Cast Steel Products, Inc. v. Admiral Insurance

[PUBLISH] IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR TH E ELEV ENTH C IRCUIT FILED ________________________ U.S. COURT OF APPEALS ELEVENTH CIRCUIT No. 02-16511 October 28, 2003 ________________________ THOMAS K. KAHN CLERK D. C. Docket No. 01-01058-CV-ORL-28 CAS T ST EEL PRO DUC TS, IN C., Plaintiff- Appe llant, versus ADM IRAL INSU RAN CE C OM PAN Y, Defen dant-A ppellee. ________________________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida _________________________ (October 28, 2003) Before BLACK and FAY, Circuit Judges, and JORDAN*, District Judge. FAY, Circuit Judge: * Honorable Adalberto J. Jordan, United States District Judge for the Southern District of Florida, sitting by designation. Cast Steel Products, Inc. (“Cast Steel”) appeals an adverse summary judgmen t granted to A dmiral Insur ance Com pany (“Ad miral”) on C ast Steel’s action for a declaration that either (or both) of its 1999 and 2000 “claims-made” professional liability policies with Admiral covered a defective product claim that accrued at the conclusion of the 1999 policy period but was not reported until the start of the 2000 policy period. The district court found that neither policy provided coverage for the claim because the claim had not both accrued and been reported to Admiral during the same policy period. Cast Steel argues on appeal that the 1999 Professional Liability Policy (“99 Policy”) is ambiguous with respect to coverage of the 1999 claim u pon renewal of the 99 Policy in 2000. Specifically, Cast Steel contends that because the 99 Policy automatically extends the claims reporting period upon cancellation or non-renewal of the po licy, but is sile nt as to whether renewal of the policy would provide the same reporting extension, an unresolved ambiguity exists in the policy that precluded the district court from granting summ ary judg ment. We agree that the 99 Po licy is ambiguous. We further find that, because under Florida law an ambiguity in an insurance policy must be construed in favor of the insured so as not to deny coverage, summary judgment should have been granted to Cast S teel. Swire Pacific Holdings, Inc. v. Zurich Ins., Co., 845 So. 2d 2 161, 165 (Fla. 2003). Accordingly, we REVERS E the district court’s order granting summary judgment in Admiral’s favor, and REMAND to the district court with instruction to enter summary judgment in Cast Steel’s favor as to the 99 Policy. I. Cast Steel is a Florida corporation in the business of supplying castings and components to the mining and waste energy industries. In early 1999, it purchased professional liability insurance from Admiral, a surplus lines insurer headquartered in Delaware, through Admiral’s designated surplus lines broker in the state of Florida , Gary M arkel. 1 The 99 Policy had a retroactive effective date of January 6, 1999 and an expiration date of January 6, 2000, at 12:01 a.m. Cast Steel subseq uently ren ewed th e 99 Po licy, and th e renew al policy h ad an eff ective date of January 6, 2000, and expiration date of January 6, 2001 (“00 Policy”).2 Both policies, by their terms, were “claims-made” policies, which meant that each policy 1 Cast Steel actually purchased the 99 Policy through Ayers/Sierra, a local insurance broker. Because Ayers/Sierra was not in the business of selling surplus lines insurance, it sought out Markel, a surplus lines agent for Admiral’s products in Florida. 2 Cast Steel also purchased a commercial general liability policy from Admiral in early 1999 (the “CGL Policy”), and it sought declaratory relief under that policy as well. The district court ultimately determined that the CGL Policy, by its plain language, did not cover the claim at issue. Cast Steel does not challenge that finding on appeal. Thus, in order to avoid confusion, we focus only on the professional liability policies (which we refer to as the “99 Policy” and “00 Policy”) in this opinion. 3 purported to cover only those claims which had both accrued and were re ported to Adm iral durin g the policy period indicated on the fa ce of the p olicy. Sometime in early 1999, Cast Steel was awarded a contract to provide 130 pallet cars to Hibbing Taconite (“Hibbing”), an iron ore mine located in Hibbing, Minn esota, for the purc hase pric e of $5.5 million. C ast Steel d elivered th e cars in June 1999. Soon thereafter, in August 1999, Hibbing reported significant problems with the wheels of the cars, which, after some investigation, Cast Steel determined to be caused by defective design of the bearings. On October 21, 1999, Hibbin g prepa red an in cident rep ort and f ormally r eported its claim to C ast Steel. Cast Steel immediately advised Ayers/Sierra of the Hibbing claim and asked that the proper claim paperwork be prepared. In an unfortunate twist of fate, Ayers/Sierra failed to submit the Hibbing claim to Admiral until January 6, 2000 – just hours after the 99 Policy had expired. On February 10, 2000, Admiral sent Cast Steel a reservation of rights letter and began investigating the Hibbing claim.3 After four months of investigation by an independent claims adjuster, Admiral sent Cast Steel a letter denying coverage 3 Admiral sent the reservation of rights letter only as to the CGL Policy, and Cast Steel argues that, as a result, Admiral never reserved its right to deny coverage under the 99 or 00 Policies. We find this argument unavailing, however, because Cast Steel only made a claim under the CGL Policy, and Admiral took it upon itself to determine whether any of Cast Steel’s three policies provided coverage. 4 under a ll policies. This suit followed on July 25, 2001. Cast Steel originally brought the action in Florid a state cou rt, seeking , inter alia, a declaration that at least one of the various policies obligated Admiral to cover the Hibbing claim. Admiral removed the action to the Middle District of Florida on diversity grounds and, in July 2002, Cast Steel moved for summary judgment on the 99 Policy. Admiral’s own summary judgment motion followed. On October 24, 2002, the district court entertaine d oral arg ument a nd in N ovemb er grante d summ ary judgment to Adm iral, findin g that no ne of the policies p rovided coverag e to Cast S teel. Specific ally, the distr ict court d etermine d that Ca st Steel faile d to com ply with the 99 Po licy’s notice requirem ent wh en it failed to report th e Hibb ing claim during the 99 Policy period. As to the 00 Policy, the court held that because the Hibbing claim accrued during 1999, and Cast Steel was undisputedly aware of the claim when it renewed the policy, the plain language of the 00 Policy precluded coverage.4 With re spect to C ast Steel’s a rgume nt that A dmiral w as on no tice of its claim because Admiral (or Admiral’s surplus lines broker Markel) cloaked Ayers/Sierra with apparent authority to receive claims on Admiral’s behalf, the 4 Section II(B)(2)(a) of the 00 Policy indicates claims arising prior to the effective date of the policy are covered only if the insured had no knowledge of the claim as of the date of signing the application for the policy. 5 district cou rt found that Cast S teel failed to show that Ad miral eve r represe nted to Cast Steel that Ayers/Sierra was its agent in this regard and, moreover, the record showed that Ayers/Sierra itself adamantly denied being Admiral’s agent or ever making a represe ntation to Cast Ste el that it wa s Adm iral’s agen t. Cast Steel asserts on appeal that the district court erred in granting summary judgment to Admiral because issues of fact remained as to whether Ayers/Sierra was cloaked with app arent authority to receive claims on behalf of Ad miral. Cast Steel also argues that an unresolved ambiguity as to whether renewal of the 99 Policy extended the period in which it could report claims precluded summary judgment on Admiral’s behalf. II. We review a district court’s granting of a motion for summary judgment de novo, applying the same legal stand ards use d by the d istrict cour t. Hilburn v. Murata Elecs. N. Am., Inc., 181 F.3d 1220, 1225 (11th Cir. 1999). We “view the evidence and all factual inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the party opposing the motion.” Burton v. City of Belle Glade, 178 F.3d 1175, 1187 (11th Cir. 1999) (quoting Clemo ns v. Do ugherty Coun ty, 684 F.2d 1365, 1368 (11th Cir. 1982)). Denial of summary judgment is also reviewed de novo. Weeks v. Harden Mfg. Corp., 291 F .3d 130 7, 1311 (11th C ir. 2002 ). 6 III. The district court’s decision presents a somewhat alarming scenario. Faced with two consecutive insurance policies that created apparently seamless coverage over tw o policy p eriods, th e court n everthele ss foun d that a claim accruing within the two periods was somehow not covered by either policy. On the face of the 99 and 00 Policies, there appears to be no gap in coverage. Indeed, the 99 Policy was effective u ntil 12:01 a.m. on J anuary 6 , 2000, a nd the 0 0 Policy was retr oactively effective beginning on January 6, 2000 (presumably at 12:01 a.m.). At a glance, one would be hard pressed to imagine how a claim accruing in the middle of the two policy periods would not be covered by one of the policies. But because a claims-made policy is designed to cover only claims both accruing and reported during the specified policy period, the district court held that a claim which accrued late in the first policy period but was not reported until early in the second was co vered b y neither p olicy. Cast Steel challenges the district court’s conclusion, and argues that because the 99 Policy automatically extends (by thirty days) the period in which to report 1999 claims if the insured elects to cancel or non-renew the policy, there remains an amb iguity as to wheth er renew al provid es a similar reportin g extens ion. Subsection B of the “Extended Discovery Period” provision (Section IV) of the 99 7 Policy provides as follows: If the policy is cancelled or not renewed by the Named Insured an automatic thirty (30) day Claims Extension Period shall apply to claims, provided such claims are not covered under any subsequent insurance purchased by the Named Insured, or that would be covered but for the exhaustion of the amount of insurance applicable to such claims. 99 Policy, Sect. IV (B). Cast Steel chose neither of the two options above, but rather renewed the 99 Policy in the following year. Neither this section, nor any section of the 99 Policy, however, discusses whether a similar reporting extension accompanies renewal of the policy. Accordingly, Admiral counters that the policy’s silence can only mean that the same reporting extension does not accomp any rene wal. The district court, siding with Admiral, did not find any ambiguity in the 99 Policy. Granting summary judgment in Admiral’s favor, the district court relied on the Southern District of Florida’s 2001 Pantro pic decision in finding that renewal of the 99 Policy d id not ex tend the tim e in wh ich Cast S teel could report its c laim. Pantropic Power Prods., Inc. v. Firemen’s Fund Ins. Co., 141 F. Supp. 2d 1366 (S.D. Fla. 2001). In Pantro pic, which was affirmed by this Court in an unpublished per curiam opinion, the plaintiff offered, and the district court rejected, the identical argument to Cast Steel’s here. The court in Pantro pic, in 8 granting insurer’s motion for summary judgment, explained that because an insurer undertakes a more limited risk in a claims-made policy, it typically charges a lower premiu m. Id. at 1369. In exchange, the insured is only permitted to make and report a claim during a narrow window of time. Significantly, in the policy at issue in Pantro pic, that time included the expressed policy period plus a 60-day grace period. Id at 1370. Because the Pantro pic plaintiff submitted its claim 16 days after the 6 0-day g race perio d expire d, it was n ot entitled to coverag e even th ough it had ren ewed its policy fo r consec utive year s with in surer. Id. at 1369–70.5 This Court was able to identify only one case in which a court, when faced with a nearly-identical factual scenario, found in favor of the insured. In Helberg, the Sixth District of Ohio determined that a claim accruing during Year 1 of a claims-made policy, but not reported until the Year 2 policy period (which, like here, was a renewal of Year 1), was covered by the Year 1 policy pursuant to the 5 This particular scenario has only been addressed by a few other district courts. In Ehrgood, the court reached the same conclusion as the Southern District in Pantropic. Ehrgood v. Coregis Ins. Co., 59 F. Supp. 2d 438 (M.D. Pa. 1998). However, in Ehrgood, as in Pantropic, the Year 1 policy provided the insured a 60-day grace period in which to report claims accruing during the first policy period, and insured reported its claim outside this window. Id. at 447. The insurer prevailed in Checkrite as well, but the court noted that even if it were to give the insured the benefit of the additional 60- or 90-day grace period contemplated by New York insurance law, the insured reported its claim far outside this time frame. Checkrite Ltd., Inc. v. Illinois Nat’l Ins. Co., 95 F. Supp. 2d 180, 191–194 & n.9 (S.D.N.Y. 2000); see also Westport Ins. Corp. v. Mirsky, No. CIV A. 00-4367, 2002 WL 31018554, at *11 (E.D. Pa. Sept. 10, 2002) (district court reached the same conclusion but was not faced with the extended reporting provision present in this matter). 9 (albeit ambiguous) reporting extension clause contained therein. Helberg v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co., 657 N.E.2d 832, 833–35 (Ohio Ct. App . 1995). Plaintiff in Helberg, an attorney, initiated litigation against his malpractice insurer (“National”), when National refused to indemnify him in a malpractice action br ought b y a form er client. Id. at 833. Plaintiff was undisputedly aware of the claim a gainst him on Oc tober 21 , 1991, b ut failed to report th e claim to National until January 21, 1992. His 1991 claims-made policy provided coverage from D ecembe r 11, 19 90, to D ecembe r 11, 19 91 – thu s he did n ot repor t his claim to Natio nal until six weeks after the co nclusion of the 19 99 cov erage pe riod. However, plaintiff purchased a renewal of his 1999 policy, which had a retroactive effective date of December 11, 1991, and therefore believed that he was covered by malprac tice insura nce at all tim es with N ational. Id. National denied coverage, asserting that the 1991 claim was not covered because it was not reported during the 199 1 policy p eriod. Id. The court, recognizing that a claims-made policy requires that notice of action against the insured must be presented to the insurer within the designated time period of the policy, nonetheless found that plaintiff’s claim was covered by the 199 1 policy. F inding s uppor t in the po licy’s exten ded rep orting en dorsem ent, the court explained: 10 In the present case, there was no cancellation of coverag e, nor did the insur ed chan ge insur ance carr iers. The ins ured m erely rene wed h is claims-m ade polic y. Such a n event sh ould no t precipita te a trap w herein claims spanning the renewal are denied. Id. at 834 (emphasis added). The policy at issue in Helber g, like the policy in our case, did not provide the insured with a grace-period after expiration of the policy to report claims. Cf. Pan tropic, 141 F. Supp. 2d at 1369. But – and again similar to the 99 Policy here – the Helberg policy’s ex tended r eporting clause set o ut only two circ umstan ces wh en purc hase of a reportin g extens ion wa s necessa ry to maintain coverag e – upo n cancella tion or n on-ren ewal. 6 Helberg, 657 N.E.2d at 835. The Ohio court continued: Applying the time-honored maxim of construction, expressio unius est exclusio alterius, the inclusion of specific things implies the exclusion of those not mentioned, this court can only conclude that the inclusion of “non-renewal” of the p olicy as one of those circumstances demanding the purchase of an extended reporting endorsement exclud es a “renewal” as a circumstance which demands such a purchase. Since appellant’s position here was a renewal rather than a “non-renewal” or “cancellation,” this court concludes that the language of the contract does not deny coverage in this con text. Id. at 835. 6 Note that in Helberg the insured was entitled to purchase a reporting extension pursuant to the extended reporting clause. Here, the extension was automatic upon non-renewal or cancellation. 11 We concur with the reasoning set forth in Helberg. Though we are sympathetic to the rationale of Pantro pic, and would generally agree that the lower premium charged for a claims-made policy should entitle an insured to lesser coverag e than a b roader, a nd mo re expen sive, occu rrence p olicy, we find it bo th illogical an d inequ itable to de ny cove rage to th e insured who c hooses to renew its claims-made policy for successive years with the same insurer – particularly in the scenario we are faced with here. Cast Steel’s claim was reported to Admiral mere hours after the expiration of the 99 Policy, and during a time period in which the 00 Policy had become effective. As the Helberg court noted, if choosing to cancel or non -renew provid ed the ins ured w ith an exte nded re porting period, e lecting to continue to do business with the same insurer by renewing the claims-made policy certainly “should not precipitate a trap wherein claims spanning the renewal are denied.” Helberg, 657 N.E.2d at 834.7 It seems to us that the most reasonable interpretation of the extended reporting clause is that it automatically extends the reporting period through 7 It is also worth noting that Admiral, unlike the insurer in Pantropic, concedes that the 00 Policy was a renewal of the 99 Policy. Thus, the Pantropic court’s reason for rejecting the logic of Helberg – that is, because the policy at issue in Helberg specifically contemplated continuous renewal – is not availing here. Admiral does not contend, as the insurer in Pantropic did, that the 00 Policy was a separate and distinct policy rather than a renewal of the 99 Policy. Indeed, Admiral refers to the 00 Policy as a “renewal policy” throughout its briefs. 12 renew al. The cla use is clear ly ambig uous o n this po int. 8 Accordingly, because we find a clear mandate in Florida law to construct a contract of insurance in favor of the insured and strictly against the drafter, we hold that the ambiguity in the 99 Policy must be resolved so as not to deny coverage. Swire Pacific Holdings, 845 So. 2d at 165. We find that Cast Steel’s renewal of the 99 Policy in 2000 extended the time in which to repor t the Hib bing claim . As Ca st Steel rep orted the claim immed iately after th e expiratio n of the 9 9 Policy , the district c ourt erre d whe n it denied coverage.9 III. Finally, Cast Steel challenges the district court’s failure to require Admiral to refun d Cast S teel a $25 00 ded uctible w hich A dmiral co llected un der the p olicy. Althou gh the d istrict cour t determin ed the de ductible w as impro perly billed , it did not award Cast Steel damages in this amount. However, because we find that the 99 Policy covers the Hibbing claim, a logical outcropping of our decision is that 8 Counsel for Admiral has been unable to explain what the reporting period would be for claims accruing on the last day, or within a very short period, of the conclusion of the policy period. Again, unlike the policy in Pantropic, the policy in question provides for no grace period following its expiration for reporting claims. 9 In view of our holding it is not necessary for us to discuss the issue of whether or not there existed genuine issues of material fact on the question of agency. However, for the sake of completeness we state that a review of the record convinces us that such do exist. Based upon the evidence in this record a jury could conclude that Admiral cloaked Ayers/Sierra with the apparent authority to receive claims on its behalf. 13 Cast Steel would have been required to pay Admiral the deductible under the policy. Accordingly, Cast Steel is not entitled to a refund of the deductible. IV. For the above r easons, w e reverse the district c ourt’s de cision an d reman d to the district court with instruction to enter summary judgment in Cast Steel’s favor on the 99 Policy. REVE RSED and REM AND ED with instructions. 14