Case Information
*1 Before WIENER, HIGGINSON, and COSTA, Circuit Judges.
STEPHEN A. HIGGINSON, Circuit Judge:
This case asks us to resolve a contract dispute between an insurer— Valiant Insurance Company—and the insured—Offshore Energy Services. The question is whether Valiant, as an excess insurer on a marine insurance policy, is required to reimburse Offshore for payments in a personal injury settlement. The district court granted summary judgment for Valiant, holding that an exclusion in the insurance policy precludes coverage.
I. Background
This case arises out of personal injuries sustained by Raylin Richard, an Offshore employee, while working on a drillship in the Gulf of Mexico in 2009. Richard sued in January 2011, and Offshore was brought into the suit in August 2011 as a third-party defendant. Offshore brought a cross claim against Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, its primary insurer, in September 2012, and against Valiant, its excess insurer, in January 2014—three years after Richard filed suit. Valiant answered in April 2014, asserting, among other defenses, that under Exclusion 11(d) of its policy with Offshore, which we refer to as the drilling rig exclusion, Valiant did not owe coverage for “any liability for, or any loss, damage, injury or expense caused by, resulting from or incurred by reason of any liability or expense arising out of the ownership, use, or operation of drilling rigs . . . .” Offshore eventually settled with Richard, but maintained its action for reimbursement against Liberty and Valiant. This appeal involves only Offshore’s claim against Valiant.
Valiant moved for summary judgment, arguing that the drilling rig exclusion unambiguously precluded coverage for Richard’s accident, which occurred on a drillship, a type of drilling rig. Offshore disagreed, claiming that, among other things, (1) a drillship is not a drilling rig; (2) the drilling rig exclusion does not preclude coverage, and applying it in the manner Valiant suggests would lead to an absurd result because the policy would not cover much; and (3) Valiant waived its right to assert coverage defenses by failing to issue a reservation of rights letter and waiting until April 2014 to raise its policy defenses, including the drilling rig exclusion. The district court granted summary judgment for Valiant, rejecting Offshore’s affirmative defense of waiver and finding that the “drilling rig exclusion applies to the claims at issue in this case and is a bar to coverage.” Offshore timely appealed. After reviewing the briefs and record, we AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment for Valiant.
II. Discussion
A. We review de novo a grant of summary judgment, applying the same standards as the district court. Malin Int’l Ship Repair & Drydock, Inc. v. Oceanografia, S.A. de C.V. , 817 F.3d 241, 249 (5th Cir. 2016). Summary judgment is appropriate when “the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
B.
The parties agree that Louisiana law applies. “To determine Louisiana
law, we look to the final decisions of the Louisiana Supreme Court.”
In re
Katrina Canal Breaches Litig.
, 495 F.3d 191, 206 (5th Cir. 2007). “In the
absence of a final decision by the Louisiana Supreme Court, we must make an
Erie
guess and determine, in our best judgment, how that court would resolve
the issue if presented with the same case.”
Id
. In the absence of a state supreme
court opinion, we look to the state intermediary courts “as the strongest
indicator of what a state supreme court would do, absent a compelling reason
to believe that the state supreme court would reject the lower courts’
reasoning.”
Hux v. S. Methodist Univ.
,
Under Louisiana law, “[a]n insurance policy is a contract between the
parties and should be construed by using the general rules of interpretation of
contracts set forth in the Louisiana Civil Code.”
Cadwallader v. Allstate Ins.
Co.
,
The drilling rig exclusion states:
III. Exclusions
A. This insurance does not apply to:
. . . .
11. Any liability for, or any loss, damage, injury or expense caused by, resulting from or incurred by reason of:
. . . .
d. any liability or expense arising out of the ownership, use or operation of drilling rigs, drilling barges, drilling tenders, platforms, flow lines, gathering stations and/or pipelines, but this exclusion shall not apply to craft serving the foregoing such as crew, supply, or utility boats, tenders, barges or tugs.
The district court found that the accident giving rise to this litigation occurred on a drilling rig, a term that “clearly encompasses” drillships. [1] The district court then held that the above exclusion precluded coverage for Richard’s accident because the accident occurred on a “drilling rig.” In reaching its conclusion, the district court looked to this court’s unpublished opinion in Cash , which held that an identical exclusion precluded coverage under similar circumstances.
In
Cash
, a worker was injured “while being transferred by crane from a
platform to a supply vessel.”
Offshore urges us not to follow our previous holding in
Cash
because, as
an unpublished case, it is not binding precedent under Fifth Circuit Rule
47.5.4. While Offshore is correct, we find
Cash
’s reasoning compelling and hold
that the district court was correct in finding that the drilling rig exclusion in
Valiant’s policy precluded coverage for Richard’s accident. As in
Cash
, we are
unpersuaded by Offshore’s argument that construing the plain language of the
exclusion in this way will lead to “absurd consequences” prohibited by La. Civ.
Code art. 2046. Offshore cites two cases in support. While
Clovelly Oil Co., LLC
v. Midstates Petroleum Co., LLC
,
We are similarly unpersuaded by Offshore’s waiver argument: that by
waiting until 2014 to raise its policy defenses, including the drilling rig
exclusion, and not previously issuing a reservation of right letter, Valiant
waived its right to assert coverage defenses. Under Louisiana law, “[w]aiver
occurs when there is an existing right, a knowledge of its existence and an
actual intention to relinquish it or conduct so inconsistent with the intent to
enforce the right as to induce a reasonable belief that it has been relinquished.”
Steptore v. Masco Constr. Co.
,
Offshore relies almost exclusively on Steptore itself to support its argument that “Valiant’s failure to notify [Offshore] of its intent to rely on the drilling rig exclusion . . . for three years . . . resulted in a reasonable belief by [Offshore] that Valiant did not intend to assert coverage defenses.” Offshore’s primary argument is relinquishment based on conduct. [3] In Steptore , the Louisiana Supreme Court held that “when an insurer, with knowledge of facts indicating noncoverage under the insurance policy, assumes or continues the insured’s defense without obtaining a nonwaiver agreement to reserve its coverage defense , the insurer waives such policy defense.” Id . (emphasis added). Here, the district court distinguished Steptore , reasoning that because Valiant never assumed the defense of Offshore, “Valiant’s failure to issue a reservation of rights letter, without more, does not constitute conduct inducing a reasonable belief in waiver under Steptore .” We likewise find Steptore distinguishable. The plaintiff in Steptore filed suit against both the primary and excess insurers, making the excess insurer a full participant in the case from the beginning of the lawsuit. Id. at 1214–15. Here, as mentioned, Valiant was not made a party to this case until three years after the initial suit. Thus, as the district court pointed out, “there is no evidence before the court to suggest that Valiant ever assumed the defense of [Offshore].”
Offshore responds by pointing to Steptore ’s Opinion Denying Rehearing, where the excess insurer for the first time asked the court to draw a distinction between primary and excess insurers. Id . at 1220. The Steptore court declined based on the facts presented in that case. Id . We are not persuaded that this rehearing denial aids Offshore here. There is no question that in Steptore the excess insurer was involved in the case from the beginning where, as here, Valiant did not become a party to the suit until years later. In sum, we agree rejected this argument, based in part on its conclusion that Moy’s testimony was “parol evidence of the policy’s meaning.” We agree that Moy’s testimony on his personal understanding of the Valiant policy does not establish Valiant’s actual intention to relinquish its right to assert policy defenses. Valiant did not become a party to the litigation until 2014, and it asserted its policy defenses, including the drilling rig exclusion, in its answer three months later. We do not think that Moy’s understanding of the Valiant policy and his receipt of the 2011 notice established an actual intention to relinquish Valiant’s right to assert policy defenses when Valiant was not yet a party to the litigation and, thus, had not been required to provide its policy defenses.
with the district court that “the facts as alleged by [Offshore] do not show conduct which . . . would induce a reasonable person to conclude that Valiant waived its coverage defenses under the policy at issue in this case.”
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED. Valiant’s opposed motion to strike portions of the record on appeal is DENIED.
Notes
[1] Offshore argues in passing that the term drilling rig might not encompass drillships, but offers no authority or persuasive reasoning for what it agrees would be a “fine distinction.” We are not persuaded by Offshore’s argument.
[2] The district court found that Valiant received notice of the accident in 2011, even though it did not become a party to the lawsuit until 2014.
[3] Offshore also urges this court to find that Valiant had an actual intention to relinquish its rights based on the testimony of John Moy, a Valiant underwriter. According to Offshore, Moy negotiated with Offshore for its insurance business and was the Valiant employee who received the 2011 notice of Richard’s accident. Based on these facts, Offshore concludes that Valiant had “an intent to specifically insure companies like [Offshore] in situations where accidents occurred during their work on . . . drillships.” The district court
