Auto-Owners Insurance Company v. Stevens & Ricci Inc , 835 F.3d 388 ( 2016 )


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  •                               PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    _____________
    No. 15-2080
    _____________
    AUTO-OWNERS INSURANCE COMPANY
    v.
    STEVENS & RICCI INC.;
    HYMED GROUP CORPORATION
    HYMED GROUP CORPORATION,
    Appellant
    _______________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. No. 5-12-cv-07228)
    Magistrate Judge: Hon. Henry S. Perkin
    _______________
    Argued
    January 20, 2016
    Before: JORDAN, HARDIMAN, and GREENAWAY, JR.,
    Circuit Judges.
    (Opinion Filed: September 1, 2016)
    _______________
    Jeffrey A. Berman
    David M. Oppenheim [ARGUED]
    Anderson & Wanca
    3701 Algonquin Road, Suite 500
    Rolling Meadows, IL 60008
    Phillip A. Bock
    Bock & Hatch, LLC
    134 N. LaSalle Street, Suite 1000
    Chicago, IL 60602
    Ann M. Caldwell
    Caldwell Law Office, LLC
    108 W. Willow Grove Avenue, Suite 300
    Philadelphia, PA 19118
    Counsel for Appellant
    Robert S. Stickley
    Langsam Stevens Silver & Hollaender, LLP
    1818 Market Street, Suite 3400
    Philadelphia, PA 19103
    Timothy P. Tobin [ARGUED]
    Gislason & Hunter LLP
    701 Xenia Ave. South
    Suite 500
    Minneapolis, MN 55416
    Counsel for Appellee
    _______________
    2
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    _______________
    JORDAN, Circuit Judge.
    In this insurance coverage dispute, Auto-Owners
    Insurance Company (“Auto-Owners”) seeks a declaration that
    it has no obligation to defend or indemnify its insured,
    Stevens & Ricci, Inc. (“Stevens & Ricci”), in connection with
    a $2,000,000 judgment entered against Stevens & Ricci as
    part of the settlement of a class action lawsuit. In that class
    action, the Hymed Group Corporation (“Hymed”) alleged, as
    representative of the class, that Stevens & Ricci had violated
    the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (“TCPA”), 47 U.S.C.
    § 227, by sending unsolicited fax advertisements. While that
    class action was pending, Auto-Owners filed this declaratory
    judgment action in the United States District Court for the
    Eastern District of Pennsylvania against both Stevens & Ricci
    and Hymed.1 Auto-Owners and Hymed filed cross-motions
    for summary judgment. In its motion, Auto-Owners argued
    that the terms of the insurance policy did not obligate it to
    indemnify or defend Stevens & Ricci in the class action;
    Hymed argued, to the contrary, that the policy required Auto-
    Owners to pay the judgment on behalf of its insured.2 The
    1
    By agreement of the parties, the declaratory judgment
    action was heard before a magistrate judge, who was thus
    empowered to enter final judgment. 28 U.S.C. § 636(c).
    2
    As more fully explained herein, Hymed, rather than
    Stevens & Ricci, ended up making these coverage arguments
    because Stevens & Ricci settled its stake in the coverage
    dispute in a manner that effectively made Hymed the party
    3
    District Court concluded that the sending of unsolicited fax
    advertisements in violation of the TCPA did not fall within
    the terms of the insurance policy, and thus granted Auto-
    Owners’s motion for summary judgment and denied Hymed’s
    cross-motion. Because we agree that the insurance policy
    does not cover the judgment in the underlying class action,
    we will affirm.
    I.    BACKGROUND
    This case began with the improper use of what now
    seems an old-fashioned method of communication: fax
    machines. Stevens & Ricci was solicited by an advertiser
    claiming to have a fax advertising program that complied
    with the TCPA. Relying on that representation, Stevens &
    Ricci allowed the advertiser to fax thousands of
    advertisements to potential customers on its behalf. The
    advertiser sent 18,879 unsolicited advertisements by fax in
    February 2006.
    Much later, on June 1, 2012, Hymed filed a class
    action lawsuit in the United States District Court for the
    Eastern District of Pennsylvania against Stevens & Ricci,
    claiming that the advertisements actually did violate the
    TCPA, see Hymed Grp. Corp. v. Stevens & Ricci, Inc., Civil
    Action No. 12-CV-3093 (the “Underlying Action”), which
    prohibits the “use [of] any telephone facsimile machine,
    computer, or other device to send, to a telephone facsimile
    machine, an unsolicited advertisement … .” 47 U.S.C.
    § 227(b)(1)(C). Hymed asserted that it and other class
    most interested in securing coverage. See infra at pp. 6-7, 9
    n.7.
    4
    members – numbering, per the complaint, “more than 39
    other recipients” (J.A. at 545) – had not invited or given
    permission to Stevens & Ricci to send the faxes. Hymed’s
    complaint further charged that the unsolicited faxes had
    damaged the recipients by causing them to waste paper and
    toner consumed in the printing process and to lose the use of
    their fax machines when the advertisements were being
    received. In Hymed’s words, the “junk faxes” had also
    interrupted the class members’ “privacy interest in being left
    alone.” (J.A. at 549-50.) For relief, Hymed sought actual or
    statutory damages, whichever was greater, and an injunction
    against future violations. Given the volume of faxes sent, a
    finding of liability to the class under the TCPA, with statutory
    damages of $500 per fax, 47 U.S.C. § 227(b)(3)(B), could
    have resulted in a damage award in the Underlying Action of
    $9,439,500, before trebling.3 Such a judgment could have
    bankrupted Stevens & Ricci and caused the dissolution of its
    business.
    During the time that Stevens & Ricci had the
    unsolicited faxes sent to Hymed and other class members, it
    was covered by a “Businessowners Insurance Policy” (the
    “Policy”) issued by Auto-Owners. (J.A. at 555.) The Policy
    obligates Auto-Owners to “pay those sums that the insured
    becomes legally obligated to pay as damages because of
    ‘bodily injury’, ‘property damage’, ‘personal injury’ or
    ‘advertising injury’ to which this insurance applies.” (J.A. at
    563.) The present dispute centers on whether the sending of
    unsolicited faxes inflicted two of those four types of injury on
    3
    The TCPA permits trebling of statutory damages if
    the defendant acted “willfully or knowingly” in violating the
    statute. 47 U.S.C. § 227(b)(3).
    5
    the members of the class: property damage and advertising
    injury.
    The term “property damage” is defined in the Policy as
    “[p]hysical injury to tangible property, including all resulting
    loss of use of that property.” (J.A. at 576.) For “property
    damage” to be covered under the Policy, it must be caused by
    an “occurrence” (J.A. at 563), which the Policy defines as an
    “accident, including continuous or repeated exposure to
    substantially the same general harmful conditions” (J.A. at
    575). Despite its use of the term, the Policy does not
    separately define an “accident,” though it does exclude from
    coverage any property damage “expected or intended from
    the standpoint of the insured.” (J.A. at 564-65.)
    The Policy defines “advertising injury” as injury
    arising out of one or more of the following events:
    a. Oral or written publication of material that
    slanders or libels a person or organization or
    disparages a person’s or organization’s goods,
    products or services;
    b. Oral or written publication of material that
    violates a person’s right of privacy;
    c. Misappropriation of advertising ideas or style
    of doing business; or
    d. Infringement of copyright, title or slogan.
    6
    (J.A. at 573.) To be covered, an “advertising injury” must
    also be inflicted “in the course of advertising [the insured’s]
    goods, products or services.” (J.A. at 563.)
    Auto-Owners agreed to defend Stevens & Ricci in the
    Underlying Action, but reserved its right to later challenge
    whether the alleged misconduct (i.e., the sending of
    unsolicited faxes) fell within the terms of the insurance
    policy’s coverage. In November 2013, Hymed, Stevens &
    Ricci, and Auto-Owners reached an agreement to
    compromise and settle the Underlying Action. Among other
    things, the parties agreed to entry of judgment in favor of the
    class, and against Stevens & Ricci, in the amount of
    $2,000,000. Hymed and the class also agreed to seek
    recovery to satisfy the judgment only from Auto-Owners
    under the Policy. On December 4, 2014, the District Court in
    the Underlying Action entered an order and final judgment
    approving the settlement and entering the judgment against
    Stevens & Ricci. In its order, the Court specifically found
    that Stevens & Ricci “did not willfully or knowingly violate
    the TCPA.” (J.A. at 24.)
    By that time, Auto-Owners had already filed this case
    to clarify its obligations under the Policy. In particular, on
    December 28, 2012, Auto-Owners filed the present
    declaratory judgment action, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2201,
    against Stevens & Ricci and Hymed, seeking a declaration
    that the Policy did not provide coverage for Hymed’s claims
    in the Underlying Action and that Auto-Owners thus did not
    owe Stevens & Ricci any duty to defend or indemnify.4 It
    4
    Hymed had previously filed a declaratory judgment
    action on the coverage question in the United States District
    7
    filed an amended complaint on January 3, 2013. Stevens &
    Ricci never entered an appearance or filed a response.5 Auto-
    Owners and Hymed each moved for summary judgment, and
    the District Court concluded that the sending of unsolicited
    faxes to Hymed and other class members did not cause the
    sort of injury that falls within the Policy’s definition of either
    “property damage” or “advertising injury.” Accordingly, the
    Court granted Auto-Owners’s motion for summary judgment
    Court for the Eastern District of Michigan. That case was
    dismissed for improper venue, because venue was proper in
    the United States District Court for the Eastern District of
    Pennsylvania, where the Underlying Action was then
    pending. See Hymed Grp. Corp. v. Auto Owners Ins. Co., No.
    12-12519, 
    2012 WL 6642645
    (E.D. Mich. Dec. 20, 2012).
    On the day that case was dismissed, Hymed filed another
    declaratory judgment action, this time in the Western District
    of Michigan. That case was then transferred to the Eastern
    District of Pennsylvania and consolidated with the instant
    case in April 2014 by agreement of the parties. The parties
    stipulated that Hymed’s declaratory judgment complaint
    would be treated as a counterclaim in the case filed by Auto-
    Owners.
    5
    It appears that, despite having been served, Stevens
    & Ricci never filed an answer to Auto-Owners’s amended
    complaint seeking a declaratory judgment. The District Court
    did not issue a default judgment against it, however, opting
    instead to dismiss Auto-Owners’s motion for a default
    judgment without prejudice to Auto-Owners’s opportunity to
    argue later, in its motion for summary judgment, that
    declaratory relief should be granted against all defendants,
    including the absent Stevens & Ricci.
    8
    and denied Hymed’s cross-motion.            Hymed promptly
    appealed.
    II.    DISCUSSION
    A.     Jurisdiction
    This is an action under the Declaratory Judgment Act,
    28 U.S.C. § 2201. That Act does not itself create an
    independent basis for federal jurisdiction but instead provides
    a remedy for controversies otherwise properly within the
    court’s subject matter jurisdiction. Skelly Oil Co. v. Phillips
    Petroleum Co., 
    339 U.S. 667
    , 671-72 (1950). In bringing its
    action, Auto-Owners invoked the District Court’s diversity
    jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332, which has two
    requirements for the establishment of jurisdiction. First, the
    parties must be completely diverse, meaning that “no plaintiff
    can be a citizen of the same state as any of the defendants.”
    Grand Union Supermarkets of the V.I., Inc. v. H.E. Lockhart
    Mgmt., Inc., 
    316 F.3d 408
    , 410 (3d Cir. 2003). For
    jurisdictional purposes, “a corporation is a citizen of both its
    state of incorporation and the state ‘where it has its principal
    place of business.’” Johnson v. SmithKline Beecham Corp.,
    
    724 F.3d 337
    , 347 (3d Cir. 2013) (quoting 28 U.S.C.
    § 1332(c)(1)). Here, there is no dispute that the parties are
    completely diverse: Auto-Owners is based and incorporated
    in Michigan, while Stevens & Ricci is based and incorporated
    in Arizona, and Hymed is based and incorporated in
    Pennsylvania.6
    6
    We need not address the citizenship of the various
    unnamed members of the class. For one, those unnamed
    individuals are not parties to this declaratory judgment action.
    9
    The second requirement for federal jurisdiction under
    the diversity statute is that the “matter in controversy exceeds
    the sum or value of $75,000 … .” 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a).
    Meeting that requirement here is not as straightforward as it
    may first appear. Although Auto-Owners and Hymed are
    ultimately fighting over the insurer’s need to pay a
    $2,000,000 judgment against its insured, that judgment is
    based on the settlement of an underlying class action lawsuit
    in which the individual claims of each class member fell well
    below the $75,000 amount-in-controversy threshold. In
    general, the distinct claims of separate plaintiffs cannot be
    aggregated when determining the amount in controversy.
    Werwinski v. Ford Motor Co., 
    286 F.3d 661
    , 666 (3d Cir.
    2002).     Given that anti-aggregation rule, we solicited
    supplemental briefing from the parties to address “whether
    and how the amount-in-controversy requirement for federal
    diversity jurisdiction is met in this case.” 7 Hymed now
    Even if this were the Underlying Action, “in a federal class
    action only the citizenship of the named class representatives
    must be diverse from that of the defendants.” In re Sch.
    Asbestos Litig., 
    921 F.2d 1310
    , 1317 (3d Cir. 1990).
    7
    We also solicited supplemental briefing on the
    question of whether Hymed has proper Article III standing, as
    required for jurisdiction, “to participate in an action seeking a
    declaration of rights under an insurance contract to which it is
    not a party.” On that issue, the parties agree – correctly – that
    Hymed does have standing. That standing is rooted in our
    previous recognition that, in a declaratory judgment action
    concerning the scope of an insurance policy, “the injured
    party has an independent right to present its case upon the
    ultimate issues, apart from that of the insured, because ‘in
    10
    argues that the District Court’s exercise of diversity
    jurisdiction ran afoul of the anti-aggregation rule, and the
    Court thus acted without jurisdiction in granting Auto-
    Owners’s motion for summary judgment.8
    As the party invoking diversity jurisdiction, Auto-
    Owners bears the burden to prove, by a preponderance of the
    evidence, that the amount in controversy exceeds $75,000.
    Judon v. Travelers Prop. Cas. Co. of Am., 
    773 F.3d 495
    , 506-
    07 (3d Cir. 2014). But that burden is not especially onerous.
    In reviewing the complaint, “the sum claimed by the plaintiff
    controls if the claim is apparently made in good faith. It must
    appear to a legal certainty that the claim is really for less than
    the jurisdictional amount to justify dismissal.” St. Paul
    many of the liability insurance cases, the most real dispute is
    between the injured third party and the insurance company,
    not between the injured and oftentimes impecunious
    insured.’” Am. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Murray, 
    658 F.3d 311
    , 319
    (3d Cir. 2011) (quoting Fed. Kemper Ins. Co. v. Rauscher,
    
    807 F.2d 345
    , 354 (3d Cir. 1986)).
    8
    It is perhaps not a coincidence that Hymed only
    discovered its concern about the District Court’s jurisdiction
    after losing in that Court. But, because the amount-in-
    controversy issue goes to jurisdiction, it is immaterial that it
    only arose on appeal. As we have previously held, “if it
    develops that the requisite amount in controversy was never
    present, even if that fact is not established until the case is on
    appeal, the judgment of the District Court cannot stand.”
    Meritcare Inc. v. St. Paul Mercury Ins. Co., 
    166 F.3d 214
    ,
    218 (3d Cir. 1999), abrogated on other grounds by Exxon
    Mobil Corp. v. Allapattah Servs., Inc., 
    545 U.S. 546
    (2005).
    11
    Mercury Indem. Co. v. Red Cab Co., 
    303 U.S. 283
    , 288-89
    (1938). “Accordingly, the question whether a plaintiff’s
    claims pass the ‘legal certainty’ standard is a threshold matter
    that should involve the court in only minimal scrutiny of the
    plaintiff’s claims.” Suber v. Chrysler Corp., 
    104 F.3d 578
    ,
    583 (3d Cir. 1997).
    In making that assessment, “[t]he temporal focus of the
    court’s evaluation … is on the time that the complaint was
    filed.” Id.; see also Kaufman v. Allstate N.J. Ins. Co., 
    561 F.3d 144
    , 152 (3d Cir. 2009) (“[U]nder a long-standing rule,
    federal diversity jurisdiction is generally determined based on
    the circumstances prevailing at the time the suit was filed.”).
    Subsequent events cannot reduce the amount in controversy
    so as to deprive the district court of jurisdiction, St. Paul
    Mercury 
    Indem., 303 U.S. at 293
    , nor can later events
    increase the amount in controversy and give rise to
    jurisdiction that did not properly exist at the time of the
    complaint’s filing. For our purposes, that means we assess
    whether Auto-Owners met the amount-in-controversy
    threshold by considering only the circumstances that existed
    in January 2013, when Auto-Owners filed its amended
    complaint in this case. Because that was long before the
    parties reached their $2,000,000 settlement of the Underlying
    Action, we must determine whether the amount in
    controversy exceeded $75,000 before the settlement made
    clear the value of Hymed’s underlying claims.
    In its amended complaint, Auto-Owners alleged that
    the amount in controversy exceeded $75,000. Typically,
    “[s]uch a general allegation when not traversed is sufficient,
    unless it is qualified by others which so detract from it that
    the court must dismiss sua sponte or on defendants’ motion.”
    12
    Gibbs v. Buck, 
    307 U.S. 66
    , 72 (1939). Auto-Owners based
    its allegation on averments in the then-pending Underlying
    Action,9 which claimed that Stevens & Ricci had violated the
    TCPA, that statutory damages were $500 per violation, and
    that “more than 39 other recipients” had received the faxes
    without their permission. (J.A. at 545.) Thus, at a minimum,
    Auto-Owners’s potential financial exposure when it filed its
    amended complaint was $20,000, i.e., $500 statutory damages
    for each of 40 fax recipients. But the complaint in the
    Underlying Action also noted that damages could be trebled,
    further increasing that minimum to $60,000. Again, that sum
    represents the minimum exposure, given trebling, and the
    complaint in the Underlying Action specifically noted that
    “more than 39” other individuals received the disputed faxes,
    with no limitation. (J.A. at 545 (emphasis added).) Using the
    statutory measure of damages and considering the potential
    for trebling, only eleven additional faxes would be necessary
    for damages to exceed $75,000.10 Importantly, the $60,000
    9
    In assessing whether the amended complaint
    sufficiently alleged jurisdiction, we may also consider
    “documents referenced therein and attached thereto.” Gould
    Elecs. Inc. v. United States, 
    220 F.3d 169
    , 176 (3d Cir. 2000).
    Here, that includes Hymed’s complaint in the Underlying
    Action, as the amended complaint in the instant case
    repeatedly relies upon Hymed’s own allegations.
    10
    As it turned out, thousands of unsolicited faxes had
    been sent to a like number of recipients, so that the actual
    amount of the purported damages at the time the complaint
    was filed was plainly adequate, even if not known at the time.
    See State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Powell, 
    87 F.3d 93
    , 97
    (3d Cir. 1996) (distinguishing between subsequent events that
    13
    minimum does not include the expense Auto-Owners would
    certainly incur in providing a legal defense against Hymed’s
    class action, as the Policy imposes on Auto-Owners a “duty to
    defend” its insured. (J.A. at 563.) That cost of defense in the
    Underlying Action, which can fairly be assumed to be well in
    excess of the $15,000 difference between $60,000 and the
    $75,000 jurisdictional threshold, is properly included in
    determining the amount in controversy here. See State Farm
    Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Powell, 
    87 F.3d 93
    , 98 (3d Cir. 1996)
    (“[W]here the underlying instrument or contract itself
    provides for their payment, costs and attorneys’ fees must be
    considered in determining the jurisdictional amount” (internal
    quotation marks omitted).).11
    change the amount in controversy and subsequent revelations
    that clarify whether the amount in controversy was in fact met
    at the time the action was filed, and permitting the latter to be
    considered for assessing the “factual reality” underlying
    jurisdiction).
    11
    Attorney’s fees do not generally constitute part of
    the amount in controversy because the successful party
    typically does not collect its attorney’s fees. As an exception
    to that rule, however, courts include attorney’s fees in the
    amount-in-controversy calculation when, as in this case, their
    payment is provided for by the terms of an underlying
    contract. See 14AA Charles Alan Wright et al., Federal
    Practice & Procedure § 3712 (4th ed. 2016) (“[T]he amount
    expended for attorney’s fees are a part of the matter in
    controversy for subject matter jurisdiction purposes when
    they are provided for by contract … , since these are part of
    the liability being enforced. … The same is true when the
    action is for indemnification for a prior judgment plus the
    14
    We have previously recognized that “the amount in
    controversy is not measured by the low end of an open-ended
    claim, but rather by a reasonable reading of the value of the
    rights being litigated.” Angus v. Shiley Inc., 
    989 F.2d 142
    ,
    146 (3d Cir. 1993). Here, in light of the costs that Auto-
    Owners would incur if required to defend the Underlying
    Action and the plausibility of there being a few additional fax
    recipients, we cannot say to a legal certainty that Auto-
    attorney’s fees incurred in defending the earlier action.”);
    Springstead v. Crawfordsville State Bank, 
    231 U.S. 541
    , 541-
    42 (1913) (“Could such an attorney’s fee be considered in
    determining whether the jurisdictional amount was involved?
    We think so. … [T]he moment suit was brought the liability
    to pay the fee became a ‘matter in controversy,’ and as such
    to be computed in making up the required jurisdictional
    amount … .”); see also Farmers Ins. Co. v. McClain, 
    603 F.2d 821
    , 823 (10th Cir. 1979) (holding that an insurer’s
    potential losses for amount-in-controversy purposes can
    include the cost of its defense of its insured in an underlying
    suit); Stonewall Ins. Co. v. Lopez, 
    544 F.2d 198
    , 199 (5th Cir.
    1976) (per curiam) (“The pecuniary value of the obligation to
    defend the separate lawsuit is properly considered in
    determining the existence of the jurisdictional amount … .”).
    Here, Auto-Owners seeks a declaration of its rights under an
    insurance policy that provides for both indemnification and
    defense. Thus, at the time Auto-Owners filed this declaratory
    judgment case, its possible losses were not limited only to the
    value of any potential judgment that might have arisen out of
    the Underlying Action. Those losses also included the costs it
    would incur if required to represent Stevens & Ricci in that
    case.
    15
    Owners’s declaratory judgment action was valued at or below
    $75,000 when it was filed. We likewise cannot conclude that
    the complaint’s allegation that the amount in controversy
    exceeded $75,000 was made in bad faith.
    Consistent with that conclusion, Hymed does not argue
    that Auto-Owners claimed more than $75,000 in bad faith.12
    Instead, it contends that, by adding up the potential damages
    owed to each of the various class members, Auto-Owners is
    improperly aggregating those claims to cross the
    jurisdictional threshold. Again, the “claims of several
    plaintiffs, if they are separate and distinct, cannot be
    aggregated for purposes of determining the amount in
    controversy.” 
    Werwinski, 286 F.3d at 666
    (internal quotation
    marks omitted).13 Although declaratory judgment actions do
    not directly involve the award of monetary damages, “it is
    well established that the amount in controversy [in such
    12
    It would be awkward for Hymed to even imply there
    was less than good faith, given that, in both of the declaratory
    judgment actions it filed in Michigan federal courts, see supra
    note 4, it had itself invoked federal diversity jurisdiction and
    alleged that the amount in controversy exceeded $75,000.
    13
    The Supreme Court has recognized one limitation on
    the anti-aggregation rule, which is inapplicable here. See
    Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Allapattah Servs., Inc., 
    545 U.S. 546
    (2005) (holding that the supplemental jurisdiction statute
    permits the exercise of diversity jurisdiction over additional
    plaintiffs who fail to satisfy the minimum amount-in-
    controversy requirement, as long as the other elements of
    diversity jurisdiction are present and at least one named
    plaintiff does satisfy the amount-in-controversy requirement).
    16
    actions] is measured by the value of the object of the
    litigation.” Hunt v. Wash. State Apple Advert. Comm’n, 
    432 U.S. 333
    , 347 (1977); see also 14AA Charles Alan Wright et
    al., Federal Practice & Procedure § 3708 (4th ed. 2016)
    (“With regard to actions seeking declaratory relief, the
    amount in controversy is the value of the right or the viability
    of the legal claim to be declared, such as a right to
    indemnification or a duty to defend.”).
    Hymed argues that the “object of the litigation” here is
    resolution of a dispute between the many members of the
    class and the insurer, and that Auto-Owners can thus only
    satisfy the amount-in-controversy requirement by improperly
    aggregating those various claims. To Hymed, “this action
    always has been a multi-party dispute between Auto-Owners
    and the multiplicity of class claimants.” (Hymed Jan. 8, 2016
    Letter Br. at 9.) Unsurprisingly, Auto-Owners disagrees,
    viewing the case as a unitary controversy between it and its
    insured. Taking that perspective, Auto-Owners argues that,
    “in coverage litigation commenced by an insurer, the focus is
    on the amount the insurer will owe to its insured or the value
    of its coverage obligation.” (Auto-Owners Jan. 4, 2016 Letter
    Br. at 1.) Given those two competing positions, we must
    decide whether this case is properly viewed as a dispute
    between Auto-Owners and the many class members – which
    would give rise to aggregation problems – or as a dispute
    between Auto-Owners and its insured concerning its overall
    obligation to defend and indemnify under the Policy.
    17
    Although we have never before spoken precedentially
    on this question,14 we find persuasive the opinion of the
    United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit in
    Meridian Security Insurance Company v. Sadowski, 
    441 F.3d 536
    (7th Cir. 2006) (Easterbrook, J.). There, much like here,
    an insurer sought a declaratory judgment against its insured to
    avoid any obligation to defend a class action alleging that the
    insured had sent unsolicited fax advertisements in violation of
    the TCPA. 
    Id. at 537.
    Also as here, the underlying class
    action was still pending at the time the declaratory judgment
    action was filed. 
    Id. at 538.
    In concluding that the district
    court indeed had diversity jurisdiction, the Seventh Circuit
    rejected the very argument that Hymed now advances.
    According to that court, “[the insurer] has not aggregated
    multiple parties’ claims. From its perspective there is only
    one claim – by its insured, for the sum of defense and
    indemnity costs.” 
    Id. at 539.
    The Seventh Circuit thus held
    that “the anti-aggregation rule does not apply … just because
    the unitary controversy between these parties reflects the sum
    of many smaller controversies. No more need be said on this
    subject.” 
    Id. 15 14
               We have previously concluded, in a pair of non-
    precedential opinions, that the district court does have
    jurisdiction under such circumstances, though we did not
    address the amount-in-controversy requirement in any detail.
    Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co. v. David Randall Assocs., Inc., 551
    F. App’x 638, 639 n.1 (3d Cir. 2014); St. Paul Fire & Marine
    Ins. Co. v. Brother Int’l Corp., 319 F. App’x 121, 124 (3d
    Cir. 2009).
    15
    Each case that Hymed cites to the contrary is readily
    distinguishable. It primarily relies on two cases – Siding &
    18
    Insulation Co. v. Acuity Mut. Ins. Co., 
    754 F.3d 367
    (6th Cir.
    2014), and Travelers Prop. Cas. v. Good, 
    689 F.3d 714
    (7th
    Cir. 2012). Although Siding also involved class claims
    against an insured based on the TCPA, the declaratory
    judgment action in that case was commenced by a class
    representative, not the insurer, and that action did not include
    the 
    insured. 754 F.3d at 368
    . The Sixth Circuit, looking at
    the case from the perspective of the plaintiff class
    representative, dismissed the case for lack of jurisdiction,
    holding that the only way the class members could meet their
    amount-in-controversy burden was by aggregating their
    claims. 
    Id. at 371-72.
    Here, Auto-Owners commenced the
    declaratory judgment action. Following the logic of Siding
    and taking the case from the perspective of the plaintiff –
    here, the insurer rather than the class – the amount in
    controversy is properly regarded as the entire sum Auto-
    Owners could owe under the Policy.
    At first glance, Good more closely resembles the
    present suit. The insurer in that case filed the declaratory
    judgment action against its insured, but did so only after the
    settlement of the underlying class action for $16 million.
    
    Good, 689 F.3d at 716-17
    . That settlement agreement
    assigned to the class members all of the insured’s claims
    against and rights to payment from the insurer. 
    Id. at 716.
    As
    a result, the indemnity rights that the insurer was litigating
    had been functionally parceled by the terms of the settlement,
    thus requiring the court to aggregate the insurer’s obligation
    to each member of the class to reach the jurisdictional
    minimum. The Seventh Circuit declined to do so. And
    because it had previously issued Sadowski, the court
    distinguished that prior case on the very grounds we also now
    rely upon:
    19
    The decisive difference between this case and
    [Sadowski] is that at the time the insurer filed
    the declaratory judgment action in that case, the
    insured’s arguable right to recover under its
    policy was still completely its own.           No
    assignment had been made. By the time [the
    insurer] filed this action, however, [the insured]
    had already assigned its claims to the members
    of the Good class, and no individual class
    member had a claim for more than $75,000. …
    Once [the insured] made the assignment of
    rights, this was no longer a “unitary
    controversy” between the insurer and its
    insured. It had become a multi-party dispute
    between [the insurer] and thousands of class
    claimants. [Sadowski] is inapposite.
    
    Id. at 718.
    Here, as in Sadowski, Stevens & Ricci’s right to
    recovery had not been divided among the class members at
    the time the declaratory judgment complaint was filed. The
    subsequent settlement in the Underlying Action did not
    revoke the jurisdiction that had been established.
    We recognize that this results in a situation in which
    an insurer can invoke federal jurisdiction in a declaratory
    judgment action while class members cannot. Echoing that
    notion, the Dissent says we are taking an “insurance-company
    viewpoint approach” to the amount-in-controversy question.
    (Dissent Op. at 10.) But our decision reflects no partiality.
    The fact that Auto-Owners can invoke federal jurisdiction
    simply follows from application of the amount-in-controversy
    requirement and its accompanying anti-aggregation rule. To
    Auto-Owners, the amount in controversy exceeds $75,000;
    we need not aggregate claims to cross that threshold. To each
    20
    We agree and now adopt Sadowski’s reasoning as our
    own. Viewing this case from the perspective of the insurer at
    the time of filing of the declaratory judgment complaint,
    Auto-Owners’s quarrel was with Stevens & Ricci regarding
    its indemnity obligation under the Policy. The only “amount
    in controversy” that the insurer was then concerned with was
    its total indemnity and defense obligation; it presumably had
    no interest in the way the indemnity sum might later be
    divided among the various class members. Its dispute was
    thus with its insured, not the class. And its overall liability
    (as established above) was not legally certain to fall below the
    jurisdictional minimum.
    member of the class, the amount in controversy falls short.
    Only one party may invoke our diversity jurisdiction because
    only that party has the requisite amount at stake. We note,
    however, that any concern about one-sidedness should be
    mitigated by the Class Action Fairness Act (“CAFA”), 28
    U.S.C. § 1332(d), which vests district courts with jurisdiction
    over class actions where the aggregate amount in controversy
    exceeds $5,000,000 and the parties are minimally diverse. As
    a consequence, class action plaintiffs may satisfy the amount-
    in-controversy requirement necessary for federal jurisdiction
    if their individual claims exceed $75,000 or if the total
    aggregate claims of the class exceed $5,000,000. Here, the
    aggregate statutory damages of the class, as subsequent
    revelations have made clear, see supra note 10, perhaps
    exceeded the CAFA threshold. In future cases, if class
    members cannot satisfy either amount, they are not then
    entirely without any opportunity for declaratory relief; they
    just need to proceed in state court.
    21
    Our dissenting colleague disagrees, and would dismiss
    this case for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. He first
    points out that “Hymed, not Stevens & Ricci, Inc., has been
    defending the suit from the beginning,” and “Stevens & Ricci
    has not so much as entered an appearance in the matter.”
    (Dissent Op. at 1-2.) But that is not something we may
    consider, because – as already noted – “federal diversity
    jurisdiction is generally determined based on the
    circumstances prevailing at the time the suit was filed.”
    
    Kaufman, 561 F.3d at 152
    .           Auto-Owners filed this
    declaratory judgment action against both Stevens & Ricci and
    Hymed at a time when the Underlying Action was still
    pending. The fact that only Hymed is now defending this
    case does not alter the circumstances that existed at the time it
    was filed.
    Next, the Dissent says there is tension between our
    standing jurisprudence, “in which we have stressed that
    parties like Hymed have a significant stake” in insurance
    coverage actions, and our amount-in-controversy conclusion
    that “parties like Hymed cannot assert federal jurisdiction in
    declaratory actions seeking similar relief.” (Dissent Op. at 2.)
    There is no such tension.            Standing and amount-in-
    controversy are two distinct inquiries. Hymed certainly had
    standing to participate in this insurance coverage action, see
    supra note 7, but that does not alter the $75,000 amount-in-
    controversy threshold that it must meet in order for the
    dispute to fall within our jurisdiction.
    The Dissent then cites In re Ford Motor Co./Citibank
    (South Dakota), N.A., 
    264 F.3d 952
    , 958 (9th Cir. 2001) for
    the proposition that we should look directly “to Hymed’s
    underlying suit to determine the amount in controversy.”
    22
    (Dissent Op. at 6.) But Ford involved multiple plaintiffs who
    each sought injunctive 
    relief. 264 F.3d at 955-56
    . In
    dismissing that case, the United States Court of Appeals for
    the Ninth Circuit took the same plaintiff-focused approach
    that we now take and held that the amount at stake “depend[s]
    upon the nature and value of the right asserted” by each
    plaintiff. 
    Id. at 959.
    Our approach here is thus entirely
    consistent with Ford.16 The Dissent nonetheless labors to
    create an aggregation problem. Indeed, its approach to
    determining the amount in controversy in declaratory
    judgment cases – to effectively ignore the declaratory
    judgment action altogether and look only at the Underlying
    Action – is unprecedented.17 We must look to the Underlying
    16
    Despite the Dissent’s charge to the contrary, our
    approach is also consistent with our opinion in Packard v.
    Provident National Bank, 
    994 F.2d 1039
    (3d Cir. 1993).
    Packard involved a claim by various class members against a
    bank, and the parties sought to avoid aggregation problems by
    arguing that the jurisdictional amount should be measured by
    the costs to the bank rather than the damages of each 
    plaintiff. 994 F.2d at 1050
    . We held that permitting that method of
    measurement would create aggregation problems. 
    Id. But that
    is not what happened here. In this case, Auto-Owners
    filed suit against its one insured and Hymed. Were the case
    reversed, Packard might prove relevant. As it stands, the
    plaintiff in the declaratory judgment action (Auto-Owners) is
    not aggregating claims to meet the amount-in-controversy
    requirement.
    17
    Our dissenting colleague takes issue with this
    characterization but cites no cases that have ever taken his
    view.
    23
    Action to discern the value of the right being litigated here,
    but we cannot, and do not, ignore party status when
    determining whether the plaintiff in the case before us is
    improperly aggregating claims to reach the jurisdictional
    threshold.    From Auto-Owners’s perspective, the basic
    dispute is one between it and its insured over the scope of
    overall insurance coverage. Principles of anti-aggregation
    thus remain intact.
    The Dissent goes on to change tack, arguing that “the
    total amount potentially owed by Auto-Owners [in the
    Underlying Action] also falls short of the $75,000 threshold.”
    (Dissent Op. at 6.) On that score, we simply disagree. It is
    difficult for us to say to a legal certainty that less than
    $75,000 is at stake in this case, where damages from the faxes
    alone were known to be at least $60,000, the complaint
    specifically said that more individuals received the faxes in
    question, and only eleven additional faxes would be necessary
    to cross the jurisdictional threshold. In apparent recognition
    of those facts, neither party has even raised this argument.
    And, of course, subsequent revelations show that, at the time
    of the complaint, over 18,000 faxes had actually been sent,
    placing a great deal more than $75,000 at issue. See 
    Powell, 87 F.3d at 97
    ; supra note 10. In any event, we are attuned to
    the admonition that “the amount in controversy is not
    measured by the low end of an open-ended claim, but rather
    by a reasonable reading of the value of the rights being
    litigated.” Angus v. Shiley Inc., 
    989 F.2d 142
    , 146 (3d Cir.
    1993). The Supreme Court has likewise instructed that we
    may only dismiss if it appears “to a legal certainty that the
    claim is really for less than the jurisdictional amount.” St.
    Paul Mercury Indem. 
    Co., 303 U.S. at 288-89
    . We do not
    share our dissenting colleague’s certainty.
    24
    Finally, the Dissent would not take into account
    potential attorney’s fees when determining the amount in
    controversy here, and faults us for an “unnecessary expansion
    of our jurisprudence” on the subject. (Dissent Op. at 8-9.)
    Even if we were to set attorney’s fees aside entirely, that
    would not change our conclusion that the amount in
    controversy exceeds $75,000, for the reasons just set forth.
    But we ought not discount those costs. As we have
    endeavored to explain, supra note 11, Auto-Owners is
    seeking a declaration of its rights and responsibilities with
    respect to a contract that requires it to pay its insured’s
    defense costs.       Our precedent on the subject is
    straightforward: “costs and attorneys’ fees should be
    considered part of the amount in controversy for jurisdictional
    purposes when they are mandated by underlying instruments
    or contracts.” 
    Powell, 87 F.3d at 98
    .18 Here, the underlying
    18
    Our dissenting colleague says we are “tak[ing]
    Powell out of context,” and uses a block quotation from that
    case to shed light on its reasoning. (Dissent Op. at 7.) One
    could read that block quote, as the Dissent does, as expressing
    some doubt about the rule of law discussed in the case. But
    that is not so. Powell recognized the common-sense notion
    that if the payment of attorney’s fees is provided for by an
    underlying contract, then those fees should be considered for
    amount-in-controversy 
    purposes. 87 F.3d at 98
    . The
    prevailing party will be awarded those fees, so they are quite
    clearly “in controversy.” In support of that proposition, the
    Powell Court cited the same two cases, Springstead and
    McClain, which we have also cited. See 
    Powell, 87 F.3d at 98
    ; supra note 11. Until today, there was no debate about
    that rule. Indeed, after collecting some thirty cases to that
    effect, a leading treatise describes the law on this question as
    25
    insurance contract mandates that Auto-Owners pay its
    insured’s defense costs, including fees. As the Dissent points
    out, Auto-Owners’s duty to defend Steven & Ricci “only
    applies to suits that fall within coverage.” (Dissent Op. at 7.)
    That is exactly right, which means that the obligation to pay
    attorney’s fees rises and falls with the outcome of this
    coverage dispute. That obligation is thus an inseparable part
    of the “amount in controversy” between Auto-Owners and
    Stevens & Ricci. To ignore those costs is to ignore the reality
    of what is at stake in this litigation.
    “now quite settled.” 14AA Charles Alan Wright et al.,
    Federal Practice & Procedure § 3712 (4th ed. 2016).
    The problem we identified in Powell was that a
    previous district court opinion on which a party to the case
    had relied – Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co. v. Rowles, 
    818 F. Supp. 852
    (E.D. Pa. 1993) – had used that correct rule of law and
    applied it in an improper context. In Rowles, the arbitration
    provision in the underlying contract provided that the costs of
    arbitration would be shared evenly by the parties. 
    Powell, 87 F.3d at 98
    . Thus, the amount was not “in controversy” at all;
    it would be borne equally regardless of the outcome of the
    arbitration or litigation. So, when Powell “question[ed] the
    reasoning of the district court’s decision in 
    Rowles,” 87 F.3d at 98
    , it did not call into doubt a settled rule of law. Instead,
    the Powell Court took issue with whether Rowles had
    correctly applied that rule of law to the case at hand – a case
    in which the underlying contract did not make the payment of
    fees depend upon the outcome of the litigation. Here, by
    contrast, the insurance coverage dispute also resolves the fee
    payment dispute; if the claim is covered, then Auto-Owners
    will pay the fees, and vice-versa. The present case thus fits
    easily into the settled rule the Powell Court discussed.
    26
    Accordingly, satisfaction of the amount-in-controversy
    requirement in this case does not violate the anti-aggregation
    rule, and the District Court had diversity jurisdiction under 28
    U.S.C. § 1332.
    B.     Standard of Review
    Both parties moved for summary judgment under Rule
    56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Summary
    judgment is proper when, viewing the evidence in the light
    most favorable to the nonmoving party and drawing all
    inferences in favor of that party, there is no genuine issue of
    material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a
    matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a); Appelmans v. City of
    Phila., 
    826 F.2d 214
    , 216 (3d Cir. 1987). “This standard does
    not change when the issue is presented in the context of cross-
    motions for summary judgment.” 
    Appelmans, 826 F.2d at 216
    . When both parties move for summary judgment, “[t]he
    court must rule on each party’s motion on an individual and
    separate basis, determining, for each side, whether a judgment
    may be entered in accordance with the Rule 56 standard.”
    10A Charles Alan Wright et al., Federal Practice &
    Procedure § 2720 (3d ed. 2016). On appeal, “[w]e exercise
    plenary review over an order resolving cross-motions for
    summary judgment,” Tristani ex rel. Karnes v. Richman, 
    652 F.3d 360
    , 366 (3d Cir. 2011), applying the same standard that
    the lower court was obligated to apply under Rule 56,
    Smathers v. Multi-Tool, Inc., 
    298 F.3d 191
    , 194 (3d Cir.
    2002).
    27
    C.     Analysis
    A federal court sitting in diversity must apply state
    substantive law. Chamberlain v. Giampapa, 
    210 F.3d 154
    ,
    158 (3d Cir. 2000). Here, the ultimate merits question is
    whether the sending of faxes in the described circumstances
    fell under the Policy’s definition of either “property damage”
    or “advertising injury,” as a matter of state law.19 But before
    reaching that question, we must determine which state’s law
    to apply. The parties disagree on that point. Auto-Owners
    urges Pennsylvania law, given Pennsylvania’s role as the
    forum state for both this declaratory judgment case and the
    Underlying Action. Hymed, on the other hand, says that
    Arizona law should apply.           It emphasizes the many
    connections between the Policy and that state: Stevens &
    Ricci is based and incorporated there; the underwriting file on
    19
    Hymed makes no argument concerning the scope of
    Auto-Owners’s duty to defend Stevens & Ricci, as distinct
    from its duty to indemnify. Hymed argues only that Auto-
    Owners must indemnify its insured per the Policy, and thus
    pay the $2,000,000 settlement. Subject to the terms of the
    insurance policy, an insurer’s duty to defend may be broader
    than its duty to indemnify. Kvaerner Metals Div. of Kvaerner
    U.S., Inc. v. Commercial Union Ins. Co., 
    908 A.2d 888
    , 896
    n.7 (Pa. 2006). But we need not consider the extent of Auto-
    Owners’s duty to defend its insured given the absence of any
    argument on this issue. Albrecht v. Horn, 
    485 F.3d 103
    , 113
    n.3 (3d Cir. 2007) (“An issue that is not discussed in the
    briefs is waived.”). We thus address only the scope of Auto-
    Owners’s duty to indemnify under the Policy – that is, its
    obligation to pay the $2,000,000 judgment.
    28
    the Policy indicates that the insurance quote was by an
    agency based in Tucson; the application for insurance was
    submitted to the Auto-Owners branch in Mesa and reviewed
    by an underwriter there; and the decision to insure Stevens &
    Ricci was made entirely within the Mesa branch. Essentially,
    Hymed argues that Arizona law should apply because that is
    where the insurance contract was formed.20
    Because the Policy itself did not contain a choice-of-
    law provision, to determine which state’s substantive law
    applies we “must apply the choice of law rules of the forum
    state.” Kruzits v. Okuma Mach. Tool, Inc., 
    40 F.3d 52
    , 55 (3d
    Cir. 1994) (citing Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co., 
    313 U.S. 487
    , 497 (1941)). As in all applications of state law, our
    task “is to predict how the [state] Supreme Court would rule
    if it were deciding this case.” Norfolk S. Ry. Co. v. Basell
    USA Inc., 
    512 F.3d 86
    , 91-92 (3d Cir. 2008). This action was
    filed in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, so we apply
    Pennsylvania choice-of-law rules. In contract cases, those
    rules are not entirely settled. Before 1964, Pennsylvania
    courts applied the law of the place where the contract was
    formed (“lex loci contractus”). That stood in contrast to the
    rule in tort cases, which required application of the law of the
    place where the injury occurred (“lex loci delicti”). In
    Griffith v. United Air Lines, Inc., the Pennsylvania Supreme
    Court abandoned the “lex loci delicti” rule for torts “in favor
    of a more flexible rule which permits analysis of the policies
    20
    Neither party has argued in favor of applying the law
    of Michigan, the state where Auto-Owners is based and
    where Hymed previously filed two declaratory judgment
    actions of its own, see supra note 4. We therefore do not
    consider Michigan in our choice-of-law analysis.
    29
    and interests underlying the particular issue before the court.”
    
    203 A.2d 796
    , 805 (Pa. 1964). The Griffith court did not
    address whether its new flexible approach to choice-of-law
    questions would also apply to contract claims, thus also
    displacing the “lex loci contractus” rule. Nor, in the years
    since, has the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania had occasion to
    answer that question.
    But we have, twice. Almost 40 years ago, we
    “predict[ed] that Pennsylvania w[ould] extend its Griffith
    methodology to contract actions.” Melville v. Am. Home
    Assurance Co., 
    584 F.2d 1306
    , 1312 (3d Cir. 1978). More
    recently, in Hammersmith v. TIG Insurance Co., we
    thoroughly analyzed subsequent precedent and again
    concluded that Pennsylvania would apply Griffith’s flexible
    approach to choice-of-law questions in contract cases. 
    480 F.3d 220
    , 226-29 (3d Cir. 2007).           In particular, we
    emphasized that, in Budtel Associates, LP v. Continental
    Casualty Company, the Pennsylvania Superior Court had
    concluded “[a]fter careful reflection” that the “spirit and
    weight of th[e] Commonwealth’s precedents mandate we
    follow the Griffith rule in the contract law context.” 
    Id. at 228
    (quoting Budtel Assocs., LP v. Cont’l Cas. Co., 
    915 A.2d 640
    , 644 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2006)). Although Hymed argues that
    the previous “lex loci contractus” rule should control – and
    thus we should apply Arizona law – it cites no intervening
    Pennsylvania authority that calls our prediction in
    Hammersmith into question. Accordingly, we will continue
    to follow our previous prediction and apply Griffith’s flexible
    choice-of-law analysis.
    Under the Griffith approach, “the first step in a choice
    of law analysis under Pennsylvania law is to determine
    30
    whether a conflict exists between the laws of the competing
    states.” Budtel 
    Assocs., 915 A.2d at 643
    . If there are no
    relevant differences between the laws of the two states, the
    court need not engage in further choice-of-law analysis, and
    may instead refer to the states’ laws interchangeably.
    
    Hammersmith, 480 F.3d at 229-30
    . To determine whether a
    conflict exists, we must decide whether Arizona and
    Pennsylvania law disagree on the proper scope of the
    coverage applicable here.
    Hymed cites “two significant conflicts” between
    Arizona and Pennsylvania substantive law. (Opening Br. at
    17.) First, it contends that a basic Pennsylvania principle of
    contract interpretation – that courts enforce unambiguous
    policy language – does not apply to the interpretation of
    insurance contracts under Arizona law. Instead, as Hymed’s
    argument goes, Arizona courts interpret insurance contracts
    by looking to the “reasonable expectations of the insured.”
    (Id. at 18 (internal quotation marks omitted).) According to
    Hymed, “in Arizona, even clear and unambiguous boilerplate
    language is ineffective if it contravenes the insured’s
    reasonable expectations.” (Id.)
    We reject that argument. To begin with, we do not
    agree that there is a conflict; both states, with limited
    exceptions not applicable here, give dispositive weight to
    clear and unambiguous insurance contract language.21 But,
    21
    Pennsylvania and Arizona generally apply clear and
    unambiguous language in an insurance contract. See Erie Ins.
    Exch. v. Conley, 
    29 A.3d 389
    , 392 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2011);
    D.M.A.F.B. Fed. Credit Union v. Emp’rs Mut. Liab. Ins. Co.
    of Wis., 
    396 P.2d 20
    , 23 (Ariz. 1964). Indeed, both states
    31
    recognize that the written policy itself manifests the intention
    of the parties. See Madison Constr. Co. v. Harleysville Mut.
    Ins. Co., 
    735 A.2d 100
    , 106 (Pa. 1999); Fireman’s Fund Ins.
    Co. v. New Zealand Ins. Co., 
    439 P.2d 1020
    , 1021 (Ariz.
    1968). As a narrow exception, Arizona does rely on the
    reasonable expectations of the parties to refuse enforcement
    of “even unambiguous boilerplate terms in standardized
    insurance contracts,” but only in a “limited variety of
    situations.” Gordinier v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 
    742 P.2d 277
    , 283 (Ariz. 1987) (emphasis in original). Those limited
    situations involve either unambiguous language that is not
    sufficiently understandable to a reasonably-intelligent
    consumer, unusual terms that emasculate apparent coverage,
    or situations where the insurer’s previous conduct created a
    mistaken impression of coverage despite clear language to the
    contrary. 
    Id. at 283-84.
    That exception, contrary to Hymed’s
    argument, is in line with Pennsylvania law, which also
    recognizes and protects the reasonable expectations of the
    insured “regardless of the ambiguity, or lack thereof, inherent
    in a given set of insurance documents” where policy terms
    may not be readily understandable, Collister v. Nationwide
    Life Ins. Co., 
    388 A.2d 1346
    , 1353 (Pa. 1978), or to protect
    the insured from deception or unilateral changes to policy
    terms by the insurer, Tonkovic v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins.
    Co., 
    521 A.2d 920
    , 925-26 (Pa. 1987).
    That narrow exception is irrelevant here, however, as
    Hymed makes no argument that this case falls into any of
    those categories. Instead, Hymed seems to suggest that
    Arizona’s law concerning insurance contract interpretation
    simply traces the expectations of the insured, and Arizona
    courts conclude that an insured has coverage if it reasonably
    thinks it has coverage. (See Reply Br. at 11 n.2 (arguing that,
    32
    even if a conflict existed on that broad interpretive principle,
    Hymed makes no effort to detail how or why the use of the
    “reasonable expectation” test would give rise to a relevant
    conflict in the substantive law applicable here. As best we
    can tell, Hymed is using the “reasonable expectation” test to
    empower it to conduct a fifty-state legal survey and to
    advocate that Arizona’s law must be whatever the prevailing
    legal theory is across the country since that prevailing law is –
    given its popularity – inherently “reasonable.” In Hymed’s
    words, “to suggest that its proffered policy interpretation is
    consistent with a reasonable insured’s expectations, Auto-
    Owners must demonstrate that the interpretation adopted
    explicitly or implicitly by courts nationwide is unreasonable.”
    (Opening Br. at 18.) That argument misperceives the nature
    of our inquiry. When sitting in diversity and conducting a
    choice-of-law analysis pursuant to Pennsylvania conflict
    principles, our job is only to evaluate any conflict between the
    laws of Arizona and Pennsylvania. In its first purported
    “conflict,” Hymed makes no argument that those two states’
    laws are different in any way that actually changes the
    meaning of either of the relevant terms of the Policy:
    “property damage” or “advertising injury.” Its argument is
    thus not only wrong on the law – the states’ laws do not
    conflict in how they interpret insurance contracts – but is also
    irrelevant because Hymed fails to connect the purported
    conflict to the law we must apply in this case.
    under Arizona law, “the reasonable expectation of the insured
    is controlling” (original emphasis)).) That would allow the
    exception to swallow the rule, would be oddly one-sided, and
    is not the law of Arizona.
    33
    Hymed’s second alleged conflict is more tenable and
    relates to differing interpretations of Arizona and
    Pennsylvania courts as to the meaning of “property damage.”
    The Policy requires that any covered “property damage” be
    caused by an “occurrence” (J.A. at 563), which is defined as
    an “accident” (J.A. at 575). The Policy does not define the
    term “accident,” though it does separately exclude from
    coverage any property damage “expected or intended from
    the standpoint of the insured.” (J.A. at 565.) Hymed
    contends that the two states define an “accident” differently.
    Specifically, it says that the two states’ laws are in conflict
    over whether an insurance policy that covers “accidents”
    would extend to the “unintended consequences of intentional
    acts,” in this instance, damage to a fax recipient from an
    intentionally-sent fax. (Opening Br. at 19.)
    Hymed argues that “a construction of Pennsylvania
    law” results in such damages being excluded from coverage.
    (Opening Br. at 19.) We agree. In Donegal Mutual
    Insurance Co. v. Baumhammers, the Supreme Court of
    Pennsylvania said that, when “accident” is undefined in an
    insurance policy, Pennsylvania courts should treat the term as
    “refer[ing] to an unexpected and undesirable event occurring
    unintentionally ….” 
    938 A.2d 286
    , 292 (Pa. 2007).
    [T]he key term in the definition of the
    “accident” is “unexpected” which implies a
    degree of fortuity. An injury therefore is not
    “accidental” if the injury was the natural and
    expected result of the insured’s actions. … See
    also Minnesota Fire and Cas. Co. v. Greenfield,
    
    855 A.2d 854
    , 870 (Pa. 2004) (“‘Accident’ has
    been defined in the context of insurance
    34
    contracts as an event or happening without
    human agency or, if happening through such
    agency, an event which, under circumstances, is
    unusual and not expected by the person to
    whom it happens.”)
    
    Id. (internal citations
    omitted). That definition comports with
    the basic purpose of insurance: “to cover only fortuitous
    losses.” United Servs. Auto. Ass’n v. Elitzky, 
    517 A.2d 982
    ,
    986 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1986).
    The intentional conduct of third parties may still be a
    covered “accident” under that definition. By way of example,
    Baumhammers involved a killing spree perpetrated by the son
    of the 
    insured. 938 A.2d at 288
    . The estates of several of the
    victims sued both the son and his parents, alleging, among
    other claims, negligence on the part of the parents “in failing
    to take possession of [his] gun and/or alert law enforcement
    authorities or mental health care providers about [their son’s]
    dangerous propensities.” 
    Id. at 291.
    The parents sought
    coverage under their insurance, which covered claims for
    bodily injury caused by an “accident.” 
    Id. at 288.
    The
    Supreme Court of Pennsylvania held that, with respect to the
    insured parents, the shootings qualified as an “accident”
    under the policy. 
    Id. at 293.
    “The extraordinary shooting
    spree embarked upon by [the son] resulting in injuries to [the
    victims] cannot be said to be the natural and expected result
    of [his parent’s] alleged acts of negligence.” 
    Id. The “injuries
    were caused by an event so unexpected, undesigned
    and fortuitous as to qualify as accidental within the terms of
    the policy.” 
    Id. 35 Here,
    in contrast, Hymed’s claimed injury is the use of
    ink, toner, and time that was caused by the receipt of junk
    faxes. Those injuries are the natural and expected result of
    the intentional sending of faxes, a far cry from Pennsylvania’s
    definition of an “accident.” Though it did not intend injury,
    Stevens & Ricci clearly intended for the third-party advertiser
    to send the fax advertisements to the members of the class.
    Barring a problem with the communication devices, the
    sending of faxes necessarily results in the receipt of faxes,
    and any sender of a fax knows that its recipient will need to
    consume paper and toner and will temporarily lose the use of
    its fax line. That does not happen by accident. While the
    Supreme Court of Pennsylvania has not addressed whether
    unintended damages from faxes sent in violation of the TCPA
    constitute an “accident,” we predict that the court would
    reject coverage under the “property damage” provision of the
    Policy.22
    In its effort to manufacture a conflict, Hymed next
    claims that Arizona law would cover its claim as an
    “accident.” Unfortunately for Hymed, Arizona law defines
    an “accident” much the same way as does Pennsylvania law:
    22
    In reaching that conclusion, we are guided and
    persuaded by the extensive analysis of the United States
    District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, which
    applied Pennsylvania law in the closely analogous case of
    Melrose Hotel Co. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co.,
    
    432 F. Supp. 2d 488
    (E.D. Pa. 2006) (rejecting coverage
    under “accident” provision of insurance policy when a third-
    party vendor sent unsolicited fax advertisements in violation
    of the TCPA), aff’d, 
    503 F.3d 339
    (3d Cir. 2007) (judgment
    order).
    36
    [A]n effect which was or should have been
    reasonably anticipated by an insured person to
    be the natural or probable result of his own
    voluntary acts is not accidental. Or to put it in
    the affirmative form, if the result is one which
    in the ordinary course of affairs would not be
    anticipated by a reasonable person to flow from
    his own acts, it is accidental. The test is, what
    effect should the insured, as a reasonable man,
    expect from his own actions under the
    circumstances.
    Cal. State Life Ins. Co. v. Fuqua, 
    10 P.2d 958
    , 960 (Ariz.
    1932); see Lennar Corp. v. Auto-Owners Ins. Co., 
    151 P.3d 538
    , 547 (Ariz. Ct. App. 2007) (“Whether an event is
    accidental is evaluated from the perspective of the insured. …
    [A]n accident is anything that happens or is the result of that
    which is unanticipated and takes place without the insured’s
    foresight or expectation or intention.” (citations and internal
    quotation marks omitted)). Following that definition, as a
    matter of Arizona law just as under Pennsylvania law, the use
    of ink, toner, and time can be regarded as the natural result of
    the intentional sending of faxes.23
    23
    Hymed primarily relies on two cases in its effort to
    demonstrate that the unintentional damage from the sending
    of the faxes is covered by the Policy as interpreted under
    Arizona law – Transamerica Insurance Group v. Meere, 
    694 P.2d 181
    (Ariz. 1984), and Phoenix Control Systems, Inc. v.
    Insurance Co. of North America, 
    796 P.2d 463
    (Ariz. 1990).
    The question in Transamerica was whether an insurance
    contract that excluded intentional injury would cover
    damages inflicted by an insured acting in self-defense. The
    37
    Supreme Court of Arizona held that, when an insured acts
    properly in self-defense, resulting injury will be covered
    because, although “[t]he law presumes he intended the result
    which was the natural consequence of his intentional act,”
    one acting in self-defense is “confronted with a risk over
    which he ha[s] little 
    control.” 694 P.2d at 188-89
    . The court
    thus relied partly on the underlying purpose of insurance:
    protecting “against risks that are outside [the insured’s]
    control.” 
    Id. at 185.
    It would be inconsistent with that
    purpose to exclude coverage for an insured who is simply
    “attempting to avoid a ‘calamity’ which has befallen him.”
    
    Id. at 186.
    But insurance is not meant to allow an insured to
    act wrongfully “with the security of knowing that his
    insurance company will ‘pay the piper’ for the damages.” 
    Id. Similarly, Phoenix
    Control involved a situation in
    which the insured acted under a claim of right or justification.
    There, the insured intended to use copyrighted material, but
    did so under a belief “that he had the ‘legal right’ to use the
    information because it was in the public 
    domain.” 796 P.2d at 468-69
    . That belief “was based on advice of counsel.” 
    Id. at 469.
    Following Transamerica, the Supreme Court of
    Arizona held that summary judgment in favor of the insurer
    was improper because the insured’s subjective intent in using
    the materials was a disputed fact. 
    Id. at 469-70.
    In reaching
    that holding, the court noted that, “[b]efore a court may
    inquire into the insured’s subjective intent, the facts must
    indicate that the insured was provoked, privileged, or justified
    in acting.” 
    Id. at 468.
    Contrary to Hymed’s argument,
    Transamerica and Phoenix Control do not require coverage
    for all insureds who merely assert that they did not intend the
    injury caused. Where no “affirmative claim of [a] privilege”
    exists, 
    Transamerica, 694 P.2d at 183
    , Arizona law demands
    38
    We conclude that there is no conflict between
    Pennsylvania and Arizona law on the question of whether the
    damage to the class members is covered under the Policy’s
    definition of “property damage.” Under either states’ law,
    there is no coverage because the alleged injury was not the
    result of an “accident.” It was, instead, the foreseeable result
    of the intentional sending of faxes to the class recipients.
    Finally, Hymed argues that coverage is available
    because the damage to class members from receipt of the junk
    faxes qualifies as “advertising injury” under the Policy.
    Because Hymed does not contend that the Arizona definition
    of “advertising injury” differs from that of Pennsylvania, we
    look to Pennsylvania law to answer that question.24 We again
    that an insured be held responsible for the foreseeable results
    of his or her actions. Insurance coverage does not insulate an
    insured who “claim[s] that he did not intend the precise injury
    – in character or magnitude – that in fact occurred.” 
    Id. at 189.
           24
    As previously discussed, Hymed relies on its
    misapprehension of Arizona law regarding the “reasonable
    expectations of the insured” exception as a way to survey the
    nationwide legal landscape and to argue that Arizona law has
    incorporated Hymed’s preferred definition of “advertising
    injury.” Although Hymed cites law from a number of
    jurisdictions to support its argument that “advertising injury”
    coverage exists here, it omits any citations from one notable
    jurisdiction: Arizona. Given the absence of any proper
    argument or even citation to Arizona law, we apply the law of
    Pennsylvania.
    39
    conclude, as did the District Court, that the claimed injury
    falls outside of the scope of the Policy’s coverage.
    The Policy defines “advertising injury” as, among
    other things: “Oral or written publication of material that
    violates a person’s right of privacy.” (J.A. at 573.)25
    Although the Policy does not define the term “privacy,”
    numerous state and federal courts have considered whether
    violations of the TCPA are covered by insurance policies that
    include similar or identical language to that at issue here. Of
    particular note is the decision of the Pennsylvania Superior
    Court in Telecommunications Network Design v. Brethren
    Mutual Insurance Co. (“Brethren”), which collects cases that
    organize the covered “right of privacy” into two broad
    categories: the privacy interest in secrecy and the privacy
    interest in seclusion. 
    5 A.3d 331
    , 335-36 (Pa. Super. Ct.
    2010).     Secrecy- based privacy rights protect private
    information, while seclusion-based privacy rights protect the
    right to be left alone. The TCPA protects only the latter
    category of privacy interest, by shielding people from
    unsolicited messages. The content of the messages (i.e.,
    whether they include private information) is immaterial under
    the TCPA. “Congress took aim at unsolicited advertisements,
    25
    The Policy also defines “advertising injury” as:
    “Oral or written publication of material that slanders or libels
    a person or organization or disparages a person’s or
    organization’s      goods,     products       or     services”;
    “Misappropriation of advertising ideas or style of doing
    business”; and “Infringement of copyright, title or slogan.”
    (J.A. at 573.) Hymed does not argue that its damages fall
    under any of those three definitions, so we do not address
    them, except in the comparative way noted hereafter.
    40
    not the content of those advertisements.” Melrose Hotel Co.
    v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 
    432 F. Supp. 2d 488
    , 502
    (E.D. Pa. 2006), aff’d, 
    503 F.3d 339
    (3d Cir. 2007) (judgment
    order). The sending of unsolicited faxes does not necessarily
    result in the dissemination of confidential information.
    Rather, “an unsolicited fax intrudes upon the right to be free
    from nuisance.” 
    Id. at 501.
    “Accordingly, the TCPA seeks to
    protect privacy interests in seclusion, not secrecy.” 
    Id. That purpose
    is consistent with the type of injury that Hymed
    alleged in its complaint, saying, “[t]he [Stevens & Ricci]
    faxes unlawfully interrupted the … class members’ privacy
    interests in being left alone.” (J.A. at 550.)
    The Policy does not cover that injury. Read in context,
    the Policy provides coverage only for violations of the
    privacy interest in secrecy, and thus does not cover violations
    of a right to seclusion. This is amply demonstrated by the
    other three offenses that the Policy includes within the
    definition of “advertising injury”: “Oral or written publication
    of material that slanders or libels a person or organization or
    disparages a person’s or organization’s goods, products or
    services”; “Misappropriation of advertising ideas or style of
    doing business”; and “Infringement of copyright, title or
    slogan.” (J.A. at 573.) All three of those offenses – slander,
    misappropriation, and infringement – “focus on harm arising
    from the content of an advertisement rather than harm arising
    from mere receipt of an advertisement.” Auto-Owners Ins.
    Co. v. Websolv Computing, Inc., 
    580 F.3d 543
    , 551 (7th Cir.
    2009) (interpreting an identical “advertising injury” provision
    to exclude coverage for the sending of unsolicited faxes).
    That content-dependent coverage clarifies the scope of the
    Policy’s “advertising injury” provision: it protects against
    injuries caused by the improper content of a published
    41
    advertisement.26 The Policy’s protection of the “right of
    privacy” is thus logically limited to a privacy interest the
    infringement of which depends upon the content of the
    advertisements: in other words, the privacy right to secrecy.
    None of the allegations in the Underlying Action relate
    in any way to the content of the faxed advertisements. The
    faxes caused the alleged damage because they were received
    without permission, not because of their content. At no point
    did Hymed allege that those unsolicited faxes included
    confidential or otherwise secret information about any of the
    class members. Because the Policy’s “advertising injury”
    deals only with the publication of private information, it
    strongly suggests that the injury alleged in the Underlying
    Action falls outside of the scope of that protection.
    And what the provision’s context suggests its plain
    text confirms. Again, as relevant here, the Policy defines
    “advertising injury” to include “[o]ral or written publication
    of material that violates a person’s right of privacy.” (J.A. at
    573 (emphasis added).) In that definition, the phrase “that
    violates a person’s right of privacy” modifies the term
    “material.” See Pa. Dep’t of Banking v. NCAS of Del., LLC,
    26
    See Riccio v. Am. Republic Ins. Co., 
    705 A.2d 422
    ,
    426 (Pa. 1997) (“[A]n insurance policy, like every other
    written contract, must be read in its entirety and the intent of
    the policy is gathered from consideration of the entire
    instrument.”); Northway Vill. No. 3, Inc. v. Northway Props.,
    Inc., 
    244 A.2d 47
    , 50 (Pa. 1968) (“[T]he meaning of words
    may be indicated or controlled by those words with which
    they are associated. Words are known by the company they
    keep.”).
    42
    
    948 A.2d 752
    , 760 (Pa. 2008) (“[T]he last antecedent rule …
    advises that a proviso usually is construed to apply only to the
    provision or clause immediately preceding it.”); Buntz v. Gen.
    Am. Life Ins. Co., 
    7 A.2d 93
    , 95 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1939)
    (applying rule of the last antecedent to the interpretation of an
    insurance contract).27 Thus, it must be the “material” itself,
    rather than its “publication,” that violates a person’s right of
    privacy. See ACS Sys., Inc. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins.
    Co., 
    53 Cal. Rptr. 3d 786
    , 796 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007)
    (construing analogous provision and concluding “that
    ‘material’ is not only the last antecedent of ‘that’ but is also
    its only antecedent”). That “would be the case only if the
    material contained confidential information and violated the
    victim’s right to secrecy.” State Farm Gen. Ins. Co. v. JT’s
    Frames, Inc., 
    104 Cal. Rptr. 3d 573
    , 586 (Cal. Ct. App. 2010)
    (using the rule of the last antecedent to construe identically-
    worded provision). The text of the relevant provision of the
    Policy, as well as its broader context, thus compels a content-
    dependent view of the privacy interest meant to be protected.
    Of course, our ultimate endeavor is to apply
    Pennsylvania law to determine the scope of the Policy’s
    “advertising injury” provision. Although the Supreme Court
    of Pennsylvania has not addressed that question, the Superior
    Court in Brethren interpreted verbatim contract language and
    reached the same conclusion as we do here, for largely the
    27
    We recognize that the rule of the last antecedent is
    “not an absolute and can assuredly be overcome by other
    indicia of meaning ... .” Barnhart v. Thomas, 
    540 U.S. 20
    , 26
    (2003). But here, those other indicia of meaning – the
    surrounding language already described – confirm the rule’s
    applicability rather than undermine it.
    43
    reasons we have addressed. 
    Brethren, 5 A.3d at 337
    . We
    regard decisions of an intermediate appellate court as
    “indic[ative] of how the state’s highest court might decide the
    issue.” McGowan v. Univ. of Scranton, 
    759 F.2d 287
    , 291
    (3d Cir. 1985) (internal quotation marks omitted). Such
    decisions can even constitute “presumptive evidence” of state
    law. Nat’l Sur. Corp. v. Midland Bank, 
    551 F.2d 21
    , 30 (3d
    Cir. 1977). We emphasize that this case raises the exact same
    question as did Brethren – the policy language is identical,
    the underlying TCPA violation is identical, and the claimed
    damages for that violation are identical.28 We thus defer to
    the intermediate appellate court’s decision as a well-reasoned
    interpretation of Pennsylvania state law.29
    28
    Brethren also represents a validation of the earlier
    prediction of state law made by the Eastern District of
    Pennsylvania in Melrose Hotel, “which applied Pennsylvania
    policy interpretation rules to an insurance policy containing a
    nearly identical clause to that in the instant matter and
    concluded that there was no duty to defend.” 
    Brethren, 5 A.3d at 336
    (citing Melrose Hotel, 
    432 F. Supp. 2d 488
    ).
    29
    Hymed argues that the Policy’s “advertising injury”
    definition “provides coverage for violations of all rights of
    privacy.” (Opening Br. at 26.) It does so by contrasting the
    Policy’s coverage for “publication of material that violates a
    person’s right of privacy” (J.A. at 573 (emphasis added)),
    with the “advertising injury” language in Melrose Hotel,
    which extended coverage to the act of “[m]aking known to
    any person or organization covered material that violates a
    person’s right to 
    privacy,” 432 F. Supp. 2d at 491
    (emphasis
    added). According to Hymed, the “making known to”
    formulation makes abundantly clear the content-dependent
    44
    III.   CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the judgment
    of the District Court.
    nature of the insurance coverage, whereas the “publishing”
    language of the Policy here requires coverage by virtue of the
    mere act of sending a fax, regardless of its content. Hymed
    finds support for this distinction primarily in a First Circuit
    decision applying Massachusetts law. See Cynosure, Inc. v.
    St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 
    645 F.3d 1
    , 3-4 (1st Cir.
    2011) (Souter, J., retired). That distinction is unpersuasive as
    a matter of Pennsylvania law, however, in light of the
    Commonwealth’s definition of “publication” with respect to
    claims of invasion of privacy, which requires dissemination to
    the public at large. OneBeacon Am. Ins. Co. v. Urban
    Outfitters, Inc., 
    21 F. Supp. 3d 426
    , 436-37 (E.D. Pa. 2014),
    aff’d, 625 F. App’x 177, 180 (3d Cir. 2015). And, given
    Brethren’s contrary conclusion interpreting Pennsylvania law,
    the First Circuit’s view of Massachusetts law provides scant
    support for Hymed’s argument. Were that not enough, we
    also note that the Seventh Circuit has twice concluded that the
    same “publication” language covers only invasions of the
    privacy interest in secrecy. Auto-Owners Ins. Co. v. Websolv
    Computing, Inc., 
    580 F.3d 543
    , 551 (7th Cir. 2009); Am.
    States Ins. Co. v. Capital Assocs. of Jackson Cty., Inc., 
    392 F.3d 939
    , 942-43 (7th Cir. 2004), declined to follow by Valley
    Forge Ins. Co. v. Swiderski Elecs., Inc., 
    860 N.E.2d 307
    , 323
    (Ill. 2006).
    45
    GREENAWAY, JR., Circuit Judge, dissenting,
    I would dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
    In deciding that the amount-in-controversy threshold is
    satisfied, the majority adopts the reasoning in Meridian
    Security Insurance Company v. Sadowski, 
    441 F.3d 536
    , 539
    (7th Cir. 2006), to conclude that the rule against aggregation
    does not apply to this declaratory judgment action because “at
    the time of filing of the declaratory judgment complaint,
    Auto-Owners’s quarrel was with Stevens & Ricci regarding
    its indemnity obligation under the Policy . . . [and] [i]ts
    dispute was thus with its insured, not the class.” Majority Op.
    at 21. I write separately because I am unconvinced that this
    approach is permissible in light of the anti-aggregation rule,
    and believe that, in reaching its conclusion, the majority
    obfuscates our jurisprudence in two important areas.
    First, the majority’s view that the instant controversy is
    “unitary” is questionable as a practical matter and creates
    tension with our previous decisions. Plaintiff-Appellee Auto-
    Owners Insurance Company named Appellant Hymed Group
    Corporation as a defendant in its declaratory action “in the
    hope of attaining a binding judgment against both the insured
    and the injured party,” American Automobile Insurance
    Company v. Murray, 
    658 F.3d 311
    , 319 (3d Cir. 2011);
    moreover, Hymed, not Stevens & Ricci, Inc., has been
    defending the suit from the beginning. In other words, we
    are not presented with a unitary controversy between Auto-
    Owners and Stevens & Ricci because, in reality, the presence
    of Hymed reflects the fact that a “controversy exist[s]
    between the insurance company and the injured [parties].” 
    Id. at 319.
           It is hard to conceive of what controversy actually
    exists between Auto-Owners and Stevens & Ricci given the
    fact that Stevens & Ricci has not so much as entered an
    appearance in the matter. As Auto-Owners itself states in its
    Brief: “Hymed and Auto-Owners are the parties currently
    engaged in the ‘real dispute’ that has reached this Court on
    appeal . . . and Hymed (and the class members) are the only
    ones that have a financial interest in the coverage issue . . . .”
    Appellee’s Supp. Br. at 12.
    The notion that insurance coverage disputes occur only
    between the insurance company and its insured fits uneasily
    with our Article III standing decisions in which we have
    stressed that parties like Hymed have a significant stake. See
    
    Murray, 658 F.3d at 319
    (explaining that an injured party has
    a “particularized interest” in an insurance coverage suit
    “because a determination of . . . coverage would dictate its
    ability to receive the full benefit of the . . . lawsuit”); see also
    Federal Kemper Ins. Co. v. Rauscher, 
    807 F.2d 345
    , 354 (3d
    Cir. 1986) (“Concluding that the injured party has an
    independent, and not a derivative right, to be heard, is not
    only jurisprudentially sound, but is also realistic[.]”).
    As the majority notes, the import of its decision is that
    parties like Hymed cannot assert federal jurisdiction in
    declaratory actions seeking similar relief. In my view, this
    retreats from our previous decisions emphasizing the
    particularized interest of the injured party. The majority
    observes that “[s]tanding and amount-in-controversy are two
    distinct inquiries.” Majority Op. at 22. It misses the point.
    My uneasiness with the majority’s characterization of
    coverage disputes arises from the practical anomaly of the
    real party in interest losing part of its stake in the suit.
    2
    Further, I believe that the majority’s approach is
    essentially a run around the anti-aggregation rule. We have
    prohibited measuring the amount-in-controversy by the
    defendant’s total cost on the basis that it violates anti-
    aggregation principles. In Packard v. Provident National
    Bank, 
    994 F.2d 1039
    , 1050 (3d Cir. 1993) we stressed that
    “allowing the amount in controversy to be measured by the
    defendant’s cost would eviscerate Snyder [v. Harris, 
    394 U.S. 332
    (1969)]’s holding that the claims of class members may
    not be aggregated in order to meet the jurisdictional
    threshold,” and thus declined to do so.
    The majority’s response to this reasoning is that it is
    not aggregating but rather assessing the amount-in-
    controversy as the total “value of the right being litigated”
    from the perspective of Auto-Owners. Majority Op. at 24.
    On this point, the majority invokes the plaintiff’s viewpoint
    rule, under which the test for determining the amount-in-
    controversy relies solely on the value of the benefit to the
    plaintiff. In other words, the majority believes that because
    the defendant in the underlying action is now the plaintiff, the
    reasoning in Packard does not apply.
    But the majority’s approach does not actually elude the
    aggregation of class members’ claims. This becomes clear if
    we consider courts’ treatment of the “either viewpoint”
    approach, under which the amount-in-controversy is based on
    the pecuniary result to either party that would be produced by
    the judgment. See 14AA Charles A. Wright et al., Federal
    Practice and Procedure § 3702.5 (4th ed. 2016).
    Courts addressing the either-viewpoint approach have
    declined to adopt the rule in suits involving class actions, for
    the simple fact that total cost is the same as aggregation. See
    3
    In re Ford Motor Co./Citibank (South Dakota), N.A., 
    264 F.3d 952
    , 958 (9th Cir. 2001). This is exactly what we
    explained in Packard: aggregation is not avoided by shifting
    perspective or semantics—whether one calls it “total cost” or
    “total detriment,” or “value of the right being litigated,” if one
    arrives at that total through aggregation of individual claims,
    it violates Snyder. Concluding otherwise, we explained,
    disturbs long-standing anti-aggregation principles.
    The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has made the same
    point. In Ford Motor 
    Co., 264 F.3d at 958
    , class-action
    plaintiffs seeking injunctive relief invoked the “either
    viewpoint” rule and argued that the amount-in-controversy
    should be viewed as the total detriment to the defendant. The
    court rejected this approach, because of the “inherent
    conflict” between the application of the approach and the
    anti-aggregation rule, explaining that “‘total detriment’ is
    basically the same thing as aggregation, and . . . where the
    equitable relief sought is but a means through which the
    individual claims may be satisfied, the ban on aggregation
    applies with equal force to the equitable as well as the
    monetary relief.” 
    Id. at 959.
    Here, the relief requested is different but the
    implications are the same. Auto-Owners asks us to view the
    amount-in-controversy as its total detriment on the
    presumption that this eludes application of the anti-
    aggregation rule. But the “inherent conflict” noted in Ford
    does not really disappear simply by assessing the amount-in-
    controversy from the plaintiff-insurance company’s
    viewpoint. This is because in a declaratory action, the court
    looks to the underlying suit to determine the amount in
    controversy. See e.g., Jumara v. State Farm Ins. Co., 
    55 F.3d 873
    , 877 (3d Cir. 1995) (“[T]he amount in controversy in a
    4
    petition to compel arbitration or appoint an arbitrator is
    determined by the underlying cause of action that would be
    arbitrated.”).1 That means, regardless of party status in the
    declaratory action, the plaintiff’s claim in the underlying suit
    still provides the basis from which we calculate the amount in
    controversy. Put differently: merely labeling the amount as
    the “total amount the insurance company will owe” does not
    sidestep the fact that, practically speaking, we are deriving
    that amount by aggregating the individual claims of the class
    members in the underlying suit.2
    The majority believes that its approach is “consistent”
    with Ford. Majority Op. at 23. I disagree. Ford
    straightforwardly explained that it would not consider the
    total detriment of the defendant in reaching the amount in
    controversy because “total detriment” and “aggregation” are
    one and the same. Here, the majority concludes that total
    detriment and aggregation are not the same simply because
    1
    The majority calls this approach unprecedented. But
    we have clearly suggested as much in Jumara. Further, the
    proposition that we look to the underlying suit to determine
    the amount in controversy is apparent as a matter of common
    sense.
    2
    This is so even if we adopt the fiction that because
    declaratory relief is sought, the controversy becomes unitary,
    only involving the insurer and its insured. Even viewing this
    suit in this way, we do not derive the amount of controversy
    out of thin air—rather, we must look to the value of damages
    sought in the underlying suit.
    5
    the insurance company is the plaintiff in the declaratory
    action. Rather than being consistent with Ford, the majority
    skirts the relevant point of Ford through a narrow focus on
    party status.
    Thus to calculate the amount-in-controversy, I would
    do what our precedents suggest: look to Hymed’s underlying
    suit to determine the amount in controversy. In doing so, it is
    clear to a legal certainty that the amount-in-controversy is not
    met. No single class member’s claim would exceed, or even
    come close to, the $75,000 threshold.
    To be sure, the total amount potentially owed by Auto-
    Owners also falls short of the $75,000 threshold. The
    majority attempts to overcome this problem by tacking onto
    the amount the cost of hypothetical attorneys’ fees. I also
    depart from this approach. Generally, attorneys’ fees are not
    considered a part of the amount-in-controversy. 28 U.S.C. §
    1332(a); see also 14AA Charles A. Wright et al., Federal
    Practice and Procedure § 3712 (4th ed. 2016). We have
    referenced a narrow exception to this rule when “the contracts
    at issue called for the payment of attorneys’ fees and costs by
    the party breaching the contract.” State Farm Mut. Auto Ins.
    Co. v. Powell, 
    87 F.3d 93
    , 98 (3d Cir. 1996). The policy
    between Auto-Owners and Stevens & Ricci (the “Policy”) is
    not an instrument of this sort.
    The majority relies on Powell in concluding that
    attorneys’ fees are duly included here, but that case provides
    only apparent support. In Powell, we declined to include
    arbitration costs in the amount-in-controversy because the
    policy at issue did “not specifically impose a duty to pay on
    the part of the [insurance company].” 
    Id. Similarly, the
    Policy contains no provision specifically imposing on Auto-
    6
    Owners a duty to pay attorneys’ fees and costs. While the
    majority points out that the Policy imposes on Auto-Owners a
    general “duty to defend,” this duty only applies to suits that
    fall within coverage. Thus, it is not an unconditional
    requirement from which we could comfortably speculate as to
    costs that may be incurred.
    The way the majority presents it, it might appear that
    Powell straightforwardly adopts the position it embraces. Not
    so. The full text of the language cited by the majority is as
    follows:
    As an initial matter, we question the reasoning
    of the district court’s decision in [Nationwide
    Mutual Insurance Company v. Rowles by
    Rowles, 
    818 F. Supp. 852
    (1993)]. In arriving
    at its conclusion, the Rowles court relied upon
    two cases, [Springstead v. Crawfordsville State
    Bank, 
    231 U.S. 541
    (1913)] and [Farmers
    Insurance Company v. McClain, 
    603 F.3d 821
          (10th Cir. 1979)] which held that costs and
    attorneys’ fees should be considered part of the
    amount in controversy for jurisdictional
    purposes when they are mandated by underlying
    instruments or contracts. In those two cases,
    however, the contracts at issue called for the
    payment of attorneys’ fees and costs by the
    party breaching the contract.
    
    Id. at 98.
    What should be readily apparent is that the majority
    takes Powell out of context. There, we did not hold that
    “costs and attorneys’ fees should be considered part of the
    amount in controversy for jurisdiction purposes when they are
    mandated by underlying instruments or contracts;” we merely
    7
    cited a district court case that made a conclusion to that
    effect. The upshot of Powell’s holding is more limited—it is,
    where an underlying instrument does not “specifically impose
    a duty to pay” fees and costs, such costs are not duly included
    in the amount in controversy. 
    Id. To be
    clear, I would agree that where a contract
    requires a breaching party to pay attorneys’ fees, those may
    be considered part of the amount in controversy—after all, in
    those contexts, “the costs [are] essentially additional damages
    to be assessed against the party found to have breached the
    instrument.” 
    Id. This narrow
    exception to the general
    prohibition does not apply here. Whatever fees and costs
    flowed from Auto-Owners’s duty to defend in its subsequent
    defense of Stevens & Ricci are entirely forward-looking—and
    as the majority opines, “federal diversity jurisdiction is
    generally determined based on the circumstances prevailing at
    the time the suit was filed.” Majority Op. at 22 (citing
    Kaufman v. Allstate N.J. Ins. Co., 
    561 F.3d 144
    , 152 (3d Cir.
    2009).      And these costs are not “essentially additional
    damages” Auto-Owners owes to Stevens & Ricci or vice
    versa, especially not as it relates to the declaratory judgment
    action. It would be a different scenario if Stevens & Ricci
    sued Auto-Owners for breach of the Policy’s duty to defend.
    But that is not the situation we are presented with here.
    In sum, the inclusion of attorneys’ fees here is an
    unnecessary expansion of our jurisprudence for which the
    majority articulates no basis.3 The majority believes that
    3
    The majority cites an influential treatise for the
    proposition that the law in this area is “quite settled.”
    Majority Op. at 25–26 n.18. However, one treatise does not
    law make. And, a closer look at the cases collected in that
    8
    those fees are an “inseparable” part of the controversy and to
    ignore them is to “ignore the reality of what is at stake in this
    litigation.” Majority Op. at 26. But in my view, by including
    these fees, the majority ignores the express language of 28
    U.S.C. § 1332(a) in the absence of any support from our
    Court.
    “It is axiomatic that federal courts are courts of limited
    jurisdiction, and as such are under a continuing duty to satisfy
    themselves of their jurisdiction before proceeding to the
    merits of any case.” 
    Packard, 994 F.2d at 1049
    (citations
    omitted). Here, I am afraid the majority has “ben[t] over
    treatise demonstrates that what is “quite settled” is that where
    an underlying contract contains a fee-shifting provision,
    attorneys’ fees may be included in the amount-in-controversy,
    a point I do not dispute. See 14AA Charles Alan Wright et
    al., Federal Practice & Procedure § 3712 (4th ed. 2016).
    What is less settled, and has received less circuit attention, is
    the context we are presented with here—with only one circuit
    sharing the majority’s view and other circuits employing a
    similar approach only where the relevant defense or
    indemnification occurs before the declaratory suit is brought.
    See Stonewall Ins. Co. v. Lopez, 
    544 F.2d 198
    , 199 (5th Cir.
    1976) (per curiam) (cost of insurer’s prospective defense of
    insured provides basis for including attorneys’ fees); S. Ariz.
    York Refrigeration Co. v. Bush Mfg. Co., 
    331 F.2d 1
    , 18 (9th
    Cir. 1964) (attorneys’ fees included when defense has already
    occurred and indemnitor refused to defend); Farmers Ins. Co.
    v. McClain, 
    603 F.2d 821
    , 823 & 823 n.3 (10th Cir. 1979)
    (attorneys’ fees included when defense has already occurred).
    Far from settled then, the circuit law addressing this particular
    question is limited and inconclusive.
    9
    backwards . . . to persuade itself that subject matter
    jurisdiction exists.” Travelers Prop. Cas. v. Good, 
    689 F.3d 714
    , 718 (7th Cir. 2012).
    Thus, because of the difficult fit between the
    majority’s reasoning and our Article III standing
    jurisprudence in similar contexts, the tension between the
    insurance-company viewpoint approach and the anti-
    aggregation rule, and my reservations regarding the inclusion
    of the attorneys’ fees to reach the amount-in-controversy, I
    am not satisfied of our jurisdiction over this dispute. I would
    dismiss the appeal on that ground and therefore respectfully
    dissent.
    10
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 15-2080

Citation Numbers: 835 F.3d 388

Filed Date: 9/1/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

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