NOT PRECEDENTIAL
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
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No. 17-2774
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PATRICIA R. BELTZ; JOSEPH S. SULLIVAN; ANITA SULLIVAN, Individually and
on behalf of all others similarly situated, and derivatively on behalf of nominal defendant
Erie Insurance Exchange,
Appellants
v.
ERIE INDEMNITY COMPANY; KAJ AHLMANN; JOHN T. BAILY; SAMUEL P.
BLACK, III; J. RALPH BORNEMAN, JR.; TERRENCE W. CAVANAUGH; WILSON
C. COONEY; LUANN DATESH; PATRICIA A. GOLDMAN; JONATHAN HIRT
HAGEN; THOMAS B. HAGEN; C. SCOTT HARTZ. SAMUEL P. KATZ.
GWENDOLYN KING; CLAUDE C. LILLY, III; MARTIN J. LIPPERT; GEORGE R.
LUCORE; JEFFREY A. LUDROF; EDMUND J. MEHL; HENRY N. NASSAU;
THOMAS W. PALMER; MARTIN P. SHEFFIELD; SETH E. SCHONFIELD;
RICHARD L. STOVER; JAN R. VAN GORDER; ELIZABETH A. HIRT VORSHECK;
HARRY H. WEIL; ROBERT C. WILBURN; ERIE INSURANCE EXCHANGE,
Nominal Defendant
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On Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Western District of Pennsylvania
(D.C. No. 1-16-cv-00179)
District Judge: Honorable Barbara Jacobs Rothstein
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Submitted Under Third Circuit L.A.R. 34.1(a)
May 2, 2018
Before: SMITH, Chief Judge, HARDIMAN, and
RESTREPO, Circuit Judges.
(Filed: May 10, 2018)
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OPINION*
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HARDIMAN, Circuit Judge.
This appeal comes to us from an order of the District Court that dismissed state
law claims filed by a putative class of subscribers of Erie Insurance Exchange (the
Exchange). We will affirm.
I
The Exchange is a subscriber-owned reciprocal insurance exchange organized
under Pennsylvania law. Since the Exchange itself is unincorporated and has no officers
or employees, its affairs are managed by the Erie Indemnity Company (Indemnity). The
relationship among the Exchange, its subscribers, and Indemnity is governed in large part
by a written Subscriber’s Agreement. The Subscriber’s Agreement appoints Indemnity as
each subscriber’s attorney-in-fact and provides that Indemnity will “retain up to 25% of
all premiums written or assumed” by the Exchange, “as compensation for” serving in that
role. App. 110. This case is the latest skirmish in a long-running dispute over whether
Indemnity may take compensation from the Exchange beyond that described in the
Subscriber’s Agreement.
Plaintiffs sued Indemnity and more than two dozen of its current and former
directors in the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania.
*
This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7 does
not constitute binding precedent.
2
They asserted direct claims for breach of the Subscriber’s Agreement, breach of fiduciary
duty, and conversion, along with derivative claims on behalf of the Exchange for
conversion, breach of fiduciary duty, and unjust enrichment. The District Court dismissed
the complaint for failure to state a claim, and Plaintiffs filed this appeal.
II
Indemnity is a publicly-traded Pennsylvania corporation overseen by a Board of
Directors. Plaintiffs allege that as a practical matter Indemnity is controlled by a small
group of individuals from the family of company founder H.O. Hirt. Upon Hirt’s death in
1982, ownership of Indemnity’s voting shares passed to trusts controlled by Hirt’s
children. The Hirt family trusts still own enough of those shares to determine the
outcome of any shareholder vote, and the Board elected by those votes is mostly made up
of Hirt family members and their close associates. Plaintiffs claim that insiders on
Indemnity’s Board paid themselves money that belonged to the Exchange. The complaint
alleges that Defendants misappropriated two categories of funds, Service Charges and
Additional Fees.
The Exchange levies a Service Charge on subscribers who elect to pay their
premiums in installments rather than in a lump sum. Those Service Charges are deposited
into the Exchange’s accounts, rather than Indemnity’s, and until 1997 that’s where they
would stay, treated as ordinary “revenue . . . available for the ultimate benefit of all
Subscribers.” App. 90 (Compl.¶¶ 69–70). But beginning in the fall of that year, “[t]he
Directors approved the taking of a portion of the Service Charges” from the Exchange.
App. 90 (Compl. ¶¶ 71–73). That practice continued until 1999, when “Indemnity began
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taking all of the Service Charges revenue.” App. 90 (Compl. ¶ 74). Plaintiffs allege that
since 1999 Indemnity has continued, with the Board’s approval, to “take for itself all of
the Service Charges revenue which otherwise would have been retained by Exchange.”
App. 90–91 (Compl. ¶¶ 75–76).
In addition to premiums and Service Charges, the Exchange also charges what
Plaintiffs term Additional Fees. Additional Fees are assessed “for checks or other
payments returned unpaid, for cancellation notices issued due to non-payment of a policy,
and for reinstatements of policies following a lapse in coverage after non-payment
cancellations.” App. 91 (Compl. ¶ 77). Like the Service Charges, Additional Fees are
initially paid to the Exchange and later transferred to Indemnity with the approval of the
Board. Plaintiffs allege that since 2008 that arrangement has siphoned off revenue that
would otherwise “be available for the ultimate benefit of [the] Exchange and the
Subscribers.” App. 91 (Compl.¶ 80).
III1
Four claims arising under Pennsylvania law are at issue: breach of contract, breach
of fiduciary duty, conversion, and unjust enrichment. For the reasons that follow, we hold
that the District Court did not err in concluding that Plaintiffs failed to state a claim.
1
The District Court had jurisdiction under the Class Action Fairness Act, 28
U.S.C. § 1332(d), and we have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We review
dismissals for failure to state a claim de novo, applying the same familiar pleading
standards as did the District Court. See Tatis v. Allied Interstate, LLC, 882 F.3d 422, 426
(3d Cir. 2018).
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A
The District Court held that Plaintiffs’ claim for breach of the Subscriber’s
Agreement fails because that contract’s allocation of up to 25% of premiums to
Indemnity “does not govern the separate and additional charges at issue” here. Beltz v.
Erie Indem. Co., 279 F. Supp. 3d 569, 580–81 (W.D. Pa. 2017).
Applying Pennsylvania law, “we must start with the language used by the parties
in the written contract.” E.R. Linde Constr. Corp. v. Goodwin, 68 A.3d 346, 349 (Pa.
Super. Ct. 2013). We “will not imply a contract that differs from the one to which the
parties explicitly consented,” id., and by its terms insurance premiums are the only funds
governed by the Subscriber’s Agreement. Though not itself an insurance policy, the
Agreement obligates subscribers to “pay [their] policy premiums,” App. 110
(Subscriber’s Agreement § 1), empowers Indemnity to “collect premiums,” id.
(Subscriber’s Agreement § 2), authorizes Indemnity to “retain up to 25% of all
premiums,” id. (Subscriber’s Agreement § 3), and expressly limits how Indemnity may
dispose of the remainder, id. By contrast, the Subscriber’s Agreement is silent on
Indemnity’s collection and disposition of money from any other source. The express
terms of the Agreement are detailed and speak only to premiums, and we decline
Plaintiffs’ invitation to infer from them additional restrictions on other funds.
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B
Plaintiffs have forfeited their fiduciary duty claims by advancing a different
argument on appeal than they did in the District Court.2 Under our precedent, to preserve
an argument on appeal, “a party must make the same argument in the District Court that
[it] makes on appeal.” United States v. Joseph, 730 F.3d 336, 341 (3d Cir. 2013); see also
Spireas v. Comm’r of Internal Rev., 886 F.3d 315, 321 n.9 (3d Cir. 2018) (explaining that
Joseph applies to civil cases). Arguments are identical if they depend on the same legal
rule or standard and the same facts. Id. at 342.
In the District Court, Plaintiffs “ma[d]e clear . . . that their claims involve[d]
ongoing decisions . . . by Indemnity . . . every year.” App. 484 (Opp’n to Mot. to
Dismiss). Plaintiffs argued that Indemnity “actively decided, each and every year, to
unlawfully take and retain the Service Charges and Additional Fees.” Id. In short,
Plaintiffs’ argument to the District Court was that the Board had committed “affirmative
acts constitut[ing] a continuing . . . breach of Indemnity’s fiduciary duties.” Id.
Plaintiffs have inverted that theory on appeal. Instead of a series of “affirmative
acts,” Plaintiffs base their fiduciary duty claims on “a sustained or systematic failure of
the board to exercise oversight.” Opening Br. 40 (citations omitted). And with the new
2
Defendants Thomas and Jonathan Hagen argue that the Plaintiffs lack standing to
assert direct fiduciary duty claims. We disagree. As Plaintiffs point out, the Exchange’s
subscribers have agreed to mutual indemnification, such that money “taken from
Exchange’s accounts . . . result[s] in an injury to each Subscriber by diminishing the
funds available to indemnify one another.” Plaintiffs’ stake in this litigation, although
indirect, is concrete and specific enough to establish Article III standing.
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theory come new facts: Plaintiffs now emphasize that there is no record that “the Board
ever approved that Indemnity could take all of the Service Charges,” and that the Board
“never specifically approved, disapproved, or otherwise made any formal decision . . . as
to the retention of the Additional Fees.” Id. at 41–42.
Plaintiffs raise two points in response, neither of which persuades us to reach the
merits or the timeliness of their fiduciary duty claims. First, they cite to four places in the
record they contend adequately presented their “failure of oversight” argument to the
District Court. Two of those citations are to allegations in the complaint rather than to
arguments made in opposing dismissal. The other two citations are isolated references to
the Board having “authorized and/or tacitly approved” a particular action. App. 472, 537.
Particularly when compared to the overwhelming emphasis Plaintiffs put on their
“affirmative acts” theory, those unexplained references were not enough to preserve a
failed-oversight argument.
Plaintiffs’ second argument—that we should decline to enforce their forfeiture
because at the motion-to-dismiss stage the parties have not invested energy in discovery
tailored to one legal theory or another—is equally unavailing. While Plaintiffs are correct
that “ensuring . . . the necessary evidentiary development” is one purpose of the appellate
waiver rule, Reply Br. 18, the rule also “promot[es] the finality of judgments and
conserv[es] judicial resources [by] preventing district courts from being reversed on
grounds that were never urged or argued before them.” In re Diet Drugs Prod. Liab.
Litig., 706 F.3d 217, 226 (3d Cir. 2013). We decline to excuse the forfeiture to allow
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Plaintiffs to raise an argument that is nearly the opposite of the one they made in the
District Court. Spireas, 886 F.3d at 321 n.9 (citation omitted).
C
We also agree with the District Court that the conversion claims against Indemnity
are barred by Pennsylvania’s two-year statute of limitations. See 42 Pa. Cons. Stat.
§ 5524(3). The limitations period began to run “when [Plaintiffs were] harmed and not
when the precise amount or extent of damages [was] determined.” Adamski v. Allstate
Ins. Co, 738 A.2d 1033, 1042 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1999). The harms underlying the Plaintiffs’
conversion claims had all materialized by 2008 at the latest—by that date it was the
continuing practice of Indemnity to claim all of the disputed funds for itself. The
Plaintiffs were well aware at the time that Indemnity claimed the monies at issue here,
and they cannot avoid the statute of limitations now by asserting that Indemnity’s
continuing claim was really a string of separate conversions. See id. at 1042–43.
D
Finally, we perceive no error in the District Court’s conclusion that Plaintiffs are
judicially estopped from pursuing their unjust enrichment claims. Judicial estoppel bars
“a party from prevailing in one phase of a case on an argument and then relying on a
contradictory argument to prevail in another phase.” New Hampshire v. Maine, 532 U.S
742, 749 (2001) (citation omitted). In a related appeal to the Commonwealth Court from
a decision of the Pennsylvania Department of Insurance, Plaintiffs disclaimed any
allegation “that the Transactions were somehow unfair or unreasonable.” Erie Ins. Exch.
ex rel. Sullivan v. Pa. Ins. Dep’t, 133 A.3d 102, 113 (Pa. Commw. Ct. 2016). The
8
Commonwealth Court—taking care to state that it was “expressly bind[ing]” Plaintiffs to
that representation—held that the complaint in the state court action did not “challenge
the fairness and reasonableness of the Transactions from a commercial or even regulatory
standpoint.” Id. That determination, in turn, was the linchpin of the court’s decision
vacating the Department’s order for lack of jurisdiction. Id.
Having already prevailed in state court by representing that they do not challenge
the fairness of the relevant payments, Plaintiffs may not argue the opposite to this Court.
But that is exactly what they would have to do in order to press their unjust enrichment
claims, since Pennsylvania law requires a showing of inequity in order to prevail. Mark
Hershey Farms, Inc. v. Robinson, 171 A.3d 810, 817 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2017).
* * *
We will affirm the judgment of the District Court.
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