NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
File Name: 20a0715n.06
No. 20-5306
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
OUTDOOR VENTURE CORPORATION, ) FILED
J.C. EGNEW, and L. RAY MONCRIEF, ) Dec 22, 2020
) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
Plaintiffs-Appellants, )
)
v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
PHILADELPHIA INDEMNITY ) EASTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY
INSURANCE CO., et al, )
)
Defendants-Appellees. )
BEFORE: DAUGHTREY, NALBANDIAN, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.
MARTHA CRAIG DAUGHTREY, Circuit Judge. Plaintiffs Outdoor Venture
Corporation (OVC), J.C. Egnew, and L. Ray Moncrief appeal a district court judgment denying
their requests that defendants Grange Mutual Casualty Company and Scottsdale Indemnity
Company reimburse them for the attorneys’ fees and costs incurred by the plaintiffs in defending
themselves in underlying lawsuits. Because we conclude that the terms of the relevant insurance
policies do not require such reimbursement of fees related to the hiring by the plaintiffs of
independent counsel, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Although this appeal now involves only three plaintiffs and two defendants, the action, as
originally filed, included additional parties. In one of its opinions in the course of this litigation,
the district court appropriately identified those parties and expertly summarized the relevant facts
No. 20-5306, Outdoor Venture Corp., et al. v. Phila. Indem. Ins. Co., et al.
of the present lawsuit. We thus see no reason to offer an additional summary of those facts and
instead adopt the following district court statement of the background of the litigation:
The plaintiffs in this matter are three corporations and two individuals who
were officers of the corporations.
The three corporations are Stearns Manufacturing and its successor Outdoor
Venture Corporation (together, “OVC”) and Kentucky Highlands Investment
Corporation. The two individual plaintiffs are J.C. Egnew and L. Ray Moncrief.
During at least the relevant time, Egnew was the president of OVC. Moncrief was
a director of OVC and an officer of Kentucky Highlands.
The root of this dispute is three lawsuits filed against various of the plaintiffs
by a company called LEEP, Inc. and one of LEEP’s insiders, Roger Blanken. LEEP
alleged that it entered into “joint venture negotiations” with OVC. During the
negotiations, Egnew signed on OVC’s behalf a non-disclosure and non-
circumvention agreement (the “NDA”) which prevented OVC from contacting
LEEP’s lenders or customers.
Eventually, LEEP and OVC signed a letter of intent which “contemplated
the formation of a new company to manufacture, in Kentucky, steel insulated
building panels.” The companies were unable to reach an agreement, however, and
negotiations ceased in August 2012.
At the time, LEEP owed more than $7 million to Fortress Credit
Corporation and was in default under the terms of the parties’ financing agreement.
After joint venture negotiations between LEEP and OVC ceased, Kentucky
Highlands purchased Fortress’s rights under the financing agreement. Kentucky
Highlands then repossessed LEEP’s assets and sold the assets to plaintiff Stearns
Manufacturing, which is a subsidiary of OVC. Stearns Manufacturing no longer
exists; OVC now owns Stearns’ assets and liabilities.
With the three lawsuits underlying this action, LEEP and Blanken asserted
that Kentucky Highlands wrongfully repossessed their assets.
The first lawsuit was brought by LEEP in Jefferson Circuit Court against
Kentucky Highlands, OVC, Egnew, and Moncrief (the “LEEP lawsuit[”]). With
this lawsuit, LEEP alleged that the insureds had devised a scheme to “force LEEP
out of business and to take over LEEP’s business by virtue of obtaining LEEP’s
confidential information and then purchasing the Fortress note.” LEEP alleged that,
after buying the note, the insureds gave notice of default to LEEP and took
possession of LEEP’s facility and its assets and “took over LEEP’s business and
contacted LEEP’s customers, all in an effort to destroy LEEP and to take over
LEEP’s business through unlawful means.” LEEP sought $30 million in damages.
The second lawsuit was brought by Blanken, who sued Kentucky Highlands
and OVC in this Court. See Blanken, et al. v. Kentucky Highlands Investment
Corporation, et al., No. 6:13-47-DLB (E.D. Ky. filed April 22, 2013) (the “Blanken
Kentucky action”). With this action, Blanken asserted that he—not LEEP—owned
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a major piece of equipment repossessed by Kentucky Highlands called the
Bradbury Roll Forming Machine and, thus, Kentucky Highlands had wrongfully
repossessed it and sold it to OVC.
The third lawsuit was also brought by Blanken, this time in state court in
Pennsylvania (the “Blanken Pennsylvania action”). In the Pennsylvania action,
Blanken again sued Kentucky Highlands and OVC again asserting that the insureds
wrongfully repossessed certain other inventory that belonged to him, not to LEEP.
That action was later removed to federal court in Pennsylvania, which transferred
the case to this Court. See Blanken v. Kentucky Highlands Investment Corporation,
et al., 6:14-cv-202-DLB (E.D. Ky. Removed March 7, 2014).
Kentucky Highlands, OVC, Egnew, and Moncrief were insured by at least
one of the defendant insurers in this action: Grange Mutual Casualty Co.,
Scottsdale Indemnity Company, or Auto-Owners/Owners Insurance Company
(together, “Owners”).1 These insurers asserted, however, that the claims brought
by LEEP and Blanken against their insureds were not covered under the applicable
insurance policies. Grange refused to defend their insureds at all. Owners offered
to defend the insureds under a “reservation of rights” and appointed counsel to
represent them. Scottsdale did the same, except with regard to Moncrief, who
Scottsdale refused to defend at all.
The insureds, however, retained their own counsel to represent them. With
this action, they seek reimbursement for the amounts they paid to defend
themselves in the three lawsuits. They assert a breach of contract claim and seek a
declaratory judgment that the insurance companies were obligated to defend them
in the underlying actions. They also assert claims for statutory bad faith and
common-law bad faith against Scottsdale and Grange.
Each of the insurance company defendants assert a counterclaim in which
they ask the Court to declare that they have no duty to reimburse their insureds for
the costs incurred in defending the underlying actions. In addition, Owners asks
that Kentucky Highlands be required to reimburse it for the costs of defending it in
the underlying actions. None of the insurers seek to recover any amounts paid by
them to settle the underlying actions.
The insureds move for partial summary judgment, asking for judgment in
their favor that the insurance companies had a duty to defend them in the underlying
actions. Each of the insurance companies also moves for summary judgment,
asking the Court to find that they had no duty to defend the plaintiffs.
Outdoor Venture Corp. v. Phila. Indem. Ins. Co., No. 6:16-cv-182-KKC, 2018 WL 4656400, at
*1–2 (E.D. Ky. Sept. 27, 2018) (citations omitted).
1
The insureds’ claims against a fourth insurer, Philadelphia Indemnity Insurance Company, were voluntarily
dismissed by the insureds.
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After the plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed their claims against Philadelphia Indemnity
Insurance Company, the district court issued a lengthy opinion in which it concluded that summary
judgment should be entered in favor of Grange and Owners because neither insurer had a
contractual duty to defend the plaintiffs in the underlying actions. Id. at *4–11. The district court
further held that Scottsdale “complied with its duty to defend OVC and Egnew by appointing
counsel to represent them in the LEEP and Blanken actions,” but “breached its duty to defend
Moncrief in the LEEP and Blanken actions.” Id. at *19.
Subsequently, the district court entered agreed orders that dismissed all claims by the
plaintiffs against Owners, all counterclaims by Owners against the plaintiffs, all claims by
Moncrief against Scottsdale, and Scottsdale’s counterclaim against Moncrief. Outdoor Venture
Corp. v. Phila. Indem. Ins. Co., No. 6:16-cv-182-KKC, 2020 WL 891213, at *1 (E.D. Ky. Feb.
24, 2020). Finally, the district court granted summary judgment to Grange and Scottsdale on the
plaintiffs’ bad-faith claims and dismissed any counterclaims by the insurers as moot. Id. at *2.
Thus, the only issues now remaining before us on appeal involve the plaintiffs’ claims that Grange
and Scottsdale are liable for reimbursement of the expenses incurred by the plaintiffs in obtaining
independent counsel to defend themselves in the underlying lawsuits.
DISCUSSION
Standard of Review
We review de novo a district court’s grant of summary judgment. See Dodd v. Donahoe,
715 F.3d 151, 155 (6th Cir. 2013). Summary judgment is appropriate only “if the movant shows
that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a
matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). A genuine dispute of material fact exists when, assuming
the truth of the non-moving party=s evidence and construing all inferences from that evidence in
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the light most favorable to the non-moving party, there is sufficient evidence for a trier of fact to
find for that party. See Ciminillo v. Streicher, 434 F.3d 461, 464 (6th Cir. 2006).
Applicable Law
The district court exercised its diversity jurisdiction over this dispute pursuant to the
provisions of 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Consequently, on appeal we are obligated to apply the substantive
law of the forum state—here, the Commonwealth of Kentucky. See Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins,
304 U.S. 64, 78 (1938); Fox v. Amazon.com, Inc., 930 F.3d 415, 422 (6th Cir. 2019) (citation
omitted).
At issue in this appeal are the terms of insurance policies issued by Grange and Scottsdale
in favor of OVC and its officers and directors, specifically those terms setting forth the
requirements for the insurance companies to defend the plaintiffs against the allegations made by
LEEP and Blanken. The Kentucky Supreme Court has held consistently that the construction of
insurance contracts generally is considered a matter of law to be determined by the court, see, e.g.,
Bituminous Cas. Corp. v. Kenway Contracting, Inc., 240 S.W.3d 633, 638 (Ky. 2007), and “[t]he
determination of whether a defense is required must be made at the outset of the litigation.” James
Graham Brown Found., Inc. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 814 S.W.2d 273, 279 (Ky. 1991).
We too have recognized explicitly that “[u]nder Kentucky law, a court should determine at the
outset of litigation whether an insurance company has a duty to defend its insured by comparing
the allegations in the underlying complaint with the terms of the insurance policy.” Westfield Ins.
Co. v. Tech Dry, Inc., 336 F.3d 503, 507 (6th Cir. 2003) (citation omitted).
In making that determination, as well as in construing other contractual provisions, “[t]he
language of a written insurance policy is given its plain meaning, unless terms are otherwise
defined therein.” Am. Mining Ins. Co. v. Peters Farms, LLC, 557 S.W.3d 293, 296 (Ky. 2018)
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(citation omitted). If the meaning of any contract term is ambiguous, however, the ambiguity must
be “interpreted against the drafter-insurer.” Id. (citation omitted).
Claims Against Grange
The district court ruled that Grange had no duty to defend the plaintiffs against the
allegations made by LEEP and Blanken. Specifically, the district court concluded that Grange was
required to defend its insureds only from claims of “bodily injury,” “property damage,” or
“personal and advertising injury.” Because, according to the district court, the lawsuits filed by
LEEP and Blanken did not allege actions that fell within the definitional parameters of those
contractual terms, no duty to defend ensued.
Bodily Injury or Property Damage
Pursuant to the provisions of Grange’s policies, the company agreed:
We will pay those sums that the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as
damages because of “bodily injury” or “property damage” to which this insurance
applies. We will have the right and duty to defend the insured against any “suit”
seeking those damages. However, we will have no duty to defend the insured
against any “suit” seeking damages for “bodily injury” or “property damage” to
which this insurance does not apply.
More specifically, Grange’s liability for, and duty to defend against, bodily injury and property
damage came into play only if the alleged bodily injury or property damage was caused by an
“occurrence” in the coverage territory during the policy period. Because the policies defined an
“occurrence” to mean “an accident,” coverage—and thus a duty to defend—was excluded in
situations in which the bodily injury or property damage was “expected or intended from the
standpoint of the insured.”
Both the LEEP complaint and the Blanken complaints alleged that actions undertaken by
the plaintiffs resulted in machinery and other assets belonging to LEEP or to Blanken being taken
without legal authorization. According to the Grange policies, such takings could be considered
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“property damage,” which the policies defined as either “[p]hysical injury to tangible property” or
“[l]oss of use of tangible property that is not physically injured.” As the policies also provided,
however, for coverage to exist for such property damage, the physical injury or the loss of use
must not have been “expected or intended from the standpoint of the insured” and must not have
arisen out of a failure by the insured (or a person acting on the behalf of an insured) “to perform a
contract or agreement in accordance with its terms.”
Although the Grange policies at issue in this appeal did not define the term “accident”
explicitly, Kentucky courts have taken numerous opportunities to offer guidance for construing
such a contractual provision. In Fryman v. Pilot Life Insurance Co., 704 S.W.2d 205, 206 (Ky.
1986), for example, the Kentucky Supreme Court noted that because the word “accident,” “as used
in insurance policies, [has] never acquired a technical meaning in law, [it] must be interpreted
according to the usage of the average [person].” Thus, “[a]n accident is generally understood as
an unfortunate consequence which befalls an actor through . . . inattention, carelessness or perhaps
for no explicable reason at all.” Id. “Conversely, a consequence which is a result of plan, design
or intent is commonly understood as not accidental.” Id.
More than a quarter of a century later, following years of attempting to divine the
applicability of the concept of “accident” to different fact patterns, see, e.g., Bituminous Cas.
Corp., 240 S.W.3d at 638–40, and Cincinnati Ins. Co. v. Motorists Mut. Ins. Co., 306 S.W.3d 69
(Ky. 2010), the Kentucky Supreme Court made clear in Martin/Elias Properties, LLC v. Acuity,
544 S.W.3d 639, 642–43 (Ky. 2018), “that the legal analysis used to determine whether something
constitutes an accident for issues of [commercial general liability] coverage is the doctrine of
fortuity, which encompasses both intent and control.” (Emphasis in original.) Specifically, courts
must determine:
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1) whether the insured intended the event to occur; and 2) whether the event was a
“‘chance event’ beyond the control of the insured.” If the insured did not intend
the event or result to occur, and the event or result that occurred was a chance event
beyond the control of the insured, then [commercial general liability] coverage
covering accidents will apply to the benefit of the insured.
Id. at 643 (emphasis in original) (footnote omitted).
Arguing that their actions in repossessing assets belonging to LEEP and Blanken fell under
the policies’ definitions of an “accident,” the plaintiffs point to a section heading in the Bituminous
Casualty opinion that states, “Accident includes intentional acts that cause unexpected or
unintended results from the standpoint of the insured.” Bituminous Cas. Corp., 240 S.W.3d at
638. They thus insist that, although they did intend to repossess the LEEP and Blanken assets,
they did not intend to interfere with any “legitimate and senior rights” of LEEP and Blanken. As
a result, they maintain that the actual interference with what were alleged to be superior rights
must be considered an act beyond their control.
Such an argument puts too fine a point on an interpretation of the holding in Martin/Elias
Properties. In essence, what the plaintiffs are arguing is that they intended to take possession of
the assets of LEEP and Blanken, but only if such repossession was not improper, or in other words,
did not result in a denial of insurance coverage. Such a formulation of the plaintiffs’ actions turns
the concepts of accident and fortuity on their heads. Indeed, the plaintiffs intended the exact
damage that occurred—the seizure of the assets of LEEP and Blanken. The decision to seize the
assets, as well as the method of doing so, was completely within the plaintiffs’ control and thus
cannot be considered accidental.
The Grange policies also explicitly excluded from coverage any damage to property that
was not physically injured but which arose out of a failure of the insured “to perform a contract or
agreement in accordance with its terms.” In its second amended complaint in Jefferson Circuit
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Court, LEEP alleged that Egnew, as president of OVC, signed a non-disclosure and non-
circumvention agreement with LEEP that “precluded OVC, its agents and representatives from
contacting any of LEEP’s creditors or lenders or customers or suppliers.” According to LEEP,
OVC and Egnew breached that agreement “by using confidential and proprietary information
provided, including LEEP’s lender negotiations and non-public lender agreements for a lucrative
settlement of debt . . . .”
LEEP’s allegation regarding the plaintiffs’ failure to abide by the terms of the non-
disclosure and non-circumvention agreement brought the plaintiffs’ actions squarely within yet
another explicit exclusion to coverage for property damage under the Grange policies. Because
Grange thus had no duty to defend the plaintiffs in the underlying actions alleging property
damage, Grange also has no responsibility for now reimbursing the plaintiffs for attorneys’ fees
and costs associated with retaining independent counsel.
Personal and Advertising Injury
Under the provisions of the commercial general liability policy Grange had with the
plaintiffs, the insurance company also agreed:
We will pay those sums that the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as
damages because of “personal and advertising injury” to which this insurance
applies. We will have the right and duty to defend the insured against any “suit”
seeking those damages. However, we will have no duty to defend the insured
against any “suit” seeking damages for “personal and advertising injury” to which
this insurance does not apply.
In pertinent part, the policy defined “personal and advertising injury” as injury arising out
of the “wrongful entry into . . . premises that a person occupies” or “[o]ral or written publication,
in any manner, of material that slanders or libels a person or organization or disparages a person’s
or organization’s goods, products, or services.” The policy included specific exclusions from
coverage, however, for any such injury “caused by or at the direction of the insured with the
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knowledge that the act would violate the rights of another and would inflict ‘personal and
advertising injury’” or any such injury “arising out of oral or written publication of material, if
done by or at the direction of the insured with knowledge of its falsity.”
The plaintiffs argue on appeal that the district court could not properly determine Grange’s
duty to defend them against LEEP’s2 claims of “personal and advertising injury” merely by
examination of the allegations in the complaint in the underlying action. In putting forth that
argument, the plaintiffs assert that, at the pleading stage of the litigation, it is impossible to
establish whether they knowingly violated the rights of another—a prerequisite to invocation of
the exclusion provision of the policy. Rather, the plaintiffs contend that such information can be
ascertained only through information obtained pursuant to discovery or by a finder of fact at trial.
As we have noted already, however, Kentucky law calls upon courts to determine an
insurer’s duty to defend at the outset of litigation by reference to the allegations in the underlying
complaint. Westfield Ins. Co., 336 F.3d at 507. Here, the allegations of “personal and advertising
injury” in LEEP’s complaint made clear that the actions undertaken by the plaintiffs fall outside
the coverage provisions of Grange’s policies because of the plaintiffs’ alleged knowledge of the
consequences of those actions. Specifically, LEEP’s second amended complaint against OVC,
Egnew, Moncrief, Kentucky Highlands Investment Corporation, and others alleged, in pertinent
part:
93. All Defendants were specifically instructed not to contact either Fortress or the
landlord, and all Defendants agreed to keep the information provided by LEEP
confidential and to make no contact with either Fortress or the landlord.
94. From on or about early 2012 through December 26, 2012, the Defendants
conspired, planned, organized, and schemed, to force LEEP out of business and to
take over LEEP’s business by virtue of obtaining LEEP’s confidential information
and then purchasing the Fortress note.
2
Blanken did not allege “personal and advertising injury” in either of his underlying complaints.
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95. Nordstrom[, LEEP’s president,] communicated to Defendants his private
negotiations with Fortress, and they used that confidential information to approach
Fortress to obtain an assignment of the Note for only $750,000 and then give notice
of default to LEEP[,] demand over $7 million dollars to be paid immediately, take
possession of [a] former LEEP facility without any legal foreclosure action and
wrongfully repossess all LEEP assets. Defendants substantially profited from the
confidence it gained through LEEP.
96. On or about December 26, 2012 and continuing thereafter, Defendant, KHI,
being assisted by other Defendants, then wrongfully entered the landlord’s
premises and took manufactured LEEPCore™ structural insulated panels and
removed the Bradbury Roll Forming lines and related support equipment and
removed other equipment and supplies belonging to LEEP and others.
97. KHI in concert with other Defendants wrongfully hired away the LEEP key
employees Nordstrom had previously identified in confidential disclosures and
took over LEEP’s business and contacted LEEP’s customers, all in an effort to
destroy LEEP and to take over LEEP’s business through unlawful means.
98. Defendant, KHI, in concert with other Defendants wrongfully locked LEEP
out of its Somerset fabrication building in an attempt to further destroy LEEP’s
business. All actions of Defendants in furtherance of the scheme to destroy LEEP
and use confidential information to take LEEP’s business were unlawful and all
were performed by and through unlawful means.
...
159. Sotera is a defense contractor which has entered a contract with LEEP
regarding the manufacturing and construction of man camps for use of the United
States Armed Forces. Sälzer is a Germany company which has entered into a
contract with LEEP.
160. The Defendant Egnew slandered LEEP to Sotera and Sälzer by disparaging
LEEP’s business.
Such statements clearly allege that the actions of the plaintiffs in this case now on appeal
were taken with full knowledge of the fact that they would violate the rights of others, that the
plaintiffs gained entry into a premises only as a result of violating the terms of a confidentiality
agreement, and that representations made by Egnew disparaged an “organization’s goods,
products, or services.” The district court thus did not err in ruling that Grange had no duty to
defend the plaintiffs on LEEP’s claims of personal and advertising injury. Consequently, Grange
also bears no liability for reimbursing the plaintiffs for the costs they incurred in employing
independent counsel for their defense.
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Claims Against Scottsdale
In a final appellate issue, plaintiffs OVC and Egnew contend that, even though Scottsdale
appointed counsel to defend them in the lawsuits filed by LEEP and Blanken, the insurance
company now should reimburse them for the costs of employing their own independent counsel.
According to the plaintiffs, the attorneys provided by Scottsdale to defend them might have
operated under a conflict of interest because those attorneys allegedly also owed a duty to the
insurance company to minimize any liability for the insurer.
Despite the plaintiffs’ claim that counsel provided by Scottsdale might consider their
primary duty to be to the insurance company rather than to the plaintiffs themselves, Scottsdale
appointed one law firm to represent the plaintiffs in the underlying lawsuits and retained an entirely
separate firm to represent the insurer’s interests. The Kentucky Bar Association has said, more
than once, that “[w]hen an Insurer provides the defense to an Insured, the attorney represents the
Insured but not the Insurer.” Ky. Bar Ass’n Ethics Op. KBA E-410 (1999).3
Moreover, the plaintiffs’ appellate brief claims to identify “examples of how counsel
appointed by Scottsdale could manipulate the proof . . . in a way that would have a real impact on
the coverage determination.” But before the district court, the plaintiffs admitted that they “are
certainly not suggesting that appointed counsel did anything wrong in these cases[.]” So the
plaintiffs essentially argue that Scottsdale’s reservation of rights alone created the prospect of a
conflict of interest, entitling them to select their own counsel at the expense of Scottsdale. Of
course, some jurisdictions hold that “a reservation of rights issued on certain bases creates a
3
To be sure, Kentucky courts are not bound by the bar association’s ethics opinions. See,
e.g., United States ex rel. U.S. Attorneys for the E. and W. Dist. of Ky. v. Ky. Bar Ass’n, 439 S.W.3d
136, 141 (Ky. 2014). At the same time, the Kentucky Supreme Court has cited bar association
opinions as persuasive authority. See Hiatt v. Clark, 194 S.W.3d 324, 328 (Ky. 2006); Shoney’s,
Inc. v. Lewis, 875 S.W.2d 514, 516 (Ky. 1994).
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conflict of interest such that the Insured is entitled to ‘independent counsel’ paid for by the
Insurer.” Ky. Bar Ass’n Ethics Op. KBA E-410 (1999). But that “stance is based on the notion
that the attorney has as clients both the Insured and the Insurer, a view to which Kentucky does
not adhere.” Id.
Further, the plaintiffs admit that they “did not explicitly . . . reject the defense offered by
their insurance carriers” prior to hiring their own counsel. Even in jurisdictions that require
appointment of independent counsel after an insurer’s reservation of rights, the insured generally
must reject the insurer’s appointed counsel before it hires its own attorney. See, e.g., Trinity
Universal Ins. Co. v. Stevens Forestry Serv., Inc., 335 F.3d 353, 356 n.3 (5th Cir. 2003) (applying
Louisiana law); see also Douglas R. Richmond, Independent Counsel in Insurance, 48 San Diego
L. Rev. 857, 874 (2011).
Even more, under the terms of the Scottsdale policy, the plaintiffs had to seek the written
consent of the insurer before incurring any additional expenses:
The Insureds agree not to . . . incur any Costs, Charges and Expenses or
otherwise assume any contractual obligation or admit any liability with respect to
any Claim without the prior written consent of the Insurer, such consent not to be
unreasonably withheld. The Insurer shall not be liable for any settlement, Costs,
Charges and Expenses, assumed obligation or admission to which it has not
consented.
There is no evidence that plaintiffs in this case ever made such a request.
At least one district court has stated that “the right to independent counsel when an
insurance company defends under a reservation is a novel question of state law” in Kentucky.
Twin City Fire Ins. Co. v. Chewning, No. 5:18-CV-124-TBR, 2019 WL 2147282, at *8 (W.D. Ky.
May 14, 2019). And two other federal trial courts also have grappled with the issue. Outdoor
Venture Corp., 2018 WL 4656400, at *18–19; Auto-Owners Ins. Co. v. Egnew, 152 F. Supp. 3d
868, 879 (E.D. Ky. 2016). We feel confident, however, that in the circumstances of this particular
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case, Kentucky law does not require reimbursement for the counsel plaintiffs selected. OVC and
Egnew not only failed to identify any injury that they suffered as a result of Scottsdale providing
them with legal counsel, they also failed to take the steps necessary to justify the actions for which
they now seek reimbursement. The district court thus did not err in granting summary judgment
to Scottsdale on the claim that the insurer was required to pay the cost of independent counsel
retained by OVC and Egnew.
CONCLUSION
After paying premiums for insurance coverage that included a duty on the part of the
insurance companies to defend the insureds from certain claims seeking monetary damages, the
plaintiffs suddenly found themselves either denied the benefits of that coverage altogether or
worried that the defense offered by the insurance company would not have the best interests of the
insureds at heart. The district court did not err, however, in concluding that the claims against the
plaintiffs for “bodily injury or property damage” and for “personal and advertising injury” by
LEEP and Blanken fell within exclusions to coverage in the Grange policies. Because Grange thus
had no duty to defend those claims, it was not liable for the costs incurred by the plaintiffs in
retaining their own counsel. Additionally, Scottsdale did provide OVC and Egnew with legal
representation—representation that the plaintiffs failed to reject prior to hiring their own counsel.
The district court thus also did not err in denying OVC and Egnew reimbursement for the fees they
incurred in hiring independent counsel.
We AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
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