Case Information
*1 In the
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit No. 01-1275
Lockwood International, B.V.
and Lockwood Engineering, B.V., Plaintiffs,
and
North River Insurance Company and Fidelity and Guaranty Insurance Company, Intervening Plaintiffs-Appellees, v.
Volm Bag Company, Inc., Defendant-Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. No. 96 C 673--Rudolph T. Randa, Judge. Argued June 5, 2001--Decided December 6, 2001 Before Flaum, Chief Judge, and Posner and Manion, Circuit Judges.
Posner, Circuit Judge. This diversity suit, based on Wisconsin law, presents a novel but potentially quite important issue of insurance law: whether a liability insurer, asked to defend (or pay the defense costs in) a suit against its insured that contains some claims that are covered by the insurance policy and others that are not, can limit its responsibility to defend by paying the plaintiff in the liability suit to replead the covered claims as uncovered claims.
For simplicity we treat the case as a
three-cornered dispute among a single
plaintiff, Lockwood; a single intervenor,
North River, the insurance company; and a
single defendant, Volm. It began with
Lockwood, a foreign manufacturer of
machines for weighing and bagging
produce, suing Volm, which Lockwood had
appointed to be its exclusive North
American distributor. Lockwood’s
*2
complaint charged that Volm had secretly
formed and funded a new company, Munter,
staffed by former employees of Lockwood
that Volm had lured to work for Munter.
Having done so, the complaint continued,
Volm stole Lockwood’s intellectual
property and manufactured machines that
copied Lockwood’s. To complete its
infamy, Volm then-- by disparaging
Lockwood and its products (even spreading
false rumors about Lockwood’s financial
solidity), by soliciting purchases of
Lockwood products and then substituting
knock-offs of them manufactured by
Munter, and by warning customers that
Lockwood machines infringed a Volm patent
(acquired by fraud, the complaint
alleged)-- had induced customers for
weighing and bagging machines to switch
their orders from Lockwood’s machines to
Munter’s. The complaint charged that
these acts constituted breach of
fiduciary duty, tortious interference
with contract, unfair competition, and
conspiracy. The suit is still pending.
North River had issued a commercial
general liability (CGL) policy to
Lockwood. Under the heading "personal
injury," the policy covers product and
producer disparagement. Under the heading
of "advertising injury," it covers (so
far as bears on this case and does not
duplicate "personal injury")
misappropriation of "advertising ideas or
style of doing business" or "infringement
of copyright," provided the
misappropriation or infringement occurs
"in the course of advertising" the
insured’s products. Since the complaint
expressly charged disparagement of
Lockwood and its products, and strongly
implied (especially in the bait and
switch allegation) that Volm had
appropriated Lockwood’s "advertising
ideas or style of doing business," North
River agreed to handle Volm’s defense.
Had the case gone through to judgment or
settlement in the usual way, North River
would probably have borne the entire
expense of conducting Volm’s defense,
e.g., School District of Shorewood v.
Wausau Ins. Cos.,
Sheboygan Emergency Medical Services,
Inc.,
Security Management Co., Inc., 96 F.3d
260, 268 (7th Cir. 1996) (same); Solo Cup
Co. v. Federal Ins. Co.,
Four years into Lockwood’s suit, North River paid Lockwood $1.5 million to file an amended complaint that would delete the covered claims. Lockwood agreed to credit that amount against any judgment it might obtain against Volm. Since the policy limit was only $1 million, the agreement (to which Volm was not a party) protected Volm up to the policy limit against having to pay any covered claims. With the agreement in hand, North River, which had already intervened in the litigation to obtain a declaration of its duties to the insured, asked the district court to rule that it had no further duty to defend or indemnify Volm, since the effect of the amended complaint was to eliminate any possible liability of Volm to pay the covered claims in Lockwood’s original complaint. The district judge agreed and entered a partial final judgment against Volm, which was immediately appealable because it resolved the claim of one of the parties, namely North River. Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(b). Volm then appealed. It asks us to *4 rule that North River must continue to pay its defense costs notwithstanding the settlement between North River and Lockwood.
North River’s lawyer acknowledged at
argument--what is anyway obvious--that
either he or other counsel for North
River had gone over the amended complaint
with Lockwood’s counsel line by line to
make sure that all insured claims had
been deleted. In other words, the
insurance company sat down with its
insured’s adversary to contrive a
complaint that would eliminate any
remaining contractual obligation of the
insurance company to defend the insured.
(We limit our attention to defense costs,
ignoring indemnity, in view of the fact
that North River’s settlement agreement
with Lockwood gave Volm more than the
policy limit; thus only defense costs are
at issue in this appeal.) It did this
without consulting the insured or
obtaining the latter’s agreement. We have
difficulty imagining a more conspicuous
betrayal of the insurer’s fiduciary duty
to its insured than for its lawyers to
plot with the insured’s adversary a
repleading that will enable the adversary
to maximize his recovery of uninsured
damages from the insured while stripping
the insured of its right to a defense by
the insurance company. The limits of
coverage, whether limits on the amount to
be indemnified under the policy or, as in
the present case, on the type of claims
covered by the policy, create a conflict
of interest between insurer and insured.
Mowry v. Badger State Mutual Casualty
Co.,
1998);Charter Oak Fire Ins. Co. v. Color
Converting Industries Co.,
An example may help make this clear. Suppose that a suit against the insured makes two claims, both covered by the defendant’s liability insurance policy. The insurer could settle one claim for $1 million and both for $2 million, but $2 million is too high. Instead it says to the plaintiff, "I’ll give you $1.5 million to settle the first claim if you’ll agree to redraft the second so that it’s an uncovered claim, which you can of course continue to press against my insured." The only purpose of such a deal would be to spare the insurance company the expense of defending against the second claim, even though it was a covered claim when filed and would have continued to be a covered claim had it not been for the insurer’s bribe of the plaintiff.
The duty of good faith is read into
every insurance contract, e.g., Danner v.
Auto-Owners Ins.,
North River’s maneuver is also defeated
by the principle that the duty to defend
depends on the facts alleged rather than
on the pleader’s legal theory. E.g., Sola
Basic Industries, Inc. v. U.S. Fidelity &
Guaranty Co.,
North River and Lockwood were apparently mindful of this principle. Their agreement not only requires Lockwood to delete the specific claims in the original complaint that are covered by the insurance policy that North River had issued to Volm, such as disparagement, defamation, misappropriation of advertising ideas or style of doing business, and copyright infringement, plus several of the theories of liability asserted in its original complaint (the ones most likely to involve disparagement or solicitation), such as tortious interference and unfair competition, and thus likely to be covered by the policy that North River had issued to Volm; it also forbids Lockwood to "undertake to prove" at trial a number of specific *7 allegations, such as that Volm caused Lockwood’s customers to believe that Lockwood products infringed Volm’s patent. This effort to get around the principle that the insurer’s duties to the insured are determined not by legal theories but by facts portends unbearable awkwardness in the forthcoming trial. Suppose that in an effort to prove its remaining theories of liability, such as breach of fiduciary duty, which disparagement and other excluded charges would bolster (especially since Lockwood is seeking punitive damages), Lockwood presents evidence in support of these charges at trial. Volm will be delighted, because the introduction of such evidence will trigger North River’s duty of indemnity and defense. North River will therefore have to have a lawyer in the courtroom to object whenever Lockwood crosses the line into forbidden territory. Either that (and what will the jury make of it?) or North River will sit out the trial but later sue Lockwood for breach of the settlement agreement if by crossing the line Lockwood resurrects Volm’s rights under North River’s policy. No case that has been cited to us or that our own research has uncovered authorizes so convoluted a mode of proceeding. To recapitulate: North River had every right to settle the claims that gave rise to its duty to defend in the first place--the covered claims and the potentially covered claims in Lockwood’s suit--in order to avoid having to defend the claims in the same suit that were not actually or potentially covered. But that is not what North River did. The duty to defend turns on the facts alleged rather than on the theories pleaded; and even after its deal with North River, Lockwood was alleging facts that could well, depending on the course of trial, describe a covered claim. Thus North River did not leave behind only clearly uncovered claims when it tried to shuck off its contractual responsibility to pay for its insured’s defense.
It is irrelevant that the trial may show
that Lockwood’s only meritorious claims
against Volm are ones that are not within
the scope of the policy. The duty to
defend (and hence to reimburse for
defense costs when the insurance company
doesn’t provide the lawyer for the
insured) is broader than the duty to
*8
indemnify. The reason goes beyond the
practical difficulties, noted earlier,
involved in apportioning defense costs
between covered and uncovered claims. The
duty is broader because it "is triggered
by arguable, as opposed to actual,
coverage." General Casualty Co. of
Wisconsin v. Hills,
Reversed and Remanded.
