Appellees Continental Casualty Company and Twin City Fire Insurance Co. (collectively “CNA”), have petitioned for rehearing with respect to our opinion in this matter, WellPoint Inc. v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co.,
We agree Trial Rule 56(B) limits our authority to grant summary judgment for Anthem to the issues raised in CNA’s motion. Before the trial court, CNA requested summary judgment in its favor on certain enumerated counts/claims for the reasons set forth in its supporting memorandum. Relevant text from CNA’s motion and supporting memorandum is as follows:
Pursuant to T.R. 56, Defendant [CNA] hereby moves for summary judgment in its favor and against Plaintiffs Well-Point, Inc .... and Anthem Insurance Companies [“Anthem”] on Counts II, III, IV, and V (incorrectly designated as*983 Count IV) of Anthem’s Second Amended Complaint for Declaratory Judgment and Damages (“Second Amended Complaint”).
Motion for Summary Judgment, Appellants’ App’x at 610 (emphasis added).
WHEREFORE, for the reasons set forth in [CNA’s] supporting Memorandum, [CNA] respectfully requests that this Court enter final judgment in [CNA’s] favor on all claims alleged in Anthem’s Second Amended Complaint as follows:
(1) denying Anthem’s claim for declaratory relief under Count II;
(2) denying Anthem’s claim for breach of contract under Count III;
(3) denying Anthem’s claim for bad faith under Count IV; and
(4) denying Anthem’s claim for punitive damages under Count V.
Id. at 611-12 (emphases added). CNA’s brief supporting its summary judgment motion included the following:
[T]here is no coverage under the Policies for Anthem’s settlement of the RICO/CUTPA-Based Claims for each of the following and separate reasons:3 ... First [no coverage for intentional conduct or ordinary business obligations] -Second [not a “Loss”]..... Third [Exclusion (b) excludes coverage for “any dishonest or fraudulent act or omission”].... Fourth [not in the “rendering of or failure to render Professional Services”] — Additionally [Anthem’s “bad faith” 'and' punitive damages claims], ...
Memorandum of Law in Support, Appellants’ App’x at 620-22 (underlined emphasis added).
[CNA] has additional defenses to coverage as set forth in its affirmative defenses and counterclaim.... However, these additional defenses may require further discovery before they are ripe for adjudication. Therefore, they have not been included in this Motion.... By moving for summary, judgment on only some of its defenses, [CNA] in no way waives (and it specifically reserves) its right to pursue its other defenses should this Court deny this Motion.
Id. at 620 n. 3 (emphasis added). We find that CNA specified it was “moving for summary judgment on only some of its defenses” and thereby reserved its other defenses.
Anthem argues CNA waived any additional affirmative defenses. It first claims CNA “did not object to Anthem’s request ... for summary judgment in its favor- on Counts II and III” until this petition for rehearing. Response to Pet. for Reh’g at 1. Anthem contends CNA should have raised this objection to the trial court. Anthem’s second argument is that Trial Rule 56(B) authorizes its requested relief because CNA’s motion for summary judgment “did not request summary judgment only as to certain specified affirmative defenses” but rather summary judgment as to certain specified counts and CNA had the duty to assert its affirmative defenses in response to Anthem’s request for summary judgment in its favor. Id. at 3-4[
Generally, an affirmative defense is waived “if not asserted in response to a motion for summary judgment that dispose[s] of the .entire issue of liability.” Reiswerg v. Statom,
We decline to find waiver of unas-serted defenses by CNA in this case. As the moving party, CNA controls the definition of the issues raised by its summary judgment motion for purposes of Trial Rule 56(B). In its motion for summary judgment, CNA sought summary judgment for any one of four “reasons”/“defenses” at issue, see Appellants’ App’x at 620, which we consolidated as “three principle claims.”
We conclude that rehearing should be granted to modify our opinion to address only the issues raised in the summary judgment proceeding. We therefore, adopt the following revisions to our opinion:
1. The fifth paragraph of our opinion,29 N.E.3d at 720 ,2015 WL 1849523 , *2, is hereby modified as follows “to clarify that [CNA’s] motion for summary judgment raised only certain issues of law prior to the close of discovery.” Pet. for Reh’g at 13.
Prior to the close of discovery, Continental Casualty Company (CNA) filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing in part that there was no coverage under the relevant policy language because the claims settled in the Underlying Litigation had not arisen out of acts that had occurred “solely” in Anthem’s rendering of, or failure to render, professional services.8 The trial court agreed with that argument and several others made by CNA and, determining that there was no just reason for delay, both granted summary judgment on the issues raised by CNA and directed entry of final judgment for CNA. Anthem initiated this appeal. A few months later, the trial court granted Twin City’s request to be joined in the final judgment order in favor of CNA on the same grounds. See Appellants’ App’x at 6450-52; 6515. Anthem brought a separate, additional appeal*985 from this judgment favoring Twin City.9 Consolidating Anthem’s appeals, the Court of Appeals affirmed on the one basis that the allegations against Anthem “did not arise ‘solely,’ i.e., exclusively or entirely, out of its claims handling activities.;.. ” Well-Point, Inc. v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, PA, No. 49A05-1202-PL-92,989 N.E.2d 845 ,2013 WL 3149002 , at *7 (Ind.Ct.App. June 19, 2013) (“WellPoint II”) (table).
2. The final paragraph of our opinion, titled “Conclusion,” is hereby modified to read:
We hold as a matter of law that Anthem’s . losses resulted from alleged wrongful acts that occurred solely in the rendering or failure to render Professional Services and thus fall within the Policy’s insuring agreement; that the relief Anthem seeks is insurable under the Policy and Indiana law; and that, with respect to Anthem’s settlement losses resulting from Shane, Thomas, and Levinson, the exception to Exclusion (b) obviates its application. Anthem is entitled to the coverage, including coverage for defense costs, under Coverage II of its policies with the Excess Reinsur-ers, except for its settlement losses resulting from CSMS’s claims. We reverse and, except for Anthem’s losses resulting from CSMS’s claims and Anthem’s bad faith claim, enter direct the entry of summary judgment in favor of Anthem pursuant to Trial Rule 56(B) on the issues raised in CNA’s motion for summary judgment and decided in this opinion. We for its-costs--of--settling the Underlying Litigation and remand to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Our opinion in this case is modified accordingly but in all other respects remains in full force.
