Robert Lee v. West Coast Life Insurance Co. , 688 F.3d 1004 ( 2012 )


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  •                   FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    ROBERT S. LEE; GINA STEVENS;           
    LAURA STEVENS,
    Counter-claimants-cross-claimants-
    Appellants,
    and
    No. 11-55026
    STEVE LEE; BOBBIE BILL LEE;
    D.C. No.
    WILLIAM LEE,
    Plaintiffs-counter-defendants-cross-      2:09-cv-06789-
    PA-VBK
    defendants,
    OPINION
    v.
    WEST COAST LIFE INSURANCE
    COMPANY,
    Defendant-counter-defendant-
    counter-claimant-Appellee.
    
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Central District of California
    Percy Anderson, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    May 9, 2012—Pasadena, California
    Filed July 31, 2012
    Before: Kim McLane Wardlaw, Richard A. Paez, and
    Johnnie B. Rawlinson, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Paez
    8629
    8632          LEE v. WEST COAST LIFE INSURANCE
    COUNSEL
    Benjamin Blakeman, Esq. and Burton Mark Senkfor, Esq.,
    Law Office of Burton Mark Senkfor, Los Angeles, California,
    for the counter-claimants-cross-claimants-appellants.
    Brent Dorian Brehm and Glenn R. Kantor, Kantor & Kantor
    LLP, Northridge, California, for the plaintiffs-counter-
    defendants-cross-defendants.
    Linda B. Oliver, Reed Smith LLP, San Francisco, Calif-
    ornia, for the defendant-counter-defendant-counter-claimant-
    appellee.
    OPINION
    PAEZ, Circuit Judge:
    This case, which involves a dispute over the proceeds of a
    life insurance policy, raises the following issue: Does the fed-
    LEE v. WEST COAST LIFE INSURANCE             8633
    eral interpleader remedy shield a negligent stakeholder from
    tort liability for its creation of a conflict over entitlement to
    the interpleaded funds? We hold that it does not, and that a
    claimant may seek to recover all damages directly and proxi-
    mately caused by the negligent stakeholder’s conduct.
    I.
    A.
    On March 13, 1998, West Coast Life Insurance Company
    (“West Coast”) issued a life insurance policy with a death
    benefit of $800,000 to the late Steve Lee, Sr. Steve Sr. was
    the original owner of the policy. William Lee, Steve Sr.’s
    brother, was the original beneficiary. In the subsequent years,
    West Coast received numerous change of ownership and ben-
    eficiary forms from members of the Lee family. At issue is a
    policy change form signed and executed in July 2005, pur-
    porting to change the ownership and beneficiaries of the pol-
    icy to Robert Lee, Bobbie Bill Lee, and Steve Lee, Jr. Bobbie
    and Steve Jr. are Steve Sr.’s nephews. Robert is Steve Sr.’s
    grandson.
    Robert, Bobbie, and Steve Jr. executed the aforementioned
    change forms in West Coast’s San Francisco office with the
    help of West Coast’s Director of Policy Administration,
    James Davis. Davis erroneously instructed Bobbie and Robert
    to sign as the existing owners of the policy, when in fact
    Steve Jr. was an existing owner and Robert was not. Davis
    also erroneously failed to ask Steve Jr. to sign a change of
    beneficiary form which would have transferred a 62.5% inter-
    est to Robert as a beneficiary. Nonetheless, Davis witnessed
    Bobbie and Robert’s signatures and West Coast approved and
    recorded a change of beneficiary as follows: Robert, 62.5%,
    Steve Jr., 19%, Bobbie, 18.5%. Relying on the validity of the
    July 2005 changes, Robert paid premiums due on the policy
    until Steve Sr.’s death approximately four years later.
    8634             LEE v. WEST COAST LIFE INSURANCE
    The Lee family members made several additional, subse-
    quent changes to the policy’s ownership and beneficiaries.
    The final change occurred in December of 2008 when Robert
    Lee and Gina Stevens became the sole beneficiaries. Steve Sr.
    died in January 2009. Robert and Gina then submitted claim
    forms to West Coast. In response, West Coast informed Rob-
    ert and Gina that the July 2005 changes were improperly exe-
    cuted, and therefore that they had no interest in the policy. In
    March 2009, upon learning that he retained the interest in the
    policy that he held in 2005, Bobbie submitted a claim form to
    West Coast. In April of 2009, West Coast responded by con-
    tacting all parties involved regarding the disputed claims, urg-
    ing them to reach a mutual agreement regarding payment of
    the insurance policy benefits, and informing them that it
    would file an interpleader action if no agreement could be
    reached. The parties were unable to reach an agreement.
    B.
    In August of 2009, Steve Jr., Bobbie, and William Lee (col-
    lectively, “plaintiffs”) filed suit against West Coast in the Los
    Angeles Superior Court alleging claims for breach of contract
    and breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing
    under California law. West Coast removed the case to federal
    court invoking diversity jurisdiction, filed an answer and
    counterclaim in interpleader1, deposited $800,000 plus
    1
    West Coast’s counterclaim does not specify whether it is premised on
    rule or statutory interpleader. “For statutory interpleader, 
    28 U.S.C. § 1335
    , there must be diversity between the adverse claimants. For inter-
    pleader under [R]ule 22(1) predicated on diversity jurisdiction, there must
    be diversity between the stakeholder on one hand and the claimants on the
    other.” Gelfgren v. Republic Nat’l. Life Ins. Co., 
    680 F.2d 79
    , 81 n.1 (9th
    Cir. 1982). Otherwise stated, statutory interpleader “allows so-called ‘min-
    imal’ diversity, as distinguished from complete diversity, and also requires
    only that $500 be in controversy in lieu of the usual . . . requirement.”
    Libby, McNeill, and Libby v. City Nat’l. Bank, 
    592 F.2d 504
    , 507 n.3 (9th
    Cir. 1978) (internal citation omitted). Rule 22 further provides that rule
    interpleader “does not supercede or limit” the statutory interpleader rem-
    LEE v. WEST COAST LIFE INSURANCE                     8635
    accrued interest with the district court, and added Gina and
    Laura Stevens2 as counterdefendants. Robert, Gina, and Laura
    (collectively, “counterclaimants”) filed counterclaims for neg-
    ligence and declaratory relief against West Coast, and cross-
    claims against the plaintiffs.
    West Coast moved for partial summary judgment, which
    the district court granted in West Coast’s favor as to its inter-
    pleader claim and on the claims sounding in contract. The
    plaintiffs and counterclaimants then reached a settlement to
    distribute the interpleaded funds amongst themselves, and the
    district court entered an order approving the distribution. The
    district court, without prompting by the parties, then amended
    its summary judgment order to grant summary judgment in
    West Coast’s favor as to counterclaimants’ claim for attor-
    ney’s fees, ruling that West Coast’s liability for attorney’s
    fees incurred in litigating over ownership of the stake was
    “cut off” by the interpleader action. The district court con-
    cluded that counterclaimants’ negligence claim against West
    Coast was the only claim remaining to be tried.3
    At the pretrial conference, the district court asked the par-
    ties to brief what damages counterclaimants could recover
    should they succeed on the merits of their negligence claim.
    Counterclaimants argued that their damages included the
    amount of the insurance proceeds allocated to the plaintiffs
    pursuant to their settlement ($290,000) and the attorney’s fees
    edy, and that statutory interpleader actions must be conducted in accor-
    dance with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Fed. R. Civ. P. 22(b); see
    also Wright, Miller & Kane, Federal Practice & Procedure: Civil 3d
    § 1708 (2001). Here, the jurisdictional requirements of statutory inter-
    pleader were satisfied, as there was complete diversity between the parties
    and the amount in controversy far exceeded the jurisdictional minimum.
    2
    Laura Stevens held an interest in the policy from 2006-2008 and pur-
    ported to transfer her interest to Gina in 2008.
    3
    Counterclaimants argue that they preserved additional claims for trial,
    namely, their estoppel claims. We discuss these claims infra.
    8636              LEE v. WEST COAST LIFE INSURANCE
    incurred in litigating their claims against the plaintiffs.4 At a
    subsequent pretrial conference, the parties stipulated to a trial
    on a record consisting of written declarations and stipulated
    facts, and to West Coast’s filing of a motion for a judgment
    as a matter of law under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(c).5
    The district court subsequently granted West Coast’s
    motion. The court did not address the merits of counterclai-
    mants’ negligence claim, reasoning that they had failed to
    allege any cognizable damages flowing from West Coast’s
    alleged negligent conduct.6
    4
    Counterclaimants claimed entitlement to recover attorney’s fees
    incurred in litigation against the plaintiffs under California’s tort-of-
    another doctrine. “Under California law, it is a well-established principle
    that attorney[’s] fees incurred through instituting or defending an action as
    a direct result of the tort of another are recoverable damages. Attorney[’s]
    fees in this context are to be distinguished from attorney’s fees qua attor-
    ney’s fees, such as those the plaintiff incurs in suing the tortfeasor defen-
    dant. Rather, when a defendant’s tortious conduct requires the plaintiff to
    sue a third party, or defend a suit brought by a third party, attorney[’s] fees
    the plaintiff incurs in this third party action are recoverable as damages
    resulting from a tort in the same way that medical fees would be part of
    the damages in a personal injury action.” Third Eye Blind, Inc. v. Near
    North Entm’t Ins. Serv., LLC, 
    26 Cal. Rptr. 3d 452
    , 463 (Cal. Ct. App.
    2005) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted); see also Brandt v.
    Super. Ct., 
    37 Cal. 3d 813
    , 817 (Cal. 1985) (“When an insurer’s tortious
    conduct reasonably compels the insured to retain an attorney to obtain the
    benefits due under a policy, it follows that the insurer should be liable in
    a tort action for that expense. The attorney’s fees are an economic loss—
    damages—proximately caused by the tort. These fees must be distin-
    guished from recovery of attorney’s fees qua attorney’s fees, such as those
    attributable to the bringing of the bad faith action itself.”) (internal citation
    omitted).
    5
    The parties’ stipulation and the district court’s subsequent orders refer
    to the Rule 52(c) motion as a motion for a directed verdict. Because the
    motion is properly considered under Rule 52(c), we will refer to it as a
    motion for judgment throughout this opinion.
    6
    The district court also found that counterclaimants had not properly
    pled estoppel as an independent theory of liability.
    LEE v. WEST COAST LIFE INSURANCE               8637
    Counterclaimants timely appealed. We have jurisdiction
    under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    , and we reverse.
    II.
    “In reviewing a judgment following a bench trial, this court
    reviews the district court’s findings of fact for clear error and
    its legal conclusions de novo.” Price v. U.S. Navy, 
    39 F.3d 1011
    , 1021 (9th Cir. 1994) (citing Tonry v. Sec. Experts, Inc.,
    
    20 F.3d 967
    , 970 (9th Cir. 1994)). “The same standard applies
    to the district court’s involuntary dismissal of a claim under
    Rule 52(c).” 
    Id.
     (citations omitted). When deciding a motion
    under Rule 52(c), the district court is “not required to draw
    any inferences in favor of the non-moving party; rather, the
    district court may make findings in accordance with its own
    view of the evidence.” Ritchie v. United States, 
    451 F.3d 1019
    , 1023 (9th Cir. 2006).
    III.
    [1] Both Rule 22 and the interpleader statute allow a party
    to file a claim for interpleader if there is a possibility of expo-
    sure to double or multiple liability. 
    28 U.S.C. § 1335
    ; Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 22(a)(2). “The purpose of interpleader is for the stake-
    holder to ‘protect itself against the problems posed by multi-
    ple claimants to a single fund.’ ” Mack v. Kuckenmeister, 
    619 F.3d 1010
    , 1024 (9th Cir. 2010) (quoting Minn. Mut. Life Ins.
    Co. v. Ensley, 
    174 F.3d 977
    , 980 (9th Cir. 1999)); see also
    Michelman v. Lincoln Nat’l Life Ins. Co., ___ F.3d ___, 
    2012 WL 2855815
    , at *5 (9th Cir. 2012). “This includes protecting
    against the possibility of court-imposed liability to a second
    claimant where the stakeholder has already voluntarily paid a
    first claimant. But it also includes limiting litigation expenses,
    which is not dependent on the merits of adverse claims, only
    their existence.” Mack, 
    619 F.3d at 1024
     (citation omitted).
    “An interpleader action typically involves two stages. In
    the first stage, the district court decides whether the require-
    8638           LEE v. WEST COAST LIFE INSURANCE
    ments for [a] rule or statutory interpleader action have been
    met by determining if there is a single fund at issue and
    whether there are adverse claimants to that fund.” 
    Id. at 1023
    (quoting Rhoades v. Casey, 
    196 F.3d 592
    , 600 (5th Cir.
    1999)). “If the district court finds that the interpleader action
    has been properly brought the district court will then make a
    determination of the respective rights of the claimants.” 
    Id. at 1023-24
     (citation omitted).
    [2] “The protection afforded by interpleader takes several
    forms. Most significantly, it prevents the stakeholder from
    being obliged to determine at his peril which claimant has the
    better claim . . . .” Wright, supra, 3d § 1702; see also id. at
    § 1704 (“[I]t is thought that the stakeholder should not be
    compelled to run the risk of guessing which claimants may
    recover from the fund.”). By contrast, interpleader protection
    generally does not extend to counterclaims that are not claims
    to the interpleaded funds. “Certainly when the stakeholder is
    an interested party and when one of the claimants asserts that
    the stakeholder is independently liable to him, the interposi-
    tion of a counterclaim is appropriate. Indeed, in most
    instances of this type, the counterclaim will be compulsory
    and the court will exercise supplemental jurisdiction over it
    . . .” Wright, Miller & Kane, Federal Practice & Procedure:
    Civil 2d § 1715 (1986) (footnote omitted); see also 44B Am.
    Jur. 2d Interpleader § 4 (“Interpleader is a procedural device
    not intended to alter substantive rights. It is not [the] function
    of an interpleader rule to bestow upon the stakeholder immu-
    nity from liability for damages that are unrelated to the act of
    interpleading, such as negligence in preserving the fund.”)
    (footnotes omitted).
    The Supreme Court’s decision in State Farm Fire & Cas.
    Co. v. Tashire, 
    386 U.S. 523
     (1967), aptly illustrates this
    point. There, the insurer of a truck driver whose vehicle had
    collided with a bus brought an interpleader action in federal
    court in Oregon. Many of the bus passengers had been injured
    and several suits had been filed against the drivers and owners
    LEE v. WEST COAST LIFE INSURANCE              8639
    of the two vehicles in California state courts. 
    Id. at 525-26
    . In
    its complaint in the Oregon district court, the insurer asserted
    that, at the time of the collision, it had in force an insurance
    policy with respect to the driver of the truck providing for
    bodily injury liability up to $10,000 per person and $20,000
    per occurrence, and for legal representation of the driver in
    actions covered by the policy. It asserted that the actions
    already filed in California and others which it anticipated
    would be filed far exceeded, in aggregate damages sought, the
    amount of its maximum liability under the policy. 
    Id. at 526
    .
    Accordingly, the insurer paid into the court the sum of
    $20,000 and asked the court (1) to require all claimants to
    establish their claims against the driver and his insurer in that
    single proceeding and in no other, and (2) to discharge it from
    all further obligations under its policy—including its duty to
    defend the driver in lawsuits arising from the accident. 
    Id.
    The district court issued an order requiring the defendant-
    victims to show cause why they should not be restrained from
    filing or prosecuting “any proceeding in any state or United
    States Court affecting the property or obligation involved in
    this interpleader action, and specifically against the plaintiff[-
    insurance company] and the defendant[-driver].” 
    Id. at 527
    .
    The district court then issued a temporary injunction along the
    lines that the insurance company sought. 
    Id.
     On appeal, we
    reversed, reasoning that the insurance company could not
    invoke federal interpleader until the claims against the
    insured, the alleged tortfeasor, had been reduced to judgment.
    
    Id. at 528
    .
    The Supreme Court reversed our judgment. It reasoned
    that,
    Were an insurance company required to await reduc-
    tion of claims to judgment, the first claimant to
    obtain such a judgment or to negotiate a settlement
    might appropriate all or a disproportionate slice of
    the fund before his fellow claimants were able to
    8640           LEE v. WEST COAST LIFE INSURANCE
    establish their claims. The difficulties such a race to
    judgment pose for the insurer, and the unfairness
    which may result to some claimants, were among the
    principal evils the interpleader device was intended
    to remedy.
    
    Id. at 533
     (footnote omitted).
    Nonetheless, the fact that the insurer had properly stated an
    interpleader claim did not “entitle it to an order both enjoining
    prosecution of suits against it outside the confines of the inter-
    pleader proceeding and also extending such protection to its
    insured, the alleged tortfeasor.” 
    Id.
     This was so, the Court rea-
    soned, because “the scope of the litigation, in terms of parties
    and claims, was vastly more extensive than the confines of the
    ‘fund,’ the deposited proceeds of the insurance policy. In
    these circumstances, the mere existence of such a fund can-
    not, by use of interpleader, be employed to accomplish pur-
    poses that exceed the needs of orderly contest with respect to
    the fund.” 
    Id. at 533-34
    .
    The Court contrasted the case before it with the typical
    interpleader action, explaining:
    There are situations, of a type not present here,
    where the effect of interpleader is to confine the total
    litigation to a single forum and proceeding. One such
    case is where a stakeholder, faced with rival claims
    to the fund itself, acknowledges—or denies—his lia-
    bility to one or the other of the claimants. In this sit-
    uation, the fund itself is the target of the claimants.
    It marks the outer limits of the controversy. It is,
    therefore, reasonable and sensible that interpleader,
    in discharge of its office to protect the fund, should
    also protect the stakeholder from vexatious and mul-
    tiple litigation.
    
    Id. at 534
     (footnote omitted). The case before it, the Court
    explained, was “another matter.” 
    Id.
    LEE v. WEST COAST LIFE INSURANCE               8641
    Here, an accident has happened. Thirty-five passen-
    gers or their representatives have claims which they
    wish to press against a variety of defendants: the bus
    company, its driver, the owner of the truck, and the
    truck driver. The circumstance that one of the pro-
    spective defendants happens to have an insurance
    policy is a fortuitous event which should not of itself
    shape the nature of the ensuing litigation. . . . And
    an insurance company whose maximum interest in
    the case cannot exceed $20,000 and who in fact
    asserts that it has no interest at all, should not be
    allowed to determine that dozens of tort plaintiffs
    must be compelled to press their claims—even those
    claims which are not against the insured and which
    in no event could be satisfied out of the meager
    insurance fund—in a single forum of the insurance
    company’s choosing.
    
    Id. at 534-35
    . The Court recognized that its “view of inter-
    pleader means that it cannot be used to solve all the vexing
    problems of multiparty litigation arising out of a mass tort.
    But interpleader was never intended to perform such a func-
    tion, to be an all-purpose ‘bill of peace.’ ” 
    Id. at 535
    .
    [3] From this discussion, we distill certain fundamental
    principles: The stake marks the outer limits of the stakehold-
    er’s potential liability where the respective claimants’ entitle-
    ment to the stake is the sole contested issue; however, where
    the stakeholder may be independently liable to one or more
    claimants, interpleader does not shield the stakeholder from
    tort liability, nor from liability in excess of the stake. Id.; see
    also New York Life Ins. Co. v. Lee, 
    232 F.2d 811
    , 814 (9th
    Cir. 1956) (stating, in the context of statutory interpleader,
    “[w]e think that Congress in the enactment of the interpleader
    statute did not intend thus to wipe out the substantial claims
    of persons asserting rights against [insurance] companies.
    . . . ‘The purpose of the interpleader statute was to give the
    stakeholder protection, but in nowise to change the rights of
    8642          LEE v. WEST COAST LIFE INSURANCE
    the claimants by its operation. . . . We think Congress had no
    intention to permit . . . destruction of acquired rights [under
    state law], if indeed it had power so to do.’ ”) (quoting Sand-
    ers v. Armour Fertilizer Works, 
    292 U.S. 190
    , 200 (1934)).
    The district court recognized these principles, and applied
    them in its initial summary judgment ruling when it found
    that counterclaimants’ negligence claim survived the inter-
    pleader action. The district court nonetheless granted West
    Coast’s Rule 52(c) motion because it concluded that attor-
    ney’s fees are not recoverable in interpleader actions absent
    a showing of bad faith, and that counterclaimants’ attempt to
    recover the amount disbursed to the plaintiffs in settlement as
    damages would require relitigation of entitlement to the insur-
    ance benefits. This reasoning was in error.
    [4] “It is generally recognized that interpleader ‘developed
    in equity and is governed by equitable principles.’ ” Aetna
    Life Ins. Co. v. Bayona, 
    223 F.3d 1030
    , 1033-34 (9th Cir.
    2000) (quoting Lummis v. White, 
    629 F.2d 397
    , 399 (5th Cir.
    1980), rev’d on other grounds by Cory v. White, 
    457 U.S. 85
    (1982); Metro. Life Ins. Co. v. Marsh, 
    119 F.3d 415
    , 418 (6th
    Cir. 1997) (“[I]nterpleader is fundamentally equitable in
    nature.”)). Accordingly, many courts have held that those who
    have acted in bad faith to create a controversy over the stake
    may not claim the protection of interpleader. See, e.g., Kent
    v. N. Cal. Reg’l Office of Am. Friends Serv. Comm., 
    497 F.2d 1325
    , 1328 (9th Cir. 1974) (“Interpleader, which is an equita-
    ble remedy, is not available to one who has voluntarily
    accepted funds knowing they are subject to competing
    claims.”) (citations omitted); Farmers Irrigating Ditch & Res-
    ervoir Co. v. Kane, 
    845 F.2d 229
    , 232 (10th Cir. 1988) (“It
    is the general rule that a party seeking interpleader must be
    free from blame in causing the controversy, and where he
    stands as a wrongdoer with respect to the subject matter of the
    suit or any of the claimants, he cannot have relief by inter-
    pleader.”) (collecting cases); see also 44B Am. Jur. 2d Inter-
    pleader § 7 (“The equitable doctrine of ‘clean hands’ applies
    LEE v. WEST COAST LIFE INSURANCE                     8643
    to interpleader actions. The party seeking interpleader must
    do equity, not have caused the conflicting claims, and be free
    from blame in causing the controversy.”) (footnotes omitted).7
    [5] Here, however, counterclaimants have not alleged that
    West Coast acted in bad faith, nor do they contend that the
    interpleader remedy was, or should have been, unavailable.
    Rather, they allege that West Coast’s negligent actions in
    2005 caused the instant controversy, and claim damages flow-
    ing from that negligence. As the Supreme Court’s discussion
    in Tashire makes clear, interpleader was not intended to extin-
    guish independent tort claims, nor intended to relieve the
    stakeholder from liability in excess of the stake. The district
    court’s conclusion that counterclaimants were required to
    show that West Coast acted in bad faith in order to claim
    attorney’s fees as damages that flow from West Coast’s negli-
    gence is without support.
    [6] Nor does counterclaimants’ negligence claim arise
    from West Coast’s failure to resolve the controversy over
    entitlement to the insurance proceeds in their favor. But for
    Davis’ erroneous recording of the July 2005 change forms,
    counterclaimants allege that they would not have been forced
    to litigate their adverse claims against the plaintiffs. In other
    words, West Coast’s alleged negligence directly and proxi-
    mately caused counterclaimants to forgo $290,000 to which
    they claim they were rightfully entitled, and caused them to
    incur attorney’s fees in litigating this action. Their damages
    flowed not from West Coast’s filing of an interpleader claim
    7
    Wright & Miller suggest that modern interpleader analysis should
    focus not on the stakeholder’s interest in the controversy or lack thereof,
    but solely on the “threat of multiple vexation.” Wright, supra, 3d § 1706.
    They suggest that “[c]ontemporary procedure, with its flexible and liberal
    provisions for joinder of parties and claims, for separate trial of separate
    issues, for assuring that the right to a jury trial on a particular issue or
    claim is not impaired, and for shaping the relief to the necessities of the
    particular case is well adapted to disposing of interpleader cases even
    when independent liability [of the stakeholder] is asserted.” Id.
    8644              LEE v. WEST COAST LIFE INSURANCE
    but from its alleged negligent conduct. For this reason, coun-
    terclaimants are not required to show that West Coast acted
    in bad faith in creating the controversy in order to recover
    damages directly and proximately flowing from its alleged
    negligent conduct. The district court’s holding to the contrary
    threatens to convert the interpleader action into a species of
    get-out-of-jail-free card, a device that would shield tortfeasors
    from liability for their negligent mistakes and limit their total
    financial exposure to the value of the stake. As the Supreme
    Court explained in Tashire, this was never the intention of the
    interpleader remedy. See 
    386 U.S. at 535
    .8
    Prudential Ins. Co. of America v. Hovis, upon which the
    district court heavily relied, is not to the contrary. 
    553 F.3d 258
     (3d Cir. 2009). Hovis involved a dispute over life insur-
    ance proceeds between the decedent’s son and the decedent’s
    fiancee. 
    Id. at 259-60
    . Robert Hovis, the decedent’s fiancee,
    was a Prudential employee, and became romantically
    involved with the decedent after selling her life insurance pol-
    icies. 
    Id. at 259
    . Shortly before her death, Hovis submitted a
    change of beneficiary form to Prudential, changing the pri-
    mary beneficiary of a particular policy from his fiancee’s son
    to himself. Hovis requested that the change be made on an
    expedited basis because of his fiancee’s declining health. 
    Id. at 260
    . Prudential had an internal policy generally prohibiting
    8
    Indeed, several courts outside our Circuit have recognized that inter-
    pleader does not protect the stakeholder from total liability in excess of the
    value of the stake. See William Penn Life Ins. Co. v. Viscuso, 
    569 F. Supp. 2d 355
    , 361 (S.D.N.Y. 2008) (stating that, upon filing an interpleader
    claim, an insurer is liable to a single beneficiary as to the value of the
    stake, but may nonetheless face “potential counterclaim liability to the
    non-beneficiary defendant” such that it “will be liable to all claimants in
    a total amount greater than the value of the Policy”) (citing Ashton v. Jose-
    phine Bay Paul and C. Michael Paul Found., Inc., 
    918 F.2d 1065
    , 1069
    (2d Cir. 1990) (“[W]e reject the argument that interpleader jurisdiction is
    improper where claims against the stakeholder potentially exceed the
    value of the interpleaded fund.”)); see also Bradley v. Kochenash, 
    44 F.3d 166
    , 169 (2d Cir. 1995) (noting that interpleader was intended to protect
    the stakeholder only from unjustified multiple liability).
    LEE v. WEST COAST LIFE INSURANCE              8645
    its sales persons from having an ownership or beneficiary
    interest in its clients’ policies. Hovis required approval from
    his managing director and Prudential’s compliance division in
    order to obtain an exemption from that policy, but had not
    secured approval when he submitted the changes. 
    Id.
     Pruden-
    tial therefore began an investigation into whether to grant an
    exception in Hovis’s case, but did not complete its investiga-
    tion before the policyholder’s death approximately one month
    later. 
    Id.
    Hovis and the policyholder’s son both submitted claims to
    the policy proceeds. In lieu of determining who was entitled
    to the funds, Prudential filed an interpleader action. 
    Id.
     at 260-
    61. Hovis counterclaimed alleging, inter alia, negligence, bad
    faith, and breach of fiduciary duty arising from Prudential’s
    failure to make the requested policy change in a timely man-
    ner. 
    Id. at 261
    . Prudential moved for summary judgment as to
    Hovis’ counterclaims, arguing that its action in interpleader
    extinguished those claims. The district court granted summary
    judgment in Prudential’s favor, and Hovis appealed. 
    Id. at 261-62
    .
    In affirming the district court’s judgment, the Third Circuit
    explained that, while in the typical case “interpleader protec-
    tion does not extend to counterclaims that are not claims to
    the interpleaded funds,” 
    id. at 264
    , Hovis did not present the
    typical case in that “each of [his] counterclaims concern[ed]
    Prudential’s failure to resolve its investigation in his favor and
    pay out the life insurance proceeds to him.” 
    Id.
     Therefore,
    “none of the counterclaims [wa]s truly independent of who
    was entitled to the life insurance proceeds, which is the issue
    the interpleader action was brought to settle.” 
    Id. at 264-65
    .
    The court concluded that exposing Prudential to tort liabil-
    ity where Hovis’ tort claims arose from Prudential’s failure to
    resolve the controversy in his favor was contrary to “the very
    idea behind the interpleader remedy—namely, that a stake-
    holder [should] not [be] obliged at his peril to determine
    8646           LEE v. WEST COAST LIFE INSURANCE
    which claimant has the better claim.” 
    Id. at 265
     (citation and
    internal quotation marks omitted) (alteration in original). The
    court therefore held that Prudential’s interpleader action
    shielded it from further liability to Hovis because a stakehold-
    er’s “failure to choose between the adverse claimants (rather
    than bringing an interpleader action) cannot itself be a breach
    of a legal duty.” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted). The court cautioned,
    however, that its
    “decision in no way turn[ed] the interpleader device
    into an all-purpose get-out-of-jail-free card[,]” but
    merely stood for the proposition that “where a stake-
    holder is blameless with respect to the existence of
    the ownership controversy, the bringing of an inter-
    pleader action protects it from liability to the claim-
    ants both for further claims to the stake and for any
    claims directly relating to its failure to resolve that
    controversy.” 
    Id. at 265
     (citation omitted).
    [7] As the foregoing discussion reveals, Hovis is consistent
    with the general principles of interpleader, namely, that a dis-
    interested stakeholder may not be subjected to liability for its
    failure to resolve the controversy over entitlement to the stake
    in one claimant’s favor, but that a stakeholder whose alleged
    tort caused the controversy is not absolved of liability by fil-
    ing an interpleader action. Here, counterclaimants seek dam-
    ages wholly separate and apart from West Coast’s failure to
    award them the policy proceeds: They seek damages flowing
    from Davis’ allegedly negligent failure to correctly execute
    the July 2005 change forms. As alleged in the counterclaim,
    West Coast, unlike Prudential, is in no way blameless for the
    instant controversy.
    [8] For these reasons, we follow the Supreme Court’s
    direction in Tashire and join our sister circuits in holding that
    the federal interpleader remedy does not shield a negligent
    stakeholder from tort liability for its creation of a conflict over
    entitlement to the interpleaded funds. It follows logically from
    LEE v. WEST COAST LIFE INSURANCE             8647
    this principle that a claimant may seek to recover all damages
    directly and proximately caused by the negligent stakehold-
    er’s conduct.
    IV.
    The district court’s grant of West Coast’s Rule 52(c)
    motion is reversed and the case is remanded for further pro-
    ceedings consistent with this opinion. We note that the pre-
    trial conference order, which the district court orally deemed
    filed, included additional claims that were to be tried, namely,
    counterclaimants’ estoppel claims. Consistent with the pre-
    trial conference order, those claims were properly preserved
    for trial. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(e). We express no views on
    the merits of these additional claims.
    REVERSED and REMANDED.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 11-55026

Citation Numbers: 688 F.3d 1004, 2012 WL 3089382, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 15768

Judges: Paez

Filed Date: 7/31/2012

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/5/2024

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