RLI Insurance Company v. Nexus Services, Inc.

26 F.4th 133
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 27, 2022
Docket20-2253
StatusPublished

This text of 26 F.4th 133 (RLI Insurance Company v. Nexus Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
RLI Insurance Company v. Nexus Services, Inc., 26 F.4th 133 (4th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

PUBLISHED

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

No. 20-2253

RLI INSURANCE COMPANY,

Plaintiff - Appellee,

v.

NEXUS SERVICES, INC.; LIBRE BY NEXUS, INC.; HOMES BY NEXUS, INC.,

Defendants - Appellants.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia, at Harrisonburg. Michael F. Urbanski, Chief District Judge. (5:18-cv-00066-MFU-JCH)

Argued: October 28, 2021 Decided: January 27, 2022

Before GREGORY, Chief Judge, QUATTLEBAUM, Circuit Judge, and FLOYD, Senior Circuit Judge.

Affirmed by published opinion. Senior Judge Floyd wrote the opinion in which Judge Gregory joined. Judge Quattlebaum wrote an opinion concurring in parts I, II, III, V, and VI and in the judgment.

ARGUED: Carl August Anderson, ROCK SPRING LAW GROUP, PLLC, Washington, D.C., for Appellants. Vivian Katsantonis, WATT, TIEDER, HOFFAR & FITZGERALD, LLP, McLean, Virginia, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Mario B. Williams, NDH LLC, Atlanta, Georgia; John M. Shoreman, MCFADDEN & SHOREMAN, Washington, D.C., for Appellants. FLOYD, Senior Circuit Judge:

This case concerns relatively straightforward obligations of a bond surety, RLI

Insurance Company (RLI), and its indemnitor, Nexus Services, Inc. (Nexus), under a

standard Commercial Surety General Indemnity Agreement (the Agreement). Because

surety is a zero-loss industry, the Agreement contains several clauses designed to keep RLI

whole. One obligates Nexus to provide collateral sufficient to cover all of RLI’s exposure,

and the parties task us with resolving what kinds of risk “exposure” means to capture. What

makes our task unique is that, unlike the familiar commercial or construction relationships

that typically contemplate only a handful of guarantees, this Agreement involves nearly

2,500 bonds RLI issued to the U.S. government on behalf of individual immigrant

detainees. Nexus insists that we must nonetheless measure RLI’s exposure on each bond

individually and that RLI is not actually “exposed” to any risk—and Nexus

correspondingly does not need to deposit collateral—until the parties have reason to

believe that RLI will have to pay out that particular bond. The first tangible evidence of

that, Nexus continues, comes about when an immigrant fails to appear in court on the

designated date, breaching the bond. In short, Nexus suggests it should deposit collateral

only up to the sum of the already-breached bonds. RLI objects the Agreement is not so

limited. Although we do not know which particular immigrant will breach, we can be

certain some will. It follows that the Agreement must secure against aggregate risk—that

is, the likelihood Nexus will be able to (timely) indemnify RLI for all future breached

bonds. Because Nexus’s financial condition, its willingness to indemnify RLI so far, and

historical rate of bonds breached all bear on that likelihood, they should likewise inform

2 the collateral calculus. The district court sided with RLI, and after reviewing the plain

terms of the Agreement, we agree. We also affirm the district court’s calculation of the

collateral amount as a sound exercise of its discretion to order equitable relief.

I.

An immigration bond, much like a criminal bond, allows the release of a detained

individual from custody based on a surety’s contractual undertaking to the United States to

either deliver the individual as demanded or forfeit the penal sum specified in the bond.

Nexus runs the bonds program: It screens the immigrants likely to keep their promise to

appear in court and maintains contact with them throughout their release. But Nexus lacks

the Department of Treasury’s commercial-surety certification, and so needs another surety

to take on the liability to the government. RLI agreed to perform that function in exchange

for a set fee upfront, and Nexus agreed to indemnify RLI for all losses. Specifically, Nexus

agreed to pay upon demand:

2(a)(i) all losses, costs, damages, attorneys’ fees and expenses of whatever kind or nature which arise by reason of, or in consequence of, the Surety having executed any Bond on behalf of the Principal, or in enforcing this agreement against any of the Indemnitor(s) . . . .

2(a)(ii) an amount sufficient to discharge any claim made against Surety on any Bond. This sum may be used by Surety to pay such claim or be held by Surety as collateral security against loss on any Bond.

J.A. 53. Nexus also agreed that:

3(c) [u]ntil Surety has been furnished with conclusive evidence of its discharge without loss from any Bonds, and until Surety has been otherwise fully indemnified . . . , Surety shall have the right of access to the books, records and accounts of the Indemnitor(s) . . . .

3 3(d) Surety shall have every right, defense, and remedy allowed by law including the rights of exoneration and subrogation. Indemnitor(s) will, upon the request of the Surety, procure the discharge of Surety from any Bond and all liability by reason thereof. If such discharge is unattainable, Indemnitor(s) will, if requested by Surety, either deposit collateral with Surety, acceptable to Surety, sufficient to cover all exposure under such Bonds or Bonds, or make provisions acceptable to Surety for the funding of the bonded obligations[ ].

Id. at 54. Illinois law governs the Agreement. Id.

While the parties have always differed as to what the Agreement requires, they have

never disputed the basic facts of how their relationship progressed. See RLI Ins. Co. v.

Nexus Servs. Inc., 470 F. Supp. 3d 564, 571 (W.D. Va. 2020). Between February 2016 and

February 2017, RLI issued 2,486 immigration bonds totaling $30 million at Nexus’s

request. From the start, RLI insisted on collateral, and Nexus agreed to deposit $500,000.

But it never did. Over the course of the year, Nexus’s performance only continued to

deteriorate. It repeatedly allowed several invoices from the government to become past

due, forcing RLI to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars from its own pocket to avert

referral to the Departments of Treasury and Justice. At one point, the unpaid invoices

totaled $709,789.37. When RLI reached out to Nexus to resolve this crisis, Nexus refused

to answer for weeks at a time, denied access to most of its financial records, misrepresented

when checks were sent to the government, and failed to indemnify RLI until RLI brought

several enforcement actions—which Nexus protracted by “cloak[ing] two of its affiliate

companies” and obstructing discovery. RLI Ins. Co. v. Nexus Servs. Inc., No. 5:18CV66,

2020 WL 6262967, at *12 (W.D. Va. Oct. 23, 2020).

4 Nexus also misrepresented the risk RLI was undertaking. During contract

negotiations, it assured RLI that its proactive screening and tracking techniques would

result in only about 2% of the bonds being breached. By the start of this suit, however,

immigrants had breached about 48% of the discharged bonds. 1 Meanwhile, Nexus has

been investigated by states, the federal government, and insurance companies. And has

had several liens placed on its assets for failing to satisfy creditors. All of this led RLI to

finally invoke ¶ 3(d) of the Agreement and request Nexus to discharge its liability on all

outstanding bonds or deposit $10 million in collateral. Nexus refused to do either, and RLI

turned to the courts. Nexus counterclaimed that RLI requested the $10 million in bad faith.

Before the district court, RLI argued it has absolute discretion to request any amount

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26 F.4th 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rli-insurance-company-v-nexus-services-inc-ca4-2022.