failed “to appreciate the potential for liability created by” the activities alleged in
    the SEC’s amended complaint. Aplee. Br. at 30; Rivelli, 
    2008 WL 5054568
    ,
    at *9. And then the court concluded that “[a]ll of the claims set forth in the
    SEC’s Amended Complaint arise from and incorporate those factual allegations.”
    Rivelli, 
    2008 WL 5054568
    , at *9 (emphasis added). Even though the court had
    decided that the word “claim” had a broader meaning than a single claim for
    relief, 
    id. at *5
    , its ultimate conclusion was based on the claims the SEC asserted
    -13-
    against plaintiffs in its amended complaint, not some other, broader, definition of
    the word “claim,” see 
    id. at *9
    .
    Finally, we reject plaintiffs’ argument that the district court erroneously
    held that the existence of any allegation of fact raising an inference of knowing
    wrongdoing was sufficient to trigger the prior knowledge exclusion in the
    Warranty Letter as a matter of law, and did not apply the rule of Colorado law
    requiring that Twin City “has a duty to defend unless [it] can establish that the
    allegations in the complaint [made against any one of the insureds] are solely and
    entirely within the exclusions in the insurance policy.” Hecla, 811 P.2d at 1090.
    As we have already explained, the district court plainly based its holding on the
    allegations in the SEC’s amended complaint, “when read together,” Rivelli,
    
    2008 WL 5054568
    , at *8, and the court clearly considered both the facts and the
    claims, see 
    id.
    The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
    Entered for the Court
    Wade Brorby
    Senior Circuit Judge
    -14-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 08-1480

Judges: Tymkovich, Anderson, Brorby

Filed Date: 10/26/2009

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/5/2024