Industrial Indem. Co. v. Chapman and Cutler

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 16, 1994
Docket93-01202
StatusPublished

This text of Industrial Indem. Co. v. Chapman and Cutler (Industrial Indem. Co. v. Chapman and Cutler) 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
Industrial Indem. Co. v. Chapman and Cutler, (5th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals,

Fifth Circuit.

No. 93-1202.

INDUSTRIAL INDEMNITY COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

CHAPMAN AND CUTLER, et al., Defendants-Appellees.

June 16, 1994.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas.

Before WISDOM and HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judges, KAUFMAN*, District Judge.

FRANK A. KAUFMAN, District Judge:

Plaintiff-Appellant Industrial Indemnity Company ("IIC")

appeals from the grant of summary judgment by the federal district

court below in favor of defendants-appellees.1 In that court,

appellant alleged instances of actionable negligence, amounting to

legal malpractice, on the part of appellees. Appellees

successfully sought the grant of summary judgment upon the ground

that appellant's claims were barred by the applicable statute of

limitations. For the reasons set forth infra, we affirm.

I.

The district court, in its Memorandum Order granting summary

judgment for appellees, set forth the following facts:

* District Judge of the District of Maryland, sitting by designation. 1 The defendants-appellees in the within action are the law firm of Chapman & Cutler, headquartered in Chicago, Illinois, and fifty of its general partners (hereinafter referred to collectively as "Chapman").

1 In September 1984, [IIC] issued a commitment to guarantee a real estate transaction in Dallas, Texas. Under the commitment, IIC undertook to insure payment of promissory notes that several Texas limited partnerships, related to Cloyce K. Box ("Box"), planned to issue to institutional investors. The collateral for the transaction was 494 acres of land in Frisco, Texas. Box intended to use the funds obtained from this financing to invest in a cement plant.

IIC's guaranty provided that if the makers of the promissory notes, which totaled $120 million, did not pay them in full at their maturity date, October 15, 1988, IIC would pay them. The IIC employees responsible for analyzing the transaction and its attendant risk to IIC failed, however, to perform their usual underwriting investigation before the commitment was issued.

IIC claims in this suit that by December 1984, when the policies were to be issued, it realized that the commitment had been obtained by the fraud of its agent FGC Services, Inc., and other participants in the transaction, primarily with respect to the value of the collateral.1 Representatives of IIC who travelled to Dallas, Texas[,] in December for the scheduled closing of the transaction intended, so it is alleged, to withdraw from the venture. Instead, they attempted to renegotiate IIC's commitment. Several changes were made, but when IIC pushed for additional concessions, Box threatened a $150 million lawsuit if it failed to honor its commitment. 1 IIC has not claimed that Chapman was guilty of any misrepresentations or omissions.

At this point, IIC consulted a Chapman partner, Paul Kosin ("Kosin"), who was in Dallas to assist with the transaction. According to IIC, Kosin advised that Box appeared to have a meritorious claim and would probably prevail in a lawsuit. IIC maintains that the advice given by Kosin was incorrect and given without proper analysis or review. Further, IIC alleges that but for Kosin's advice, it would not have issued the subject policies guaranteeing payment of the notes.

IIC reviewed this transaction, as well as the others it had made, throughout 1985 and 1986, thereby incurring costs for attorneys' fees and other investigative expenses. In 1985, IIC terminated its financial guarantee business, recognizing in consequence a loss of $160 million. Crum and Forster ("C & F"), the parent company of IIC, set up a discontinued operations reserve on its books to cover potential future administrative costs and claims expenses which might arise under the different guarantees IIC had

2 issued. This reserve included a contingency reserve of $55 million for the Frisco transaction which was recorded as a $55 million loss on the financial statements of IIC's parent company, C & F, and its parent, Xerox Financial Services (a subsidiary of Xerox Corporation).

Shortly after issuing the policies, in January 1985, IIC

received a premium of approximately $4.6 million from the limited

partnerships. The promissory notes issued by IIC were "zero coupon

notes" which required no interim installments of principal or

interest and no financial performance or payment by the makers of

the notes to the holders until October 1988. Upon the notes'

maturation, the makers completely defaulted, leaving IIC to perform

as required and to pay the holders the full $120 million. After so

doing, IIC foreclosed upon the inadequate real-estate collateral.

IIC, a California corporation, instituted suit in the Superior

Court for San Francisco County, California, on April 6, 1989,

alleging legal malpractice by appellees. Appellees promptly

removed the case to the federal district court for the Northern

District of California based upon the diversity of citizenship

among the parties. 28 U.S.C. § 1332. The headquarters office of

the law firm of Chapman & Cutler is located in Illinois, and none

of the partners of that firm who also is named as a defendant

resides in California. After the said removal, appellees

successfully sought transfer of the case from the Northern District

of California to the Northern District of Texas pursuant to 28

U.S.C. § 1404(a)2 and moved for summary judgment upon the ground

2 § 1404(a) states:

For the convenience of parties and witnesses, in

3 that IIC's action was barred by the applicable statute of

limitations.

The "transferee" federal district court in Texas, applying

California choice-of-law case law in the same manner as would the

"transferor" federal district court in California to which this

case earlier had been removed,3 determined that either the

California or Texas statute of limitations applied and that, under

either statute, the period for filing suit upon IIC's claim had

expired. IIC appeals that conclusion to this Court, asserting that

the district court erred in its invocation of the California and

Texas statutes, rather than the statute of limitations of Illinois,

and that, even under each or both of the California and Texas

statutes, the limitations period had not expired.4

the interest of justice, a district court may transfer any civil action to any other district or division where it might have been brought. 3 See Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Electric Mfg. Co., 313 U.S. 487, 61 S.Ct. 1020, 85 L.Ed. 1477 (1941). 4 In support of its appeal to this Court in connection with the limitations issue, IIC has referred in its briefs to several factual and legal contentions which appellees assert, in a motion to strike filed with this Court, were not presented in any court below. Because we determine that the district court correctly decided the question of limitations, whether or not any or all of IIC's said contentions are sound, we treat appellees' motion to strike as moot.

IIC also urges this Court to rule that the district court mistakenly treated two of appellees' requests for admission as admitted by IIC, despite IIC's claim that it previously had denied the assertions which were the subjects of those requests.

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