Case Information
*1 BEFORE: BOGGS and McKEAGUE, Circuit Judges; and QUIST, Senior District Judge. [*]
QUIST, District Judge. Defendants, Industrial Electronics, LLC (“Indel”) and Yuriy Osyka (“Osyka”), appeal the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Plaintiff, Capitol Specialty Insurance (“Capitol”), concluding that Capitol has no duty to defend or indemnify Indel and Osyka in a lawsuit filed in Jefferson Circuit Court. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I. BACKGROUND
Osyka was employed by Industrial Control Solutions, Inc. (“ICS”), a Kentucky corporation engaged in the repair of industrial electronic equipment, from May 2002 to October 2005. In May 2002, and again in March 2003, Osyka entered into employment agreements with ICS. The employment agreements set Osyka’s compensation and contained, among other things, non-compete and confidentiality provisions. These provisions prohibited Osyka from competing with ICS or disclosing ICS’s confidential information or trade secrets during his employment and for a period of two years from the end of his employment.
In October 2005, Osyka left his employment with ICS, apparently due to a dispute regarding his compensation. Within a few months of his departure, Osyka was hired by Indel, a newly-formed company that was also in the electronics repair business. ICS claims that after Osyka joined Indel, he disclosed to Indel customer and pricing lists and other proprietary information from ICS computer files, and that Indel used this information to its advantage and to the detriment of ICS.
In August 2008, ICS sued Osyka and Indel in Jefferson Circuit Court. That suit gave rise to the instant dispute. The underlying state-court complaint alleged three claims: (1) that Indel [1]
tortiously interfered with ICS’s business relationship with Osyka by “intentionally and improperly” using ICS’s trade secrets and proprietary information; (2) that Osyka breached his contract with ICS by disclosing proprietary and trade secret information to Indel; and (3) that Indel’s and Osyka’s actions violated KRS § 365.880, the Kentucky Uniform Trade Secrets Act. ICS confirmed in its complaint that “[t]he [alleged] dissemination of information . . . forms the basis for the tortuous [sic] claims and the breach of contract claim.”
Indel notified Capitol of the underlying action pursuant to a commercial general liability policy (the “Policy”) that Capitol had issued to Indel. The initial Policy term was from April 17, 2006 through April 17, 2007, and it was subsequently rеnewed for the periods April 17, 2007 through April 17, 2008, and April 17, 2008 through April 17, 2009. Capitol agreed to defend Indel and Osyka in the underlying action under a reservation of rights.
Capitol filed the instant action on November 24, 2008, seeking a declaration that it has no duty to defend or indemnify Indel and Osyka in the undеrlying state court action. Following discovery, Capitol moved for summary judgment. Capitol argued that the allegations of the underlying action fell outside the Policy’s coverage for “personal and advertising injury” which, all parties agreed, was the only possible basis fоr coverage. In addition, Capitol argued that even if ICS’s allegations triggered personal and advertising injury coverage, various exclusions applied. One exclusion Capitol cited, for Breach of Contract, excluded coverage for “‘[p]ersonаl and advertising injury’ arising out of a breach of contract, except an implied contract to use another’s advertising idea in your ‘advertisement.’” Another exclusion, Infringement of Copyright, Patent, Trademark or Trade Secret, excluded “‘[p]ersonal and advertising injury’ аrising out of the infringement of copyright, patent, trademark, trade secret or other intellectual property rights.”
The district court granted Capitol’s motion on October 14, 2009. It first concluded that the misappropriation of customer and price lists alleged in the underlying action did not constitute advertising injury. In doing so, the court rejected Indel’s arguments that its use of the word “obsolete” on its website and its statements to ICS’s customers that it had better prices and services than ICS were wrongful acts giving rise to advertising injury. (10/14/09 Mem. Op. at 6.) Rather than Indel’s advertising, thе district court observed, ICS’s alleged injuries arose from Osyka’s disclosure, and Indel’s use, of ICS’s customer and pricing lists. ( Id. ) The district court also recognized that Kentucky courts had not specifically addressed whether use of trade secrets constitutes an “advertising injury” and that other jurisdictions were split on the issue. After considering cases coming down on both sides, the district court determined that Kentucky courts would side with those courts holding that misappropriation of customer and price lists does not constitute “advertising injury.” Recognizing “the split of authorities on this issue and Kentucky’s strong preference for finding coverage,” however, the district court held in the alternative that even if ICS alleged advertising injury, the Infringement of Copyright, Patent, Trademark and Trade Secret exclusion barred the tortious interference and stаtutory claims and the Breach of Contract exclusion barred the breach of contract claim. ( at 7-8.)
This timely appeal followed.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
This court reviews
de novo
a motion for summary judgment.
Kleiber v. Honda of Am. Mfg.,
Inc.
,
III. ANALYSIS
In the district court, and again on appeal, the parties cite cases from jurisdictions other than Kentucky to support their respective positions on the existence of advertising injury coverage. We need not decide whether Kentucky courts would adopt the more restrictive view that misappropriation of customer and price lists is not advertising injury, as the district court concluded and Capitol urges, or whether Kentucky courts would adopt a more liberal view, as Indel and Osyka urge, because we conclude that the Breach of Contract exclusion excludes coverage for all of the underlying claims. For the same reason, we need not determine whether the district court erred in concluding that coverage is excluded under the Infringement of Copyright, Patеnt, Trademark or Trade Secret exclusion or whether it applied the correct version of that exclusion.
Under Kentucky insurance law, “terms used in insurance contracts should be given their
ordinary meaning as persons with the ordinary and usual understanding would construe them.”
Motorists Mut. Ins. Co. v. RSJ, Inc.
,
The rule of strict construction against an insurance company certainly does nоt mean that every doubt must be resolved against it and does not interfere with the rule that the policy must receive a reasonable interpretation consistent with the parties’ object and intent or narrowly expressed in the plain meaning and/or language of the contract. Neither should a nonexistent ambiguity be utilized to resolve a policy against the company. We consider that courts should not rewrite an insurance contract to enlarge the risk to the insurer.
St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Powell-Walton-Milward, Inc.
,
The Breach of Contract exclusion excludes coverage for personal and advertising injury “arising out of a breach of contract, except an implied contract to use another’s advertising idea in your ‘advertisement.’” The language of this exclusion is clear and unambiguous. Because nothing in the record suggеsts that Indel and/or Osyka had an implied contract with ICS, and ICS’s customer and price lists cannot reasonably considered an “advertising idea” (and Indel and Osyka do not argue otherwise), the only issue is whether ICS’s claims arise out of a breach of contract.
In
Hugenberg v. West American Insurance Company/Ohio Casualty Group
,
The words ‘arising out of * * * use’ in an automobile liability insurance policy are broad, general and comprehensive terms meаning ‘originating from,’ or ‘having its origin in,’ ‘growing out of’ or ‘flowing from’ . . . . All that is required to come within the meaning of the words ‘arising out of the * * * use of the automobile’ is a casual connection with the accident. (quoting Ins. Co. of N. Am. v. Royal Indem. Co. , 429 F.2d 1014, 1017-18 (6th Cir. 1970))
(footnote omitted and asterisks in original). Although
Hugenberg
involved an automobile policy
rather than a comprehensive gеneral liability policy, as in the instant case, we find no reason for not
according the phrase “arising out of” the same broad application here. Moreover, this Court has
given the phrase the same broad application it applied in
Royal Indemnity
,
supra
, in casеs involving
general comprehensive liability policies.
See Assurance Co. of Am. v. J.P. Structures, Inc.
, Nos. 95-
2384, 96-1010, 96-1027,
Given the broad meaning of the term “arising out of,” we hold that ICS’s claims against both Osyka and Indel arose directly from Osyka’s breach of contract. In other words, Indel’s use of ICS’s proprietary and trade secret information – the basis of both the tortious interference and statutory claims – grew out of, or flowed from, Osyka’s dissemination of suсh information to Indel. Without Osyka’s breach, Indel would have no information. Indel does not contend otherwise, but argues instead that this exclusion is inapplicable because ICS sued only Osyka for breach of contract. In other words, Indel contends that in order for the exclusion to apply to it, ICS must have asserted a breach of contract directly against Indel. Indel further contends that any personal and advertising injury arose from the allegations against Indel, not from the alleged breach of contract.
Indel’s arguments lack merit because the language of the exclusion is not so limited. Instead,
it merely requires that the injury arise out of “
a
breach of contract.” (Emphasis supplied.) This
condition would be satisfied whether Osyka, Indel, or some other party breached a contract, and even
regаrdless of whether ICS actually pled a breach of contract claim, so long as the asserted claims
arose out of the breach. The Fifth Circuit rejected an argument similar to Indel’s, based on virtually
identical facts, in
Gemini Insurance Co. v. Andy Boyd Co.
,
IV. CONCLUSION
Accordingly, the district court’s judgment is AFFIRMED .
Notes
[*] Honorable Gordon J. Quist, United States Senior District Judge for the Western District of Michigan, sitting by designation.
[1] At the time Osyka left ICS, ICS suspected Osyka had taken variоus files and information that ICS considered trade secrets or confidential information. ICS claims that an examination of the hard drive of Osyka’s ICS computer revealed that Osyka had deleted various files from his computer during the two or three months before he left ICS. This informаtion formed the basis of a separate lawsuit by ICS against Osyka in Jefferson Circuit Court in October 2007, alleging that Osyka destroyed ICS’s property, i.e., its computer files.
[2] Pursuant to the 2010 amendments to Rule 56, former subdivision (c)(2), which contained the summary judgment standard, has been redesignated as subdivision (a).
