UNPUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 03-2082
GUANG LU,
Plaintiff - Appellant,
versus
ZURICH AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY,
Defendant - Appellee,
and
NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY,
Defendant.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of
Maryland, at Greenbelt. Peter J. Messitte, District Judge. (CA-
01-2103-PJM)
Argued: September 30, 2004 Decided: November 10, 2004
Before WILLIAMS, TRAXLER, and KING, Circuit Judges.
Vacated and remanded by unpublished per curiam opinion.
ARGUED: John Umana, Washington, D.C., for Appellant. David Drake
Hudgins, Alexandria, Virginia, for Appellee.
Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
See Local Rule 36(c).
2
PER CURIAM:
Plaintiff Guang Lu brought this action against his insurance
carrier, Zurich American Insurance Company, and former employer,
New York Life Insurance Company, for bad faith and breach of
contract, respectively. The district court denied Zurich’s motion
to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6),
and denied New York Life’s motion for summary judgment. At
Zurich’s request, the district court then entered final judgment
for Lu against Zurich for nominal damages in the amount of one
dollar, which Lu appeals. We vacate and remand.
I.
According to the Amended Complaint, Lu was employed as a life
insurance agent and securities trader with New York Life and
purchased an Errors and Omissions insurance policy from Zurich. In
September 2000, Dr. Xuejiao Hu filed a complaint with the
Securities Division of the Maryland Attorney General’s Office,
claiming that Lu had conducted unauthorized trading in her New York
Life and Charles Schwab accounts and that, as a result, she had
incurred approximately $80,000 in trading losses. Upon learning of
Dr. Hu’s allegations, New York Life terminated Lu’s employment.
In January 2001, the Securities Division instituted an
administrative action against Lu, alleging violations of securities
regulations. Zurich issued a preliminary coverage letter for the
3
claims of Dr. Hu and assigned counsel to defend Lu in the
administrative action, but later withdrew its defense of Lu in the
administrative action. Lu denied the charges lodged by Dr. Hu and
the Securities Division.
In March 2001, Zurich and New York Life negotiated a
settlement of Dr. Hu’s claims against Lu and New York Life for
$80,000, under which Zurich and New York Life each paid $40,000 to
Dr. Hu. Dr. Hu executed a General Release and agreed to contact
the “Securities Division, informing it in writing that her
complaint has been resolved amicably and notifying it that said
complaint has been dropped.” J.A. 22 (quoted in Amended
Complaint). Lu was never consulted or informed of the settlement
negotiations.
Shortly after executing the General Release, Dr. Hu wrote the
following letter to the Securities Division:
I am writing this letter to inform you that I
and NY Life have reached an amicable agreement
on settling the complaint I filed to your
office against Mr. Guang Lu and NY Life last
year. I appreciate very much for your help in
resolving this matter.
J.A. 21-22 (quoted in Amended Complaint). According to the Amended
Complaint, however, the Securities Division maintained “that Dr. Hu
had not dropped her complaint, notwithstanding her General Release,
and the [administrative] case on that premise proceeded to trial,
causing significant additional damages and costs to Guang Lu.”
J.A. 22.
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Lu alleged, inter alia, that Zurich had breached its duty of
good faith by failing to consult with him before settling the claim
with Dr. Hu, by failing to inform him of the proposed $80,000
settlement with Dr. Hu, and by allowing Dr. Hu to receive the
settlement proceeds, including the $40,000 contribution from Zurich
under Lu’s policy, without first obtaining Dr. Hu’s compliance with
the terms of the General Release. In lieu of answering, Zurich
filed a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss the Amended Complaint for
failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted.1
The district court held a hearing on Zurich’s motion to
dismiss. Zurich argued that, because it had no duty under the
policy to obtain Lu’s consent to a settlement, it also had no duty
to consult with Lu during the course of settlement negotiations or
to inform him of the settlement. The district court disagreed,
ruling that the trier of fact might find that Zurich breached a
duty to consult with Lu during the representation and settlement
process, even if the policy did not require Zurich to obtain his
ultimate consent to the settlement.2 Although the district court
also indicated that damages for this technical breach would likely
1
New York Life filed a motion for summary judgment, which
was denied. After the district court entered final judgment
against Zurich, Lu and New York Life filed a consent motion to
dismiss all claims against New York Life with prejudice.
2
We express no opinion as to whether Zurich had a duty to
consult with Lu before settling Dr. Hu’s claim. The district court
denied Zurich’s motion to dismiss the bad faith claim and the issue
of Zurich’s duty to Lu is not before us.
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be nominal, it declined to entertain the question at the time
because Lu had not moved for summary judgment on the liability
issue.
Within days, however, the district court entered a written
order denying Zurich’s motion to dismiss, with the added proviso
that “to the extent that the trier of fact may conclude that Zurich
had a duty to consult with Plaintiff before settling the claim of
Dr. X Hu, Plaintiff shall be limited to the recovery of nominal
damages for the breach of same.” J.A. 53-54. The district court
set forth no discussion as to why Lu was properly limited to the
recovery of nominal damages based upon Zurich’s Rule 12(b)(6)
motion. The court entered a scheduling order setting a discovery
cut-off date of August 7, and a dispositive pretrial motions
deadline of September 8.
In May 2003, Zurich filed a “Motion for Entry of Judgment” in
the district court, contending that Lu’s damages had been
conclusively established by virtue of district court’s prior order
denying Zurich’s Rule 12(b)(6) motion. J.A. 55. In the motion,
Zurich offered to consent to entry of a judgment against it for its
failure to consult with Lu prior to settling the claim if the court
would award nominal damages in the amount of one dollar. Lu
opposed the motion, asserting that it was procedurally improper
under Rule 54(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure because
the order denying Zurich’s motion to dismiss was interlocutory and
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“subject to revision at any time before the entry of judgment
adjudicating all the claims and the rights and liabilities of all
the parties.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(b). Additionally, Lu argued that
entry of judgment was improper because a reasonable jury could
conclude that the costs he incurred in defending the administrative
action were proximately caused by Zurich’s breach of its duty of
good faith. According to Lu, the letter Dr. Hu wrote, advising the
Securities Division that she “ha[d] reached an amicable agreement
on settling the complaint” with New York Life, J.A. 21, was
insufficient to satisfy her promise to “inform[] [the Securities
Division] in writing that her complaint ha[d] been resolved
amicably and . . . that said complaint ha[d] been dropped,” J.A. 22
(quoted in Amended Complaint). Lu intended to demonstrate that,
had he been consulted by Zurich, he could have taken steps to
ensure that Dr. Hu dropped her administrative complaint as well as
her civil claims, as she was required to do under the terms of the
General Release, prior to her receipt of the settlement proceeds
paid by Zurich on his behalf.
On June 18, the district court, without further hearing,
granted Zurich’s motion for judgment as to liability with regard to
its duty to consult with Lu, but denied Zurich’s request that
judgment be entered against it for nominal damages. According to
the district court:
[it] has made no finding heretofore as to what
damages would attach to Zurich’s breach of its
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duty to consult, having merely speculated that
such damages were likely to be “nominal.”
That characterization, hardly the “law of the
case” as Zurich contends, is always subject to
revision as the case goes forward. Since the
case will go forward as to Defendant New York
Life, it will not greatly inconvenience Zurich
to remain in the case at the same time. It
may well eventuate that Guang Lu is only
entitled to nominal damages after all. But in
the course of the proceedings, especially to
the extent that Dr. Hu’s testimony is
developed, a fuller picture of the events will
be possible.
J.A. 55-56 (emphasis added).
Pointing to the language regarding nominal damages set forth
in the district court’s order denying its Rule 12(b)(6) motion,
Zurich promptly filed a motion for reconsideration of its request
that final judgment be entered for nominal damages. In the
alternative, Zurich argued that the district court should vacate
its June 18 final judgment as to liability because Zurich had only
agreed to consent to judgment on liability if the plaintiff were
limited to nominal damages. Because nominal damages were not
awarded, Zurich sought to retrieve its right to contest liability
before a jury.
On July 16, the district court granted Zurich’s motion for
reconsideration, vacated the June 18 order, and entered final
judgment in favor of Lu against Zurich for nominal damages in the
amount of one dollar. The district court again offered no
explanation as to why Lu’s Amended Complaint failed to state a
claim for compensatory damages, stating only that it had mistakenly
8
indicated in the June 18 order that there had been no prior finding
as to such damages.
II.
On appeal, Lu asserts that the district court erred in
entering final judgment against Zurich for nominal damages based
solely upon its prior order denying Zurich’s motion to dismiss the
Amended Complaint for failure to state a claim. We agree.
A.
As an initial matter, we hold that the district court erred in
entering the order denying Zurich’s Rule 12(b)(6) motion as a final
judgment under Rule 54(b). Rule 54(b) provides that:
When more than one claim for relief is
presented in an action . . . or when multiple
parties are involved, the court may direct the
entry of a final judgment as to one or more
but fewer than all of the claims or parties
only upon an express determination that there
is no just reason for delay and upon an
express direction for the entry of judgment.
In the absence of such determination and
direction, any order or other form of
decision, however designated, which
adjudicates fewer than all the claims or the
rights and liabilities of fewer than all the
parties shall not terminate the action as to
any of the claims or parties, and the order or
other form of decision is subject to revision
at any time before the entry of judgment
adjudicating all the claims and the rights and
liabilities of all the parties.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(b). Neither the district court nor Zurich
points us to the procedural rule upon which the district court’s
“Entry of Judgment” rests. Zurich represents that its motion was
9
not made pursuant to Rule 54(b), but offers no alternative rule
upon which it might rest, and admits that the final judgment is
based upon matters beyond the four corners of the complaint and the
earlier Rule 12(b)(6) ruling. We can identify no procedural
vehicle for the entry of judgment other than Rule 54(b).
Pertinent to this appeal, Zurich has filed only two motions --
the Motion to Dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) and the “Motion for Entry
of Judgment.” The district court’s order enters “a Final Order of
Judgment in favor of Plaintiff Guang Lu and against Defendant
Zurich.” J.A. 58. In doing so, the district court proceeded under
the presumption that Zurich had moved for the entry of judgment “so
that an immediate appeal can be taken by [it],” J.A. 55, and
expressly noted that the judgment entered was indeed “FINAL as to
Defendant Zurich American Insurance Company only, not as to
Defendant New York Life Insurance Company.” J.A. 60. Thus, we are
satisfied that the district court intended to enter its March 25
order denying Zurich’s Rule 12(b)(6) motion under Rule 54(b) as a
final one for our review.3
3
As correctly asserted by Lu, the district court’s order
denying Zurich’s Rule 12(b)(6) motion could only be appealed upon
the district court’s entry of a final judgment as to Zurich only,
splitting the case away from New York Life under Rule 54(b), “upon
an express determination that there is no just reason for delay.”
Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(b). Until that time, the decision was “subject
to revision at any time before the entry of judgment adjudicating
all the claims and the rights and liabilities of all the parties.”
Id. Although the district court made no such “express
determination,” Lu’s subsequent filing of a consent motion
dismissing the claims against New York Life with prejudice renders
10
The district court erred, however, because its Rule 12(b)(6)
order, standing alone, cannot suffice as a final order of judgment
against Zurich. The district court’s order plainly denied Zurich’s
Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss the bad faith cause of action for
failure to state a claim. Thus, even if we could construe the
order as one that granted Zurich’s 12(b)(6) motion in part
regarding compensatory damages, there remains a stark gap between
the district court’s Rule 12(b)(6) order and the district court’s
final order of judgment under Rule 54(b). There is no prior order
establishing liability on Zurich’s part in Lu’s favor at all, only
a determination that a trier of fact might find that Zurich
breached a duty on its part to consult with Lu before settling.
We also reject Zurich’s attempt to have us construe its motion
to enter judgment as a motion under Rule 54(b) and as an admission
of liability which paved the way for the district court to enter
the Rule 12(b)(6) order on damages as final. Even if we were to
allow a Rule 54(b) motion to serve as a proper procedural vehicle
for a defendant to admit, for the first time, allegations of
liability set forth in a complaint, Zurich has not done so. Zurich
has made it plain that it does not admit liability and that its
admission of liability was wholly contingent upon all damages being
limited to one dollar. Rule 54(b) provides a procedural vehicle
for a district court to enter a prior order as a final judgment, in
the Rule 12(b)(6) order final as to Zurich in any event.
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order that an appeal as to fewer than all claims or all parties may
proceed; it does not provide a procedural vehicle for a defendant
to confess judgment or otherwise admit liability contingent upon
the district court limiting the award of damages against it.4
Accordingly, the district court erred in entering its Rule 12(b)(6)
order as a final judgment against Zurich under Rule 54(b).
B.
Even if we were to construe the district court’s Rule 12(b)(6)
order as one that granted Zurich’s motion to dismiss Lu’s claim for
compensatory damages and accept Zurich’s conditional motion for the
entry of judgment for nominal damages as a proper filing under Rule
54(b), the entry of judgment also cannot stand. The district court
erred in concluding that Lu had failed to state a claim for
compensatory damages in his Amended Complaint.
We review a district court’s dismissal of a complaint under
Rule 12(b)(6) under well-established standards. “[A] Rule 12(b)(6)
motion should only be granted if, after accepting all well-pleaded
allegations in the plaintiff’s complaint as true and drawing all
reasonable factual inferences from those facts in the plaintiff’s
favor, it appears certain that the plaintiff cannot prove any set
4
At oral argument, counsel for Zurich suggested that we
might construe its motion as an “Offer of Judgment” under Fed. R.
Civ. P. 68. The plain language of that rule reveals that it too
cannot apply to the circumstances here.
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of facts in support of his claim entitling him to relief.” Edwards
v. City of Goldsboro, 178 F.3d 231, 244 (4th Cir. 1999).
The Amended Complaint alleges that Zurich breached its duty of
good faith by failing to consult with Lu before settling Dr. Hu’s
claim and inform him of the settlement, and by giving Dr. Hu the
settlement proceeds before she notified the Securities Division
that she was dropping her complaint. These failures, Lu alleges,
“deprived him of an[y] opportunity to assure that Dr. Hu in fact
had complied with the specific terms and requirements of the
General Release, before they gave her [the] $80,000.” J.A. 24.
At the hearing, the district court rejected Zurich’s argument
that it had no such duty to Lu, but proceeded to engage counsel in
an extended discussion of what damages Lu might prove were he to
prevail on the liability issue before the trier of fact. In doing
so, the court and parties ventured far beyond the allegations of
the Amended Complaint, upon which a Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal must
rest, and well into factual representations, assumptions, and
speculations that may or may not be the subject of ultimate dispute
upon an evidentiary record.
By way of example, Lu argued that, had he known about the
settlement negotiations before Dr. Hu recouped her money, he could
have retained personal counsel, and ensured that Dr. Hu dropped the
complaint against him, thereby avoiding the substantial litigation
costs associated with defending that action. In response, Zurich
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counter-argued that Lu could have done nothing because the
Securities Division was at liberty to pursue its action whether or
not Dr. Hu dropped her complaint. Because Lu would not ultimately
be able to establish a causal connection between his costs of
defending the administrative action and Zurich’s failure to consult
with him during the settlement negotiations, Zurich argued that an
award of only nominal damages was proper.
The flaw in Zurich’s position on appeal is that Zurich did not
move for summary judgment on the issue of compensatory damages
below, asserting that Lu, having been given the opportunity, failed
to make a sufficient evidentiary showing of his entitlement to such
damages should he prevail on the bad faith claim. Rather, Lu was
asked to explain, well in advance of the discovery cut-off and
dispositive motions date, and in the context of a 12(b)(6) hearing,
what damages he sought to recover and what facts might causally
link such damages to his liability allegations. At no time did the
district court advise the parties that it intended to convert
Zurich’s Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss to a Rule 56 motion for
summary judgment. Thus, there was no notice or opportunity given
to Lu to produce affidavits or other evidence in support his stated
claim for compensatory damages. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c) (Summary
judgment “shall be rendered forthwith if the pleadings,
depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file,
together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine
14
issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled
to a judgment as a matter of law.”). For example, although there
is an allegation that the Securities Division advised Lu that,
contrary to the requirements in the General Release, Dr. Hu did not
drop her complaint after the settlement was finalized, there was no
evidence in the record regarding the Securities Division’s position
on the settlement or its usual course of action in situations where
a complainant actually drops a complaint and declines to cooperate
further. Nor, as the district court noted in its vacated order,
was there evidence as to the position or actions taken by Dr. Hu
following her execution of the Release.5
To conclude, we express no opinion as to whether Lu can
ultimately establish a claim for compensatory damages should a jury
determine that Zurich acted in bad faith, or whether Lu’s claim for
5
Because we review this matter under Rule 12(b)(6), prior
to the completion of discovery and upon an incomplete record, we
can only speculate as to what facts might have surfaced to support
a claim for compensatory damages. As an example of the manner in
which the hearing wandered far beyond the allegations of the
Amended Complaint, however, we note representations made by counsel
at the Rule 12(b)(6) hearing to the effect that Dr. Hu not only
failed to notify the Securities Division that she was “dropping”
her complaint as required, but also appeared in Maryland to testify
against him in the administrative proceedings. This led to
disputed factual claims by Zurich that Dr. Hu was subpoenaed to do
so, beyond her control, as well as the contrary claim by Lu that
she was beyond the subpoena power of the Maryland courts. We also
note that, during oral argument before us, Lu’s counsel represented
that he had discovered, after the final entry of judgment, that the
Securities Division was notified of the settlement negotiations
between Dr. Hu, New York Life, and Zurich, and participated in
those negotiations.
15
damages can survive a properly filed motion for summary judgment.
At this juncture, it appears that Lu contends only that Zurich’s
bad faith failure to inform him of the settlement negotiations
proximately caused him to incur damages in the form of the costs of
defending and trying the administrative case. Such damages may
ultimately prove to be unrecoverable. However, taking the
allegations in the Amended Complaint as true and construing them in
the light most favorable to Lu, we cannot say beyond doubt that the
plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claims which
would entitle him to compensatory damages of more than one dollar.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the district court’s
order entering judgment for Lu against Zurich for nominal damages
and reverse the district court’s Rule 12(b)(6) order to the extent
it limits Lu’s recovery to nominal damages. We remand the case to
the district court for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
VACATED AND REMANDED
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