ORDER AMENDING OPINION, DENYING PETITION FOR REHEARING, AND AMENDED OPINION
ORDER
The opinion filed on February 1, 2008, and published at
Page 1019 After <BONY’s damages are therefore the $14 million that the bank was legally obligated to pay to the New York Insurance Department out of its own pocket. > insert a footnote stating: <On remand, Fremont General remains free to argue that these damages should be reduced by an amount proportionate to BONY’s contribution, if any, to causing the harm. See Sorensen v. Allred, 112Cal.App.3d 717, 726, 169 Cal.Rptr. 441 (1980) (comparative fault doctrine applies to intentional torts). >
Page 1019 After <We remand to allow the district court to conduct such further evidentiary proceedings as necessary to resolve the issue of Fremont General’s intention in causing the transfers insert a footnote stating: < Fremont General also claims that California’s managerial privilege shields it from liability. See Huynh v. Vu,111 Cal.App.4th 1183 , 1194-1201,4 Cal.Rptr.3d 595 (2003). But the district court has not yet addressed this claim, so we do not consider it.>
The panel, as constituted above, has voted to deny the petition for panel rehearing.
The petition for panel rehearing is denied. No further petitions for rehearing or rehearing en banc will be accepted.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
OPINION
This case arises from a commercial bank deposit contract involving an account in which funds were held to secure the payment of claims in the highly regulated world of workers’ compensation insurance. The Bank of New York (“BONY”) appeals the district court’s entry of partial summary judgment against it and ultimately judgment against it following a bench trial. BONY brought suit against Fremont General Corporation (“Fremont General”), the ultimate corporate parent of Fremont Indemnity Company (“Fremont Indemnity”) and Industrial Indemnity Company (“Industrial Indemnity”) — two California insurance companies that provided workers’ compensation policies to employers in several states, including California and New York. 1 BONY asserted claims for damages allegedly incurred as a result of Fremont General’s withdrawal of $14 million from custodial accounts that Fremont Indemnity maintained at BONY. Fremont General’s withdrawals violated New York Insurance law and the “custodian agreement” that Fremont Indemnity signed with BONY. According to BONY, Fremont General intentionally interfered with the custodian agreement between Fremont Indemnity and BONY, and converted the funds in the custodial accounts. We review the district court’s judgment against BONY on Claim One for Interference with Contract and Claim Two for Conversion. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.
I.
A.
Fremont Indemnity provided workers’ compensation insurance services to New York residents. New York insurance law required Fremont Indemnity to maintain custodial accounts at a New York bank in trust for the benefit of Fremont Indemnity’s policyholders as a condition to Fremont Indemnity writing workers’ compensation insurance in New York. See N.Y. Ins. Law § 1314. By requiring insurance carriers to maintain such custodial accounts, the New York Insurance Department ensures that the carriers have adequate funds to pay claims in the event that they become insolvent. New York state law required Fremont Indemnity to enter into a Workers’ Compensation Insurance
The custodian agreement named BONY as the custodian and barred BONY from releasing funds without a written request from Fremont Indemnity and written approval from the Superintendent of Insurance of the State of New York (“Superintendent”). The agreement provided in relevant part:
Securities placed in the custodian account shall be held by the Custodian, its successors or assigns, in custody exclusively for the Superintendent of Insurance of the State of New York, as trustee, in trust for the security of the workers’ compensation insurance policyholders and claimants of the Company resident of New York State and free of any lien or other claim of the Custodian
Except as hereinafter provided, no securities in this account or any of the principal cash account held pursuant to this Agreement shall be released by the Custodian except upon receipt of a written request of the Company and written approval by or in the name of the Superintendent of Insurance ...
Custodian shall be accountable to the Superintendent of Insurance for the safekeeping of the securities and cash reserves held by it under this Agreement.
New York Insurance Law sections 1314 and 1318 permit insurance carriers to withdraw from custodial accounts interest earned on the deposited principal, but not the principal itself. Insurance carriers typically sweep the custodial accounts to withdraw the interest as it is earned. Fremont General, acting as Fremont Indemnity’s investment manager, initially deposited in the custodial accounts interest-bearing securities — California State Veterans bonds in the amount of $10 million — that made no periodic partial principal repayments. Fremont General, however, then sought and obtained approval from the New York Insurance Department to substitute Government National Mortgage Association (“GNMA”) securities in place of the interest-bearing securities. 3
Because GNMA securities make periodic payments of principal along with payments of interest, the New York Insurance Department initially found them unacceptable trust deposit securities for Fremont Indemnity’s custodial account. Fremont General proposed alternatives to alleviate the regulatory concerns about Fremont Indemnity potentially receiving principal payments as the GNMA securities paid principal into the custodial account. The New York Insurance Department ultimately approved substitution of GNMA securities contingent on a commitment by Fremont Indemnity’s Board of Directors, who agreed by unanimous written consent to “replace any GNMA or GNMA CMO security on deposit before any return of principal is made.” Here lies the genesis of the lawsuit.
Meanwhile, Fremont Indemnity ran into financial difficulties which ultimately resulted in the company being placed in con-servatorship. In November 2000, the California Department of Insurance, Fremont Indemnity, Fremont General, and FCIG entered into a Letter Agreement of Regulatory Oversight in which the Department appointed a Special Deputy Examiner to supervise FCIG and Fremont Indemnity. This agreement prohibited Fremont Indemnity from making payment to, engaging in any transaction, or entering into any agreement directly or indirectly with Fremont General, absent the approval of the California Department of Insurance. Nor could Fremont Indemnity make any dividend payment or other distribution to Fremont General without the prior approval of the California Department of Insurance.
When FCIG’s financial health further deteriorated, Fremont General, FCIG, Fremont Indemnity, and the California Department of Insurance entered into a second letter agreement in July 2002 called “Letter Agreement of Run-Off and Regulatory Oversight of the Fremont Compensation Insurance Group, Inc. Workers’ Compensation Insurance Companies.” Fremont Indemnity was now completely prohibited from engaging in transactions with its parent or affiliate. The district court found as a matter of fact that Fremont General never “engage[d] in any transactions that violated the [November letter agreement],” and that it “substantially complied” with the July letter agreement.
The situation worsened. On June 4, 2003, the California Department of Insur-
On November 30, 2004, the Insurance Commissioner for the State of California, the Conservator of Fremont Indemnity, and the New York Insurance Department executed an “Agreement for Early Access Distribution of Funds” with the Fremont Indemnity estate. In this agreement, the New York Department agreed to accept a pro rata distribution from the Fremont Indemnity estate and to return to the Fremont Indemnity estate any excess distribution it had received from the estate.
B.
On December 17, 2003, BONY filed a complaint against Fremont General for intentional interference with contract, conversion, money had and received, unjust enrichment, restitution, unfair competition, and constructive trust. The operative First Amended Complaint alleges that Fremont General knew of the restrictions and terms of the custodian agreement, yet it nonetheless instructed BONY to wire transfer $14 million of principal from the custodial account to Fremont Indemnity’s J.P. Morgan Chase account without the Superintendent’s approval. Consequently, Fremont General caused BONY to suffer damages in at least that amount.
On June 17, 2005, the district court granted Fremont General’s motion for partial summary judgment on BONY’s claims of intentional interference with contract and restitution. Because the district court found that “no breach or damages occurred as a result of [Fremont General’s] conduct,” it could not hold Fremont General liable for intentional interference with contractual relations between BONY and Fremont Indemnity.
The court then proceeded to conduct a bench trial in August 2005 on the remaining claims. The district court issued findings of facts and conclusions of law and entered final judgment in favor of Fremont General. The district court concluded that BONY could not prevail on its conversion claim for several reasons, including the fact that neither BONY nor the New York Insurance Department suffered damages from BONY’s release of the funds. BONY appeals.
II
We review de novo the district court’s order granting Fremont General partial summary judgment.
Scheuring v.
) — I t — i
A.
To prevail on its intentional interference with contract claim, BONY had to show (1) the existence of a valid contract between BONY and a third party, (2) Fremont General’s knowledge of the contract, (3) intentional acts designed to induce a breach or to disrupt a contractual relationship, (4) actual breach or disruption of the contractual relationship, and (5) resulting damage.
See Reeves v. Hanlon,
1.
The district court concluded that, whatever Fremont General’s intention in requesting the transfer, those requests did not actually cause the transfer. Rather, the transfer occurred as a result of BONY’s breach of its independent duty to secure written permission from the Superintendent before transfer. In reaching this conclusion, the district court appears to have applied the wrong legal standard for causation.
California employs the “substantial factor” test for determining causation in intentional torts cases.
See Franklin v. Dynamic Details, Inc.,
Relatedly, “the notion of independent intervening cause has no place in the law of intentional torts, so long as there is a
factual
chain of causation.”
United States Fid. & Guar. Co.,
Thus, we must decide in this case whether Fremont General’s conduct was a substantial factor in causing the transfer. See Judicial Council of Cal. Civil Jury Instructions No. 2201 (listing as an element of intentional interference with contractual relations, “[Defendant’s] conduct was a substantial factor in causing [Plaintiffs] harm”). We believe that the district court’s findings of fact compel the legal conclusion that Fremont General’s conduct meets this standard. Irrespective of BONY’s conduct, Fremont General made multiple requests that funds from the custodial accounts be transferred to Fremont Indemnity’s separate account, and those funds were indeed transferred. But for Fremont General’s conduct, the funds never would have been transferred. 5
In essence, Fremont General contends that BONY’s breach of its independent duty to secure written permission from the Superintendent before transferring the funds was an intervening force that acts as a barrier to liability for Fremont General. Fremont General is mistaken. The causation analysis turns on whether “there is a factual chain of causation,” not whether there has been an intervening act.
U.S. Fid. & Guar. Co.,
2.
We turn to the remaining elements of BONY’s intentional interference with contract claim. We must determine whether there are still issues of fact with respect to those elements. If issues of fact exist, we must remand to the district court to conduct, as necessary, further evidentiary proceedings to resolve those issues.
There is no dispute as to the first element: there is a valid contract between BONY and Fremont Indemnity. As for the second element, no issues of fact remain. Fremont General was aware of the contract. Fremont General was responsible for managing the funds deposited into the custodial account, and indeed, Fremont General obtained special permission from
3.
Next, we turn to the issue of Fremont General’s intention in causing the transfer. The basic requirement is that Fremont General intended to cause a breach or disruption of the custodian agreement between Fremont Indemnity and BONY. However, BONY is not required to present direct evidence of Fremont General’s intention. “ ‘Intent, of course, may be established by inference as well as by direct proof.’ Thus, the jury may ‘infer culpable intent from conduct “substantially certain” to interfere with the contract.’ ”
Savage v. Pac. Gas & Elec. Co.,
“Generally, the knowledge of a corporate officer within the scope of his employment is the knowledge of the corporation.”
Meyer v. Glenmoor Homes, Inc.,
The change in letterhead discussed in footnote four also serves as evidence of Fremont General’s intention. One possible explanation for the change is that it was part of a wider corporate policy, unrelated to the transfer. Another reasonable explanation is that Brody knew that his corporation was intentionally causing the breach of Fremont Indemnity’s contract with BONY and did not want his own company’s name to appear on any of the relevant documents. The finder of fact must resolve that question.
Because contested issues of material fact remain with respect to Fremont General’s intention in causing the transfer of funds out of the BONY custodial account, we remand the case to the district court to conduct further proceedings as necessary to resolve the dispute.
4.
The final element of BONY’s intentional interference claim is damages. Following the bench trial, the district court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law with respect to the damages element of BONY’s conversion claim. Because the
BONY’s alleged damages are derivative of the New York Insurance Department’s. According to BONY, the New York Insurance Department was damaged because if the transfer had not occurred, the Department would have been entitled to retain control over the full $14 million and use it exclusively to pay the claims of Fremont Indemnity’s New York policyholders. But the transfer did occur, and as a result, the New York Insurance Department wound up with only a pro rata share of Fremont Indemnity’s liquidated assets, which amounted to about $3.8 million.
In response, Fremont General relies on New York Insurance Law § 1314(a)(2), which states that, “All such securities shall be held by the superintendent, in trust, without preference or priority to any bfene-ficiary entitled to share therein, for the security of the depositing insurer’s policyholders within the United States.” According to Fremont General, § 1314(a)(2) establishes that even if the transfer had not occurred, the New York Insurance Department would not have been entitled to use the full $14 million to pay the claims of Fremont Indemnity’s New York insureds, but instead would have been entitled only to a pro rata share of Fremont Indemnity’s estate. In other words, regardless of whether the transfer had occurred, the New York Insurance Department would have been in the same position. The district court agreed with Fremont General’s position.
We do not. Although the district court’s interpretation of § 1314(a)(2) is correct, that provision does not apply to the instant case because Fremont Indemnity was domiciled outside of New York. Under New York’s “reciprocity statute,” New York treats the deposits of an insurer domiciled out-of-state in the same manner as that insurer’s state of domicile treats the deposits of New York insurers. N.Y. Ins. Law § 1112. 7 Fremont Indemnity is domiciled in California, so we must look to how California treats the special deposits of New York insurers doing business in California.
In California,
In order to provide protection to the workers of this state in the event that the insurers issuing workers’ compensation insurance to employers fail to pay compensable workers’ compensation claims ... every insurer desiring admission to transact workers’ compensation insurance ... shall, as a prerequisite to admission ... deposit [approved funds]... with a qualified depository-The deposit shall be for the purpose of paying compensable workers’ compensation claims under policies issued by the insurer ... in the event the insurer ... fails to pay those claims when they come due.
Cal. Ins.Code § 11691(a). “The proceeds of the deposit required pursuant to Section 11691 shall be used solely to pay compen-sable workers’ compensation claims under the insured ... policies.... ” Cal. Ins.Code § 11698.02. California defines a “compen-sable workers’ compensation claim” as “a claim where the claimant is entitled to benefits under the workers’ compensation law of the state [of California].” Cal. Ins. Code § 11690(a).
Read together, these provisions authorized the Superintendent to use Fremont Indemnity’s funds on deposit in BONY for the sole benefit of Fremont Indemnity’s New York policyholders. The terms of the custodian agreement support this conclusion. Under the terms of that agreement, “[securities placed in the custodian account shall be held by Custodian ... in custody exclusively for the Superintendent ..., as trustee, in trust for the security of the workers’ compensation insurance policyholders and claimants of the Company resident of New York State ....” (emphasis added).
Fremont General contends that the New York Insurance Department’s decision to enter into the Early Access Agreement, in which the New York Insurance Department agreed to accept a pro rata distribution of the Fremont Indemnity estate, demonstrates that the New York Insurance Department was not entitled to the full $14 million, because otherwise it never would have agreed to accept far less than that. However, the New York Insurance Department’s intention in entering into the Early Access Agreement is irrelevant. The essential fact is that under New York’s reciprocity statute, the Superintendent was entitled to use the $14 million as security solely for the benefit of New York policyholders. That it later agreed to accept $8.8 million as its pro rata share of the California conservatorship is irrelevant to BONY’s damages in this action.
The New York Insurance Department, as the holder of a security, was damaged when Fremont General caused a reduction in that security’s value.
See Baldwin v. Marina City Props.,
The principles discussed in Baldwin apply here. At the moment the funds were transferred from the custodial account, BONY was liable for the full amount to the New York Insurance Department, which, as trustee of those funds, stood in the shoes of Fremont Indemnity’s New York policy-holders. As Baldwin makes clear, the New York Insurance Department was not required to wait to sue BONY until Fremont Indemnity defaulted on any of the claims of its insureds.
At the time BONY settled with the New York Insurance Department, the Depart
We reverse the grant of partial summary judgment in favor of Fremont General. We remand to allow the district court to conduct such further evidentiary proceedings as necessary to resolve the issue of Fremont General’s intention in causing the transfer. 9
B.
BONY argues that the district court erred by not finding Fremont General liable for conversion where Fremont General, according to BONY, • prevented BONY from freely exercising control or ownership over its property. A conversion occurs where the defendant wrongfully exercises dominion over the property of another.
Greka Integrated, Inc. v. Lowrey,
A plaintiff in a conversion action must also prove that it did not consent to the defendant’s exercise of dominion.
See Farrington v. A. Teichert & Son, Inc.,
In the present case, the district court found that BONY knew that the money it was transferring to Fremont Indemnity’s separate account was principal.
IV
We affirm the district court’s judgment in favor of Fremont General on the conversion claim. We reverse the district court’s grant of partial summary judgment in Fremont General’s favor on the intentional interference with contract claim, and remand to allow the district court to conduct such proceedings as necessary to resolve the outstanding issues as discussed in this opinion. Each party shall bear its own costs.
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Fremont General is the parent company of Fremont Compensation Insurance Group ("FCIG”), which, in turn, is the parent company of Fremont Indemnity and Industrial Indemnity. Fremont Indemnity and Industrial Indemnity merged in August 2001, leaving Fremont Indemnity as the surviving corporation. We collectively refer to Fremont Indemnity and Industrial Indemnity as "Fremont Indemnity."
. Industrial Indemnity entered into the custodian agreement with BONY on August 15, 1995; Fremont Indemnity entered into the same agreement on December 5, 1997. The agreements are “retaliatory" in that they are required of companies domiciled elsewhere who seek to write insurance in New York whose state of incorporation imposes a similar deposit condition on New York insurers doing business in that foreign state.
See
N.Y. Ins. Law §§ 1319, 1112;
Levin v. Nat’l Colonial Ins. Co.,
. GNMA securities are mortgage-backed securities that return principal over time rather than in one lump sum on maturity.
. BONY initialed eleven separate wire transfers, totaling about $3.2 million, between May 2002 and September 2002 under Fremont General’s repetitive wire instructions provided to BONY two years earlier. In October 2002, BONY required specific letter requests for any further distributions. As a result, Fremont General issued monthly letters — the first two on Fremont General letterhead and the remaining letters on Fremont Indemnity letterhead — authorizing BONY to transfer all cash from the custodial accounts to the J.P. Morgan Chase account. (We refer to all transfers from the custodial accounts to Fremont Indemnity’s J.P. Morgan Chase account collectively as "the transfer.”) BONY cites Fremont General’s switching of letterhead as the best evidence of bad faith in this case because BONY claims it shows that Fremont General knew the transfer requests were wrongful under the terms of the custodian agreement.
. The district court's finding that Fremont General “took no action” in causing the transfer of the first $3.2 million is clearly erroneous, and indeed, that finding conflicts with the district court's earlier finding that those funds were transferred "pursuant to recurring wire transfer instructions provided by Fremont General on behalf of [Fremont Indemnity].”
. The alternative — remanding the case to allow the district court to enter findings of fact and conclusions of law with respect to BONY’s intentional interference claim— would be pointless, because the district court, under the law of the case doctrine, would be effectively precluded from reconsidering the issue of damages since it has already decided that issue in the context of BONY’s conversion claim.
See Milgard Tempering, Inc. v. Salas Corp. of Am.,
. New York Insurance Law section 1112(a)(1) provides: "If, by the laws ... of any other state, any insurer organized or domiciled in this state ... shall be, required to deposit securities in such other state to protect policyholders ... then all similar insurers organized or domiciled in such other state ... shall make like deposits for like purposes with the superintendent ...(emphasis added).
. On remand, Fremont General remains free to argue that these damages should be reduced by an amount proportionate to BONY’s contribution, if any, to causing the harm.
See Sorensen v. Allred,
. Fremont General also claims that California's managerial privilege shields it from liability.
See Huynh v. Vu,
. Although the district court did not rely on its finding of consent as a basis for its ruling in Fremont General’s favor, “[w]e may affirm on any basis supported by the record, whether or not relied upon by the district court.”
Hall v. N. Am. Van Lines, Inc.,
