Cynergy, LLC v. First American Title Insurance Company

706 F.3d 1321, 90 Fed. R. Serv. 711, 2013 WL 309052, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 1901
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 28, 2013
Docket12-10495
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 706 F.3d 1321 (Cynergy, LLC v. First American Title Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cynergy, LLC v. First American Title Insurance Company, 706 F.3d 1321, 90 Fed. R. Serv. 711, 2013 WL 309052, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 1901 (11th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

FRIEDMAN, District Judge:

In this appeal, we are asked to review the district court’s interpretation of an exclusion in a title insurance policy issued by the appellee, First American Title Insurance Company, to a Georgia bank, Farmers State Bank, and the district court’s decision that First American was entitled to summary judgment based on that exclusion. We affirm the district court in all respects.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

This dispute arises from a land development project that failed to go according to plan. The essential facts are as follows. A group of real estate investors formed a company — the Retreat at Lake Thurmond, LLC — to purchase an undeveloped parcel of land in Lincoln County, Georgia, and turn it into a residential subdivision. The Retreat took out a short-term purchase loan from a local institution, Farmers State Bank, to finance only the acquisition of the land; the costs of development were to be funded later from a separate source. The Bank, to protect itself from risks asso *1323 dated with the loan it was extending, also obtained personal guarantees from two of the Retreat’s prindpal investors, Tommy Lee and Dean Antonakos, and secured debt on real property owned by individual Retreat investors as additional collateral for the loan. It also took out a title insurance policy with First American Title Insurance Company. Such policies insure “owners of real property or others having an interest in such real property ... against loss by encumbrance, defective titles, invalidity, adverse claim to title, or unmarketability of title by reason of encumbrance or defects not excepted in the insurance contract.” Ga.Code Ann. § 33-7-8.

Using the funds it borrowed from the Bank, the Retreat purchased the parcel of land in September 2006. Although it promptly commenced preliminary construction operations, clearing and grading the property, its development plans did not proceed as anticipated. Among the issues with which the Retreat contended was that the property did not abut a public road and lacked dedicated access to any public road. The previous owner, Emily Hester, had accessed the property through a neighboring lot with the permission of its owners. Permissive access was also available via a gravel road situated on adjacent land owned by the United States Army Corps of Engineers, but the property had no legally enforceable right of access. Although the Retreat was aware of this condition before it purchased the property and had intended to obtain an easement across the Army Corps of Engineers land, it abandoned this plan after deeming it too expensive.

The title insurance policy that First American issued to the Bank covered, among other things, loss or damage incurred due to a “lack of a right of access to and from the land.” A year after the Retreat purchased the property, it sent a letter to First American purporting to file a claim under this provision of the insurance policy. First American denied the claim because the Bank, not the Retreat, was the insured party.

The Retreat attempted to solve its dedicated access problem by purchasing an adjoining tract of land in 2008 that contained a road leading to the highway. Progress continued to lag, however, due to the Retreat’s inability to secure funding for development. Meanwhile, interest on the Retreat’s purchase loan from the Bank continued to accrue, while the loan’s maturity date approached. In an attempt to reach a mutually beneficial resolution to the Retreat’s difficulty in paying back the purchase loan to Farmers State Bank, the Bank and the Retreat began to negotiate about a possible extension uf the loan with modified terms. In October 2008, a principal investor behind the Retreat, Dean Antonakos, sent a letter to the Bank acknowledging that while the Retreat originally planned to fund the development of the property through other sources, “due to the financial climate of the over all economy, especially in the banking sector, those original development sources have dried up.” Antonakos suggested, among other options, that the Retreat could complete preliminary improvements of the property in tandem with work on the newly purchased adjacent property, with the aim of selling the two together as a single subdivision that could be developed later — an endeavor that would require additional funding from the Bank.

Antonakos wrote to the Bank again the next month, acknowledging an “impasse” in their discussions and suggesting some alternative courses of action. In this letter, Antonakos drew the Bank’s attention to its title insurance policy with First American and encouraged the Bank to file a claim under the provision that offered *1324 coverage for losses incurred due to the lack of a right of access to and from the land.

In March 2009, the Bank’s executive vice president, J. Bruce Turner, wrote to Antonakos, declining Antonakos’ invitation to make a claim against First American for the insurance proceeds and proposing two options for extending and modifying the loan. In this letter, Turner also stated: “When we originally made this loan, we knew that there was no designated access to the property, but it was in your plans to create one” from the nearby highway.

No agreement was reached with respect to extending the loan. Once the loan went into default, the Bank indicated that it might seek to recover on the personal guarantees that were made at the time of the loan by Antonakos and another Retreat investor, Tommy Lee. To extricate the Retreat from its debt to the Bank, Antonakos, Lee, and others formed a new company — Cynergy, LLC, the appellant here — to raise additional funds from third parties and purchase the Retreat’s promissory note from the Bank. This newly formed company acquired the note at full price in May 2009, essentially purchasing the Bank’s loan. Through this transaction, Cynergy became the successor in interest to the Bank under the insurance policy. 1

Four days after acquiring the Retreat note, Cynergy submitted to First American an insurance claim premised on the Retreat property’s lack of dedicated access. First American retained counsel who conducted an investigation into the matter, after the completion of which First American denied the claim. It based this denial on one of the exclusions in the policy, a provision excluding coverage for matters “assumed or agreed to” by the insured. First American explained in its denial letter that, according to the results of its investigation, the Bank extended the loan with full awareness that the land had no dedicated right of access. Therefore, in First American’s view, the property’s lack of dedicated access was a condition “assumed or agreed to” by the Bank.

After First American refused a subsequent demand for payment, Cynergy filed suit in state court, seeking damages for breach of contract along with bad-faith penalties. First American removed the case to federal court, and the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment on the issue of First American’s liability under the policy.

B. The District Court’s Decision

The district court granted summary judgment to First American.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Karas v. Liberty Ins. Corp.
335 Conn. 62 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 2019)
Sonya Fuller v. Mercury Insurance Company of Georgia
708 F. App'x 637 (Eleventh Circuit, 2018)
First Mercury Insurance Company v. Emily Sudderth
620 F. App'x 826 (Eleventh Circuit, 2015)
Esperanza Garcia v. Geico General Insurance Company
807 F.3d 1228 (Eleventh Circuit, 2015)
First Mercury Insurance v. Sudderth
72 F. Supp. 3d 1328 (N.D. Georgia, 2014)
Madura v. Bac Home Loans Servicing, LP
593 F. App'x 834 (Eleventh Circuit, 2014)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
706 F.3d 1321, 90 Fed. R. Serv. 711, 2013 WL 309052, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 1901, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cynergy-llc-v-first-american-title-insurance-company-ca11-2013.