OPINION & ORDER
Response Personnel, Inc. (“RPI”) brings the above-captioned action against Hartford Fire Insurance Co. (“Hartford”) for: (1) a declaration that certain losses RPI sustained from the departure of critical employees are covered by an insurance policy issued to it by Hartford; and, (2) damages for Hartford’s breach of that contract. Hartford has moved pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), Fed.R.Civ.P., to dismiss plaintiffs amended complaint (“Complaint”) for failure to state a claim. Hartford principally argues that RPI’s loss was sustained and discovered before the policy period. For the following reasons, Hartford’s motion to dismiss is converted to a motion for summary judgment and is granted.
BACKGROUND
The following facts are drawn from the Complaint filed on December 17, 2010, the documents integral to the Complaint, and undisputed facts. RPI, a New York-based
1. 2004 Departure of Employees
On or about September 2, 2004, three RPI employees submitted letters of resignation (the “Former Employees”). RPI quickly discovered that prior to their departure, the Former Employees had stolen confidential customer lists from RPI’s medical placement business. On September 30, RPI filed a complaint in New York State Supreme Court (the “New York Complaint”) against the Former Employees and the agencies for which they went to work, seeking both injunctive relief and damages (the “State Court Action”). Additionally, RPI filed an Order to Show Cause supported by the affidavit of its Vice President, Barry Cohen (the “Cohen Affidavit”), requesting immediate injunctive relief. Together, the New York Complaint and Cohen Affidavit alleged that in August and September 2004, the Former Employees “conspired to leave RPI and go to work for a competitor and to take for their benefit and the benefit of their new employer, confidential information and trade secrets from RPI.”
On December 17, 2008, RPI filed the affidavit of Vice President Mindi Derry (“Derry”) in opposition to the Former Employees’ motion for partial summary judgment in the State Court Action. Derry testified that “immediately” after learning of the Former Employees’ resignation on September 2, she “went to the RPI Long Island office and found that [two] defendants ... had 'cleaned out’ their desks and that the records and documents with which they worked in contacting health professional and health facilities were all missing.” Derry explained that in the following months, she and other RPI employees “visited all of RPI’s customers and clientele in order to try to preserve RPI’s business relationship with them.” Despite these efforts, Derry stated that
RPI’s business not only took an immediate severe drop but the balance ebbed away over the next several months. What had taken RPI nearly three years to create literally disappeared overnight. ...
It was not just financially impossible for RPI to rebuild its business from scratch, but it was equally unfeasible to find replacement health workers in a short period of time that had previously taken two years to accomplish. Thus, [RPI] had no choice other than to terminate its medical staffing business operations in March of2005.
(Emphasis supplied.)
2. The 2006 Policy
In 2006, Hartford issued RPI a CrimeShield Policy for Mercantile Entities (the “Policy”) for the period beginning July 31, 2006 through July 31, 2008 (the “Policy Period”).
In exchange for the payment of premium and subject to the Declarations, Insuring Agreements, Exclusions, General Conditions, Definitions and terms of this Policy, we will pay for loss which you sustain resulting directly from acts committed or events occurring at any time and discovered by you during the Policy Period shown in the Declarations
1. We will pay for loss which you sustain through acts or events committed or occurring at any time and which are discovered by you during the Policy Period ....
2. Discovery of loss occurs when you first become aware of facts which would cause a reasonable person to assume that a loss covered by this Policy has been, or may be incurred even though the exact amount or the details of the loss may not then be known.
(Emphasis supplied.)
Attached to the Policy is an endorsement titled “Employee Theft Coverage— Trade Secrets for Temporary Help Agencies” (the “Endorsement”), which “adds an additional Insuring Agreement to the Policy,” and provides that Hartford “will pay for ‘loss’ of ‘Trade Secrets’ by ‘theft.’ ”
the actual economic loss (net revenues derived from specific customer accounts minus expenses) realized by you for any customer accounts lost directly due to “theft" by an “employee.”
Finally, the Endorsement replaced the Policy’s General Condition concerning valuation of loss with a specialized provision, stating in relevant part, that
“Loss” involving “theft” by an “employee” of your customer list ... shall be determined by the economic loss realized on a detailed customer level for the first six (6) months following the date of “theft" of the customer list and comparing said economic loss against economic gain, if any, on a detailed customer level for the comparable six (6) month period from the prior calendar year. The period for measuring the amount of such “loss” shall be limited exclusively to this time period.
(Emphasis supplied.)
3. 2007 Notice of Claim
In May 2007, RPI sent Hartford an initial notice of loss. RPI completed and signed a Proof of Loss certifying that the “loss was discovered in May 2007.”
(1) RPI did not discover this loss during the Policy period; (2) the Policy’s suit limitations period has expired; (3) RPI’s notice of loss is untimely under the Policy; and (4) RPI’s proof of loss is untimely under the Policy.
Hartford further explained that
[cjentral to [its] coverage position is its conclusion, based upon the [Cohen] Affidavit and the filing of the [New York Complaint] in the fall of 2004, that RPI discovered this loss, as defined in the Policy, no later than September 30th, 2001, the date of the Affidavit. In so concluding, Hartford does not agree with the “May of 2007” discovery dates set forth in the Proof of Loss.
(Emphasis supplied.)
By letters dated April 23 and August 21, 2008, RPI challenged the denial. Hartford then requested information relating to RPI’s calculation of its alleged loss. On November 3, 2008, RPI and Hartford entered a “Non-Waiver Agreement” pursuant to which Hartford committed to “conduct [an] additional investigation concerning the facts and circumstances of the transactions that are the subject of [RPI’s] ... Proof of Loss.” The parties also agreed, however, that “such investigation shall be on a non-waiver basis and without prejudice or waiver of the rights, remedies or defenses of either party and subject to a reservation of each party’s respective rights, remedies and defense under the Policy at law and equity.”
RPI commenced this action on July 8, 2010, and on December 17, it filed the amended complaint (the “Complaint”). On January 14, 2011, Hartford filed a motion to dismiss. The motion became fully submitted on April 1.
DISCUSSION
Hartford has moved to dismiss the Complaint. It contends that RPI “discovered” the loss caused by the Former Employees prior to the start of the Policy Period. As a result, RPI’s claim is not covered by the Policy.
“‘If, on a motion under Rule 12(b)(6) or 12(c), matters outside the pleadings are presented to and not excluded by the court, the motion must be treated as one for summary judgment under Rule 56.’ ” Hernandez v. Coffey,
Summary judgment may not be granted unless all of the submissions taken together “show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the movant is
Once the moving party has asserted facts showing that the non-movant’s claims cannot be sustained, the opposing party must “set out specific facts showing a genuine issue for trial,” and cannot “rely merely on allegations or denials” contained in the pleadings. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e); see also Wright v. Goord,
Both parties assume that New York law applies, but do not directly address the choice-of-law issue. “Federal courts sitting in diversity look to the choice-of-law rules of the forum state.” Int’l Bus. Machs. Corp. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
“The New York approach to the interpretation of contracts of insurance is to give effect to the intent of the parties as expressed in the clear language of the contract.” Fed. Ins. Co.,
The Policy states that Hartford “will pay for loss ... from acts ... discovered ... during the Policy Period.” (Emphasis supplied.) “Discovery,” in turn, is defined to mean when the insured “first become[s] aware of facts which would cause a reasonable person to assume that a loss covered by this Policy has been, or may be incurred even though the exact amount or the details of the loss may not then be known.” (Emphasis supplied.)
RPI offers three principal reasons why the defendant’s motion should be denied.
Next, RPI suggests that the Policy’s definition of “discovery” conflicts with the Endorsement’s definition of “loss,” and that the Endorsement “supersedes” the Policy.
Finally, RPI argues that for the purpose of this motion, the Court must assume the
CONCLUSION
The defendant’s January 14, 2011 motion to dismiss, converted to a motion for summary judgment, is granted. The Clerk of Court shall enter judgment for the defendant and close the case.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Policy was initially in effect for the period beginning July 31, 2006 until can-celled. The Policy Period was then adjusted by endorsement to end on July 31, 2007. A subsequent renewal endorsement extended the Policy Period to July 31, 2008.
. The Endorsement defined "theft” to mean "the act of stealing by an employee” the insured's "customer or employee/applicant list and the subsequent distribution or sale of such list to third parties or the retention of such list and use by such employee for personal pecuniary gain.”
. Attached to the Proof of Loss was a document titled "Period Comparison,” which compared RPI’s net profit with respect to each of its Medical Placement Business customers for the six month period immediately succeeding the Former Employees’ resignation with its net profit from each of these customers for the comparable six month period from the previous calendar year. The document compared net profits from September 1, 2003 to February 28, 2004 with those from September 1, 2004 to February 28, 2005. The Period Comparison indicates that the loss in net profit was $394,549.
. Defendant further argues, inter alia, that this action is time barred since it was not commenced within two years after "discovery of loss” pursuant to the Policy’s General Condition on "Legal Action Against Us”; and, that the Complaint should be dismissed since RPI failed to provide Hartford with notice of its alleged notice "as soon as possible” as is required by the Endorsement. It is not necessary to reach these additional arguments supporting dismissal.
. RPI also invokes the "doctrine of equitable estoppel” and asserts that by reopening RPI's file, Hartford either “waived” or "relinquished the grounds upon which its original denial” was based. Hartford having denied RPI's claim, it is not estopped from asserting the Policy’s "time for suit clause[].” See Enter. Engineering, Inc. v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 04 Civ. 5018(DLC),
. Even under the plaintiff's definition of discovery (equating discovery with actual loss), discovery must have .occurred prior to the beginning of the Policy Period on June 31, 2006. RPI's medical placement division ceased operating in February/March 2005. Based on RPI’s allegation that the theft occurred in early September 2004, the period for measuring a "loss” under the Endorsement’s Valuation clause terminated six months later, in February 2005.
