American Special Risk Management Corp. v. Cahow

192 P.3d 614, 286 Kan. 1134, 2008 Kan. LEXIS 465
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedSeptember 12, 2008
Docket95,942
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 192 P.3d 614 (American Special Risk Management Corp. v. Cahow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Special Risk Management Corp. v. Cahow, 192 P.3d 614, 286 Kan. 1134, 2008 Kan. LEXIS 465 (kan 2008).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Luckert, J.:

This appeal examines the standard to be applied when an insurance company denies coverage because the insured failed to disclose a potential claim on an application for insurance. Specifically, we must determine: When an application for insur *1135 anee asks for the identification of “any facts, circumstances, or situations . . . which could reasonably be expected to give rise to a claim” and the policy excludes any claim arising from an undisclosed risk, must the insurance company invoking the exclusion and denying coverage establish that the applicant (a) committed fraud; (b) failed to disclose information that the applicant subjectively perceived as a potential risk; (c) failed to disclose known information that an objective person would reasonably perceive as a potential risk; or (d) failed to discover circumstances that reasonably should have been known and which, if known, would be perceived as a potential risk by a reasonable person?

We hold that the language of the policy and application — specifically, the request for disclosure of facts, circumstances, or situations which could reasonably be expected to give rise to a claim — requires application of a combined subjective-objective standard: (1) Subjectively, what facts did the applicant know, and (2) objectively, would a reasonable person perceive that the known facts create a potential risk? In other words, an insurance company may invoke a policy exclusion for undisclosed risks if, in completing the application, the applicant failed to disclose known information which would reasonably be perceived as a potential risk.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The Undisclosed Risk of Loss

The insurance application at issue was completed by Peoples Bank (the Bank) when it applied for an errors and omissions (E&O) endorsement to a directors and officers (D&O) liability insurance policy issued by Progressive Casualty Insurance Company (Progressive). Shortly after the policy was issued, the Bank sought coverage and a defense against allegations made by American Special Risk Management Corporation (American). American alleged that the Bank was guilty of negligence and conversion by fading to exercise ordinary care when it allowed an American employee, William Cahow, to open a business (a doing business as [d/b/a] or a sole proprietorship) account in the name of “Bill Cahow d/b/a American Special Risk Management” and when it honored improperly endorsed checks that were owned by American and pre *1136 sented by Cahow. See K.S.A. 84-3-420 (conversion of instruments). Over an 8-year period, Cahow repeatedly and consistently deposited American’s funds in the business account and then transferred funds to his personal account, which was also at the Bank.

Cahow’s scheme unraveled when one of American’s clients questioned an endorsement on a check the client had issued. The inquiry roused American’s suspicions, causing it to begin an investigation. Pursuing the routing of the check, American’s president called the Bank and talked with Robert Chenoweth, who was serving as the Bank’s senior operations officer, about whether there were any accounts in American’s name at the Bank. Chenoweth checked the Bank’s records and advised American of the sole proprietorship account. American’s president told Chenoweth the account was not authorized by American and no corporate funds should go through the sole proprietorship account.

Chenoweth eventually put a temporary hold on two checks totaling approximately $20,000, one check made payable to “American Special Risk Management c/o Bill Cahow” and the other check made payable to “American Special Risk Management.” Chenoweth testified that the funds were not yet collected on the checks; thus, he was able to put a hold on the checks as uncollected funds. He further suggested that American contact the issuers of the checks and request them to stop payment. American followed the suggestion. In addition, American’s president asked Chenoweth for the name of a local attorney, and American retained the suggested law firm in pursuit of its investigation against Cahow. An attorney from the firm spoke with Chenoweth on May 2 and May 3, 2001, regarding the hold on the checks.

Chenoweth testified that on May 22, 2001, he was notified by American that criminal charges would be filed against Cahow and that Chenoweth’s name would be given to the local sheriff s office as someone familiar with the transactions. According to Chenoweth, American never indicated that it believed the Bank was liable in this matter, and the Bank considered the issue to be a dispute between American and Cahow.

*1137 Application for Insurance and the Policy

Approximately 3 weeks after Chenoweth learned of the criminal prosecution, the Bank applied for the D&O and E&O insurance with Progressive. The E&O application asked two questions pertaining to losses, pending litigation, and claims history:

"1. Has there been any actual, threatened or pending litigation against the Applicant or any subsidiary during the past 3 years?
“2. Are there any facts, circumstances or situations involving the Applicant, any subsidiary or any past or present director, trustee, officer or employee which could reasonably be expected to give rise to a claim?”

In response to both questions, the Bank checked the boxes labeled “No.” Immediately following these questions, the application stated the following exclusionaiy language in bold, capital letters:

“PERTAINING TO QUESTION 1, IT IS UNDERSTOOD AND AGREED THAT ANY CLAIM ARISING FROM ANY PRIOR OR PENDING LITIGATION IS EXCLUDED FROM COVERAGE. PERTAINING TO QUESTION 2, IT IS FURTHER UNDERSTOOD AND AGREED THAT IF KNOWLEDGE OF ANY FACT, CIRCUMSTANCE OR SITUATION EXISTS, ANY CLAIM OR ACTION SUBSEQUENTLY ARISING THEREFROM SHALT. BE EXCLUDED FROM COVERAGE.”

Progressive issued the Bank a D&O claims-made insurance policy with the E&O endorsement. The period for the entire D&O/ E&O policy ran from July 1, 2001, through July 1,2002. The E&O endorsement application was made part of the endorsement. Pursuant to the first page of the E&O application, “the particulars and statement contained in this Application . . . and any material submitted therewith . . . are the basis of the Policy/Bond and are to be considered as incorporated in and constituting a part of this Policy/Bond.” See K.S.A. 40-2205(A) (insured not bound by any statement made in application unless copy of “application is attached to or endorsed on the policy when issued as part thereof’). The E&O endorsement incorporated much of the D&O policy language into its terms.

The Claim and Progressive’s Position

Just a few months after the policy was issued, American sued both Cahow and the Bank for damages resulting from Cahow’s *1138

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
192 P.3d 614, 286 Kan. 1134, 2008 Kan. LEXIS 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-special-risk-management-corp-v-cahow-kan-2008.