This insurance-coverage action represents the third case in a series of lawsuits stemming from the marketing of Syn-throid, a synthetic thyroid drug.
See In re Synthroid Mktg. Litig.,
German corporation BASF AG (“BASF”) then filed this third suit, seeking to recover damages from its umbrella insurers for their failure to defend and indemnify BASF, and its related corporate entities, in the initial Synthroid litigation. The district court in this case decided that the umbrella-insurance policies required the insurers to defend BASF in the Syn-throid litigation, and granted summary judgment to BASF on the insurers’ liability for breach of contract. We disagree. The terms of the umbrella policies, as a matter of law, did not obligate the insurers to defend or indemnify BASF. We therefore reverse, and remand to the district court for the entry of summary judgment in favor of the insurers.
I. History
Between 1989 and 1995, BASF’s predecessor in interest, Boots Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (“Boots”), purchased two layers of liability insurance: primary insurance and umbrella insurance. 1 The primary-insurance policies all contained similar provisions, which stated that the insurers would indemnify Boots for lawsuits seeking damages “arising out of’ claims for a “personal injury” or an “advertising injury.” The primary policies uniformly defined an “advertising injury” as, among other things, an “injury arising out of ... oral or written publication of material that slanders or libels a person or organization or disparages a person’s or organization’s goods, products, or services.” Moreover, the primary policies each outlined the insurer’s duty to defend: each primary policy required the insurer to pay all costs that Boots incurred in defense of any suit for which the insurer would be obligated to indemnify Boots.
The umbrella-insurance policies provided two additional types of insurance coverage to Boots: excess coverage and gap-filling coverage. All of the umbrella policies contained excess-insurance provisions, which required the umbrella insurers to indemnify Boots for sums Boots became liable for that exceeded the coverage limits of its primary-insurance policies. Some of the umbrella policies also included gap-filling-insurance provisions, which obligated the umbrella insurers to defend Boots for any loss covered by the terms and conditions of the umbrella policy, and “not covered as warranted” by the primary insurers. Other umbrella policies described this gap-filling coverage as the obligation to defend any suit or any claim potentially covered by the umbrella policies to which the primary policies did not apply.
The defendants in this action — Great American Assurance Company (“Great American”), Federal Insurance Company (“Federal”), and Westchester Fire Insur- *816 anee Company (“Westchester”) — hold six of these umbrella-insurance policies. 2 Like the primary-insurance policies, the umbrella policies covered only lawsuits that sought damages “arising out of’ or “because of’ a “personal injury” or an “advertising injury.” The umbrella policies all defined personal injury and advertising injury in a manner that was substantively identical to the primary policies’ definitions of those terms. Put another way, exclusions aside, the primary policies’ and umbrella policies’ coverage of personal injury and advertising injury was coextensive, and a suit or claim that did not arise out of, or because of, a personal injury or an advertising injury would not be covered under either the primary or the umbrella policies.
In 1987, Boots began to manufacture, market, and sell Synthroid, a synthetic thyroid medication used to treat various thyroid diseases. In an attempt to prove that Synthroid was superior to competing synthetic thyroid hormones on the market, in the late 1980s Boots commissioned a study by Dr. Betty Dong of the University of California-San Francisco (“UCSF”). Boots hoped the study would prove that Synthroid and its competitors (among them, cheaper generic hormones) were not “bioequivalents” — drugs that have the same effect on a patient in terms of potency and absorption rate when equal doses are administered.
See Synthroid,
When provided with these results, Boots immediately sought to discredit Dr. Dong and her findings. Boots’s scientists sent letters to Dr. Dong that questioned her methods and conclusions, and Boots asked UCSF to terminate the study. UCSF did not comply and in 1994, Dr. Dong provided her final report to Boots, which stated that Synthroid and its competitors were bioe-quivalents. Even after Boots learned of Dr. Dong’s results, Boots continued to publicly maintain that Synthroid had no known bioequivalents, and Boots continued to advertise and market the drug as such. In early 1995, Boots exercised its rights under its contract with Dr. Dong to block the publication of her study.
In 1996, the
Wall Street Journal
learned of Dr. Dong’s study and Boots’s response, and it published an exposé on Boots and Synthroid. The article revealed to the public that there were cheaper alternatives to Synthroid, and that Boots had prevented the publication of Dr. Dong’s study, which had confirmed that the cheaper alternatives were equally effective. Dr. Dong’s study was eventually published in 1997.
See Synthroid,
The gravamen of the consolidated complaints was that Boots, BASF, and their employees had wrongfully asserted monopoly control over the market for thyroid medication, which resulted in consumers and health insurers paying higher prices for Synthroid rather than purchasing lower-cost, equally effective alternatives. Both complaints claimed that the defendants had exercised monopoly control by suppressing Dr. Dong’s study and criticizing her methodology and results, by concealing known facts about Synthroid, and by marketing Synthroid as a uniquely superior drug despite knowledge to the contrary. Both complaints sought economic damages for the class members (consumers and health insurers) who overpaid for Synthroid. Neither complaint sought damages on behalf of Dr. Dong or on behalf of the competing thyroid manufacturers, and neither complaint alleged defamation, libel, disparagement, or slander.
In April 1997, BASF tendered the
Syn-throid
complaints to its primary insurers. The primary insurers each separately refused to defend BASF, claiming that they had no obligation to do so under the primary-insurance policies’ definitions of personal injury and advertising injury. In late June 1997, BASF notified its umbrella insurers about the
Synthroid
litigation, shortly before beginning formal settlement negotiations with the class-action plaintiffs. On August 1, 1997, before any of the umbrella insurers had responded with coverage determinations, BASF entered into a settlement agreement with the
Synthroid
plaintiffs. In 2000, the
Synthroid
court approved a settlement that required BASF to pay approximately $88 million to the consumers and $46 million to the third-party payors in exchange for a release of all claims.
See In re Synthroid Mktg. Litig.,
After settling with the class-action plaintiffs, BASF filed an insurance-coverage suit against its primary insurers seeking to recover damages for the insurers’ failure to defend and indemnify BASF in the
Syn-throid
litigation.
See Knoll Pharm. Co.,
After settling the Knoll case with its primary insurers, BASF filed this diversity lawsuit, see 28 U.S.C. § 1332, against the umbrella insurers. The complaint alleged that the umbrella insurers owed BASF over $110 million for BASF’s unrecovered costs from the Synthroid litigation. The complaint sought $90 million for BASF’s *818 settlement costs and $21.4 million in defense costs — BASF arrived at these amounts by deducting the sums it received in its settlement of Knoll with the primary insurers from its total expenditure on the settlement and defense of Synthroid.
The parties completed discovery and then filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The, district court evaluated the voluminous summary judgment record and held that Federal, Westchester, and Great American had breached their respective contractual duties to defend BASF during the Synthroid litigation. The district court relied heavily on the Knoll decision, and adopted its reasoning that the Synthroid class plaintiffs’ claims “may have had their origin in slander, libel, or disparagement,” which fell under the umbrella policies’ definitions of advertising injury. The district court explained that while the Synthroid complaints did not allege libel, slander, or disparagement, the Synthroid litigation “grew out of various disparaging, defamatory, and libelous statements,” such as Boots’s claims that Synthroid was superior to other thyroid drugs and Boots’s criticism of Dr. Dong’s study.
After granting summary judgment to BASF on its breach-of-contract claims, the district court held that the breach es-topped the umbrella insurers from contesting coverage; the court then allowed the case to proceed to trial on the amount of damages. After a two-day trial, a jury set damages at $90 million for BASF’s unre-covered costs of the Synthroid settlement; it allocated $50 million of the damages to Federal, $30 million to Westchester, and $10 million to Great American. The jury also held the umbrella insurers jointly and severally liable for the remaining $21.4 million of defense costs. The district court then added over $45 million in prejudgment interest to the amounts awarded by the jury. The umbrella insurers timely filed this appeal.
II. Analysis
On appeal, Great American, Federal, and Westchester claim that the district court erred when it granted summary judgment to BASF on its breaeh-of-eon-tract claims. Specifically, the umbrella insurers argue that the class-action complaints in the consolidated Synthroid litigation advanced claims that did not fall under the umbrella-insurance policies’ definitions of personal injury or advertising injury. The umbrella insurers maintain that, as a result, their duties to defend and indemnify BASF were never triggered by the Synthroid litigation, and that the district court should have entered summary judgment in their favor. The umbrella insurers raise numerous additional challenges to the district court’s decisions to limit discovery, exclude certain evidence at the damages trial, assess prejudgment interest, and deny the insurers’ post-trial motions.
We review the district court’s decision on cross-motions for summary judgment
de novo. Premcor
USA,
Inc. v. Am. Home Assurance Co.,
The parties all concede that the substantive law of Illinois governs this diversity action. Under Illinois law, the in
*819
terpretation of an insurance policy is a question of law that is properly decided by way of summary judgment.
Crum & Forster Managers Corp. v. Resolution Trust Corp.,
“A court’s primary objective in construing the language of an insurance policy is to ascertain and give effect to the intentions of the parties as expressed by the language of the policy.”
Id.
at 314;
see also Cent. Ill. Light Co. v. Home Ins. Co.,
“An insurer’s duty to defend is much broader than its duty to indemnify its insured.”
Gen. Agents Ins. Co. of Am., Inc. v. Midwest Sporting Goods Co.,
The parties all agree that the only policy definitions that BASF’s claims could fall (or potentially fall) within are the umbrella-insurance policies’ coverage of “injury arising out of’ the “offenses” of “[ojral
*820
or written publication of material that slanders or libels a person or organization or disparages a person’s or organization’s goods, products, or services.” The parties also all concede that the
Synthroid
class plaintiffs did not plead slander, libel, or disparagement as causes of action in the consolidated complaints. If Illinois law required that the plaintiff specifically plead a covered cause of action to trigger an insurer’s duty to defend, we could end our analysis here. However, it does not.
See, e.g., Cincinnati Ins. v. E. Atl. Ins. Co.,
We believe that the facts in the
Synthroid
complaints are simply insufficient to sketch a claim for the common-law offenses of libel, slander, or disparagement, which in Illinois all require that a false statement be made
about the plaintiff. See Solaia Tech., LLC v. Specialty Pub. Co.,
In addition to the requirements of the Illinois common law, the
Synthroid
class plaintiffs would have faced a further obstacle to sketching a claim for libel, slander, or disparagement based on the statements about Dr. Dong and Synthroid’s competitors — the class plaintiffs would not have had standing to do so.
See Elk Grove Unified School Dist. v. Newdow,
Despite the
Synthroid
complaints’ failure to sketch a common-law claim for libel, slander, or disparagement, BASF argues that the umbrella insurers still had a duty to defend it in the
Synthroid
litigation because the consumer plaintiff class implicitly advanced a disparagement claim by pleading that Boots violated the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act (“CFA”), 815 ILCS 505/1,
et seq.
To advance this contention, BASF relies on the Illinois Supreme Court’s recent decision,
Valley Forge Insurance Co. v. Swiderski Electronics Inc.,
which interpreted an insurance policy that defined an advertising injury as: “Oral, written, televised or videotaped publication of material that violates a person’s right of privacy.”
See
307 IlLDec. 653,
BASF argues that similarly, coverage is warranted under the umbrella-insurance policies at issue here because a claim for disparagement is implicit in the
Synthroid
plaintiffs’ statutory claim under the CFA. But we do not believe that this case is analogous to
Valley Forge.
The CFA seeks to vindicate the rights of consumers by creating a cause of action that protects consumers from deceptive trade practices, fraud, and other abusive acts by businesses that market products to the public.
See, e.g., Pappas v. Pella Corp.,
*822
Nevertheless, BASF urges us to adopt the expansive position of the district court — that the
Synthroid
complaints did not need to assert every element of an offense delineated by the umbrella-insurance policies in order to trigger the umbrella insurers’ duty to defend, because the language in the umbrella policies required the umbrella insurers to cover claims that “may have had their origin in” the offenses of libel, slander, or disparagement. However, following this approach would unmoor coverage determinations from the factual allegations of the complaint — something that Illinois law will not permit us to do.
See, e.g., Gen. Agents Ins. Co.,
Abandoning focus on the complaint would mean that the breadth of insurance coverage “could be extended indefinitely.”
See Great Am. Ins. Co. v. Riso, Inc.,
Insurance is a creature of contract, and as such, Illinois law is sensitive to the parties’ intentions.
Valley Forge Ins. Co.,
In concluding that the
Synthroid
complaints fell within the coverage of the umbrella-insurance policies, the district court relied almost exclusively on the decision against the primary insurers in
Knoll. See
Because we hold that the umbrella insurers had no duty to defend BASF from the
Synthroid
litigation, it necessarily follows that the umbrella insurers also did not have a duty to indemnify BASF for the settlement.
See Cent. Ill. Light Co.,
III. Conclusion
We ReveRse the judgment of the district court and RemaNd this case for the entry of summary judgment in favor of the defendants.
Notes
. In March 1995, BASF acquired Boots and its related entities and completely merged the companies into a new BASF subsidiary, Knoll Pharmaceutical Company ("Knoll”). Incident to this transaction, Knoll and BASF assumed the benefits of the liability-insurance policies previously obtained and held by Boots. BASF sold Knoll to Abbott Laboratories ("Abbott”) in March 2001. However, pursuant to the Purchase Agreement, BASF retained its right to recover any damages from Boots’s insurers for the Synthroid litigation. For clarity, we will refer to BASF and Knoll collectively as BASF throughout this opinion.
. Great American changed its name from Agricultural Insurance Company ("Agricultural”) sometime after Agricultural originally issued one umbrella policy to Boots. West-chester holds three of the six umbrella policies, which were initially provided to Boots by International Insurance Company and subsequently novated to Westchester. Federal issued, and continues to hold, the other two umbrella policies.
