This case presents the thorny issue whether New York and federal law permit town council members to obtain indemnification under a license agreement. They allegedly failed to investigate charges of racial discrimination levied against the town’s licensee, a private “boat and canoe” club. Both the council members and the club, separately and without admitting liability, settled the claims against them in the underlying civil rights action. Although we affirm the district court’s interpretation of the license agreement, we rule that the district court erred in dismissing the council members’ cross-claim for indemnification and in denying their motion for summary judgment.
BACKGROUND
The history of this case is set forth in great detail by the district court in three opinions. Gibbs-Alfano v. Ossining Boat & Canoe Club, Inc.,
The Ossining Boat & Canoe Club (the “Boat Club”) is a private club that has operated since 1979 on property owned by the Town of Ossining, New York (the “Town”), pursuant to several license agreements granted by the Town. The license agreement in effect at the relevant time was granted in 1991 and was extended by resolution of the Ossining Town Council in 1995 for a five-year period covering January 1, 1996 to December 31, 2001 (the “License Agreement”).
Under the License Agreement, the Boat Club must “accept a total membership as it is able to accommodate subject to the physical space limitations of its facilities.” The Boat Club reserved the right to deny or terminate the membership of any individual who “is a danger to the health, safety, or welfare of the ‘Club’ or of any of its members.” The License Agreement also states, however, that the Boat Club may not terminate any member based on considerations of “race, creed, color, national origin or sex” and prohibits the Boat Club from discriminating against any employee, applicant or member in any way.
For its part, the Town retains the right to terminate the License Agreement if the Boat Club fails to comply with any federal, state or local law affecting the License Agreement, or if, in its sole judgment, it finds the Boat Club is not operating in a “satisfactory mannеr.”
The Indemnification Clause
The License Agreement also contains a broad indemnification clause (the “Indemnification Clause”), which provides, in relevant part, that the Boat Club:
agrees to protect, defend, indemnify and hold the “TOWN” and its officers, employees and agents free and harmless from and against any and all losses, fees, or other expenses or liabilities of every kind and character arising out of or relating to any and all claims, liens, demands, obligations, actions, proceedings, or causes of action of every kind аnd character in connection with or arising directly or indirectly out of the performance of this Agreement by the “LICENSEE”. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, any and all such claims, etc., relating to ... any ... tangible or intangible personal or property right, or any actual or alleged violation of any applicable statute, ordinance, administrative order, rule or regulation, or decree of any court, shall be included in the indemnity hereunder. The “LICENSEE” further agrees to investigate, handle, respond to, provide defense for and defend any such claims, etc., at its sole expense and agrees to bear all other costs and expenses related thereto including attorney’s fees, even if it (claims, etc.,) is groundless, false [or] fraudulent.
The Lawsuit
In 1998, Kathleen Gibbs-Alfano, who is African-American, and her husband Thomas Alfano, who is Caucasian, brought an action in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (McMahon, /.), against the Boat Club and its Trustees (collectively, the “Boat Club Defendants”), and members of the Town Council-Town Supervisor William Burton, Edward Wheеler, Sue Poverman, Michael O’Connor and Geoffrey Harter (collectively, the “Town Defendants”). The Alíanos alleged that Mrs. Gibbs-Alfa-no was twice suspended and both she and her husband were “effectively” expelled from the Boat Club because of her “race and skin color” and their status as an interracial couple.
According to the plaintiffs, the Boat Club suspended Mrs. Gibbs-Alfano in 1994 on the pretext that she used foul language
A year later, Mrs. Gibbs-Alfano was again suspended from the Boat Club after yet another incident that allegedly was “incited by racially hostile conduct” directed at her by other white members of the Boat Club. According to the Alfanos, she was thereafter denied access to the Boat Club and, as such, was “in essence deemed expelled” by the Boat Club.
Two years later, Mr. Alfano was expelled from the Boat Club. The Alfanos allege that the Boat Club did not proffer written charges against Mr. Alfano, or give him advance notice of or an opportunity to defend against his expulsion.
On the basis of the foregoing, the Alfa-nos alleged claims against the Boat Club Defendants under: 42 U.S.C. § 1981, which prohibits race-based discrimination in the making and enforcing of contracts; 42 U.S.C. § 1983, which prohibits persons acting under color of state law from depriving individuals of rights, privileges and immunities secured by the United States Constitution and statutes; 42 U.S.C. § 1985, which prohibits persons from conspiring to deprive individuals of equal protection of the laws or of equal privileges and immunities under the laws; 42 U.S.C. § 2000a, which guarantees individuals full and equal enjoyment of places of public accommodation without race-based discrimination; and, finally, N.Y. Exec. Law § 296, New York State’s analogue to § 2000a.
After Mrs. Gibbs--Alfano was de facto expelled from the Boat Club (but before Mr. Alfano was expelled therefrom), she complained in writing to William Burton, the Town’s Supervisor, about the “discriminatory and illegal behavior of the Boat Club.” According to the Alfanos, the Town Council “intentionally chose not to investigate” her charges, despite Council Member O’Connor’s oral representation to her that the Town’s attorneys were “reviewing it.” Piqued by this alleged nonfeasance, the Alfanos brought claims against the Town Defendants identical to the claims they brought against the Boat Club Defendants, asserting that: “By virtue of their knowing and willful disregard of the unlawful and discriminatory аctivities taking place on the Town property being used by the Boat Club, the Town Defendants in effect ratified and adopted as their own the actions of the Boat Club Defendants.” (emphasis added).
The Town Defendants’ Cross-Claim
Soon after the Alfanos started the lawsuit, the Town demanded that the Boat Club Defendants “undertake to defend and indemnify the Town of Ossining and its officials” in connection with the lawsuit. However, the Boat Club declined to defend or indemnify the Town Defendants. The Town Defendants, under protest, retained their own counsel and assumed the cost of their defense. They latеr asserted a cross-claim for indemnification against the Boat Club in their answer to the complaint, seeking recovery of “any judgment that may be recovered by plaintiff against [the Town Defendants] ... together with
Proceedings Before the District Court
Before they filed their answers to the complaint, the Boat Club Defendants and Town Defendants each filed a motion to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). Gibbs-Alfano I,
In ruling on the Town Defendants’ motion to dismiss the Alíanos’ § 1981 claim, the district court noted that “[a]s against the Town [Defendants, the allegations in the complaint are less than detailed.” Id. at 512. Nevertheless, the district court let the § 1981 claim stand, largely because the Town Defendants challenged only whether plaintiffs had a contract that was impaired, and “it has long been recognized that § 1981 forbids discrimination in club privileges and memberships.” Id. (citing Tillman v. Wheaton-Haven Recreation Ass’n, Inc.,
Rеgarding the Alíanos’ claim that the defendants, acting under color of state law, deprived them of their federal rights in violation of § 1983, the district court noted that “[a] myriad of federal rights [were] implicated by defendants’ alleged behavior, including plaintiffs’ First Amendment association rights and their rights to substantive due process under the Fourteenth Amendment.” Id. The district court sustained the Alíanos’ claim against the Town Defendants on the ground that “[t]he Town Board could well have been under a duty to act” by virtue of its right to terminate the License Agreement, “and its inaction could have resulted in a deprivation of plaintiffs’ constitutional rights.” Id. at 513 (citing Citizens Council on Human Relations v. Buffalo Yacht Club,
The district court sustained the Alíanos’ § 2000a claim against the Town Defendants, finding that the Alíanos adequately pled a claim and noting that “the Town [Defendants failed to brief the issue at all.” Id. at 514. Finally, the district court decided to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the Alíanos’ state law claim, noting that the sole ground alleged by the defendants in favor of its dismissal was lack of jurisdiction if the federal claims failed. Id.
After discovery proceedеd, the Town Defendants alone moved for summary judgment on the Gibbs-Alfanos’ remaining claims against them, but the district court denied their motion. Gibbs-Alfano II,
In denying the Town Defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the § 1983 claim, the district court built on the foundation laid in Gibbs-Alfano I, finding that the License Agreement “created an oversight function to be carried out by the Town” and that its terms “could be fairly seen to create a duty to enforce [its] provisions.” Id. at 388. The Town Defendants’ nonfeasance, according to the district court, “raise[d] a question of fact as to whether their inaction constituted race discrimination.” Id.
The district court then set a date for a trial on the Alíanos’ claims against the defendants. Before a jury was empaneled,
Soon thereafter, the Town Defendants moved for summary judgment on their cross-claim for indemnification, seeking from the Boat Club an indemnity payment of $94,461.71-the amount they allege to have incurred by virtue of the settlement and in defense of the lawsuit, including attorneys’ fees and other costs. In response, the Boat Club cross-moved for summary judgment dismissing the Town Defendants’ cross-claim.
The district court analyzed the language of the License Agreement and found that the Indemnification Clause applies on its face to the cоsts incurred by the Town Defendants. Gibbs-Alfano III,
The Town Defendants now appeal from the district court’s denial of their motion for summary judgment on their cross-claim and its judgment dismissing their cross-claim.
DISCUSSION
Standard of Review and Choice of Law
“We review the grant or denial of summary judgment de novo.” Republic Nat'l Bank of New York v. Delta Air Lines,
The parties’ briefs assume that New York law controls the interpretation of the License Agreement, and such implied consent is sufficient to establish choice of law. Santalucia v. Sebright Transp., Inc.,
Interpretation of the Indemnification Clause
The Town Defendants do not quarrel with the district court’s interpretation of the Indemnification Clause. Indeed, the district court found that the Indemnification Clause applies on its face to the costs the Town Defendants incurred in defending and settling the lawsuit. We find no error in the district court’s analysis in this regard.
It is axiomatic that an indemnity contract is interpreted to effectuate the intention of the parties as expressed in thе unequivocal language of the contract. Weissman v. Sinorm Deli, Inc.,
As the district court observed, the Indemnification Clause at issue is extremely broad. Among other things, it requires the Boat Club to indemnify the Town Defendants “against any and all losses, fees, or other expenses or liabilities of every kind arising out of or relating to any and all claims ... in connection with or arising directly or indirectly out of the performance of [the License] Agreement by the [Boat Club].” Although the Alíanos’ claims against the Town Defendants were based on the Town Defendants’ nonfeasance-i.e., their failure to investigate the Boat Club’s discriminatory expulsion of the Alíanos— the Town Defendants’ duty to investigate would never have been invoked but for the Boat Club’s malfeasance. We find that the broad, all-encompassing language of the Indemnification Clause clearly evinces the Boat Club’s intent to indemnify the Town Defendants for the Town’s own nonfeasance. Thus, we rule that the district court did not err in determining that the Indemnification Clause, on its face, applies to the Alíanos’ claims against the Town Defendants.
But the district court’s decision did not end there.
Rosado v. Proctor & Schwartz, Inc.
As explained earlier, the district court, relying on Rosado v. Proctor & Schwartz, Inc.,
Thus, Rosado did not alter two well-established New York rules: (1) parties may obtain contractual indemnity from liability-even where such liability is incurred in whole or in part through their own fault-through express, “unequivocal” agreements to that effect,
Our inquiry, however, does not end here. We now consider whether allowing the Town Defendants to seek indemnification for costs in defending and settling the lawsuit against them would offend public, policy.
Public Policy
The Boat Club argues that enforcement of the Indemnification Clause in this case
1. New York Public Policy
The New York Court of Appeals has stated that “[i]ndemnification agreements are unenforceable as violative of public policy only to the extent that they purport to indemnify a party for damages flowing from the intentional causation of injury.” Austro v. Niagara Mohawk Power Corp.,
2. Federal Public Policy
This Court has once before decided whether federal public policy bars a settling defendant chargеd with intentional discrimination from seeking contractual indemnity from another. In Stamford Board of Education v. Stamford Education Ass’n, female teachers sued the Stamford Board of Education, their teachers’ union and the union’s successor for sex discrimination in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq., and the Equal Pay Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 206(d)(1)-(2).
Noting the strong federal policy against sex discrimination, as evidenced by the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Cоnstitution, Title VII and the Equal Pay Act, and our stated policy “that
While there was no finding below as to the relative intent of the parties to the contract, the logical reason why the contract contained a “hold harmless” clause was becausе at least one of the parties (probably, the Board) thought that there was a good chance that the pay schedule in the [CBA] would be held discriminatory.
Id. Noting further that the “hold harmless” clause appeared in the very same article of the contract that incorporated the discriminatory pay schedule, we held the clause unenforceable as applied, because to do otherwise “would be to fully indemnify the Board for what is partly its own willful misconduct.” Id.
Our opinion in Stamford Board of Education suggests that federal public policy bars claims for contractual indemnity by a settling defendant where there exists either: (1) a factual finding of discriminatory conduct by the indemnitee; or, at least, (2) a set of circumstances that strongly suggests discriminatory conduct by the indemnitee. Id. at 74.
Applying the standard set forth in Stamford Board of Education to the facts before us, we conclude that federal policy does not bar enforcement of the Indemnification Clause. Once again, we emphasize that there was no finding below of intentional wrongdoing by the Town Defendants. And in startling contrast to the CBA at issue in Stamford Board of Education, which, on its very face mandated a disсriminatory pay schedule, the License Agreement here expressly forbids the Boat Club from discriminating against members of the Boat Club or those who apply for membership therein.
Finally, we find persuasive the Seventh Circuit’s decision in Chicago Housing Authority v. Federal Security, Inc.,
On appeal, the Seventh Circuit restated the Illinois Supreme Court’s holding “that ‘an agreement to indemnify against wilful misconduct would, as a general rule, be contrary to public policy and unenforceable.’ ” Id. at 488 (quoting Davis v. Commonwealth Edison Co.,
[T]o the extent [plaintiffs] original complaint included charges against the CHA at all, its allegations related to CHA’s dealings with FSI. Thus, ... it claimed that the CHA was deliberately indifferent to ongoing illegal activity by the FSI guards, and that the CHA was negligent in choosing FSI as the security provider. We see nothing in the general Illinois rule against contracts to indemnify someone for thе consequences of its intentional or negligent acts that would preclude enforcement of a contract requiring the primary wrongdoer to bear the financial burden of its actions.
Id. at 489; cf. Vargas v. Hudson County Bd. of Elections,
We see no meaningful distinction between the facts of Chicago Housing Authority and those at issue herein. In both cases, the settling party seeking indemnification was essentially charged with nonfea-sance arising from a more culpable party’s malfeasance. Like our sister Circuit, we see nothing in the general rule against contracts to indemnify a party for the consequence of its intentional conduct that would preclude enforcement of the Indemnification Clause under the circumstances presented to us.
CONCLUSION
In sum, while we AFFIRM the district court’s interpretation of the Indemnification Clause, we REVERSE the district court’s dismissal of the Town Defendants’ cross-claim and' its denial of the Town Defendants’ motion for summary judgment on that claim. This case is hereby REMANDED to the district court for a determination of the appropriate indemnity payment owed to the Town Defendants and for entry of judgment in their favor.
Notes
. Although the Alfanos' complaint purports to state a claim under “Section 295 et seq. of the New York State Executive Law,” it is clear from their allegations that they seek relief under Section 296.
. N.Y. Gen. Oblig. Law § 15-108(c) states:
(c) Waiver of contribution. A tortfeasor who has obtained his own release from liability shall not be entitled to contribution from any other person.
(McKinney 2001)
. That the Court of Appeals’ decision did not alter the law regarding express contractual indemnity is made perfectly clear by the Appellate Division's earlier holding in Rosado that: "No reason exists why ... the manufacturer ... should be permitted to shift liability to ... the purchaser, where the agreement between them imposed no duty of indemnification.... Had the parties intended indemnification, their contract could have clearly so provided.” Rosado v. Proctor & Schwartz, Inc.,
.For substantially the same reasons, we find Aetna Life & Casualty Co. v. Blue Bird Co.,
. Two years after our decision in Stamford Board of Education, we held that a union found liable for discriminating against its members in violation of Title VII and § 1981 could not seek implied indemnity against the members' employer. Anderson v. Local Union No. 3, Int’l Bhd. of Elec. Workers,
