John Warren v. Federal Insurance Company , 358 F. App'x 670 ( 2009 )


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  •                         NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
    File Name: 09a0822n.06
    No. 08-4448
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    John Warren and James Warren,                       )
    )                         FILED
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,                       )                      Dec 22, 2009
    )                LEONARD GREEN, Clerk
    v.                                                  )
    )
    Federal Insurance Co.,                              )
    )
    Defendant-Appellee.                          )   ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
    )   STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
    )   NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO
    )
    )
    )
    )
    BEFORE:        Merritt, Clay, and McKeague, Circuit Judges.
    MERRITT, Circuit Judge. This is an appeal from a grant of summary judgment to
    defendant Federal Insurance Company concerning a dispute over insurance coverage. Plaintiffs
    John and James Warren filed suit against Federal Insurance after the company denied coverage to
    the Warrens under the directors and officers liability section of a policy issued to the Warrens’
    former company, Prime Measurement Products, LLC. The primary issue on appeal is whether
    language in a letter sent to plaintiffs by PNC Bank advising that the bank was “evaluating” its rights
    and remedies with respect to possible financial misrepresentations by plaintiffs triggered a duty to
    defend and indemnify by Federal Insurance under Ohio law. The district court found that the letter
    sent to plaintiffs did not present a claim under the plain language of the policy and did not obligate
    No. 08-4448
    Warren v. Fed. Ins. Co.
    the insurance company to defend or indemnify plaintiffs. We agree with the district court and base
    our opinion on the reasoning of the lower court.
    I. Facts
    Plaintiffs John (a/k/a “Jeff”) and his brother James (a/k/a “Jamie”) Warren, through a limited
    liability company, The Warren Group, LTD, owned a 50% interest in BIS Holdings, LLC. The
    George Hofmeister Family Trusts owned the remaining 50%. BIS Holdings is a holding company
    that held all the interest in Prime Measurement Products, LLC. Prime Measurement was a
    manufacturer of measurement tools and control sensors for the oil, gas and process markets. The
    Warrens were officers and directors of both BIS Holdings and Prime Measurement from mid-2001
    until May 2005. On February 24, 2004, Prime Measurement obtained a revolving line of credit from
    PNC Bank that permitted Prime Measurement to borrow money for working capital purposes based
    on a formula that included, but was not limited to, the book value of Prime Measurement’s
    inventory. Both John and James Warren signed a personal guaranty on the line of credit. The
    personal guaranty contained a “cognovit” provision, which allows the bank to enter a judicial
    confession of judgment.
    In addition, BIS Holdings purchased a comprehensive general liability insurance policy from
    defendant, Federal Insurance,1 which included directors and officers liability coverage. The policy
    covered BIS Holdings and its subsidiaries, including Prime Measurement, and the policy was in
    effect from July 1, 2005 to August 1, 2006.
    1
    The “Chubb Group” is a trade name used by Federal Insurance, but it is not a separate legal
    entity.
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    Warren v. Fed. Ins. Co.
    In May 2005, plaintiffs, through their company The Warren Group, LTD., sold their
    ownership in BIS Holdings (including Prime Measurement, which was a subsidiary of BIS
    Holdings), leaving control of the company in the hands of The Hofmeister Family Trusts. For
    approximately six months after the sale of BIS Holdings (and its subsidiary Prime Measurement),
    both plaintiffs performed various services for BIS Holdings and Prime Measurement, including John
    Warren’s service as interim CEO of Prime Measurement until July 2005 (two months after the sale
    of Prime Measurement). In mid-to-late 2005, after plaintiffs had sold their interest in and were no
    longer actively managing Prime Measurement, the company’s financial condition started to
    deteriorate, causing PNC Bank to advise plaintiffs that certain events of default occurred relating to
    the revolving line of credit. PNC Bank demanded that plaintiffs fulfill their obligations under the
    personal guaranty. Plaintiffs refused and PNC Bank filed a complaint in Ohio state court based on
    the personal guaranty signed by both plaintiffs. PNC Bank N.A. v. Jeff J. Warren and James K.
    Warren, No. 06-CV-144885 (Lorain Cty. Com. Pleas Ct. Jan 20, 2006). There were no allegations
    in the complaint relating to any misrepresentations or other improper or negligent actions on the part
    of plaintiffs. Based on the cognovit provision in the guaranty, judgment was automatically entered
    against plaintiffs in the amount of $700,000. The Warrens immediately filed for a stay of execution
    on the judgment and a motion to vacate the judgment, citing numerous defenses.
    On March 22, 2006, plaintiffs’ attorney, Thomas Muzilla, received a letter from a PNC Bank
    regarding various issues, mostly relating to the guaranty. The letter, however, included the following
    paragraph:
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    Warren v. Fed. Ins. Co.
    In addition to your clients’ liability to PNC as set forth above (under the guaranty and
    with respect to the purchase of their interest in BIS Holdings) we believe that the
    Warrens were responsible for misrepresentations regarding Prime’s inventory which
    affected (a) the borrowing base certificates provided to PNC, and (b) Prime’s
    financial statements upon which PNC relied. We are currently evaluating PNC’s
    rights and remedies with respect to these misrepresentations.
    (Emphasis added.) On or about April 20, 2006, Prime Measurement, through its local insurance
    broker Hylant of Indiana, LLC, notified Federal Insurance of a claim being made against the Warrens
    via an electronic claim system. In the section titled “Loss Description,” Buffy Thomas of Hylant
    insurance company wrote:
    Specialty – D&O Other – PNC Bank has delivered written notice to former officers,
    Jeff & Jamie Warren, were [sic] responsible for misrepresentation regarding Prime’s
    inventory which affected the borrowing base certificates of Prime provided to PNC
    and Prime’s financial statements, each of which PNC relied upon in making loans to
    Prime. The Warrens deny the allegations of PNC.
    Directors & Officers Loss Notice. On April 28, 2006, plaintiffs’ lawyer received an email from PNC
    Bank rejecting a settlement offer from the Warrens to settle all claims against them. In that email,
    PNC Bank wrote:
    The proposal is rejected. The Warrens have substantial liability to PNC ($700,000
    plus claims I’ve outlined in prior correspondence with you) and cannot buy out for
    $100,000. PNC intends to press all of its claims against the Warrens. . . .
    Email dated April 28, 2006, from Leo Plotkin of PNC Bank to Thomas Muzilla. On May 3, 2006,
    Federal Insurance sent a letter to Prime Measurement’s insurance broker, Hylant, acknowledging
    receipt of the electronic claim and requesting “any additional pertinent information or documentation
    regarding the facts and circumstances of this matter.” Letter dated May 3, 2006, from Sandra Abair
    of Chubb Group to Buffy Thomas of Hylant of Indiana. On May 17, 2006, Federal Insurance sent
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    Warren v. Fed. Ins. Co.
    an email to plaintiffs’ counsel requesting certain documentation concerning the litigation on the
    guaranty and specifically requesting “[c]opies of any and all correspondence regarding the matters
    referenced in [PNC Bank’s] March 22, 2006, letter.” Email dated May 17, 2006, from Federal
    Insurance to Thomas Muzilla. On May 19, plaintiffs’ counsel provided to Federal Insurance the
    documents concerning the litigation on the guaranty, but did not enclose the April 28 email from
    PNC Bank regarding rejection of the settlement offer. There is nothing in the record to indicate that
    any further correspondence or communication transpired between Federal Insurance and plaintiffs,
    plaintiffs’ attorney or plaintiffs’ insurance brokers at Hylant until August 8, 2006, when Federal
    Insurance notified plaintiffs of the denial of coverage. Federal Insurance denied coverage because
    the policy did not cover the cognovit guaranty filed by PNC Bank against plaintiffs.
    On June 27, 2007, after a lengthy court-ordered mediation process, plaintiffs and PNC Bank
    settled all claims between them for $350,000. The Settlement Agreement expressly provides that
    PNC Bank “alleges that [plaintiffs] committed certain malfeasance while officers and/or agents of
    Prime . . . .” and indicates that $300,000 of the $350,000 payment was allocated to “claims asserted
    by PNC . . . for accounting irregularities . . . .” and $50,000 as settlement on the guaranty.
    Settlement Agreement between PNC Bank and John Warren and James Warren, dated June 27,
    2007.
    Several months after the settlement was completed, plaintiffs filed suit in Ohio state court
    against Federal Insurance for breach of contract (Count I), bad faith (Count II) and Declaratory
    Judgment on enforceability of the policy (Count III). Federal Insurance removed to federal court
    based on diversity jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. § 1332, where it argued that plaintiffs are simply
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    Warren v. Fed. Ins. Co.
    attempting to escape a liability by converting a personal debt based on their suretyship contract into
    an insurance indemnification claim, as the district court also recognized when it noted:
    The Court is somewhat disturbed that plaintiffs are seeking insurance coverage for
    the vast majority of the amount paid to PNC pursuant to the settlement agreement.
    It is surprising, to say the least, that so little of the amount was designated as payment
    under the guaranty, even though that claim is undoubtedly easier to litigate. This is
    especially so given that PNC did not even assert a claim for accounting malfeasance.
    Dist. Ct. slip op. at 12 n.5 (emphasis in original).
    The district court bifurcated plaintiffs’ bad faith claim (Count II) from the other two claims
    and stayed all discovery relating to the bad faith claim. The breach of contract and declaratory
    judgment claims were decided on summary judgment in favor of defendant. Warren v. Fed. Ins. Co.,
    No. 1:07 CV 3695 (N.D. Ohio Aug. 21, 2008). Plaintiffs appeal (1) the grant of summary judgment
    in favor of Federal Insurance on the breach of contract and declaratory judgment claims, (2) the
    bifurcation of the proceeding below, which precluded discovery on the bad faith count unless
    coverage was established and (3) the decision of the district court to prohibit depositions of Federal
    Insurance employees who made the decision to deny coverage.
    II. Discussion
    A. Breach of Contract/Declaratory Judgment Count
    Plaintiffs claim that Federal Insurance breached its contract by not defending and
    indemnifying plaintiffs in their dispute with PNC Bank. The relevant language in the policy
    provides as follows:
    The Company shall pay Loss on behalf of Insured Persons resulting from any D&O
    [directors and officers] Claim first made against such insureds during the Policy
    period, or any applicable Extended Reporting Period, for Wrongful Acts, but only to
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    Warren v. Fed. Ins. Co.
    the extent the Insured Organization does not indemnify the Insured Person for such
    Loss.
    A “D&O Claim” is defined, in relevant part, as follows:
    (a) written demand for monetary damages or non-monetary relief;
    (b) a civil proceeding commenced by the service of a complaint or similar pleading;
    ***
    against an insured for a Wrongful Act, including any appeal therefrom.
    Section I(D)(1)(a), (b) (emphasis added).
    Plaintiffs argue that the March 22nd letter from PNC Bank to plaintiffs constitutes a “ written
    demand for monetary damages” under subpart (a) of the definition for a “D&O Claim.” Federal
    Insurance argues that the letter states only that PNC Bank is “evaluating” its options and makes no
    “demand for monetary damages.” The relevant portion of the March 22nd letter provides as follows:
    [W]e believe that the Warrens were responsible for misrepresentations regarding
    Prime’s inventory which affected (a) the borrowing base certificates provided to
    PNC, and (b) Prime’s financial statements upon which PNC relied. We are currently
    evaluating PNC’s rights and remedies with respect to these misrepresentations.
    The district court agreed with Federal Insurance, finding that the March 22nd letter is not a D&O
    Claim as that term is defined in the policy. The lower court explained that PNC Bank could not be
    “currently evaluating” its rights and remedies and “making a claim for monetary damages” because
    the two concepts are “mutually exclusive.” D. Ct. slip op. at 7. The district court also found that
    the plain language of the March 22nd letter does not contain a demand for monetary damages as
    required for coverage under the policy. 
    Id. We agree.
    Plaintiffs also point to cases where they contend that Federal Insurance covered a
    policyholder in the same or very similar circumstances to this case and argue that Federal Insurance
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    Warren v. Fed. Ins. Co.
    is estopped from denying coverage in this case. We agree with the district court’s conclusion that
    the cases cited by plaintiffs are different from the situation herein because the language relied upon
    by plaintiffs in the other cases is decidedly different from the language in the March 22nd letter.
    None of the cases where coverage was provided cite to language that indicates a party was still
    “evaluating its rights and remedies.”
    In the court below, plaintiffs also argued that the underlying suit by PNC Bank on the
    guaranty involved allegations of financial malfeasance that were “intertwined” with the claim based
    on the cognovit guaranty, thereby constituting a claim under subpart (b) of the policy as well, but it
    appears that they have abandoned that theory on appeal.2 Plaintiffs also contend that the district
    court erred in refusing to consider other evidence offered by them after the claim was denied by
    Federal Insurance because such evidence demonstrates that PNC Bank did in fact make a “written
    demand for monetary damages” against plaintiffs during the spring of 2006.
    The other evidence on which the Warrens rely, (1) the affidavit of Wallace Clements, Senior
    Vice-President of PNC Bank, (2) the April 4, 2007, letter from PNC Banks’ attorneys regarding
    settlement and (3) the settlement agreement between the Warrens and PNC Bank, which was
    executed in June 2007, were not in existence during the spring and summer of 2006 when Federal
    2
    In their Reply Brief, plaintiffs state: “Federal argues that Section II(D)(1)(b) of the Policy
    does not apply. . . . However, the Warrens have not [ever] asserted that this provision provides them
    with coverage.” Reply Brief at 15 n.4. Despite this claim, plaintiffs did in fact argue below that the
    alleged misrepresentations constitute a Directors & Officers Claim under subpart (b). Memorandum
    in Support of Plaintiffs’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment at 15 (Heading entitled “The
    Wrongful Act Constitutes a ‘D&O Claim’ Under Section II(D)(1)(b)”) . The district court addressed
    plaintiffs’ argument that it was entitled to coverage under subpart (b) at pages 10-11 of its opinion
    below.
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    Warren v. Fed. Ins. Co.
    Insurance was reviewing the claim. These documents only came into existence because Federal
    Insurance denied the claim. For example, plaintiffs argue that an affidavit by a PNC Bank officer
    did not constitute an inadmissible legal conclusion and should have been considered by the district
    court even though the affidavit stated that the March 22 letter from PNC Bank to plaintiffs served
    as a “written demand for damages” under the policy. Plaintiffs also point to an April 7, 2007, letter
    wherein PNC Bank estimated its loss due to plaintiffs’ malfeasance at $3.5 million and plaintiffs
    claim that Michelle Lafferty, an employee of Hylant (the Warrens’ local insurance broker), sent an
    email to Michael Joyce, the Federal Insurance employee who signed the denial letter, wherein Ms.
    Lafferty says that she and Mr. Joyce discussed “their impression” that Mr. Joyce only reviewed the
    PNC Bank complaint on the cognovit guaranty when preparing the denial letter and did not review
    the March 22 letter. Such extrinsic and after-the-fact “evidence,” none of which Federal Insurance
    received before denying the claim, does not serve to turn the March 22 letter into a “written demand
    for monetary damages” or serve as adequate notice to Federal Insurance that a claim had been made
    against the plaintiffs that would be covered under the policy.
    B. Plaintiffs Did Not Give Notice to Federal Insurance of a “Potential Claim”
    Plaintiffs argue that Federal Insurance should have known from the correspondence it
    received that a potential claim had been made against them by PNC Bank, even if it did not meet the
    definition of a “D&O Claim.” The policy addresses coverage for potential claims that arise during
    the policy period but do not come to fruition until after coverage has ended. To the extent that later
    documentation, for example the April 28, 2006, email sent to the plaintiffs by PNC Bank, or other
    correspondence or circumstances, presented evidence that PNC Bank’s “evaluation” of its rights and
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    No. 08-4448
    Warren v. Fed. Ins. Co.
    remedies had ripened into an actual claim, it does not appear that Federal Insurance received actual
    notice of a “D&O Claim” as required under the policy. By simply informing Federal Insurance that
    an investigation into plaintiffs’ conduct was underway and might lead to more claims against them,
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    Warren v. Fed. Ins. Co.
    plaintiffs did not comply with the policy terms.3 Under (A)(1), plaintiffs were obligated to provide
    3
    The policy provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
    VII. REPORTING
    (A)       Solely with respect to any Liability Coverage Section:
    (1) Any Insured shall, as a condition precedent to exercising their
    rights under any Liability Coverage Section, give to the Company
    written notice as soon as practicable of any Claim.
    (2) If during the Policy Period . . . an Insured becomes aware of a
    Potential Employment claim or Potential Third Party Claim which
    could give rise to any Employment Claim or Third Party Claim . . . or
    becomes aware of circumstances which could give rise to any Claim,
    other than an Employment Claim or Third Party Claim . . ., and gives
    written notice of such Potential Employment Claim, Potential Third
    Party Claim or circumstances to the Company as soon as practicable
    thereafter but before the expiration or cancellation of this Policy, then
    any Claim subsequently arising from such Potential Employment
    Claim, Potential Third Party Claim or circumstances shall be
    considered to have been made against the Insured during the Policy
    Year in which [such claims] or circumstances were first reported to
    the Company.
    ***
    VIII. NOTICE
    (A) Any notice to the Company . . . shall designate the Coverage Section under
    which the notice is being given and shall be treated as notice under only the Coverage
    Section(s) so designated.
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    Warren v. Fed. Ins. Co.
    notice of the actual claim when it arose.
    The policy provisions on notice and reporting ensure that Federal Insurance has the necessary
    information to evaluate whether coverage is warranted when a policyholder makes a claim. Plaintiffs
    concede it was “a very fluid situation” between them and PNC Bank during the time in question
    (Plaintiffs’ opening brief at 25), but yet they did not keep Federal Insurance apprised of all of the
    circumstances and correspondence regarding the situation despite Federal Insurance’s request in its
    May 17 letter that they provide all relevant correspondence regarding the litigation with PNC Bank.
    The changing nature of the situation did not absolve plaintiffs from giving Federal Insurance actual
    notice of the claim and ensuring that the company had all the details of the “very fluid” situation.
    Plaintiffs also contend that the district court erred in its refusal to consider the April 28 email
    sent to plaintiffs by PNC Bank, even though plaintiffs essentially concede, as the district court found,
    that there is no evidence that the email was ever sent to Federal Insurance by plaintiffs. The email
    provides, in relevant part,
    The proposal [for settlement] is rejected. The Warrens have substantial liability to
    PNC ($700,000 plus claims I’ve outlined in prior correspondence with you) and
    cannot buy out for $100,000. PNC intends to press all of its claims against the
    Warrens . . . .
    Plaintiffs contend on appeal that the failure to consider the email improperly “shifts the burden” of
    proof to plaintiffs because Federal Insurance failed to notify them before denying their claim that
    additional information was required. However, on May 17, Federal Insurance sent an email to
    plaintiffs’ attorney requesting “[c]opies of any and all correspondence regarding the matters
    referenced in [PNC Bank’s] March 22, 2006, letter.” (Emphasis added.) Two days later, plaintiffs’
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    Warren v. Fed. Ins. Co.
    attorney sent Federal Insurance a letter and enclosed various documents regarding the litigation
    between PNC Bank and plaintiffs, but failed to mention or provide a copy of the April 28 email.
    It was plaintiffs who failed to give Federal Insurance all the necessary documentation, as specifically
    requested by Federal Insurance on May 17, almost three months before it issued the denial letter.
    Under the terms of the policy and pursuant to the specific request by Federal Insurance in May, it
    was incumbent upon plaintiffs to ensure that Federal Insurance had actual notice of a claim before
    the denial letter was issued in August.
    It is in the interests of both the plaintiffs and PNC Bank to set up Federal Insurance as a
    source of payment for the suretyship obligation, and the settlement agreement between PNC Bank
    and plaintiffs reflects that joint interest. But in situations of this kind, we must be conscious of these
    interests and require strict compliance with the insurance contract before shifting payment to the
    insurance company for what appears to be a personal debt that the insurer has not agreed to
    reimburse.
    C. Bad Faith
    Plaintiffs contend that the district court erred in bifurcating the bad faith count of their
    complaint from the coverage issues. We review the district court’s decision to bifurcate the bad-
    faith claim and stay discovery while the breach of contract claim is pending for abuse of
    discretion. Smith v. Allstate Ins. Co., 
    403 F.3d 401
    (6th Cir. 2005); Gettings v. Building
    Laborers Local 310 Fringe Benefits Fund, 
    349 F.3d 300
    , 304-05 (6th Cir. 2003) (reviewing a
    stay of discovery for abuse of discretion). Because the merits of the bad faith claim depended on
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    Warren v. Fed. Ins. Co.
    whether coverage was properly or improperly denied, it was reasonable for the district court to
    resolve the coverage question before allowing the bad faith claim to proceed.
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
    -14-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 08-4448

Citation Numbers: 358 F. App'x 670

Judges: Merritt, Clay, McKeague

Filed Date: 12/22/2009

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024