PER CURIAM:
I.T.N. Consolidators, Inc. and I.T.N. of Miami, Inc. (collectively “ITN”) appeal the summary judgment the district court entered in favor of Northern Marine Underwriters Ltd., individually and as agents for Lloyd’s of London, Watkins Syndicate (WTK/457) (collectively “Northern”), denying ITN’s insurance claims. We find that genuine issues of material fact exist and therefore VACATE the summary judgment and REMAND the case for further proceedings.
I.
A.
ITN, freight forwarders, purchased an open cover policy (the “Policy”) from Northern for coverage of marine cargo for the period from August 16, 2007, through August 14, 2008. The Policy Schedule provides in part:
PERIOD: To cover all transits where risk commences on or after 16th August, 2007 for a period of twelve calendar months ending 14th August, 2008 both days inclusive!)]
SUBJECT-MATTER INSURED: All goods and / or merchandise of every description incidental to the business of the Assured or in connection therewith including duty if and as applicable. Duty sum insured should be separately shown and will be subject to conditions as per the Basis of Valuation Clause!)]
The Policy provided further still, in relevant part, as follows:
Basis of Valuation
It is agreed that the basis of valuation for the purpose of this Open Cover shall be the value declared for insurance, but in no case shall the valuation exceed CIF [i.e., Cost, Insurance, and Freight] + 30% unless prior written consent of the Insurer is given. In the event of declaration after loss or arrival, the basis of valuation will be CIF + 10% only.
Claims
11 11.1 In order to recover under this Insurance the Assured must have an assurable interest in the subject-matter insured at the time of the loss.
11.2 Subject to 11.1 above, the Assured shall be entitled to recover for insured losses occurring during the period covered by this Insurance, notwithstanding that the loss occurred before the contract of insurance was concluded, unless the Assured were aware of the loss and Underwriters were not.
The declaration mentioned in the “Basis of Valuation” provision refers to the Certificate of Marine Cargo Insurance (the “COI”), which ITN issues—and thereupon pays a premium—for each shipment. The COI outlines the particular risk of each shipment (e.g., cargo, value, destination)
and bears on its face the statement ‘WAR
RANTED: NO KNOWN OR REPORTED LOSSES.”
B.
On or about October 22, 2007, ITN arranged for shipment of electronic goods belonging to Alfa Company, S.A. (“Alfa”) from Miami, Florida, to Ciudad del Este, Paraguay. On the afternoon of November 7, 2007, the truck carrying the cargo traveling to the Paraguay border was hijacked, and the cargo was lost. Alfa’s president learned of the loss on the evening of November 7, 2007, and reported the loss to ITN’s Vice President, Fadi Aftimos, the following morning. Aftimos spoke with insurance broker Edward Tafur, who, as the district court found, reported the loss to Northern on November 8, 2007. That same day, ITN generated a COI
from Northern’s website. The parties dispute whether Northern knew of the loss prior to the issuance of the COI; the court, however, found that all parties were aware of the loss when ITN generated the COI.
ITN submitted the COI to Northern, paid the designated premium, and submitted a claim for the loss. Northern denied coverage, so ITN brought this lawsuit. At some point after this suit was brought, Northern tendered a refund of the premium to ITN. ITN refused to accept it.
The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Northern argued that the COI was necessary to effect coverage under the Policy and that ITN’s failure to issue a COI prior to the loss rendered the shipment uninsured. Northern also argued that it did
not
know about the loss before ITN issued the COL Given this fact, Northern denied coverage on three grounds: (1) the Policy language did not cover the loss; (2) ITN breached the “No Known or Reported Losses” warranty; and (3) the
uberrimae
fidei
doctrine precluded coverage.
ITN, for its part, argued that the COI was irrelevant to the existence of insurance coverage on any shipment under the open cover policy. Essentially, ITN argued, based on the Basis of Valuation clause cited
supra,
that the policy contemplated post-loss COIs and, therefore, coverage, notwithstanding the statement of “NO KNOWN OR REPORTED LOSSES” on the COI. ITN argued the COI was not a condition for coverage as the Policy provided inchoate coverage and that the issuance of the COI only operated to trigger valuation of the coverage and premium.
The district court found that no relevant material facts were in dispute and that the outcome of the case depended on insurance contract interpretation,
a question of law.
See St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. ERA Oxford Realty Co. Greystone, LLC,
572 F.3d 893, 897 (11th Cir.2009). The court agreed with ITN that the Policy incorporated the COI neither expressly nor by reference. After discussing generally when coverage would attach in an open cover policy, the court concluded that the insurer’s agreement to bear the risk would be “ ‘inchoate and incomplete’ until a declaration was made by the assured.”
I.T.N. Consolidators, Inc. v. N. Marine Underwriters Ltd.,
No. 09-20762-CIV-LENARD/GARBER, slip op. at 16 (S.D.Fla. Mar. 25, 2010) (quoting
Orient Mut. Ins. Co. v. Wright,
64 U.S. (23 How.) 401, 406, 16 L.Ed. 524 (I860)). Nevertheless, the court found that ITN’s interpretation of the Policy, in which a COI could issue and trigger coverage after a loss, would undermine the notion of risk upon which the insurance industry is based, as well as the principle of
uberrimae fidei
The court reasoned that under ITN’s reading of the open cover policy, ITN would be able to forgo the issuance of COIs and the payment of premiums for shipments that arrived safely but at the same time be permitted to issue COIs, pay the premium, and collect compensation for shipments when they were lost. The court found, “With the subject of insurance no longer in existence and the loss known to both parties, ITN’s subsequently-issued Certificate was without consideration and void. Thus, at the time of the hijacking, ITN’s shipment was not declared to [Northern], and, therefore, was not insured by the Policy.”
I.T.N. Consolidators,
slip op. at 19 (citations omitted). Northern was accordingly entitled to summary judgment.
II.
The district court was correct in stating that the particular shipment at issue in this case was “not insured
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PER CURIAM:
I.T.N. Consolidators, Inc. and I.T.N. of Miami, Inc. (collectively “ITN”) appeal the summary judgment the district court entered in favor of Northern Marine Underwriters Ltd., individually and as agents for Lloyd’s of London, Watkins Syndicate (WTK/457) (collectively “Northern”), denying ITN’s insurance claims. We find that genuine issues of material fact exist and therefore VACATE the summary judgment and REMAND the case for further proceedings.
I.
A.
ITN, freight forwarders, purchased an open cover policy (the “Policy”) from Northern for coverage of marine cargo for the period from August 16, 2007, through August 14, 2008. The Policy Schedule provides in part:
PERIOD: To cover all transits where risk commences on or after 16th August, 2007 for a period of twelve calendar months ending 14th August, 2008 both days inclusive!)]
SUBJECT-MATTER INSURED: All goods and / or merchandise of every description incidental to the business of the Assured or in connection therewith including duty if and as applicable. Duty sum insured should be separately shown and will be subject to conditions as per the Basis of Valuation Clause!)]
The Policy provided further still, in relevant part, as follows:
Basis of Valuation
It is agreed that the basis of valuation for the purpose of this Open Cover shall be the value declared for insurance, but in no case shall the valuation exceed CIF [i.e., Cost, Insurance, and Freight] + 30% unless prior written consent of the Insurer is given. In the event of declaration after loss or arrival, the basis of valuation will be CIF + 10% only.
Claims
11 11.1 In order to recover under this Insurance the Assured must have an assurable interest in the subject-matter insured at the time of the loss.
11.2 Subject to 11.1 above, the Assured shall be entitled to recover for insured losses occurring during the period covered by this Insurance, notwithstanding that the loss occurred before the contract of insurance was concluded, unless the Assured were aware of the loss and Underwriters were not.
The declaration mentioned in the “Basis of Valuation” provision refers to the Certificate of Marine Cargo Insurance (the “COI”), which ITN issues—and thereupon pays a premium—for each shipment. The COI outlines the particular risk of each shipment (e.g., cargo, value, destination)
and bears on its face the statement ‘WAR
RANTED: NO KNOWN OR REPORTED LOSSES.”
B.
On or about October 22, 2007, ITN arranged for shipment of electronic goods belonging to Alfa Company, S.A. (“Alfa”) from Miami, Florida, to Ciudad del Este, Paraguay. On the afternoon of November 7, 2007, the truck carrying the cargo traveling to the Paraguay border was hijacked, and the cargo was lost. Alfa’s president learned of the loss on the evening of November 7, 2007, and reported the loss to ITN’s Vice President, Fadi Aftimos, the following morning. Aftimos spoke with insurance broker Edward Tafur, who, as the district court found, reported the loss to Northern on November 8, 2007. That same day, ITN generated a COI
from Northern’s website. The parties dispute whether Northern knew of the loss prior to the issuance of the COI; the court, however, found that all parties were aware of the loss when ITN generated the COI.
ITN submitted the COI to Northern, paid the designated premium, and submitted a claim for the loss. Northern denied coverage, so ITN brought this lawsuit. At some point after this suit was brought, Northern tendered a refund of the premium to ITN. ITN refused to accept it.
The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Northern argued that the COI was necessary to effect coverage under the Policy and that ITN’s failure to issue a COI prior to the loss rendered the shipment uninsured. Northern also argued that it did
not
know about the loss before ITN issued the COL Given this fact, Northern denied coverage on three grounds: (1) the Policy language did not cover the loss; (2) ITN breached the “No Known or Reported Losses” warranty; and (3) the
uberrimae
fidei
doctrine precluded coverage.
ITN, for its part, argued that the COI was irrelevant to the existence of insurance coverage on any shipment under the open cover policy. Essentially, ITN argued, based on the Basis of Valuation clause cited
supra,
that the policy contemplated post-loss COIs and, therefore, coverage, notwithstanding the statement of “NO KNOWN OR REPORTED LOSSES” on the COI. ITN argued the COI was not a condition for coverage as the Policy provided inchoate coverage and that the issuance of the COI only operated to trigger valuation of the coverage and premium.
The district court found that no relevant material facts were in dispute and that the outcome of the case depended on insurance contract interpretation,
a question of law.
See St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. ERA Oxford Realty Co. Greystone, LLC,
572 F.3d 893, 897 (11th Cir.2009). The court agreed with ITN that the Policy incorporated the COI neither expressly nor by reference. After discussing generally when coverage would attach in an open cover policy, the court concluded that the insurer’s agreement to bear the risk would be “ ‘inchoate and incomplete’ until a declaration was made by the assured.”
I.T.N. Consolidators, Inc. v. N. Marine Underwriters Ltd.,
No. 09-20762-CIV-LENARD/GARBER, slip op. at 16 (S.D.Fla. Mar. 25, 2010) (quoting
Orient Mut. Ins. Co. v. Wright,
64 U.S. (23 How.) 401, 406, 16 L.Ed. 524 (I860)). Nevertheless, the court found that ITN’s interpretation of the Policy, in which a COI could issue and trigger coverage after a loss, would undermine the notion of risk upon which the insurance industry is based, as well as the principle of
uberrimae fidei
The court reasoned that under ITN’s reading of the open cover policy, ITN would be able to forgo the issuance of COIs and the payment of premiums for shipments that arrived safely but at the same time be permitted to issue COIs, pay the premium, and collect compensation for shipments when they were lost. The court found, “With the subject of insurance no longer in existence and the loss known to both parties, ITN’s subsequently-issued Certificate was without consideration and void. Thus, at the time of the hijacking, ITN’s shipment was not declared to [Northern], and, therefore, was not insured by the Policy.”
I.T.N. Consolidators,
slip op. at 19 (citations omitted). Northern was accordingly entitled to summary judgment.
II.
The district court was correct in stating that the particular shipment at issue in this case was “not insured
by the Policy.” I.T.N. Consolidators, Inc. v. N. Marine Underwriters Ltd.,
No. 09-20762-CIVLENARD/GARBER, slip op. at 19 (S.D.Fla. Mar. 25, 2010) (emphasis added). The court erred, however, when it concluded that no coverage attached to ITN’s cargo at the time of its loss because a COI could not issue after a loss. In short, the court failed to consider whether Northern and ITN had nevertheless contracted, outside the Policy’s conditions for automatic coverage, to insure a mutually known loss.
The district court’s conclusion conflicts with the Policy’s plain language. To illustrate this, we consider the mechanics of how a shipment comes to be insured under ITN’s open cover policy.
A.
In general, an open cover policy is a contract that sets out the terms that will govern future contracts; i.e., it is “merely a contract for insurance[,] and each time the underwriter agrees to accept a risk, a contract of insurance is formed in relation to that particular risk.” Baris Soyer,
Warranties in Marine Insurance,
ch. 5.43, at 150-51 (2d ed.2006);
see also Greene v. Cheetham,
293 F.2d 933, 935 (2d Cir.1961) (“[In a] typical open-cover polic[y] .... [t]he assured binds the insurer by issuing a certifícate of insurance for each specific shipment and inserting therein the valuation of the shipment, the name of the vessel, and the route for which coverage is to be had.”). An open cover policy, therefore, “is a prospective policy which requires notice from the insured to the insurer of the particulars concerning each shipment to be made so that they can be entered on the policy which is ‘open to receive them,’ and so that the premium can be fixed.” 5 Saul Sorkin,
Goods in Transit
§ 42.08[1] (footnote omitted) (quotations omitted).
By initiating the exchange of a premium for a promise to insure a shipment, the COI thus itself reflects the insurance contract as to any
particular
shipment, as Northern illustrated in its motion for summary judgment:
The [COI] subsequently written constitutes the contract or policy of insurance. The [COI] also contains the terms and conditions of coverage and incorporates into it all the terms and conditions of the insurance policy[.] ...
The open cover set[s] forth the voyages covered ..., the types of merchandise covered, the applicable rates, and the general terms of the conditions of insurance.
The actual insurance on specific shipments was obtained by the issuance of individual certificates under the open cover.
Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J. 5-6 (quoting
Indus. Waxes, Inc. v. Brown,
258 F.2d 800, 801 (2d Cir.1958)) (internal quotation marks omitted) (emphasis omitted).
The plain terms of ITN’s open cover policy, however, seem to require that the loss of a shipment be unknown when the COI is issued and the premium accepted in order for coverage to attach under any given COI. Per the “Claims” provision of ITN’s policy, “[ITN] must have an assurable interest in the subject-matter insured at the time of the loss” to recover under the Policy. That provision also says, however, that “[ITN] shall be entitled to recover for insured losses occurring during the period covered by this Insurance, notwithstanding that the loss occurred before the contract of insurance was concluded, unless [ITN] were aware of the loss and Underwriters were not.”
In such a case, the lost—but nevertheless insured—shipment would be valued at CIF + 10%, rather than up to CIF + 30%, pursuant to the policy’s valuation clause.
So if a shipment were lost before a COI issued, automatic coverage under the policy would be possible—it would simply depend on whether ITN knew about the loss before it issued the COI for the shipment. This requirement is consistent with the policy’s reduced compensation level where a loss occurs before a COI issues; all a shipper needs do to avoid this reduction is issue a COI when the shipment departs for its destination. But the open cover policy leaves the door open for an alternate practice of issuing COIs on some regular basis, without regard to the specific timing of any one shipment.
All that is required is that the shipper not
know
about a loss before any
particular
COI is issued. Else, the insurer is not required to automatically insure the lost shipment. It is thus logical that the COI would bear a warranty on its face that no known loss had occurred at the time of its issuance. That warranty does not contradict any part of the open cover policy, but rather serves to bring the shipment under the automatic coverage of the policy.
To summarize, based on the Policy’s “Claims” provisions, and with specific terms that provide for different valuations for lost and arrived shipments, the plain language of the Policy provides that a COI could issue and coverage could attach after a loss. The district court’s holding to the contrary was in error. Our determination that the holding was erroneous, however, does not fully resolve this appeal.
The loss here occurred before the COI issued; by reference to the “Claims” provisions in the Policy, there was thus no
“insured loss[ ]” at the time ITN generated its COI.
Both
ITN and Northern knew about the loss before the COI issued—and, therefore, “before the contract of insurance was concluded.” As a result, the “Claims” provision’s exception allowing for insurance after a loss does not apply. This is thus not a case contemplated by the exception and by the no-known-loss warranty on the COI, whereby a COI is issued for a shipment not known to be lost and coverage attaches—per the Policy’s Claims clause—“notwithstanding that the loss occurred before the contract of insurance was concluded.”
Because all parties knew of the loss here, a misrepresentation that no known loss had occurred could not have led Northern to rely on that statement, and would in no way constitute a material misrepresentation in breach of
uberrimae fidei.
But even with this forthright exchange of information, the plain terms of the policy indicate that Northern was not required to insure this loss.
That coverage did not automatically arise for this lost shipment is not to say that Northern could not have
voluntarily
contracted to insure the lost shipment. Northern, knowing of the loss, could have nonetheless billed ITN the premium called for by the COI as if no loss had occurred. The consideration exchanged might have been, for instance, the furtherance of Northern’s relationship with ITN, or the encouragement of the practice ITN claims it followed: the invariable payment of premiums on every shipment. The question, then, becomes whether ITN and Northern contracted to insure the lost shipment.
C.
In sum, the issue in this case is thus not whether the COI conflicts with the terms of the open cover policy. Notwithstanding the mechanism for automatic coverage for a not-lost shipment under the open cover policy, it is entirely possible for Northern to insure a shipment that was lost before the COI issued—provided that both Northern and ITN knew about the loss before hand. ITN would inform Northern of the loss, then issue the COI and submit it along with the premium. If Northern wanted to insure the shipment, it would, at this point, accept the contract formed by the COI by keeping the premium payment. To be clear, Northern was not bound by the open cover policy to accept the risk because the contract would be
nudum pactum
if solely to insure an already-lost shipment.
The post-loss COI—and the retention of the premium paid on it—would
reflect instead a voluntary contractual agreement. Considering that both parties knew of the loss before the COI issued, any purported misrepresentation that no loss had occurred—and therefore any
uberrimae fidei
argument—would be irrelevant to the contract formation.
Insurance coverage in this case, then, turns on whether Northern in fact agreed to insure the lost shipment. That question in turn depends on whether Northern accepted ITN’s premium payment, thereby consummating the contract to insure the lost shipment. ITN claims it paid the premium at the time the COI issued, and that Northern initially kept the payment for some time. Apparently, Northern attempted to return the premium to ITN at some point after this litigation had commenced. Therefore, in addition to resolving the convoy-requirement issue it declined to address, the district court should determine whether Northern in fact accepted ITN’s premium payment such that a contract to insure the lost shipment was formed.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s summary judgment is VACATED
and the case is REMANDED for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
SO ORDERED.