American Legion Department of Missouri Inc. v. Hanover Insurance

286 B.R. 729, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 25420, 2002 WL 31681950
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedOctober 8, 2002
Docket1:02-cr-00077
StatusPublished

This text of 286 B.R. 729 (American Legion Department of Missouri Inc. v. Hanover Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Legion Department of Missouri Inc. v. Hanover Insurance, 286 B.R. 729, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 25420, 2002 WL 31681950 (E.D. Mo. 2002).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

MEDLER, United States Magistrate Judge.

This matter is before the court pursuant to the Motion for Summary Judgment filed by Defendant and Third-Party Plaintiff The Hanover Insurance Company (“Hanover” or “Defendant Hanover”). [20] Plaintiff The American Legion Department of Missouri Incorporated (“American Legion”) and Third-Party Defendant Lowell Carey Bankhead (“Bankhead” or “Third-Party Defendant Bankhead”) have filed Responses to Defendant Hanover’s motion. Defendant Hanover has filed a Reply. The parties have consented to the jurisdiction of the undersigned United States Magistrate Judge pursuant to 28 U.S.C § 636(c). [12]

UNREFUTED FACTS

On June 7, 1996, Defendant Hanover and the American Legion entered into a written agreement, whereby Hanover was to provide insurance to the American Legion for employee dishonesty. In the top right hand corner of the first page of the agreement the words “COMMERCIAL CRIME, COVERAGE FORM A-BLANKET” appear. See Defendant. Ex F. The agreement’s limit of insurance for employee dishonesty was $500,000, with a deductible amount of $2,500. The agreement’s “Employee Dishonesty Coverage Form” states, in relevant part:

A. COVERAGE
*733 We will pay for loss of, and loss from damage to, Covered Property resulting directly from the Covered Cause of Loss.
1. Covered Property: “Money,” “securities,” and “property other than money and securities”.
2. Covered Cause of Loss: “Employee dishonesty.” ...
C. DEDUCTIBLE
1. We will not pay for loss in any one “occurrence” unless the amount of loss exceeds the Deductible Amount shown in the Declarations ...
2. You must:
(a) Give us notice as soon as possible of any loss of the type insured under this Coverage Form even though it falls entirely within the Deductible Amount
(b) Upon our request, give us a statement describing the loss...
D. ADDITIONAL EXCLUSIONS, CONDITION AND DEFINITIONS: ...
3. Additional Definitions
(a)“Employee Dishonesty” in paragraph A2 means only dishonest acts committed by an “employee,” whether identified or not, acting alone or in collusion with other persons, except you or a partner, with the manifest intent to:
(1) Cause you to sustain loss; and also
(2) Obtain financial benefit (other than salaries, commissions, fees, bonuses, promotions, awards, profit sharing, pensions or other employee benefits) earned in the normal course of employment for
(a) The “employee”

Defendant. Ex. F. (emphasis in document).

According to a Memorandum and Order of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Missouri, Third-Party Defendant Bankhead was the Adjutant of the American Legion, which position is the equivalent of the chief operating officer (“CEO”) of a corporation. See Defendant. Hanover Ans., Ex. C (“Dec.”) at 2. On May 7, 1999, Bankhead, and his wife, Charla Bankhead, filed a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code. In their schedules, the Bankheads listed the American Legion as a general unsecured creditor with a debt in the amount of $3,500. In response to Interrogatories in the bankruptcy matter, Third-Party Defendant Bankhead stated that the $3,500 was the amount he owed the American Legion for airline tickets.

On August 31, 1999, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(4), the American Legion filed a complaint in the Bankheads bankruptcy matter, objecting to the discharge of certain debts and alleging that the Bankheads’ debt to the American Legion was in excess of $75,000, plus interest and that this debt was nondischargeable because of the Bankheads’ “defalcation, embezzlement, and obtaining property by false pretenses, false representation and actual fraud.” Dec. at 3. In particular, the American Legion claimed:

During the term of at least the last two years, Defendant Lowell Cary [sic] Bankhead, Jr., while acting in a fiduciary capacity, used his position as a salaried employee serving as adjutant of the Legion for defalcation and to fraudulently convert, without lawful and appropriate authority, funds belonging to [the American Legion] for the personal use *734 of himself and Defendant Charla Marie Bankhead.

Dec. at 3.

Decision of the Bankruptcy Court:

The bankruptcy court concluded, however, that with the exception of $3,500.00, that Bankhead charged to the American Legion’s American Express credit card for the purchase of airline tickets for his family, “the American Legion did not provide evidence that Lowell Bankhead committed any acts of positive or actual fraud, committed any intentional wrongs or committed acts of moral turpitude.” Dec. at 7. The bankruptcy court reached this conclusion after hearing extensive evidence and testimony. In particular, the current Adjutant of the American Legion testified that the American Legion hired a law firm to investigate allegations that Bankhead misappropriated funds, but the current Adjutant did not suggest what he considered conduct of Bankhead which amounted to misappropriation. An attorney, Thomas Davis, testified that his firm was hired to investigate Bankhead. Davis provided the bankruptcy court with a list of American Express charges which he believed amounted to misappropriation of funds, and which were, therefore, nondischargeable under the fiduciary fraud provision of § 523(a)(4).

The bankruptcy court found that it was not satisfied that Davis conducted a thorough examination of the circumstances surrounding each of the American Express credit card charges prior to concluding that Bankhead misappropriated funds. See Dec. at 10. In regard to Davis’s listing Bankhead’s charges on the American Express card for gifts, supplies, books, newspapers, cigars, a portable phone, meals, hotel rooms, and travel memberships as misappropriated funds, the bankruptcy court found that no appointed official or employee of the American Legion testified that these charges were inappropriate. In regard to Davis’s inclusion of Bankhead’s use of a van owned by the American Legion in his list of inappropriate charges, the bankruptcy court found that no appointed official or employee of the American Legion testified that Bank-head’s use of the van or related gas charges were inappropriate. See Dec. at 10.

Davis further testified before the bankruptcy court that, while Bankhead had an annual budget of $9,000, he exceeded that budget. Davis asserted that the amount by which Bankhead exceeded this budget, $22,000 per year in 1997 and 1998, represented misappropriated funds.

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Bluebook (online)
286 B.R. 729, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 25420, 2002 WL 31681950, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-legion-department-of-missouri-inc-v-hanover-insurance-moed-2002.