F IL E D
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
U N IT E D ST A T E S C O U R T O F A PP E A L S
December 1, 2006
FO R T H E T E N T H C IR C U IT
Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
NOTW EN CORPORATIO N, a
D elaw are corporation; WC N /G AN
PA RTNERS, LTD., a Colorado limited
partnership; WILLIA M C . N EW TON,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v. No. 06-8016
(D.C. No. 05-CV-104-ABJ)
AM ERICAN ECONOM Y (D . W yo.)
IN SU RAN CE C OM PA N Y ,
Defendant-Appellee.
O R D E R A N D JU D G M E N T *
Before O ’B R IE N and B R O R B Y , Circuit Judges, and B R O W N , * * District Judge.
*
After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined
unanimously that oral argument would not materially assist the determination of
this appeal. See Fed. R. App. P. 34(a)(2); 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G). The case is
therefore ordered submitted without oral argument. This order and judgment is
not binding precedent, except under the doctrines of law of the case, res judicata,
and collateral estoppel. It may be cited, however, for its persuasive value
consistent with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1 and 10th Cir. R. 32.1.
**
The H onorable W esley E. Brown, Senior District Judge, District of K ansas,
sitting by designation.
Plaintiffs Notwen Corporation, W CN/GAN Partners Ltd., and W illiam C.
Newton (collectively, “Notwen plaintiffs” or just “plaintiffs,”) 1 were insured
under a businessowners liability policy issued in W yoming by defendant
American Economy Insurance Company (AEIC). The policy covered, among
other things, unintended and unexpected property damage caused by plaintiffs
through accidental occurrences. Plaintiffs brought this diversity action against
AEIC when it refused to defend them against an Oregon lawsuit that they insisted
fell within the scope of the policy. On cross motions for summary judgment, the
district court followed the magistrate judge’s recommendation to hold that the
Oregon lawsuit, alleging plaintiffs had misappropriated trade secrets and other
property, arose out of intentional misconduct, not accidental occurrences and,
hence, that AEIC had no duty to defend. Plaintiffs appealed. W e review the
district court’s determination, including its assessment of controlling state law ,
under a de novo standard. See Freightquote.com, Inc. v. Hartford Cas. Ins. Co.,
397 F.3d 888, 892 (10th Cir. 2005). W e agree with the district court’s analysis of
the operative contract language and applicable law and, accordingly, affirm.
“The interpretation of an insurance contract is governed by state law and,
sitting in diversity, we look to the law of the forum state.” Houston Gen. Ins. Co.
1
W illiam N ewton explained that he created WCN/GAN Partners and Notwen
Corporation to handle, respectively (w ith some overlap), his investments and his
family affairs generally. Aplt. A pp. at 274.
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v. Am. Fence Co., 115 F.3d 805, 806 (10th Cir. 1997). Thus, as the district court
recognized and the parties agree, we look to W yoming law to determine the scope
of AEIC ’s duty to defend under the policy in question. See M arathon Ashland
Pipe Line LLC v. M aryland Cas. Co., 243 F.3d 1232, 1236, 1243 (10th Cir. 2001).
Under W yoming law, the insurer’s duty to defend turns on whether “‘the alleged
claim [against the insured] rationally falls within the policy coverage.’” Id. at
1244 (quoting Shoshone First Bank v. Pac. Employers Ins. Co., 2 P.3d 510, 513
(W yo. 2000)). To resolve a duty-to-defend claim, the court examines the policy
to determine its scope and then review s the complaint in the underlying law suit to
determine whether the claims alleged therein could rationally fall within that
scope. Lawrence v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 133 P.3d 976, 980 (W yo. 2006);
Reisig v. Union Ins. Co., 870 P.2d 1066, 1068 (W yo. 1994). That is precisely
what the district court did here.
The policy provided that AEIC would undertake plaintiffs’ defense if a
lawsuit sought damages otherw ise covered by the policy. See Aplt. App. at 252
(section A.1.a). Property damage was covered if “caused by an ‘occurrence,’” id.
(section A.1.b.(1)(a)), defined in turn as “an accident,” id. at 263 (section F.12.).
Reinforcing the limited nature of this coverage, the policy specifically excluded
property damage “expected or intended from the standpoint of the insured.” Id. at
254 (section B.1.a.). W yoming courts have found such language unambiguous,
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attributing to the term “accident” its commonsense meaning. M atlack v.
M ountain W. Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co., 44 P.3d 73, 77 (W yo. 2002). A policy
of this sort does not create a duty to defend the insured against intentional tort
claims, such as conversion or trespass, or claims that, though not intentional torts,
involve a material element of deliberate conduct, such as misrepresentation
(which, even if only negligent, requires an intent to induce reliance) and breach of
contract. See, e.g., id. at 80; Reisig, 870 P.2d at 1069-71; First Wyo. Bank v.
Cont’l Ins. Co., 860 P.2d 1094, 1099-1101 (W yo. 1993).
The Oregon lawsuit was brought by the purchaser of assets belonging to a
cellular-phone technology firm in bankruptcy proceedings. The purchaser’s basic
complaint was that trade secrets and other assets of the firm that should have been
transferred to the bankruptcy trustee and thence to him had been misappropriated
by some of its directors and others who used them to pursue a competing business
that essentially continued the bankrupt firm. The pleadings asserted several broad
claims, three of w hich had subsidiary aiding-and-abetting and acting-in-concert
“counts” implicating the Notwen plaintiffs for their alleged facilitation of the
wrongful scheme. 2 The three claims were for misappropriation of trade secrets,
2
The pleadings in the Oregon suit were amended numerous times. The
Notwen plaintiffs did not even appear until the Third Amended Complaint.
Plaintiffs assert that to the extent subsequent am endments, which were largely
organizational, added any allegations relevant to our inquiry here, they provided
(continued...)
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intentional interference with contract, and intentional interference with economic
relations. In the acting-in-concert counts for these claims, the Notwen plaintiffs
were alleged to have “agreed . . . to become part of the group pursuing this plan
and its associated activities,” Aplt. App. at 215, 222, 225. In the aiding and
abetting counts, they were alleged to have provided funding, “monitored,
reviewed, and provided influential business advice,” “approved and directed the
continuing misappropriation and concealment of [the bankrupt firm’s] trade
secrets and other assets from the trustee in bankruptcy,” solicited investment for
the scheme, and funded litigation “in order to hinder, deter, delay and prevent [the
purchaser] from acquiring the [bankrupt firm’s assets] to which he is rightfully
entitled.” Id. at 218-220 , 223, 226. M ore generally, the complaint alleged that
the Notwen plaintiffs “at all material times had knowledge of the wrongfulness of
the [scheme detailed in the complaint].” Id. at 218.
Comparing such intent-driven claims to the accidental-occurrence condition
in plaintiffs’ liability policy, the district court concluded that the Oregon law suit
did not trigger a duty to defend. W e fully agree, and none of the points raised by
plaintiffs persuade us otherw ise.
2
(...continued)
additional support for plaintiffs’ position. Aplt. Opening Br. at 9. W e therefore
focus on the last pleading, the Fifth Amended Complaint.
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Plaintiffs argue that under Oregon law a claim for misappropriation of trade
secrets can be based on the use of secrets by someone who knows or only has
reason to know of their wrongful derivation and, thus, such a claim need not
always constitute a strictly intentional tort. But “[i]n determining the question of
whether the intentional tort[s] of [misappropriation and intentional interference]
can be considered an ‘accident,’ we look only to the allegations of the Complaint
filed [in the underlying lawsuit] ,” Reisig, 870 P.2d at 1069 (emphasis added), and
this inquiry focuses on “the facts in the complaint,” M atlack, 44 P.3d at 80
(emphasis added). As set out above, the facts alleged regarding the scheme in the
Oregon suit, and plaintiffs’ participation in particular, clearly reflect knowing
misconduct. W hile the W yoming Supreme Court has indicated there may be
circumstances in which an intentional act based on a mistake could still qualify as
an accidental occurrence if the mistake had “some basis in fact” and was “held in
good faith,” id. at 78, the factual allegations against plaintiffs in the Oregon suit
clearly provide no occasion for application of this limited exception.
Plaintiffs also seek to bring themselves within the principle, accepted by
some courts, that a business liability policy may entitle an employer to insist on
the insurer’s defense against vicarious liability/respondeat-superior claims based
on otherw ise excluded intentional torts of employees. They insist this principle is
implicated here because the Oregon case included allegations of wrongdoing on
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the part of Lisa deCosta, Notwen Corporation’s director of investments. But no
vicarious liability claim was asserted in the Oregon case. Indeed, the pleadings
alleged that all of the Notwen plaintiffs had know ledge of the wrongful enterprise
that M s. deCosta helped facilitate for them and that she acted with the approval of
defendant Newton himself. Aplt. App. at 218. In acting as the agent for the
Notwen plaintiffs she was alleged, in short, to have been instrumental to the
effectuation of their own wrongful designs.
In a last effort to forestall the result dictated by application of the
controlling law to the allegations in the Oregon pleadings, plaintiffs argue that the
district court should have considered a statement taken from plaintiff William
Newton in which he denied knowledge of the wrongdoing alleged in that case.
Plaintiffs insist this statement creates a factual dispute as to the intentionality of
Newton’s conduct and, consequently, as to coverage under the AEIC policy.
There are at least two basic problems with this argument. First, it runs afoul of
the rule, repeated without qualification in the W yoming cases we have discussed,
that duty-to-defend claims must turn on the allegations in the underlying law suit.
Second, the argument is patently circular, rendering the exclusion of intentional
torts from the liability policy meaningless, at least under the circumstances
presented here: it asserts, in effect, that a duty to defend against intentional-tort
claims excluded under the policy is nevertheless triggered whenever the insured
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denies he committed the alleged intentional torts, i.e., whenever the insured seeks
to defend itself (w ith the insurer’s assistance) in a law suit alleging intentional-tort
claims. W e do not think W yoming law renders the plain and explicit exclusion of
intentional-tort claims from a liability policy so insubstantial.
The district court correctly held that the businessowners liability policy at
issue here did not impose on AEIC a duty to defend plaintiffs on the claims
asserted against them in the Oregon lawsuit. Accordingly, summary judgment
was properly entered for AEIC on plaintiffs’ claims for breach of contract, bad
faith, statutory interest and attorney fees.
The judgment of the district court is A FFIRM ED. Appellants’ motion to
present oral argument is DENIED.
Entered for the Court
W esley E. Brown
District Judge
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