Evanston Insurance Company v. Pilar Pena ( 2014 )


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  •              Case: 12-15466    Date Filed: 04/08/2014   Page: 1 of 14
    [DO NOT PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 12-15466
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 1:11-cv-21015-PAS
    EVANSTON INSURANCE COMPANY,
    an Illinois Corporation,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    versus
    DESIGN BUILD INTERAMERICAN, INC,
    a Florida Corporation, et al.,
    Defendants,
    PILAR PENA,
    individually and as Plenary Guardian
    of Alberto Zambrana, Florida residents,
    Defendant - Appellant.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Florida
    ________________________
    (April 8, 2014)
    Case: 12-15466       Date Filed: 04/08/2014       Page: 2 of 14
    Before MARTIN, JORDAN, and SUHRHEINRICH, * Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:
    Pilar Pena, appearing individually and as guardian of her husband Alberto
    Zambrana, appeals the entry of summary judgment in favor of Evanston Insurance
    Company in an insurance coverage dispute arising out of injuries Mr. Zambrana
    sustained at a construction site. 1 Evanston sought a declaratory judgment that the
    excess commercial general liability insurance policy it issued to Design Build
    Interamerican, Inc. does not cover the negligence claims asserted by Ms. Pena in
    state court against DBI and three of DBI’s employees, Manuel Leon, Pedro Ramos,
    and Sergio Ruiz.2 The district court concluded that because Mr. Zambrana
    sustained injuries while he was performing duties related to the conduct of DBI’s
    business, his claims are excluded under the CGL’s employer’s liability exclusion,
    *
    Honorable Richard F. Suhrheinrich, United States Circuit Judge for the Sixth Circuit,
    sitting by designation.
    1
    Mr. Zambrana was critically injured while delivering a steel pipe to a construction site
    managed by DBI. Mr. Zambrana was delivering the pipe on behalf of Royal Plumbing Inc., a
    subcontractor of DBI. When he arrived at the site with the pipe, Mr. Zambrana was asked to help
    carry it to an upper level of the construction site. While on the upper level, he stepped on an
    unsupported drop ceiling and fell twenty feet to a concrete floor, sustaining serious injuries.
    2
    Mr. Leon is DBI’s President, Mr. Ramos is Mr. Leon’s partner, and Mr. Ruiz is a DBI
    employee. It is not disputed that the CGL policy provides coverage to DBI and also to DBI’s
    officers and employees, subject to the policy’s exceptions and/or exclusions.
    2
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    even when the policy’s separation of insureds provision is applied to that
    exclusion. 3
    On appeal, Ms. Pena argues that, under Florida law, the separation of
    insureds provision, as applied to the “any insured” language within the employer’s
    liability exclusion, precludes application of this exclusion in the context of an
    employee suing a co-employee rather than suing his or her employer. Ms. Pena
    does not dispute that the employer’s liability exclusion precludes coverage for her
    claims against DBI (as Mr. Zambrana’s employer), but rather argues that coverage
    is not precluded for the claims against the employees of DBI, namely Messrs.
    Leon, Ramos, and Ruiz.
    Having carefully considered the parties’ briefs and the record in this case
    and after having the benefit of oral argument, we reverse.
    I. Standard of Review
    We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, applying
    the same legal standards as the district court. Hickson Corp. v. N. Crossarm Co.,
    Inc., 
    357 F.3d 1256
    , 1259 (11th Cir. 2004). Summary judgment is properly
    3
    The district court’s order granting summary judgment to Evanston simply incorporated
    its earlier summary judgment order in a related, but separate, declaratory judgment action
    involving Nautilus Insurance Company, which had issued the primary insurance policy to DBI
    for $1,000,000.00 in coverage, against the same defendants. Evanston’s CGL policy provided
    $1,000,000.00 of coverage in excess of the Nautilus policy and included a “follow the form”
    provision, in which all of the terms and provisions of the primary insurance policy, namely the
    Nautilus CGL policy, are incorporated into the Evanston policy.
    3
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    granted where “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and
    admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no
    genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)).
    The interpretation of an insurance contract is a matter of law subject to de
    novo review. Dahl-Eimers v. Mut. of Omaha Life Ins. Co., 
    986 F.2d 1379
    , 1381
    (11th Cir. 1993). Because this is a diversity action, Florida law governs our
    interpretation of the CGL policy in this case. Hartford Acc. & Indem. Co. v.
    Beaver, 
    466 F.3d 1289
    , 1291 (11th Cir. 2006).
    II. Discussion
    The parties’ dispute centers on the proper interpretation of two provisions in
    the CGL policy.
    Evanston contends that the plain language of the employer’s liability
    exclusion precludes coverage for Mr. Zambrana’s claims against DBI and the three
    named defendants. That provision provides, in relevant part:
    Exclusion: Injury to Employees, Contractors, Volunteers and Workers
    . . . This Insurance does not apply to:
    e. Employer’s Liability
    “Bodily injury” to:
    (1) An “employee” of any insured arising out of and in the
    course of:
    4
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    (a) Employment by any Insured; or
    (b) Performing duties related to the conduct of any
    insured’s business[.]
    . . . This exclusion applies:
    (1) Whether any insured may be liable as an employer or in any
    other capacity . . . .
    Evanston argues that because it is undisputed that Mr. Zambrana was an employee
    of DBI (as defined in the CGL policy) who was performing duties related to DBI’s
    business at the time he suffered injuries, the plain language of the employer’s
    liability exclusion precludes coverage.
    Ms. Pena does not dispute that Mr. Zambrana was an “employee” of DBI as
    defined in the employer liability exclusion or that he was performing duties related
    to DBI’s business, but instead responds that the exclusion’s terminology (“any
    insured”) must be read in light of the policy’s separation of insureds provision
    (also commonly referred to as a “severability of interest” provision), which
    provides:
    7. Separation Of Insureds
    Except with respect to the Limits of Insurance, and
    any rights or duties specifically assigned in this
    Coverage Part to the first Named Insured, this Insurance
    applies:
    a. As if each Named Insured were the only
    Named Insured; and
    5
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    b. Separately to each insured against whom claim
    is made or “suit” is brought.
    Florida courts have explained that severability clauses, like the separation of
    insureds provision here, create separate insurable interests in each individual
    insured under a policy, such that the conduct of one insured will not necessarily
    exclude coverage for all other insureds. See Mactown, Inc. v. Cont’l Ins. Co., 
    716 So. 2d 289
    , 292-93 (Fla. 3d DCA 1998). Thus, in Ms. Pena’s view, the entire CGL
    policy must be read as if it applies separately to Messrs. Leon, Ramos, and Ruiz so
    that the language—“an employee of any insured”—in the employer’s liability
    exclusion would not preclude coverage for Messrs. Leon, Ramos, or Ruiz because
    Mr. Zambrana was not “an employee of [Messrs.] [Leon], [Ramos], or [Ruiz].”
    Rather, he was an employee of DBI only, such that the employer’s liability
    exclusion would bar coverage only as to DBI.
    In support of her construction of the CGL policy, Ms. Pena relies on Premier
    Ins. Co. v. Adams, 
    632 So. 2d 1054
     (Fla. 5th DCA 1994). In Premier, the Fifth
    District considered the effect of a severability of insurance clause in a
    homeowner’s policy on the policy’s exclusionary clause. 
    Id. at 1056
    . The
    severability clause provided that “[t]his insurance applies separately to each
    insured[,]” 
    id.,
     and the exclusionary clause precluded coverage for bodily injury
    “which is expected or intended by any insured,” 
    id. at 1055
    . The Fifth District first
    6
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    noted that there were no Florida cases dealing with the “interaction of exclusionary
    clauses and severability clauses or the term ‘any insured’ as contrasted to ‘an
    insured’ or ‘the insured,’ in an exclusionary clause” 
    id.,
     and thus looked to
    decisions in several other jurisdictions, 
    id.
     at 1056–57. The Fifth District found
    persuasive the reasoning of the Massachusetts Supreme Court that the severability
    clause created “a separate insurance policy for each insured,” and thus the use of
    the term “any insured” in the exclusionary provision of the policy “referred only to
    persons claiming coverage under the policy.” 
    Id. at 1056
     (describing the reasoning
    of Worcester Mut. Ins. Co. v. Marnell, 
    398 Mass. 240
    , 
    496 N.E.2d 158
     (1986)).
    The Fifth District agreed with the Massachusetts Supreme Court that this
    interpretation “gave reasonable meaning to both the exclusionary clause and the
    severability clause[,]” which it found preferable “to one which leaves a part useless
    or inexplicable.” Id. at 1057. 4 Moreover, the Fifth District concluded that, to the
    extent the severability and exclusionary provisions created an ambiguity, the policy
    had to be construed strictly against the insurer as the drafter of the policy. Id.
    Noting that the policy at issue “contains an exclusion for the intentional acts
    of ‘any insured’ and contains a severability clause creating a separate insurable
    4
    In reaching this conclusion, the Fifth District specifically rejected an alternative
    construction of the interplay of the severability and exclusionary clauses that would treat the use
    of the term “any insured” in an exclusionary clause as “express[ing] a contractual intent to create
    joint obligations and to prohibit recovery by an innocent coinsured.” Id. at 1056 (describing the
    holding of Chacon v. Am. Fam. Mut. Ins. Co., 
    788 P.2d 748
     (Colo. 1990)).
    7
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    interest in each individual insured,” the Fifth District in Premier held that the “the
    most plausible interpretation is that the exclusionary clause is to exclude coverage
    for the separate insurable interest of that insured who intentionally causes the
    injury.” 
    Id.
    The reasoning and holding of Premier govern our interpretation of the
    severability and exclusionary provisions of Evanston’s CGL policy in this case. 5
    First, like the policy in Premier, Evanston’s policy provides coverage for several
    insureds, including DBI and Messrs. Leon, Ramos, and Ruiz. Second, the
    separation of insureds provision in the Evanston CGL policy explicitly provides
    that the insurance applies “[a]s if each Named Insured were the only Named
    Insured” and just as the severability of insurance clause did in Premier, it states
    that it applies “[s]eparately to each insured.” Because we are applying Florida law,
    we must interpret this language as requiring that each insured has separate
    insurance coverage, Premier, 
    632 So. 2d at 1057
    , and therefore read all provisions
    5
    In diversity cases, “the rule is that, absent a decision from the state supreme court on an
    issue of state law, we are bound to follow decisions of the state’s intermediate appellate courts
    unless there is some persuasive indication that the highest court of the state would decide the
    issue differently.” McMahan v. Toto, 
    311 F.3d 1077
    , 1080 (11th Cir. 2002). Moreover, the
    Florida Supreme Court has held that “[t]he decisions of the district courts of appeal represent the
    law of Florida unless and until they are overruled by this Court. Thus, in the absence of
    interdistrict conflict, district court decisions bind all Florida trial courts.” Galindo v. ARI Mut.
    Ins. Co., 
    203 F.3d 771
    , 775 (11th Cir. 2000) (quoting Pardo v. State, 
    596 So. 2d 665
    , 666
    (Fla.1992)) (internal quotation marks omitted). Here, neither the Florida Supreme Court nor
    other Florida district courts of appeal have addressed the interplay of a severability clause with
    the use of the term “any insured” in an exclusionary clause, so we follow Premier as the law of
    Florida.
    8
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    of the policy, including the employer’s liability exclusion, as if coverage is for only
    DBI, or only Mr. Leon, or only Mr. Ramos, or only Mr. Ruiz.6 Third, when
    applying this construction of the severability provision to the employer’s liability
    exclusion in the Evanston CGL policy, we conclude that coverage is not precluded
    for Messrs. Leon, Ramos, or Ruiz. The exclusion states that the insurance does not
    apply to bodily injury to “[a]n ‘employee’ of any insured.” (Emphasis added).
    Reading this provision as if Mr. Leon were the only insured, coverage would not
    be precluded because Mr. Zambrana is not an employee of Mr. Leon. The same
    construction is true for Mr. Ramos and for Mr. Ruiz. Moreover, we note that this
    reading does not render the inclusion of the employer’s liability exclusion
    superfluous because, as Ms. Pena concedes, the exclusion applies to DBI, who for
    purposes of this exclusion is the employer of Mr. Zambrana.
    Construing the separation of insureds provision and the use of the term “any
    insured” in the employer’s liability exclusion as we have is consistent with the
    Fifth District’s treatment of the two similar provisions at issue in Premier. The
    policy in Premier “contains an exclusion for the intentional acts of ‘any insured,’”
    6
    We recognize that our circuit, when interpreting a contract governed by Georgia law,
    explained that “unlike the phrase ‘the insured,’ the phrase ‘any insured’ unambiguously
    expresses a contractual intent to create joint obligations and to prohibit recovery by an innocent
    co-insured.” Sales v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 
    849 F.2d 1383
    , 1385 (11th Cir. 1988). In this
    case, however, we must apply Florida law, which, in Premier, holds to the contrary that the term
    “any insured,” when used in a severability of insureds provision, creates separate insurable
    interests in each insured.
    9
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    meaning that coverage was excluded only “for the separate insurable interest of
    that insured who intentionally causes the injury.” 
    632 So. 2d at 1057
    . Likewise
    here, Evanston’s CGL policy contains an exclusion for bodily injury to “an
    employee of any insured,” meaning that coverage is excluded only “for the
    separate insurable interest of that insured” who is the employer of the individual
    who suffered the injury. Essentially, the exclusion’s use of the term “any insured”
    when read in conjunction with the severability clause creates a class of insureds
    who are excluded from coverage, i.e., employers of the injured claimant.
    Accordingly, as to other insureds who are not in the class of excludable insureds,
    but against whom a claim could be asserted, i.e., non-employers of the injured
    claimant, coverage is not precluded.
    Premier involved an exclusion for intentional torts in a homeowner’s policy,
    rather than an employer’s liability exclusion in a CGL policy. But that does not
    alter our analysis.
    First, the reasoning in Premier was not dependent on the type of insurance
    policy but instead was based on the meaning of the language in the severability
    clause and its effect on the use of the term “any insured” in the exclusion.
    Significantly, the Fifth District in Premier concluded that the severability clause, in
    and of itself, created a separate insurable interest in each individual insured under
    the policy, which when applied to the policy’s use of the term “any insured” means
    10
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    that each insured must be treated independently from other insureds. This
    principle is applicable regardless of the type of insurance policy at issue.
    Second, another Florida appellate court has applied a severability of
    insurance clause to an employee exclusion in an automobile liability policy and
    concluded that “[t]he exclusion as to employees of the insured is thus limited and
    confined to the employees of the employer against whom the claim is asserted.”
    Shelby Mut. Ins. Co. v. Schuitema, 
    183 So. 2d 571
    , 574 (Fla. 4th DCA 1966),
    approved 
    193 So. 2d 435
     (Fla. 1967).7 Like the Fifth District in Premier, the
    Fourth District in Schuitema recognized that “the principle that the severability of
    interests clause must be construed as intended to treat each insured independently
    from the other insured” must be applied to other pertinent provisions of the policy.
    
    Id.
     Specifically, when applying this principle to the employee bodily injury
    exclusion, the court in Schuitema held that “where the claimant is not the employee
    of the additional insured against whom the claim is made, then there is coverage.”
    
    Id.
    7
    Although the policy at issue in Schuitema used the term “the insured” as contrasted with
    Premier’s use of the term “any insured,” both the Fifth District in Premier and the Fourth
    District in Schuitema treated the terms as being used severally as opposed to collectively or
    jointly. 
    183 So. 2d at 573-74
    . In Premier the term “any insured” was treated as being used
    severally based on the Fifth District’s interpretation of the severability of interests clause’s effect
    on that term where it was used elsewhere in the policy, 
    632 So. 2d at 1057
    , whereas in
    Schuitema, the term “the insured” was defined explicitly in the severability of interests clause as
    being used “severally,” 
    183 So. 2d at 572
    . Either way, in Florida the term “any insured” when
    used in an exclusionary provision of a policy containing a severability of interests provision is
    treated no differently from the meaning of the term “the insured” in Schuitema.
    11
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    Evanston argues that coverage for Messrs. Leon, Ramos, and Ruiz is
    excluded based on the additional language in the employer’s liability exclusion,
    which provides (emphasis added), “[t]his exclusion applies: (1) [w]hether any
    insured may be liable as an employer or in any other capacity.” We are not
    persuaded. As we have explained, the preliminary language of the exclusion in
    this policy—“[a]n employee of any insured”—read in conjunction with the
    separation of insureds provision, requires that the bodily injury claim be made by
    an employee of the insured employer who is claiming coverage. Only those
    insureds who are employers of the injured claimant are excluded from coverage.
    To read the subsequent language “in any other capacity” as including all insureds,
    even those who are not the employer of the claimant and hence, not precluded from
    coverage under the first part of this provision, would render not only the separation
    of insureds provision but also the first part of the exclusion meaningless.
    Moreover, the language “in any other capacity” is not superfluous even when
    limited to an insured who is an employer of the claimant, because this language
    can be read to exclude coverage for an insured employer who may be sued in a role
    other than employer, such as an owner of a vehicle, as a general contractor, or as a
    state actor.
    Evanston’s reliance on Mercury Ins. Co. of Fla. v. Charlie’s Tree Serv., Inc.,
    
    29 So. 3d 375
     (Fla. 4th DCA 2010), does not sway us. There was no dispute that
    12
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    the insured at issue in that case was the claimant’s employer, and thus the
    exclusion applied without reliance on the “in any other capacity” language. Aetna
    Comm. Ins. Co. v. Am. Sign Co., 
    687 So. 2d 834
    , 836 (Fla. 2d DCA 1996), likewise
    is inapplicable as it is silent as to whether the policy at issue contained a
    severability of interests clause and thus contains no analysis of what effect such a
    clause would have had on the interpretation of the exclusionary clause.
    We also reject Evanston’s alternative argument that coverage for Messrs.
    Leon, Ramos, and Ruiz is excluded under the co-employee provision contained in
    “Section II – Who Is An Insured” of the CGL policy. This provision provides that
    DBI’s “employees,” other than its executive officers, are insureds but that they are
    not covered for bodily injury to other co-employees. Evanston, however, has not
    shown at summary judgment that Mr. Zambrana was an “employee” of DBI for
    purposes of this section of the policy, which defines “employee” as follows:
    “‘Employee’” includes a ‘leased worker.’ ‘Employee’ does not include a
    ‘temporary worker.’” Although it is not disputed that Mr. Zambrana meets the
    definition of “employee” for purposes of the employer’s liability exclusion, that
    provision of the CGL policy replaces the meaning of “employee” from the
    Definitions Section with a separate and more expansive definition that is applicable
    only to the employer’s liability exclusion. Here, the record shows that Mr.
    Zambrana was employed as a driver for Royal Plumbing, and the district court
    13
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    found that he was an “employee” of DBI under the expansive definition of
    “employee” for purposes of the employer’s liability exclusion. There is nothing in
    the record to support Evanston’s argument that Mr. Zambrana was an “employee”
    of DBI as that term is defined for purposes of the co-employee exclusion contained
    in Section II – Who Is An Insured.
    III. Conclusion
    Based on precedent from Florida’s appellate courts, we conclude that the
    employer liability exclusion in Evanston’s CGL policy does not preclude coverage
    for Ms. Pena’s claims against Messrs. Leon, Ramos, and Ruiz, as none of these
    insured individuals were Mr. Zambrana’s employer.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED. 8
    8
    Ms. Pena’s pending motion to take judicial notice is hereby denied as moot.
    14