Marleen M. LaPLANT, individually and on behalf of a class, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. The NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 12-3264.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued Oct. 31, 2012. Decided Nov. 28, 2012.
701 F.3d 1137
David Boies, Attorney, Boies, Schiller & Flexner, Armonk, NY, George P. Kersten, Attorney, Kersten & McKinnon, Mequon, WI, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Sean C. Grimsley, Attorney, Dеnver, CO, Adam L. Hoeflich, Attorney, Chicago, IL, Bartlit, Beck, Herman, Palenchar & Scott LLP, Joshua D. Maggard, Attorney, Quarles & Brady LLP, Milwaukee, WI, for Defendant-Appellant.
EASTERBROOK, Chief Judge.
Northwestern Mutual sold an annuity contract, which the parties call a “Pre-MN annuity,” to approximately 36,000 persons. Of these, some 3,000 live in Wisconsin. In 1985 Northwestern Mutual changed the method it used to calculate the annuitants’ annual dividend. The annuitants contend that this change violates the terms of the annuity contracts, both substantively and with respect to the notice Northwestern Mutual must give its customers.
This is not the first class action filed by the annuitants. In 2001 the lawyers who today represent Marleen LaPlant, our representative рlaintiff, filed suit in a Wisconsin state court seeking to represent all annuitants throughout the nation. The judge declined to certify that class, ruling among other things that (a) a claim for damages creates individual issues that make class treatment imprudent, and (b) a national class is not manageable given differences in the state law applicable to the policies, approximately 45% of which contain choice-of-law clauses specifying application of the law in the annuitants’ home state, rather than Wisconsin, where Northwestern Mutual is incorporated and has its headquarters. Noonan v. Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co., 298 Wis.2d 247, 2006 WL 3314622 (Ct.App.2006), affirmed that decision. The current suit, reflecting the limits established in Noonan, initially proposed a class limited to annuitants who live in Wisconsin and sought only a declaratory judgment that the 1985 change is invalid. A declaratory judgment in favor of the class could be followed by individual suits seeking damages.
The Wisconsin-only suit was certified as a class action and tried to the court (since the only proposed remedy was a declaratory judgment). Judge Dennis J. Flynn ruled in plaintiffs’ favor, issuing a sweeping decision declaring that Northwestern Mutual violated the annuity contracts, breached its fiduciary duties, and should pay substantial compensatory and punitive damages. Plant [sic] v. Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co., No. 08-CV-11988 (Cir.Ct. Milwaukee County Mar. 7, 2011). The class then amended its complaint to seek damages for all annuitants in every state.
Contending that the amendment brought the suit within the scope of the Class Action Fairness Act,
The district court remanded the suit. 886 F.Supp.2d 1001, 2012 WL 3573912 (E.D.Wis. Aug. 20, 2012). The judge observed that the appellate decision in Noonan had not held that multiple states’ laws apply but had concluded only that the state trial judge had not abused his discretion in so holding. Deeming the state trial judge‘s decision on that point not binding, the federal district judge declared that the choice-of-law clauses are invalid and that Wisconsin law applies to the policyholders in every state. The district judge аlso concluded that all disputes concerning policies issued by a mutual insurer relate to that insurer‘s internal affairs, so that
The application of
The parties do, however, dispute how we should resolve uncertainties about whether a particular suit relates to intеrnal affairs. The district court concluded, and the class contends, that “relates to” should be read broadly and that the existence of other issues (here, the interpretation of the contracts) should not prevent a remand. Northwestern Mutual sees the word “solely” as defeating a broad reading of “rеlates to“. Although at least one circuit has held that the statutory language reflects a preference for remand to state court, see Greenwich Financial Services Distressed Mortgage Fund 3 LLC v. Countrywide Financial Corp., 603 F.3d 23, 29 (2d Cir. 2010), this circuit‘s approach is to read the exceptions in
Congress did not define “internal affairs“, but neither did it signal a departure from that term‘s ordinary meaning, which the Supreme Court restated in Ed-
True, policyholders in a mutual have “ownership” interests, but that is not enough. Holders of corporate bonds also have ownership interests, especially when the issuer does not pay the promised return (the very sort of claim LaPlant makes). Yet disputes between corporations and their creditors regularly are resolved under the law of contract; they are nоt thought of as disputes about internal corporate affairs. Annuity policies are effectively debt contracts, and this suit depends on the terms of promises that Northwestern Mutual made in the “Pre-MN annuities.” Money due under a contract is not a dividend for corporate-law purposes, no matter what thе contract calls it. In corporate law, a dividend is discretionary with the board. The annuitants are entitled to be paid, not to a role in Northwestern Mutual‘s corporate governance.
One logical implication of holding that a dispute between annuitants and mutual insurers relates to the insurer‘s internаl affairs would be that any dispute about the meaning of any of the issuer‘s policies relates to the firm‘s internal affairs—for holders of standard policies, no less than holders of annuities, have remote “ownership” interests in mutual insurers. Yet suits about the meaning of an advertising-injury coverage, or an exclusion for intentional torts, are decided every day without either judge or litigants dreaming that they need to understand or address corporate law. These are disputes about the policies, resolved under insurance law rather than the Model Business Corporations Act and the internal-affairs doctrine. Just so with disputes about the meaning of annuity contracts. A court should proceed in this suit the same way it would if the issuer were a for-profit insurer with shares traded on the New York Stock Exchange rather than a mutual insurer. Judge Flynn relied on New York and Wisconsin insurance law and several states’ laws about marketing but scarcely mentioned Wisсonsin‘s corporate law. That pretty much shows that this dispute does not concern the internal affairs of a Wisconsin corporation. What‘s more, the class relies heavily on
The annuitants are entitled to the full measure of their rights no matter the issuer‘s financial structure, but under contract law and insurance law (and potentially securities law, since annuities can be securities if not regulated as insurance policies, see SEC v. United Benefit Life Insurance Co., 387 U.S. 202, 87 S.Ct. 1557, 18 L.Ed.2d 673 (1967)) rather than cоrporate law. LaPlant and the class have not cited any decision, by any state court, applying the internal-affairs doctrine to claims by annuitants based on promises made in their policies, and we conclude that
The choice-of-law clauses found in about 45% of the annuities reflect their stаtus as regulated insurance products. Many states require insurance policies to be governed by the law of the state in which the insured lives (or the policy is issued) rather than the law of the state in which the insurer is incorporated. And if multiple states’ law applies, this litigation cannot be resolved “solely” under Wisсonsin‘s corpo-
For this startling proposition the district court cited only Bush v. National School Studios, Inc., 139 Wis.2d 635, 642, 407 N.W.2d 883 (1987). Bush dealt with a suit under the Wisconsin Fair Dealership Law, which forbids any contractual departure from its provisions.
LaPlant relies on Drinkwater v. American Family Mutual Insurance Co., 290 Wis.2d 642, 714 N.W.2d 568 (2006), for the proposition that choice-of-law clauses can be deemed invalid even in the absence of a statute such as
This is a contract case, not a corporate-governance case. And multiple states’ law
A federal court inherits a removed case in its procedural posture on the date of removal. When this case was removed, Judge Flynn was free to reconsider his own decision—to consider not only whether it was substantively correct but also whether the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act, which Wisconsin has adopted,
VACATED AND REMANDED
