TIG Specialty Insurance v. PinkMonkey.com Inc.

                                                                              United States Court of Appeals
                                                                                       Fifth Circuit
                                                                                      F I L E D
                                                                                       July 14, 2004
                         UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                                  FIFTH CIRCUIT
                                                                                 Charles R. Fulbruge III
                                                                                         Clerk
                                        ____________

                                        No. 03-20848
                                        ____________


              TIG SPECIALTY INSURANCE CO,


                                            Plaintiff-Counter Defendant - Appellee,

              versus


              PINKMONKEY.COM INC; ET AL,


                                            Defendants
              versus

              WINSOME CHEE; ART CHEE; BAILEY LEE; FRANC LEE;
              KHALID HUMOND ALTHEYAB; ET AL

                                            Counter Claimants - Appellants.



                         Appeal from the United States District Court
                             For the Southern District of Texas



Before BARKSDALE, EMILIO M. GARZA, and PICKERING, Circuit Judges.

EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judge:

       Winsome Chee, Art Chee, Bailey Lee, Franc Lee and Khalid Humond Altheyab (“the Chee

parties”) appeal from the district court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of TIG Specialty

Insurance (“TIG”). In this insurance coverage dispute, TIG filed a declaratory action asking the
district court to declare that it is not liable for state court judgments against PinkMonkey.com

(“PinkMonkey” or “the Company”), its former chief execut ive officer, Patrick Greene, and a

PinkMonkey securities dealer, John Kim, arising from their lawsuit with the Chee parties; or the Chee

parties’ settlement with specified PinkMonkey officers or directors. Finding that the district court

correctly granted summary judgment in favor of TIG, we affirm.

                                                  I

                                                 A

       PinkMonkey provides literature study aids through an internet website. Greene was the

largest shareholder in PinkMonkey, its chairman, and its chief executive officer during the events at

issue. Kim was a securities dealer representing PinkMonkey.        The other officers and directors

involved in the events at issue are Dennis Rigas, D. Keith McIntosh, Donald Ison, Moses Joseph, and

Harry White (collectively “other officers/directors”).      The Chee parties were investors in

PinkMonkey.

       TIG issued PinkMonkey a Director and Officer Liability insurance policy (“Insurance Policy”)

effective from August 23, 1999 through August 23, 2000, with a retroactive date of April 24, 1997.

Section I.A of the Insurance Policy provides insurance coverage for “Insureds” of claims against them

based on “Wrongful Acts” they allegedly committed. Specifically § I.A provides that:

               [TIG] shall pay on behalf of each Insured all Loss for which the
               Insured is not indemnified by the Company which the Insured
               becomes legally obligated to pay because of any Claim first made
               against the Insured . . .for a Wrongful Act committed, attempted or
               allegedly committed or attempted by such Insured . . . .




                                                -2-
        Section I.C1 of the Insurance Policy also included a “Securities Claims Endorsement,” which

provides insurance coverage fo r PinkMonkey for all securities claims against it. Section I.C

specifically provides that:

                [TIG] shall pay on behalf of the Company all Loss for which the
                Company becomes legally obligated to pay because of any Securities
                Claim first made against the Company during the Policy Period or, if
                exercised during the Extended Reporting Period, for any Securities
                Claim arising out of a Company Wrongful Act committed or
                attempted by the Company after the Policy Retroactive Date as shown
                in Item 7 of the Declarations.

        The Insurance Policy, in § II.K,2 defines a securities claim as:

                 [A] claim made against an Insured or the Company alleging a
                violation of the Securities Act of 1933, the Securities Exchange Act
                of 1934, any rules or regulations of the Securities and Exchange
                Commission adopted thereunder; similar federal, state or foreign
                statutes regulating securities; and any rules or regulations of any state
                or foreign jurisdiction, or any common law, relating to any transaction
                arising out of, involving, or relating to the sale of securities.


        The Insurance Policy also included a Personal Profit Exclusion in § III.L excluding from

coverage “any Claim [against any Insured] based upon, arising from, or in consequence of an Insured

having gained in fact any personal profit, remuneration, or advantage to which such Insured was not

legally entitled.” Thus, while the Insurance Policy explicitly covered securities claims against the

Company and Insureds, it excluded coverage of claims arising from an Insured having gained a

personal profit to which such Insured was not legally entitled.



        1
        Section C was added to the Insurance Policy by an Endorsement for Securities Claims that
was effective at the inception of the Insurance Policy.
        2
        Section K was added to the Insurance Policy by an Endorsement for Securities Claims that
was effective at the inception of the Insurance Policy.

                                                  -3-
                                                 B

       The Chee parties filed a Texas state court action in July 2000 claiming that Kim and Greene

solicited them to invest in PinkMonkey and made numerous misrepresentations about the investment.

Specifically, the Chee parties asserted that (1) Kim and Greene falsely promised that thirty percent

of the PinkMonkey stock they bought would be registered under federal securities laws; (2) Kim and

Greene falsely referred to PinkMonkey as a “no risk and good investment;” (3) Kim and Greene

falsely claimed that PinkMonkey was scheduled to distribute shares of stock it held in Houston

Interweb Design Inc., and that the Chee parties would receive five shares of Houston Interweb for

every one hundred shares of PinkMonkey they purchased. The Chee parties alleged violations of the

Texas Blue Sky Act, TEX. REV. CIV. STAT. art. 581-33(A), including control person liability;

violations of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act, TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE art. 27.01; and

negligent misrepresentation.

       The Chee Parties settled with four of the other directors/officers prior to trial. One of the

other directors/officers defaulted. The Chee parties went to trial against PinkMonkey, Greene, and

Kim. The state court trial resulted in a judgment in favor of the Chee parties. The jury found that

PinkMonkey sold stock to the Chee parties by means of an untrue statement of material fact or an

omission to state a material fact; PinkMonkey was materially aided by Greene and Kim; Greene, Kim,

and PinkMonkey made negligent misrepresentations to the Chee parties; PinkMonkey and Greene

committed fraud against the Chee parties; and Greene benefitted from his false representation or

promise. The jury found that Kim did not benefit from his actions. The state court judgment imposed

liability for actual damages, and awarded fees and costs to the Chee parties.


                                                -4-
       The defendants claimed under the Insurance Policy in the state court. TIG responded with

a reservation of rights, and then denied the coverage claims of PinkMonkey, Kim, Greene, and two

of the directors who settled prior to trial. TIG then filed a declaratory action in the district court,

which had diversity jurisdiction over the action, seeking a ruling that the claims were not covered

under the Insurance Policy. The Chee parties intervened as third-party defendants and counter third-

party plaintiffs. TIG and the Chee parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The district

court granted summary judgment in favor of TIG because it ruled that the Personal Profit Exclusion

in the Insurance Policy excluded from coverage all of the claims at issue as Greene personally profited

from the sale of the stock to the Chee parties. The district court also ruled that the claims against

PinkMonkey, Kim, and the other officers/directors were excluded because those claims were based

upon the claims against Greene.

                                                  II

       The Chee parties appeal the district court’s order contending that (1) Greene did not gain in

fact any personal profit, remuneration, or advantage to which he was not legally entitled; and (2) even

if the personal profit exclusion applies to Greene, it does not apply to the Company or the other

director/officer defendants.

       We review the district court's grant of summary judgment de novo, considering all evidence

in a light most favorable to the non-movant. Greenberg v. Crossroads Sys., Inc. 364 F.3d 657, 661

(5th Cir. 2004). Summary judgment will be affirmed where, after independent review, there is no

genuine issue o f material fact and the movant is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. Id.

Summary judgment may be affirmed on any basis supported by the record. See S&W Enters., L.L.C.

v. SouthTrust Bank of Ala., NA, 315 F.3d 533, 537-38 (5th Cir. 2003). Because this case comes


                                                 -5-
before us through diversity jurisdiction, we apply Texas law. See Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304

U.S. 64, 78-79 (1938).

        Under Texas law, in construing an insurance policy contract, the court must strive to give

effect to the written expression of the parties’ intent. Forbau v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., 876 S.W.2d 132,

133 (Tex. 1994). If a written contract is worded in such a way that it can be given a definite or

certain legal meaning, then the contract is not ambiguous. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. v. CBI Indus.,

907 S.W.2d 517, 520 (Tex. 1995). A contract will become ambiguous only if its meaning is uncertain

or if it is subject to two or more reasonable interpretations. Id. If the insurance policy is susceptible

of more than one reasonable interpretation, the court must adopt the construction that most favors

the insured. W. Heritage Ins. Co. v. Magic Years Learning Ctrs. & Child Care Inc., 45 F.3d 85, 88

(5th Cir. 1995). However, an ambiguity does not arise simply because the parties advance conflicting

interpretations of the contract. Forbau, 876 S.W.2d at 134. “Therefore, we must read the

allegations of the underlying state court suit in light of the policy’s insuring provisions and exclusions

to determine whether there is coverage, bearing in mind these liberal rules of construction in favor

of the insured.” Magic Years, 45 F.3d at 88.

                                                    A

        In the district court the Chee parties claimed that section I.A of the Insurance Policy provides

coverage for the claims against the individual officers and directors and that section I.C covers their

claims against PinkMonkey. The district court, however, ruled that the Personal Profit Exclusion bars

coverage under bo th provision I.A and I.C because Greene had gained in fact a personal profit or

advantage to which he was not legally entitled. On appeal, the Chee parties contend that Greene did

not personally profit from his misrepresentation and that ruling that he personally profited within the


                                                   -6-
meaning of the Personal Profit Exclusion would eviscerate the Securities Claims Endorsement.

       For the Personal Profit Exclusion to apply to Greene, the Chee parties’ claims must be based

upon, arising from, or in consequence of his: (1) having gained in fact any personal profit,

remuneration, or advantage; (2) to which he was not legally entitled. See Insurance Policy § III.L.

Greene was found liable for statutory stock fraud under Section 27.01 of the Texas Business &

Commerce Code. In order to find Greene liable for statutory stock fraud the jury was required to find

that he “benefitted from the false representation or promise.” Benefit is synonymous with advantage

or profit. See BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 150 (7th ed. 1999). Thus, Greene’s statutory stock fraud

conviction indicates that he gained in fact a personal profit or advantage.

       However, the jury’s finding that Greene benefitted is not sufficient on its own to trigger the

Personal Profit Exclusion. TIG must also establish that Greene was not legally entitled to his gain.

Thus, we must determine precisely what Greene’s gain was and whether he was legally entitled to it.



       This court has found that a majority shareholder in a small startup company gains a personal

advantage from a sizeable capital investment in the company because it gives the majority shareholder

the opportunity to become the owner of a successful business. See Jarvis Christian College v. Nat’l

Union Fire Ins. Co., 197 F.3d 742, 747 (5th Cir. 1999). Here, Greene was the majority shareholder

in PinkMonkey, a small startup with only four employees that operated out of a garage. Greene was

also the chairman and chief executive of PinkMonkey. As in Jarvis, Greene gained a personal

advantage from the opportunity to own and participate in a successful business when PinkMonkey

was infused with capital as a result of his fraud.

       A defendant is not legally entitled to an advantage or profit resulting from his violation of law


                                                     -7-
if he could be required to return such profit. Cf. Jarvis, 197 F.3d at 749 (holding that a fiduciary is

not legally entitled to any profit or advantage he gains as a result of breach of duty because such a

fiduciary must account to his principal for all he has received). Here, Greene’s advantage resulted

from his violation of § 27.01. The remedies for a violation of § 27.01 include the equitable remedy

of recision, which requires the return of any money paid. See Scott v. Sebree, 986 S.W.2d 364, 368-

69 (Tex. App. 1999) (holding that § 27.01 allows the equitable remedy of specific performance

because § 27.01 allows for recision). Because return of the capital investment in PinkMonkey could

have been required, there was no legal entitlement to the capital investment. Greene’s fraud resulted

in the capital investment, which lead directly to his personal advantage. Greene was not legally

entitled to profit from his fraud.

        The Chee parties contend that finding that Greene was not legally entitled to the advantage

he gained from his fraud would eviscerate the Securities Claims Endorsement. This is plainly untrue.

The Personal Profit Exclusion only applies to claims against an Insured. As explained in detail in

section II.B below, Insureds are separate from the Company. While some securities claims against

the Company will be considered a claim against an Insured, when, as explained below, both the

Company and Insured are sued based upon the same wrongful act, not all claims against the Company

will be considered a claim against an Insured. As the Personal Profit Exclusion does not necessarily

apply to all Securities claims against the Company, it does not eviscerat e the Securities Claims

Endorsement.

        Moreover, Greene was not the only officer/director sued for a securities claim. Greene,

however, was the only officer/director who gained an advantage or personal profit. For example,

although Kim made negligent misrepresentations to the Chee parties, he was not found to have


                                                 -8-
benefitted from his misrepresentations, according to the State court jury findings. Consequently,

insurance coverage over a claim brought solely against Kim could not be excluded under the Personal

Profit Exclusion. Thus, not all securities claims against Insureds will trigger the Personal Profit

Exclusion. As such, the Securities Claims Endorsement is not eviscerated by finding that Greene

profited within the meaning of the Personal Profit Exclusion.

                                                  B

       The Chee parties next assert that even if the Personal Profit Exclusion applies to Greene, it

should not apply to either the Company or the other directors and officers. They contend that the

Insurance Policy limits the Personal Profit Exclusion to Insureds who themselves have obtained an

improper profit or gain. This co ntention is contrary to the plain language of the Personal Profit

Exclusion.

       The Personal Profit Exclusion states that “[t]his insurance does not apply to any Claim made

against any Insured arising out of [ ] the following: . . . any Claim based upon, arising from, or in

consequence of an Insured having gained in fact any personal profit, remuneration, or advantage to

which such Insured was not legally entitled.” Insurance Policy § III.L. (emphasis added). The

exclusion does not require that the claim be based upon the Insured, that Insured or such Insured

having gained a personal profit or gain, but based upon an Insured having gained a personal profit.

Although the terms “the Insured,” “that Insured” or “such Insured” preceding personal profit would

indicate the same insured as the claim is brought against, the Personal Profit Exclusion uses the more

general term “an Insured.” This indicates that coverage is excluded for all Insureds, not merely the

Insured who profited. See Coregis Ins. Co. v. Lyford, 21 F.Supp.2d 695, 698 (S.D. Tex. 1998)

(holding that exclusions concerning “the act s of ‘an’ or ‘any’ insured, as opposed to exclusions


                                                 -9-
concerning acts of ‘the’ insured, operate to bar coverage for all insureds when one insured commits

such an act”).

        Moreover, “courts must be particularly wary of isolating from its surroundings or considering

apart from other provisions a single phrase, sentence, or section of a contract.” State Farm Life Ins.

Co. v. Beaston, 907 S.W.2d 430, 433 (Tex. 1995). Here, the Personal Profit Exclusion does use the

specific term “such Insured” to indicate the same insured as previously referred to, when it states that

the claim must arise from “an Insured having gained in fact any personal profit . . . to which such

Insured was not legally entitled.” The use of more specific language within the same provision

further indicates that “an Insured” does not necessarily refer to the same insured against whom the

claim was bro ught. By considering the entire provision, it is clear that a claim arising out of an

Insured having gained a personal profit is not limited to a claim against the Insured who profited.

        If the claims against Kim and the other officers/directors are claims against Insureds arising

out of Greene’s personal profit, then the Personal Profit Exclusion is applicable to Kim and the other

officers and directors. The Insurance Policy defines an Insured as

               any person who after the Policy Retroactive Date is one of the
               following: 1. A duly elected Director of the Company; 2. A duly
               elected or appointed Officer of the Company; 3. The estate, heirs or
               legal representative of any deceased Director of the Company who
               was a Director or Officer of the Company at the time of the Wrongful
               Act upon which an insurable Claim is based; or 4. The legal
               representative of any Director or Officer of the Company in the event
               of his or her incompetency, insolvency, or bankruptcy.
Insurance Policy Section II, ¶ H. All officers and directors are Insureds, thus the claims against Kim3

and the other officers and directors are claims made against “any Insureds.” The claims against Kim

and the other officers and directors are based upon Greene having gained an advantage to which he


        3
         It is not disputed that Kim is an officer or director covered by the insurance policy at issue.

                                                 -10-
was not legally entitled. The claims against the directors and officers other than Kim were for control

person liability. The rationale behind control person liability is that a control person is in a position

to prevent the securities violation at issue. See Frank v. Bear, Stearns & Co., 11 S.W.3d 380, 383-84

(Tex. App. 2000). Thus, control person liability is based upon the underlying securities violations.

In this case, the claims against the officers and directors other than Kim were based upon Greene’s

fraud, which enabled Greene to gain an advantage to which he was not legally entitled. Insurance

coverage for the claims against the officers and directors other t han Kim are thus excluded by the

Personal Profit Exclusion.

        The jury found that Kim materially aided in selling stock to the Chee parties. Greene’s

advantage, to which he was not legally entitled, was derived from the stock sale to the Chee parties.

The claims against Kim were thus based upon Greene’s advantage. Accordingly, the Personal Profit

Exclusion also excludes coverage for the claims against Kim.

        The Chee parties argue that the Personal Profit Exclusion does not exclude the claims against

the Company because it only applies to any claim made against “any Insured” and PinkMonkey is not

an Insured. However, under the “Limits of Liability” section of the Insurance Policy, “[a]ll Claims

arising from the same Wrongful Act or interrelated or continuous Wrongful Acts of one or more

Insured shall constitute a single Claim.” Insurance Policy § V.B. Here, the claims against the

Company and the claims against Greene arise from the same Wrongful Act, the misrepresentations

made to the Chee parties. Accordingly, the claims against the company and against the Insureds arise

from the same Wrongful Act and constitute a single claim. As such, the claim against the Company

is also a claim against an Insured. See Forbau, 876 S.W.2d at 133 (“This court is bound to read all

parts of a contract together to ascertain the agreement of the parties.”). The Personal Profit


                                                  -11-
Exclusion thus excludes coverage for the claims against PinkMonkey.

                                              III

       The district court correctly ruled that the Personal Profit Exclusion excluded insurance

coverage for the claims against Greene, Kim, the other officers and directors, and PinkMonkey.

Consequently, the district court order granting summary judgment in favor of TIG is AFFIRMED.




                                             -12-
PICKERING, Circuit Judge, specially concurring in part and dissenting in part:



       I concur with the majority as to the result reached in this case as to Greene, PinkMonkey’s

chief executive, and the result reached as to all of the other directors of the company, except White.

I do not agree that this case should be affirmed as to the securities dealer, John Kim, and director of

PinkMonkey, White. I likewise do not agree that the decision should be affirmed as to PinkMonkey.

Consequently I respectfully dissent as to PinkMonkey, Kim and White.

       The Chee parties argue that under the holding of Alstrin v. St. Paul Mercury Insurance Co.,

179 F. Supp. 2d 376 (D. Del. 2002), the judgment against all defendants should be reversed based

upon the argument that the exclusion takes away the coverage granted by the insuring agreement.

The problem with that argument is that it is contrary to the holding of this Court, interpreting Texas

law in Jarvis Christian College v. National Union Fire Insurance Co. of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,

197 F.3d 742 (5th Cir. 1999). Consequently, I agree with the majority that the decision as to Green

should be affirmed. The policy at issue also specifically provides that an insured cannot settle without

the consent of the insurer. Since the directors other than White settled without the consent of the

insurer, I would also affirm as to those directors. As to director White there was a default judgment

and as to securities agent Kim there was a finding of liability based upon negligent misrepresentation.

                                                   I.

       Under well established Texas law, “if a contract of insurance is susceptible of more than one

reasonable interpretation, we must reso lve the uncertainty by adopting the construction that most

favors the insured.” National Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh v. Hudson Energy Co., Inc., 811

S.W.2d 552, 555 (Tex. 1991) (citations omitted) (emphasis added). The Hudson court held “[i]n
particular, exceptions or limitations on liability are strictly construed against the insurer and in favor

of the insured.” Id. (citations omitted) (emphasis added). The Hudson court went on to say “[t]he

court must adopt the construction of an exclusionary clause urged by the insured as long as that

construction is not unreasonable, even if the construction urged by the insurer appears to be more

reasonable or a more accurate reflection of the parties’ intent.” Id. (citations omitted) (emphasis

added).

          The Fifth Circuit, in summarizing Texas law, set out the above principles and noted

specifically that “exceptions and limitations of liability are even more strictly construed against the

insurer.” Western Heritage Ins. Co. v. Magic Years Learning Centers and Child Care, Inc., 45 F.3d

85, 88 (5th Cir. 1995) (emphasis added). “An intent to exclude coverage must be expressed in clear

and unambiguous language . . .” Hudson, 811 S.W.2d at 555 (emphasis added). The case before this

Court involves an exception, or exclusion.

          The policy in question is a “DIRECTOR AND OFFICER LIABILITY POLICY” comprised

of nine sections, numbered with Roman numerals, I through IX, plus an Endorsement. Section I.A.

provides “[w]e shall pay on behalf of each Insured all loss for which the Insured is not indemnified

by the Company which the Insured becomes legally obligated to pay . . .” Section I.B. provides “[w]e

shall pay on behalf of the Company all loss for which the Company grants indemnification to each

insured . . .” Section I.C. provides “[w]e shall pay on behalf of the Company all losses for which the

Company becomes legally obligated to pay because of any Securities Claim . . .” The endorsement

added a definition of a securities claim as follows: “‘Securities Claim’ means a claim made against an

Insured or the Company alleging a violation of the Securities Act . . .” (emphasis added).



                                                  -14-
         The Definition section of the policy defines the word “Insured” as being a “director” or an

“officer” of the company. Both officer and director are singular words. Although the company is

covered as to a securities claim, the company itself is not covered under other provisions of the policy

and is not defined as an “Insured.” The policy provides that “[t]he written application for coverage

shall be construed as a separate application for coverage by each of the Insureds.” (Section “IV.

REPRESENTATIONS AND SEVERABILITY”) (emphasis added).

         Appellants contend that the exclusion applies only to a claim against an insured who receives

a profit or gain to which he or she is not legally entitled. That is not an unreasonable interpretation.

The exclusion in question is set out and laid out as follows:

         III. EXCLUSIONS

         This insurance does not apply to any Claim made against any Insured arising out of
         any of the following:

         ****

         L. Any Claim based upon, arising from, or in consequence of an Insured having
         gained in fact any personal profit, remuneration, or advantage to which such Insured
         was not legally entitled. (emphasis added)

         This Exclusion uses the word “Insured” three times. Each time the word “Insured” is

singular. Each time it is used, it is modified by a different adjective. Chronologically, “Insured” is

modified by “any,” “an,” and “such.” According to the dictionary, “any” means “one,” singular, but

it can mean “some,” plural.4 “An” is clearly singular. “Such insured” refers back to “an insured.”

So, the third time the word “insured” is used in the exclusion it clearly refers back to the second time



         4
           The first definition of the word “any” is “any. 1. Being one (or, pl., some).”   Webster’s New Collegiate
Dictionary 40 (1958 ed.).

                                                           -15-
the word insured is used.

       According to the dictionary definition, the word “any” can be interpreted as being singular

or plural. Consequently, appellants’ contention that it is to be construed as being singular is not

unreasonable. Bolstering appellants’ interpretation is the fact that each time the word “insured” is

used, it is singular and that the words “such insured” refer back to “an insured.” Again, interpreting

the word “any insured” as being singular, and “such insured” as referring back to the specific insured

who profited or gained inappropriately, appellants’ construction of the exclusionary clause is not

unreasonable.

       Accordingly it is not unreasonable to interpret the EXCLUSION as excluding from coverage

only a claim against the single insured who gained a profit or advantage to which he was not legally

entitled. Such a construction would not exclude the claim against the securities dealer Kim who was

found liable for negligent misrepresentation, nor would it exclude the claim against White since he

was not found to have inappropriately profited, nor would it exclude the claim against the Company.

The interpretation argued for by the appellants is not only a reasonable interpretation, but in the mind

of this writer, it is more consistent with the wording of the exclusion.

       The majority notes that the jury found that “Green, Kim, and PinkMonkey made negligent

misrepresentations to the Chee parties” and that “PinkMonkey and Green committed fraud against

the Chee parties[.]” The majority then notes that “insurance coverage under a claim brought solely

against Kim could not be excluded under the Personal Profit Exclusion.” So, according to the

majority, if appellants had filed their suit against Green, Kim, White, and PinkMonkey on the theory

of negligent misrepresentation, the claim would have been covered but that since they included the

fraudulent claim against Green as to which he received inappropriate gain, coverage is excluded. It

                                                 -16-
is incongruous that if appellants had filed against Kim for negligent misrepresentation, such a claim

would have been covered, but since they sued Kim, Green and PinkMonkey jointly, the claims are

excluded from coverage.

       The majority focuses on the words “an insured,” construes the words “an insured” as meaning

“any insured” (plural) and concludes that if a claim is excluded based on the actions of any one

insured who receives an inappropriate gain or profit, it is barred as to all insureds. While that may

be a reasonable interpretation, it is not the only reasonable interpretation. While it is reasonable to

interpret “an insured” as meaning any insured, it is also reasonable to interpret “any” insured as a

single insured, thus making the exclusion apply only to a claim against the specific insured who

received the ill gotten gain. As the Court in the Western Heritage case concluded “[m]indful that we

must adopt any construction of an exclusionary clause urged by the insured as long as it is not

unreasonable, (citation omitted) we must read the employer liability exclusion as applying separately

to each insured . . .” Western Heritage, 45 F.3d at 90 (emphasis added).

       If “any insured” in the exclusion is interpreted as singular, then the only party barred is the

one receiving the inappropriate profit or gain. If that is a reasonable interpretation, the following

analysis is superfluous.

                                                  II.

       Appellants contend that since Section I.C. provides specific coverage for “the Company” as

to a securities claim, and since the exclusion does not clearly and unambiguously exclude a claim

against the company, that the claim against the company is not excluded. In fact, the exclusionary

clause do es no t exclude a claim against the company at all, much less clearly and unambiguously.

Appellants’ interpretation that the exclusionary clause does not exclude a claim against the company

                                                 -17-
is not an unreasonable interpretation. The exclusion specifically excludes “any claim made against

any insured” but does not exclude a securities claim against the company.                   The majority

acknowledges that “The Personal Profit Exclusion only applies to claims against an Insured . . .

Insureds are separate from the Company.” The insured in writing the policy demonstrated in at least

three instances that they knew how to make a paragraph apply to both “an insured” and the

“company.” As the Texas Supreme Court held in Hudson, “an intent to exclude coverage must be

expressed in clear and unambiguous language . . .” 8ll S.W.2d at 555.

        In order to get around the fact that the wording of the exclusion only excludes a claim against

an “insured” and not the company, the majority relies on the policy language that “all claims arising

from the same wrongful act or interrelated, repeated, or continuous wrongful acts of one or more

injured shall constitute a single claim.” The fallacy of this conclusion is that this definition of “claim”

is found under Section “V. LIMITS OF LIABILITY” which further states that “the claims shall be

subject to a single retention.” Since this definition of “claim” is not found in the Definition section of

the policy, but rather is found in the “Limits of Liability” section, it is not unreasonable to construe

this definition of “claim” as being applicable only to the limits of liability. It is not unreasonable to

interpret this as limiting the insurer’s limits of liability and not the extent of coverage. Particularly

is this not an unreasonable interpretation in view of the fact that Section II, the Definition section of

the policy, gives the word “claim” an entirely different definition.

        TIG “may have intended to exclude coverage of claims [against the company] but it did not

do so. Instead, the policy excludes coverage [only, to a claim made against any insured.] The author

of the policy knew how to write [an exclusion that would have excluded “an insured” and the

“company”] for he [made this distinction in at least three different places in the policy] . . . .” Western

                                                   -18-
Heritage, 45 F.3d at 89. “If [TIG] wanted to exclude [a claim against the company], then it was

incumbent upon it to expressly and clearly state the exclusion in the policy. Having failed to do so,

[TIG] cannot now complain.” Hudson Energy Co., 811 S.W.2d at 555.

         But even more importantly, the majority still ignores appellants’ contention that the

Exclusion, narrowly interpreted as we must, excludes a claim against only the insured who received

the inappropriate gain or profit.

                                                 III.

       In ordinary usage the word “claim” can refer to a single theory of liability, or it can refer to

an entire lawsuit including multiple theories. In the Definition section of the policy the word “claim”

is defined as “‘Claim’ means a written demand for monetary damages, including the institution of suit

or a demand for arbitration.” (Section II.A. Definition) Quite often one lawsuit will have a number

of claims representing the different theories of a lawsuit. Certainly appellants had separate claims

against each defendant. The policy, by its own terms, provided for separate coverage as to each

insured and the company.

       If one uses the definition of “claim” as defined in the Definition section of the subject

insurance policy and interprets the word “any” as being singular as the word is defined in the

dictionary, the exclusion would read as follows: This insurance does not apply to “a written demand

for monetary damages, including the institution of suit” made against “any insured” (one insured)

arising out of any of the following:    any suit based upon, arising from or in consequence or an

insured (one insured) having gained in fact any personal profit, remuneration, or advantage of which

such insured was not legally entitled. To read the word “company” into this exclusion is less

reasonable than to read the company out of the exclusion since TIG clearly knew how to amend the

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policy and in fact amended the Definition section by the Endorsement in several respects.

       The majority writes

       Although the terms “the insured” “that insured” or “such insured” preceding personal
       profit would indicate the same insured as the claim is brought against, the personal
       profit exclusion uses the more general term “an insured.” This indicates that coverage
       is excluded for all insureds, not merely the insured who profited. (emphasis added).

Whether the words “an insured” indicates that coverage is excluded for all insureds is not the test.

The test is whether or not there is another reasonable interpretation of the exclusion which is to be

particularly construed against the insurer. The exclusion is not expressed in clear and unambiguous

language as Texas law requires. The above quotation from the majority proves the point of this

dissent. The majority finds that the words “an insured” indicates that coverage is excluded for all

insureds. The majority notes that the terms “the insured,” “that insured” or “such insured” would

indicate the same insured as the claim is brought against, thus providing coverage to appellants. The

majority then chooses between these two indications. It is not enough that an insurance policy

indicates that an exclusion is involved, but the exclusion must be stated in clear and unambiguous

terms. That the insured did not do.

       The majority would be correct if Texas law provided that uncertainties or ambiguities in an

insurance policy should be construed in favor of the insurer. But Texas law does not so provide. In

fact, Texas law is to the contrary.

       I, therefore, specially concur in part and respectfully dissent in part.




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