PAULETTE J. THABAULT*, аs Receiver of Ambassador Insurance Company v. DORIS JUNE CHAIT, as Representative of the Estate of Arnold Chait; PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS LLP
No. 06-2209
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
September 9, 2008
Before: SCIRICA, Chief Judge, RENDELL and FUENTES, Circuit Judges.
Argued September 11, 2007. * Amended in accordance with Clerk‘s Order dated 6/6/06 pursuant to
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey (D.C. Civil No. 2:85-cv-02441) District Judge: Honorable Harold A. Ackerman
Tracy K. Stratford
Jones Day
901 Lakeside Avenue
North Point
Cleveland, OH 44114
Robert J. Stickles, Esq.
Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney
550 Broad Street
Suite 810
Newark, NJ 07102
Fordham E. Huffman, Esq.
Jones Day
325 John H. McConnell Boulevard
Suite 600, P.O.Box 165017
Columbus, OH 43215
Attorneys for Appellee
Evan R. Chesler, Esq. [Argued]
Antony L. Ryan
Cravath, Swaine & Moore
825 Eighth Avenue
Worldwide Plaza
New York, NY 10019
Jay K. Wright, Esq.
Andrew T. Karron
Matthew A. Eisenstein
Arnold & Porter
555 12th Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20004
Attorneys for Appellant
Kevin McNulty, Esq.
Gibbons
One Gateway Center
Newark, NJ 07102
Amicus Curiae for the Court
OPINION OF THE COURT
FUENTES, Circuit Judge.
For over 20 years, the Insurance Commissioner for the State of Vermont (the “Commissioner“) has served as receiver of Ambassador Insurance Company (“Ambassador” or “the company“) and sought to recover damages for claims paid on insurance policies following the company‘s downward spiral and ultimate collapse.1 In 1985, the Commissioner brought a professional malpractice claim against Coopers & Lybrand (“Coopers“), on behalf of the company, alleging that Coopers failed to disclose the insolvency of Ambassador following their 1981 and 1982 audit and
after the District Court added prejudgment interest. PricewaterhouseCoopers (“PwC“), the successor in interest to Coopers, appeals the jury verdict. We will affirm the jury‘s verdict in its entirety.
I. Factual Background
Ambassador was an insurance company incorporated in Vermont, with its principal place of business in North Bergen, New Jersey. Arnold Chait (“Chait“) founded Ambassador in 1965 and served as the company‘s president and chief executive officer. Ambassador was a surplus lines insurance company, which insured high-risk businesses and individuals who were unable to get insurance from other companies at standard rates. In 1971, Chait formed a holding company to raise capital for Ambassador named Ambassador Group. Chait and his wife, Doris Chait, owned approximately 65% of the Ambassador Group stock; the remainder was publicly held.
By virtue of its Vermont domicile, Ambassador was regulated by the Vermont Department of Banking and Insurance (the “Insurance Department“). According to Vermont statute, Ambassador was required to file an annual financial statement with the Insurance Department (“annual Vermont statement“) each year by March 15th. The applicable statute required the annual Vermont statement to be “verified by oath of two of its executive officers,” but did not require that the statement be audited. See
Ambassador was also required to file an annual financial statement with the Securities and Exchange Commissiоn (“annual SEC statement“). Unlike the annual Vermont statement, the annual SEC statement had to be audited. To audit the Ambassador Group‘s annual SEC statements that were filed between 1979 and 1982, Ambassador retained Coopers. Coopers did not audit the annual Vermont statements that Ambassador filed with the Insurance Department; however these statements incorporated Coopers‘s loss reserves calculations from the audited annual SEC
statements.
From January to May 1981, two Vermont state examiners conducted an on-site examination of Ambassador‘s annual Vermont statements for the five-year period ending December 31, 1979, and detected no significant problems. In particular, the Vermont state examiners concluded that Ambassador‘s loss reserves reported in 1979 were adequate. The first downturn in Ambassador‘s financial strength was reflected in its 1981 annual SEC statement, which showed an underwriting loss. Thereafter, in February 1982, Ambassador Group‘s stock price dropped by almost half. Ambassador Group‘s 1982 annual SEC statement recorded an overall loss and showed a drop in its “surplus.”2 In
Following this downturn, in March 1983, the Insurance Department retained Kramer Capital Consultants (“Kramer“), an independent financial consulting firm for insurance companies and regulators, to conduct a special examination of Ambassador, including its lоss reserves. Kramer, relying on Coopers‘s audited annual SEC statements, concluded that there were no material deficiencies in Ambassador‘s reported loss reserves and that it was solvent. Nonetheless, it reported that Ambassador‘s “financial condition has materially deteriorated, and the [c]ompany may be deemed to be operating in a hazardous financial condition.” (App. 2038.) In light of this report, the Insurance Department presented Chait with a plan requiring Ambassador to halt its growth by reducing premium volumes by 30%. Chait accepted the plan but he failed to abide by it and continued to increase Ambassador‘s premium volumes. In September 1983, the Insurance Department ordered Ambassador to cease payment of dividends and ordered Kramer to resume its on-site examination.
Within two months, Kramer issued a report concluding that Ambassador was $3 million insolvent.3 Immediately, the Insurance Department filed a complaint against Ambassador in Vermont state court, seeking to enjoin Ambassador from conducting further business and to have the Commissioner appointed as receiver. Based on its conclusion that “it is unsafe and inexpedient for Ambassador to continue business,” the state court appointed the Commissioner as Ambassador‘s receiver. (App. 1789.) In 1984, the Commissioner concluded that Ambassador could not be successfully rehabilitated and, accordingly, obtained an order of liquidation.
In May 1985, the Commissioner filed this action in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey. The complaint alleged, among other things, negligent mismanagement and misfeasance, breach of fiduciary duty, fraud and negligent misrepresentation against Arnold and Doris Chait and Richard Tafro, Ambassador‘s former vice president of finance. Relevant here, the complaint also asserted a cause of action for negligent auditing practices against Coopers.
In his claim against Coopers, the Commissioner alleged that Coopers was negligent in its audit of Ambassador‘s 1981 and 1982 financial statements.4 Specifically, the Commissioner claimed that as a result of its audit of Ambassador Group and its subsidiaries, Coopers either knew or should have known in early 1982 that Ambassador was only marginally solvent and should not have continued writing new insurance policies. He further alleged that if Coopers had issued the adverse audit opinion that it should have
the regulators could have acted to protect Ambassador and its policyholders, claimants and creditors.
At the close of the evidence, the District Court sua sponte entered a default judgment against the Estate, pursuant to
Court‘s final judgment.7
On appeal, PwC argues that the District Court erred (1) in not entering judgment for PwC as a matter of law for lack of compensable injury to Ambassador on the basis that deepening insolvency cannot be used as a measure of damages for a negligence claim; (2) in not granting judgment to PwC as a matter of law for lack of proximate causation; (3) in not entering judgment as a matter of law on PwC‘s in pari delicto defense; (4) in denying PwC‘s motion for a separate trial because the Estate was in default and no jury issues remained as to Chait‘s liability; (5) by entering an excessive damages award; (6) in awarding $63 million in prejudgment interest; and (7) in applying New Jersey law on joint and severable liability rather than Vermont law. We address each in turn.
II. Deepening Insolvency and Damages to Ambassador
On appeal, PwC contends that the Commissioner‘s case was based on a theory of damages for “deepening insolvency” and that such a theory cannot be used as a measure of damages for an independent cause of action such as malpractice. PwC also maintains that it was error for the District Court not to enter summary judgment in favor of PwC because the Commissioner failed to prove that PwC‘s alleged
While we do not ignore the undisputed fact that there was reference made throughout this case to “deepening insolvency” as a measure of damages for PwC‘s negligence, we conclude that the damages presented to the jury were based on traditional New Jersey
tort damages.8 Under New Jersey law, the measure of damages for a negligence action are the damages proximately caused by defendant‘s conduct. See Schroeder v. Perkel, 432 A.2d 834 (N.J. 1981); Gleitman v. Cosgrove, 227 A.2d 689, 692 (N.J. 1967). As to damages, the District Court instructed the jury at the close of trial that:
The Vermont Commissioner seeks damages for the net loss Ambassador incurred from its continued operation after March 31st, 1982. The Vermont Commissioner contends that [PwC] is liable for such damages because Ambassador would have been prevented from writing new business if [PwC] had conducted an audit of [Ambassador] year-end 1981 financial statements in a non-negligent manner. Accordingly, the [Commissioner‘s] theory of damages is that, because of [PwC‘s] alleged negligent audit, Ambassador was permitted to continue to write new business until November 9, 1983. During that time, the [Commissioner] contends that the insurance that [Ambassador] wrote produced claims that cost the company more than the premiums, plus interest and other investment income on those premiums, it collected for that insurance. The [Commissioner] claims that this amount equals $119.9 million and that this constitutes the company‘s damages. . . . Your job as jurors will be to consider the evidence that the [Commissioner] has presented relating to Ambassador‘s insolvency and its consequences.
(App. 1504-05.) The question of whether PwC caused Ambassador‘s deepening insolvency was never put before the jury. Rather, on the question of damages, the verdict sheet asked the jurors: “Has the [Commissioner] proven by a preponderance of the evidence that [PwC‘s] breach was a proximate cause of any damages that the [Ambassador] may have incurred?” (App. 240.) (emphasis added). The jury responded: “Yes.” Id. The jury was then asked to determine the total damages incurred by Ambassador that the Commissioner proved by a preponderance of the evidence.
Despite PwC‘s contention, the jury was not simply presented with a comparison of Ambassador‘s balance sheets at the point of wrongdoing and at the point of insolvency to show the harm done to the corporation and to measure the damages. Instead, the Commissioner proved actual damages: itemized, specific, and avoidable losses that Ambassador incurred by continuing its operations beyond the date of PwC‘s negligent audits. The damages that were presented to the jury were Ambassador‘s $119.9 million net loss from continuing operations after March 31, 1982, the date that PwC completed its 1981 audit of Ambassador. The damages were comprised of $188.2 million in total costs incurred from continuing operations past
Undoubtedly, these losses, which arose from the continued writing of insurance policies, had an impact on Ambassador‘s solvency and increased Ambassador‘s liabilities. This increase in Ambassador‘s liabilities was caused by PwC‘s negligence and thus was properly considered as damages proximately caused by PwC‘s negligence.
Relying on In re CitX Corp. (“CitX“), PwC asks us to hold that whenever a plaintiff makes reference to “deepening insolvency” or “an injury to the Debtor‘s corporate property from the fraudulent expansion of corporate debt and prolongation of its corporate life,” as part of its explanation of damages in a negligence action, recovery is not permissible. (Appellant Br. at 24-29 (citing 448 F.3d 672, 677 (3d Cir. 2006)). However, CitX does not support this proposition. When a plaintiff brings an action for professional negligence and proves that the defendant‘s negligent conduct was the proximate cause of a corporation‘s increased liabilities, decreased fair market value, or lost profits, the plaintiff may recover damages in accordance with state law.
In Official Comm. of Unsecured Creditors v. R.F. Lafferty & Co., (“Lafferty“), we held that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court would recognize deepening insolvency as an independent cause of action where it causes damage to corporate property. 267 F.3d 347, 351 (3d. Cir 2001). We defined deepening insolvency as “an injury to the Debtors’ corporate property from the fraudulent expansion of corporate debt and prolongation of corporate life.” Id. at 347. We further explained that “prolonging an insolvent corporation‘s life through bad debt may simply cause the dissipation of corporate assets” and that such harm “can be averted, and the value within an insolvent corporation salvaged, if the corporation is dissolved in a timely manner, rather than kept afloat with spurious debt.” Id. at 350. Lafferty was decided under Pennsylvania law, unlike the instant case which is controlled by New Jersey law.
Subsequently in CitX, the trustee of a bankrupt internet company, CitX Corporation, Inc. (“CitX“), sued the company‘s accounting firm for malpractice and deepening insolvency. 448 F.3d at 675. The accounting firm compiled CitX‘s financial statements from July 1997 through December 31, 1999. Using these financial statements at shareholder meetings, CitX raised over $1,000,000 in equity, allowing it to continue its operations and accrue millions of dollars in debt. Id. at 676. The trustee alleged that the accounting firm had “dramatically deepened the insolvency of CitX, and wrongfully expanded the debt of CitX and waste of its illegally raised capital, by permitting CitX to incur additional debt
by virtue of the compilation statements prepared and relied upon by third parties.” Id. at 677 (internal quotations omitted).
We determined that there was no harm to the plaintiff corporation because the
