KENTUCKY ASSOCIATION OF COUNTIES ALL LINES FUND TRUST, Appellant, v. Phillip McCLENDON, Daryl Wilson, Howard Hansford, James Cothron, Kenneth Earl Hicks, James D. Slaughter and Ralph Troxtell, in Their Capacities as Magistrates of the Pulaski Fiscal Court; and Pulaski County, Kentucky, Appellees.
No. 2002-SC-0648-DG.
Supreme Court of Kentucky.
March 17, 2005.
157 S.W.3d 626
All concur.
See also 967 S.W.2d 1.
William M. Thompson, Pulaski County Attorney, Jeffrey Scott Lawless, Travis, Pruitt & Lawless, Somerset, Counsel for Appellees.
Opinion of the Court by Justice KELLER.
I. ISSUE
In Allen v. McClendon,1 we determined that the magistrate members of the Pulaski County Fiscal Court unlawfully increased their salaries. Upon remand, the trial court entered a judgment requiring the magistrates to repay the improper salary increases. Now, in this postscript to Allen, the magistrates maintain that their liability insurer, Kentucky Association of Counties All Lines Fund Trust (“KALF“), was required to defend and indemnify them against the underlying claim seeking repayment of the salary increases. Because the underlying claim was neither for the commission of a tort nor for the breach of a fiduciary duty, and thus was not covered under the insurance policy issued by KALF, we hold that KALF did not have a duty either to defend or to indemnify the magistrates. We, therefore, reverse the Court of Appeals and reinstate the trial court‘s summary judgment in favor of Appellant.
II. BACKGROUND
In 1993, Phillip McClendon, Daryl Wilson, Howard Hansford, James Cothron, Kenneth Earl Hicks, James D. Slaughter, and Ralph Troxtell (collectively “Magistrates“) were elected to five-year terms as magistrates on the Pulaski County Fiscal Court beginning in January 1994. In April 1994, the Magistrates voted to double their monthly salaries from $600.00 to $1,200.00, effective July 1994. In response to the salary increases, People for Ethical Government, Inc. (“PEG“) filed a complaint alleging that the Magistrates had violated
The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the Magistrates and upheld the salary increases. This Court accepted transfer from the Court of Appeals and held that under
Upon the initial filing of PEG‘s lawsuit, the Magistrates demanded that KALF, their and Pulaski County‘s liability insurer, defend them against the claim and confirm coverage for any judgment that might be entered against them. KALF declined to defend the Magistrates and denied coverage. After judgment was entered against them, the Magistrates again requested coverage from KALF. In response, KALF filed the present action seeking a declaration that its policy did not cover the judgment entered against the Magistrates and that KALF was not required to reimburse Pulaski County for its defense of the Magistrates. Subsequently, the trial court granted KALF a summary judgment on the grounds that the Magistrates’ liability for the illegal salary increases did not arise either from the commission of a tort or from the breach of a fiduciary duty, which are the only actions covered by the insurance policy. In accordance with that determination, the trial court additionally concluded that the judgment against the Magistrates did not constitute “damages” arising from a tort or from a breach of a fiduciary duty. For these reasons, the trial court found that KALF had no duty to defend or to indemnify the Magistrates. But the Court of Appeals held that the Magistrates were entitled both to a defense and to coverage, and it reversed the trial court.
III. ANALYSIS
PEG‘s complaint in the underlying action against the Magistrates alleged, in relevant part, that the “action of the Defendants in doubling their pay as Magistrates of the Pulaski Fiscal Court violates Section 64.530 of the Kentucky Revised Statutes and Sections 2, 161 and 235 of the Kentucky Constitution and other applicable law.” The complaint sought “[j]udgment... requiring the Defendants, individually, to repay Pulaski County all money they have received as a result of this illegal increase in the Magistrates’ salaries.”
The Court of Appeals ruled that PEG‘s claim against the Magistrates “sounded in tort” and that since KALF‘s policy provided coverage for torts, the Magistrates’ actions fell within the scope of activity cov-
KALF contends that the policy‘s terms do not provide coverage for the claims stated in the complaint because it did not allege the commission of a tort by the Magistrates. The “denial of coverage” letter from KALF‘s claims representative set forth the reasons for its denial of coverage:
We have been informed by the Kentucky All Lines Fund that as the plaintiff[s] in this case merely ask for Declaratory Relief and ask the Court to require the defendants to return the “illegal” increases in their salaries, the Coverage Agreement will not apply. You will note that the Coverage Agreement indemnifies the insured for torts for which money damages are sought. The plaintiffs in this case are not alleging a tort nor are they seeking money damages as damages are defined.
“Terms of insurance contracts have no technical meaning in law and are to be interpreted according to the usage of the average man and as they would be read and understood by him in the light of the prevailing rule that uncertainties and ambiguities must be resolved in favor of the insured.”8 But this “rule of strict construction against an insurance company certainly does not 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 plain meaning and/or language in the contract.”9 When the terms of an insurance contract are unambiguous and not unreasonable, they will be enforced.10
KALF‘s policy, a general liability policy, provides coverage to the Magistrates for claims brought against them for torts and for violations of their fiduciary duties. Under the section of the policy captioned “Coverage Agreement,” the policy reads:
II. COVERAGES
A. KALF, at its election, will pay either as reimbursement to the member or on behalf of the member all sums which the member shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of the commit-
ment of a tort... by the member or its employee except as excluded hereinafter.... ....
C. KALF shall pay on behalf of any employee for claims brought against such individuals for torts committed by such persons or for alleged violations of such person‘s fiduciary duties in their public official capacity... except as restricted hereinafter.
KALF has no duty to defend any suit brought for the collection of money owed or claimed to be owed by the member;... or defend any action challenging the constitutionality or legal validity of any ordinance.
....
D. KALF shall have the right and duty to investigate any claim and to defend any suit seeking damages for such claim against a member, or any other person to whom KALF has assumed a duty under Sections A and C of this Article, even if any of the allegations of the suit are groundless, false or fraudulent, and shall make such investigation and settlement of any claim or suit as it deems expedient. In the event the claim includes allegations of an intentional tort, KALF shall still have we [sic] the duty to defend such claim or suit but shall not be liable for that portion of any judgment due to the claim having been found to be the result of an intentional tort.
The policy defines the following relevant terms:
I. DEFINITIONS
....
B. Claim means a demand for money naming the member or other person(s) protected under Article II of this Coverage Agreement and alleging the commission of a tort or violation of a fiduciary duty by or on behalf of the member....
....
D. Employee means:
3. any executive officer, administrator, supervisor or member of a governing body of the member, whether appointed or elected
....
while acting within the scope of his or her duties as such.
The Coverage Agreement (or “Agreement“) governs KALF‘s responsibilities to the Magistrates.11 Article II(A) of the Coverage Agreement does provide coverage for torts. “Tort” is defined in Article I(J) of the Agreement as “a civil wrong other than a breach of contract or warranty for which money damages other than court costs and related attorney fees are sought from the wrongdoer of [sic] its principal.” Thus, if the underlying action “sounds in tort” and is not otherwise excluded by the Coverage Agreement, then the policy does provide coverage. Conversely, if the underlying action is based on a breach of contract or warranty or is expressly excluded by the terms of the Coverage Agreement, it does not sound in tort and is not covered under the policy.
The Magistrates argue that coverage should be extended because the complaint states a cause of action for the tort of conversion. We disagree for two reasons. First, the complaint does not
V. COVERAGE EXCLUSIONS
A. Coverage under this Agreement does not apply to:
1. To a claim arising out of the willful or intentional violation of a statute, ordinance or constitutional provision;
2. To a claim resulting from an intentional tort or an act intended to cause injury or damages[.]
“Intentional tort” is defined in Article I(J) of the Agreement as,
A tort which was committed with knowledge that committing the act was wrong or expected to produce a wrongful act or knowingly failing to correct a wrongful act after discovery.... Intentional tort additionally means any action or inaction by the member or its employees in violation of any ordinance, regulation, statute or constitutional provision....
For the Magistrates’ actions to be conversion, the acts must have been intentional. If their actions were intentional, then coverage is specifically excluded as outlined above. Regardless, we find that the underlying action did not sound in tort. Second, we believe that the underlying action is more analogous to an action for breach of contract than one for conversion. PEG claims in the underlying action that the Magistrates violated
Additionally, we would note that PEG‘s lawsuit was in essence a collection action on behalf of Pulaski County seeking to recoup from the Magistrates the salary increases that it claimed the Magistrates had wrongfully paid themselves as a result of enacting an invalid ordinance; it did not otherwise seek damages against the Magistrates for a civil wrong. The policy provides that “KALF has no duty to defend any suit brought for the collection of money owed or claimed to be owed by the member;... or defend any action challenging the constitutionality or legal validity of any ordinance.” Thus KALF was not required to defend the Magistrates from PEG‘s claim.
The Magistrates rely heavily on the general principle of contra proferentem, that is, that the policy should be construed against the insurer as drafter of the document. However, where there is no ambiguity, the rule of liberal construction in favor of the insured is inapplicable.18 As it has been stated numerous times by the courts in this Commonwealth, courts cannot enlarge coverage or make new contracts under the guise of construction, but must determine the parties’ responsibilities according to the contract terms.19
The Magistrates are mistaken that the Agreement is ambiguous and is therefore subject to interpretation. We would point out that “[a] non-existent ambiguity [should not] be utilized to resolve a policy against” an insurer.20 It is not enough for one party to claim ambiguity. “The mere fact that [a party] attempt[s] to muddy the water and create some question of interpretation does not necessarily
The Magistrates also assert that coverage should be extended on the basis of the reasonable expectation doctrine because parties in good faith do not bargain for insurance that pays no benefits. “Under the ‘doctrine of reasonable expectations,’ an insured is entitled to all the coverage he may reasonably expect to be provided according to the terms of the policy.”22 “‘Only an unequivocally conspicuous, plain and clear manifestation of the company‘s intent to exclude coverage will defeat that expectation.‘”23 In at least two separate sections, the Agreement excludes coverage for statutory and constitutional violations and throughout the Agreement it is abundantly clear that the coverage extends only to torts and not to a breach of contract. These exclusions are “unequivocally conspicuous, plain and clear.”24
Relying on Busbee v. Reserve Insurance Co.,25 the Court of Appeals determined that insurance policies for municipal officers covered the claims made here. This reliance on Busbee, however, is misplaced. There, a “faithful performance bond” provided indemnification to the state—not the employee—for “[l]oss caused the [state] through the failure of any of its employees... to account properly for all monies and property received by virtue of his position or employment.”26 At his behest, a state employee received an unauthorized salary increase and the state received a judgment against the employee for the amount of the increase. The state, however, was unable to obtain satisfaction of its judgment, so it sued the bond‘s surety. The Busbee Court held that the employee, “by failing to disgorge the sums he had received in the form of his unauthorized salary increase, did not account properly for monies received by virtue of his position or employment.”27 Thus, the state was entitled to recover the increase from the surety. This holding is consistent with the general rule that a surety is liable under such a bond.28 Here, the policy—which is a general liability policy, not a faithful performance bond—understandably does not contain a failure-to-account provision; thus, Busbee is not relevant in the analysis of the KALF Coverage Agreement.
In the second case, Graham v. James F. Jackson Associates, Inc.,31 the insurance policy provided coverage for negligent infliction of injury resulting in death, but excluded coverage for criminal acts. A city police officer was convicted of involuntary manslaughter, a criminal act which was excluded from coverage. This particular criminal act, however, could also be characterized as negligent infliction of injury resulting in death, for which coverage would be provided. Because of this conflict, the Court of Appeals of North Carolina determined that the policy was “reasonably susceptible to more than one construction and must be construed in favor of providing coverage.”32 While this Court agrees that ambiguities are construed in favor of coverage, we can find no ambiguity in KALF‘s Coverage Agreement. The Agreement provides coverage for torts and specifically excludes coverage for a breach of contract and any intentional action or inaction in violation of a statute or constitutional provision.
The final issue is whether KALF breached any duty to defend under the Agreement. In Kentucky, an insurer has a duty to defend if there is an allegation which might come within the coverage terms of the insurance policy, but this duty ends once the insurer establishes that the liability is in fact not covered by the policy.33 As previously discussed, coverage under the Agreement did not extend to the Magistrates’ actions. We believe this is readily evident from a comparison of the complaint in the underlying action and the Agreement. The claims were clearly and expressly excluded and thus KALF appropriately declined to defend the allegations.
IV. CONCLUSION
We hold that KALF did not have a duty either to defend or to indemnify the Magistrates. Accordingly, we reverse the Court of Appeals and reinstate the judgment of the Pulaski Circuit Court.
COOPER, GRAVES, JOHNSTONE, SCOTT and WINTERSHEIMER, JJ., concur.
LAMBERT, C.J., dissents by separate opinion.
The pivotal question that this Court has failed to address is whether a claim in tort or a claim for breach of fiduciary duty was brought against Appellees, magistrates of the Pulaski County Fiscal Court, thereby contractually obligating Kentucky Association of Counties, All Lines Fund Trust (KALF), to indemnify and to provide them a legal defense. The majority opinion erroneously concludes that the underlying action brought by People for Ethical Government against Appellees did not sound in tort, a contractual exclusion from KALF‘s legal obligation to defend and indemnify Appellees. Because People for Ethical Government‘s complaint can be characterized to allege tortious conduct and a potential breach of fiduciary duties, and because indemnity and liability insurance coverage should be broadly applied, I would affirm the Court of Appeals.
The People for Ethical Government opposed the self-approved salary increase of members of the Pulaski County Fiscal Court and filed a declaration of rights action alleging that the magistrates had tortiously exercised dominion and control over funds belonging to the Pulaski County government or to the taxpayers. The People for Ethical Government also alleged that the magistrates violated their fiduciary duties. Appellees immediately contacted KALF, their insurer, and requested legal defense and indemnification for any damages assessed. KALF refused to indemnify or defend Appellees. In 1998, this Court held that the magistrates’ salary increases were improper.1 On remand, the Pulaski Circuit Court ordered Appellees to pay money damages and required them to refund the amount of the salary increases. Appellees again requested that KALF provide a defense and indemnification for the amount of money damages, and KALF filed this declaration of rights action.
The duty of an insurer to fulfill the terms of its contract to defend is broad and extends to “any allegation which potentially, possibly or might come within the coverage of the policy.”2 Whether a potential action is actually pursued or proves meritorious is immaterial to the insurer‘s duty to defend.3 “The duty to defend continues to the point of establishing that liability upon which plaintiff was relying was in fact not covered by the policy, and not merely that it might not be.”4 Moreover, public policy mandates that the language of an insurance contract be liberally construed so as to afford coverage with respect to defense and indemnification.5
In Brown Foundation, we held that an insurer was required to provide a defense for a wood preservation treatment plant where the cause of action for environmental claims by a federal agency could possibly come within terms of the contract provisions.6 We denied application of coverage exclusions for intentional acts contained within the insurance agreement.7 We noted that such exclusions cannot subvert an insurer‘s duty to defend be-
Moreover, this is a specific case where it is possible to characterize the complaint to allege tortious conduct or breaches of duty. The Pulaski Circuit Court held that the magistrates had made an error, but that it was not a breach of fiduciary duty. The specific tort or fiduciary duty claim against Appellees stems from their failure to adequately research statutory law and the law applicable to decisions of members of a fiscal court, i.e.,
The exclusion from coverage is also inapplicable because this was not a case of intentional tort. The magistrates relied upon an order of the Pulaski Circuit Court granting summary judgment when they decided to retain the salary increases. And there is no indication in the record of any willful or knowing violation of law. However, even if the Appellees committed an intentional tort and suffered a judgment to that effect, KALF still would be required to defend them up and until that judgment was satisfied.11 I agree with the Court of Appeals that the record shows that money damages were sought in this case and that KALF has a contractual obligation to both defend and provide indemnification to Appellees. The only windfall in this situation is the one improperly bestowed on KALF,12 as it has eluded
