Nat'l Continental Ins. Co. v. Nurbek Aiazbekov

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 23, 2020
Docket19-1926
StatusUnpublished

This text of Nat'l Continental Ins. Co. v. Nurbek Aiazbekov (Nat'l Continental Ins. Co. v. Nurbek Aiazbekov) 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
Nat'l Continental Ins. Co. v. Nurbek Aiazbekov, (6th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 20a0370n.06

No. 19-1926

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

NATIONAL CONTINENTAL INSURANCE ) FILED COMPANY, ) Jun 23, 2020 ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) v. ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED NURBEK AIAZBEKOV; ROAD ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR CARRIERS, INC., ) THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF Defendants, ) MICHIGAN ) ZEF LJAJCAJ, ) OPINION Defendant-Appellant. ) )

BEFORE: MERRITT, MOORE, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.

MURPHY, Circuit Judge. Zef Ljajcaj was injured in a trucking accident and sued the other

driver, Nurbek Aiazbekov, along with Aiazbekov’s trucking company, Road Carriers, Inc., in state

court. While that suit was pending, Aiazbekov fled the country. After Ljajcaj settled with Road

Carriers, he obtained a $2.6 million default judgment against the missing Aiazbekov. This federal

diversity case asks whether Road Carriers’ insurer, National Continental Insurance Company, must

pay that state-court judgment. National Continental says it need not pay because Aiazbekov, by

fleeing the country, breached a provision in Road Carriers’ insurance policy that required him to

cooperate in the defense. The district court agreed, and we affirm. No. 19-1926, Nat’l Cont’l Ins. Co. v. Aiazbekov, et al.

I

Around 2:00 a.m. on October 19, 2016, Ljajcaj was driving his semitruck across Indiana’s

border into Michigan in the middle lane of Interstate 94. At the same time, Aiazbekov, driving a

load of watermelons in another semi, attempted to merge onto the interstate from Michigan’s Wel-

come Center. Aiazbekov suddenly stalled and “jackknifed” into the middle lane. He also did not

have his lights on. While Ljajcaj saw Aiazbekov’s truck jackknife, he could not avoid hitting the

back of Aiazbekov’s trailer. Ljajcaj says that he suffered head, back, and shoulder injuries that

required multiple surgeries and caused lasting physical and mental harms. In July 2017, he brought

a negligence suit against Aiazbekov and Road Carriers (the Illinois company that owned the truck)

in Michigan state court.

National Continental, Road Carriers’ liability insurer, paid for separate counsel to defend

both Road Carriers and Aiazbekov. By January 2018, however, Aiazbekov had disappeared. His

counsel made many efforts to reach him, including through a private investigator, but learned that

Aiazbekov had fled to “Asia or Russia.” Counsel moved to withdraw from the case in late May,

which the state court allowed after a hearing. Two weeks later, Ljajcaj agreed to a $500,000 set-

tlement with Road Carriers (which was half of the $1,000,000 coverage limit under National Con-

tinental’s insurance policy). While Aiazbekov had disappeared by the time of this settlement (and

likely would not pay any judgment), the settlement agreement did not release Ljajcaj’s claims

against Aiazbekov. Given Aiazbekov’s absence (and his lack of counsel), Ljajcaj later obtained a

default judgment of roughly $2.6 million against Aiazbekov.

Eighteen days after Aiazbekov’s counsel withdrew and several weeks before Ljajcaj moved

for a default judgment against Aiazbekov in the state-court case, National Continental brought this

diversity action against Aiazbekov, Ljajcaj, and Road Carriers. National Continental sought a

2 No. 19-1926, Nat’l Cont’l Ins. Co. v. Aiazbekov, et al.

declaratory judgment that, under the terms of its insurance policy with Road Carriers, it had no

duty to defend or indemnify Aiazbekov in connection with Ljajcaj’s pending state-court claims.

That insurance policy, which otherwise covered Aiazbekov, states that National Continental “ha[s]

no duty to provide coverage under this policy unless there has been full compliance with” certain

duties in the event of a lawsuit—including a duty to “[c]ooperate with [National Continental] in

the investigation or settlement of the claim or defense against the ‘suit.’” National Continental

argued that Aiazbekov had violated this “cooperation” provision by fleeing the country. Aiaz-

bekov and Road Carriers both failed to answer the complaint. Ljajcaj counterclaimed, asserting

that the cooperation provision was unenforceable under Michigan law and that National Continen-

tal must provide coverage for his state-court judgment against Aiazbekov.

At the summary-judgment stage, the district court first held that Illinois law, not Michigan

law, applied to Road Carriers’ insurance policy with National Continental. See Nat’l Cont’l Ins.

Co. v. Aiazbekov, 2019 WL 2717221, at *2 (W.D. Mich. June 28, 2019). Applying Illinois law,

the court next decided that Aiazbekov breached the insurance policy’s cooperation provision be-

cause he did not cooperate even after National Continental took reasonable steps to locate him. Id.

at *2–3. And the court found that his failure to cooperate prejudiced National Continental’s de-

fense. Id. at *3. It thus held that National Continental need not indemnify Aiazbekov for Ljajcaj’s

judgment against him. Ljajcaj now appeals, and we review the district court’s decision de novo.

See Miller v. State Farm Mut. Auto Ins. Co., 87 F.3d 822, 824 (6th Cir. 1996).

II

Ljajcaj argues (1) that a Michigan law invalidates the cooperation provision on which Na-

tional Continental relies to avoid its duty to indemnify Aiazbekov, (2) that, even under Illinois law,

National Continental failed to prove that Aiazbekov breached this cooperation clause, and (3) that

3 No. 19-1926, Nat’l Cont’l Ins. Co. v. Aiazbekov, et al.

National Continental should be estopped from raising this argument. Ljajcaj may have forfeited

these arguments, but they fail on their merits in any event.

A

Ljajcaj asserts that a provision in Michigan’s Financial Responsibility Act bars us from

enforcing the cooperation clause in Road Carriers’ insurance policy with National Continental.

The provision states that “no failure of the insured to give any notice, forward any paper or other-

wise cooperate with the insurance carrier, shall constitute a defense as against” a judgment creditor

like Ljajcaj. Mich. Comp. Laws § 257.520(f)(1). The Michigan Supreme Court recently held that

§ 257.520 applies only to a subset of liability insurance policies. Titan Ins. Co. v. Hyten, 817

N.W.2d 562, 569–70 (Mich. 2012). We need not decide whether that subset would include Road

Carriers’ insurance policy because Illinois law—not Michigan law—governs this dispute.

To identify the state law that applies in a diversity case, we look to the choice-of-law rules

of the state in which the district court sits—here, Michigan. See Mill’s Pride, Inc. v. Cont’l Ins.

Co., 300 F.3d 701, 704 (6th Cir. 2002). The district court predicted that Michigan courts would

apply Illinois law to decide whether Aiazbekov breached the cooperation clause in Road Carriers’

insurance policy. See Nat’l Cont’l, 2019 WL 2717221, at *2. Yet Ljajcaj “barely mentions” this

preliminary choice-of-law question in his opening brief, relegating it to a footnote at the end.

United States v. Johnson, 440 F.3d 832, 845 (6th Cir. 2006). Even after National Continental

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Nat'l Continental Ins. Co. v. Nurbek Aiazbekov, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/natl-continental-ins-co-v-nurbek-aiazbekov-ca6-2020.