REVISED APRIL 15, 2008
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
March 31, 2008
No. 07-10142 Charles R. Fulbruge III
Clerk
CITIBANK TEXAS, N.A.
Plaintiff - Appellee
v.
PROGRESSIVE CASUALTY INSURANCE CO.
Defendant - Appellant
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Texas
USDC No. 3:06-CV-00395
Before WIENER, DEMOSS, and PRADO, Circuit Judges.
WIENER, Circuit Judge:1
Plaintiff-Appellee Citibank Texas, N.A. (“Citibank”) sued Defendant-
Appellant Progressive Casualty Insurance Co. (“Progressive”) as the issuer of a
Financial Institution Bond (the “Bond”), claiming Progressive should cover a loss
Citibank sustained in a prior state court action filed against it by a depositor on
a claim of unauthorized endorsement. Both Citibank and Progressive filed
motions for summary judgment. The district court agreed with Citibank on its
1
This opinion replaces the opinion reported at 508 F.3d 779 (5th Cir. 2007), which was
previously withdrawn on panel rehearing.
No. 07-10142
breach of contract claim and held Progressive liable for Citibank’s loss. As we
now disagree with the district court’s holdings that (1) Progressive is collaterally
estopped from contesting the state court’s determination and (2) the
endorsements were “unauthorized” within the intendment of the Bond, we
reverse the district court and render a take-nothing judgment against Citibank.
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
GoldenLife/Richardson L.P. (“GoldenLife”) was a Texas limited
partnership formed by Todd P. Lindley to develop and operate a skilled nursing
facility in Richardson, Texas. Lindley was also the president and owner of
Pilatus Company, GoldenLife’s general partner. The limited partners of
GoldenLife invested $2,570,000 in the partnership. Between February and
September of 2002, Citibank allowed Lindley, an authorized signatory on
GoldenLife’s account as well as on another Citibank account in the name of
Lindley Properties, to endorse and deposit into his personal Lindley Properties
account sixteen checks payable to GoldenLife totaling $1,170,000. Lindley used
these GoldenLife funds in an unauthorized manner, inconsistent with the intent
of the GoldenLife partnership.2
In 2005, after GoldenLife discovered Lindley’s misuse of the funds, it
accused Citibank of conversion for allowing Lindley to misdeposit the sixteen
checks into his own account and filed a suit for damages against Citibank in
Texas state court. Progressive was Citibank’s insurer under the Bond, which
provided up to $7,000,000 in coverage for losses resulting from counterfeiting,
forgeries, “unauthorized” signatures, and other dishonest or fraudulent acts.
Under the Bond, Progressive had the right (but not the obligation) to join in
Citibank’s defense of the state court action but, at its election, declined to do so.
The state court bifurcated the trial, first addressing liability and eventually
2
GoldenLife’s claims against Lindley are not before the court.
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No. 07-10142
entering partial summary judgment in favor of GoldenLife on that facet of the
claim. The court reasoned that, as Citibank had accepted and paid checks
belonging to GoldenLife with Lindley’s unauthorized endorsements, Citibank
had taken the checks with notice of Lindley’s breach of fiduciary duty and thus
was not a holder in due course. The state court held Citibank responsible for
misdepositing GoldenLife’s checks. Subsequent to this liability determination,
and prior to the court’s determination of the amount of GoldenLife’s loss,
Citibank and GoldenLife settled their dispute for $845,000.
Citibank then sought reimbursement from Progressive for the $845,000
settlement payment. Insuring Agreement D of the Bond indemnified Citibank
for “[l]oss resulting directly from . . . [f]orgery or alteration of, on or in any
Negotiable Instrument . . . .” Under the Bond’s Unauthorized Signature Rider
(the “Rider”), Insuring Agreement D was modified as follows: “Accepting, paying
or cashing any Negotiable Instruments or Withdrawal Orders that bear
unauthorized signatures or endorsements shall be deemed to be a Forgery under
this Insuring Agreement.”3 As the state court had held that Lindley’s
endorsements of the GoldenLife checks were unauthorized, Citibank contended
that these checks were “unauthorized endorsements,” and thus forgeries for
purposes of Insuring Agreement D, as modified by the Rider, making Citibank’s
underlying state court loss to its depositor recoverable under the Bond.
When Progressive refused payment, Citibank sued in federal court for
breach of contract and breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing in
violation of the Texas Insurance Code. Citibank sought to recover: (1) the
amount of its settlement less the Bond’s deductible; (2) attorneys’ fees incurred
in defending the GoldenLife case in state court; and (3) damages for its breach
of the duty of good faith and fair dealing claim. Progressive took the position
3
Emphasis added.
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No. 07-10142
that the Bond did not cover any part of the sum for which Citibank had been
held liable to GoldenLife in state court.
The district court held for Citibank on its breach of contract claim but
denied recovery on its claims for attorneys’ fees incurred in defending the
GoldenLife case in state court and bad faith violations of the Texas Insurance
Code. The court stated two alternative bases for its holding that Citibank’s
settlement payment was a loss covered by the Bond. First, the court credited
Citibank’s reliance on the doctrine of collateral estoppel, rejecting Progressive’s
contention that it was not bound by the state court judgment and could contest
the Bond’s coverage of Citibank’s loss by relitigating the issue of Citibank’s
liability to GoldenLife for honoring purportedly unauthorized endorsements.
The court ruled, in the alternative, that even if Progressive were not collaterally
estopped from relitigating whether Lindley’s endorsements were “unauthorized”
for the purpose of the Bond, the district court would hold, as had the state court
on the merits, that Lindley’s endorsements were “unauthorized” under the Bond.
The district court held Progressive liable for the settlement amount less the
Bond’s deductible, plus pre-judgment and post-judgment interest, and attorneys’
fees incurred in federal court, awarding Citibank approximately $823,000.4
Progressive timely filed a notice of appeal.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo.5 A
motion for summary judgment should be granted only when there is no genuine
4
The district court awarded Citibank: (1) $695,000 (the $845,000 Citibank paid to
GoldenLife less the Bond’s $150,000 deductible); (2) $48,540 pre-judgment interest; and (3)
$79,591.84 in attorneys’ fees for prosecuting its claim on the Bond against Progressive, for a
total judgment of $823,132.35 (plus post-judgment interest at the rate of 4.99% per annum).
5
Am. Int’l Specialty Lines Ins. Co. v. Canal Indem. Co., 352 F.3d 254, 260 (5th Cir.
2003).
4
No. 07-10142
issue of material fact.6 In determining whether there is a genuine issue of
material fact, we view all facts and draw all inferences therefrom in favor of the
non-moving party.7
III. ANALYSIS
A. Collateral Estoppel
The fourth paragraph General Agreement F of the Bond stipulates that if
“the Underwriter elects not to defend any causes of action, neither a judgment
against the Insured, nor a settlement of any legal proceeding by the Insured,
shall determine the existence, extent or amount of coverage under this Bond for
loss sustained by the Insured . . . .” Progressive interprets this language to
mean that Citibank is required to prove that Lindley’s endorsements were
“unauthorized” under the Bond, independently of the state court judgment, viz.,
the Bond bars the state court’s decision from having collateral estoppel effect.
Citibank counters that General Agreement F prevents a third-party judgment
or settlement from determining the Bond’s coverage, but not Progressive’s
liability; if an insurer elects not to participate in the defense of such a third-
party action, collateral estoppel may still apply to the issue of liability. Agreeing
with Citibank’s interpretation, the district court held that Progressive is
collaterally estopped from attacking the state court’s holding that Lindley’s
endorsements were unauthorized. The district court reasoned that General
Agreement F explicitly gave Progressive the right to conduct or support
Citibank’s state court defense and that Progressive had notice of the GoldenLife
suit, yet Progressive declined to participate in it. This, concluded the district
court, bound Progressive to the state court determination.
6
Weeks Marine, Inc. v. Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co., 340 F.3d 233, 235 (5th Cir. 2003).
7
Id.
5
No. 07-10142
The district court appeared to follow well-established precedent, as an
insurer who has the duty to defend a suit against an insured but fails to do so
is generally bound by the liability judgment in that suit.8 The court failed to
distinguish, however, between: (1) the ubiquitous general liability policy, under
which an insurer is duty bound to defend (as well as to indemnify) the insured,
but may do so under a reservation of rights; and (2) the Financial Institution
Bond issued in the instant case, under which Progressive had the option (but not
the duty) to defend, and if opting not to defend, would do so without waiving its
defenses. The third paragraph of General Agreement F of the Bond specifies
that, “[i]f the Underwriter elects to defend the Insured,” a judgment or
settlement of any claim, and all fees and costs, “shall be a loss covered” by the
Bond.9 Thus, under the Bond, Progressive had no legal ability to defend
Citibank in state court under a reservation of rights: If Progressive had opted
to defend Citibank, it would have committed itself not only to pay Citibank’s
defense costs but also to pay the full amount of any judgment against it.
8
See, e.g., Columbia Mut. Ins. Co. v. Fiesta Mart, Inc., 987 F.2d 1124, 1127 (5th Cir.
1993) (“It is well-settled in Texas that when an insurer breaches a duty to defend its insured,
it is bound, in subsequent proceedings, by a settlement or judgment rendered against the
insured. But, of course, an insured’s liability and whether there is concomitant coverage are
separate and distinct matters; and a prior judgment establishing liability is not binding in a
subsequent proceeding on coverage. Furthermore, whether an insurer is bound by a specific
finding from the liability action — i.e., whether it is collaterally estopped from contesting that
finding-depends upon whether the fact determined in the prior suit was essential to the
judgment in the prior suit, and whether the necessary requirement of privity exists between
the parties.”) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted); see also Enserch Corp. v. Shand
Morahan & Co., 952 F.2d 1485, 1493 (5th Cir. 1992); Hartford Cas. Co. v. Cruse, 938 F.2d 601,
605 (5th Cir.1991).
9
The third paragraph of General Agreement F of the Bond reads in its entirety: “If the
Underwriter elects to defend the Insured, in whole or in part, any judgment against the
Insured on those counts or causes of action which the Underwriter defended on behalf of the
Insured or any settlement in which the Underwriter participates and all attorneys’ fees, costs
and expenses incurred by the Underwriter in the defense of the litigation shall be a loss
covered by this bond.”
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No. 07-10142
Progressive chose not to defend Citibank in state court because, inter alia,
the language of General Agreement F expressly prevented Progressive from
exercising its option to defend Citibank in state court without waiving its rights.
It would be inequitable, then, for us to prevent Progressive from having any
opportunity to contest its liability for Citibank’s loss in court. We hold that the
district court erred in applying the doctrine of collateral estoppel here, so
Progressive is not bound by the state court’s determination that Lindley’s
endorsements were unauthorized.10
B. Unauthorized Endorsements
As collateral estoppel does not apply, we must address the substantive
issue presented, viz., whether, for purposes of the Bond’s coverage, Lindley’s
endorsements of the GoldenLife checks to his own account were “unauthorized.”
The Bond’s terms and definitions were not before the state court in the suit
between Citibank and GoldenLife, so that court applied the definition of
unauthorized endorsement found in the Uniform Commercial Code (“UCC”) (as
codified in the Texas Business & Commerce Code), i.e., that an endorsement is
unauthorized any time it is made “without actual, implied, or apparent
authority.”11 In contrast, the Rider defines an “unauthorized endorsement” as
an “endorsement not reflected on the appropriate signature card or named in the
Insured’s records for the account or accounts in question.” The state court’s
determination that Lindley’s endorsements were unauthorized under the UCC
10
On appeal, Progressive does not address the related but distinct question whether it
should be estopped from contesting the $845,000 settlement amount agreed on by GoldenLife
and Citibank after the judgment of liability was rendered but before any determination of the
quantum of GoldenLife’s loss. Progressive has thus waived any right it might have had to
contest the quantum of the GoldenLife/Citibank settlement. See Tex. Commercial Energy v.
TXU Energy, Inc., 413 F.3d 503, 510 (5th Cir. 2005) (recognizing that arguments not raised
before the district court are waived on appeal). Because we hold that Progressive is not liable
for any portion of the GoldenLife/Citibank settlement, however, this point is moot.
11
TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE ANN. § 1.201(b)(41).
7
No. 07-10142
definition is neither in dispute nor legally relevant to this appeal. Rather, we
must decide whether the district court correctly held that Lindley’s
endorsements were “unauthorized” under the Bond.
We believe that the district court’s interpretation of the type of
“unauthorized endorsement” covered by the Bond was overly expansive.12 As a
general rule, an endorsement is unauthorized if the person signing either (1) had
no authority whatsoever to endorse negotiable instruments for the named payee
(i.e., the person was not authorized to endorse anything and thus is an
unauthorized endorser per se) or (2) had some authority to endorse for the
named payee but exceeded the scope of his endorsement authority. The Bond
covers the former situation but not the latter. Lindley falls into the latter as he
indisputably had some endorsement authority for GoldenLife.
Section 1 of the Rider specifies, inter alia, that, as a condition precedent
to Citibank’s right of recovery for an “unauthorized . . . endorsement[],”13
Citibank must “have on file the signatures of all persons authorized to sign”
negotiable instruments. As Lindley was listed by name in Citibank’s records for
GoldenLife’s accounts, and as his signature was on record for GoldenLife’s
12
The general rule that ambiguities in insurance contracts are to be construed strictly
against the underwriter does not apply in this case. As Judge Wisdom noted in
Calcasieu-Marine National Bank v. American Employers’ Insurance Co., 533 F.2d 290, 295 n.6
(5th Cir. 1976), “banker’s blanket bonds” (e.g., Financial Institution Bonds) are often drafted
by the joint efforts of associations represented by insurers and insureds. If the banks and the
insurers are equally responsible for the language in the “Standard Form” Bond, the general
principle that our interpretation of ambiguous contract language favor the insured would be
inapt. See also Nat’l Bank of Commerce in New Orleans v. Fid. & Cas. Co. of N.Y., 312 F. Supp
71 (E.D. La. 1970) (Judge Rubin holding that because bankers’ blanket bond resulted from
joint efforts and negotiations of American Bankers Association and Surety Association of
America, bond terms should not be applied hostilely against insurer), aff’d, 437 F.2d 96 (5th
Cir. 1971). But cf. Shoals Nat’l Bank of Florence v. Home Indem. Co., 384 F. Supp. 49, 54 (N.D.
Ala. 1974) (holding that, although bankers’ blanket bond resulted from efforts of two
organizations, because “record is absent any evidence that this plaintiff or any association
acting for it negotiated the language of the” bond, general rule that ambiguities in insurance
contracts are to be construed against underwriter applied).
13
Emphasis added.
8
No. 07-10142
accounts, he clearly had authority to endorse checks payable to GoldenLife.
Thus, the Rider’s condition precedent was satisfied. Moreover, even though
Lindley exceeded the scope of his endorsement authority when he endorsed the
sixteen checks at issue to his personal account, he was nevertheless an
authorized endorser of GoldenLife checks for some purposes. The language of
the Rider makes clear that Bond coverage does not depend on the authorized
endorser’s purpose for endorsing a check. As Lindley was an authorized
endorser, the determination of coverage under the Bond ends there, irrespective
of whether he endorsed GoldenLife checks to GoldenLife, or to himself, or to
anyone else for that matter.
This is further confirmed by the observation that the Bond covers both
forgery (“unauthorized signatures”) and “unauthorized endorsements,” but
specifically excludes coverage of the type of behavior engaged in by Lindley.
Section 3 of the Rider expressly limits covered “unauthorized . . .
endorsement[s]” to those non-forgery endorsements (i.e., those in which the
person signing is the person whose name is signed) that are executed by persons
whose signatures or names are not on file at the bank for the account of the
customer in question — here, GoldenLife:
For the purpose of this rider, unauthorized signature or
endorsement shall mean a signature or endorsement not reflected
on the appropriate signature card or named in the Insured’s records
for the account or accounts in question.
As Lindley’s signature was “reflected on the appropriate signature card”
and he was “named in” Citibank’s records for the GoldenLife account, this
language makes pellucid that Lindley’s endorsement of GoldenLife’s instruments
is not a covered “unauthorized . . . endorsement.” Obviously, therefore, the
intent of the Bond was to insure only against (1) forged endorsements (not at
issue here) and (2) endorsements by totally unauthorized endorsers: It was not
intended to insure against endorsements by endorsers like Lindley who are
9
No. 07-10142
authorized but simply exceed the scope of their endorsement authority.
Citibank’s broad construction of the Rider would cover many different types of
unauthorized-endorsement losses, but the plain wording of the Rider
demonstrates that there is nothing an endorser whose signature and identity are
on file for the accounts of the depositor in question can do to render his
endorsement “unauthorized” for purposes of coverage by the Bond — even if, as
here, it might be deemed unauthorized under the UCC.
In short, we are bound by the precise language of the Bond which confirms
that the losses resulting from Lindley’s activities were not covered. We are well
aware that Lindley’s endorsements represented attempts to defraud Citibank’s
customer, GoldenLife, and that Citibank undoubtedly purchased the Bond from
Progressive to protect itself from various kinds of fraudulent activity. Citibank
and Progressive, however, are large and sophisticated parties, and the only
reasonable reading of the Bond leads inextricably to the conclusion that
Lindley’s endorsements were not “unauthorized” for purposes of the Bond’s
coverage. Contrary to the district court’s holding, Progressive is not liable for
Citibank’s loss.
IV. CONCLUSION
We hold that the ruling of the state court in an action to which Progressive
was not a party does not estop Progressive from contesting its liability under the
Bond. We further hold that Lindley was not an “unauthorized endorser” on
GoldenLife’s accounts for purposes of the Bond. Thus, Lindley’s abuse of his
endorsement authority does not come within the Bond’s coverage. We therefore
reverse the district court and render judgment in favor of Progressive: Citibank
shall take nothing from Progressive under the Bond as a result of Lindley’s
contested endorsements of the GoldenLife instruments.
REVERSED and RENDERED.
10