OPINION
St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company (“St.Paul”) appeals the judgment of the district court holding that it owed its insured, Mor-Flo Industries, Inc. (“Mor-Flo”), a duty to defend in a patent infringement action and that it was liable for the attorney’s fees and costs incurred by Mor-Flo in defending that action. Ronald Weiss appeals the district court’s order vacating Weiss’s default judgment against St. Paul and the district court’s judgment that St. Paul had no duty to indemnify Mor-Flo for the judgment against it in the patent infringement action. We will affirm the order vacating the default judgment and the judgment in favor of St. Paul on the issue of indemnification. We will reverse the district court’s judgment in favor of Mor-Flo on the issue of St. Paul’s duty to defend and the award of fees and costs.
I. Procedural Background
St. Paul provided liability coverage for Mor-Flo, a manufacturer of water heaters. In 1984, Mor-Flo was sued for patent infringement and St. Paul declined to defend, contending that it had no duty either to defend or indemnify. Mor-Flo lost the patent infringement suit and paid the patent holder $9,925,638.00 in damages and $2,250,158.24 in fees and costs. In 1992, Mor-Flo was sold and its former chairman, Walter L. Abt, purchased the rights to Mor-Flo’s duty-to-defend claim against St. Paul for $1000.00.
Abt filed this action against St. Paul, seeking a declaratory' judgment that St. Paul had a duty to defend Mor-Flo in the patent infringement action and a duty to indemnify Mor-Flo for the judgment against it in that action. Due to the failure of St. Paul and its outside counsel to file an answer, a default judgment was entered against St. Paul. The district court granted St. Paul’s motion to vacate the default judgment pursuant to Rule 60(b), and both parties then moved for summary judgment. The district court held that St. Paul had a duty to defend Mor-Flo in the patent litigation but did not have a duty to indemnify. The district court further found that, having breached its duty to defend Mor-Flo in the patent litigation
II. Facts
In 1979, State Industries, a manufacturer of water heaters, applied for a patent to cover its new process for making water heaters that used foam insulation as opposed to the prior industry standard of fiber glass insulation. Shortly thereafter, Mor-Flo developed its own foam-insulated water heater, using a slight variation of State’s design, and by 1981, Mor-Flo was producing foam insulated heaters. By 1984, Mor-Flo was one of the largest water heater manufacturers in the nation.
On May 8,1984, the Patent Office granted State a patent on State’s method of manufacturing foam insulated heaters. State immediately sued Mor-Flo for patent infringement. Relying on the advice of patent counsel, Mor-Flo contested the suit and continued to produce foam insulated water heaters. The district court ruled that Mor-Flo had infringed State’s patent and that judgment was affirmed. The district court awarded State approximately $8.7 million in damages. By January 26, 1990, Mor-Flo had paid State a total of $9,925,638.00 in damages and had also paid $2,250,158.24 in fees and costs.
When the patent litigation began, Mor-Flo had three insurance policies through St. Paul. The Comprehensive General Liability plan provided coverage for “advertising injury claims resulting from your business activities.” Advertising injury was defined as “Piracy; Unfair competition; Infringement of copyright, title or slogan” that resulted in interference with another’s rights. Advertising claims that were the result of “infringement of trademark, service mark or trade name” were excluded from coverage. Another policy, the Umbrella Excess Liability plan, covered essentially the same activities in relation to advertising injuries. The third policy was a Director’s and Officer’s Liability plan.
In May of 1985, Mor-Flo requested that St. Paul defend the patent action and indemnify any losses. The St. Paul adjuster assigned to determine whether there was coverage inexplicably (even according to St. Paul itself) limited his review to Mor-Flo’s Director’s and Officer’s Liability plan. Based on its review of only the Director’s and Officer’s Liability plan, St. Paul denied coverage.
Walter Abt was the chairman of the board, chief executive officer and majority shareholder of Mor-Flo. In February, 1991, Abt read an article in the Wall Street Journal that suggested that advertising injury provisions in comprehensive insurance plans such as Mor-Flo’s covered patent infringement litigation. Armed with this information, Abt submitted a claim to St. Paul. On April 25, 1991, St. Paul began its investigation into possible coverage for legal fees expended by Mor-Flo in the patent litigation. In July, Jacqueline McCroskey, the St. Paul claim representative at the Cleveland office assigned to Mor-Flo’s claim, established an expense reserve of $1 million based on her belief that there was a fifty percent likelihood that St. Paul could be found liable for the approximately $2 million in legal fees accrued by Mor-Flo in defending the patent litigation. On September 27, 1991, St. Paul received an opinion from outside counsel that St. Paul had no duty to defend, and on October 2, 1991, McCroskey
Mor-Flo was sold to SABH (US), Inc., during the spring of 1992, and Abt purchased the rights to Mor-Flo’s duty-to-defend claim against St. Paul for $1000. Abt filed this declaratory judgment action on August 25, 1992. By August 27, 1992, St. Paul had received the complaint through certified mail. On September 2, 1992, St. Paul sent the complaint to Weston (St. Paul’s counsel) which received the complaint in its docket department the following day. Dennis Kolibab, a docket clerk, testified that pursuant to Weston’s policy he called the district court clerk asking whether the return of service had been filed. After finding that the return had not yet been filed, he docketed an answer date for September 14, twenty days from the date the complaint was filed. The return of service was filed on September 9,1992.
James Barone, another docket clerk at Weston, stated in his affidavit that on September 12 or 13, 1992,
No answer to the complaint was filed by the answer date of September 16. Two days later a default was entered on the court’s docket. On September 22, 1992, Abt filed an affidavit in support of a default judgment in which he alleged damages due to him of approximately fifteen million dollars. Around that date, Barone again telephoned the district court clerk and inquired about the status of the return of service and was again told that no return had yet been filed. (Apparently the court clerk did not mention that a default had been entered in the case.) Barone then noted a new, later, answer date of October 4, 1992. This date was forty days after the filing of the complaint.
The court entered a default judgment on September 28, 1992. Weston’s internal docket sheet indicated that on October 4, someone — Weston has not been able to determine who — postponed the answer date to October 18, 1992. Finally, on October 7, 1992, Weston learned of the default. The following day St. Paul filed a motion to vacate the default judgment pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(1) and (3).
The district court granted the motion finding that Abt was not prejudiced by the vacating of the judgment, St. Paul had a meritorious defense, there was no culpable conduct on St. Paul’s behalf, and Abt’s counsel knew of, but did not notify, St. Paul’s counsel before obtaining the judgment. Each party then moved for summary judgment. The district court held that at the time the patent suit was filed in 1984 it was arguable whether Mor-Flo’s policies covered its claim, and therefore, under Willoughby Hills v. Cincinnati Ins. Co.,
Next, relying on Herman Miller, Inc. v. Travelers Indem. Co.,
III. Analysis
A. The Default Judgment
We review for abuse of discretion the district court;s granting of a motion to vacate a default judgment. Manufacturers’ Indus. Relations Ass’n v. East Akron Casting Co.,
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure require a defendant to serve an answer within twenty days of being served with a summons and complaint. Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(a)(1)(A). Rule 55 permits the clerk to enter a default when a party fails to defend an action as required. The court may then enter a default judgment. Fed. R.Civ.P. 55(b)(1). A party against whom a default judgment has been entered may petition the court to set aside the default judgment under Rules 55(c) and 60(b) for good cause, and upon a showing of mistake, or any other just reason.
The seminal case in this circuit on Rule 60(b) motions to vacate default judgments is United Coin Meter Co., Inc. v. Seaboard Coastline R.R.,
In Waifersong, we made it clear that a party seeking to vacate a default judgment under Rule 60(b)(1) must demonstrate first and foremost that the default did not result from his culpable conduct. That burden may be carried, we said, only by meeting the requirements of Rule 60(b)(1), that is, by “demonstrat[ing] that his default was the product of mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect.” Waifersong,
We recognize that the district court did not consider the United Coin Meter factors in the order that Waifersong requires.
In fact, Abt’s arguments are somewhat disingenuous. As the district court pointed out, Abt’s attorneys had been in frequent touch with St. Paul’s attorneys prior to the initiation of this suit, but elected not to notify them of the filing of the lawsuit, the entry of default or the default judgment. This is clearly not one of those “most extreme cases” where the default judgment is the result of deliberate, willful, conduct. United Coin Meter Co., Inc.,
B. Summary Judgment on the Duty to Defend
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Advance Watch Co., Ltd. v. Kemper Nat’l Ins. Co.,
St. Paul and Abt agree that Willoughby Hills,
Abt, on the other hand, contends that this court must look to the legal landscape when the patent suit was initiated to determine whether arguably there was coverage, and that St. Paul’s reliance on cases decided after the patent litigation began is misplaced. Abt argues that in jurisdictions other than Ohio legal opinion was divided in 1984 over whether a patent infringement claim was covered as an “advertising injury;” in essence, Abt argues that this division of opinion makes the coverage “arguable” under Willoughby Hills.
In Willoughby Hills the Supreme Court of Ohio addressed the changes wrought by Ohio’s use of notice-pleading and expanded upon the earlier rule that a duty to defend may arise solely from the pleadings. Since under notice-pleading the duty to defend could arise at some point subsequent to the filing of the complaint, the court adopted the rule that when the pleadings “state a claim which is potentially or arguably within the policy coverage ... the insurer must accept the defense of the claim.” Id. at 558 (emphasis added). We agree that Willoughby Hills controls here, and we think that case requires that we determine from the plain meaning of the contract terms whether the occurrence is arguably covered by the insurance contract.
In Ohio, normal contract rules apply to the interpretation of insurance contracts. King v. Nationwide Ins. Co.,
This court faced a situation similar to the one at hand in Herman Miller,
It is true that the Herman Miller case was decided years after the conclusion of the underlying patent litigation at issue here. But in that case we did not look to other jurisdictions to determine whether
Our view that the plain meaning of the contract terms at issue here precludes a finding that claims for patent infringement are covered, arguably or otherwise, by the St. Paul policies is supported, however, by both Ohio and Sixth Circuit case law. Pri- or to our decision in Herman Miller, the Ninth District Court of Appeals of Ohio gave a restrictive interpretation to the term “advertising injury” in the case of Synergystex Int’l, Inc. v. Motorists Mut. Ins., No. 2290-M,
This circuit addressed the question of whether patent infringement is covered as an advertising injury in United Nat’l Ins. Co.,
In Advance Watch Co., Ltd.,
We hold that the district court erred in concluding that because of the split in legal authority in 1984 in jurisdictions outside of Ohio, there was no way to determine what construction of the terms in question the Ohio courts would give. The plain meaning of an “advertising injury” defined in the policy as “piracy” and “unfair competition” does not arguably cover the losses due to patent litigation, and therefore St. Paul had no duty to defend Mor-Flo in the patent infringement litigation. And because we have held that St. Paul had no duty to defend, we will reverse the district court’s judgment awarding attorney’s fees and costs. The district court, sitting in diversity, was bound to apply the substantive law of Ohio. Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins,
C. Summary Judgment on Duty to Indemnify
Because the St. Paul policies do not arguably cover the patent infringement claims, they cannot be held to require indemnification on those claims. We therefore affirm the district court’s determination that St. Paul had no duty to indemnify Mor-Flo.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court vacating the default judgment against St. Paul; we AFFIRM the portion of the judgment holding that the St. Paul insurance policies did not cover claims for patent infringement, and we REVERSE the portion of the judgment holding that St. Paul had a duty to defend Mor-Flo in the patent infringement litigation and awarding costs and attorney’s fees.
Notes
. After the notices of appeal were filed, Walter Abt died and Ronald Weiss, Abt’s executor and trustee, was substituted as the plaintiff-appellee, cross-appellant. For ease of reference, we will continue to refer to the plaintiff as Abt.
. Barone's recollection is flawed because September 12 was Saturday and the 13th was Sunday and on neither day was the clerk's office open.
. Because Ohio and Michigan follow the same rules of contract construction, the Herman Miller analysis is applicable in this case. See United Nat’l Ins. Co. v. SST Fitness Corp.,
