Federal Insurance Co v. CompUSA Inc

319 F.3d 746, 2003 WL 173960
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 12, 2003
Docket02-10768
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 319 F.3d 746 (Federal Insurance Co v. CompUSA Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Federal Insurance Co v. CompUSA Inc, 319 F.3d 746, 2003 WL 173960 (5th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Defendants-Appellants CompUSA, Inc. (“CompUSA”) and its former president and CEO, James F. Halpin (“Halpin”), appeal from the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Plaintiff-Appellee Federal Insurance Company (“Federal”), declaring that Federal is not obligated under its Executive Protection Policy No. 8146-12-81B (“Policy”) to indemnify CompUSA or Halpin for any claims arising from the state court lawsuit brought against them by COC Services, Ltd. (“COC”) early in 2000. For the same reasons expressed by the district court in its Memorandum Opinion and Order of Juné 4, 2002, we affirm.

I. Facts and Proceedings

Federal issued the Policy to CompUSA, insuring it and its officers and directors against specified legal liabilities, for an initial term of two years, beginning December 16, 1998 and ending December 16, 2000. The Policy covered “claims made” during that two-year policy period, and contained a provision allowing CompUSA to extend the “reporting period” (but not the coverage period) for any claims made within one year following the effective date of termination of the Policy, but only as to claims based on acts committed during the policy term, i.e., prior to the effective date of termination of the Policy.

On January 3, 2000, just a little more than halfway through the two-year term of the Policy, COC filed a suit in state court against CompUSA. Approximately one month later, COC amended its complaint to add Halpin and other individuals as defendants.

CompUSA evaluated the claims advanced by COC and judged them to be frivolous. On the basis of that evaluation, CompUSA made the conscious decision not to furnish written notice of COC’s claims to Federal even though the claims were made during the term of the Policy. This election was made despite, and in full knowledge of, the following provision of the Policy:

The Insureds shall, as a condition precedent to exercising their rights under this coverage section, give to [Federal] written notice as soon as practicable of any Claim made against any of them for a Wrongful Act (emphasis added).

Indeed, without apprising Federal of the claims or of the lawsuit and its progress, CompUSA and the other defendants in COC’s state court suit handled that matter entirely on their own, from the time the suit was filed in January, 2000 until the three-week jury trial ended on February 8, 2001, with a multimillion dollar verdict in favor of COC. In fact, it was not until a week after the jury returned its verdict that CompUSA made an abrupt change of its long-standing “no notice” position and purported to comply with the Policy’s notice requirement by sending a letter via Federal Express on February 15, 2001, *749 which was received by Federal on February 16, 2001. 1

Although the record reflects that Federal had no actual knowledge of COC’s claims or of the state court lawsuit, there is evidence that an employee in Federal’s underwriting department (not in its claims department) acquired, via the Internet, a copy of CompUSA’s 54-page quarterly 10-Q report for the period ending December 25, 1999. This copy of CompUSA’s 10-Q was obtained in February, 2000, in connection with the anticipated March 1, 2000 early termination of the Policy. Early termination of the Policy was occasioned by CompUSA’s being acquired by another organization. In turn, the anticipated termination of the Policy is apparently what prompted CompUSA to apply for and eventually obtain a six-year extension of the period in which claims relating to the pre-termination policy period could be made, in lieu of the one-year extension of the reporting period, to which CompUSA was entitled under the Policy. 2 CompU-SA’s 10-Q, it later turned out, contained a reference to, inter alia, the COC claim. Uncontradicted record testimony reflects, however, that no one at Federal was aware of the reference to the COC claim in Com-pUSA’s 10-Q, or had even read that part of the 10-Q, until a time in 2001 after CompUSA and Halpin were cast in judgment and after Federal filed the instant declaratory judgment action.

The district court granted Federal’s motion for summary judgment in June, 2002, declaring that, as to the claims advanced in COC’s suit, the failure of CompUSA and Halpin to furnish notice to Federal “as soon as practicable” eliminated any indemnity obligation of the insurer under the Policy. CompUSA and Halpin timely filed a notice of appeal.

II. Analysis

A. Standard of Review

As this case is before us on appeal from the district court’s grant of summary judgment, our review is plenary.

B. Bases of CompUSA’s and Hatpin’s Appeals

CompUSA and Halpin do not — because they cannot (at least not with a straight face) — contend that the letter sent to Federal on February 15, 2001 (more than a year after the lawsuit was filed, about a year after Halpin was impleaded, and a week after the jury returned a $90 million verdict for COC against four individual defendants, including Halpin) satisfied the Policy’s condition precedent of furnishing written notice “as soon as practicable” following the making of a claim. Instead, in this post-hoc attempt to avoid the adverse results of the risk they had assumed more than a year earlier when they decided not to furnish notice timely to Federal and instead to handle the COC claims on then-own, CompUSA and Halpin advance alternative theories for why their failure to satisfy that condition precedent does not preclude their recovering from Federal un *750 der the Policy: (1) Extending the reporting period beyond a “claims-made” policy’s termination date somehow converts such a policy to an “occurrence” policy, thereby relieving the insureds of strict, timely notice compliance and forcing the insurer to demonstrate that actual prejudice resulted from tardy notification by the insureds; and (2) the Policy’s formal notice requirement was somehow satisfied when a member of Federal’s underwriting staff acquired a copy of CompUSA’s 10-Q, which was later found to contain a description of COC’s claims. Halpin asserts an additional theory, contending that, despite having been CompUSA’s President and CEO at the time, he was somehow prohibited by the terms of the Policy from furnishing notice to Federal of COC’s claims against him.

On the spectrum of disingenuous theories of defense, we view those advanced by CompUSA and Halpin as lying somewhere between wholly specious and downright frivolous. In contrast, we view the clear and comprehensive opinion of the district court as more than adequately explaining and supporting its grant of summary judgment in favor of Federal. In the interest of judicial economy, therefore, we shall not replicate the district court’s cogent disposition of this matter by writing separately.

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Bluebook (online)
319 F.3d 746, 2003 WL 173960, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federal-insurance-co-v-compusa-inc-ca5-2003.