Bachman Sunny Hill Fruit Farms v. Producers Agriculture Ins. Co.

57 F.4th 536
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 11, 2023
Docket21-2868
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 57 F.4th 536 (Bachman Sunny Hill Fruit Farms v. Producers Agriculture Ins. Co.) 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
Bachman Sunny Hill Fruit Farms v. Producers Agriculture Ins. Co., 57 F.4th 536 (6th Cir. 2023).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b) File Name: 23a0005p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

┐ BACHMAN SUNNY HILL FRUIT FARMS, INC., │ Petitioner-Appellant, │ > No. 21-2868 │ v. │ │ PRODUCERS AGRICULTURE INSURANCE COMPANY, │ Respondent-Appellee. │ ┘

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Michigan at Grand Rapids. No. 1:20-cv-01117—Janet T. Neff, District Judge.

Argued: July 20, 2022

Decided and Filed: January 11, 2023

Before: KETHLEDGE, BUSH, and NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judges.

_________________

COUNSEL

ARGUED: Mark Granzotto, MARK GRANZOTTO, P.C., Berkley, Michigan, for Appellant. Josephine A. DeLorenzo, PLUNKETT COONEY, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Mark Granzotto, MARK GRANZOTTO, P.C., Berkley, Michigan, John D. Tallman, JOHN D. TALLMAN, PLC, Grand Rapids, Michigan, for Appellant. Josephine A. DeLorenzo, Elaine M. Pohl, Olivia M. Paglia, PLUNKETT COONEY, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, for Appellee. _________________

OPINION _________________

JOHN K. BUSH, Circuit Judge. When farmers and private insurers enter a federally reinsured crop-insurance contract, they agree to common terms set by the Federal Crop Insurance No. 21-2868 Bachman Sunny Hill Fruit Farms v. Page 2 Producers Agriculture Ins. Co.

Corporation (FCIC). One such term requires the parties to arbitrate coverage disputes. In those proceedings, the arbitrator must defer to agency interpretations of the common policy. Failure to do so results in nullification of the arbitration award.

Bachman Sunny Hill Fruit Farms lost at an arbitration with its insurer, Producers Agriculture Insurance Company. Bachman Farms blames its loss on the arbitrator allegedly engaging in impermissible policy interpretation. On that ground, the insured petitioned a federal district court to nullify the arbitration award. The petition to nullify, however, did not comply with the substance or time limits of the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA). Those FAA requirements govern this challenge to an arbitration award in federal court, as we explain below. We therefore affirm the district court’s dismissal of Bachman Farms’s petition to nullify.

I.

Bachman Farms grows apples in central Ohio. Like hundreds of thousands of other farms, it protected its 2017 crop with federally reinsured crop insurance. See Nat’l Agric. Stats. Serv., U.S.D.A., AC-17-A-51, 2017 Census of Agriculture 17 tbl.8 (2019) (counting 380,236 farms enrolled in crop-insurance programs in 2017). It purchased two policies from Producers Agriculture to cover that year’s crop.

The federal government, through the FCIC, has been in the business of providing crop insurance directly to farmers since the 1930s. See Ackerman v. U.S. Dep’t of Agric., 995 F.3d 528, 529 (6th Cir. 2021). And ever since Congress enacted the Federal Crop Insurance Act of 1980, the FCIC and its administrator, the Risk Management Agency (RMA), have also reinsured policies offered to farmers by private insurers. Id. The federal reinsurance program allows the FCIC to provide reimbursement, subsidies, and reinsurance for approved crop-insurance policies. See Stephanie Rosch, Cong. Rsch. Serv., R46686, Federal Crop Insurance: A Primer 25 (2021).

These federally reinsured crop-insurance policies “are not typical private insurance agreements.” Williamson Farm v. Diversified Crop Ins. Servs., 917 F.3d 247, 249 (4th Cir. 2019). Yes, each contract is “between a farmer and an insurance provider,” but “the FCIC determines the terms and conditions” of the policy. Balvin v. Rain & Hail, LLC, 943 F.3d 1134, 1136 (8th Cir. 2019). In fact, the terms of the insurance Bachman Farms bought from Producers No. 21-2868 Bachman Sunny Hill Fruit Farms v. Page 3 Producers Agriculture Ins. Co.

Agriculture—the Common Crop Insurance Policy (common policy)—are set out in full in the Code of Federal Regulations. See 7 C.F.R. § 457.8 (hereinafter CCIP). Those terms governed the parties’ relationship and gave rise to this dispute.

At bottom, this appeal is about the dispute-resolution mechanisms Bachman Farms and Producer Agriculture agreed to in the common policy. The dispute began when Bachman Farms sought indemnity from Producers Agriculture after hail damaged its apple crop. According to the insured, Producers Agriculture paid for only a small part of its claim. Allegedly, that lesser payout resulted from two mistakes the insurance adjuster made when he handled the claim. His first mistake was his failure to inform Bachman Farms it could seek an independent appraisal of its crop. Adjusters must provide that notice, according to the apple loss adjustment standards handbook. And his second mistake was his directive that Bachman Farms “pack out” its apple crop, a costly harvesting process. This second mistake conflicted with another directive, in the loss adjustment manual standards handbook, which says adjusters are not supposed to tell an insured farm whether to harvest its crop.

Dissatisfied with its payout from the claim, Bachman Farms brought an arbitration against Producers Agriculture in 2020. After two days of testimony, the arbitrator entered an award for Producers Agriculture on March 26. His reasoning rested on the two handbooks Bachman Farms accused the insurance adjuster of ignoring. According to the arbitrator, the handbooks were not binding parts of the insurance contract, so even if the adjuster failed to abide by them, that failure did not breach the contract.

But Bachman Farms claims the arbitrator ventured outside his authority when he sided with Producers Agriculture. Under the common policy, an arbitrator’s role is limited: “if the dispute in any way involves a policy or procedure interpretation,” the parties “must obtain an interpretation from FCIC[.]” CCIP § 20(a)(1). Interpretations by that agency bind the arbitrator. Id. § 20(a)(1)(i). And if the arbitrator decides a dispute without obtaining an FCIC interpretation, the arbitration award is nullified. Id. § 20(a)(1)(ii). Put simply, “only the FCIC— and not the arbitrator—may interpret the policy.” Williamson Farm, 917 F.3d at 255. That “leave[s] very little decision[-]making authority to the arbitrator.” Id. No. 21-2868 Bachman Sunny Hill Fruit Farms v. Page 4 Producers Agriculture Ins. Co.

As it turns out, neither the parties nor the arbitrator went through the formal process of requesting an interpretation from the FCIC. And it was not until several months after entry of the arbitration award that the FCIC determined that the handbooks are a part of the insurance contract. So “[n]ot only did the arbitrator violate the proscription against interpreting the contract,” says Bachman Farms, but “his interpretation was wrong.”1 Petition to Nullify, R. 1, PageID 5.

Based on those contentions, Bachman Farms asked a federal district court to nullify the arbitration award under the common policy and its accompanying regulations, in a petition filed on November 19. Producers Agriculture moved to dismiss the petition for failure to state a cause of action under the FAA and for untimeliness under the FAA. It argued that parties challenging an arbitration award must abide by the FAA and its time limits.

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57 F.4th 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bachman-sunny-hill-fruit-farms-v-producers-agriculture-ins-co-ca6-2023.