Old Republic Ins. v. Cynthia Bitting

340 F.3d 709, 297 B.R. 709
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 25, 2003
Docket01-1206EM, 02-2241EM, 02-2270EM
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 340 F.3d 709 (Old Republic Ins. v. Cynthia Bitting) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Old Republic Ins. v. Cynthia Bitting, 340 F.3d 709, 297 B.R. 709 (8th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

RICHARD S. ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.

In 1991, Popkin & Stern was a troubled law firm, losing both clients and partners. The firm has since ceased doing business and sought bankruptcy protection. The question presented in this case is whether, and to what extent, the law firm’s professional liability insurance carrier, Old Republic Insurance Company, is hable for a claim made against Popkin & Stern in October of 1991. Old Republic argues that it is not liable for this claim because Pop-kin & Stern dissolved — an event which would have terminated the policy — before the claim was made. We disagree; Pop-kin & Stern did not dissolve until after the claim was made. We also reject Old Republic’s alternate argument that the loss on this claim should be spread between it and another insurer. We conclude that the “other insurance” clauses of the two policies involved are not “mutually repugnant.” Old Republic is fully liable. The District Court’s judgments to the contrary will be reversed.

I.

Popkin & Stern was a law firm organized under Missouri law. At the time relevant to this lawsuit, the firm was governed by an Agreement of Partnership dated July 1, 1990. The agreement explained:

The term of the Partnership shall continue from the effective date of this Partnership Agreement until the death, retirement, or withdrawal of all Partners or until terminated pursuant to Article Twenty-Four hereof....

Section 13.01 addressed the conditions under which a partner could withdraw from the partnership: “[a]ny partner may withdraw or retire from the Partnership at the end of any calendar month, after giving the Partnership at least sixty (60) days’ notice in writing.” And Section 24.01 provided that “[a] vote of two-thirds (2/3) of the Partners shall be required to liquidate and terminate the Partnership business.” No other provision in the Agreement provides a method for dissolving the partnership.

The firm was experiencing serious financial difficulties throughout 1991, as it was losing clients and profitable partners. In September of 1991, the remaining partners decided that the firm was no longer a *712 worth while endeavor. Thus, on September 30, 1991, all of the remaining partners signed letters of resignation that, despite the 60-day notice requirement of Section 13.01 of the Agreement, purported to be effective as of that date. 1 The partners took numerous contemporaneous steps in furtherance of their plan to wind up the partnership. For one, they set up a Liquidating Committee, which was to handle the winding-up process. The firm also fired the vast majority of its employees as of that date, keeping only a few employees to tidy up the firm’s affairs. The firm also cancelled all outstanding credit cards and transferred its furniture to another law firm.

Even though the firm ceased normal law practice, the Liquidating Committee continued the winding-up process for a considerable period of time, and at least two partnership resolutions were drafted after September 30. First, a resolution drafted October 2, 1991, would have amended Section 13.01 of the partnership agreement to allow partners to resign with only five days’ notice, rather than the sixty days’ notice required by the existing agreement. It does not appear that this resolution was ever adopted by the partners. A second resolution, which proposed a vote to liquidate the partnership, was dated April 7, 1992. This resolution was not signed, and there is no evidence that it was adopted.

During this period, Popkin & Stern was insured under a “claims-made” professional liability insurance policy issued by Old Republic in November of 1990. The policy covered two classes of liability: (1) claims made during the policy period or within thirty days thereafter and (2) acts, errors, or omissions that might reasonably become claims so long as Old Republic was given written notice of the potential claim during the policy period. The policy was to last for one year, until November 1, 1991, but provided for early termination in certain circumstances:

8. Change of Status

If there is a change of status in which the NAMED INSURED is:

(a) dissolved;
(b) acquired by another law firm; or
(c) merged into, or consolidated with, another law firm and the Named Insured is not the surviving entity.
this Policy shall end on the date the change in status takes place ....

Thus, if the firm dissolved or was merged into a larger firm before November of 1991, the policy terminated on the date of the change in status.

On October 7, 1991, Popkin & Stem gave Old Republic notice of what has become known as the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) Matter. RTC, a government agency acting as receiver for a failed financial institution the law firm had represented, was investigating whether a partner at Popkin & Stem who had represented the financial institution had committed any malpractice. Subpoenas were issued for Popkin & Stern records on the matter. Old Republic initially acknowledged coverage of the RTC Matter, and agreed, along with two other insurance companies, to settle the matter with the complaining party. The other two insurers became involved in the suit because they had issued professional liability policies to two other law firms that now included former Popkin & Stern partners in their partnership. The Bar Plan Mutual Insurance Company, one of these companies, insured a law firm whose partners included twelve past Pop-kin & Stern partners.

*713 Old Republic has since taken the position that the RTC Matter was not covered by its insurance policy because Popkin & Stern dissolved on September BO, 1991— seven days before the claim was made, according to Old Republic. Old Republic sought declaratory relief in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Missouri, where the law firm’s bankruptcy case was pending, to determine its liability on the RTC Matter. In Count I, Old Republic asked the Court to find that it was not liable because Popkin & Stern dissolved on September 30, 1991, and no notice of the claim was given before that date. In Count III, Old Republic asked the Court to determine the respective liability of each of the insurance companies. Old Republic maintained that, if it were liable for the RTC Matter, it should share the costs with Bar Plan because each policy included an “other insurance” clause. 2 Old Republic maintains that these clauses are “mutually repugnant,” as applying each clause literally would result in a total lack of coverage. Under well-settled precedent, so the argument goes, the inclusion of such “mutually repugnant” clauses in each policy results in the sharing of liability on the claim.

The Bankruptcy Court determined that Count I was a core proceeding and concluded that Old Republic was liable on its policy.

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Bluebook (online)
340 F.3d 709, 297 B.R. 709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/old-republic-ins-v-cynthia-bitting-ca8-2003.