This is an insurance coverage dispute arising out of a personal injury and retaliatory discharge action brought against Minnesota Commercial Railway Company (the Railway) in state court by former employee, Barbara Williams. General Star Indemnity Company (General Star) insured the Railway on a claims-made basis between February of 2000 and February of 2001. In July of 2001, five months after the General Star policy expired, the Railway made a claim for insurance coverage for the injury Williams had sustained. General Star denied coverage of the claim eight months later. The Railway asserts that General Star had, in fact, accepted coverage.. The Railway sued General Star in federal court, seeking relief through the doctrine of estoppel. The parties brought cross-motions for summary judgment. The district court 1 granted General Star’s motion, holding that under Minnesota law, General Star is not estopped from denying coverage. It neither accepted the defense of the state court action, nor controlled the defense through settlement or judgment. The Railway appeals, and we affirm.
We summarize the facts as follows. Between February 1, 2000 and February 1, 2001, the Railway held an insurance policy with General Star that covered claims made during the policy period. On November 5, 1999, Williams sustained an injury in the course of her employment with the Railway. She filled out a personal injury report, and the Railway treated the claim as a work-related injury. Williams received medical attention for her back, including surgery, and the Railway contributed approximately $41,870 toward her medical care, and, additionally, paid voluntary wage benefits and fringe benefits to her. On July 23, 2001, twenty-one months after the injury, the Railway submitted the Williams claim to General Star through Railway Claim Services, a third-party administrator for providing claims services on, behalf of General Star. Although the Railway did not notify its insurers of the Williams injury until nearly two years after the injury, it claimed it did so because it was exhausting its self-insured retention (SIR) under its health care plan in effect between 1999 and 2001.
In August of 2001, Williams sued the Railway for her injury, pursuant to the Federal Employers Liability Act (FELA). The Railway defended itself, 2 eventually settling the matter. General Star denied coverage on May 17, 2002 because a claim for Williams’s injury was not filed during General Star’s term of coverage. After General Star’s denial of coverage, the Railway pursued coverage against General Star and Lloyd’s of London. Lloyd’s provided claims-made general commercial liability coverage to the Railway from February 1, 2001 to February 1, 2002, and provided indemnity coverage for the Williams claim under a loan receipt agreement. Lloyd’s has refused to pay past or future defense expenses. The Railway seeks defense expenses of $150,000 plus attorneys fees.
The Railway concedes it submitted the claim too late to be covered by the policy, but contends that General Star’s actions *1063 and delay in denying coverage implied it had accepted the claim, and is therefore estopped from denying coverage. The Railway asserts that under certain circumstances, Minnesota law permits an insured to create insurance coverage through es-toppel even if the insurer did not control the defense in an action against the insured.
The Eighth Circuit reviews a grant of summary judgment de novo.
Nettles v. American Tel. & Tel. Co.,
In
Shannon v. Great Am. Ins. Co.,
There is a limited exception to
Shannon,
which permits the use of estoppel by an insured to actually create coverage where the insurer controls the litigation by the insured.
Tozer v. Ocean Accident & Guar. Corp.,
Here, the Railway is not entitled to the use of the doctrine of estoppel to expand its coverage under its General Star policy because it controlled its own defense from the beginning of the Williams litigation. General Star refused to defend the Railway and denied coverage because the Williams claim was submitted after the General Star insurance policy had been terminated. As a result, the Railway cannot expand coverage through estoppel.
See Globe Indem. Co.,
Appellee cites
Transamerica Ins. Co. v. Int’l Broad. Corp.,
For the reasons cited above, we affirm the district court.
