ORDER AND MEMORANDUM DECISION
This case arises out of Plaintiff Direct Mortgage Corporation’s (“Direct Mortgage”) claim for coverage under a fidelity bond issued by Defendant National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, PA (“National Union”). Direct Mortgage seeks coverage for its liability to third party financial institutions that unknowingly purchased fraudulently-obtained mortgages from Direct Mortgage and then demanded that Direct Mortgage buy back the mortgages under warranty clauses in the purchase agreements. Direct Mortgage settled with those entities and submitted a claim to National Union. National Union denied the claim on the basis that Direct Mortgage did not suffer a direct loss under the fidelity bond.
The parties have filed cross-motions for partial summary judgment 1 on the cover *1173 age issue. 2 Because the court finds that the fidelity bond’s unambiguous language does not cover the indirect, consequential loss suffered by Direct Mortgage, National Union is entitled to partial summary judgment on that issue.
A. Factual Background 3
Direct Mortgage is a wholesale lending company that generates revenue by originating mortgages through its broker network and selling those loans in the secondary market. National Union issued Direct Mortgage a Financial Institution Bond which contains various types of coverage, 4 including protection against the risk of employee dishonesty (the “Fidelity Bond”). 5
Direct Mortgage filed its claim with National Union after it discovered that its employee, Lloyd Rutherford, 6 falsified various documents necessary to close the loans. For example, Mr. Rutherford purportedly changed the value of the appraisals, altered the square footage of the property, falsified income verifications, and, in some cases, replaced the property description to which the loan pertained with a different property description. Direct Mortgage then sold the loans to its customers — including CitiMortgage, Countrywide Home Loans, GMAC Mortgage, and Washington Mutual — which, upon discovery of the fraud, demanded (based on Direct Mortgage’s repurchase obligations in the sales agreements) that Direct Mortgage buy back the fraudulently-obtained loans.
Direct Mortgage settled with its customers. Then Direct Mortgage filed a claim with National Union for loss based on its settlement obligations. National Union contends that Direct Mortgage’s claim does not fall within the type of loss covered by the Fidelity Bond.
B. The Fidelity Bond
The relevant portion of the Financial Institution Bond is titled the “Amended Fidelity Agreement.” The language, located in Rider # 8 of the bond, creates the “fidelity bond” in dispute here. According *1174 to Rider # 8, National Union agreed to provide coverage to Direct Mortgage for:
(A) Loss resulting from dishonest or fraudulent acts committed by an Employee acting alone or in collusion with others. Such dishonest or fraudulent acts must be committed by the Employee with the manifest intent:
(a) to cause the Insured to sustain such loss, and
(b) to obtain financial benefit for the Employee or another person or entity.
As used throughout this Insuring Agreement, financial benefit does not include any employee benefits earned in the normal course of employment, including: salaries, commissions, fees, bonuses, promotions, awards, profit sharing or pensions.
(Financial Institution Bond No. 690-71-28, Fidelity Insuring Agreement [“Fidelity Bond”], attached as Ex. A to Def.’s Mem. Supp. Mot. Summ. J.) The bond contains the following relevant exclusions:
This bond does not cover: ...
(l) damages of any type for which the Insured is legally liable, except compensatory damages, but not multiples thereof, arising directly from a loss covered under this bond; ...
(n) indirect or consequential loss of any nature....
(Fidelity Bond Exclusions 2(1) & 2(n).)
C. Coverage Under the Fidelity Bond
According to the Fidelity Bond language, Direct Mortgage, in order to prevail on its claim of coverage, must present sufficient evidence that Mr. Rutherford was an employee who committed dishonest or fraudulent acts, with a manifest intent to harm Direct Mortgage and to benefit himself or others, that resulted in a loss covered under the Fidelity Bond. Because the court finds that Mr. Rutherford’s actions did not result in a loss covered under the Fidelity Bond, 7 Direct Mortgage is not entitled to coverage.
1. Split Among Jurisdictions (Proximate Cause v. “Direct Means Direct” )
No Utah law exists on the question of recovery under fidelity bonds. “In deciding an issue that the Utah Supreme Court has not addressed, we must look to lower state court decisions, decisions of other states, federal decisions, and other available resources in deciding how the Utah Supreme Court would decide the issue.”
FDIC v. Oldenburg,
Direct Mortgage and National Union present two competing interpretations of “loss” under the Fidelity Bond. Their positions reflect a split in jurisdictions on the issue of what constitutes a direct loss under a fidelity bond.
Direct Mortgage advocates application of the “proximate cause” standard to determine whether the loss directly resulted from Mr. Rutherford’s actions.
See, e.g., Scirex Corp. v. Federal Ins. Co.,
National Union advocates a narrower reading, sometimes referred to as the “direct means direct” approach.
See, e.g., Vons Cos., Inc. v. Federal Ins. Co.,
2. Cases Adopting “Direct Means Direct” Approach are More Persuasive.
The court finds that the Utah Supreme Court would most likely adopt the “direct means direct” approach because cases advocating that approach are better reasoned and more consistent with the traditional nature of fidelity bonds and the language of the Fidelity Bond at issue.
See Nielsen v. O’Reilly,
3. Direct Mortgage’s Claimed Loss is Not Covered By the Fidelity Bond.
Based on a review of the language in the Fidelity Bond, the undisputed facts, the history and overall purpose of fidelity bonds, and the persuasiveness of the decisions adopting the “direct means direct” approach, the court concludes, for the reasons set forth below, that Direct Mortgage’s claimed loss is not covered by the Fidelity Bond.
a. The Fidelity Bond is Not a Liability Insurance Policy.
Typically, a fidelity bond is intended to provide indemnification of a direct loss suffered by the insured at the hands of a dishonest employee. It is not intended to be a liability policy. For example, in New York,
a fidelity bond is not a liability policy within the meaning of [New York insurance law]. The difference turns on what is defined as the risk. Insurance covers the liability of the insureds to a third-party, while fidelity bonding covers the loss of property owned by the insureds or held by the insureds, as a consequence of employee dishonesty.
Aetna Cas. & Sur.,
As fidelity bonds, financial institution bonds are in fact a form of insurance. However, due to the risk that is insured under the bond, it is not a liability insurance policy .... [They are] indemnity contracts .... In other words, whereas liability insurance covers the liability of insured to a third-party, fidelity bonds cover the loss of property owned by the insureds or held by the insureds, as a result of employee dishonesty or other perils.
11 Steven Plitt et al.,
Couch on Insurance
§ 167:43 “Financial Institution Bonds” (3d ed. 2008) (emphasis added); 1 Lee R. Russ & Thomas F. Segalla,
Couch on Insurance
§ 1:16 “Performance Bonds — Fidelity Insurance” (3d ed. 2008) (“The contract [fidelity insurance] is essentially one of indemnity for the personal loss to the employer.”).
See also Tri City,
Much of the language in the Fidelity Bond tracks the language of other fidelity bonds interpreted by courts. One distinction is that the word “direct” was removed from the coverage language and placed only in the exclusions section of the policy. 8 *1177 But the legal significance of this change is not clear. It appears, from the overall language of the Fidelity Bond, that the claimant must still demonstrate a direct loss before a finding of coverage is appropriate. (See Fidelity Bond Exclusion 2(1) (excluding coverage for damages “of any type for which the Insured is legally liable, except compensatory damages ... arising directly from a loss covered under this bond.”) (emphasis added); Exclusion 2(n) (excluding “indirect or consequential loss of any nature”) (emphasis added).) Exclusions 2(1) and 2(n), when read together, lead the court to conclude that coverage is limited to direct losses suffered by the insured.
Contrary to Direct Mortgage’s contention, the language in Exclusion
2(1)
does not convert the Fidelity Bond into a liability insurance policy. That exclusion says that the bond does not cover “damages of any type for which the Insured is
legally liable, except compensatory damages,
...
arising directly from a loss covered under this bond.”
(Fidelity Bond Exclusion
2(1)
(emphasis added).) Direct Mortgage contends that the plain language of Exclusion 2(Z) contemplates coverage for compensatory damages paid out by the insured based on liability to third parties arising out of a loss covered under the Fidelity Bond.
(See
Pl.’s Omnibus Mem. at 26-27.) The court disagrees. Indeed, other courts have rejected similar arguments.
See, e.g., Lynch Properties, Inc. v. Potomac Ins. Co. of Ill.,
Also, Direct Mortgage’s interpretation does not answer the question before the court: What is a “loss covered under this bond”? The more plausible interpretation of that language is that liability coverage for compensatory damages paid to a third party is limited to loss of that third party’s property which was being held by the insured in a bailment or trust situation (another type of coverage in the Fidelity Bond
(see
“On Premises” and “In Transit” coverage for loss of property) that is not at issue here).
See, e.g., Lynch Properties,
b. Direct Mortgage’s Claimed Loss is Too Contingent to be Direct.
Direct Mortgage’s loss was contingent on the occurrence of a series of
*1178
events that were not inevitable, and such a contingency takes the loss outside the scope of the Fidelity Bond.
See, e.g., Vons Companies, Inc.,
Direct Mortgage alternatively argues that it suffered a direct loss as soon as the loans were issued and sold to the third parties because it was “on the hook” for violation of the warranty and buy-back provisions.
(See
Pl.’s Omnibus Mem. at 16-17, 23, 30-31.) Direct Mortgage further contends (unpersuasively) that the amounts demanded and eventually paid simply quantified the losses Direct Mortgage sustained when it made the loans based on Mr. Rutherford’s fraud.
(See, e.g., id.
at 26, 40.) But although Direct Mortgage was potentially “on the hook” as soon as the loans were sold, its loss was theoretical at that point. No demands had been made and no defaults or foreclosures had occurred. Allowing coverage for the so-called immediate loss would be inconsistent with the Tenth Circuit’s holding that the insured must prove that it “suffered an actual loss by a preponderance of the evidence .... Bookkeeping or theoretical losses, not accompanied by actual withdrawals of cash or other such pecuniary loss [are] not recoverable.”
FDIC v. United Pac. Ins. Co.,
If the court required National Union to reimburse Direct Mortgage for losses resulting from the warranty or repurchase provisions in the sales agreements to which National Union was not a party, this would essentially allow Direct Mortgage to unilaterally, and improperly extend coverage under the Fidelity Bond.
For all the foregoing reasons, the court finds that the claimed loss is not covered by the Fidelity Bond.
ORDER
For the foregoing reasons, the court ORDERS as follows:
1. National Union’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Dkt. # 28) is GRANTED, and Direct Mortgage’s claim for coverage is dismissed. The court holds, however, that Direct Mortgage’s claims for breach *1179 of contract and breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing remain, as they were not the subject of the cross-motions and are not moot as a result of the court’s ruling on coverage.
2. Direct Mortgage’s Cross-Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Dkt. # 44) is DENIED.
3. National Union’s Motion to Strike the Expert Reports of Derk G. Rasmussen and Robert E. Wilcox (Dkt. # 48) is DENIED WITHOUT PREJUDICE.
Notes
. The cross motions focus solely on the issue of coverage. The court’s ruling in this order *1173 does not dispose of Direct Mortgage’s claim for breach of contract for not adjudicating or paying the claim, nor does it dispose of the claim for breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing for failing to promptly and reasonably investigate and settle the claim. Because those two claims are factually and analytically distinct from the issue of coverage, they are not moot.
. National Union also has filed a Motion to Strike the Expert Reports of Derk G. Rasmussen and Robert E. Wilcox (Dkt. # 48). Because the expert reports have no bearing on the court's analysis and ruling on the cross-motions for summary judgment, the court denies the Motion to Strike without prejudice.
. This is just a summary. For a full description of the facts, see the parties' briefs.
. Other portions of the Financial Institution Bond include agreement to cover loss of property on the premises (Insuring Agreement B), loss of property in transit (Insuring Agreement C), loss from forgery or alteration of a negotiable instrument by an agent of Direct Mortgage (Insuring Agreement D), loss relating to third party's securities fraud (Insuring Agreement E), loss relating to counterfeit currency (Insuring Agreement F), and loss relating to unauthorized access to computer systems (Rider #10).
. Generally speaking, a fidelity bond is an insurance contract by which an insurer indemnifies the insured against loss "arising from the lack of integrity or honesty of an employee or of a person holding a position of trust, such as a loss from embezzlement.” Black’s Law Dictionary (8th ed. 2004) (definition of "fidelity insurance” under "insurance”).
. National Union admits, for the purposes of its motion only, that Mr. Rutherford was an employee of Direct Mortgage, as that term is defined in the insurance policy.
. The court does not reach the question of whether Mr. Rutherford committed the acts with a manifest intent to harm Direct Mortgage and to benefit himself or others.
. Even if the court is to strictly construe ex-elusions and interpret ambiguous language in *1177 favor of the insured, this does not remove the requirement that Direct Mortgage show some sort of direct connection between the claimed loss and the insured event.
. If Direct Mortgage had not entered into agreements containing that language, its financial liability for Mr. Rutherford’s fraud would not have been as clear. That is, absent the specific re-purchase clauses in the sales agreements (which were added as part of Direct Mortgage’s routine business of selling loans on the secondary market (PL’s Omnibus Mem. at 32)), the third parties' recourse would have to incur damages and sue Direct Mortgage for vicarious liability for the torts of Mr. Rutherford. (The law is relatively clear that fidelity bonds do not create third party beneficiaries and that such individuals who suffer loss may not maintain direct claims against the insurance company. See, e.g.,
School Employees Credit Union v. National Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, Pa.,
