Cust-O-Fab Service Co. v. Admiral Insurance

158 F. App'x 123
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedDecember 9, 2005
Docket04-5092
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 158 F. App'x 123 (Cust-O-Fab Service Co. v. Admiral Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cust-O-Fab Service Co. v. Admiral Insurance, 158 F. App'x 123 (10th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

TYMKOVICH, Circuit Judge.

Cust-O-Fab Service Company appeals an order of summary judgment granted in favor of Admiral Insurance Company. In this insurance coverage dispute, the district court held the insurance policy between Admiral and Cust-O-Fab did not require Admiral to defend Cust-O-Fab in *124 a Texas lawsuit asserting contract and tort claims.

Cust-O-Fab asserts the district court made four errors: (1) finding that a breach of contract exclusion barred Cust-O-Fab’s policy claims; (2) determining that Admiral had no duty to defend Cust-O-Fab because it was unlikely Cust-O-Fab would be held liable for negligent misrepresentation in the Texas lawsuit; (3) prematurely adjudicating Admiral’s obligation to indemnify Cust-O-Fab; and (4) permitting Admiral to assert an untimely contract exclusion in its motion for summary judgment.

We REVERSE and REMAND for further fact finding regarding the precise meaning of the contract exclusion clause, the application of the administration clause, Admiral’s duty to defend the negligence claim in the Texas lawsuit, and Admiral’s duty to indemnify. We AFFIRM the district court’s conclusion that Admiral was not estopped from raising its contract exclusion argument at the summary judgment stage.

I. Background

The Parties. Cust-O-Fab is an Oklahoma limited liability company. In 2001, Cust-O-Fab purchased commercial general liability insurance (the “Policy”) from Admiral Insurance, a Delaware insurance company. The Policy included coverage for Cust-O-Fab’s administration of its employee benefits programs, including a company health care plan for its employees.

To help it administer its benefits programs, Cust-O-Fab contracted with Spectrum Risk Management Services, a company that specialized in providing third party administrative services. Spectrum, in turn, retained two companies to assist it with the health benefits portion of its services. First, it contracted with Beech Street Corporation as the preferred provider organization. Beech Street was to arrange for the provision of health care services for covered employees. Second, after the series of events leading to this lawsuit, Spectrum retained Medical Services Management (MSM) to provide case management services for claims made under the employee health policy.

The Policy. The Policy was a commercial liability insurance policy that covered a number of business risks. As part of the Policy, Cust-O-Fab purchased an endorsement for Employee Benefits Liability Coverage (the “EBL Endorsement”). The EBL Endorsement was designed to cover liabilities incurred in the process of the “administration” of emplbyee benefits programs, including Cusi^O-Fab’s health care plan.

In particular, the EBL Endorsement covered the following liability:

We will pay those sums which you become legally obligated to pay as damages sustained by any employee, former employee, prospective employee or the beneficiaries or legal representatives thereof caused by your negligent act, error or omission or any other person for whose acts you are legally liable in the “administration ” of your “Employee Benefits Programs” in the “policy territory.”

App. 139 (emphasis added). The Policy defined “administration” as “(a) providing interpretations and giving counsel to your employees regarding your ‘Employee Benefits Programs’; (b) handling records in connection with your ‘Employee Benefits Programs’; (c) the enrollment, termination or cancellation of employees under your ‘Employee Benefits Programs.’ ” App. 141.

The Policy contained two other important limitations. First, it excluded “[d]am-ages arising out of a negligent act, error or omission which ... you knew or should have known might result in a claim.” Sec *125 ond, it barred coverage for certain contract disputes, stating that it did “not apply to ... any loss or claim arising out of a failure of performance of any contract by an insurer.” App. 139 — 40) (emphasis added).

The Accident. On August 19, 2001, John Cummings, a former Cust-O-Fab employee, was severely injured in an automobile accident in Texas. He was treated for his injuries at an Amarillo, Texas, facility of the Northwest Texas Healthcare System (the Hospital). When he was released, his hospital bill totaled more than $430,000.

Cummings’s injuries were so serious he was incapacitated for a period of time after the accident. Consequently, two days after he was hospitalized, on August 21, 2001, John Cummings’s brother Travis, who was a Cust-O-Fab employee, located a copy of the Cust-O-Fab benefits policy in his employee handbook and provided it to the Hospital. On August 23, 2001, Beech Street, in its capacity as preferred provider organization, sent correspondence to the Hospital stating a seven-day stay at the hospital appeared to be appropriate. The letter, however, advised the Hospital that Beech Street was not making a conclusive determination of benefits coverage and would not guarantee any payments of Cummings’s expenses.

The Payment Dispute. On August 31, 2001, after a series of negotiations between MSM (on behalf of Spectrum) and the Hospital, the Hospital agreed to provide medical services at a reduced fee. The agreement was memorialized in a document signed by MSM, which instructed the Hospital to send bills to Spectrum. App. 421. Cummings also formally assigned his benefits under the health plan to the Hospital on October 4, 2001.

Notwithstanding the MSM document, on November 14, 2001, Spectrum sent a written notice to Cummings and the Hospital notifying them that Cummings’s medical expenses would not be covered. Spectrum asserted Cummings’s injuries would not be covered under the health plan because his accident was the result of the “illegal use of alcohol.” App. 482. Athough the Hospital subsequently disputed whether Cummings was intoxicated at the time of the accident, Spectrum refused coverage. Consequently, the Hospital initiated litigation in Texas state court in March 2003 against Cust-O-Fab and Spectrum based upon theories of breach of contract, negligent misrepresentation, promissory estoppel, breach of implied contract, violation of the Texas PPO Prompt Payment Act, and common law and statutory claims of bad faith.

The Coverage Dispute. After the Hospital filed suit, Cust-O-Fab notified Admiral that it had been sued and that it expected Admiral to cover litigation defenses costs pursuant to the Policy’s coverage for liability arising from Cust-O-Fab’s “administration” of its employee benefits programs. Admiral denied a duty to defend in the lawsuit, asserting in a letter that “the denial of the claim for medical benefits is not included in the definition of ‘administration’ as defined in the policy.” App. 303; 308.

Cust-O-Fab commenced litigation based on diversity jurisdiction in the Northern District of Oklahoma, seeking a declaratory judgment that the claims asserted by the Hospital were covered under the Policy. 1

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 F. App'x 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cust-o-fab-service-co-v-admiral-insurance-ca10-2005.