Case Information
*1 Before: SILER and KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judges; MURPHY, District Judge. [*] _________________
COUNSEL ARGUED: Robert J. Fogarty, HAHN, LOESER & PARKS LLP, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellant. John C. Greiner, GRAYDON, HEAD & RITCHEY LLP, Cincinnati, Ohio, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Robert J. Fogarty, Derek E. Diaz, Justin M. Croniser, HAHN, LOESER & PARKS LLP, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellant. John C. Greiner, Kara A. Czanik, GRAYDON, HEAD & RITCHEY LLP, Cincinnati, Ohio, for Appellee.
_________________
OPINION
_________________
KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judge. When a party comes to us with nine grounds for reversing the district court, that usually means there are none. Here, Chicago Title Insurance Company challenges on nine grounds the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Fifth Third Mortgage on claims that Chicago Title was required to defend and indemnify Fifth Third in a dispute over property in Ohio. We reject Chicago Title’s arguments and affirm.
I.
In 2007, Fifth Third loaned Anthony Buford $406,000 in exchange for a mortgage on property that Buford purportedly owned. The property was located at 7694 Plantation Drive in Mason, Ohio. To insure against the risks that Buford did not actually have title to the property or that other creditors had interests in the property that would trump the mortgage, Fifth Third obtained a title-insurance policy from Direct Title Resources. Direct Title was an issuing agent for Chicago Title.
Direct Title was also a fraudulent agent. Jolie Neal, Direct Title’s sole “member,” was the actual title owner of the Plantation property. She used that single property as collateral to obtain multiple loans from different lenders. She also conspired with Anthony Buford, who obtained more loans by pretending to be the owner of the Plantation property—which he too used as collateral.
In December 2008, one of Jolie Neal’s creditors foreclosed on the Plantation property in state court. Fifth Third learned of the foreclosure suit and intervened to protect its mortgage interest in the property. In the process, Fifth Third discovered that Buford was not, in fact, the record title owner of the property. Fifth Third also learned that other creditors held liens on the property and that their liens were superior to Fifth Third’s mortgage.
Fifth Third’s title policy covered any “loss or damage . . . incurred by” Fifth Third “by reason of” a title defect and “[t]he lack of priority of the lien of the Insured Mortgage upon the Title over any other lien or encumbrance.” Citing the policy, Fifth Third asked Chicago Title to defend Fifth Third’s interest in the Plantation property in the foreclosure action. Fifth Third also asked Chicago Title to compensate Fifth Third for losses resulting from the title defect and the inferiority of its mortgage. Chicago Title refused to defend or indemnify Fifth Third. Fifth Third then filed this lawsuit against Chicago Title.
Three months later, before discovery had begun, Fifth Third moved for summary judgment. Chicago Title filed an affidavit under Rule 56(d), stating that it needed more time to conduct discovery before responding to the motion for summary judgment. Among other things, Chicago Title said that it needed discovery on the question whether “Fifth Third failed to follow objectively reasonable and prudent underwriting standards” in processing Buford’s loan application. Chicago Title also said that it needed discovery to determine whether Direct Title had authority to issue the title-insurance policy on Chicago Title’s behalf. The district court held that discovery would be pointless, however, because Chicago Title’s defenses to the suit were clearly meritless.
This appeal followed.
II.
We review the district court’s denial of Chicago Title’s Rule 56(d) motion for
an abuse of discretion.
CenTra, Inc. v. Estrin
,
Chicago Title asserts that it might have prevailed on a number of defenses if
given time to take discovery on them. First, Chicago Title argues that the policy is
unenforceable because its issuing agent, Direct Title, lacked both actual and apparent
authority to issue the policy on Chicago Title’s behalf.
See generally Meyer v. Klensch
,
Chicago Title’s apparent-authority theory is meritless. An agent has apparent
authority to bind a principal if the principal has “‘by [its] voluntary act placed [the] agent
in such a situation that a person of ordinary prudence . . . is justified in assuming that
such agent is authorized to perform on behalf of his principal’” the act in question.
Master Consol. Corp. v. BancOhio Nat’l Bank
, 575 N.E.2d 817, 822 (Ohio 1991)
(citation omitted). Chicago Title surely did that here: It entered an issuing-agent
agreement with Direct Title that authorized Direct Title to issue title-insurance policies
on Chicago Title’s behalf. That was sufficient to make Fifth Third’s belief in Direct
Title’s authority reasonable and thus to bind Chicago Title by the policy Direct Title
issued.
Cf. Milnes v. Anson B. Smith & Co.
, No. 5310,
Chicago Title responds that it might discover evidence that Fifth Third knew
about Direct Title’s fraudulent scheme. But that theory is so improbable—why, after all,
would Fifth Third lend money if it knew it would never get the money back—that
Chicago Title specifically alleged in its pleadings below that Fifth Third was
unaware
of the scheme. The district court did not need to permit discovery regarding such a
baseless argument.
See generally Blough v. Holland Realty, Inc
.,
Chicago Title next argues that Fifth Third’s losses were Fifth Third’s own fault. Specifically, the policy only provides coverage for losses that arise “by reason of” a title defect or encumbrance. Chicago Title reads this requirement to mean that the defect or encumbrance must be the sole proximate cause of the loss. And had Fifth Third reviewed Buford’s loan application more thoroughly, Chicago Title says, Fifth Third would have rejected it and avoided the loss that resulted when another creditor foreclosed on the property and asserted a superior interest. Thus, Chicago Title says that Fifth Third’s allegedly shoddy underwriting of Buford’s loan was the proximate cause of Fifth Third’s loss.
The problem with this argument is that the insurance policy says nothing about Fifth Third’s underwriting obligations. Chicago Title insured against a risk that Buford’s title in the Plantation property would be defective. That risk materialized, and Fifth Third’s inability to foreclose on the property caused Fifth Third a loss. By the policy’s plain terms, that means that Chicago Title was required to pay benefits to Fifth Third. Nothing in the policy makes that obligation conditional upon the quality of Fifth Third’s underwriting with respect to the Buford loan. Chicago Title insured against a risk of title defects, not a risk of default. Its argument has no support whatever under the policy’s terms.
Chicago Title reads the policy differently. The policy excludes from coverage: [L]oss or damage, costs, attorneys’ fees, or expenses that arise by reason of . . . [d]efects, liens, encumbrances, adverse claims, or other matters (a) created, suffered, assumed, or agreed to by the Insured Claimant; [or] (b) not Known to the Company, not recorded in the Public Records at Date of Policy, but Known to the Insured Claimant and not disclosed in writing to the company by the Insured Claimant prior to the date the Insured Claimant became an insured under this policy[.] Chicago Title says that Fifth Third’s alleged underwriting failure is an “other matter” that Fifth Third “created,” and that Fifth Third therefore cannot recover for the resulting loss. But Chicago Title reads “other matters” too broadly. “[O]ther matters” is a “general” phrase that follows “specific terms”—“defects, liens, encumbrances, [and] adverse claims[.]” Albrecht v. Marinas Int’l Consol., L.P. , No. 25246, 2010 WL 4866289, at *3 (Ohio Ct. App. Nov. 24, 2010) (citation omitted). Under the interpretive canon of ejusdem generis —and as written English is commonly understood as well—the exclusion therefore forecloses coverage if Fifth Third created a title defect, encumbrance, adverse claim, or something similar . See generally id. Fifth Third’s alleged underwriting failure is not similar to a title defect or encumbrance.
Fourth, Chicago Title argues that discovery concerning Fifth Third’s
underwriting standards might show that Fifth Third violated the covenant of good faith
and fair dealing. Where an insurance policy “is silent . . . with respect to a particular
matter,” Chicago Title notes, “the parties . . . are required to use good faith to fill the gap
of a silent contract.”
Savedoff v. Access Group, Inc.
,
But there is no gap to fill here. A gap ordinarily exists where a question arises
as to how to “fulfill the explicit terms of an agreement[.]”
Metro. Life Ins. Co. v. RJR
Nabisco, Inc.
,
Fifth, Chicago Title contends that discovery might support its defense under the
“known loss doctrine.” That doctrine holds that “one cannot buy insurance coverage for
a loss already known to be in progress, or for a loss that the insured planned, intended,
or is aware is substantially certain to occur.”
Buckeye Ranch, Inc. v. Northfield Ins. Co.
,
Whether Ohio recognizes the known-loss doctrine is unclear.
See id.
at 104–05;
Burlington Ins. Co. v. PMI Am. Inc.
, No. 2:08-cv-1054,
Sixth, Chicago Title argues that it is entitled to rescind the insurance policy. In
Ohio, a party to a contract is entitled to rescission if the party relies on the other party’s
intentional misrepresentation of a material fact.
See Spriggs v. Martin
,
Under Ohio law, however, an insurer cannot rescind a policy after becoming
liable on it, unless the putative misrepresentation is written into the policy itself.
Allstate
Ins. Co. v. Boggs
,
Chicago Title responds that this rule should not apply where the policy “insure[s] against future losses springing from past events.” But Chicago Title has not identified any Ohio cases that draw the distinction it proposes. We see no basis for reading that distinction into Ohio law.
Seventh, Chicago Title relies on the rule that an insurer is “relieved of the
obligation to provide coverage if it is prejudiced by the [insured’s] failure to protect [the
insurer’s] subrogation rights.”
Ferrando v. Auto-Owners Mut. Ins. Co.
,
Eighth, Chicago Title challenges the district court’s holding that Chicago Title had a duty to defend Fifth Third in the state foreclosure action. Under the policy, Chicago Title had a duty to “provide for the defense of [Fifth Third] in litigation in which any third party asserts a claim covered by this policy adverse to the insured.” Chicago Title reads this provision to mean that it has an obligation to represent Fifth Third only where Fifth Third is a defendant in a lawsuit over its mortgage. Thus Chicago Title argues that it had no obligation to represent Fifth Third in the foreclosure action, since Fifth Third was not a defendant there but instead intervened voluntarily.
But Chicago Title accepted a broader duty under the text of the policy here. The policy does not say that Chicago Title will defend Fifth Third if a third party “asserts a claim against Fifth Third.” Rather, it says that Chicago Title will defend Fifth Third if a third party “asserts a claim covered by this policy adverse to the insured .” The claim in the foreclosure action was such a claim. The district court was correct to hold that Chicago Title breached its duty to defend.
Finally, Chicago Title challenges the district court’s holding that it acted in bad
faith when it refused coverage for Fifth Third’s loss. An insurer acts in bad faith if its
action is “‘not predicated upon circumstances that furnish reasonable justification
therefor.’”
Zoppo v. Homestead Ins. Co.
,
We disagree. Chicago Title denied coverage here based upon a condition—adequate underwriting practices—nowhere found or even intimated in the policy itself. And the policy terms otherwise plainly required Chicago Title to cover Fifth Third’s loss. Thus, under the policy’s terms, Chicago Title’s refusal to provide coverage, on underwriting grounds, was plainly unreasonable. The district court was correct to grant summary judgment to Fifth Third.
In closing, the party that should have been more careful here was Chicago Title itself. Chicago Title, not Fifth Third, chose to enter into an agency agreement with a fraudulent agent. That agreement was the sine qua non of everyone’s losses here. And Chicago Title, not Fifth Third, failed to catch the publicly recorded encumbrances on the Plantation property before issuing the policy here. The consequences that followed are simply those spelled out in the policy itself.
The district court’s judgment is affirmed.
Notes
[*] The Honorable Stephen J. Murphy, III, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Michigan, sitting by designation. 1
