Case Information
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA FORT WAYNE DIVISION
BROTHERHOOD MUTUAL )
INSURANCE COMPANY, )
)
Plaintiff, )
) v. ) Cause No.: 1:21-CV-00007-HAB-SLC )
CHURCH MUTUAL INSURANCE )
COMPANY, S.I., )
)
Defendant. )
OPINION AND ORDER
For years, Plaintiff, Brotherhood Mutual Insurance Company (Brotherhood Mutual) and Defendant, Church Mutual Insurance Company, S.I. (Church Mutual) have litigated against each other in courts across the country. Believing that an agreed resolution to resolve future issues between them would bring an end to their repeated disputes, the parties entered into a Settlement Agreement (the Agreement). Alas, the optimism sparked by the Agreement was short-lived and the parties have returned to the courts.
Following its most recent dispute, Brotherhood Mutual filed a declaratory judgment lawsuit in Indiana state court seeking a court determination of the scope and applicability of the Agreement. (ECF No. 3). Church Mutual removed the suit to federal court asserting federal question jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1441 (a), because, in its view, “the substantive controversy presents a violation of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a).” (ECF No. 1). Brotherhood Mutual sees it differently and filed the present Motion to Remand (ECF No. 9). The parties have provided extensive briefing for the Court. (ECF Nos. 10, 20, 21, 29, 30). Because the Court finds that the McCarran-Ferguson Act, 15 U.S.C. §1012, reverse preempts actions under the Lanham Act related to the “business of insurance,” the Court lacks jurisdiction over the parties’ dispute and the Motion to Remand will be GRANTED.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND Church Mutual and Brotherhood Mutual are “direct competitors in a niche insurance market with competing agencies engaging in sales activity intended to sell property/casualty policies within the religious nonprofit organization market.” (Compl., ECF No. 3, ¶5). [1] In 2017, after Church Mutual filed a series of lawsuits against Brotherhood Mutual alleging unfair competition based on its agencies and agents’ sales practices, the parties signed the Agreement. (Compl., ECF No. 3, ¶¶s1-2). The Agreement included a “Sales Complaint Resolution Process” (SCRP) to address future agency-related complaints pertaining to “agency sales issues.” ( Id. ¶ 3). That process is set forth below:
Between the date of the Agreement and August 2020, the parties had several reciprocal sales agency complaints which they resolved through the SCRP. Church Mutual, however, has one outstanding unresolved complaint against Brotherhood Mutual arising from a May 19, 2020, webinar. This webinar addressed church re-openings during the COVID-19 pandemic.
During the webinar, a Brotherhood Mutual agent discussed liability coverage for claims arising out of in-person church gatherings during the COVID-19 pandemic. As part of his discussion, the Brotherhood Mutual agent detailed coverage interpretations that Brotherhood Mutual and Church Mutual had publicly posted. In substance, the agent identified that Brotherhood Mutual and Church Mutual have taken opposing positions on whether the exclusion for violating any local, state, or federal criminal statute (the Exclusion) applies to COVID-19 claims related to government orders and restrictions.
After the webinar, in-house counsel for Church Mutual contacted Brotherhood Mutual to address the agent’s statements made at the webinar and invoke the SCRP process. Brotherhood Mutual undertook an investigation and determined that the statements by its agent at the webinar were materially accurate and did not constitute actionable misconduct. After Brotherhood Mutual notified Church Mutual of its determination, Church Mutual, by letter, requested an in-person meeting under the SCRP. In the letter, Church Mutual also challenged Brotherhood Mutual’s interpretation of the Exclusion in its policy as well as Brotherhood Mutual’s publicly stated position that “this exclusion would likely not apply to losses which result from the failure to follow executive civil orders related to COVID-19.” (Compl. ¶67).
On July 23, 2020, general counsel for the companies met to discuss the Exclusion and potential action that might be taken against the agent for his statements made at the webinar. For nearly a month after this meeting, the parties engaged in continued communications about their dispute. Brotherhood Mutual’s understanding from those communications is that the dispute is a direct carrier-to-carrier dispute related to coverage interpretation, not an agency sales practice dispute. But Church Mutual believes that Brotherhood Mutual’s materials addressing the Exclusion are “false and misleading within the meaning of the Lanham Act” and violate state laws on unfair insurance practices and unfair competition and are a deceptive sales practice. In line with its belief, Church Mutual demanded arbitration under the SCRP of their Agreement.
Believing the dispute is not covered by the Agreement, Brotherhood Mutual sought a state court determination confirming its position. [2] Church Mutual removed the action to this Court asserting that federal question jurisdiction exists because the substantive controversy presents a Lanham Act claim, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a). The Court turns now to the Motion to Remand.
a. Legal Standards
Unless Congress provides otherwise, a state claim can be removed to federal court only if the federal court has original jurisdiction.28 U.S.C. § 1441(a); Rivet v. Regions Bank of Louisiana , 522 U.S. 470, 474 (1998). This statutory right of removal provides the defendant with an opportunity to substitute his choice of forum for the plaintiff’s original choice. See Wright and Miller, 14C Fed. Prac. & Proc. Juris. § 3721 (Rev. 4th ed.). “The party seeking removal has the burden of establishing federal jurisdiction, and federal courts should interpret the removal statute narrowly, resolving any doubt in favor of the plaintiff’s choice of forum in state court.” Schur v.
L.A. Weight Loss Ctrs., Inc.
,
Without diversity between the parties, a defendant may remove a suit to federal court only
when the plaintiff’s “well-pleaded complaint” raises a federal question. This “well-
pleaded complaint” rule makes the plaintiff the “master of the claim,” as he or she may avoid
federal jurisdiction by pleading only under state law.
Caterpillar, Inc. v. Williams
,
677, 690 (2006);
see also Grable & Sons Metal Prods., Inc. v. Darue Eng'g & Mfg.
,
b. Legal Discussion The complaint here is narrow: it asks the state court to interpret the Agreement and determine whether it extends to disputes outside of agency sales complaints. On its face, this is a state-law claim that would not provide this Court with subject matter jurisdiction over the dispute.
Newkirk v. Vill. of Steger , 536 F.3d 771, 774 (7th Cir. 2008) (“A settlement agreement is a particular kind of contract, and so [state] contract law… governs.”); Laserage Technology Corp.
v. Laserage Laboratories, Inc.,
49 (2009), it asserts that “the Court must assess subject matter jurisdiction over this arbitration dispute by ‘looking through’ to the substantive controversy between the parties.” (ECF No. 1 ¶ 6).
Not so, Brotherhood Mutual argues, because even if Church Mutual is correct, the Court would lack subject matter jurisdiction over the dispute as the Lanham Act is preempted by the McCarran- Ferguson Act.
The Vaden Decision, the Well-Pleaded Complaint Rule, and Federal i. Question Jurisdiction In Vaden , the Supreme Court explained the jurisdictional analysis applicable in arbitrability disputes. There, Discover Bank filed a state court complaint, arising solely under state law, seeking to recover past-due charges from Vaden, one of its credit card holders. Vaden counterclaimed alleging violations of state usury laws, a claim which Discover Bank believed was preempted by federal law. In line with that reasoning, Discover Bank, invoking an arbitration clause in its cardholder agreement, filed a §4 petition under the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), 9 U.S.C. §§ 1–16, in federal court seeking to compel arbitration of Vaden’s counterclaims. The district court ordered arbitration and the appellate court affirmed.
In reversing the lower courts and concluding that FAA §4 did not empower the federal courts to compel arbitration based on Vaden’s counterclaims, the Supreme Court first identified the “national policy favoring arbitration of claims that parties contract to settle in that matter,” and noted that § 4 of the FAA created the means to enforce an arbitration demand in the federal courts. at 58 (internal quotations and citations omitted). Indeed, § 4 provides a federal-court remedy in arbitration disputes:
A party aggrieved by the alleged failure, neglect, or refusal of another to arbitrate under a written agreement for arbitration may petition any United States district court which, save for such agreement, would have jurisdiction under title 28, ... for an order directing that such arbitration proceed in the manner provided for in such agreement.
But
Vaden
recognized an oddity about the FAA: “[i]t bestows no federal jurisdiction but
rather requires for access to a federal forum an independent jurisdictional basis over the parties’
dispute.”
Vaden
,
Discover could not, the Court ruled, invoke §4 of the FAA based on Vaden’s counterclaims but must do so based only on its own complaint.
To reach this conclusion, the Court read §4 in tandem with the well-pleaded complaint doctrine and “the corollary rule that federal jurisdiction cannot be invoked on the basis of a defense or counterclaim”:
Parties may not circumvent those rules by asking a federal court to order arbitration
of the portion of a controversy that implicates federal law when the court would not
have federal-question jurisdiction over the controversy as a whole. It does not
suffice to show that a federal question lurks somewhere inside the parties’
controversy, or that a defense or counterclaim would arise under federal law.
Of course, this entire discussion invites the question of why this court is discussing a case
under §4 of the FAA when here, the Court has no such petition in front of it. What the Court has
here is a declaratory judgment action filed in state court seeking an interpretation of a contract
governed solely by state law. Brotherhood Mutual has framed its suit under state law, and, as
master of its complaint it may do so. Brotherhood Mutual also points out that it has not invoked
federal law or sought to compel arbitration under the Agreement, nor is it a “party aggrieved by
the alleged failure, neglect, or refusal of another to arbitrate” as required to maintain an action
authorized by the FAA. At first glance then, this case appears to fall under
Vaden
’s admonition
that jurisdiction does not lie in federal court where “a federal question lurks somewhere inside the
parties’ controversy.”
Vaden
,
ii. The McCarran Ferguson Act (MFA) and Reverse Preemption
The MFA endows states with plenary authority over the regulation of insurance and
provides that “[n]o Act of Congress shall be construed to invalidate, impair, or supersede any law
enacted by any State for the purpose of regulating the business of insurance.” 15 U.S.C. § 1012.
[3]
Indeed, the MFA makes states supreme as “to laws ‘regulating the business of insurance.’’”
SEC
v
,
Forsyth
,
[3]
The MFA was enacted in response to the Supreme Court’s decision in
United States v. South-Eastern
Underwriters Ass’n
,
The Supreme Court has explained that to determine whether the MFA precludes application of a federal law, a district court should weigh three factors: (1) whether the state law is enacted “for the purpose of regulating the business of insurance”; (2) whether the federal law does not “specifically relat[e] to the business of insurance”; and (3) whether the federal law would “invalidate, impair, or supersede” the state’s law. Humana Inc. v. Forsyth, 525 U.S. 299, 307 (1999).
Brotherhood Mutual contends that the Lanham Act is subject to reverse preemption by the MFA and that state law stands supreme. Acknowledging that no court in the Seventh Circuit has weighed in on the specific issue of whether the MFA reverse preempts the Lanham Act, Brotherhood Mutual cites Colonial Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. American Fam. Life Assurance Co.
of Columbus,
In
Ins. Prod. Mktg.,
the plaintiff filed a state court complaint asserting, among other claims,
breach of contract, violations of the Lanham Act and the South Carolina Unfair Trade Practices
Act. The parties, like the companies here, were signatories to a settlement agreement resolving
prior disputes. Defendant removed the case to federal court asserting that the plaintiff’s assertion
of the Lanham Act in its complaint supplied the basis for federal question jurisdiction. It then
sought dismissal in the federal court action asserting, in part, that the Lanham Act claims were
preempted. The district court agreed finding that the MFA, enacted to preserve state regulation of
activities of insurance companies unless the federal act specifically related to the business of
insurance, applied to the advertising activities complained of in the complaint.
Ins. Prod. Mktg.,
Inc.
,
Brotherhood Mutual encourages the Court to apply the above rationale to hold that no jurisdiction can lie in federal court based on the Lanham Act. It points out that the Lanham Act does not specifically relate to insurance and notes that every state has enacted generally applicable laws regulating the insurance business. More particularly, Indiana has enacted unfair competition and deceptive trade practices statutes designed to address the precise concerns here. See Ind. Code §27-4-1-3.
Church Mutual makes little argument against applying the above precedent to the present facts. It concedes that “there is no dispute that the Lanham Act does not specifically relate to the business of insurance or that the Indiana Unfair or Deceptive Acts and Practices Statute was enacted to regulate the business of insurance.” (ECF No. 20 at 12). Rather, its primary argument is that the determination of whether preemption applies is premature at this stage of the litigation.
It asserts that preemption is a subject better left for an arbitrator. The Court disagrees.
The propriety of removal is dependent on whether the plaintiff’s complaint prompts a
federal question because it necessarily raises “actually disputed and substantial issues of federal
law that are capable of resolution in federal court without disrupting the federal-state balance
approved by Congress.
See Grable & Sons,
Here, the critical factor is whether exercising jurisdiction would “herald an enormous shift of traditionally state cases into federal courts.” Grable & Sons , 545 U.S. at 319. The MFA provides clear evidence that Congress intended issues related to the “business of insurance” to be litigated in state courts unless the federal statute at issue relates to insurance. [5] Church Mutual has not established that the Lanham Act confers jurisdiction and has conceded that it does not relate to insurance. It is Church Mutual’s burden to establish that federal jurisdiction exists. At best, Church Mutual has argued for the potential presence of a federal issue in this matter, but even that matter is preempted by the MFA. Thus, it has not shown that Brotherhood Mutual’s claims necessarily raise disputed and substantial issues of federal law. For these reasons, Church Mutual has not met its burden to establish that federal jurisdiction exists. [6]
CONCLUSION
Based on the above, the Plaintiff’s Motion to Remand (ECF No. 9) is GRANTED. This case is REMANDED to the Allen Superior Court.
SO ORDERED on August 2, 2021.
s/ Holly A. Brady__________________________ JUDGE HOLLY A. BRADY UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
Notes
[1] Brotherhood Mutual operates and issues policies of insurance in the lower 48 states and the District of Columbia. Church Mutual operates and issues policies of insurance in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. (Compl . ¶¶24, 25).
[2] Along with its declaratory judgment action, Brotherhood Mutual filed a regulatory complaint against Church Mutual with the Indiana Department of Insurance targeted at Church Mutual’s “anticompetitive behavior concerning Brotherhood Mutual’s publicly stated position concerning [the Exclusion] for certain COVID-19 liability claims.” (ECF No. 10 at 5).
[4] In
SEC v
.
Nat’l Secs., Inc.
,
[5] This case is an oddity in that it deals with the concept of “reverse preemption” in which Congress has
articulated a preference for state regulation of insurance matters. Typically, preemption works to preclude
state regulation over an area the federal government intends to exclusively control. In this context,
“ordinary” preemption is an affirmative defense that “simply allows a defendant to defeat a plaintiff's state-
law claim on the merits by asserting the supremacy of federal law.”
Comm. State Bank v. Strong
, 651 F.3d
2041, 1260 n.16 (11 th Cir. 2011). “Ordinary” preemption is neither a source of federal subject matter
jurisdiction, nor a basis for removal to federal court. “[A] case may
not
be removed to federal court on the
basis of a federal defense, including that of federal preemption.” (quoting
Caterpillar, Inc. v. Williams
, 482
U.S. 386, 393,
[6] Church Mutual is not without a remedy in the state court proceeding. As Vaden discussed, Church Mutual may petition the state court to compel arbitration under the Agreement.
