11-2644-cv
VAM Check Cashing v. Federal Insurance Company
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
August Term, 2012
(Argued: August 23, 2012 Decided: November 7, 2012)
Docket No. 11-2644-cv
VAM CHECK CASHING CORP.,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
— v. —
FEDERAL INSURANCE COMPANY,
Defendant-Appellant.
B e f o r e:
KATZMANN, WESLEY, and LYNCH, Circuit Judges.
__________________
Plaintiff insured contends that a criminal scheme perpetrated at its store constituted
“robbery” within the meaning of its crime insurance policy which the defendant insurer
issued. The district court (Jack B. Weinstein, J.) correctly ruled that the policy’s
definition of “robbery” is ambiguous, that the insured offered a reasonable interpretation
of the policy permitting coverage, and that the insurer was therefore liable for the loss.
AFFIRMED.
PAUL S. HUGEL, Clayman & Rosenberg LLP, New York, New York, for
plaintiff-appellee.
ARTHUR N. LAMBERT (M. Diane Duszak, on the brief), Frenkel Lambert
Weiss Weisman & Gordon LLP, New York, New York, for
defendant-appellant.
GERARD E. LYNCH, Circuit Judge:
This case requires us to decide whether a particular criminal act constituted
“robbery” within the meaning of a crime insurance policy. Because we agree with the
district court that the policy is ambiguous and that the insured offers a reasonable
interpretation of the policy permitting coverage, we conclude that the insurer is liable
under the policy and therefore affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment to
the insured.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff-appellee VAM Check Cashing Corp. (“VAM” or “the insured”) operates
a number of check cashing stores in the New York City area, including Pine Check
Cashing in Brooklyn, New York. VAM purchased a crime insurance policy (“Policy”)
from defendant-appellant Federal Insurance Company (“Federal” or “the insurer”).
During the pendency of the Policy, a group of criminals successfully tricked a Pine
Check Cashing employee, Romanita Vazquez, into turning over $120,000 in cash to
them. The parties do not dispute the facts of the scheme, which are detailed principally in
Vazquez’s three-page statement prepared after the crime.
2
Some time before noon on September 2, 2009, Vazquez received a phone call from
a woman claiming to be the wife of VAM’s owner. Over the course of a wide-ranging
chat, the caller told Vazquez that her husband was opening three new check cashing
stores, including one in Manhattan that very day. During this call, Vazquez received a
second call from another woman who identified herself as the manager of the newly
opened Manhattan store. The second caller said that a government official had arrived at
the new store to collect a tax bill, but because the store had just opened, it had insufficient
cash on hand to pay the bill. Vazquez relayed this information to the original caller, who
told Vazquez that a man named Windfrey would come to Pine to collect the $100,000,
and that she would be able to identify him by his use of a code number. Later, the
original caller increased the amount to $120,000, and Vazquez placed that amount in a
box.
Eventually, a man who identified himself as Windfrey came into the store. He
offered the pre-arranged code number, and Vazquez buzzed him into the back of the
store. She then handed him a box containing the $120,000 in cash, and he left. As noted
by the district court, Vazquez testified at her deposition that she “never felt threatened by
Mr. Windfrey,” and at the time, “she did not believe he was dangerous or a thief.” Vam
Check Cashing Corp. v. Fed. Ins. Co., 787 F. Supp. 2d 264, 267 (E.D.N.Y. 2011).1
1
We assume that the failure to render “Vam” in all capital letters in the title of the
reported district court decision is an oversight on the publisher’s part. In any event, we
adopt plaintiff’s own usage and capitalize the name as “VAM Check Cashing Corp.”
3
Over the course of the afternoon, Vazquez did not hear anything further from the
owner. She gradually grew suspicious and eventually called the police that evening. The
police never caught the perpetrators or recovered the money; they advised VAM that the
scheme was the work of a sophisticated group of criminals that had perpetrated similar
scams across the country.
After the loss, VAM made a claim under the Policy, asserting that the crime was
covered under the Policy’s definition of “robbery.” In January 2010, however, Federal
gave final notice that it denied the claim. Further negotiations between the parties to
settle the claim were unsuccessful, and VAM then sued in the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of New York (Jack B. Weinstein, District Judge) for breach of
contract, claiming damages of $112,500 (the $120,000 loss less the Policy’s $7500
deductible). The facts being essentially undisputed, the parties filed cross motions for
summary judgment. On May 25, 2011, the district court granted summary judgment to
VAM. Vam Check Cashing Corp., 787 F. Supp. 2d 264. Federal appeals.
DISCUSSION
I. Legal Standard
The parties do not dispute the material facts underlying the claim. The case thus
turns on the interpretation of the insurance contract. Because interpretation of an
insurance agreement is a question of law, we review the district court’s construction of
the Policy de novo. See, e.g., Duane Reade, Inc. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 411
F.3d 384, 388 (2d Cir. 2005). The parties agree that New York law governs this diversity
4
action because New York is the “center of gravity” of the dispute. See Lazard Freres &
Co. v. Protective Life Ins. Co., 108 F.3d 1531, 1539 (2d Cir. 1997) (noting that New York
federal courts must apply New York State’s choice-of-law principles, including the
“center of gravity” test for contract actions).
Under New York insurance law, the plain language of an insurance policy, read
“in light of ‘common speech’ and the reasonable expectations of a businessperson,” Belt
Painting Corp. v. TIG Ins. Co., 795 N.E.2d 15, 17 (N.Y. 2003), will govern if the
language is unambiguous. See, e.g., Fieldston Prop. Owners Ass’n, Inc. v. Hermitage Ins.
Co., 945 N.E.2d 1013, 1017 (N.Y. 2011). In construing the policy consistent with these
dictates,
A reviewing court must decide whether, affording a fair
meaning to all of the language employed by the parties in the
contract and leaving no provision without force and effect, there
is a reasonable basis for a difference of opinion as to the
meaning of the policy. If this is the case, the language at issue
would be deemed to be ambiguous and thus interpreted in favor
of the insured.
Fed. Ins. Co. v. IBM, 965 N.E.2d 934, 936 (N.Y. 2012) (internal citations, brackets, and
quotation marks omitted). “Whether a contract is ambiguous is a question of law . . . .”
S. Road Assocs., LLC v. IBM, 826 N.E.2d 806, 809 (N.Y. 2005).
II. Analysis
The basis for VAM’s claim under the Policy, and thus for its breach of contract
action for failure to pay that claim, is that the events of September 2, 2009 fell within the
Policy’s “Robbery” clause. The Policy states in relevant part that “[Federal] shall be
5
liable for direct losses: . . . Within the Premises of Money and other property received
from sources other than the sale of Food Stamps but only when such loss is caused by: . . .
(2) Robbery or attempt thereat.” The Policy defines the term:
“Robbery” means the unlawful taking of insured property from
an Insured, a partner, an Employee or any other person
authorized by the Insured to have custody of the property by
violence, threat of violence or other overt felonious act
committed in the presence and cognizance of such person,
except any person acting as a watchman, porter or janitor.2
The parties agree that Vazquez was an “Employee” and was not “acting as a watchman,
porter or janitor.” The parties also agree that “Windfrey”3 and his associates employed
neither actual nor threatened violence. Thus the definition can be simplified for this case:
“Robbery” means the unlawful taking of insured property from
. . . an Employee . . . by . . . overt felonious act committed in the
presence and cognizance of such person . . . .
2
This definition is clearly broader than the definition of robbery under the most
common criminal law definitions, which generally limit the crime to larcenies committed
by force or threat of force. See, e.g., 3 WAYNE R. LAFAVE, SUBSTANTIVE CRIMINAL LAW
§ 20.3 (2d ed. 2003) (common law robbery requires force or threat thereof); Model Penal
Code § 222.1 (in addition to theft, robbery conviction requires either actual or threatened
infliction of serious bodily injury on another, or actual or threatened commission of
another serious felony); 18 U.S.C. § 1951 (under the federal Hobbs Act, “‘robbery’
means the unlawful taking or obtaining of personal property from the person or in the
presence of another, against his will, by means of actual or threatened force, or violence,
or fear of injury”). While the scam accomplished by Windfrey and his group was not a
robbery under these definitions, that is irrelevant here. The parties to an insurance
contract are free to define terms used in that contract as they choose; the question before
us is solely whether the crime was a “Robbery” as defined in the Policy. See Thomas J.
Atkins & His Five Sons, Ltd. v. Mass. Bonding & Ins. Co., 139 N.Y.S.2d 446, 447 (App.
Term 2d Dep’t 1955).
3
Because we do not know his real name, we adopt the parties’ usage and refer to
the man who received the money by the name provided to Vazquez.
6
Because the parties also agree that the acts constituted the “unlawful taking of insured
property,” the only dispute is about the final phrase in the shortened definition: whether
the unlawful taking by Windfrey and associates was an “[1] overt felonious act [2]
committed in the presence and cognizance of” Vazquez.
[1] “Overt felonious act.” Federal contends that “overt felonious act” must be
read as a whole. It argues, in effect, that the adjective “overt” should be read to modify
the entire phrase “felonious act,” such that it covers only a “felonious act” whose
felonious character is “overt.” On that reading, though Windfrey’s taking of the money
was a “felonious act,” and was “overt” in the sense that it was visible to Vazquez, it was
not an “overt felonious act” because its felonious nature was not “overt,” but covert. That
is, while Vazquez knew that she was giving money to Windfrey and observed his taking
it, she did not recognize that she was handing the money over to a criminal because the
scheme proceeded by trickery.
VAM counters that Federal’s interpretation might prevail if the Policy read
“overtly felonious act,” in which case the adverb “overtly” would clearly modify the
adjective “felonious.” But since the Policy uses two consecutive adjectives, VAM
contends, both “overt” and “felonious” must each separately modify the noun “act.”
Thus, coverage is proper if Windfrey committed an “act” that was both “overt” and
“felonious.” Here, VAM argues, Windfrey’s act was clearly “felonious,” since it
amounted to larceny by trick. And it was also “overt,” since the act of taking the money
7
was “‘open, manifest; public,’” Appellee Br. 15, quoting BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY
1258 (4th ed. 1968), even though its true criminal nature was hidden.
We cannot say that either of these two readings is definitive. Federal’s
interpretation has the advantage, not argued by Federal, that it might better connect the
phrase “or other overt felonious act” with the language that precedes it (“violence, [or]
threat of violence”) under the maxim of ejusdem generis. Federal’s meaning might also
be thought to come closer to the common law definition (and perhaps the ordinary
understanding) of the word “robbery.” See supra note 2. As we note above, however, the
criminal law definition is not controlling in this contract dispute, and the definition for
which Federal argues does not correspond to the criminal definition in any event. Nor is
the connection between the criminal law meaning of robbery and the “overtly felonious”
reading close enough to render the ejusdem generis argument especially persuasive.
Finally, it cannot be said that Federal’s proposed reading is grammatically impossible, or
even simply incorrect. English usage is sufficiently flexible to admit Federal’s use of an
adjective to modify a noun phrase, even if more careful writers would use an adverb to
express the intended meaning.
Nonetheless, VAM’s reading is grammatically more natural, since it does not
require an adjectival word to be read adverbially. VAM’s reading thus has the advantage
of respecting the plain (if strict) meaning of the contested phrase. Nor would VAM’s
proposed meaning render the word “overt” meaningless. In many forms of theft, the act
of taking is itself covert; if, for example, Windfrey had grabbed a pile of cash and snuck it
8
into his pocket while Vazquez’s back was turned, his act itself (not simply the true nature
of the act) would presumably be considered covert.4
Thus, the meaning of the phrase “overt felonious act” is ambiguous standing alone.
We therefore examine whether it can be clarified by the second contested phrase,
“committed in the presence and cognizance of such person,” or by the remaining textual
context. See Fed. Ins. Co., 965 N.E.2d at 936 (before finding ambiguity, reviewing court
must first “decide whether, affording a fair meaning to all of the language employed by
the parties in the contract and leaving no provision without force and effect, there is a
reasonable basis for a difference of opinion as to the meaning of the policy”) (internal
quotation marks, citations, and brackets omitted).
[2] “Presence and cognizance.” Though the parties agree that the taking occurred
“in the presence of” Vazquez, they disagree on whether it occurred in her “cognizance.”
Federal argues that under a large set of cases interpreting similar language in crime
insurance policies across the nation and over the course of many decades, “cognizance”
should be “equated with awareness of the criminal nature of the underlying act.” On this
view, to meet the Policy’s definition, the victim employee must recognize the act “as both
overt and felonious.” VAM agrees that “cognizance” means “awareness,” but disagrees
4
For this reason, we are not particularly persuaded by the district court’s attempt
to draw on the meaning of “overt act” in conspiracy law. In that context, an “overt act” is
simply a physical act in furtherance of a conspiracy, beyond mere mental or verbal assent
to a conspiratorial plan. As no insured loss could occur absent an “overt act” in that
sense, the word “overt” would have no meaning in the context of the Policy if so
interpreted.
9
about the object of that awareness. According to VAM, the employee need only be aware
of the act, rather than its felonious character.
The discussion of phrase [2] adds little to our analysis of phrase [1]. Neither
party’s reading better gives each phrase independent meaning. Instead, the key
disagreement between the parties about the meaning of [2] is essentially identical to their
disagreement about the meaning of [1]. Whether expressed as a difference about the
meaning of “overt” or about the object of the employee’s “cognizance,” the dispute is the
same: Federal contends that phrase [1] means the act’s criminal character must be
possible to observe, and that phrase [2] means the act’s criminal character must be
actually noticed.5 VAM argues that phrase [1] means the act must be observable, and that
phrase [2] means the act must be in fact observed. Under either party’s interpretation,
then, [1] and [2] differ in the same manner: [1] is about what is observable (possible), and
[2] is about what is observed (actual). Neither reading of [2] clarifies our understanding
of [1] or is independently preferable to the other.6
5
VAM argues that Federal’s reading of [2] cannot be correct because it requires
the employee to be aware that the act constitutes a felony, which would make coverage
depend on the employee’s legal acumen. Such a reading would be unlikely, but it is not
an inevitable consequence of Federal’s reading of “cognizance,” since it would depend on
the meaning given to “felonious.” It is at least arguable that an ordinary businessperson
would understand “felonious” to mean “criminal,” rather than applying the technical legal
definition of “felony.” In any event, we need not resolve this quibble; for our disposition
of the case, it is enough to say that the Policy is ambiguous.
6
Following the maxim that each separate textual term should be given independent
meaning if reasonably possible, see Hooper Assocs., Ltd. v. AGS Computers, Inc., 548
N.E.2d 903, 905 (N.Y. 1989), Federal argues that “overt felonious act” must be read to
have separate meaning from “unlawful taking.” Federal argues that VAM’s reading
renders “overt felonious act” surplusage, since any “act” that is also an “unlawful taking”
is “felonious.” This is not necessarily so, since the language could be taken to distinguish
10
The effect of ambiguity. With Federal’s textual arguments exhausted, the
ambiguity remains. As mentioned above, New York follows the maxim of contra
proferentem in insurance cases: where the plain language of a policy permits more than
one reasonable reading, a court must adopt the reading upholding coverage. See Haber v.
St. Paul Guardian Ins. Co., 137 F.3d 691, 697-98 (2d Cir. 1998) (describing New York
law). As the Supreme Court of Arkansas memorably put it, in language long ago
embraced by the New York Court of Appeals,
If [the insurer] meant to exclude liability . . . ,
why did it not say so in such plain language that
a wayfaring man, though a fool, might not be
deceived thereby? It would appear a simple thing
for a great institution, such as [the insurer], to
write a clause in its policies exempting itself from
such liability in plain and simple language.
Equitable Life Assurance Soc’y of U.S. v. Dyess, 109 S.W.2d 1263, 1265 (Ark. 1937),
quoted in Hartol Prods. Corp. v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am., 47 N.E.2d 687, 690-91 (N.Y.
1943).
Because the plain text of the Policy does not resolve this case, VAM must prevail
if it has provided us a reasonable reading permitting recovery. It has. Under VAM’s
overall reading of the Policy provision at issue, the insured will recover for “robbery”
whenever property is taken from an employee by means of an observable act that amounts
between felonies and misdemeanors, see supra note 5, and since some unlawful takings,
as explained above, could be covert. In any event, there are limits to the persuasiveness
of readings designed solely to avoid surplusage. It may be more natural for a reasonable
businessperson to assume that contracts (and lawyers) sometimes engage in repetition,
rather than that words in a policy do not mean what they apparently say.
11
to a felony, provided that the act occurs in the presence of the employee and the employee
is aware of the act’s occurrence. But the employee need not be aware that the act itself is
felonious. As we have already explained, this interpretation is at least as plausible a
reading of the language as that provided by Federal.
Precedent. VAM’s reading accords with the result in the only case cited by either
party that presents the precise question before us. In Schwegmann Bros. Giant Super
Mkts. v. Underwriters at Lloyd’s London, 300 So. 2d 865 (La. Ct. App. 1974), a
Louisiana intermediate appellate court upheld coverage under a similar crime insurance
policy. A group of criminals had observed the time that an armored truck arrived each
evening to pick up money from a supermarket. A few minutes before the genuine truck
was scheduled to arrive, the crooks showed up in a fake truck with fake guards wearing
convincing fake uniforms. The hapless employees freely and unwittingly handed over the
money from the vault, and the scheme was uncovered when the real truck arrived on time
fifteen minutes later. Id. at 866-67. Thus, as in this case, theft was accomplished by a
fraudulent act committed openly by the criminals such that the act itself was observable,
but its felonious nature was not. The insured’s employees were fully cognizant of the
criminals’ actions, but oblivious to the actions’ felonious quality.
The insurance policy at issue in Schwegmann was quite similar to the one at issue
here: it defined “robbery” to mean, inter alia, “a felonious and forcible taking of property”
by violence, threat of violence, or “by any other overt felonious act committed in the
presence of a custodian and of which he was actually cognizant, provided such overt act
12
is not committed by an officer or employee of the Assured.” Id. at 867 (emphasis added).
There, as here, the insured argued that “the proper interpretation of this clause is that the
custodian must be aware of the act of taking but it is not required that the custodian know
at the time of the taking that the overt act is in fact or law felonious,” while the insurance
company argued “that the custodian [must] know at the time of its occurrence that the
overt act is of a felonious nature.” Id. at 867-68. The court held that the plain language
of the policy required coverage, since:
[T]he actual taking was observed and within fifteen minutes the
import of those actions, that is the felonious nature of the taking,
was established. We believe this fulfills the requirement of the
policy. To hold for the construction contended by [insurer], we
would have to add to the policy “cognizant at the time of the
act” or similar words.
Id. at 868. No contemporaneous awareness of the act’s criminal nature was required:
there, as here, the employee both observed the act itself and eventually became aware of
the felonious character of the act. We need not hold, as the Schwegmann court did, that
the insured’s reading is the best one. But we find it persuasive that a court faced with
similar language and similar facts upheld coverage. VAM’s analogous reading under
analogous facts is at least reasonable; in light of the ambiguity of the Policy’s language,
that is all that is necessary to decide the case.
The cases cited by Federal are less germane to the problem before us. First,
Federal argues that a number of New York cases have interpreted policies containing
language similar to that at issue here without finding ambiguity. But those cases do not
present sufficiently similar facts to be helpful here. The same textual provision may
13
apply clearly to one set of facts but unclearly to others. Cf. Gen. Assurance Co. v.
Schmitt, 696 N.Y.S.2d 72, 75 (2d Dep’t 1999) (“[T]he circumstances particular to each
case must be considered in construing the meaning of the term.”). For example, Buffalo
Smoketeria, Inc. v. Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Co. of New York, 258 N.Y.S. 581
(Sup. Ct. Erie County 1932), tested a different question – the definition of “in the
presence of” under a similarly worded policy. And the opinion in Lorenz v. Indemnity
Insurance Co. of North America, 94 N.Y.S.2d 25 (App. Term 1st Dep’t 1949), is so brief
and cryptic as to be entirely unenlightening.
Second, Federal cites a number of cases from other jurisdictions in favor of its
reading. But again, and in contrast to Schwegmann, these cases involve thefts in which
the act itself was covert, and thus do not address the key dispute between the parties:
whether the act itself, or its criminal nature, must be apparent to, and observed by, the
insured’s employee at the time of its occurrence. Schwegmann is the only cited case
applying a similarly worded policy on facts where an agent of the insured observes the
act, but not its criminal nature.
Thus, for example, in Jones v. Auto Owners Insurance Co., 180 So. 2d 145 (Ala.
Ct. App. 1965), a jewelry store clerk felt something was amiss after a group of shoppers
left, and after investigation discovered that watches and rings were missing. But the clerk
could not have observed, and did not observe, the legerdemain by which the property was
taken (that is, the felonious act). As the Jones court stated,
It is true [that the clerk] observed the woman looking at dresser
sets. But she . . . was unaware of any overt felonious act by
14
which the rings were taken. [She] was without actual
knowledge the men took the rings and of course was not aware
the woman was acting as accomplice in such taking.
Id. at 151-52. Although the Jones court denied coverage under a policy with similar
language, the insured’s agent in that case observed neither the act nor its felonious
character, and the case is therefore unhelpful here. Much the same is true of Still v. Great
Central Insurance Co., 176 S.E.2d 268 (Ga. Ct. App. 1970), in which no one saw a bag of
cash being removed from underneath the counter, and Ashcraft v. United States Fidelity
& Guaranty Co., 255 S.W.2d 485 (Ky. 1953), in which the insured’s agent “was not
aware or, as the policy states it, ‘actually cognizant’, of any act involving the abstraction
of the $807 from his person,” id. at 486, since he was aware only that he had been jostled
by a group of men while they were all apparently trying to break up a fight between two
dogs.7
Finally, it is clear that the theft here falls within VAM’s proposed reading of the
Policy. Federal offers little analysis of which “act” (or acts) should be considered
relevant. But since the act must effect an “unlawful taking of insured property,” we agree
with VAM that the most relevant act was the obvious, readily observable action of
Windfrey in taking the box of cash. That act was clearly “felonious,” was “overt” in the
sense of being observable, and was both within Vazquez’s physical “presence” and her
“cognizance,” since she was aware of his request for the money and her act of giving it to
him. We therefore hold that coverage was proper under VAM’s reasonable reading.
7
Federal also offers a number of objections to the district court’s reasoning, but
because we have made our own de novo review of the Policy’s language, we need not
address those contentions.
15
CONCLUSION
The district court correctly held that the Policy’s language was ambiguous and that
VAM presented a reasonable reading permitting coverage. We therefore AFFIRM the
district court’s judgment.
16