Louisiana v. AAA Insurance

524 F.3d 700, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 7933, 2008 WL 1118176
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 11, 2008
DocketNo. 08-30145
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 524 F.3d 700 (Louisiana v. AAA Insurance) 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
Louisiana v. AAA Insurance, 524 F.3d 700, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 7933, 2008 WL 1118176 (5th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

The Attorney General of Louisiana filed a class action, naming the State and numerous Louisiana citizens as Plaintiffs. The class action alleged that the Defendant insurance companies failed to pay covered insurance claims following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita and as a result breached the insurance contracts to which the State is a partial assignee. It requested damages and declaratory and injunctive relief, all under state law. At several Defendants’ request, the case was removed to federal district court under the Class Action Fairness Act (“CAFA”).1 Louisiana moved to remand to state court, arguing that CAFA did not apply and that Louisiana enjoyed sovereign immunity from involuntary removal to federal court in that it was suing in its state court to enforce state law. The district court denied remand. Louisiana petitioned this court for permission to appeal the interlocutory order under CAFA, which we granted.

I

Louisiana administers the Road Home Program, which advances money to Louisiana homeowners for reconstructing homes damaged or destroyed by Hurricanes Rita and Katrina. Any homeowner could receive up to $150,000 from Louisiana with a written assignment to the State of the owner’s claim against his insurer in the amount of the payment received from the State. Only an owner’s claim for damage to his dwelling was assigned. These as[703]*703signments, functionally subrogation agreements, read in part:

Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained herein, this is a limited subrogation and assignment, and is limited to an amount not to exceed the amount of the grant received by the undersigned [insured] under the Program, to which the State has not been reimbursed from other sources.

While an owner’s assignment was partial in that the owner retained his claim against his insurer for amounts exceeding the sum advanced by the State, the assignment also granted Louisiana the right to sue his insurer in the owner’s name for the owner’s insured losses.2

Under a Louisiana statute, all insurance claims relating to damages from Hurricane Katrina had to be filed by September 1, 2007.3 On August 28, 2007, Louisiana filed this suit in Orleans Parish against more than 200 insurance companies. By an amended petition filed five days later, Louisiana added a class action against the same defendants under Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure, Article 591.4 It was filed on behalf of “The State of Louisiana, individually and on behalf of’ the state agency administering the program. The asserted class consisted of:

[a]ll current and former citizens of the State of Louisiana who have applied for and received or will receive funds through the Road Home Program, and who have executed or will execute a subrogation or assignment agreement in favor of the State, and to whom insurance proceeds are due and/or owed for damages sustained to any such recipient’s residence as result of any natural or man-made occurrence associated with Hurricanes Katrina and/or Rita under any policy of insurance, as plead herein, and for which the State has been or will be granted or be entitled to recover as repayment or reimbursement of funds provided to any such recipient through the Road Home Program.

The amended petition5 requested injunc-tive relief, declaratory judgment, damages, and “an order finding the Insurance Company Defendants liable to the State and the recipients (members of the class), as plead herein,” “[flor an injunctive order directing that the Insurance Company Defendants pay all coverage afforded under [704]*704the terms of the recipients’ policies, and where a total loss is found, an injunctive order directing the payment of the full value placed on the recipients’ residence ... with full reimbursement or repayment of any funds to which the State is entitled to as a result of any grant issued under The Road Home Program,” “[f]or a declaration of the State’s and the recipient’s [sic] rights under Louisiana law, and ... a declaration of the Insurance Company Defendants’ responsibilities to the State and the recipients, as plead herein,” “for an injunction prohibiting the Insurance Company Defendants from committing further breaches of their duties owed to the State and members of the class, and ... forbidding ... Defendants from failing to honor the coverage provided by the All Risk policies ... issued to the recipients,” and “[f]or any and all monetary, general and equitable relief or injunctive relief as this Court deems just and appropriate under Louisiana law, whether plead herein or otherwise.”

The amended petition alleged breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and breach of fiduciary duty, asserting inter alia that “repeated demands were made by recipients to the ... Defendants which refused to meet their obligations under the All Risk policies and refused to pay the full damages for recipients’ homes being destroyed or damaged,” that the insurance companies had “by failing ... to pay the recipients all of the benefits due and owing them ... violated the duties of good faith and fair dealing owed to recipients,” and that “Defendants’ failure to fully disclose and properly advise the recipients ... breached the fiduciary duties owed to them as their policyholders.” The amended petition also requested a declaratory judgment that “under Louisiana’s Valued Policy Law, La. R.S. § 22:695, et seq., recipients are entitled to recover the full value placed on their residences by the Insurance Company Defendants without deduction or offset, especially without any deduction or offset for funds received under The Road Home Program.”

On the filing of the amended petition with its class action allegation, several Defendants filed a notice of removal in which others joined and consented. Louisiana moved to remand to state court, arguing that CAFA did not apply and that exercise of federal jurisdiction over the suit offended its sovereign immunity. Following a hearing, the district court refused to remand. At the hearing, the insurance companies argued that removal was proper under CAFA and the Multiparty Multiform Trial Jurisdiction Act (MMTJA), which provides for original jurisdiction in the district court, and removal to district court, for certain minimal diversity actions arising from a “single accident.”6 Finding minimal diversity under CAFA, the district court declined to reach the claim of jurisdiction under MMTJA.7

Louisiana here argues that CAFA does not apply, and that even if it does apply by its terms, it cannot abrogate sovereign immunity from federal process, or at the least Congress did not clearly do so in CAFA; and that MMTJA does not apply by its own terms.

[705]*705II

Enacted in 2005, CAFA provides for removal of class actions involving parties with minimal diversity. It defines a “class action” as

any civil action filed under rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure or similar State statute or rule of judicial procedure authorizing an action to be brought by 1 or more representative persons as a class action.8

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Related

Louisiana Ex Rel. Caldwell v. Allstate Insurance
536 F.3d 418 (Fifth Circuit, 2008)
In Re Katrina Canal Litigation Breaches
524 F.3d 700 (Fifth Circuit, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
524 F.3d 700, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 7933, 2008 WL 1118176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisiana-v-aaa-insurance-ca5-2008.