Argonaut Great Central Ins. Co v. Lincoln County, Missouri ( 2020 )


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  •                 United States Court of Appeals
    For the Eighth Circuit
    ___________________________
    No. 18-2930
    ___________________________
    Argonaut Great Central Insurance Company
    lllllllllllllllllllllPlaintiff - Appellant
    v.
    Lincoln County, Missouri; Ryan J. McCarrick; Michael Merkel; Detective Patrick
    Harney; Prosecuting Attorney Leah Wommack Chaney, Formerly known as Leah
    Askey-Chaney; Russell Scott Faria
    lllllllllllllllllllllDefendants - Appellees
    ____________
    Appeal from United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Missouri - St. Louis
    ____________
    Submitted: September 25, 2019
    Filed: March 17, 2020
    ____________
    Before SMITH, Chief Judge, BEAM and ERICKSON, Circuit Judges.
    ____________
    BEAM, Circuit Judge.
    Argonaut Great Central Insurance Company appeals the district court’s1 grant
    of judgment on the pleadings2 in favor of Lincoln County, Missouri and several of its
    employees (collectively, “the county”). The dispute is regarding Argonaut’s duty to
    defend the county against a civil rights lawsuit brought against the county by Russell
    Scott Faria, who is also a defendant in the instant lawsuit, but has simply joined the
    county’s legal arguments by consent. We affirm.
    I.    BACKGROUND
    On December 27, 2011, Faria’s wife Betsy was murdered in their home in
    Troy, Missouri, suffering over 55 stab wounds including a knife stuck in the side of
    her neck. Faria alleges he arrived home around 9:30 that evening, found his wife and
    called 911. Records of the call indicate that Faria was hysterical and told dispatchers
    that he thought his wife (who was terminally ill with cancer) had committed suicide.
    The officer who arrived at the scene also found Faria to be crying and hysterical.
    After the officers secured the scene, Faria voluntarily went to the police station and
    also waived his Miranda rights before speaking to officers. The questioning at the
    Lincoln County jail and a polygraph test, which was administered at another location,
    took more than forty hours, and Faria was released from custody on December 29,
    2011, around 4:30 p.m. The next relevant event that occurred was when the county
    filed criminal homicide and related charges against Faria on January 4, 2012.
    Officers arrested Faria on that date, and he remained in custody at the county jail until
    his trial in November 2013 because he could not procure bail money. Faria was
    convicted of murder in November 2013 and sentenced to life in prison, but while the
    appeal was pending, the Missouri Court of Appeals granted Faria’s motion to remand
    1
    The Honorable John A. Ross, United States District Judge for the Eastern
    District of Missouri.
    2
    Due to the relief sought by the county, the district court applied the summary
    judgment standard in ruling on the county’s motion.
    -2-
    for a new trial to account for newly discovered evidence. See Day v. Hupp, 
    528 S.W.3d 400
    , 404 (Mo. Ct. App. 2017) (noting the details of Faria’s criminal
    proceedings in a civil life insurance policy dispute between Betsy Faria’s daughters
    and Pam Hupp, a friend of Betsy’s, who was named a beneficiary a few days before
    Betsy’s death). Faria was retried in a bench trial and acquitted of the murder charge
    in November 2015.
    In July 2016, Faria brought the underlying lawsuit alleging in Count I that a
    particular police officer (McCarrick) violated his Fourth Amendment rights by
    arresting him, seizing him and holding him without probable cause in December
    2011. In Count II, Faria alleges McCarrick’s second seizure and ultimate
    incarceration of him in January 2012 violated the Fourth Amendment. In Count III,
    Faria alleges the prosecuting attorney violated the Fourth Amendment for his second
    seizure and incarceration. In Count IV, he alleges the county conspired to violate his
    Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights by seizing him and denying him substantive
    due process. In Count V, he alleged malicious prosecution, but ultimately that count
    was dismissed without prejudice. In Count VI, he alleges a Monell3 claim against the
    county based upon the prosecutor’s actions in her official capacity. Within these
    counts are factual allegations that the various county actors fabricated evidence,
    ignored exonerating evidence, and failed to investigate another more obvious suspect,
    notably Pam Hupp, a woman who Betsy named as the new beneficiary of Betsy’s life
    insurance policy in the days before her murder. See 
    id. Argonaut issued
    an insurance policy to Lincoln County, including its officers
    and employees, effective January 1, 2012, to December 31, 2013. In the policy,
    Argonaut agreed to indemnify the county when it was legally obligated to pay
    3
    Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 
    436 U.S. 658
    , 694 (1978) (holding that when
    a government employee enforces the government’s policy causing the constitutional
    injury, the government entity is liable under § 1983).
    -3-
    damages resulting from a covered wrongful act committed during the course and
    scope of law enforcement activities, or which arose out of the use of law enforcement
    premises while conducting law enforcement activities. The policy excluded coverage
    for claims arising from “dishonest, malicious, fraudulent or criminal act[s], . . . or a
    knowing violation of [the] law.” The policy also noted that if another policy applied,
    the Argonaut policy would be “excess” coverage and Argonaut would have no
    corresponding duty to defend. As relevant, a public insurer called Missouri Public
    Entity Risk Management Fund (MOPERM) previously provided liability insurance
    coverage to the county, from January 1, 2011, through January 1, 2012. Finally, the
    Argonaut policy stated that it did not provide coverage for any act which an insured
    would otherwise have an exemption because of sovereign immunity.
    Argonaut argued to the district court that it had no duty to defend because of
    exclusions in the policy for malicious conduct; because the relevant conduct occurred
    in 2011 before Argonaut was the insurer, making its policy in excess to the allegedly
    “primary” MOPERM policy; and because of the exclusion for possible governmental
    immunities. The district court disagreed and found that because Argonaut could not
    establish the impossibility of coverage, it had a duty to defend the county against
    Faria’s lawsuit. The court found that Faria’s complaint adequately pleaded that there
    were covered wrongful acts not barred by the exclusionary clauses. The court also
    found that the covered wrongful acts occurred during the time the policy was in
    effect. The court acknowledged that although the county began actively investigating
    Faria during the latter part of 2011, the damage to Faria triggering coverage–the
    criminal charges and arrest–did not happen until January 4, 2012, when the Argonaut
    policy was in effect. The court also found that the immunities clause did not excuse
    Argonaut from defending, because although the defendants had raised qualified and
    sovereign immunity defenses to Faria’s suit, it was premature to know whether those
    defenses would be successful. Finally, the district court found that although
    Argonaut had a duty to defend the county against Faria’s lawsuit, whether Argonaut
    had a corresponding duty to indemnify the county was yet to be determined based
    -4-
    upon the development of the facts at trial. Argonaut appeals the district court’s
    decision regarding its duty to defend, which we distill into two primary arguments:
    whether there was a covered wrongful act, and whether the wrongful act occurred
    during the time the policy was in effect.
    II.   DISCUSSION
    Missouri law applies to this diversity insurance dispute. The interpretation of
    an insurance policy is a question of law. Interstate Bakeries Corp. v. OneBeacon Ins.
    Co., 
    686 F.3d 539
    , 543 (8th Cir. 2012) (quotation omitted). An insurer’s duty to
    defend a suit arises if there is potential or even possible liability to pay based upon
    the facts at the outset of the case. McCormack Baron Mgmt. Servs., Inc. v. Am. Guar.
    & Liab. Ins. Co., 
    989 S.W.2d 168
    , 170 (Mo. 1999). The duty to defend is analyzed
    by comparing the language of the policy with the allegations in the complaint, and if
    the complaint alleges facts that merely give rise to a potential claim within coverage,
    the insurer has a duty to defend. 
    Id. at 170-71.
    The duty to defend is broader than the
    duty to indemnify. City of Lee’s Summit v. Mo. Public Entity Risk Mgmt., 
    390 S.W.3d 214
    , 219 (Mo. Ct. App. 2012). We review the district court’s rulings de
    novo. 
    Id. at 218.
    A.     Wrongful Act
    For the purposes of this appeal, insurance coverage activating Argonaut’s duty
    to defend arises when there has been the possibility of (1) a covered wrongful act
    which (2) occurred during the time the policy was in effect. The Argonaut policy
    defines “wrongful act” as “any act, error or omission flowing from or originating out
    of a ‘law enforcement activity.’” As previously noted, the policy excludes malicious
    acts and knowing violations of the law. It is these exclusions upon which Argonaut
    relies in asserting there was no “covered act.” Indeed, Faria’s eighty-three page civil
    rights petition has alleged numerous things against the county, including that the
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    county acted maliciously in knowing violation of the law. Further, Argonaut argues
    that Missouri public policy prohibits it from being liable to defend against intentional
    and malicious acts.
    In support of its argument that there is no coverage for the type of “wrongful
    act” that occurred here, Argonaut cites Custom Hardware Engineering & Consulting,
    Inc. v. Assurance Co. of America, 
    295 S.W.3d 557
    (Mo. Ct. App. 2009). In Custom
    Hardware, a company called StorageTek sued Custom Hardware, alleging it had
    violated copyright and unfair competition laws. In its petition, however, StorageTek
    only alleged intentional acts (copyright violations), and alleged nothing sounding in
    recklessness, error, or mistake. 
    Id. at 562.
    The allegations were that “[Custom
    Hardware] has committed all of the alleged acts of infringement deliberately,
    knowingly, willfully, maliciously and oppressively, without regard to StorageTek's
    proprietary rights”. 
    Id. (alterations in
    original). Thus, the court found that the
    insurance company did not have to defend the lawsuit because the underlying suit
    only alleged intentional acts, which the court found were excluded from coverage
    under the insurance contract. 
    Id. at 562-64.
    Unlike the Custom Hardware case, however, Faria’s petition also alleges that
    the defendants acted recklessly and incompetently during the investigation of Faria
    for murder. These claims would be included in coverage under the policy for actions
    committed by law enforcement officers and prosecutors during their normal law
    enforcement activities while investigating a murder. In each cause of action except
    the Monell policy allegation in Count VI, Faria set apart a separate section alleging
    that county employees were reckless and acted with reckless indifference to his
    constitutional rights. Thus, the “knowing” clause or the “malicious” clause, or both,
    cannot be the basis for preclusion of coverage because Faria affirmatively and
    additionally alleged recklessness in the lawsuit.
    -6-
    We disagree with Argonaut’s claim, based upon Easley v. American Family
    Mutual Insurance Co., 
    847 S.W.2d 811
    (Mo. Ct. App. 1992), that Missouri public
    policy requires the exclusion of coverage in this case. In Easley, a student was
    seriously injured by a fellow student following a school yard fist fight, but was more
    seriously injured than he otherwise would have been because the injured student fell
    backwards through a window and sustained severe cuts. After obtaining a judgment
    against the attacker, the injured student attempted to recover the judgment from the
    attacker’s home owner’s insurance policy. The court found that the insurance policy
    (which excluded coverage for “bodily injury . . . which is expected or intended by any
    insured”), as well as Missouri public policy, excluded coverage. 
    Id. at 812.
    The
    court found that to decide otherwise would allow the attacker to “insure himself
    against his wanton, reckless or willful acts [which] would enable him to insure
    himself from bearing the consequences of his intentional acts and would, therefore,
    be contrary to public policy.” 
    Id. Argonaut argues
    that Easley stands for the
    proposition that Missouri public policy precludes any insurance policy from covering
    reckless, willful or intentional acts. Easley is readily distinguishable from the current
    situation. Here, the county procured insurance to shield itself against, among other
    things, possible constitutional claims against its officers and agents during the
    performance of their law enforcement duties. Such claims, normally brought pursuant
    to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, necessarily sound in recklessness, and counties would be
    uninsurable if Missouri insurance policies could only cover negligent conduct, as
    Argonaut claims. Argonaut’s policy was procured to cover the kind of acts currently
    being alleged–“wrongful act[s]” arising out of “law enforcement activities.”
    Most importantly, because the standard for the duty to defend this lawsuit is
    whether there is any possibility of coverage, Argonaut cannot hurdle this high bar
    based upon the alleged absence of a covered wrongful act. There is certainly a
    possibility that the county acted recklessly or with reckless disregard for Faria’s
    constitutional rights during the course and scope of their law enforcement activities
    -7-
    while investigating Betsy Faria’s murder. Accordingly, Argonaut cannot escape the
    duty to defend on this basis.
    B.     Occurrence During the Policy Period
    Argonaut also argues the acts for which the county seeks coverage did not
    occur during the time the policy was in effect. Argonaut asserts that since the murder
    occurred in 2011 and the investigation started at that time, its coverage, beginning on
    January 1, 2012, was not triggered. Under Missouri law, an insurable event occurs
    when the victim is first damaged. Am. Fam. Ins. Co. v. McMullin, 
    869 S.W.2d 862
    ,
    864 (Mo. Ct. App. 1994). The county argues that Faria’s alleged damage first
    occurred when he was arrested in early January 2012, citing Lee’s Summit, 
    390 S.W.3d 214
    . In Lee’s Summit, a plaintiff in a suit against the city was charged and
    prosecuted for child molestation in 1998, but, after multiple trials, was ultimately
    acquitted in 2005. At that point, plaintiff filed a civil rights claim against the city and
    several officials, and the insurance company (MOPERM) denied coverage because
    its policy was only in effect from 2004-2005. The city sued MOPERM for wrongful
    refusal to defend and indemnify, but the court granted summary judgment to
    MOPERM, because the insurable events happened in the late 1990s and early 2000s,
    not during 2004-2005 when the policy was in effect. The court stated, “injury begins
    to flow from when the complaint is filed” in such a case and the plaintiff “suffered
    injury when the charges were filed against him,” and that did not occur when the
    policy was in effect. 
    Id. at 220,
    222 (first quotation omitted).
    In Count I, Faria alleges a constitutional violation based upon his initial
    “seizure,” allegedly without probable cause, on December 28, 2011. Argonaut
    alleges that this is the triggering event for coverage, and its coverage was not yet in
    effect. However, the remaining counts all involve actions that occurred in 2012,
    including the most pertinent actions according to Lee’s Summit–Faria’s arrest and his
    charge of murder in January 2012. Those specific actions occurred during the time
    -8-
    Argonaut’s policy was in place starting January 1, 2012. Although Faria’s Count I
    asks for redress of injuries that occurred before that time, it is worth noting that Faria
    went willingly to the police station and waived his Miranda rights in speaking to the
    police. He was released to go home on December 29, 2011, and if nothing further
    had occurred, Faria would likely not be bringing the current lawsuit. Injury, for
    purposes of Argonaut’s duty to defend, first occurred “when the charges were filed
    against [Faria].” 
    Id. at 222.
    Based upon the application of the Lee’s Summit test for
    when damage occurs, Argonaut cannot show that there is no possibility that its
    coverage was in effect when Faria was damaged. Argonaut accordingly has a
    corresponding duty to defend the case.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    We affirm the district court’s conclusion that Argonaut has a duty to defend the
    county against Faria’s underlying § 1983 lawsuit.
    ERICKSON, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
    I agree with the majority that the duty to defend is determined by a comparison
    of the policy language with the allegations in the complaint. An analysis of the
    unambiguous policy language in conjunction with the complaint’s allegations
    compels the conclusion that Argonaut does not have a duty to defend.
    Argonaut’s policy defines “wrongful act” as “any act, error or omission flowing
    from or originating out of a ‘law enforcement activity.’” It also contains a “deemer”
    clause, which provides that “all acts, errors or omissions, committed by one or more
    insureds that are substantially the same or are in any way directly related–either
    logically, causally, or temporally–shall be deemed to constitute one ‘wrongful act’,
    regardless of the number of claims or claimants.” Under the insuring agreement,
    Argonaut has “no duty to defend the insured against any ‘suit’ seeking ‘damages’ for
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    a ‘wrongful act’ to which this insurance does not apply.” The insurance applies “only
    if the ‘wrongful act’ was first committed . . . during the policy period.” (emphasis
    added).
    Faria alleged, among other claims, that he suffered injuries beginning on the
    date of his first arrest and detention, which was December 28, 2011. It is indisputable
    that the arrest was a “law enforcement activity”4 and a “wrongful act” alleged by
    Faria. It is apparent that the first wrongful act was not committed during Argonaut’s
    policy period, but instead while MOPERM was the county’s liability insurer. By
    ignoring the existence of the alleged first “wrongful act” and instead relying on when
    most of the alleged misconduct occurred, or when “the most pertinent actions” took
    place, or when the charges against Faria were filed, the majority has rewritten the
    terms of the policy.
    It is axiomatic under Missouri law that so long as an underlying complaint
    includes allegations, even if inartfully drafted, that fit within an insurance policy’s
    coverage, the duty to defend is triggered. Truck Ins. Exch. v. Prairie Framing, LLC,
    
    162 S.W.3d 64
    , 83 (Mo. Ct. App. 2005). “Under Missouri law, in contract cases the
    language of the contract is [the court’s] first–and often, [its] only – resort.” Ferguson
    v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., No. WD 82090, 
    2019 WL 6703892
    , at *7 (Mo. Ct.
    App. Dec. 10, 2019), reh'g denied (Jan. 23, 2020). Because Faria has alleged injuries
    occurring during the time MOPERM provided liability insurance coverage to the
    county, Argonaut has no duty to defend according to the plain language set forth in
    the scope of its insuring agreement and because the policy contains an “other
    4
    The policy defined “law enforcement activity” to mean the “administration of
    the criminal justice system and/or any act, error or omission of your law enforcement
    agency, its officials, officers, ‘employees’ or volunteers. ‘Law Enforcement Activity’
    also includes the use, operation or maintenance of any premises by your law
    enforcement agency.”
    -10-
    insurance” provision specifically informing the insured that it has no duty to defend
    if any other insurer has a duty to defend.
    The majority in this case has failed to apply the plain language set forth in the
    insurance contract governing coverage to the allegations in the complaint. Rather
    than look to the language in the policy, the majority finds Lee’s Summit dispositive.
    In Lee’s Summit both the arrest and initiation of criminal charges occurred in April
    1998. The city argued that MOPERM, which provided liability coverage from July
    1, 2001, through January 1, 2006, had a duty to defend because the victim’s claim for
    malicious prosecution did not arise until 2005 when the underlying criminal case was
    terminated in his favor. The MOPERM policy at issue in Lee’s Summit broadly
    defined occurrence, in relevant part, as “an act, accident, event, during the coverage
    period that results in injury or damages.” The Missouri court found that the
    injury/damages occurred at the time the criminal charges were filed in April 1998,
    which was also the date of arrest. Because both the facts and policy language
    distinguish Lee’s Summit from this case, I find that case neither persuasive nor
    controlling. I would find Argonaut has no duty to defend based on the unambiguous
    policy language recited earlier.
    ______________________________
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