Cardigan Mountain School v. New Hampshire Insurance Compan , 787 F.3d 82 ( 2015 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 14-2182
    CARDIGAN MOUNTAIN SCHOOL,
    Plaintiff, Appellant,
    v.
    NEW HAMPSHIRE INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Defendant, Appellee.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    [Hon. Landya B. McCafferty, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Howard, Selya, and Barron,
    Circuit Judges.
    Scott H. Harris, with whom Nicholas C. Casolaro, Andrew R.
    Hamilton, and McLane, Graf, Raulerson & Middleton, P.A. were on
    brief, for appellant.
    Mark D. Sheridan, with whom Jason F. King, Sean P. Neafsey,
    and Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP were on brief, for appellee.
    May 27, 2015
    BARRON, Circuit Judge.           This appeal arises out of an
    action   for   a   declaratory    judgment.      The   plaintiff,   now   the
    appellant, is a private middle school in Canaan, New Hampshire.
    The school seeks to prove that, nearly fifty years ago, the
    insurance company that is the defendant, and now the appellee,
    issued the school an insurance policy that covers a claim that the
    school recently received concerning events allegedly occurring
    during the 1967-1968 academic year.
    The twist is that while the school can document that it
    had a policy with the insurance company at some point, it cannot
    find a copy of the policy for the year in question.                 And the
    insurance company has told the school that it cannot confirm the
    existence of the policy.         Thus, the company contends that it is
    not obliged to cover the claim and, more significantly for present
    purposes, that the school's complaint should be dismissed because
    it fails to make a plausible case that such a policy ever existed.
    The District Court sided with the insurance company and
    dismissed the suit. But although the question is close, we reverse
    and remand for further proceedings.
    I.
    In 2013, the Cardigan Mountain School received a demand
    letter asserting a claim (about which we have been given no
    details) based on events that allegedly occurred during the 1967-
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    1968 school year.        In response, the school asked the New Hampshire
    Insurance Company to defend against the claim as the carrier of
    the school's comprehensive general liability insurance policy at
    that time.
    The   New    Hampshire     Insurance     Company   rejected    the
    request. The company explained that it had not been able to locate
    any policy covering the school for the relevant time period, and
    thus that it was not the school's carrier at that time and
    therefore had no duty to defend against this claim now.
    Not having found a copy of the policy in its own records,
    the school filed this suit in New Hampshire state court under the
    New Hampshire declaratory judgment statute.              See N.H. Rev. Stat.
    Ann. § 491:22.       The school sought a judgment "adjudicating and
    decreeing the existence of, and Cardigan's rights under, any policy
    issued by" New Hampshire Insurance Company.
    New    Hampshire         Insurance      Company     --      which,
    notwithstanding its name, is a Pennsylvania corporation with its
    headquarters in New York -- removed the suit to federal court on
    diversity-of-citizenship grounds.              See 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a).    New
    Hampshire Insurance Company then moved to dismiss the suit for
    failure to state a claim.        See Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).
    The   District    Court    granted    New   Hampshire    Insurance
    Company's motion and dismissed the suit.                 The District Court
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    concluded that the school's complaint did not plausibly show the
    existence of the policy.1   The school appealed.2
    II.
    Under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, a complaint
    must provide "a short and plain statement of the claim showing
    that the pleader is entitled to relief."    Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(a)(2).
    To meet that standard, a plaintiff "need not demonstrate that [it]
    is likely to prevail" on its claim.        García-Catalán v. United
    States, 
    734 F.3d 100
    , 102 (1st Cir. 2013).    Rather, the complaint
    need include only enough factual detail to make the asserted claim
    "plausible on its face."    Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. 662
    , 678
    (2009) (quoting Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 
    550 U.S. 544
    , 570
    (2007)).   We review the District Court's dismissal of complaint
    1  The District Court also held that the school's suit was
    ripe for adjudication, because the school had received a demand
    letter threatening legal action and the uncertainty over the
    availability of insurance coverage had "significant implications"
    for the parties' responses to that letter.          Neither party
    challenges that ripeness holding on appeal.
    2 The school does not challenge the District Court's separate
    holding that New Hampshire law places the burden on the school to
    prove the existence of the disputed insurance policy, rather than
    placing the burden on New Hampshire Insurance Company to disprove
    the existence of the policy, and we therefore do not address that
    question in this appeal. See Kelley v. LaForce, 
    288 F.3d 1
    , 11
    (1st Cir. 2002) (issues not raised in the appellant's brief are
    waived). We thus resolve this appeal on the understanding that
    the school bears the burden of persuasion on this issue.
    - 4 -
    for failure to state a claim de novo.               
    García-Catalán, 734 F.3d at 102
    .
    To evaluate the sufficiency of a complaint under Rule 8,
    we first must "distinguish 'the complaint's factual allegations
    (which       must    be   accepted   as   true)    from    its     conclusory   legal
    allegations (which need not be credited).'"                  
    Id. at 103
    (quoting
    Morales-Cruz v. Univ. of P.R., 
    676 F.3d 220
    , 224 (1st Cir. 2012)).
    We    then    must    "determine     whether      the   factual     allegations   are
    sufficient to support 'the reasonable inference that the defendant
    is liable . . . .'"            
    Id. (quoting Haley
    v. City of Boston, 
    657 F.3d 39
    , 46 (1st Cir. 2011)).
    To perform this two-step analysis, though, we need to be
    clear about the legal issue that is in dispute.                     Here, the school
    seeks to prove that the company must cover the claim made in the
    2013 demand letter that the school received.                      But on appeal, the
    issue is narrower.           The sole legal question in dispute concerns
    the existence of the policy, not whether that policy, if it exists,
    covers the claim.          And that is because, as in the District Court,
    the    New     Hampshire      Insurance     Company       seeks     the   complaint's
    dismissal solely on the ground that the complaint does not make a
    plausible case that the policy was ever in place.                     See Goldman v.
    First Nat'l Bank of Bos., 
    985 F.2d 1113
    , 1116-17 n.3 (1st Cir.
    1993) ("[T]heories not raised squarely in the district court cannot
    - 5 -
    be surfaced for the first time on appeal." (quoting McCoy v. Mass.
    Inst. of Tech., 
    950 F.2d 13
    , 22 (1st Cir. 1991))).
    We thus look at the complaint to determine what facts it
    sets forth concerning the existence of the policy. We then address
    whether, accepting the truth of those facts, the complaint makes
    out a plausible case that the policy does in fact exist.
    A.
    The allegations in the school's complaint do not include
    a direct allegation that the insurance policy existed.           In fact,
    the   complaint   alleges   that   New   Hampshire   Insurance   Company's
    representative "has noted that she has searched for the policy and
    been unable to find it, but has assured the [school] that her
    search continues."    In place of a direct allegation, the complaint
    relies on circumstantial evidence.         That evidence is as follows.
    The complaint alleges that an accounting firm prepared
    an audit report for the school dated September 1971.         That report
    is attached as an exhibit to the complaint.            The report states
    that from September 1970 to September 1971 the school had a
    "Special Multi-Peril" insurance policy from the New Hampshire
    Insurance Company.     And, according to the report, that policy
    included $1,000,000 in "General Liability" coverage.
    The complaint further states that Phillip Wheeler, "one
    of the two principals in the [accounting] firm that prepared" that
    - 6 -
    audit report, "believes that had the school changed carriers"
    between the 1969-1970 school year and the 1970-1971 school year,
    "then the auditors would have noted the change."               No such change
    is noted in the audit report.
    To show that the policy was in place during the critical
    1967-1968   school     year,    the   complaint     alleges   that   "Cornelius
    Bakker, Cardigan's business manager between 1967 and 1970, is
    certain the school had insurance during his tenure." The complaint
    further alleges that Bakker "worked with A.B. Gile, Inc., a local
    insurance brokerage, to secure Cardigan's insurance coverage."
    And the complaint alleges that Bakker "does not believe Cardigan
    changed carriers while he was business manager between 1967 and
    1970."
    The     complaint     offers      one   additional,      bolstering
    allegation.       It alleges "[u]pon information and belief" that the
    insurance brokerage the school used "had a close association with"
    New Hampshire Insurance Company and "advised most of its commercial
    clients like Cardigan to place their commercial lines of insurance
    with" New Hampshire Insurance Company.
    New Hampshire Insurance Company argues, and the District
    Court held, that, except for the allegation concerning the audit
    report, the complaint sets forth "nothing more than speculation
    and conjecture."      New Hampshire Insurance Company thus argues that
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    we are not "obligated to accept" those other allegations as true.
    New Hampshire Insurance Company relies for that argument on the
    Supreme Court's decisions in Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. 662
    (2009), and Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 
    550 U.S. 544
    (2007).
    In each decision, the Supreme Court held that "the tenet
    that a court must accept as true all of the allegations contained
    in a complaint is inapplicable to legal conclusions."                  
    Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 678
    ; see 
    Twombly, 550 U.S. at 555
    .               Iqbal illustrates the
    sort of "conclusory statements" that are "not entitled to the
    assumption of 
    truth." 556 U.S. at 678-79
    .
    Iqbal involved a suit by an individual -- Iqbal -- who
    was    arrested   and   detained      following   the     September    11,    2001,
    terrorist attacks.           
    Id. at 666.
          After Iqbal was released, he
    brought suit against a variety of federal officials, asserting
    alleged    violations    of     his   constitutional      rights.      
    Id. The defendants
    included John Ashcroft, who had been the United States
    Attorney General at the time, and Robert Mueller, then the Director
    of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.             
    Id. The Supreme
    Court explained that the complaint's "bald
    allegations" that Ashcroft and Mueller were personally involved in
    unconstitutional conduct were "conclusory" and thus should have
    been    disregarded     by    the   district    court.      
    Id. at 681.
         In
    particular, the Supreme Court held that statements that Ashcroft
    - 8 -
    and Mueller "'knew of, condoned, and willfully and maliciously
    agreed    to    subject   [the     plaintiff]'       to    harsh       conditions    of
    confinement"      based   on   his    "'religion,         race,    and/or    national
    origin'" were not factual allegations that must be taken as true.
    
    Id. at 680.
         And the Court ruled the same with respect to Iqbal's
    allegations that "Ashcroft was the 'principal architect'" of the
    policy    and    that   "Mueller     was   'instrumental'         in    adopting    and
    executing it."      
    Id. at 680-81.
    These sorts of allegations, the Court explained, were
    "nothing more than a 'formulaic recitation of the elements' of a
    constitutional      discrimination         claim."        
    Id. at 681
      (quoting
    
    Twombly, 550 U.S. at 555
    ).             In contrast, Iqbal did credit as
    factual those allegations in the complaint that made reference to
    specific events.        See 
    id. (crediting allegations
    including "that
    'the [FBI], under the direction of Defendant MUELLER, arrested and
    detained thousands of Arab Muslim men'").
    The Supreme Court's decision in Twombly is similar.
    Twombly was an antitrust suit. 
    See 550 U.S. at 548
    . The plaintiffs
    contended that the defendants had conspired "in restraint of trade"
    in the local telephone market.             
    Id. (quoting 15
    U.S.C. § 1).             The
    plaintiffs lacked any direct evidence of the existence of the
    conspiratorial agreement on which their claim depended.                      See 
    id. at 564.
           Rather, the plaintiffs based their claim largely "on
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    descriptions of parallel conduct" by the defendants -- similar
    actions taken by putatively independent firms that, according to
    the plaintiffs, showed that those firms were really acting in
    concert.    
    Id. at 553-54,
    564.
    The Supreme Court credited those factual allegations of
    parallel conduct, although it ultimately found them inadequate to
    state a claim under § 1.         See 
    id. at 564-66.
          But mixed in among
    the plaintiffs' allegations about parallel conduct were "a few
    stray statements speak[ing] directly of agreement."               Id at 564 &
    n.9.   Those "stray statements," the Supreme Court held, were "on
    fair reading . . . merely legal conclusions resting on the prior
    allegations."      
    Id. at 564.
         In particular, the allegation that the
    defendants    "have       entered    into   a   contract,    combination     or
    conspiracy . . . and have agreed not to compete with one another"
    was, the Supreme Court held, no more than a legal conclusion based
    on the allegations of parallel conduct.          
    Id. at 564-65.
        And thus,
    the Supreme Court held that this direct allegation of agreement
    did not need to be taken as true.           See 
    id. New Hampshire
    Insurance Company contends that, under
    Iqbal and Twombly, we are obliged to disregard the school's
    allegations outlined above (save for the one concerning the audit
    report).     But    New    Hampshire    Insurance     Company's   argument   is
    mistaken.
    - 10 -
    The allegations in the school's complaint described
    above   are    specific       and    factual.       The    complaint    refers     to
    individuals        with   relevant    knowledge     who    are    recalling     facts
    plausibly known to them.             Those allegations are thus like the
    allegations of actual events in Iqbal and of parallel conduct in
    Twombly that the Supreme Court took as true; they are specific and
    appear to be based on the knowledge of particular individuals.
    They are not bare recitations of the legal conclusion the suit
    seeks to prove.           We thus conclude that the school's allegations
    set forth above are entitled to the presumption of truth at the
    motion to dismiss stage.
    At    the   same   time,    precisely       because   these   factual
    allegations        involve   a   series   of     particular      recollections   and
    beliefs about the school's insurance practices and the role of the
    auditor, the complaint provides at most circumstantial evidence
    that the school had an insurance policy with this carrier at the
    time in question.          And so we must proceed to the second step of
    the analysis, and consider whether "the factual allegations are
    sufficient     to     support    'the     reasonable      inference    that'"    the
    insurance policy at issue was in place.               
    García-Catalán, 734 F.3d at 103
    (quoting 
    Haley, 657 F.3d at 46
    ).
    - 11 -
    B.
    In undertaking our inquiry, we must "accept the truth of
    all   well-pleaded   facts   and     draw    all   reasonable   inferences
    therefrom in the pleader's favor."          
    Id. at 102
    (quoting Grajales
    v. P.R. Ports Auth., 
    682 F.3d 40
    , 44 (1st Cir. 2012)).           In doing
    so, we recognize that "circumstantial evidence often suffices" to
    render an asserted claim plausible in the pleading context.           
    Id. at 103
    (quoting Rodríguez-Reyes v. Molina-Rodríguez, 
    711 F.3d 49
    ,
    56 (1st Cir. 2013)).   But at bottom, this inquiry requires that we
    "draw on [our] experience and common sense," 
    Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 679
    , as the parties have cited no precedent to guide us on the
    application of the Rule 8 standard to a lost-insurance-policy suit,
    and we have found very little on our own.3          Instead, nearly every
    lost-policy case we know of concerns what showing must be made to
    survive summary judgment.     See, e.g., Bianchi v. Florists Mut.
    3See Radenbaugh v. State Farm Lloyds, No. 4:13-CV-339-A, 
    2013 WL 4442024
    , *2-*4 (N.D. Tex. 2013) (granting motion to dismiss
    because, among other things, the complaint made no allegations
    that the defendant insurance company had ever issued an insurance
    policy to him); N. River Ins. Co. v. Bishop of Pueblo, No. 06-cv-
    01971, 
    2008 WL 280842
    , *2 (D. Colo. 2008) (denying motion to
    dismiss a counterclaim because the "ambiguities" and "issues of
    fact" relating to the existence of a policy must be construed in
    non-movant's favor); Lumbermens Mut. Cas. Co. v. Foster Wheeler
    Corp., No. 88 C 4302, 
    1993 WL 394769
    , at *3 (N.D. Ill. Oct. 4,
    1993) (holding, with little explanation, that unspecified
    allegations in a complaint adequately alleged the existence of a
    lost insurance policy).
    - 12 -
    Ins. Co., 
    660 F. Supp. 2d 434
    (E.D.N.Y. 2009); S. Union Co. v.
    Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 
    581 F. Supp. 2d 120
    (D. Mass. 2008); UTI
    Corp. v. Fireman's Fund Ins. Co., 
    896 F. Supp. 362
    (D.N.J. 1995);
    Peterborough v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 
    824 F. Supp. 1102
    (D.N.H.
    1993).
    In our view, although the question is close, the school's
    allegations, and the "reasonable inferences" we must draw from
    them, 
    García-Catalán, 734 F.3d at 102
    (quoting 
    Grajales, 682 F.3d at 44
    )), do make a plausible showing that New Hampshire Insurance
    Company issued an insurance policy to the school for the 1967-1968
    school year.   The school's allegation of the existence of a New
    Hampshire Insurance Company policy for the 1970-1971 school year
    is directly supported by the school's audit report from that year.
    And the school's factual allegations tending to show no change in
    coverage in the preceding three years are enough to plausibly
    support the existence of coverage in the 1967-1968 school year.
    The factual allegations are "circumstantial," to be
    sure, but there is no requirement for direct evidence.   
    Id. at 103
    (quoting 
    Rodríguez-Reyes, 711 F.3d at 56
    ).     Neither is there a
    "probability requirement" at the pleading stage.      
    Twombly, 550 U.S. at 556
    .   Rather, the factual allegations need only be enough
    to nudge the claim "across the line from conceivable to plausible,"
    - 13 -
    thus    "rais[ing]   a   reasonable   expectation     that   discovery   will
    reveal evidence of" the lost policy.         
    Id. at 556,
    570.
    The school has alleged specific facts concerning an
    audit report that tend to show that it had an insurance policy
    from New Hampshire Insurance Company as of 1971.             And the school
    has then linked that allegation to the recollections of specific
    individuals who were involved in the relevant events and are of
    the view both that the school had a general liability policy in
    the preceding years, including the crucial 1967-1968 school year,
    and that there had been no change in carrier during that period of
    time.
    New   Hampshire    Insurance    Company    responds   that     the
    school's   complaint,     in   describing   the   recollections   of     these
    persons, uses "carefully crafted words" in an effort to disguise
    "the vagueness" of the key factual allegations.               New Hampshire
    Insurance Company focuses in particular on the allegation that
    Bakker "does not believe Cardigan changed carriers" between 1967
    and 1970, which, New Hampshire Insurance Company says, is not the
    same as saying that "Cardigan did not change carriers."
    But in ordinary usage, the expression "I do not believe
    [some event] occurred" may be synonymous with the expression "I
    believe [some event] did not occur." We are required at this stage
    of the proceedings to "draw all reasonable inferences in" the
    - 14 -
    school's favor.   Morales-Tañon v. P.R. Elec. Power Auth., 
    524 F.3d 15
    , 17 (1st Cir. 2008).     And one reasonable inference from the
    school's allegation is thus that Bakker's best recollection is
    that the school did not change insurance carriers during his
    tenure.   Moreover, the school pleads that Bakker was the person
    who "worked with A.B. Gile, Inc., a local insurance brokerage, to
    secure Cardigan's insurance coverage."    Given that assertion, it
    is a reasonable (albeit not necessary) inference that, had there
    been a change in coverage, Bakker would have known about it, due
    to his asserted role in securing coverage for the school.    Thus,
    Bakker's lack of a belief that there was a change in coverage (even
    phrased as it was) is itself a relevant, factual assertion tending
    to suggest that no such change in coverage occurred.4
    4  New Hampshire Insurance Company also argues that Bakker
    may have lacked knowledge regarding the crucial 1967-1968 policy,
    because that policy could have been purchased before Bakker became
    the school's business manager at an unspecified time in 1967. But
    the school alleges that Bakker worked for the school during that
    1967-1968 school year, and that Bakker believes the school did not
    "change[] carriers while [Bakker] was business manager."       Any
    change in insurance carrier between the 1967-1968 school year and
    the 1969-1970 school year would thus have occurred "while [Bakker]
    was business manager."    And so it is reasonable to think that
    Bakker -- the one who was responsible for purchasing insurance --
    would have personal knowledge of such a change, even if -- as New
    Hampshire Insurance Company suggests -- Bakker may not have been
    the one who purchased the 1967-1968 policy. Moreover, as we have
    discussed, the school's allegations also address the possibility
    of a change in insurance after Bakker's tenure as business manager
    ended at an unspecified time in 1970. The school alleges that any
    change between the 1969-1970 and 1970-1971 school years would have
    - 15 -
    III.
    This case is not one in which a plaintiff has selected
    an insurance company at random and filed a declaratory judgment
    action against it in the hopes that the plaintiff might get lucky
    and find a policy.           The school's complaint instead provides a
    plausible basis, beyond a mere possibility, for believing that New
    Hampshire Insurance Company issued the policy in question. Whether
    the school can elicit the evidence that will be required to make
    the more demanding showing the school will need to make as the
    suit moves forward is, of course, a different question that we
    need not address in this appeal.                See 
    Twombly, 550 U.S. at 556
    (noting that "a well-pleaded complaint may proceed even if it
    strikes   a    savvy   judge    that    actual    proof   of   those   facts   is
    improbable, and 'that a recovery is very remote and unlikely'");
    see also Metts v. Murphy, 
    363 F.3d 8
    , 10, 12 (1st Cir. 2014) (en
    banc)   (vacating      the   dismissal     of     the   plaintiffs'    claim   as
    "premature" and remanding "to allow a fuller development of the
    evidence, and further legal analysis based on that evidence,"
    before resolving the claim on the merits).
    been noted on the 1970-1971 audit report, which showed the
    existence of a New Hampshire Insurance Company policy and noted no
    change in insurer from the prior year.
    - 16 -
    We thus reverse the District Court's dismissal of this
    action for failure to state a claim, and we remand the case for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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