Adco Oil Company has not fared well in the market for legal services. In 1988 it hired attorney Michael J. Rovell to sue Guy Taylor and his law firm for malpractice. By outward appearances Rovell did a good job. After a jury trial a judgment for $120 million was entered in Adco’s favor. But Adco never saw a penny of that judgment and Adco now has filed suit accusing Rovell of malpractice. The complaint alleges that without Adco’s consent Rovell made an agreement with Adco’s co-plaintiff and adversaries that left Rovell with $265,000 in fees and Adco with nothing. Rovell has since filed a petition in bankruptcy (he is the debtor in possession in a Chapter 11 reorganization). Adco wants to collect from Rovell’s malpractice carrier, The Home Insurance Company. Rovell has done his best to frustrate Adco. He refrained from notifying Home of Adco’s malpractice suit, and its claims-made policy expired before Home learned of the proceeding. Rovell also ignored the adversary action Home initiated in the bankruptcy case. Following this default Bankruptcy Judge Ginsberg entered a declaratory judgment that Home need not defend or indemnify Rovell.
Adco contends, however, that the policy remains available, faulty notice and default judgment notwithstanding. Adco concedes that Rovell did not comply with the policy’s notice provision but insists that this does not matter. Illinois (whose law, the parties agree, controls) prevents injurers and their insurers from destroying the “vested rights” of injured parties.
France v. Citizens Casualty Co.,
First we must inquire whether the district court had subject-matter jurisdiction, a topic the judge did not explore. Home invoked the diversity jurisdiction. 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Home and Adco are of diverse citizenship, and the amount in controversy exceeds the jurisdictional minimum. But Home’s dispute with Adco arises out of its policy with Rovell, and the normal alignment of parties in a suit seeking a declaratory judgment of non-coverage is Insurer versus Insured and Injured Party. Both Home and Rovell are citizens of Illinois, which forecloses diversity jurisdiction in such a suit. Carving 'a single controversy into pieces— Insurer vs. Insured in the bankruptcy court, Insurer vs. Injured Party in the district court — nominally yields jurisdiction over each suit but creates the possibility of inconsistent outcomes (which has come to pass) and does not really solve the jurisdictional problem, for Rovell is an indispensable party under Fed.R.Civ.P. 19. He has a stake in the outcome because victory for Adco would restore the policy as an asset in the bankruptcy, remove the possibility that discharge will be denied for wasting the estate’s assets, and affect the recoveries of other creditors; Adco’s claim is derivative of Rovell’s contract with Home. We need not trace through the consequences, however, because there is an independent source of federal jurisdiction.
Home’s adversary proceeding in Rovell’s bankruptcy named not only Rovell but also Adco. After entering the default judgment against Rovell, the bankruptcy judge expressed doubt that he had jurisdiction over the dispute between Adco and Home and encouraged Home to dismiss the case and refile it in the district court. Home followed this advice, creating the problem we have discussed. It is a problem the bankruptcy judge could and should have averted. Its root is the default
judgment
against Ro-vell, as opposed to a notation of default. In a suit against multiple defendants a default judgment should not be entered against one until the matter has been resolved as to all.
Frow v. De La Vega,
The district judge’s failure to withdraw the reference from the bankruptcy judge complicates matters, but not fatally. A district judge should not hear as an original matter any part of a bankruptcy case it has referred to a bankruptcy judge without first withdrawing the reference “in whole or in part, ... on its own motion or on timely
On to the merits. Home undertook in the malpractice policy
[t]o pay on behalf of the Insured all sums in excess of the deductible amount ... which the Insured shall become legally obligated to pay as damages as a result of CLAIMS FIRST MADE AGAINST THE INSURED DURING THE POLICY PERIOD AND REPORTED TO THE COMPANY DURING THE POLICY PERIOD caused by any act, error or omission for which the Insured is legally responsible, and arising out of the rendering or failure to render professional services for others in the Insured’s capacity as a lawyer or notary public.
The policy ran from April 1, 1994, to April 1, 1995, and would have entitled Rovell to coverage on Adeo’s malpractice claim, which was filed on October 21, 1994, if he had reported the claim to Home. But he did not, and Home did not learn of the suit from Adco until after April 1, 1995. Even under an occurrence policy, which links coverage to the date of the tort rather than of the suit, an insurer has a strong interest in prompt notice about claims, so that it can investigate or settle them. See
Transport Insurance Co. v. Post Express Co.,
Seizing on the statement in
Reagor
that “neither the insured nor the insurer, acting separately or together, may act to defeat the rights of the injured person” (Reagor
Adco’s retainer agreement with Rovell did not require Rovell to carry malpractice insurance. Illinois permits clients to hire uninsured lawyers. The state does not have any statute for lawyers comparable to the law requiring drivers to carry liability insurance, and to our knowledge no court has interpreted the Code of Professional Responsibility to imply such a mandatory-insurance obligation. Cf.
Weisblatt v. Chicago Bar Association,
In the end none of this may matter — for Adco was represented in the litigation against Taylor by Jenner & Block, of which Rovell was then a partner, and may have recourse against the firm’s assets or insurance. Moreover, Adco’s co-plaintiff in the Taylor suit, to whom Rovell supposedly diverted winnings in violation of his duties to Adco, is a partnership in which Adco has an interest. Indirect recovery through the partnership may be as good as direct recovery. Whatever claim remains against Rovell must be satisfied by Rovell personally, if he is liable for anything — a subject we have not broached, because like the district judge we have taken Adco’s contentions at face value.
One last issue requires brief comment. We assumed when discussing subject-matter jurisdiction- that Home and Adco are the only parties-. That is not quite right. Dismayed by some statements in the district court’s opinion, Rovell sought leave to intervene under Fed.R.Civ.P. 24 after judgment. Though Rovell disclaimed any interest in the suit’s outcome, the district court allowed him to intervene
on the same side as Home
for the purpose of clarifying some facts for the court. That was a mistake, and not only because the motion to intervene was untimely (after judgment), unnecessary (Rovell could have made his views known as
amicus curiae),
inappropriate (if as the district court believed Rovell had no interest in the outcome, how could he be a party?), and created jurisdictional problems (if Rovell had been aligned as a defendant, as he should have been, diversity of citizenship would have vanished). As a debtor in bankruptcy, Rovell has a fiduciary duty to his creditors not to squander property of the estate, see 11 U.S.C. §§ 704(1), 1107(a), including his interest in the policy.
In re United States Brass Corp.,
The judgment of the district court is reversed, and the case is remanded with instructions to enter a declaratory judgment that Home has no duty to defend or indemnify Rovell in Adco’s suit.
