HM Intl v. Twin City Fire Ins

13 F.4th 356
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 2, 2021
Docket20-20122
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 13 F.4th 356 (HM Intl v. Twin City Fire Ins) 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
HM Intl v. Twin City Fire Ins, 13 F.4th 356 (5th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

Case: 20-20122 Document: 00516002239 Page: 1 Date Filed: 09/02/2021

United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit

FILED September 2, 2021 No. 20-20122 Lyle W. Cayce Clerk HM International, L.L.C.,

Plaintiff—Appellant,

versus

Twin City Fire Insurance Company,

Defendant—Appellee.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas No. 4:17-CV-111

Before Owen, Chief Judge, Smith and Graves, Circuit Judges. Jerry E. Smith, Circuit Judge: The district court granted Twin City Fire Insurance Company (“Twin City”) summary judgment on the claim of HM International, L.L.C. (“HMI”), that Twin City had breached its duty to indemnify. The court interpreted the policy as not covering settlement payments made after limita- tions for the underlying negligent conduct had expired. But properly inter- preted, the policy does cover such settlement payments. We vacate and remand. Case: 20-20122 Document: 00516002239 Page: 2 Date Filed: 09/02/2021

No. 20-20122

I. This insurance dispute arises out of the settlement of a threatened negligence suit against HMI, which provides various accounting and financial services for Greg and Kathy Geib. On January 12, 2015, HMI’s CFO re- ceived an email from a fraudster purporting to be Greg Geib, instructing HMI to wire transfer $1 million to another bank account. HMI, unfortunately, executed the order, causing the Geibs to lose the $1 million, much of which they have been unable to recover. The fraud was discovered two days later when the fraudster attempted the scheme a second time, prompting HMI to contact Greg Geib to confirm the transfer request. Three months later, the Geibs’ attorney sent HMI a letter accusing it of negligence and demanding that HMI compensate the Geibs for their loss. HMI notified Twin City, its insurer, of the letter and requested that Twin City provide a defense and indemnification per the Directors, Officers, and Entity Liability Coverage (“D&O Policy”) held by HMI’s parent company. 1 The details of that policy are discussed infra, but, in short, the policy requires the insurer to defend and indemnify certain threatened and actual lawsuits against the insured. Twin City declined to defend HMI, citing two exclusions to the D&O policy. Shortly thereafter, HMI sued Twin City for breach of the insurance contract. The Geibs joined the lawsuit as plaintiffs against Twin City, assert- ing that a different part of the insurance policy separately covered them. 2 While the litigation against Twin City was ongoing, HMI and the Geibs settled their dispute. HMI paid the Geibs $470,000 and received a

1 Coverage under other parts of the insurance policy were initially at issue, but only coverage under the D&O Policy remains disputed. 2 That claim has been dismissed and is no longer at issue.

2 Case: 20-20122 Document: 00516002239 Page: 3 Date Filed: 09/02/2021

complete release from any liability and the right to pursue recovery of the stolen funds. The Geibs never filed their threatened negligence suit against HMI. And the settlement occurred more than two years after the Geibs’ negligence claim accrued, so limitations had run. After discovery, both HMI and Twin City moved for summary judg- ment. Among other contentions, Twin City theorized that it does not have to indemnify HMI for its settlement payment to the Geibs because the policy does not cover settlements made after the limitations period had run. The district court agreed with Twin City’s interpretation of the policy and granted it summary judgment on HMI’s claim for breach of the duty to indemnify. Later, on a motion to reconsider, the district court granted HMI summary judgment on its claim for breach of the duty to defend, a decision that Twin City did not cross-appeal. HMI then voluntarily dismissed its remaining claims with prejudice and appealed the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Twin City. Our review is de novo. Davis v. Fernandez, 798 F.3d 290, 292 (5th Cir. 2015).

II. Under Texas law, insurance policies are interpreted “under the well- established rules of contract construction.” Great Am. Ins. Co. v. Primo, 512 S.W.3d 890, 892 (Tex. 2017). “[E]very contract should be interpreted as a whole and in accordance with the plain meaning of its terms.” Id. Courts are to “assign terms their ordinary and generally accepted meaning unless the contract directs otherwise.” Id. at 893. The policy should be interpreted so that “no provision is rendered meaningless,” and courts must “refuse to insert language or provisions the parties did not use.” Id. If the policy is ambiguous, then it is to be “interpreted in favor of coverage.” Gilbert Tex. Constr., L.P. v. Underwriters at Lloyd’s London, 327 S.W.3d 118, 133 (Tex. 2010).

3 Case: 20-20122 Document: 00516002239 Page: 4 Date Filed: 09/02/2021

The D&O Policy says that “the Insurer shall pay Loss on behalf of an Insured Entity resulting from an Entity Claim first made against such Insured Entity during the Policy Period or Extended Reporting Period, if applicable, for a Wrongful Act by an Insured Entity.” (Emphasis added.) The policy defines a number of those terms, as well as some terms used in those definitions:

• “Loss” is defined as “Defense Costs and Damages.” • “Damages” is defined as “the amounts, other than Defense Costs, that the Insureds are legally liable to pay solely as a result of a Claim covered by this Liability Coverage Part, including: . . . settlement amounts.” (Emphasis added.) • “Claim” is defined to include any “Entity Claim.” • “Entity Claim” is defined to be any of the following things asserted against an Insured Entity: o A “written demand for monetary damages or other civil non-monetary relief commenced by the receipt of such demand”; o A “civil proceeding, including arbitration or other alterna- tive dispute proceeding, commenced by the service of a complaint, filing of a demand for arbitration, or similar pleading”; o A “criminal proceeding commenced by the return of an indictment, or formal administrative or regulatory proceed- ing commenced by the filing of a notice of charges, or simi- lar document.” The district court granted summary judgment to Twin City, conclud- ing that the settlement payment was not a “loss” because it was not an amount that HMI was “legally liable to pay solely as a result of a claim.”

4 Case: 20-20122 Document: 00516002239 Page: 5 Date Filed: 09/02/2021

Specifically, the court reasoned “[i]n the very sense of the words ‘legally liable,’ a claim barred by the statute of limitations cannot be a claim in which HMI faced legal liability—the law actually bars liability.” That conscientious reasoning is erroneous for two key reasons. 3 First, the district court did not account for the policy’s definition of the term “claim,” instead treating it as synonymous with “cause of action.” That error is apparent from the court’s referring to a “claim barred by the statute of limitations.” A cause of action can certainly be time-barred by a statute of limitations. But the policy’s definition of “claim” includes a “writ- ten demand for monetary damages or other civil non-monetary relief”—i.e., a Demand Letter—which cannot. Second, the district court interpreted the phrase “legally liable to pay” to mean effectively that HMI actually lost or would have lost had the Geibs filed suit.

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13 F.4th 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hm-intl-v-twin-city-fire-ins-ca5-2021.