MARK MORREL; RUTH MORREL, Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. NATIONWIDE MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 98-1963
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
Argued: April 8, 1999; Decided: August 16, 1999
Before WILKINS, WILLIAMS, and KING, Circuit Judges.
PUBLISHED. (CA-98-116). Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Alexandria. Leonie M. Brinkema, District Judge.
COUNSEL
ARGUED: Lowry Jock Miller, MILLER, MILLER, KEARNEY & GESCHICKTER, L.L.P., Fairfax, Virginia, for Appellant. Bruce Andrew Cohen, KATZ & STONE, L.L.P., Vienna, Virginia, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Gerald I. Katz, KATZ & STONE, L.L.P., Vienna, Virginia, for Appellees.
OPINION
KING, Circuit Judge:
Mark and Ruth Morrel obtained a money judgment against The Miller Group Construction Company, Inc. (the “Contractor“) in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. When they were unable to execute the judgment, the Morrels filed this suit in the Eastern District of Virginia, seeking to enforce the judgment directly against the Contractor‘s liability insurer, Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Company (“Nationwide“). The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the Morrels.
Nationwide now appeals, arguing that (1) the District of Columbia judgment was obtained by fraud and upon defective service, and (2) the Morrels may not recover under the insurance policy because the Contractor breached its obligations thereunder. We reject Nationwide‘s position on both issues and affirm.
I.
On April 10, 1995, the Morrels hired the Contractor to renovate their home in Bethesda, Maryland. The parties entered into a written construction contract. While performing the renovations, the Contractor seriously damaged the Morrels’ house.
On August 12, 1995, the Morrels submitted a claim for this damage to Nationwide. Thereafter, Nationwide opened a file for the Morrels’ claim and had the property inspected several times. During the course of the next year, Nationwide continued to investigate the Morrels’ claim.
As of July 1996, the Morrels still had not been compensated for the damage to their property. Consequently, on July 22, 1996--and as authorized by Article 10.8 of the construction contract--the Morrels commenced an arbitration proceeding against the Contractor in accordance with the rules of the American Arbitration Association. In their filings with the arbitrator, the Morrels named as defendants “The Miller Group Construction Company, Inc.” and its president, Paul D.
The Morrels were dissatisfied with the arbitration award. On February 7, 1997, they filed an Application to Correct or Vacate Arbitration Award (the “Application“) in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia.2 The Application named as defendants Paul D. Miller and “The Miller Group Construction Company.” The Morrels had the Application personally served on Mr. Miller, who also accepted service on behalf of “The Miller Group Construction Company,” as its president. On May 6, 1997, the Morrels sent Nationwide a copy of the Application and all accompanying pleadings by certified mail. Nationwide apparently received these documents the next day.3
On July 28, 1997, the Morrels wrote Nationwide and demanded that it satisfy the District of Columbia judgment. Nationwide refused. In its letter of August 22, 1997, Nationwide explained that the Contractor had failed to meet its obligations under its liability insurance policy with Nationwide (the “Policy“). More specifically, Nationwide claimed that, in violation of the Policy, the Contractor had failed to (1) assist Nationwide in investigating the Morrels’ claim; (2) notify Nationwide that the Morrels had sued the Contractor; and (3) send Nationwide copies of any documents relating to the Morrels’ suit or otherwise cooperate in the defense of that suit. Given these facts, Nationwide argued that the Contractor‘s breach excused Nationwide from paying the Morrels’ claim.
In December 1997, the Morrels attempted to execute the District of Columbia judgment on the Contractor, but the United States Marshal‘s Service was unable, after repeated attempts, to locate Paul Miller, and the judgment was returned unsatisfied.
On January 26, 1998, the Morrels initiated this diversity action against Nationwide in the district court for the Eastern District of Virginia. The Morrels sued under
Nationwide now appeals to this court, contesting the validity of the District of Columbia judgment in favor of the Morrels and the district court‘s conclusion that Nationwide had waived its defenses based on the Contractor‘s breach of the Policy.
II.
No policy or contract insuring or indemnifying against liability for . . . injury to or destruction of property, shall be issued and delivered in this Commonwealth unless it contains in substance the following provisions or other provisions that are at least equally favorable to the insured and to judgment creditors:
. . .
That if execution on a judgment against the insured or his personal representative is returned unsatisfied in an action brought to recover damages for injury sustained or for loss or damage incurred during the life of the policy or contract, then an action may be maintained against the insurer under the terms of the policy or contract for the amount of the judgment . . . .
Having reviewed the district court‘s grant of summary judgment de novo, we disagree with Nationwide. See Monumental Paving & Excavating, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Mfrs. Ass‘n Ins. Co., 176 F.3d 794, 797 (4th Cir. 1999).5 Viewing the record in the light most favorable to Nationwide, we are satisfied that, as a matter of law, (1) the District of Columbia judgment was valid, and (2) Nationwide waived its right to rely on its claim of the insured‘s breach as a defense to the Morrels’ action. We therefore affirm.
A person or organization may sue us to recover on an agreed settlement or on a final judgment against an insured obtained after an actual trial; but we will not be liable for damages that are not payable under the terms of this Coverage Part or that are in excess of the applicable limit of insurance. J.A. 37.
A.
1.
Before reaching the substance of Nationwide‘s challenge to the District of Columbia judgment, we address a procedural matter that caused some confusion below. The district court concluded that, because the District of Columbia judgment appeared to be valid on its face, the district court lacked authority to look behind the judgment to determine whether it had been properly issued. Instead, the district court suggested that Nationwide could attack the District of Columbia judgment only in the court that had issued it.
The district court underestimated its authority here.
Further, and also in contrast to a motion for relief, an independent action may be brought in a court other than the one that issued the contested order: “A federal court can entertain an original action to enjoin or otherwise grant relief from a judgment . . . rendered not only by it, but also by another federal court.” 7 Moore‘s Federal Practice at 60-366; see also Abbott, 130 F.2d at 42 (independent action may be brought in federal court to challenge state court judgment). Independent actions may be brought offensively--that is, by a plaintiff--or they may be raised by way of defense to a suit seeking to enforce the contested judgment. 7 Moore‘s Federal Practice at 60-370 (“If an
The facts of Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. Abbott are analogous to this case. In Abbott, a bank customer won a judgment in Maryland state court against Takoma Park Bank, based on the disappearance of property from the customer‘s safe deposit box at the bank. When the judgment was returned unsatisfied, the customer sought to enforce the judgment against the bank‘s liability insurer in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland. The insurer countered that the state court judgment was void because the plaintiff and the bank had conspired to defraud the state court. Id. at 41. The district court disagreed and granted judgment on the pleadings for the bank customer.
On appeal, this court addressed the insurer‘s fraud defense. Id. at 43. Importantly, we did not conclude that the facial validity of the state court judgment barred our substantive review of the insurer‘s fraud defense. Instead, we rejected the fraud allegations on their merits, holding that the insurer had not stated them with particularity sufficient to satisfy
Here, as in Abbott, the plaintiffs obtained a judgment in another jurisdiction against the defendant‘s insured, and they now seek to enforce it in the Eastern District of Virginia against the insurer. The insurer now, as in Abbott, raises equitable defenses to the judgment, including contentions that the judgment is tainted by fraud. As a result, the district court was permitted to treat Nationwide‘s defenses6
2.
Nationwide first argues that the default judgment against its insured, The Miller Group Construction Company, Inc., is defective because the Application to Correct or Vacate, filed in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, which gave rise to this judgment, failed to name, and was not served on, its insured. Nationwide grounds this argument on the fact that the Application named as a defendant “The Miller Group Construction Company,” rather than The Miller Group Construction Company, Inc. The affidavit of service for the Application likewise named “The Miller Group Construction Company” as the party served.
Nationwide‘s argument is premised on a thin reed--a misnomer in the spelling of the name of its insured--and is meritless. It has long been the rule in this circuit that service of process is not legally defective simply because the complaint misnames the defendant in some insignificant way. As we recognized many years ago:
A suit at law is not a children‘s game, but a serious effort on the part of adult human beings to administer justice; and the purpose of process is to bring parties into court. If it names them in such terms that every intelligent person understands who is meant . . . it has fulfilled its purpose; and courts should not put themselves in the position of failing to recognize what is apparent to everyone else . . . . As a general rule the misnomer of a corporation in a notice, summons . . . or other step in a judicial proceeding is immaterial if it appears that [the corporation] could not have been, or was not, misled.
United States v. A.H. Fischer Lumber Co., 162 F.2d 872, 873 (4th Cir. 1947) (citations omitted).
Moreover, the body of the Application refers to both the construction project performed by the Contractor and the ensuing arbitration, to which the Contractor was indisputably a party.7 Perhaps most significantly, a copy of the construction contract giving rise to this entire controversy was attached to the Application; the contract is between the Morrels and “The Miller Group Construction Co. Inc.” If there was any confusion as to what business entity the Application sought to name, the allegations in the Application and its attachments dispelled that confusion. See Barsten v. Department of Interior, 896 F.2d 422, 423 (9th Cir. 1990) (technical misnaming of defendant insignificant where complaint and accompanying documents make defendant‘s identity clear); Rice v. Hamilton Air Force Base Commissary, 720 F.2d 1082 (9th Cir. 1983) (same).
Finally, Nationwide‘s own correspondence with the Morrels points out the unlikelihood that the Application could have caused any confusion. In its letter of August 22, 1997, Nationwide refers to its insured alternately as “The Miller Group Construction Company, Inc.” and “The Miller Group Construction Company.”8 Having used
3.
In a related argument, Nationwide claims that the District of Columbia judgment is the product of fraud, because the final judgment itself names “The Miller Group Construction Company, Inc.,” while the Application had named “The Miller Group Construction Company.” Nationwide argues that this change in names was tantamount to the Morrels suing one company and then having judgment entered against another company altogether. This argument also is entirely meritless.
As explained above, the Morrels’ Application was sufficient to bring the Contractor before the district court for the District of Columbia, even though the Application did not get the company‘s name precisely right. See id. As a result, we conclude that neither the court nor the Contractor could have been defrauded when, after the Contractor was properly made a party to the suit, a final judgment was entered that did get the Contractor‘s name precisely right. Changing of the defendant‘s name in the judgment form did not have the
Following the initial inspection of the Morrel‘s[sic] house, Mr. Paul Miller nor anyone else associated with The Miller Group Construction Company did not provide Nationwide with any further assistance in resolving this claim . . . . The insured has an obligation to send us copies of any legal papers received in connection with the suit and cooperate with the investigation and defense of the suit. Again, the Miller Group Construction Company failed to meet any of these policy requirements.
In summary, the insured did not meet the requirements of their policy and therefore Nationwide has no obligation to pay any portion of the judgment against Paul Miller and The Miller Group Construction Company, Inc.
J.A. 477 (emphasis added).
It is unclear in the record why the misnomer occurred and why the Contractor is named differently in the Application and the final judgment. Assuming that the Morrels discovered the error in the Application after it had been filed, the better practice would have been to move for permission to amend the corporate defendant‘s name under
Because the Contractor had been served as effectively as if its correct corporate name had appeared on the Application, the inclusion of its correct name on the final judgment changed no legal aspect of the case and did not prejudice Nationwide. Consequently, this misnomer did not serve in any way to defraud the court or any party to the proceeding.
B.
Finally, Nationwide contends that the Morrels cannot recover against it “under the terms of the policy,” within the meaning of
A claimant seeking to bring a direct action against an insurer in Virginia stands in the shoes of the insured against whom his claim arose. Consequently, if the insured has breached the insurance policy,
Whenever any insurer on a policy of liability insurance discovers a breach of the terms or conditions of the insurance contract by the insured and the insurer intends to rely on the breach in defense of liability for any claim within the terms of the policy, the insurer shall notify the claimant. . . of its intention to rely on the breach as a defense. Notification shall be given within twenty days after discovery by the insurer or any of its agents of the breach or of the claim, whichever is later.
The ultimate purpose of the statute, as explained by the Supreme Court of Virginia, is to protect claimants such as the Morrels:
The obvious purpose of the statute is to require a liability insurer that intends to rely on a breach of the terms and conditions of the policy contract, in defense of any claim under the policy, to furnish prompt notice of such intention to the
claimant . . . so that steps may be taken by the claimant, a stranger to the insurance contract, to protect his rights.
Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 288 S.E.2d at 474. Toward this end, federal and state courts interpreting Section 38.2-2226 and its predecessor statute have concluded that an insurer which fails to notify a claimant within the twenty-day statutory period waives its right to rely on the insured‘s breach. Vermont Mut. Ins. Co. v. Everette, 875 F. Supp. 1181, 1189 (E.D. Va. 1995); Federal Ins. Co. v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co., 448 F. Supp. 723 (W.D. Va. 1978) (interpreting
Here, Nationwide argues that the Contractor breached the provisions of the Policy requiring the Contractor to assist Nationwide in the event of a lawsuit. For example, subsection IV.2(c) of the Policy requires the Contractor to “[c]ooperate with[Nationwide] in the investigation, settlement or defense of the claim or suit.” J.A. 37. Nationwide contends that the Contractor provided no assistance whatsoever, and thus breached this provision of the Policy.
Assuming Nationwide is correct on this point, the question becomes whether--and if so, when--Nationwide notified the Morrels of its intention to rely on the Contractor‘s breach in defense of the Morrels’ claim. The only effective notification in the record is Nationwide‘s August 22, 1997 letter to the Morrels’ counsel.10 In that
Because Nationwide notified the Morrels on August 22, 1997, that it would rely on its insured‘s breach to defend against the Morrels’ claim, this notice was timely only if Nationwide “discovered” both the Morrels’ claim and the Contractor‘s breach no earlier than August 2, 1997.
Second, Nationwide had discovered the Contractor‘s breach of the Policy before August 2, 1997. The Supreme Court of Virginia has described “discovery” of an insured‘s breach as a two-step process: “`[D]iscovery’ of a breach entails, first, awareness by the insurer of facts tending to show there has been a violation of the policy provisions and, second, evaluation of those known facts culminating in a decision that a breach apparently has occurred.” Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 288 S.E.2d at 474.
cooperation. See, e.g., Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 288 S.E.2d at 472, 475 (although conditional, insurer‘s notice satisfied § 38.2-226 when it told claimant that insured‘s failure to cooperate “could result in a full denial of coverage to our insured“). By contrast, Nationwide does not claim that, before August 1997, it ever told the Morrels that it might deny coverage to the Contractor altogether. Its agent simply says he told the Morrels that Nationwide “would be unable to respond to the Morrels’ claims until [Reilly] had the cooperation of the policyholder.” Such a statement, while alerting the Morrels that processing of their claim might be delayed, does not notify them that Nationwide is considering denying coverage altogether.
Indeed, Nationwide cannot have concluded otherwise. In its letter of August 22, 1997, Nationwide acknowledges that the Contractor had not met “any” of its policy requirements since the Morrels’ home was first inspected; this inspection took place no later than September 1995. Consequently, in May 1997, Nationwide had known for at least nineteen months that the Contractor was not upholding its responsibilities under the Policy. Also at this time, Nationwide received the arbitration award--not from its insured, but from the Morrels--which states on its face that Paul Miller did not participate in the arbitration, either for himself or on behalf of the Contractor. The award thus notified Nationwide that its insured had defaulted in the arbitration, all apparently without ever discussing the arbitration with Nationwide. Knowing these facts, Nationwide can only have concluded that the Contractor had breached the Policy.
At the latest, then, Nationwide had discovered the Contractor‘s breach by May 7, 1997, when it received from the Morrels a copy of the District of Columbia pleadings, to which the arbitration award was attached as an exhibit. Because it was aware of the Morrels’ claim by that time as well, Nationwide had discovered both this claim and the Contractor‘s breach more than three months before it notified the Morrels of its intent to rely on the breach as a defense to the Morrels’ claim. Nationwide therefore did not satisfy the statutory notification requirement of Section 38.2-2226, and has waived its right to raise the Contractor‘s breach as a shield to the Morrels’ claim. Everette, 875 F. Supp. at 1189.
Nationwide nevertheless contends that receipt of the arbitration award did not trigger its notice obligations under Section 38.2-2226, because the award found the Contractor not liable to the Morrels. Given this finding, Nationwide contends that it had no reason to then
The twenty-day clock of Section 38.2-2226 is not triggered by an insurer‘s determination that, for strategic or tactical reasons, it will definitely rely on its insured‘s breach. Instead, the statute starts the twenty-day period when the insurer has discovered both the claim and the breach of the policy. Thus an insurer may not simply withhold the required notice until it makes a final determination to deny coverage under the policy. Everette, 875 F. Supp. at 1190. Consequently, the substance of the arbitration award had no effect on Nationwide‘s obligations under Section 38.2-2226, and we agree with the district court that Nationwide has forfeited its defenses that arise from the Contractor‘s breach of the Policy.
III.
Having rejected Nationwide‘s equitable challenge to the District of Columbia order, and having determined that Nationwide waived its defenses based on the Contractor‘s apparent breach of the Policy, we affirm the district court‘s grant of summary judgment in favor of the Morrels.
AFFIRMED
Notes
1. The Respondent, Paul D. Miller, is liable to Claimants in place of the Respondent, the Miller Group Construction Co., Inc. because the Commonwealth of Virginia terminated the corporate existence of the Miller Group Construction Co., Inc. prior to the formation of the Miller contract and, accordingly, Paul D. Miller is individually liable for the obligations created by the contract. J.A. 99.
No person or organization has a right under this Coverage Part . . . [t]o sue us on this Coverage Part unless all of its terms have been fully complied with.
Whenever any insurer on a policy of liability insurance discovers a breach of the terms or conditions of the insurance contract by the insured, the insurer shall notify the claimant or the claimant‘s counsel of the breach. Notification shall be given within forty-five days after discovery by the insurer of the breach or of the claim, whichever is later . . . . Failure to give the notice within forty-five days will result in a waiver of the defense based on such breach to the extent of the claim by operation of law.
