EMCOR Group, Inc. v. Great American Insurance Company ( 2016 )


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  •                              UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 14-1682
    EMCOR GROUP, INC.; THE        POOLE     AND KENT CORPORATION;
    FORTI/POOLE  AND  KENT        LLC;      MONUMENTAL INVESTMENT
    CORPORATION,
    Plaintiffs - Appellants,
    v.
    GREAT AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Defendant - Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of
    Maryland, at Baltimore.     J. Frederick Motz, Senior District
    Judge. (1:12-cv-00142-JFM)
    Argued:   December 9, 2015                 Decided:   January 26, 2016
    Before WILKINSON, KEENAN, and HARRIS, Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed by unpublished per curiam opinion.
    ARGUED: Bernard London, LONDON FISCHER LLP, New York, New York,
    for Appellants.   Michael A. Graziano, ECKERT SEAMANS CHERIN &
    MELLOTT LLC, Washington, D.C., for Appellee.    ON BRIEF: James
    Walsh, James T.H. Deaver, LONDON FISCHER LLP, New York, New
    York, for Appellants. F. Joseph Nealon, ECKERT SEAMANS CHERIN &
    MELLOTT LLC, Washington, D.C., for Appellee.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
    PER CURIAM:
    EMCOR       Group,        Inc.      and        three      of     its     subsidiaries
    (collectively,        EMCOR)      brought        this       action   against        the   Great
    American      Insurance         Company       (Great        American),    which      provided
    EMCOR with three successive commercial crime insurance policies
    between     December       1,    2002     and    December       1,     2005.        The   three
    policies    each    provided        coverage          for    certain     losses      sustained
    because of employees’ fraudulent acts.                         EMCOR contends that the
    policy in effect from December 1, 2004 to December 1, 2005 (the
    2004 policy), obligated Great American to provide coverage for
    EMCOR employees’ fraudulent acts that occurred between December
    1, 1999 and December 1, 2003.                   The district court concluded that
    the   unambiguous      language         of     the    2004     policy    obligated        Great
    American only to provide coverage for losses sustained after
    December 1, 2003.               Because we agree that the language of the
    2004 policy is unambiguous, we affirm.
    I.
    The   facts     at    issue       are     not    disputed.         At    all    relevant
    times,    EMCOR    maintained          successive       commercial        crime      insurance
    policies,     which    provided         coverage        for    losses     sustained       as    a
    result of “employee dishonesty.”                       From December 1, 1999 until
    December    1,    2002,     those       policies        were    provided       to    EMCOR     by
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    Factory Mutual Insurance Company, which is not affiliated with
    Great American.
    As noted above, from December 1, 2002 until December 1,
    2005, Great American provided EMCOR with three successive crime
    insurance     policies.            At    the   time       one      Great    American     policy
    became effective, the immediately prior policy was terminated.
    At issue in the present appeal is the scope of coverage afforded
    under the 2004 policy.
    The    2004        policy     provided          that     the    applicable       “policy
    period” began on December 1, 2004, and ended on December 1,
    2005.     The policy also stated that, by accepting the terms of
    the    2004   policy,        EMCOR      agreed     that       the     “prior   [p]olicy”       in
    effect    from      December       1,   2003      to    December       1,   2004   (the    2003
    policy),      was     cancelled.            The        2004     policy      obligated     Great
    American to pay for the “loss of, and damage to,” any money,
    securities,         and     property      resulting           directly      from     “employee
    dishonesty.”         That coverage provision was limited by Condition
    14, which stated that Great American would pay “only for loss
    that     [EMCOR]      sustain[s]         through         acts       committed      or    events
    occurring     during        the    Policy      Period”        of    December    1,      2004   to
    December 1, 2005.
    Condition 14, however, was “subject to” Condition 10, which
    extended coverage as follows:
    10.    Loss Sustained During Prior Insurance
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    a.   If you, or any predecessor in interest, sustained
    loss during the period of any prior insurance that you
    . . . could have recovered under that insurance except
    that the time within which to discover loss had
    expired, we will pay for it under this insurance,
    provided:
    (1)     this insurance became effective at the time
    of   cancellation  or   termination  of  the  prior
    insurance; and
    (2)     this loss would have been covered by this
    insurance had it been in effect when the acts or
    events causing the loss were committed or occurred.
    (Emphasis added.)
    In 2005, EMCOR notified Great American of losses of more
    than $10 million resulting from fraudulent acts committed by
    EMCOR employees between December 1, 1999 and December 1, 2003. 1
    EMCOR submitted a claim under the 2004 policy for its losses.
    Great American refused to pay the claim on the ground that the
    claimed losses occurred outside the scope of coverage provided
    by   the   2004   policy.     EMCOR   filed   suit,   alleging    that   Great
    American     breached   its   coverage    obligations     under    the    2004
    policy.
    Both parties filed partial motions for summary judgment,
    asking the district court to determine the extent of the 2004
    1 EMCOR originally sought coverage for fraudulent acts
    committed up to December 1, 2005.   In a separate decision, the
    district court determined that EMCOR lacked an evidentiary basis
    for its claim that it suffered “loss” between December 1, 2003
    and December 1, 2005, and granted partial summary judgment in
    favor of Great American. EMCOR does not appeal that decision.
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    policy coverage.            Great American maintained that it only was
    required to cover losses arising from acts that occurred during
    the 2004 policy period or the 2003 policy period, to include
    only    fraudulent     acts    that    occurred      after    December     1,    2003.
    EMCOR argued that Great American was obliged to cover losses
    occurring as early as 1999, when Factory Mutual provided EMCOR
    with commercial crime insurance.                 The parties’ arguments were
    based   on    their    differing      interpretations        of    the   terms   “this
    insurance” and “any prior insurance” set forth in Condition 10.
    In determining the meaning of those terms, the district
    court relied on the language used throughout the entire 2004
    policy.      In particular, although Condition 10 initially provided
    that Great American would pay for loss sustained during “any
    prior insurance,” that obligation immediately was limited by the
    proviso      that   payment    would    be    made   only    if    “this   insurance
    became effective at the time of cancellation or termination of
    the prior insurance.”          (Emphasis added.)          Furthermore, under the
    heading “Cancellation of Prior Insurance” in the declarations
    page, the 2004 policy provided: “By acceptance of this Coverage
    Part, you give us notice cancelling prior Policy or Bond Nos.
    CRP    524-49-86-01     [the    2003    policy],      the    cancellation        to   be
    effective at the time [the 2004 policy] becomes effective.”
    Reading      those    provisions       together,      the    district     court
    concluded that the plain language of the 2004 policy identified
    5
    the 2003 policy as the “prior insurance” referenced in Condition
    10.   Accordingly, the district court held that the language in
    Condition        10   requiring     Great         American        to   pay     for     losses
    sustained     under     “any     prior   insurance”          unambiguously           referred
    only to the losses EMCOR may have sustained during the 2003
    policy period, from December 1, 2003 to December 1, 2004.                                  The
    district    court      therefore    granted         partial       summary      judgment     in
    favor of Great American.           This appeal followed.
    II.
    On    appeal,      EMCOR     argues         that     the     phrase      “any     prior
    insurance” in Condition 10 unambiguously refers to all prior
    commercial crime insurance policies that EMCOR retained, even
    those provided by Factory Mutual.                    EMCOR submits that the only
    limitation       on   Great    American’s         coverage       for   losses      sustained
    because     of    “employee      dishonesty”         was     that      EMCOR      maintained
    continuous       commercial      crime    insurance         coverage,        so    that    one
    policy     period     began    immediately         upon     the    termination        of   the
    previous     policy     period.          In       EMCOR’s    view,      Great        American
    therefore is obligated to provide coverage for all of EMCOR’s
    losses from acts that occurred as early as 1999, because EMCOR
    retained continuous commercial crime insurance from 1999 through
    the 2004 policy period.
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    EMCOR argues alternatively that the meaning of “any prior
    insurance” is ambiguous and therefore this Court should review
    extrinsic    evidence     and   resolve    the   ambiguity       against    Great
    American    as   the   contract   drafter.       We   disagree    with     EMCOR’s
    arguments.
    We review a district court’s grant of a motion for summary
    judgment de novo.       Millenium Inorganic Chem. Ltd. v. Nat’l Fire
    Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, Pa., 
    744 F.3d 279
    , 285 (4th Cir. 2014).
    In   interpreting       insurance     contracts,      we   apply     the     same
    principles applicable to any other contract.               Mitchell v. AARP
    Life Ins. Program, N.Y. Life Ins. Co., 
    779 A.2d 1061
    , 1069 (Md.
    2001). 2    As with any other contract, we begin with the policy’s
    plain language.        MAMSI Life & Health Ins. Co. v. Callaway, 
    825 A.2d 995
    , 1005 (Md. 2003).          Courts “analyze the plain language .
    . . according to the words and phrases in their ordinary and
    accepted meanings as defined by what a reasonably prudent lay
    person would understand them to mean.”                Kendall v. Nationwide
    Ins. Co., 
    702 A.2d 767
    , 771 (Md. 1997).
    2 EMCOR argues for the first time on appeal that Connecticut
    law, rather than the Maryland law applied by the district court,
    applies to our interpretation of the 2004 policy.     We will not
    consider this newly introduced argument.      See Muth v. United
    States, 
    1 F.3d 246
    , 250 (4th Cir. 1993) (“As this court has
    repeatedly held, issues raised for the first time on appeal
    generally will not be considered.”).      Moreover, our decision
    would be the same under either Maryland or Connecticut law.
    7
    When the language of an insurance contract is unambiguous,
    a court must enforce its terms.               Megonnell v. United Serv. Auto.
    Ass’n,    
    796 A.2d 758
    ,    772    (Md.     2002).      “A    contract       is   not
    ambiguous merely because the parties do not agree as to its
    meaning.”       Floyd v. Mayor & City Council of Balt., 
    946 A.2d 15
    ,
    48 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 2008).             Rather, an insurance policy term
    only is “ambiguous if, to a reasonably prudent person, the term
    is susceptible to more than one meaning.”                     Cole v. State Farm
    Mut. Ins. Co., 
    753 A.2d 533
    , 537 (Md. 2000).
    We agree with the district court that the language at issue
    in the 2004 policy is unambiguous.               Condition 10 obligated Great
    American to provide coverage for losses based on acts occurring
    during “any prior insurance” period, but only if “this insurance
    became effective at the time of cancellation or termination of
    the     prior   insurance.”           Nothing    in    that      limiting    language
    suggests that “prior insurance” means any and all commercial
    crime    insurance      EMCOR   held     for     all     time,    regardless      which
    insurer provided coverage or when such coverage was provided.
    Nor can the limiting clause in Condition 10 be read to suggest
    that    “this    insurance”     refers     collectively          to   all   of    Great
    American’s insurance policies, as opposed solely to the 2004
    policy.     The declarations page of the 2004 policy makes clear
    that the 2003 policy was the only “prior insurance” cancelled at
    the time that the 2004 insurance became effective.                     Accordingly,
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    the   language    of    Condition     10     regarding      “prior   insurance”
    unambiguously refers only to the 2003 policy, while the term
    “this insurance” refers only to the 2004 policy.
    Our conclusion is not altered by the general dictionary
    definitions advanced by EMCOR of the term “insurance” as the
    “state of being insured,” such that the use of “this insurance”
    in Condition 10 would include all commercial crime insurance
    policies EMCOR has had.         Within the four corners of the 2004
    policy, the phrase “this insurance” unambiguously refers only to
    the 2004 policy.        We will not read into the contract EMCOR’s
    tortured     interpretation      of        the    2004      policy     language.
    Additionally, because we conclude that the language of the 2004
    policy is unambiguous, we do not address EMCOR’s alternative
    arguments regarding the proper approach for resolving contract
    ambiguity.
    III.
    We hold    that   the   2004   policy      extended   coverage    only   to
    losses sustained as a result of fraudulent conduct occurring
    during the 2003 and 2004 policy periods.                 We therefore affirm
    the judgment of the district court.
    AFFIRMED
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