At issue on this appeal is whether plaintiff-appellee State Farm Fire & Casualty Company (“State Farm”) is obligated under its commercial general liability (“CGL”) business policy to defend and indemnify its insured against a lawsuit alleging misappropriation of confidential business information. Specifically, we consider whether the policy’s “advertising injury” coverage extends to the allegations at issue in the underlying lawsuit. Defendants-Appellants Richard Steinberg and Norman Fine (the “Steinberg defendants”) and Steinberg Global Asset Management, Ltd. (“SGAM”) appeal from the District Court’s entry of a declaratory judgment in favor of State Farm, holding that there was no duty to defend or indemnify its insured in a lawsuit alleging that the defendants misappropriated trade secrets of a competing investment firm.
Following careful review of the policy language and of the allegations of the complaint in the underlying lawsuit, we conclude that State Farm has no obligation to defend or to indemnify the insureds under the policy’s “advertising injury” coverage. We therefore affirm the judgment of the District Court.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
At all times relevant to this action, SGAM, of which Richard Steinberg and Norman Fine were principals, was covered by the State Farm policy at issue. The policy covers legal actions alleging any of four kinds of injury by the insured: bodily injury, property damage, personal injury or advertising injury. The coverage for an advertising injury is limited to “advertising injury caused by an occurrence committed in the coverage territory during the policy period. The occurrence must be committed in the course of advertising your goods, products or services.”
“Advertising injury” is defined in the policy to include:
injury arising out of one or more of the following offenses:
a. oral or written publication of material that slanders or libels a person or organization or disparages a person’s or organization’s goods, products or services;
b. oral or written publication of material that violates a person’s right of privacy;
c. misappropriation of advertising ideas or style of doing business; or
d. infringement of copyright, title or slogan.
“Occurrence” is defined in pertinent part to mean: “the commission of an offense, or a series of similar or related offenses, which results in personal injury or advertising injury.”
The policy excludes coverage for “advertising injury,” inter alia, “arising out of the wilful violation of a penal statute or ordinance committed by or with the consent of the insured.”
In 1998, the events occurred that formed the basis of a lawsuit (the “underlying lawsuit”) by Nicholson-Kenny Capital Management, Inc. (“Nicholson-Kenny”) against various defendants the same year. The underlying lawsuit initially did not name the Steinberg defendants or SGAM as defendants. On April 25, 2000, however, Nicholson-Kenny filed a second amended complaint naming the Steinberg defendants and SGAM for the first time, and pleading four causes of action against them: tortious interference with business relationships; misappropriation of trade *1229 secrets; unfair competition; and civil conspiracy. 1
The allegations of the second amended complaint are summarized as follows: Before the alleged events, Nicholson-Kenny was an investment firm managing over $80 million in assets. In May 1998, the Stein-berg defendants, using SGAM as a “commercial vehicle,” conspired with three Nicholson-Kenny employees to form Helios International Asset Management, Inc. (“Helios”), which was established for the unlawful purpose of tortiously interfering with plaintiffs business relationships, misappropriating trade secrets, and unfairly competing with plaintiff. These employees conspired with the Steinberg defendants to misappropriate confidential client information belonging to Nicholson-Kenny and on June 15, 1998, they closed and departed from Nicholson-Kenny’s offices, taking with them Nicholson-Kenny’s “confidential” client information. The confidential client information was not a mere “customer list” but was “a compilation that derives independent economic value, actual or potential, from not being generally known to and not being readily ascertainable by proper means by other persons who can obtain economic value from its use and is the subject of efforts that are reasonable under the circumstances to maintain its secrecy.” The next day, the former Nicholson-Kenny employees began serving many of Nicholson-Kenny’s clients from the offices of Helios. Within three weeks, Helios was managing $60 million of assets of former Nicholson-Kenny clients, something that would have been impossible without misappropriating confidential client information. Within three months, more than 80% of Helios’s clients were former clients of Nicholson-Kenny. The defendants’ actions caused “substantial damage” to Nicholson-Kenny’s business. The Steinberg defendants, acting in conspiracy with the former Nicholson-Kenny employees, committed theft of trade secrets, a third degree felony under Florida law.
After declining the Steinberg defendants’ and SGAM’s request for a defense in the lawsuit, State Farm filed suit in the District Court and ultimately moved for summary judgment on all theories of coverage advanced by the Steinberg defendants. On April 14, 2003, the District Court granted State Farm’s motion. The court held that, because the underlying complaint alleged “several types of criminal behavior when [the defendants] stole and destroyed trade secrets and confidential information protected by law,” advertising injury coverage was not triggered, and further stated: “it cannot be the case that these terms include or even contemplated the inclusion of embezzlement and fraud and criminal taking and destruction of trade secrets and confidential information, as alleged in the complaint.” The court also held that the policy’s exclusion for “wilful violation of a penal statute or ordinance” barred coverage. This appeal ensued.
*1230 II. DISCUSSION
A.
We review a district court’s order granting summary judgment
de novo. Iraola & CIA, S.A v. Kimberly-Clark Corp.,
Florida courts start with “the plain language of the policy, as bargained for by the parties.”
See Auto-Owners Ins. Co. v. Anderson,
Under Florida law, the general rule is that an insurance company’s duty to defend an insured is determined solely from the allegations in the complaint against the insured, not by the true facts of the cause of action against the insured, the insured’s version of the facts or the insured’s defenses.
Amerisure Ins. Co. v. Gold Coast Marine Distributors, Inc.,
In 1998, one district court observed that “[a]n insurance company’s duty to defend intellectual property claims under the rubric of ‘advertising injury’ is the subject of countless lawsuits — indeed, a recent litigation explosion — throughout the country.”
Winklevoss Consultants, Inc. v. Federal Ins. Co.,
In the ensuing years, courts have been called on to examine the applicability of advertising injury clauses in CGL policies to an ever-expanding array of underlying factual allegations and alleged torts based on them, even as the standard CGL policy language has undergone periodic revision by the Insurance
*1231
Services Office (“ISO”).
2
Much of this jurisprudence has developed in the federal courts sitting in diversity jurisdiction, although insurance coverage issues are governed by state law. The opinions of federal coui’ts sitting in diversity are considered persuasive, rather than precedential.
Cf. Zurich Ins. Co. v. Amcor Sunclipse North America,
For purposes of adjudicating coverage disputes, this Court has distilled the typical CGL policy language on advertising injury into a three-part test: :
(1) the suit must have alleged a cognizable advertising injury;
(2) the infringing party must have engaged in advertising activity; and
(3) there must have been some causal connection between the advertising injury and the advertising activity.
Hyman v. Nationwide Mutual Fire Ins. Co.,
B.
The Steinberg defendants assert that the underlying lawsuit alleges a cognizable advertising injury because it contains allegations that fit two of the enumerated offenses in the policy: “infringement of copyright, title or slogan” and “misappropriation of advertising ideas or style of doing business.” We disagree.
For the first theory, the Steinberg defendants rely on the opinion of a Mississippi district court holding that misappropriation of a customer list qualified as an “infringement of copyright, title or slogan” because “the Court finds that the Alabama action may be said to involve an infringement of [plaintiffs] title to the customer list,”
Merchants Co. v. American Motorists Ins. Co.,
We now turn to the Steinberg defendants’ second theory: that the Nicholson-Kenny lawsuit’s allegations of misappropriation of a customer list and other confidential information triggers a duty to defend and/or indemnify under the “misappropriation of advertising ideas or style of doing business” clause of the policy’s definition of “advertising injury.” Although this clause disappeared from standard-form CGL policies in 1998,
see
n. 3 above, the courts have adjudicated numerous lawsuits contending that allegations of trademark or trade dress infringement trigger coverage under this clause. In
Hyman,
this Court held that trade dress infringement may, under certain circumstances, constitute a misappropriation of either “advertising ideas,” defined as “any idea or concept related to the promotion of a product to the public,” or “style of doing business,” defined as “the manner in which a company promotes, presents, and markets its products to the public.”
The instant appeal, however, does not concern trademark or trade dress infringement but rather the misappropriation of trade secrets — specifically, confidential business information. Among federal appellate courts, only the Ninth Circuit has specifically addressed the applicability of the “misappropriation of advertising ideas or style of doing business” clause in a CGL policy’s advertising injury coverage for a lawsuit alleging misappropriation of a customer list and other confidential information. In
Sentex Systems, Inc. v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co.,
While the
Sentex
court held that “misappropriation of advertising ideas” was broad enough
to
reach the allegations of the complaint in the underlying action at issue before it, the court expressly stated that it did not consider misappropriation of a customer list a covered offense alone. “We do not necessarily agree with the district court’s broader conclusion, however, that allegations of misappropriation of customer lists ... can alone trigger coverage” Id. at 581.
Cf. Frog, Switch & Mfg. Co.,
In
Frog, Switch & Mfg. Co.,
In the instant appeal, the alleged misappropriation of a confidential customer list cannot, under accepted principles of insurance contract construction, be held to fall within the policy language regarding misappropriation of either “advertising ideas” or “style of doing business.” A confidential customer list is a trade secret, not an idea about advertising or an outward expression of a business’s style. Without relevant, attendant allegations pertaining to advertising, no coverage under a “misappropriation of advertising ideas or style of doing business” theory is available to the Steinberg defendants.
Having found that the Steinberg defendants fail the first prong of the three-part test set forth in Hyman, we need not reach the second and third prongs. Nor need we review the district court’s determination that coverage is also barred by the operation of the “wilful violation of a penal statute” exclusionary clause.
III. CONCLUSION
State Farm’s CGL policy was not intended to offer “advertising injury” coverage for litigation arising from the conduct alleged against the Steinberg defendants. The allegations of the underlying lawsuit constitute neither “infringement of copyright, title, or slogan” nor “misappropriation of advertising ideas or style of doing business.” Judgment in favor of State Farm is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Perhaps hoping to increase their chances of triggering State Farm’s duty to defend, the Steinberg defendants assert on this appeal that they are entitled to seek a defense and indemnification for not only the allegations of the second amended complaint, but also the first amended complaint, in which they are not named as defendants. While they describe the second amended complaint as a "confusing 130-paragraph amendment by in-terlineation,” it does not incorporate any of the first amended complaint by reference or otherwise rely on the other document. It "appends” allegations that are pled solely against the Steinberg defendants and SGAM and as such is sufficient for purposes of determining the coverage issues in this litigation.
. Advertising injury coverage was first introduced into CGL policies in 1973 in the form of an endorsement. Matthew J. Schlesinger & Bikram Bandy,
Advertising Injury Coverage: Analyzing Its Historic Evolution And Its Changing Scope,
702 PLI/Lit 83, 85 (2004 Practicing Law Institute). In 1986, ISO moved advertising injury coverage into the main policy form and made significant changes to the coverage by, among other things, introducing the four enumerated offenses defining "advertising injury” set forth in the policy at issue on this appeal.
Id.
at 86-87.
See also Lebas Fashion Imports v. ITT Hartford Ins. Group,
