Alticor Global Holdings Inc v. American Intl Specialty Lines

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 23, 2024
Docket22-1641
StatusUnpublished

This text of Alticor Global Holdings Inc v. American Intl Specialty Lines (Alticor Global Holdings Inc v. American Intl Specialty Lines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alticor Global Holdings Inc v. American Intl Specialty Lines, (6th Cir. 2024).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 24a0366n.06

Nos. 22-1631/22-1641/22-1679

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

ALTICOR GLOBAL HOLDINGS INCORPORATED; ) ALTICOR, INC.; AMWAY CORPORATION; AMWAY ) FILED ) Aug 23, 2024 INTERNATIONAL, INCORPORATED, ) KELLY L. STEPHENS, Clerk Plaintiffs-Appellees (22-1631), ) Plaintiffs-Appellants/Cross-Appellees (22-1641/1679), ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE v. ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE WESTERN AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL SPECIALTY LINES ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN INSURANCE CO., nka AIG Specialty Insurance Company, ) Defendant-Appellant (22-1631), ) ) OPINION ) NATIONAL UNION FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF ) PITTSBURGH, PA, ) Defendant-Appellee/Cross-Appellant (22-1641/1679). ) )

Before: GRIFFIN, NALBANDIAN, and MATHIS, Circuit Judges.

GRIFFIN, J., delivered the opinion of the court in which MATHIS, J., joined in full, and NALBANDIAN, J., joined in all but Section II.C. NALBANDIAN, J. (pp 22–29), delivered a separate opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part.

GRIFFIN, Circuit Judge.

In this insurance-coverage dispute, the district court concluded defendant American

International Specialty Lines Company breached its insurance agreement with plaintiff Amway1

when it declined to defend and indemnify Amway in underlying copyright-infringement litigation

We refer to plaintiffs as “Amway”—plaintiff Alticor Global Holdings is a holding 1

company, and the other plaintiffs are its subsidiaries. Nos. 22-1631/1641/1679, Alticor Glob. Holdings, Inc., et al. v. Am. Int’l Specialty Lines Ins. Co., et al.

that Amway ultimately settled. The district court then entered judgment against American for

$36,923,844.50, which represented Amway’s costs along with prejudgment interest. American

raises four issues on appeal, three related to the district court’s liability holdings and one regarding

its imposition of prejudgment interest. We affirm and dismiss as moot the conditional appeal and

cross-appeal concerning defendant National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, PA.

I.

A.

Amway is one of the largest direct-sales ventures in the world, selling numerous household

products through independent contractors known as Independent Business Owners (IBOs).

Defendants are insurance companies from whom Amway purchased insurance—American

provided Amway with an Internet and network security insurance policy and National was

Amway’s umbrella carrier. Amway also purchased general liability insurance structured as

“fronting insurance” from non-party ACE, which we detail later.

In 1996, twelve record companies sued Amway and many of its IBOs for copyright

infringement in the Middle District of Florida. They accused Amway’s IBOs of producing

videotapes that utilized sound recordings without their consent, which were then used privately by

IBOs “as motivational tools, as sales tools, to recruit new [IBOs,] and to promote upcoming

Amway [IBO] conventions and conferences.” The record companies sought to hold the IBOs

liable for direct infringement and Amway liable under vicarious and contributory liability theories.

This so-called VHS tape litigation settled in 1998. As part of the settlement terms, the parties

agreed to an alternative-dispute-resolution process that set forth how they would address any future

copyright violations.

-2- Nos. 22-1631/1641/1679, Alticor Glob. Holdings, Inc., et al. v. Am. Int’l Specialty Lines Ins. Co., et al.

Fast forward fourteen years to 2012. Several record companies once again accused Amway

of engaging in copyright infringement; this time, however, the alleged infringing act was not that

of producing VHS recordings to be used internally but uploading videos to the Internet for the

entire world to see. Their letter identified “more than 365 infringing videos containing more than

220 different sound recordings” and asserted Amway’s history showed its conduct was willful,

highlighting that “approximately 25 of the videos (containing at least ten different sound

recordings) incorporate sound recordings that also were at issue in the previous lawsuit.” It also

directly linked Amway to the videos in a manner distinct from the VHS tape litigation:

It also is clear that at the direction and instruction of Amway Corporation, the Internet has to a large extent significantly enhanced the marketing and advertising practices that were the subject of the previous lawsuit. Thus, instead of using our . . . music in videos that were only performed or distributed internally, these infringing videos are now made available to anyone in the world with access to a computer, tablet or smartphone as part of an ongoing video marketing program involving Amway and its distributors.

(Emphasis Added). The letter additionally asserted Amway’s conduct violated the permanent

injunction and final judgment agreed to in the VHS tape litigation, and it expressly put Amway on

notice of the record companies’ intent to invoke the alternative dispute resolution provision set

forth in the settlement agreement. Amway tendered the letter to American, National, and ACE,

triggering each carrier’s evaluation of whether coverage would lie under their respective policies.

The American policy provided insurance coverage and indemnity up to $25 million for

claims alleging wrongful acts—including copyright infringement—on Internet media. American

eventually denied coverage under this policy. Although it noted three reasons for doing so, two

exclusion provisions—which both relate to the VHS tape litigation—are relevant here. Exclusions

J and P generally preclude coverage for prior litigation or those claims with prior notice,

respectively. American generally claimed that it was not obligated to defend against this “Internet

-3- Nos. 22-1631/1641/1679, Alticor Glob. Holdings, Inc., et al. v. Am. Int’l Specialty Lines Ins. Co., et al.

video litigation” because, in its view, those claims were just repackaged violations flowing from

the VHS tape litigation.

The two other policies merit brief mention. Amway’s policy with National provided $50

million in umbrella coverage for personal and advertising injury per occurrence, which applied

“only in the excess of . . . Underlying Insurance and any applicable Other Insurance whether or

not such limits are collectible.” National issued several reservation-of-rights letters to Amway,

and it takes the position that its policy does not provide coverage.

The ACE policies are more complicated. Amway annually purchased commercial general

liability coverage from ACE between 2006 and 2016, which provided up to $2 million in coverage

per occurrence for “personal and advertising injury liability” (which includes copyright

infringement), up to $4 million in the aggregate. What is peculiar about the ACE policies is that

the deductible matches the policy limits; as all parties agree, this means that they are “fronting”

policies. This structuring is important—one of American’s main arguments on appeal is that these

policies constitute “other valid and collectible insurance available to [Amway]” under its policy,

which must be satisfied first. ACE admits the letter’s allegations “trigger[ed] coverage,” but, like

National, issued a reservation of rights.

Amway’s dispute with the record companies eventually made its way to federal court when

Amway sued the record companies in 2014 in the Middle District of Florida for breach of the

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