Case Information
*1 08-2521-cv
AXA Versicherung AG v. American International Group Inc.
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT SUMMARY ORDER RULINGS BY SUMMARY ORDER DO NOT HAVE PRECEDENTIAL EFFECT. CITATION TO A SUMMARY ORDER FILED ON OR AFTER JANUARY 1, 2007, IS PERMITTED AND IS GOVERNED BY FEDERAL RULE OF APPELLATE PROCEDURE 32.1 AND THIS COURT’S LOCAL RULE 32.1.1. WHEN CITING A SUMMARY ORDER IN A DOCUMENT FILED WITH THIS COURT, A PARTY MUST CITE EITHER THE FEDERAL APPENDIX OR AN ELECTRONIC DATABASE (WITH THE NOTATION “SUMMARY ORDER”). A PARTY CITING A SUMMARY ORDER MUST SERVE A COPY OF IT ON ANY PARTY NOT REPRESENTED BY COUNSEL.
At a stated term of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, held at the Daniel Patrick Moynihan United States Courthouse, 500 Pearl Street, in the City of New York, rd on the 23 day of August, two thousand and ten.
PRESENT:
CHESTER J. STRAUB,
PETER W. HALL,
DEBRA ANN LIVINGSTON,
Circuit Judges . _____________________________________________________________________________ AXA V ERSICHERUNG AG, ON ITS OWN BEHALF
AND AS SUCCESSOR IN INTEREST TO
A LBINGIA V ERSICHERUNGS AG,
Plaintiff-Counter-Defendant-Appellee ,
v. No. 08-2521-cv N EW H AMPSHIRE I NSURANCE C OMPANY , A MERICAN H OME
A SSURANCE C OMPANY AND N ATIONAL U NION F IRE
I NSURANCE C OMPANY OF P ITTSBURGH , P ENNSYLVANIA ,
Defendants-Counter-Claimants-Appellants ,
A MERICAN I NTERNATIONAL G ROUP , I NC . AND
A MERICAN I NTERNATIONAL U NDERWRITERS O VERSEAS , L TD .,
Defendants . ______________________________________________________________________________ *2 J OSEPH T. M C C ULLOUGH IV (Paul Bradford Ockene, Joseph P. Cyr, Sean Thomas Keely, on the brief ) Hogan Lovells US LLP, Chicago, IL and New York, NY, for Plaintiff-Counter-Defendant- Appellee .
K ATHLEEN M. S ULLIVAN (William B. Adams, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP, New York, NY; Stuart E. Cotton, David W. Kenna, Mound Cotton Wollan & Greengrass, New York, NY, on the brief ), Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP, New York, NY, for Defendants- Counter-Claimants-Appellants.
______________________________________________________________________________
UPON DUE CONSIDERATION, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED that the judgment of the District Court is AFFIRMED IN PART and VACATED IN PART, and the case is REMANDED to the District Court for entry of judgment in favor of Defendants-Counter-Claimants-Appellants.
_______________________________________________________________________________
Defendants-Appellants New Hampshire Insurance Company, American Home Assurance
Company, and National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
(collectively, “AIG”) appeal from a judgment entered in the Southern District of New York (Jed
S. Rakoff,
Judge
) after a jury trial holding AIG liable for $34,373,170, including $5,750,000 in
punitive damages, on claims of fraudulent inducement with respect to two reinsurance facilities,
and from the denial of AIG’s post-trial motions for relief under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
50(b) and 59(e). This matter has returned to us after our summary order remand to the District
Court on October 6, 2009.
See AXA Versicherung AG v. N.H. Ins. Co.
,
to fraud and whether AIG waived any right it might have to arbitration. Id. at 630-31. The *3 District Court gave full consideration to these issues, and issued its decision on April 29, 2010. See AXA Versicherung AG v. N.H. Ins. Co. , --- F. Supp. 2d ----, No. 05 Civ. 10180, 2010 WL 1718202 (S.D.N.Y. Apr. 29, 2010).
We now consider, first, whether the District Court correctly concluded that AXA’s allegations sound in fraud, and thus were properly before the District Court rather than being arbitrable, and, second, the remaining issues presented by this appeal, including whether AXA’s claims are barred by the statute of limitations. We assume the parties’ familiarity with the facts, procedural history, and scope of the issues presented on appeal. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the District Court’s conclusion in its April 29 opinion that all of AXA’s allegations sound in fraud, and thus were not arbitrable, but we vacate the judgment holding AIG liable for $34,373,170 because AXA’s fraudulent inducement claims are barred by the statute of limitations. Accordingly, we remand for entry of judgment in favor of AIG.
As a threshold matter, we agree with the District Court that AXA’s allegations sound in
fraud.
See AXA Versicherung
,
allegations all constitute misrepresentations “of present fact, not of future intent[,] collateral to,
but which w[ere] the inducement for the contract.”
Deerfield Commc’ns Corp. v. Chesebrough-
Ponds, Inc.
,
AIG intended to, and did, perform under the reinsurance contracts, but it misrepresented to AXA the “present fact” of precisely how the reinsurance facilities would operate from their inception, i.e. , AIG misrepresented that it would treat the facilities as facultative obligatory, that it would cede a reasonable cross-section of risks (which a facultative obligatory contract implicitly requires), and that AXA’s share of the primary layer risks would be calculated as a percentage of AIG’s share of the risks when, in fact, AIG did not intend to retain any primary layer risks. These alleged misrepresentations were essential to induce AXA to enter into the reinsurance contracts because, as AXA alleged, it would not (in fact, could not) have entered into a purely facultative reinsurance contract, under which AIG could try to unload risks it perceived as less profitable that AXA could either accept or reject in re-underwriting those risks, and AXA would not have agreed to a contract where AIG retained no primary layer risks. Moreover, that AIG’s alleged misrepresentations were “collateral to” the reinsurance contracts is supported by the absence of any language in the initial slips related to these factual allegations. Accordingly, because we agree with the District Court that all of AXA’s allegations sound in fraud, there is no need to reach the issue of whether, even if certain of the allegations sounded in contract, AIG *5 waived arbitration.
This brings us to the statute of limitations issue. We conclude that AXA’s fraudulent inducement claims (a single claim for each reinsurance facility) are time-barred. The District Court rejected AIG’s motion for summary judgment on this point, concluding that the issue turned on disputed questions of fact. And at trial, the jury found that with respect to each facility AXA proved that it did not discover, and could not with reasonable diligence have discovered, until after December 2, 2003, the facts from which a reasonable reinsurer in AXA’s position would have inferred that it was fraudulently induced to enter into the facilities. After trial, the District Court again rejected AIG’s statute of limitations defense, denying its renewed Rule 50(b) motion and holding that “the jury had a more than sufficient evidentiary basis upon which to conclude that a ‘reasonable reinsurer in AXA’s position’ would not have been put on notice that it had been defrauded until” 2005. AXA Versicherung AG v. N.H. Ins. Co. , No. 05 Civ.
10180,
Underwriters, Inc. v. Jasam Realty Corp.
,
United Techs. Int’l, Inc.
,
Under New York law, a claim for fraud must be commenced either within six years from the commission of the fraud or within two years from the date that the fraud was discovered, or could reasonably have been discovered, whichever is later. The plaintiff bears the burden of establishing that the fraud could not have been discovered before the two-year period prior to the commencement of the action. Where the circumstances are such as to suggest to a person of ordinary intelligence the probability that he has been defrauded, a duty of inquiry arises, and if he omits that inquiry when it would have developed the truth, and shuts his eyes to the facts which call for investigation, knowledge of the fraud will be imputed to him.
Guilbert v. Gardner
,
Whether a plaintiff was placed on inquiry notice is analyzed under an objective standard. This objective determination can be resolved as a matter of law — it need not be made by a trier of fact.
“Storm warnings” need not detail every aspect of the alleged fraudulent scheme: An investor does not have to have notice of the entire fraud being perpetrated to be on inquiry notice. Rather, a totality-of-the-circumstances analysis applies. Inquiry notice may be found as a matter of law only when uncontroverted evidence clearly demonstrates when the plaintiff should have discovered the fraudulent conduct.
Staehr v. Hartford Fin. Servs. Group, Inc.
,
The crux of AXA’s fraudulent inducement claims is that AIG (primarily through its
brokers) misled AXA into believing that the reinsurance facilities operated on a facultative
obligatory basis, while AIG treated them as purely facultative and offloaded bad risks onto the
reinsurers, and AIG’s continuing misrepresentations about the operation of the facilities left
AXA off its guard. AIG argues in support of its statute of limitations defense that AXA received
numerous documents, some of which AXA signed, that establish that AXA’s duty of inquiry
arose as early as 1998 and, in any event, no later than September 2000. AXA principally
responds that the jury’s determination was supported by the “totality of the circumstances,”
*7
specifically that AIG continued to misrepresent the nature of the facilities before, after, and even
as the August 1998 wordings were being signed. We hold that AXA was confronted with a clear
“storm warning” in August 1998, as well as additional facts through 2000, “such as to suggest . .
. the probability that [it] ha[d] been defrauded,”
Guilbert
,
At bottom, AXA fails to adequately address the reality that the August 1998 wordings,
which it ultimately signed, clearly indicate that the facilities were facultative in nature, which it
even admitted at trial.
See
J.A. 300-01, 1072 (“REINSURER
may
accept individual risks on a
facultative basis
”), 1085 (“Risks will be evaluated on a
case by case basis
”), 1087 (delineating
percentage share of “
each and every facultative risk
set forth in the attached reinsurance
agreement”) (emphases added);
see also
J.A. 1134, 1146, 1148. AXA argues that the
surrounding circumstances absolve its failure to fully read the wordings and understand that the
reinsurance facilities were (at least pursuant to the unambiguous language of the wordings) being
operated in a manner that directly contradicted its own expectations. But had AXA actually read
the 1998 wordings, as the law expects,
see, e.g.
,
Staehr
,
AXA cites
Newman v. Warnaco Group, Inc.
,
Moreover, there were other documented storm warnings up through September 2000 that,
under the totality of the circumstances, placed AXA on inquiry notice of the alleged fraud well
before December 2, 2003. First, as to AXA’s share of the ceded risks, there were, at a minimum,
conflicts between representations by AIG and provisions in the underlying documents sufficient
to place AXA on notice that its share of the risks may not have been calculated relative only to
AIG’s share of the risks.
See, e.g.
, J.A. 1393-94 (“Limits and excesses hereon are expressed as
100.00% of original policies” and “Order” listed as “[h]ereon 20.000% of limits and
premiums”), J.A. 1084, 1087 (listing AXA’s share of the risks as “52.0834% of up to 48% of
100%” where “100% is Defined as 100% of the Entire Risk”), J.A. 1559-78 (Many declarations
explaining AXA’s share in terms of 52.0834% or 47.1698% of some percentage of 100%). In
addition, AXA alleges that, in late 1997, AIG withheld known information about additional
losses for the 1997 facility to induce AXA to renew the reinsurance facility for the following
*10
year. As to this allegation, given the additional circumstances and storm warnings, we believe
AXA’s duty to inquire about the alleged fraud was heightened in September 2000 when AIG
disclosed nearly ten times the number of losses that were disclosed in late 1997. Although if this
fact stood alone we would likely agree with the District Court’s conclusion that a reasonable jury
might conclude that AXA “more likely . . . concluded that the losses only became known to AIG
later, rather than concluding that AIG had deliberately concealed them,”
AXA Versicherung
,
Accordingly, we find that the substantial increase in reported losses for the 1997 facility in September 2000 constituted yet another storm warning, and under the totality of the circumstances, AXA was on inquiry notice of the alleged fraud. AXA’s failure to inquire and to act in a reasonably diligent manner imputed to it knowledge of the fraud as early as August 1998, and certainly no later than September 2000.
Accordingly, because we hold that AXA’s fraudulent inducement claims are barred by the statute of limitations, we need not reach the issues of whether the case was properly tried before a jury rather than the bench or whether punitive damages were properly awarded. In sum, we affirm the District Court’s conclusion that AXA’s allegations sound in fraud, but we vacate the judgment holding AIG liable for $34,373,170 because AXA’s fraudulent inducement claims are barred by the statute of limitations. We remand to the District Court for entry of judgment in favor of AIG.
FOR THE COURT: Catherine O’Hagan Wolfe, Clerk of Court
Notes
[1] For ease of reference, unless otherwise noted, we refer only to AXA even though many of the relevant negotiations were between AIG and Albingia.
[2] For a succinct summary of the allegations that comprise AXA’s fraudulent inducement
claims that went to trial, see
AXA Versicherung
,
[3] The parties agree that federal law on inquiry notice is analogous to New York law.
See
Armstrong v. McAlpin
,
[4] Again, as we recognized in
Staehr
, “‘[s]torm warnings’ need not detail every aspect of
the alleged fraudulent scheme: An investor does not have to have notice of the entire fraud
being perpetrated to be on inquiry notice.”
