MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
In this insurance coverage dispute, the court must decide on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment whether the insurer, plaintiff-counterdefendant Carolina Casualty Insurance Co. (“Carolina”), has a duty under a management liability insurance policy (the “Policy”) to defend four underlying lawsuits (the “Underlying Lawsuits”). This question turns on whether three Policy exclusions bar coverage. Concluding that Carolina has established beyond peradventure that it has neither a duty to defend nor a duty to indemnify in the Underlying Lawsuits, the court grants Carolina’s motion for summary judgment, denies defendants-coun-terplaintiffs’ motions for partial summary judgment, and enters judgment in favor of Carolina.
I
Carolina brings this suit against individual defendant James E. Sowell (“Sowell”)
1
and individual defendant-counterplaintiff Jeffrey Ellis (“Ellis”), and corporate defendants-counterplaintiffs James Sowell Co., L.P. (“Sowell LP”), Union Industrial Gas
&
Supply, Inc. (“Union”), DGS, L.L.C. (“DOUS”),
2
and Gas Holdings, Inc.
The Underlying Lawsuits were filed in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, and they arise out of a dispute concerning a leased property located in New Orleans (the “Leased Property”) that was damaged in the hurricane. At the time of the hurricane, Doussan Properties, L.L.C. (“DPL”) had leased the property to Union, DOUS, and GHI.
In the first lawsuit at issue, DPL sued Union, DOUS, and GHI in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana.
See Doussan Props., L.L.C. v. Union Indus. Gas & Supply, Inc.,
No. 06-4167,
Following dismissal of the
Federal Lawsuit,
DPL filed a similar suit against Union, DOUS, and GHI in the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans, State of Louisiana, and that lawsuit was removed to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana.
See Doussan Props., L.L.C. v. Doussan Gas & Supply, L.L.C.,
No. 07-5508,
DOUS later sued DPL in the 24th Judicial District Court for the Parish of Jefferson, State of Louisiana. See Doussan Gas & Supply, L.L.C. v. Doussan Props., L.L.C., No. 645-011 (24th Dist. Ct., Jefferson Parish, La. filed May 17, 2007) (the “ Jefferson Parish Lawsuit ”). In the Jefferson Parish Lawsuit DOUS seeks a declaratory judgment determining its rights and status under the lease. In the alternative, but only if it is determined that DOUS failed to obtain sufficient insurance, DOUS seeks a declaration that the DOUS officers who knew of the insufficiency of the obtained insurance breached a fiduciary duty owed to DOUS.
In the final Underlying Lawsuit, defendant Sowell filed a shareholder derivative action on behalf of DOUS against Leonard Doussan III (“Doussan III”), Leonard Doussan, Jr. (“Doussan Jr.”), Ellis, and DOUS in the 68th Judicial District Court of Dallas County, Texas. See Sowell v. Doussan, No. 07-10557 (68th Dist. Ct., Dallas County, Tex. filed Sept. 10, 2007) (the “Dallas County Lawsuit"). Sowell alleges, in relevant part, that Doussan III, Doussan Jr., and Ellis breached fiduciary duties owed to DOUS. The claims concern the failure to provide adequate insurance for the Leased Property and DOUS’s mismanagement of the litigation concerning the Leased Property. Subsequently, another DOUS shareholder, Robert Welsh (“Welsh”), intervened in the Dallas County Lawsuit, also alleging a breach of fiduciary duty by Ellis.
The Policy at issue in this suit is a management liability insurance policy issued by Carolina to Sowell LP and covering the period January 16, 2006 to January 16, 2007. The Policy insures Sowell LP and several “additional insured entities,” including Union, DOUS, and GHI. Coverage A of the Policy provides coverage for the directors and officers of an insured entity when they face a claim arising out of any wrongful act. “Coverage A. Directors and Officers Liability Insurance,” provides:
This Policy shall pay the Loss of:
1. each and every Director or Officer of the Insured Entity arising from any Claim first made against the Directors or Officers during the Policy Period or the Extended Reporting Period (if applicable) for any Wrongful Act, except and to the extent that the Insured Entity has indemnified the Directors or Officers.
2. the Insured Entity arising from any Claim first made against the Directors or Officers during the Policy Period or the Extended Reporting Period (if applicable) for any Wrongful Act, but only to the extent that the Insured Entity has Indemnified the Directors or Officers for such Loss as permitted by law.
Corporate Ds. July 21,
Coverage B of the Policy covers an insured entity itself when it faces a claim arising out of a wrongful act. “Coverage B. Corporate Liability Insurance,” provides: “This Policy shall pay the Loss of the Insured Entity arising from any Claim first made against the Insured Entity during the Policy Period or the Extended Reporting Period (if applicable) for any
Policy coverage is subject to three pertinent exclusions. First, the exclusion in § IV.N (the “Contract Exclusion”) provides that Carolina
shall not be liable to make any payment for Loss in connection with a Claim made against any insured ... based upon, arising out of, directly or indirectly resulting from or in consequence of, or in any way involving any oral or written contract or agreement. This exclusion shall not apply to Coverage A. or Coverage C., in the event that such liability would have attached to an Insured in the absence of the oral or written contract or agreement, or in the event a claimant alleges a breach of implied contract.
Id. at 10,12.
Second, the exclusion in § IV.D.2 (the “Property Damage Exclusion”) provides that Carolina is not liable for loss in connection with a claim made against any insured for “damage to or destruction of any tangible property, including the loss of use thereof.” Id. at 11.
Third, the exclusion in § IV.F (the “Insured v. Insured Exclusion”) provides that Carolina is not liable for loss in connection with a claim made against any insured “by, on behalf of, or in the right of the Insured Entity, or by any Directors or Officers.” Id. The Insured v. Insured Exclusion does not apply, however, to “any derivative action by any security holder of the Insured Entity, but only if such Claim is instigated and continued totally independent of, and totally without the solicitation of, or assistance of, or active participation of, or intervention of any Insured or the Insured Entity.” Id.
Defendants notified Carolina of the Underlying Lawsuits and requested coverage and a defense. Carolina has denied coverage and has declined to provide a defense, asserting that coverage is precluded by the three Policy exclusions.
Carolina seeks summary judgment declaring that it has neither a duty to defend nor a duty to indemnify defendants in the Underlying Lawsuits, and dismissing defendants’ counterclaims. The Corporate Defendants move for partial summary judgment dismissing Carolina’s declaratory judgment action and declaring that Carolina has a duty to defend them in the Underlying Lawsuits. Defendant Ellis also seeks partial summary judgment and joins the Corporate Defendants’ motion. Because the parties’ motions for summary judgment address the same issues, the court will consider them together.
II
It is undisputed that Texas law applies in this case. “In Texas, the duty to defend and duty to indemnify are distinct and separate duties creating distinct and separate causes of action.”
Am. Alliance Ins. Co. v. Frito-Lay, Inc.,
Texas follows the “eight-corners” rule, under which the court looks only to the third-party plaintiffs pleadings and the provisions of the insurance policy in determining whether an insurer has a duty to
[i]f the four corners of a petition allege facts stating a cause of action which potentially falls within the four corners of the policy’s scope of coverage, the insurer has a duty to defend. If all the facts alleged in the underlying petition fall outside the scope of coverage, then there is no duty to defend, but we resolve all doubts regarding duty to defend in favor of the duty.
Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. v. Graham,
The insured has the burden of showing that a claim is potentially within the scope of policy coverage.
See Northfield Ins. Co. v. Loving Home Care, Inc.,
The parties’ summary judgment burdens depend on whether they are addressing a claim or defense for which they will have the burden of proof at trial. To be entitled to summary judgment on a matter for which it will have the burden of proof, a party “must establish ‘beyond peradventure all of the essential elements of the claim or defense.’ ”
Bank One, Tex., N.A. v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am.,
When the summary judgment movant will not have the burden of proof at trial, it need only point the court to the absence of evidence of any essential element of the opposing party’s claim or defense.
See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Ill
The court first concludes that the
Jefferson Parish Lawsuit
contains no claim potentially covered under the Policy. Defendants have the burden of showing that a claim is potentially within the Policy’s scope.
Northfield,
IV
Defendants have shown, and Carolina does not dispute, that at least one claim asserted in each of the three remaining Underlying Lawsuits is potentially within the scope of the Policy.
6
Because defendants have met this burden, for Carolina to establish that it has no duty to defend, it must show that the plain language of one or more policy exclusions bars coverage of all claims.
See Northfield,
The court first analyzes the claims asserted in the Orleans Parish Lawsuit. Defendants contend that, at the very least, the claims for negligence, statutory violations, lost rents, and costs of property removal are not excluded. Carolina argues that both the Contract Exclusion and the Property Damage Exclusion preclude coverage.
The Contract Exclusion precludes coverage of claims made against an insured “based upon, arising out of, directly or indirectly resulting from or in consequence of, or in any way involving any oral or written contract or agreement.”
7
Corporate Ds. July 21,
Defendants contend that the court must adopt their interpretation of the exclusion, but they do not demonstrate how the Contract Exclusion is susceptible to more than one reasonable interpretation.
8
See Gore Design,
In addition to proffering an unclear interpretation of the Contract Exclusion, defendants argue that Carolina’s interpretation is overly broad, and that Carolina’s interpretation of the phrase “arising out of’ is erroneous. Carolina contends that Texas courts interpret the phrase “arising out of’ to require only a “but for” causal connection, which is broader than direct or proximate causation. Carolina primarily relies on two Texas cases for this assertion:
Utica National Insurance Co. of Texas v. American Indemnity Co.,
It is clear that, under Texas law, the phrase “arising out of’ means a causal connection. But to decide whether the claims asserted in the Orleans Parish Lawsuit fall within the Contract Exclusion, the court need not resolve whether the phrase equates precisely to “but for” causation. Nor need the court undertake an analysis of the meaning and scope of “but for” causation in the context presented here. This is because the claims at issue bear a close causal connection to the lease, not a remote or vague connection.
Moreover, the Contract Exclusion applies not only to claims “arising out of’ a contract, but to claims “based upon, arising out of, directly or indirectly resulting from or in consequence of, or in any way involving any oral or written contract or agreement.” Corporate Ds. July 21,
Defendants also contend that Carolina’s interpretation of the Contract Exclusion is overly broad because it would bar coverage of any claims between the landlord and defendants simply because their relationship is a result of defendants’ presence on the Leased Property.
10
But while such an interpretation
would
be overly broad, this does not appear to be Carolina’s reading of the Contract Exclusion, and it is not the court’s. The Contract Exclusion bars coverage of the claims between DPL and defendants, not because
their relationship
arose out of a lease contract, but because
the claims
DPL asserts arise out of the lease contract. This interpretation is narrower than the purported interpretation that defendants challenge. This distinction is illustrated by
Admiral Insurance Co. v. Briggs,
Defendants argue that Carolina’s interpretation is inconsistent with
Admiral Insurance Co.,
which applied a nearly identical exclusion under Texas law. In
Admiral Insurance Co.
the insured’s former landlord sued it for,
inter alia,
stock fraud, alleging that the insured made material misrepresentations concerning its future success in order to convince the landlord to accept the insured’s stock instead of cash for payment on the lease.
Id.
at 462-63. The insurer contended that the stock fraud claim fell within the contract exclusion because it “involved” the lease contract.
Id.
Judge Godbey rejected this argument. He emphasized that the terms of the exclusion as a whole, including the “involving” language, required a “causal relationship between the contract and the claim.”
Id.
at 463. He concluded that “[t]he lease contract did not cause the stock fraud claim, it simply provided the context in which the
Carolina contends that the claims asserted in the Orleans Parish Lawsuit are clearly distinguishable from the stock fraud claim in Admiral Insurance Co. Whereas the stock fraud claim could exist independent of any lease, Carolina argues that the claims in the Orleans Parish Lawsuit could not exist independent of the lease. It argues that the lease does not merely provide the context for the claims, but the claims are based on the lease itself.
As demonstrated below, the court also concludes that the lease provides more than context for the claims asserted in the Orleans Parish Lawsuit. All of the claims are causally connected to the lease contract and could not exist without the lease. They are all . clearly based upon,-arise out of, result from, are in consequence of, or involve the lease.
B
The court now addresses the individual claims asserted in the
Orleans Parish Lawsuit.
It applies the plain language of the Contract Exclusion and draws all reasonable inferences in favor of defendants.
See Gore Design,
1
The first claim DPL asserts against Union, DOUS, and GHI in the Orleans- Parish Lawsuit is for money damages for failing to secure adequate insurance on the Leased Property. DPL alleges that the lessees were contractually liable under the terms of the lease when Hurricane Katrina damaged the Leased Property. It avers that the lease required that they insure the Leased Property against fire, flood, and windstorm damage for an amount not less than 90% of the value of the building and improvements on the Leased Property, but that the lessees failed to obtain the required amount of insurance. This is a breach of contract claim that is clearly based on the lease and falls within the Contract Exclusion.
2
In a related and alternative claim, DPL alleges that the lessees negligently failed to obtain adequate insurance. Defendants contend that this claim does not fall within the Contract Exclusion because “[t]his claim for negligence, by its very nature, asserts a legally imposed duty to obtain adequate insurance that exists apart from any contract.” Corporate Ds. Resp. Br. 16-17. Carolina argues that it is immaterial that defendants have fashioned this claim as one for negligence. It contends that, although the claim sounds in tort, it still arises out of the lease. Carolina maintains that any duty to purchase adequate insurance covering the Leased Property arose only from the lease. Carolina cites
King Chapman & Broussard Consulting Group, Inc. v. National Union Fire Insurance Co.,
The court holds that the Contract Exclusion clearly precludes coverage for DPL’s negligence claim. The duty to obtain insurance on the Leased Property arises directly and exclusively from the
3
DPL also alleges in the Orleans Parish Lawsuit that it is entitled to compensation for loss of rents because the lessees failed to remove their personal property from the Leased Property. It avers that ¶ 17 of the lease provides: “Upon the termination or expiration of the Lease Agreement, if Lessor so requests in writing, Lessee shall promptly remove all of its personal property placed in or about the Premises by Lessee.” P. Compl. Ex. D HXW. DPL then asserts that it provided the required written notice, and that the lessees refused to remove their personal property from the premises, which has limited its ability to lease the property.
Defendants first argue that this claim does not fall within the Contract Exclusion because it is based on the absence of a lease, which had already been terminated when the claim arose. Although it is true that the damages of lost rents did not arise until the lease was terminated and DPL actually lost rents, it does not follow that the claim is not based on the lease. Paragraph 17 of the lease explicitly governs the removal of personal property following termination of the lease, and DPL alleges that the lessees breached this provision. This is a breach of contract claim, and the fact that DPL seeks lost rents as damages does not change this.
Defendants also argue that the duty to remove property- from the premises of another is one that exists independent of a contract. They contend that, in Louisiana, this duty is enforced by a claim for trespass. Defendants then argue that the Contract Exclusion should not be applied when the duty of the insured is a tort duty that exists independent of a contract. The court holds that this reasoning is inapplicable in the context of this claim.
First, although there may be a duty independent of contract to remove property from the premises of another and not to trespass in some circumstances, it is not implicated by the facts alleged in the Orleans Parish Lawsuit. DPL’s allegations are that the lessees acquired personal property while occupying the Leased Property, and that they failed to remove their personal property, as the lease required. The duty to remove property arose under the terms of the lease and depended on a written request from DPL; it was not a duty existing independent of the lease. DPL does not mention trespass in its complaint, and although the court must construe the complaint liberally in favor of coverage, the complaint cannot be interpreted to allege a claim for trespass.
Second, assuming
arguendo
that the lessees had a duty independent of the lease to remove their personal property, the Con
4
DPL also alleges that the lessees failed, as required under the lease and La. Civ.Code Ann. art. 2683, to return the Leased Property in the same condition in which they took possession at the lease inception. The alleged violation of the lease terms is simply a breach of contract claim. And the allegation that the lessees violated the same requirement under Art. 2683 also falls within the Contract Exclusion. Article 2683 specifies a lessee’s principal obligations and provides that “[t]he lessee is bound ... [t]o return the thing at the end of the lease in a condition that is the same as it was when the thing was delivered to him, except for normal wear and tear or as otherwise provided hereafter.” La. Civ.Code Ann. art. 2683. Defendants argue that this statutory claim is not barred by the Contract Exclusion because that exclusion does not clearly and unambiguously express an intent to exclude coverage of statutory claims. But the fact that the Contract Exclusion is silent concerning the exclusion of legal theories does not mean that it does not clearly and unambiguously exclude a specific claim. The Contract Exclusion bars coverage of claims “based upon, arising out of, directly or indirectly resulting from or in consequence of, or in any way involving” a contract, regardless of whether they take the form of a breach of contract claim, a tort claim, or a statutory claim. Article 2683 specifies a lessee’s statutory obligations, and the court cannot conclude that the duty to return leased property in a certain condition at the termination of the lease does not result from or involve the lease itself.
As indicated above, this claim is inherently different from the stock fraud claim at issue in
Admiral Insurance Co.
In
Admiral Insurance Co.
Judge Godbey held that the lease merely provided the context for the stock fraud claim.
Admiral Insurance Co.,
5
DPL brings an alternative claim for a variety of damages. DPL alleges:
Alternatively, Plaintiff is entitled to damages for the cost of removing the defendants’ personal property, for additional damages as appropriate, including the inability to lease the premises, to use the premises, for additional damage caused to the building because of the defendants’] refusal to remove their property, and any other damages pursuant to Civil Code Art. 2687.
P. Compl. Ex. E ¶ XX. As discussed above, see supra § IV(B)(3), the lease explicitly governs the removal of personal property at lease termination. To the extent this claim rests on the lessees’ failure to remove personal property, it arises out of the lease and falls within the Contract Exclusion. See supra § IV(B)(3). To the extent the claim rests on an alleged violation of Art. 2687, it similarly arises out of the lease. Like Art. 2683, Art. 2687 is part of the Louisiana Civil Code governing leases. It provides that “[t]he lessee is liable for damage to the thing caused by his fault or that of a person who, with his consent, is on the premises or uses the thing.” La. Civ.Code. Ann. art. 2687. The claim that DPL is entitled to damages because the lessees damaged the Leased Property by failing to remove their personal property directly results from the lease because, absent the lease, the statute would provide no remedy.
Moreover, DPL’s claim under Art. 2687 also clearly falls within the Property Damage Exclusion, which bars coverage of claims made against the insured for “damage to or destruction of any tangible property, including the loss of use thereof.” Corporate Ds. July 21,
6
DPL’s final claim is asserted against Ellis, not the lessees. DPL alleges that, as manager and supervisor of the lessees with respect to the Leased Property, “Ellis had a duty to ensure that the terms of the lease agreement were fulfilled by Defendants.” P. Compl. Ex. D ¶ XXIII. It avers that “Ellis was aware of the contractual provision in the lease agreement requiring the defendant to carry adequate insurance coverage for the property and he intentionally refused and/or negligently refused to ensure that adequate coverage was obtained.” Id. ¶ XXIV. DPL maintains that Ellis is liable for the damages that DPL suffered as a result of this breach of duty that Ellis owed to it.
Ellis contends that the Contract Exclusion does not bar coverage of this claim because he is not a party to the lease and
The terms of the exclusion cannot be reasonably read to limit it to breach of contract claims. As discussed above, the exclusion bars coverage of claims “based upon, arising out of, directly or indirectly resulting from or in consequence of, or in any way involving” a contract, regardless of the legal theory that is asserted. The fact that the claim against Ellis could sound in tort does not change the fact that it is based on the lease.
See King,
This claim is very similar to the one at issue in
GE HFS Holdings.
There the court held that a contract exclusion very similar to the one at issue here barred coverage of a claim that an insured negligently supervised services provided under a service contract.
GE HFS Holdings,
The Contract Exclusion also cannot be reasonably read, as Ellis urges, to apply only to claims involving a contract to which Ellis was a party.
14
The exclusion bars coverage of claims made against any insured based upon
“any
oral or written contract or agreement,” Corporate Ds. July 21,
7
Because the court concludes that the Contract Exclusion bars coverage of all the claims asserted in the Orleans Parish Lawsuit, it need not analyze whether the claims fall within the Property Damage Exclusion or the Insured v. Insured Exclusion. 16
The claims asserted against the lessees in the Federal Lawsuit are essentially the same as those asserted against them in the Orleans Parish Lawsuit. 17 For the same reasons that the Contract Exclusion bars coverage of the claims asserted in the Orleans Parish Lawsuit, it bars coverage of all the claims asserted in the Federal Lawsuit. Accordingly, the court need not decide whether other exclusions also bar coverage.
VI
In the Dallas County Lawsuit defendant Sowell, on behalf of DOUS, brings a shareholder derivative action against Doussan III, Doussan Jr., Ellis, and DOUS. Sowell alleges, in relevant part, that Doussan III, Doussan Jr., and Ellis, all of whom are or were allegedly directors or officers of DOUS, breached fiduciary duties owed to DOUS. He also requests that DOUS reimburse him for the expenses incurred through pursuing this derivative action. Welsh, another DOUS shareholder, has intervened in the Dallas County Lawsuit, alleging a breach of fiduciary duty by Ellis.
A
Carolina maintains that it has no duty to defend the
Dallas County Lawsuit
because coverage of the asserted claims is clearly barred by the plain language of the Insured v. Insured Exclusion. The Insured v. Insured Exclusion provides that Carolina is not liable for loss in connection with a claim made against any insured “by, on behalf of, or in the right of the Insured Entity, or by any Directors or Officers.” Corporate Ds. July 21,
B
The Insured v. Insured Exclusion is unambiguous, and the court applies its plain language. This conclusion is consistent with those of several courts, including this one, that have previously held that very similar exclusions are unambiguous.
See Voluntary Hosps. of Am. v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co.,
In applying the plain meaning of the exclusion, the court concludes that the claims asserted in the
Dallas County Lawsuit
fall clearly within the exclusion and that Carolina has no duty to defend them.
C
Defendants, particularly Sowell and Ellis, make several arguments to support the contention that the Insured v. Insured Exclusion does not bar coverage of the Dallas County Lawsuit, but all of their arguments are inconsistent with the plain language of the exclusion and the Policy.
1
Defendants argue that there is no evidence establishing that Sowell is an “insured” under the Policy for purposes of the
Dallas County Lawsuit.
This contention fails because Sowell signed the Policy renewal form as the President of Sowell LP, the named insured.
18
The President of the named insured is clearly an “insured” under the Policy.
See
Corporate Ds. July 21,
2
Defendants next contend that the Insured v. Insured Exclusion is inapposite because it must be applied separately to each insured entity. They argue that the exclusion applies to a claim “against any Insured” that is brought by “the Insured Entity, or by any Directors or Officers.” Sowell Resp. Br. 6. Defendants reason that because the exclusion refers to the insured entity, rather than to any insured entity, the party bringing the claim must be part of the same entity as the party against whom the claim is brought.
Assuming arguendo that this argument has force, it is misplaced in this case. The Insured v. Insured Exclusion does not apply in this case simply because Sowell, as an officer of Sowell LP, is suing DOUS and its officers and directors. Sowell is suing DOUS and its officers on behalf of DOUS.
Moreover, the exclusion does not provide that the claim must be brought by
“the
insured entity”; it states that the claim must be brought “by, on behalf of, or in the right of the Insured Entity.” Corporate Ds. July 21,
3
Defendants argue that the Insured v. Insured Exclusion is inapplicable to shareholder derivative lawsuits. They contend that because Sowell, a shareholder of DOUS, brings his claims in the Dallas County Lawsuit as derivative claims on behalf of DOUS, the Insured v. Insured Exclusion is inapplicable. Defendants’ argument gives insufficient weight to the language of the derivative suit exception. The Insured v. Insured Exclusion is inapplicable to a derivative claim “only if such Claim is instigated and continued totally independent of, and totally without the solicitation of, or assistance of, or active participation of, or intervention of any Insured or the Insured Entity.” Id. As defendants argue elsewhere, the use of the phrase “any Insured,” as opposed to “the Insured,” indicates inclusion of all insureds under the Policy. Because the derivative claims were brought by Sowell (an insured), the Insured v. Insured Exclusion applies and precludes coverage.
4
Finally, defendants argue that the intervention of Welsh, who is not an insured under the Policy, takes the case outside the scope of the Insured v. Insured Exclusion. They rely on
Federal Insurance Co. v. Infoglide Corp.,
This contention misinterprets the holding of
Federal Insurance
and overlooks the fact that Welsh’s claim is a derivative claim.
20
Although the quoted passage from
Federal Insurance
appears on its face to support defendants’ argument, when it is read in context, it becomes clear that the passage does not apply to the facts of the present case. The
Federal Insurance
court held in the quoted portion that the inclusion of an insured as a plaintiff does not bar coverage of a claim when the other non-insured plaintiffs are asserting
direct
claims.
See id.
at *5-*6. The part of the opinion that immediately follows the quoted passage indicates that the outcome would be different if the non-insured plaintiffs were asserting
derivative
claims.
See id.
at *6-*8. When a plaintiff is asserting a derivative claim, the derivative action exception to the Insured v. Insured Exclusion applies. The
Federal Insurance
court then held that at least some of the claims asserted by the non-
In the Dallas County Lawsuit the non-insured plaintiff (Welsh) asserts a derivative claim on behalf of DOUS. Unless Welsh’s claim was instigated and continues totally independent of Sowell, which is not the case, it falls within the Insured v. Insured Exclusion. This is the only conclusion that the plain language of the exclusion allows, and it is also consistent with the holding of Federal Insurance.
Because all the claims asserted in the Dallas County Lawsuit clearly fall within the plain language of the Insured v. Insured Exclusion, coverage of the suit is barred.
VII
In summary, no claims asserted in the Underlying Lawsuits are potentially covered under the Policy. Defendants have failed to show that the claims asserted in the
Jefferson Parish Lawsuit
potentially fall within the scope of the Policy. And Carolina has established that the plain language of the Contract Exclusion bars coverage of all the claims asserted in the
Orleans Parish Lawsuit
and the
Federal Lawsuit.
It has also established that coverage of the claims asserted in the
Dallas County Lawsuit
is barred by the plain language of the Insured v. Insured Exclusion. Because none of the claims asserted in the Underlying Lawsuits potentially falls within the Policy’s coverage, Carolina has no duty to defend them as a matter of law.
See St. Paul Guardian,
VIII
The parties dispute whether the issue of Carolina’s duty to indemnify defendants is ripe for adjudication. Defendants argue that the duty to indemnify cannot be decided until the facts are developed in the Underlying Lawsuits. This is not the case, however, when the court concludes that the insurer has no duty to defend the underlying litigation. The duty to defend is “broader than the duty to indemnify.”
E & L Chipping,
IX
The court now turns to the counterclaims that all defendants except Sowell assert against Carolina. 21
Defendants also allege that, by failing to provide a defense and coverage to defendants in the Underlying Lawsuits, Carolina is liable for (1) breaching the Policy, (2) breaching its duty of good faith and fair dealing, (3) violating Chapters 541 and 542 of the Texas Insurance Code, and (4) damages under § 17.50 of the Texas Business
&
Commerce Code because it used deceptive insurance practices, in violation of Chapter 541. Carolina argues that, because it had no duty to defend the Underlying Lawsuits, it is entitled to summary judgment dismissing all of these counterclaims. The court agrees. Carolina did not breach the Policy by failing to defend the Underlying Lawsuits, because it had no duty under the Policy to defend them. And Carolina cannot be liable for breaching a duty of good faith and fair dealing or for violating Chapters 541 or 542 of the Texas Insurance Code because the Underlying Lawsuits are not covered under the Policy.
See, e.g., Eilander v. Federated Mut. Ins. Co.,
For the reasons explained, the court grants Carolina’s August 13, 2008 motion for summary judgment, and it denies the July 21, 2008 motions for partial summary judgment of the Corporate Defendants and Ellis. By judgment filed today, the court enters a judgment declaring that Carolina has neither a duty to defend nor a duty to indemnify defendants in the Underlying Lawsuits, and dismissing defendants’ counterclaims with prejudice.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. All defendants except Sowell assert counterclaims against Carolina. See infra note 21.
. DGS, L.L.C. was formerly known as Dous-san Gas & Supply, L.L.C. Defendants refer to
. DPL asserts, however, that the lessees were required under the lease and Louisiana Civil Code Art. 2683, as opposed to Arts. 2619-20, to return the Leased Property in the condition in which they took possession. DPL also alleges that the alternative damages it requests are recoverable under Art. 2687.
. Because the Corporate Defendants have filed appendixes in support of both their motion for partial summary judgment and their response to Carolina's motion for summary judgment, the court for clarity will refer to the appendix by the date filed.
. Defendants do not even contend that the Jefferson Parish Lawsuit contains a claim against an insured. To the extent the lawsuit could be interpreted as containing a claim against DOUS’ officers, however, the claim clearly falls within the Policy’s Insured v. Insured Exclusion, which the court addresses infra at § VI.
. For example, defendants have shown that claims in each of the three remaining Underlying Lawsuits are potentially covered under Coverage B, which provides: "This Policy shall pay the Loss of the Insured Entity arising from any Claim first made against the Insured Entity during the Policy Period ... for any Wrongful Act.” Corporate Ds. July 21,
.The Contract Exclusion does not apply, however, “to Coverage A. or Coverage C., in the event that such liability would have attached to an Insured in the absence of the oral or written contract or agreement, or in the event a claimant alleges a breach of implied contract.” Corporate Ds. July 21,
. As discussed below, defendants do dispute Carolina's interpretation of the phrase “arising out of,” but they do not offer an opposing interpretation. Moreover, the court is not relying on Carolina's interpretation of the phrase.
. Additionally, in interpreting a policy exclusion under Texas law, the Fifth Circuit stated: “[t]his court has held that the words 'arising out of,’ when used within an insurance policy, are 'broad, general, and comprehensive terms effecting broad coverage.' ”
Am. States Ins. Co.,
. Defendants’ argument is demonstrated in the following passage:
Under Carolina's overly broad "but for” interpretation, the fact that the Defendants were residing at the property pursuant to a written lease would serve as a bar of any claims between the landlord and the Defendants in the Underlying Lawsuits, including negligence claims, intentional torts, wrongful acts committed by Defendants’ officers and directors, and even claims based on the lack of a contract or arising only after the lease no longer existed. Indeed, under Carolina's interpretation, so long as any plaintiff's relationship with the Defendants arose as a result of Defendants’ presence on the leased property, any claim against Defendants would be barred from coverage.
Corporate Ds. Resp. Br. 10.
. This is not an instance where the court must adopt the insured’s interpretation. This is a dispute over the application of another case's holding, not over an alleged ambiguity in a policy exclusion.
See Gore Design,
. DPL asserts this claim for lost rents against Union, DOUS, and GHI, not against Ellis.
. Moreover, the articles of the Louisiana Civil Code relating to leases have been held to serve primarily as gap-fillers for situations in which the lease contract is silent.
See Schwegmann Family Trust No. 2 v. KFC Nat’l Mgmt. Co.,
. DPL actually alleges that Ellis, on behalf of the lessees, was a signatory to amendments to the lease.
. DPL specifically alleges that "[d]ue to this breach of duty owed to the Plaintiff, Ellis is personally liable for all damages sustained by Plaintiff as a result of his failure to ensure that the property was adequately insured.” P. Compl. Ex. D ¶ XXV (emphasis added).
.Although the court need not decide whether other exclusions may also bar coverage, it has noted above that the claim alleging violation of La. Civ.Code Ann art. 2687 clearly falls within both the Property Damage Exclusion and the Contract Exclusion. See supra § IV(B)(5).
. In the Orleans Parish Lawsuit DPL also asserts the negligence claim against the lessees and the claim against Ellis.
. Sowell is also a partner of Sowell LP and, at least allegedly, a member of DOUS.
. Defendants also contend that the underlying rationale of the Insured v. Insured Exclusion, which they argue is to prevent collusion and abuse, supports the theory that the exclusion must apply separately to each insured entity. They argue that when, as here, unrelated entities litigate against each other there is no opportunity for collusion. This argument is misplaced. It bears emphasis that this is not a case where unrelated entities are
. The parties debate several other issues concerning Federal Insurance, including the distinguishing factors between its facts and those of Sphinx. In light of the court's reading of Federal Insurance, however, these issues are irrelevant to the outcome of this case, and the court need not address them.
. Although the Corporate Defendants and Ellis answered Carolina’s complaint separately, they assert identical counterclaims. Sowell has not asserted any counterclaims against Carolina.
