IMG Worldwide, Inc. v. Great Divide Insurance Co.

704 F. App'x 562
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 23, 2017
Docket15-4291
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 704 F. App'x 562 (IMG Worldwide, Inc. v. Great Divide Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
IMG Worldwide, Inc. v. Great Divide Insurance Co., 704 F. App'x 562 (6th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

SILER, Circuit Judge.

This appeal involves a dispute between two insurers over which insurer bears the liability for defense costs incurred by their joint insured in an underlying lawsuit. Great Divide Insurance Company (“Great Divide”), the primary insurer of IMG Worldwide, Inc. (“IMG”), appeals from the district court’s grant of partial summary judgment to Westchester Fire Insurance Company 1 (“Westchester”), IMG’s excess insurer. The district court held that under the principle of equitable indemnity, Great Divide was liable to Westchester for approximately $8,000,000 in defense costs that IMG incurred in the underlying litigation when neither Great Divide nor West-chester would defend IMG. IMG itself had already been made whole: it received $250,000 of its defense costs from Great Divide in a settlement and the remainder of its costs from Westchester after IMG sued Westchester for breach of its duty to defend and prevailed on appeal. On remand, Westchester added a third-party equitable-indemnification claim against Great Divide on which the district court granted Westchester partial summary judgment and from which Great Divide now appeals. We affirm the grant of partial summary judgment because Great Divide (as IMG’s primary insurer) had primary liability for IMG’s defense costs, thus allowing West-chester to assert equitable indemnification to recover those costs from Great Divide.

I

This case is a fight between two insurers over which insurer bears the liability for defense costs incurred by their joint insured in an underlying lawsuit.

Great Divide was IMG’s primary commercial general-liability (“CGL”) insurer from 2005 until 2009. The CGL policies obligated Great Divide both to indemnify IMG against certain liability to third parties for “bodily injury” or “property damage” — subject to a $l,000,000-per-occurrence limit and an annual $2,000,000 general-aggregate limit — and to defend IMG against any lawsuit seeking damages that Great Divide would be obligated to pay, with no limit on Great Divide’s liability for defense costs.

Westchester was IMG’s excess (i.e., umbrella) insurer from 2007 to 2009. West-chester provided IMG with various insurance coverages (including $25,000,000 in umbrella coverage in excess of the Great *564 Divide CGL coverage), obligating West-chester to indemnify IMG for liability to third parties if the CGL policy failed to provide coverage or if its per-occurrence or general-aggregate limits had been reached. Westchester also owed a duty to defend IMG, without limitation, against any suit seeking damages that Westches-ter would be obligated to pay. That arrangement did not alter Great Divide’s status as primarily liable for all costs of defending any lawsuit in which Great Divide would be obligated to pay.

In 2008, several individuals sued IMG, alleging injury from a real-estate project in Florida. IMG forwarded the complaint to Great Divide and Westchester, seeking defense and .indemnity. Both insurers refused to defend on grounds that the IMG’s potential liability to the plaintiffs did not fall within the policies because the claims were not for “property damage.” In May 2010, IMG settled the Florida litigation and sought reimbursement from Great Divide and Westchester for the roughly $5 million that IMG agreed to pay to the plaintiffs and roughly $8 million in defense costs.

In September 2010, Great Divide settled with IMG for $1,250,000, agreeing that $1 million exhausted the per-occurrence limit and that the remaining $250,000 would satisfy IMG’s claim against Great Divide to indemnify IMG’s defense costs. IMG released Great Divide from “any and all [cjlaims based upon or arising out of’ the •Florida litigation.

In 2011, IMG sued Westchester, alleging failure to indemnify covered losses and breach of the duty to defend IMG in the Florida litigation. A jury returned a verdict for IMG as to the failure to indemnify, finding IMG had suffered $3,900,000 in covered losses. Westchester moved for leave to join Great Divide as an indemnitor. Great Divide voluntarily intervened in the lawsuit for the purpose of opposing Westchester’s motion for leave, “in order to avoid becoming a party.” Before ruling on the motion for leave, however, the district court entered a final judgment upholding the jury’s award of $3,900,000 as covered losses but denying IMG’s motion for judgment against Westchester as to defense costs, concluding that Westchester owed no duty to defend IMG in the Florida litigation. IMG Worldwide, Inc. v. Westchester Fire Ins. Co., 945 F.Supp.2d 873, 883, 890 (N.D. Ohio 2013). The district court dismissed as moot Westchester’s motion for leave to amend to join claims against Great Divide. Both IMG and West-chester appealed the final judgment.

In 2014, this court affirmed the jury’s award, but reversed the judgment on the issue of Westchester’s duty to defend. IMG Worldwide, Inc. v. Westchester Fire Ins. Co., 572 Fed.Appx. 402, 409, 412 (6th Cir. 2014). We concluded that “Westches-ter was obligated to defend IMG when Great Divide improperly refused to do so.” Id. at 411. Although Westchester could not obtain a credit or setoff from IMG for amounts that should have been paid by Great Divide, we observed that Westches-ter may still have had recourse against Great Divide:

[W]e note that Westchester can still seek reimbursement from Great Divide under various equitable principles including equitable contribution and sub-rogation. The district court dismissed Westchester’s claims against Great Divide as moot. We decline to take any position on the merits of these claims, which are not before us at this time, but we find that Westchester’s claims against Great Divide have been adequately preserved such that the district court can and should revisit these issues on remand.

Id. at 412.

On remand, Westchester was granted leave to file a third-party complaint *565 against Great Divide. Great Divide filed an answer, and Westchester moved for partial summary judgment against Great Divide. Westchester asked the court to declare that Great Divide had breached a duty to defend IMG in the underlying litigation, was obligated to pay all defense costs associated with the underlying litigation, and owed reimbursement to Westchester for the costs paid by Westchester, none of which was extinguished by Great Divide’s settlement with IMG. In its opinion granting Westchester’s motion for partial summary judgment, the district court concluded that “Great Divide is liable under the principles of equity to reimburse West-chester for the defense costs it was ordered to pay to IMG.” IMG Worldwide, Inc. v. Westchester Fire Ins. Co., No. 1:11 CV 1594, 2015 WL 5093428, at *10, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 114659, at *37 (N.D. Ohio Aug. 28, 2015). After determining the theories of equitable contribution and equitable subrogation to be inapplicable, the district court concluded that equitable indemnification was Westchester’s appropriate remedy because the doctrine prevents a primary insurer like Great Divide from using a settlement to avoid defense costs for which it is responsible:

IMG cannot be held directly accountable for its acceptance of the settlement agreement, or its breach of the subrogation clause in its contract with West-chester.

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Bluebook (online)
704 F. App'x 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/img-worldwide-inc-v-great-divide-insurance-co-ca6-2017.