Allied World Surplus Lines Insurance Company v. Goettle, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedAugust 19, 2024
Docket1:17-cv-00670
StatusUnknown

This text of Allied World Surplus Lines Insurance Company v. Goettle, Inc. (Allied World Surplus Lines Insurance Company v. Goettle, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allied World Surplus Lines Insurance Company v. Goettle, Inc., (S.D. Ohio 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION

ALLIED WORLD SURPLUS LINES INSURANCE COMPANY,

Plaintiff/Counter- Case No. 1:17-cv-670 Defendant, JUDGE DOUGLAS R. COLE v.

RICHARD GOETTLE, INC.,

Defendant/Counterclaimant. OPINION AND ORDER At its heart, every insurance dispute asks one simple question: who is left holding the bag? Whether an insured has incurred a loss either due to an adverse judgment or instead as a result of harms that befell his person or property, insurance law has developed intricate rules to decide who—as between the insured or the insurer—must bear the costs of that loss. This case presents a unique twist on this age-old question. Defendant/Counterclaimant Richard Goettle, Inc., (Goettle) recently settled a lawsuit brought against it by third-party claimant Joy Global Conveyors, Inc., (JGC), in the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana.1 That underlying suit was the basis for this separate coverage action in which Plaintiff/Counter-Defendant Allied World Surplus Lines Insurance Company (Allied World) claimed it had no duty to defend or to indemnify Goettle in the

1 The Court “may take judicial notice of proceedings in other courts of record.” Dates v. HSBC, ___ F. Supp. 3d ___, 2024 WL 860918, at *1 n.1 (S.D. Ohio 2024) (quoting Granader v. Pub. Bank, 417 F.2d 75, 82 (6th Cir. 1969)). Louisiana lawsuit. Goettle now contends Allied World must pay for the entire value of the settlement in that action. According to Goettle, that is because (1) the prior assigned judge’s summary judgment ruling in this coverage dispute, while directed

solely at the duty to defend, in fact conclusively established Allied World’s indemnification obligations, and (2) Allied World cannot object to paying for the settlement because it wrongfully refused to defend Goettle in the underlying suit. As explained below, the Court concludes that Goettle’s two arguments do not carry the day. As to the former, Goettle overstates the scope of the prior assigned judge’s summary judgment ruling. And as to the latter, assuming without deciding that Allied World wrongfully refused to defend Goettle, under Ohio law, an insurer’s

wrongful refusal to defend, while it may limit the insurer’s ability to rely on certain defenses to coverage, does not expand the scope of coverage otherwise available under an insurance contract. And because there is an open question about the extent to which the insurance policy here requires Allied World to cover the settlement costs of the underlying suit, the Court DENIES Goettle’s Motion to Enforce Court’s March 28, 2019,2 Order and Order for Payment of Settlement Funds (Doc. 105).

BACKGROUND Goettle, an Ohio engineering and construction company, contracted with Allied World, an insurance subsidiary specializing in professional liability policies for

2 The title of Goettle’s motion refers to a “March 28, 2019, Order” but no such thing exists. The Court presumes that this is a clerical error given the substance of the motion refers to docket entry 74—the prior-assigned judge’s May 28, 2019, Order on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. (Doc. 74). It appears that Goettle has referred to this non-existent “March 28, 2019, Order” twice before. (Docs. 75, 79). engineering and contracting firms, for a claims-made3 Constructors Professional Liability and Protective Policy (the 2016–2017 Policy) covering the period between June 28, 2016, and June 28, 2017. (Doc. 41-3; Doc. 74, #4760–62). After Goettle

submitted a renewal application on March 29, 2017, Allied World renewed the policy (the 2017–18 Policy) with the same material provisions (with the exception of the policy’s limits, which were increased from $5 million to $10 million) for an additional year of coverage. (Doc. 41-7; Doc. 74, #4767–69). Under both policies, Allied World generally agreed to cover losses arising from negligence on Goettle’s part in rendering its engineering services, subject to exclusions for Goettle’s services that resulted in either faulty construction or faulty

workmanship. (Doc. 41-3, #652–53, 656–57, 661–62; Doc. 41-7, #715–16, 719–20, 724– 25; Doc. 74, #4762–64). The parties expanded the scope of this coverage to include coverage for pollution events (e.g., discharge of contaminating materials into the environment) for both policy periods. The parties accomplished this by executing a pollution endorsement (Endorsement 7). (Doc. 41-3, #646–51; Doc. 41-7, #709–14; Doc. 74, #4765–67, 4780–84). The policy language also obligated Goettle, as a

condition precedent to coverage, to provide Allied World with written notice of any claim that could result in a covered loss. The timing of the required notice differed

3 Insurance policies generally come in two forms: claims-made and occurrence-based policies. Occurrence policies provide coverage so long as the event occurred during the policy period, regardless whether the insured requested coverage during the period. Claims-made policies by contrast provide coverage only for claims that are reported to the insurer during the policy term (with the policy also usually providing a short window for late reporting after the term otherwise expires). In this case, Allied World issued a claims-made policy that provided coverage only for covered events that Goettle reported during the policy period or within 60 days after its expiration. (Doc. 41-3, #646, 652; Doc. 41-7, #709, 715). depending on whether the loss fell within the ambit of Endorsement 7 or instead under the original policy language itself.4 (Doc. 41-3, #663–64; Doc. 41-7, #726–27; Doc. 74, #4764–65). Finally, under the policies, Allied World had a duty to defend

Goettle (up to policy limits) against “any Claim … even if the allegations of the Claim are groundless, false or fraudulent.” (Doc. 41-3, #653). The events prompting this coverage action and the related suit in federal court in Louisiana arise from work Goettle performed for JGC at the Dolet Hills coal mine near Mansfield, Louisiana. (Doc. 74, #4769). JGC contracted for Goettle to construct a retaining wall used to support ramps dump trucks utilized for hauling lignite coal throughout the site. Goettle began work on the project in November 2016. (Id.). Alas,

the retaining wall did not withstand the test of time. On April 18, 2017, JGC observed

4 The prior assigned judge, in her ruling on the parties’ cross motions for summary judgment, held that Endorsement 7 expanded, but did not supplant, coverage under the Policy. (Doc. 74, #4784–85). Based on that ruling, Endorsement 7 and the original policy language were deemed to be mutually exclusive as to the claims they each covered: claims arising from pollution events fell under the terms of Endorsement 7, whereas claims arising from non- pollution events fell under the original policy language. (Id.). The then-assigned judge reached this holding, later affirmed on appeal, (Doc. 97, #5377–78), based on ambiguities that would be created were Endorsement 7 read to supplant language in the original policy and to apply to claims arising under both pollution and non-pollution events. (Doc. 74, #4781–84). For example, the then-assigned judge noted that if Endorsement 7 governed non-pollution events, mere notice to Goettle that a third-party claimant might demand payment from Goettle for negligent engineering services would trigger Goettle’s duty to notify Allied World of the potential claim. (Id. at #4782–83 (citing Doc. 41-7, #709, 711)). By contrast, under the original policy language not supplanted by Endorsement 7, Goettle was also given the choice whether to provide Allied World notice of the same potential non-pollution event immediately or upon “the Potential Claim[’s] matur[ation] into … a demand for payment or services.” (Id. at #4782 (citing Doc. 41-7, #727)).

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