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- IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA EASTERN DIVISION Case No. 4:20-cv-00073-M COLUMBUS LIFE INSURANCE ) COMPANY, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) OPINION ) AND ORDER ) WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A., as Securities ) Intermediary, ) ) Defendant. ) This action was brought under the Declaratory Judgment Act seeking to contest a life-insurance policy. For the reasons that follow, the court declines to adjudicate the declaratory claims. 1. Background On May 4, 2020, Plaintiff Columbus Life Insurance Company filed a complaint seeking a judgment declaring that an insurance policy it issued, and to which Defendant Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. holds title, is void. [DE-1] Plaintiff alleges that: (1) the policy at issue is a so-called stranger-originated life-insurance (“STOLI”) policy; and (2) STOLI policies are void as a matter of public policy and unenforceable under North Carolina law. [DE-1] On July 7, 2020, Defendant moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). [DE-10] Among other things, Defendant argues that the policy is incontestable under North Carolina law. [DE-11 at 6-20] This matter comes before the court on Defendant’s motion. II. Analysis By seeking declaratory relief in this court, Plaintiff has implicitly invoked the federal Declaratory Judgment Act (the “DJA”), 28 U.S.C. § 2201. The DJA provides as follows: In a case of actual controversy within its jurisdiction . . any court of the United States, upon the filing of an appropriate pleading, may declare the rights and other legal relations of any interested party seeking such declaration, whether or not further relief is or could be sought. Any such declaration shall have the force and effect of a final judgment or decree and shall be reviewable as such. 28 U.S.C. § 2201(a). The court is satisfied that Plaintiff's amended complaint appropriately pleads an actual controversy that is within the court’s diversity jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332. [see DE-37] A threshold question is whether the court, having jurisdiction to do so, should decide to hear the case. It is well-established that the DJA does not oblige federal courts to make any declarations of rights, but rather gives federal courts the power to make such declarations should they elect to do so in the exercise of their sound discretion. See Wilton v. Seven Falls Co., 515 U.S. 277, 282, 287 (1995) (“district courts possess discretion in determining whether and when to entertain an action under the [DJA], even when the suit otherwise satisfies subject matter jurisdictional prerequisites. ... We have repeatedly characterized the [DJA] as ‘an enabling Act, which confers a discretion on the courts rather than an absolute right upon the litigant.’” (quoting Public Serv. Comm'n of Utah v. Wycoff Co., 344 U.S. 237, 241 (1952)); United Capitol Ins. Co. v. Kapiloff, 155 F.3d 488, 493 (4th Cir. 1998) (“The [DJA] provides that district courts ‘may declare’ the rights of interested parties. This permissive language has long been interpreted to provide discretionary authority to district courts to hear declaratory judgment cases.”), The Fourth Circuit long ago said that a district court should hear a declaratory-judgment action when the judgment sought would (1) “serve a useful purpose in clarifying and settling the legal relations in issue” and (2) “terminate and afford relief from the uncertainty, insecurity, and controversy giving rise to the proceeding.” Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Quarles, 92 F.2d 321, 325 (4th Cir. 1937) (quotation marks and citation omitted). But the Quarles court also said that the DJA should not be used “to try a controversy by piecemeal, or to try particular issues without settling the entire controversy, or to interfere with an action which has already been instituted.” Jd. Declaratory-judgment actions seeking adjudication of state-law issues that are brought in federal court pursuant to diversity jurisdiction require additional considerations: [W]hen a federal court is confronted with an insurer’s request for a declaratory judgment on coverage issues during the pendency of related litigation in the state courts, its discretion must be guided not only by the criteria outlined in Quarles, which focus on the general utility of the declaratory relief sought, but also by the same considerations of federalism, efficiency, and comity that traditionally inform a federal court’s discretionary decision whether to abstain from exercising jurisdiction over state-law claims in the face of parallel litigation in the state courts. Nautilus Ins. Co. v. Winchester Homes, 15 F.3d 371, 376 (4th Cir. 1994). The “considerations of federalism, efficiency, and comity” that district courts must consider in deciding whether to hear a declaratory-judgment action involving state-law causes of action—the so-called Nautilus factors—have been articulated by the Fourth Circuit as follows: (i) the strength of the state’s interest in having the issues raised in the federal declaratory action decided in the state courts; (ii) | whether the issues raised in the federal action can more efficiently be resolved in the court in which the state action is pending; (iii) | whether permitting the federal action to go forward would result in unnecessary entanglement between the federal and state court systems, because of the presence of overlapping issues of fact or law; and (iv) whether the declaratory judgment action is being used merely as a device for procedural fencing--that is, to provide another forum in a race for res judicata or to achieve a federal hearing in a case otherwise not removable. Centennial Life Ins. Co. v. Poston, 88 F.3d 255, 257 (4th Cir. 1996) (quoting Nautilus, 15 F.3d at 377 (internal quotation marks and brackets omitted)), Although the Nautilus factors speak to pending state action, the Fourth Circuit has made clear that the same factors are to be considered where there is no state action pending. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Ind-Com Elec. Co., 139 F.3d 419, 424 (4th Cir. 1998) (“a district court does not per se overstep the bounds of its discretion when it dismisses a declaratory judgment action in the absence of a pending parallel state court proceeding. Rather, such a dismissal is within the district court’s discretion, and that discretion is not abused so long as the factors which we have enumerated to guide district courts in this determination weigh in favor of denying declaratory relief.”). In the complaint, Plaintiff seeks to prospectively establish a defense to an action to enforce the life- insurance policy. Defendant’s incontestability argument seeks to overcome such a defense and keep Plaintiff from being able to contest the policy’s validity on the grounds raised in the complaint. The incontestability argument is therefore potentially dispositive as to Plaintiff's declaratory claims. To establish the defense it seeks, Plaintiff argues that: (1) if it is able to establish that the policy at issue is a STOLI policy, the policy would be void ab initio as a matter of North Carolina! public policy as an insurance contract issued without “insurable interest,” see Vance v. Wiley T. Booth, Inc., 112 N.C. App. 600, 602-03, 436 S.E.2d 256, 258 (1993) (discussing “insurable interest”); and (2) a party cannot use an incontestability clause in a life-insurance policy to overcome a defense that such a contract is invalid and unenforceable for lack of insurable interest. [DE-15 at 8-9] Both of Plaintiff's arguments find support in certain opinions from the North Carolina Supreme Court, most notably Wharton v. Home Sec. Life Ins. Co., 206 N.C. 254, 173 S.E. 338 (1934). In Wharton, the beneficiary of a life-insurance policy sued the insurer seeking the proceeds of the policy. Jd. at 256, 173 S.E. at 339. The jury rendered a verdict in the beneficiary’s favor, and the insurer parties agree that the substantive law of North Carolina governs this dispute. [DE-11 at 6; DE-15 at appealed the resulting judgment, which ultimately reached the North Carolina Supreme Court. Jd. The Wharton court first said: It is well settled as the law in this and other jurisdictions that a person cannot take out a valid and enforceable policy of insurance for his own benefit on the life of a person in which he has no insurable interest; such a policy or contract of insurance is void and unenforceable on grounds of public policy, it being merely a wagering contract. Id. The court noted that the beneficiary conceded that the policy was issued without insurable interest, but that she argued “that the principle is not applicable because of the presence in the policy of the incontestable clause” which stated that “[a]fter this policy has been in force for two full years, it shall be incontestable except for nonpayment of premiums, fraud, misstatement of age or violation of article third.”? Jd. at 255— 56, 173 S.E. at 338-39. The court rejected the beneficiary’s incontestability argument as follows: This contention cannot be sustained. The parties to a contract which is void because in contravention of a well settled public policy, cannot bind themselves by such contract, and thus deprive the courts of the power to enforce the public policy of the State by their judgments. ... If at any time it appears in the process of the action that the contract sued upon is one which the law forbids, the Court will refuse relief. Id. at 256-57, 173 S.E. at 339. The judgment for the beneficiary was accordingly reversed. Id. Plaintiff relies heavily on Wharton’s holding that an incontestability clause in a contract cannot overcome a defense that the contract “is void because in contravention of a well settled public policy” (the “Wharton rule”). Id. Defendant counters that: (1) Wharton has not been cited by any North Carolina court in more than 50 years; and (2) the North Carolina General Assembly, by enacting N.C. Gen. Stat. § 58-58- 22 in 1995, abrogated the Wharton rule in the life-insurance-policy context. [DE-11 at 6-15] N.C. Gen. Stat. § 58-58-22 sets forth as follows: ? The Wharton opinion does not specify what “article third” of the contract there at issue concerned, but the court does not consider that important. No policy of individual life insurance shall be delivered in this State unless it contains in substance the following provisions, or provisions that in the Commissioner’s opinion are more favorable to the person insured: (2) Incontestability. — A provision that the validity of the policy shall not be contested, except for nonpayment of premium, once it has been in force for two years after its date of issue[.] N.C. Gen. Stat. § 58-58-22(2). Since it is uncontested that the policy at issue was delivered in North Carolina sometime in 2004-05 [DE-1 {J 11-17]—and thus long following N.C. Gen. Stat. § 58-58-22(2)’s enactment in 1995—Defendant argues that the policy became incontestable by 2007 “except for nonpayment of premium[.]” [DE-11 at 5] And because Plaintiff’s declaratory-judgment action seeks to establish that the policy at issue is invalid for another reason, Defendant argues that Plaintiff's request for declaratory relief must be rejected. The North Carolina Supreme Court has said that “it is well settled that North Carolina common law may be modified or repealed by the [North Carolina] General Assembly, except for any parts of the common law which are incorporated in [the North Carolina] Constitution.” Rhyne v. K-Mart Corp., 358 N.C. 160, 169, 594 S.E.2d 1, 8 (2004) (internal quotation marks, brackets, and citation omitted). The Rhyne court said that “[t]he legislative branch of government is without question the policy-making agency of our government, and when it elects to legislate in respect to the subject matter of any common law rule, the statute supplants the common law rule and becomes the public policy of the State in respect to that particular matter.” Jd. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). The North Carolina Constitution contains certain provisions regarding life-insurance policies, see N.C. Const. Art. X § 5, but does not incorporate: (1) any rights of insurers to contest life-insurance policies; or (2) any rights of contractual counterparties to contest or enforce contracts more generally. Because the North Carolina Constitution therefore does not incorporate the Wharton rule, “the common law rule” was arguably “supplant[ed]” in the life-insurance- policy context by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 58-58-22(2)’s enactment. Rhyne, 358 N.C. at 169, 594 S.E.2d at 8. Indeed, since incontestability clauses could be worded more broadly than the incontestability provision contemplated by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 58-58-22(2) (as evinced by the above-described clause at issue in Wharton), Defendant has a strong argument that the North Carolina General Assembly changed the public policy of the state regarding when and how life-insurance policies may be contested by enacting the statute, narrowing the law such that the only viable defense that may now be raised by an insurer to contest a life-insurance policy following the two-year statutory period is the nonpayment of insurance premiums. After all, the incontestability provision in Wharton was a mere agreement between contractual counterparties, which agreement the court held was insufficient to trump the state’s “well settled public policy[,]” Wharton, 206 N.C. at 256-57, 173 S.E. at 339, whereas the incontestability provision here at issue’ is required and governed by statute, which is the state’s public policy. But neither party directs the court’s attention to any case law discussing N.C. Gen. Stat. § 58-58- 22(2)’s impact upon the Wharton rule, or any other North Carolina authority addressing the question of whether an incontestability clause in a life-insurance policy can overcome a defense that the policy is void as a matter of public policy for lack of insurable interest—or that the policy is invalid for any other reason except the nonpayment of premiums—following N.C. Gen. Stat. § 58-58-22(2)’s enactment (the “Wharton- tule issue”). Defendant concedes that the law is unsettled on this score. [DE-11 at 9] Plaintiff relies on decisions from the high courts of Delaware and New Jersey in arguing that “the weight of other authority” supports its position. [see DE-15 at 17-21 (discussing PHL Variable Insurance Company v. Price Dawe 3 The policy here at issue, which Plaintiff attached as an exhibit to its complaint, contains an incontestability provision which is compliant with N.C. Gen. Stat. § 58-58-22(2). [see DE-1-1 at 21 (“We will not contest this policy to the extent of the initial Specified Amount after it has been in effect during the Insured’s lifetime for two years from the Policy Date.”)] 2006 Insurance Trust, 28 A.3d 1059 (Del. 2011) and Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada v. Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, 208 A.3d 839 (N.J. 2019)). In so doing, Plaintiff effectively concedes that the question has not been addressed by North Carolina courts. The court has considered the arguments of the parties’ able counsel, but after conducting its own independent research, the court concludes that the Wharton-tule issue is unsettled such that the court would have to resolve a novel question of state law to adjudicate Plaintiff's declaratory claims. In Mitcheson v. Harris, 955 F.2d 235 (4th Cir. 1992), the Fourth Circuit discussed the competing federal and state interests when a federal court sitting in diversity is asked to issue a declaratory judgment regarding questions of state law. Id. at 237-38. The Mitcheson court noted that, by conferring diversity jurisdiction upon the federal courts in Article III, the United States Constitution clearly expressed the “paramount federal interests in having federal courts resolve questions of state law and accord protection to out-of-state parties.” Jd, at 237. But the court also recognized that “[tJhere exists an interest in having the most authoritative voice speak on the meaning of applicable law, and that voice belongs to the state courts when state law controls the resolution of the case[,]” noting that in other contexts the Supreme Court had “stated that . . . federal court[s] should frequently exercise [their] discretion to dismiss [a] case in order to avoid ‘needless decisions of state law’ when a state court could provide ‘a surer-footed reading” thereof. Id. at 237-38 (quoting United Mine Workers v. Gibbs, 383 U.S. 715, 726 (1966)). Because only state-law claims were there at issue, and in recognition of a pending state action on related claims, the Mitcheson court stated: Absent a strong countervailing federal interest, the federal court here should not elbow its way into this controversy to render what may be an “uncertain and ephemeral” interpretation of state law. Id. at 238 (quoting Pennhurst State School & Hosp. v. Halderman, 465 U.S. 89, 122 n.32 (1984)). Finding no strong countervailing federal interest, the Mitcheson court concluded that “the state interest in resolving matters of state law should have guided the exercise of federal judicial discretion[,]” and reversed the district court with instructions to dismiss the declaratory action upon remand. Jd. at 238. In Nautilus, the Fourth Circuit applied Mitcheson in concluding that there was not a state interest in having the state-law questions there at issue answered by the state’s courts that was sufficiently compelling to justify a refusal to hear the declaratory suit. 15 F.3d at 377-78. The Nautilus court reached this conclusion because the state-law questions “involve[d] the routine application of settled principles of law to particular disputed facts[,]” noting that “[i]n analogous situations in which a federal court possesses discretionary power to abstain from deciding state-law questions otherwise properly within its jurisdiction, that discretion may be exercised only when the questions of state law involved are difficult, complex, or unsettled.” Jd. at 378. Plaintiff seeks a declaration that the policy at issue is a void STOLI policy. Were the court to so rule and grant Plaintiff the declaratory judgment it seeks, the question would remain whether Defendant could initiate a lawsuit for breach of the policy and, by invoking the incontestability clause, keep Plaintiff from using the judgment as a defense to that lawsuit. Thus, without a ruling regarding the legal import of the incontestability clause—and thus a resolution of the unsettled Wharton-rule issue—the judgment Plaintiff seeks would neither “serve a useful purpose in clarifying and settling the legal relations in issue ..- [nor] terminate and afford relief from the uncertainty, insecurity, and controversy giving rise to the proceeding[,]” but would likely rather result in “try[ing the] controversy by piecemeal, or . . . try[ing] particular issues without settling the entire controversy[.]” Quarles, 92 F.2d at 325 (citations omitted). Such a judgment would therefore not be the sort that the court should consider granting under Quarles. If the court were to resolve the Wharton-rule issue, the resulting judgment would settle the issue between the parties within the meaning of Quarles. See Kapiloff, 155 F.3d at 494 (“It is well established that a declaration of parties’ rights under an insurance policy is an appropriate use of the declaratory judgment mechanism.”). But resolving the unsettled issue would require an “uncertain and ephemeral interpretation of state law[,]” which Mitcheson says courts should avoid undertaking unless “a strong countervailing federal interest” militates otherwise. 955 F.2d at 238 (quotation marks and citation omitted). The court discerns no strong countervailing federal interest here. As in Mitcheson, “the only federal interest at issue in this case is the same interest federal courts have in deciding any diversity case.” Id. In light of Quarles, Mitcheson, and Nautilus, the court accordingly concludes that North Carolina courts should resolve the Wharton-rule issue. As noted above, the first of the Nautilus factors that the court must consider in a case like this concerns “the strength of the state’s interest in having the issues raised in the federal declaratory action decided in the state courts[.]” Centennial Life, 88 F.3d at 257. North Carolina’s interest in resolving the unsettled Wharton-rule issue is very strong. See Hartford Fire Ins. Co. v. Kinston Plumbing & Heating Co., 868 F. Supp. 120, 122 (E.D.N.C. 1994) (dismissing DJA action in exercise of discretion because the court “would be forced to speculate” regarding a question of first impression under North Carolina law, about which the state’s interest was “crucial”); cf: Kapiloff, 155 F.3d at 494 (finding “the interests of Maryland in deciding this case were not particularly significant” because the state-law issues were “standard” and the “federal court would [therefore] be unlikely to break new ground or be faced with novel issues of state interest”). Concerning the rest of the Nautilus factors, although the court is aware of no pending state action such that a ruling by this court would necessarily risk (2) causing unnecessary inefficiency or (3) entangling the federal and state court systems, and (4) the court does not conclude that Plaintiff's DJA action is mere device to procedurally fence in Defendant, the court concludes that these considerations do not outweigh (1) North Carolina’s very-strong interest in resolving the Wharton-rule issue. See Hartford, supra; Ind-Com, 139 F.3d at 423-24 (affirming discretionary refusal to hear declaratory action in absence of parallel state proceeding where the “case raises important issues of unclear state law in which the state of North Carolina has an important interest[,]” agreeing with the district 10 court that “the existence or nonexistence of a state court action is simply one consideration relevant to whether to grant declaratory relief.”); Reifer v. Westport Ins. Corp., 751 F.3d 129, 141, 144-45 (3d Cir. 2014) (following Ind-Com and affirming discretionary refusal to hear declaratory claims in absence of parallel state proceeding in light of unsettled question of Pennsylvania law: “[W]hen applicable state law is uncertain or undetermined, district courts should be particularly reluctant to exercise DJA jurisdiction. Rather, the proper relationship between federal and state courts requires district courts to step back and permit state courts to resolve unsettled state law matters.” (internal quotation marks and citations omitted)). In sum, North Carolina’s very-strong interest in resolving the unsettled Wharton-rule issue guides the court’s decision to decline, in its discretion, to adjudicate Plaintiff's declaratory claims.‘ I. Conclusion For the foregoing reasons, the court DISMISSES the complaint and DISMISSES AS MOOT all pending motions in the case. SO ORDERED this the day of beeen □□□ , 2020. RICHARD E. MYERS II UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE 4 The court notes that, unlike other states, there exists no mechanism allowing federal courts to certify questions of North Carolina law to North Carolina’s courts, see Colony Ins. Co. v. Peterson, 582 F. App’x 156, 160 n.2 (4th Cir. 2014), and that Plaintiff accordingly must seek its declaratory judgment, if at all, in North Carolina state court. 11
Document Info
Docket Number: 4:20-cv-00073
Filed Date: 12/8/2020
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 6/25/2024