Hiscox Dedicated Corp Member v. Suzan Taylor

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 16, 2025
Docket24-1161
StatusPublished

This text of Hiscox Dedicated Corp Member v. Suzan Taylor (Hiscox Dedicated Corp Member v. Suzan Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hiscox Dedicated Corp Member v. Suzan Taylor, (8th Cir. 2025).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the Eighth Circuit ___________________________

No. 24-1161 ___________________________

Hiscox Dedicated Corporate Member, Limited

lllllllllllllllllllllPlaintiff - Appellee

v.

Suzan E. Taylor

lllllllllllllllllllllDefendant - Appellant ____________

Appeal from United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas - Hot Springs ____________

Submitted: April 17, 2025 Filed: December 16, 2025 ____________

Before LOKEN, GRUENDER, and GRASZ, Circuit Judges. ____________

LOKEN, Circuit Judge.

More than five years after this protracted insurance coverage dispute began, Suzan Taylor appeals the district court’s1 ruling, following our resolution of an earlier appeal, that Taylor made one or more material misrepresentations in applying for

1 The Honorable Susan O. Hickey, United States District Judge for the Western District of Arkansas. property insurance covering her home in Hot Springs, Arkansas, and violated the policy’s “Concealment or Fraud” coverage condition. Therefore, the court held, the insurer properly declared the policy void ab initio and denied coverage for loss caused by a fire that destroyed the home. For the following reasons, we conclude the district court did not err and therefore affirm.

I. Background

Suzan Taylor owns various real properties in Arkansas which she has separately insured with the help of an independent insurance agent, Nicky Hodges. Hiscox Dedicated Corporate Member Limited (“Hiscox”) is a United Kingdom corporation that is a capital provider to Hiscox Syndicate 33, an underwriting syndicate doing business within the Lloyd’s of London insurance marketplace. Burns & Wilcox, Ltd. (“B&W”) is a multi-state insurance agency that the Syndicate 33 underwriters, including Hiscox, have authorized to serve as their “coverholder” in underwriting and issuing binding property insurance policies on certain types of risks in Arkansas.2

In early 2018, seeking a policy covering her home at 654 Springwood Road, Hot Springs National Park, Arkansas (“the Hot Springs Property”), Taylor filled out an industry standard ACORD form provided by insurance agent Hodges to apply for a suitable policy.3 As relevant here, Taylor’s completed form provided the following answers to application questions:

2 Under Arkansas law, Hiscox and the other Syndicate 33 underwriters are only authorized to issue surplus lines insurance through a licensed Arkansas surplus lines insurer such as B&W. Thus, B&W as coverholder was acting as a surplus lines broker and agent of Hiscox in helping the Syndicate underwriters conduct insurance business in Arkansas outside the limits of their Arkansas licenses. 3 This standard form is frequently used by retail agents seeking quotes from insurers like Hiscox.

-2- 1. Has applicant had a foreclosure, repossession, bankruptcy or filed for bankruptcy during the past five (5) years? No 2. Has applicant had a judgment or lien during the past five (5) years? No 3. Any losses, whether or not paid by insurance, during the last 3 years at this or any location? Brush or Brush & Grass Mixture Fire 4. Has any coverage been declined, cancelled or non-renewed during the last three (3) years? Yes - Builders Risk policy with American Zurich is nonrenewing on 02/15/2018 5. Is the dwelling/home for sale? No

In February 2018, Hodges returned the completed form to Taylor with a quote Hodges obtained from B&W for a Lloyd’s of London policy providing High Value Homeowners property insurance and obligating Hiscox and the other Syndicate 33 participants to pay for covered property damage to the Hot Springs Property. Taylor signed the completed application, declaring “that the information provided . . . is true, complete and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief [and] is being offered to the company as an inducement to issue the policy for which I am applying.” After reviewing the completed application, B&W issued the policy covering the Hot Springs Property for an effective period from February 8, 2018 to February 8, 2019, listing B&W as the Underwriters’ “correspondent” for the insurance certification. The policy provided dwelling coverage up to $2,600,000, personal property coverage up to $1,300,000, and loss of use/rents coverage up to $260,000.

A fire destroyed the Hot Springs Property on August 6, 2018. The Claims Manager for Syndicate 33 directed the insurer’s third party administrator to conduct a claim investigation. The administrator reported several “red flags” raising the possibility of arson, but the cause of the fire remained inconclusive due to the extent of the damage and lack of physical evidence.

-3- Hiscox also investigated potential misrepresentations made in the ACORD policy application, and counsel conducted an Examination Under Oath of Taylor on September 5 in Hot Springs. Parsons determined that Taylor made several misrepresentations, underwriters at B&W and Hiscox London Market confirmed they were material, and Parsons directed that the policy be rescinded ab initio. Hiscox returned the policy premium to Taylor. Taylor’s counsel mailed it back, stating she disagreed with the decision to rescind the policy.

On October 15, 2018, Hiscox commenced this diversity action seeking a declaratory judgment that it properly rescinded the policy ab initio; Hiscox has no duty to pay for loss for the fire at the Hot Springs Property; and, alternatively, “there was no coverage for the claim regarding the fire at the Property pursuant to the policy’s ‘Concealment or Fraud’ condition.” The Complaint for Declaratory Judgment alleged six distinct material misrepresentations by Taylor in answering questions on the Lloyd’s policy application.4 Taylor answered the Complaint and filed counterclaims for breach of contract, bad faith claim handling, and improper rescission. She also filed a third party complaint against B&W but those claims were dismissed in April 2020, before the close of discovery.

4 The underwriters alleged that Taylor failed to disclose: (1) that foreclosure proceedings on the Hot Springs Property were in progress at the time of the policy application; (2) that Taylor owned a house in Fairfield Bay, Arkansas (“the Fairfield Bay Property”) that was sold in a foreclosure sale in 2016; (3) that Taylor had an outstanding judgment against her in favor of Deere Credit, Inc.; (4) that an earlier policy covering the Hot Springs Property was non-renewed in 2016; (5) that Taylor submitted a theft claim in 2016 for loss to the Hot Springs Property that was not listed on the application; and (6) that the Hot Springs Property was listed for sale for $1.5 million at the time of the application. The Complaint alleged that “Underwriters would not have issued the Policy or would not have issued it on the same terms and conditions, had Taylor truthfully completed the application.”

-4- II. Procedural History

Following extensive discovery, the parties cross-moved for summary judgment. On October 7, 2021, the district court granted Hiscox’s summary judgment motion. Applying Arkansas law, the court held that the question asking whether Taylor had a foreclosure, repossession, bankruptcy, or filed for bankruptcy during the past five years was unambiguous, “the filing of the [pending] foreclosure against the [Hot Springs Property] obviously constituted a foreclosure,” and Taylor’s failure to disclose that foreclosure had begun a week before she submitted the application was a material misrepresentation that allowed Hiscox to rescind the policy ab initio. The court did not rule on whether the other alleged misrepresentations justified rescission of the policy. The court dismissed Taylor’s counterclaims with prejudice.

Taylor appealed and we reversed the district court’s judgment dismissing Taylor’s complaint.

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Bluebook (online)
Hiscox Dedicated Corp Member v. Suzan Taylor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hiscox-dedicated-corp-member-v-suzan-taylor-ca8-2025.