FILED
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
February 28, 2011
PUBLISH Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
TENTH CIRCUIT
COHEN-ESREY REAL ESTATE
SERVICES, INC.,
Plaintiff - Appellant,
v. No. 10-3159
TWIN CITY FIRE INSURANCE
COMPANY,
Defendant - Appellee,
and
HARTFORD FIRE INSURANCE
COMPANY,
Defendant.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS
(D.C. NO. 2:08-CV-02527-KHV)
Leonard Rose (Amy Loth Allen, with him on the briefs), Lathrop & Gage LLP,
Kansas City, Missouri, for Plaintiff - Appellant.
William James Foland, Foland, Wickens, Eisfelder, Roper & Hofer, P.C., Kansas
City, Missouri, for Defendant - Appellee.
Before MURPHY, HARTZ, and GORSUCH, Circuit Judges.
HARTZ, Circuit Judge.
Cohen-Esrey Real Estate Services, Inc. (Cohen-Esrey) appeals the district
court’s award of summary judgment to Twin City Fire Insurance, Inc. (Twin
City). Cohen-Esrey’s claims arose from Twin City’s failure to indemnify it under
a claims-made errors-and-omissions policy for liability caused by its employee,
Brenda Phillips. The district court held that the policy precluded indemnification
because on the policy-inception date Cohen-Esrey was aware of circumstances
that it could reasonably have foreseen might result in a claim under the policy.
The district court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332 (diversity jurisdiction).
We have appellate jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and, agreeing with the
district court, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Cohen-Esrey managed the Quail Ridge Apartments in El Dorado, Kansas,
for its owner, HJS Realty, LLC. The Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD) subsidized the rent of qualifying Quail Ridge tenants to the
extent that it exceeded 30% of the tenant’s income. Phillips was Cohen-Esrey’s
on-site property manager at Quail Ridge from March 19, 2001, until
September 15, 2006. In that capacity she was responsible for the day-to-day
operations of the property, including the submission to HUD of documents
reflecting who the tenants were and their incomes.
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From 2004 to 2006, Phillips conducted a fraudulent scheme to embezzle
money from Quail Ridge. When a qualified tenant moved out of a unit, Phillips
would transfer a qualified tenant from a second unit into the vacated unit and
place an unqualified tenant in the second unit. She then falsified the lease and
HUD verification forms for the units to show qualified tenants living in both
apartments and kept for herself the amount paid by the unqualified tenant in
excess of the subsidized rental rate.
The scheme was accidentally detected in September 2006 when Phillips
was out sick and her substitute was asked for a key by someone who claimed to
be a tenant but was not on the rent roll. Soon thereafter Cohen-Esrey notified its
insurance carriers. On September 28 it submitted a notice of claim under its
Hartford Fire Insurance Company crime policy, which covered employee theft.
And on October 30 it submitted a “General Liability Notice of Occurrence/Claim”
under its errors-and-omissions policy with Nutmeg Insurance Company,
informing Nutmeg of “circumstances that may give rise to a claim.” J. App., Vol.
1 at 227. Both notices said: “Apartment property manager embezzled cash from
rents. Loss is approx. $260K.” Id. at 198 (Hartford claim); see id. at 227
(Nutmeg notice). Cohen-Esrey did not, however, inform Twin City of the fraud
before November 1, 2006, when the Twin City errors-and-omissions policy
replaced the Nutmeg policy.
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The scheme was not Phillips’s first misconduct while employed by Cohen-
Esrey. In September 2004 she used a company account to make a personal
purchase of $115 and then denied the misconduct. Cohen-Esrey required her to
repay the money and reprimanded her on January 6, 2005.
On June 7, 2007, HJS wrote Cohen-Esrey a letter demanding that it pay for
the losses to HJS and HUD from Phillips’s scheme because Cohen-Esrey had been
negligent in the retention and supervision of Phillips. The letter referred to
Phillips’s prescheme fraudulent use of a company account to pay personal
expenses and pointed out that Cohen-Esrey had retained her as property manager
without further investigating her financial activities.
Cohen-Esrey submitted a claim under its errors-and-omissions policy with
Twin City, but Twin City denied coverage. Cohen-Esrey then filed a complaint
against Twin City in the United States District Court for the District of Kansas,
alleging claims for breach of contract, bad-faith refusal to pay, and money
owed/reimbursement. 1 Twin City moved for summary judgment on several
grounds. But we need consider only the ground on which the district court based
its summary-judgment ruling. The court agreed with Twin City that there was no
coverage because of the failure to satisfy the policy’s condition precedent that at
the policy’s inception Cohen-Esrey “was [not] aware of [a] Wrongful Act, fact,
1
Cohen-Esrey also brought claims against Hartford. Hartford won at trial,
but Cohen-Esrey’s appellate briefs do not challenge the judgment in Hartford’s
favor.
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circumstance or situation that [it] knew or could reasonably have foreseen might
result in a Claim under this Policy.” J. App., Vol. 1 at 155.
II. DISCUSSION
“We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo,
applying the same standards that the district court should have applied.” See
Jensen v. Solvay Chemicals, Inc., 625 F.3d 641, 650 (10th Cir. 2010) (internal
quotation marks omitted). Summary judgment “should be rendered if the
pleadings, the discovery and disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits show
that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the movant is
entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(2) (2009). “We
examine the record and all reasonable inferences that might be drawn from it in
the light most favorable to the non-moving party.” Berry & Murphy, P.C. v.
Carolina Cas. Ins. Co., 586 F.3d 803, 808 (10th Cir. 2009) (internal quotation
marks omitted).
In this diversity action we apply the substantive law of the forum state,
Kansas. See id. Kansas courts interpret the provisions of insurance contracts as
follows:
First, a court should consider the instrument as a whole and try to
ascertain the parties’ intention from the language used, taking into
account the situation of the parties, the nature of the subject matter,
and the purpose to be accomplished. Second, if a provision is
ambiguous, the insurance policy language is tested by what a
reasonably prudent insured would understand the language to mean,
not by what the insurer intended the language to mean. Third,
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limiting or exclusionary insurance provisions are to be construed
narrowly against the insurer.
Am. Special Risk Mgmt. Corp. v. Cahow, 192 P.3d 614, 621 (Kan. 2008) (citations
omitted).
Cohen-Esrey’s errors-and-omissions policy with Twin City was a claims-
made liability policy that covered both loss and defense costs. “Under a
claims-made policy, coverage is only triggered when, during the policy period, an
insured discovers and notifies the insurer of either claims against the insured or
occurrences that might give rise to such claims.” Id. In contrast, under an
occurrence policy, “coverage becomes effective if the negligent or omitted acts
occur during the term of the policy.” Id. The Twin City policy covered losses
that Cohen-Esrey “shall become legally obligated to pay . . . resulting from
Claims first made against the Insured during the Policy Period . . . for a Wrongful
Act by the Insured, or an Entity for whom an Insured Entity is legally responsible
. . . .” J. App., Vol. 1 at 155. The policy defines a Wrongful Act as “any actual or
alleged negligent act, error or omission in the rendering of or failure to render
Professional Services.” Id. at 158.
The policy provision central to the parties’ dispute is in § I. It states that
“as [a] condition[] precedent to coverage hereunder[,] . . . as of the inception date
no partner, principal, officer, director, or member of the Insured was aware of any
Wrongful Act, fact, circumstance or situation that he or she knew or could
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reasonably have foreseen might result in a Claim under this Policy.” Id. at 155.
Such prior-knowledge conditions are common in claims-made policies because
they “ensure that only risks of unknown loss are potentially incurred,” Cahow,
192 P.3d at 621, and prevent an insured from “obtain[ing] coverage for the risk of
a known loss,” id. at 622, which would be unfair to the insurer.
As the parties agree, the Kansas Supreme Court applies what it terms a
two-prong, subjective-objective test to determine whether a prior-knowledge
condition has been satisfied. See id. at 628. The subjective prong is “whether the
insured knew of certain facts.” Id. at 625. In Cahow the objective prong,
tracking the language of the application for the policy, was “whether such facts
could reasonably have been expected to give rise to a claim.” Id. at 625. 2 The
objective prong in this case would accordingly be whether Cohen-Esrey “could
reasonably have foreseen [that the facts known to it] might result in a Claim
under th[e] Policy.” J. App., Vol. 1 at 155.
Twin City contends that the prior-knowledge condition was not satisfied
because of the facts indisputably known to Cohen-Esrey by November 1, 2006,
the inception date of the policy. First, Cohen-Esrey knew in September 2006 that
Phillips had engaged in a scheme to defraud HUD and HJS. Second, it knew that
Phillips had fraudulently used a Cohen-Esrey company account to pay personal
2
The application asked whether there were “any facts, circumstances or
situations involving the Applicant . . . which could reasonably be expected to give
rise to a claim.” Cahow, 192 P.3d at 618.
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expenses of $115 in September 2004, and then lied to Cohen-Esrey about doing
so, yet Cohen-Esrey had retained her and taken no steps to oversee her work more
carefully. From these facts, argues Twin City, any reasonable insured would
anticipate that the victims of Phillips’s fraud might claim that Cohen-Esrey had
negligently retained and supervised Phillips.
On appeal Cohen-Esrey argues that a proper analysis requires consideration
of a number of additional facts under the subjective prong of the Kansas test. It
asserts that it knew the following: (1) that Phillips had been disciplined on
January 6, 2005, for her improper charge to a company account; (2) that Phillips
reimbursed Cohen-Esrey and neither Cohen-Esrey, HUD, nor HJS suffered a loss
from that misconduct; (3) that Quail Ridge passed a HUD audit every year of
Phillips’s embezzlement, including 2006; (4) that the January 2005 incident “did
not flag any internal control violation or trigger an audit,” Aplt. Br. at 22; (5) that
Kansas Housing Resources Corporation, which handled oversight of Quail Ridge
for HUD, performed a management and occupancy review two or three times and
Quail Ridge passed each time; (6) that the tenant files prepared by Phillips were
approved by Cohen-Esrey’s central compliance procedures; (7) that the Federal
Home Loan Bank issued a compliance memo on September 6, 2006, that deemed
Quail Ridge to be “in compliance with . . . Federal Regulations for Long-term
Monitoring,” id.; (8) that the compliance memo was transmitted to HJS; (9) that
Cohen-Esrey submitted a notice of claim under its crime policy with Hartford;
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and (10) that Cohen-Esrey’s submission in October 2006 of a notice of
circumstances to Nutmeg (its errors-and-omissions carrier at the time) was in
accordance with its regular practice of reporting occurrences to its insurance
carriers.
Cohen-Esrey contends that consideration of these facts would render
unforeseeable a claim against it of negligent retention and supervision. It points
out (1) that the company did not believe it was negligent and did not know how it
could have prevented Phillips’s embezzlement beyond employing the internal and
external controls already in place, and (2) that Phillips testified that she did not
know how her scheme would have been detected had she not been out sick.
Further, Cohen-Esrey argues that the question of foreseeability is ordinarily a
question of fact for the jury and can be determined as a matter of law “[o]nly
when reasonable persons could arrive at but one conclusion.” Kansas State Bank
& Trust Co. v. Specialized Transp. Servs. Inc., 819 P.2d 587, 598 (Kan. 1991).
We are not persuaded. Cohen-Esrey knew that Phillips had defrauded HUD
and HJS and that she had previously been caught engaging in theft and dishonesty
yet had not been fired or subjected to stricter oversight. To be sure, a claim
against Cohen-Esrey for negligent retention and supervision was not a certainty.
But any reasonable insured under such a professional errors-and-omissions policy
would know that a claim of such negligence was more than colorable. Certainly
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any insured “could reasonably have foreseen [that these facts] might result in a
Claim under this Policy.” J. App., Vol. 1 at 155 (emphasis added).
Cohen-Esrey misses the point when it focuses on whether it could
reasonably have predicted that Phillips would engage in her fraudulent scheme.
True, not everyone who steals $115 will engage in a much larger and more
complicated embezzlement scheme. And the failure of several external and
internal audits and controls to detect her scheme may have given Cohen-Esrey a
sense of security about Phillips’s virtue. But these observations are most relevant
to whether Cohen-Esrey was in fact negligent in retaining Phillips and not
monitoring her more closely, not to whether a victim of Phillips’s scheme would
claim that Cohen-Esrey bore responsibility. Only if a reasonable insured would
have concluded that Cohen-Esrey had a sure and obvious defense to a negligent-
retention-and-supervision claim—a defense so sure and obvious that a victim
would very likely not bother to make the claim—would the policy’s condition
precedent be satisfied. It would not be satisfied simply by a showing that a
claimant would likely lose. After all, it bars coverage if Cohen-Esrey was aware
of facts or circumstances from which it was reasonably foreseeable that a claim
“might result.” Id. at 155 (emphasis added). The threat of a claim, even an
unfounded one, is relevant to the insurer’s exposure, because defense costs, which
can be quite substantial, are covered by the policy even when the claim against
the insured proves unsuccessful. The reality of modern American litigation,
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which is what insurance policies are designed to protect against, is that persons
must be prepared to defend against colorable albeit invalid claims.
The Third Circuit has construed a prior-knowledge exclusion to require
almost a certainty that no claim would be pursued against the insured. See
Coregis Ins. Co. v. Baratta & Fenerty, Ltd., 264 F.3d 302 (3d Cir. 2001). The
insured attorneys argued that the exclusion did not apply because the limitations
period had expired on the potential claim before the effective date of the policy.
See id. at 307. A claim against the insureds was not covered by the policy if it
arose out of an act occurring before the policy effective date and if the insured
attorney, before the effective date, “could have reasonably foreseen that such
act . . . might be expected to be the basis of a CLAIM.” Id. at 304. The
exclusion may not have been as broad as Twin City’s because it included the
words be expected; one could read “might be expected to be the basis of a
CLAIM” to require a greater likelihood of a claim than does the Twin City
language “might result in a Claim.” J. App., Vol. 1 at 155. Yet the court ruled
that the exclusion was broad enough to bar coverage. It said:
When an attorney has a basis to believe he has breached a
professional duty, he has a reason to foresee that his conduct might
be the basis of a professional liability claim against him. He cannot
assume that the claim will not be brought because he subjectively
believes it is time barred or lacks merit.
Coregis Ins. Co., 264 F.3d at 307. It further elaborated:
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In our view, a reasonable attorney in [the insureds’] position could
not have been certain, and thus should not have assumed, that the
limitations period had expired as a matter of law. Rather, a
reasonable attorney would have foreseen that there might be the basis
for a claim because the statute of limitations may have been tolled
. . . under the discovery rule.
Id. at 308. Likewise, the New York Court of Appeals observed when applying the
objective prong to language in an insurance contract similar to Twin City’s that
the insured need not actually be liable, saying, “the prior knowledge exclusion in
this case does not require the known-of act, error, omission or circumstance to be
wrongful conduct on the part of the insured.” Exec. Risk Indem. Inc. v. Pepper
Hamilton LLP, 919 N.E.2d 172, 13 N.Y.3d 313, 323 (N.Y. 2009) (internal
quotation marks omitted) (construing provision excluding coverage if insured
“could have reasonably foreseen that [circumstance known to it] might be the
basis of a CLAIM”); see Westport Ins. Corp. v. Goldberger & Dubin, P.C., 255 F.
App’x 593, 594 (2d Cir. 2007) (unpublished) (“even a low probability of suit
would trigger” the exclusion).
Cohen-Esrey cites several cases in which the insurer unsuccessfully sought
to invoke a prior-knowledge provision to preclude coverage. But we do not find
them persuasive. All but one are unhelpful because the court did not apply the
subjective-objective test adopted in Kansas or because the policy required a
greater likelihood of a claim being brought than did the Twin City policy, which
required only reasonable foreseeability that a claim might result. The remaining
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case is distinguishable on other grounds. In Westport Ins. v. Ray Quinney &
Nebeker, No. 2:07-CV-236-TC, 2009 WL 2474005 (D. Utah Aug. 7, 2009), the
court denied summary judgment to the insurer because of a dispute regarding a
critically important fact under the subjective prong. The claim against the insured
law firm was that it had committed malpractice in providing legal services for a
kidney-transplant program. See id. at *1. The factual issue was whether the firm
subjectively knew at the relevant time that it had in fact provided such services.
See id. at *6.
Cohen-Esrey may have had a plausible defense to a claim, but it was not
one that was particularly likely to deter a victim from suing. We therefore hold
that the prior-knowledge condition barred coverage under the Twin City policy.
Twin City was entitled to summary judgment because no reasonable person could
find, on this record, that the condition precedent was satisfied. 3
3
Cohen-Esrey implies in its opening brief that Twin City had received some
sort of pre-inception-date constructive notice of the circumstances of Phillips’s
embezzlement through the notice filed by Cohen-Esrey with Nutmeg. But Cohen-
Esrey did not make this argument in district court, and the argument is therefore
forfeited on appeal. See Tele-Communications, Inc. v. Comm’r, 104 F.3d 1229,
1232–33 (10th Cir. 1997).
Also, Cohen-Esrey argues in its reply brief that HJS’s claim was not
reasonably foreseeable at the time of the Twin City policy’s inception because
Cohen-Esrey had not yet conducted a full investigation into the effect of
Phillips’s scheme and therefore did not know that HJS had actually suffered any
losses. This argument comes too late. “This court does not ordinarily review
issues raised for the first time in a reply brief.” Stump v. Gates, 211 F.3d 527,
533 (10th Cir. 2000).
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III. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the district court’s judgment.
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