Shephard v. St Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Co

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedMarch 16, 2021
Docket5:18-cv-01603
StatusUnknown

This text of Shephard v. St Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Co (Shephard v. St Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Co) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shephard v. St Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Co, (W.D. La. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA SHREVEPORT DIVISION

JEREMY SHEPHARD, ET AL. CIVIL ACTION NO. 18-1603

VERSUS JUDGE ELIZABETH E. FOOTE

ST. PAUL FIRE AND MARINE MAGISTRATE JUDGE HORNSBY INSURANCE CO.

MEMORANDUM RULING

Plaintiffs have sued St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company (“St. Paul”) for alleged fraudulent misrepresentations made in a previously litigated personal injury suit. In that suit, the Plaintiffs sued St. Paul and its insured, AIX Energy, Inc. (“AIX”). AIX declared bankruptcy before trial, and in order to lift the bankruptcy stay on the personal injury litigation, the parties agreed that any recovery against AIX would be limited to the amount of its insurance with St. Paul. The case proceeded to trial and a jury found damages in excess of the St. Paul policy limits attributable to AIX. In this suit, Plaintiffs claim that St. Paul hid the identity of another potentially liable party that was also insured by St. Paul. Thus, Plaintiffs allege that they have been damaged by St. Paul in the amount of the jury verdict upheld on appeal which exceeded the St. Paul policy limits for AIX. Now before the Court is St. Paul’s motion to dismiss Plaintiffs’ second supplemental and amended complaint pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) in which St. Paul contends that Plaintiffs’ claims must be dismissed for various reasons, including that the claims have prescribed. Record Document 37. Plaintiffs oppose the motion and St. Paul filed a reply. Record Documents 41 and 46. For the reasons stated herein, this Court holds that Plaintiffs’ claims are prescribed and St. Paul’s motion [Record Document 37] is GRANTED. I. Background

The factual allegations contained in Plaintiffs’ complaint are accepted as true and are as follows.1 In June 2014, Plaintiffs filed suit against AIX Energy, Inc. (“AIX”) for personal injuries caused by an oilfield explosion occurring in 2013. Record Document 1 at 2. Plaintiffs’ petition in that suit alleged that “AIX owned and/ or operated the well” that exploded. Record Document 32 at 1. AIX’s August 15, 2014 answer stated that “AIX Energy was the owner of the well. As written, the remaining allegations contained in Paragraph 5 are denied.” Id. at 1-

2. At that time, AIX’s defense was provided by its insurer, St. Paul. Record Document 1 at 3. Plaintiffs amended their complaint to add a direct claim against St. Paul in March 2015 and the attorney engaged to represent AIX then began to represent St. Paul as well. Id. at 2-3. In October 2016, St. Paul answered Plaintiffs’ petition and pleaded that “Defendant adopts, reiterates, reaffirms and reavers all prior responses, defenses, allegations, and assertions made in the pervious filings by then Assured, AIX ENERGY, INC.” Record Document 32 at 2.

The parties also engaged in discovery during the suit. On August 1, 2014, before St. Paul was a named defendant, Plaintiffs propounded Interrogatory No. 15 which requested AIX to “identify the owner and/ or the custodian of the well on the date of the incident.” Record Document 1 at 3. AIX objected to the form of the interrogatory, said it was unsure what “owner and/ or custodian” referred to, and directed Plaintiffs to Exhibits R through F,

1 “[W]hen ruling on a defendant’s motion to dismiss, a judge must accept as true all of the factual allegations contained in the complaint.” Erickson v. Pardus, 551 U.S. 89, 94 (2007) (citations omitted). which were thirty-six pages of drilling permits and regulatory filings that did not identify the owner of the well. Id. Plaintiffs also propounded Requests for Production “J” and “F.” Request “J” sought “the contract under which defendant conducted operations at the well.” Id. at 4.

AIX objected to the request as vague and ambiguous and stated that other companies, not AIX, “conducted operations” at the well. Id. Request “F” asked that AIX “produce all documents evidencing ownership and/ or custody of the well.” Record Document 32 at 2. AIX directed Plaintiffs to its answer to Interrogatory 15 and Exhibits R through F. Id. After Plaintiffs propounded the aforementioned discovery, AIX filed for bankruptcy, which stayed the personal injury litigation. Record Document 32 at 3. To lift the stay, Plaintiffs

reached an agreement with St. Paul and AIX that Plaintiffs would “only proceed as to collectible insurance of [AIX] with St. Paul.” Id. Plaintiffs relied on the discovery responses when reaching this agreement. Id. The personal injury suit proceeded to trial in December 2016 and Plaintiffs obtained a verdict in their favor. Record Document 32 at 3. The jury verdict exceeded the amount of St. Paul coverage attributable to AIX by over $10,000,000. Record Document 1 at 6. On January

18, 2017, St. Paul filed a post-trial motion seeking to avoid the jury verdict and have Plaintiffs’ claims dismissed. Record Document 32 at 4. In this motion, St. Paul revealed for the first time that in June 2012 AIX had sold seventy-five percent of its ownership interest in the well to a third party, NextEra Energy Gas Producing, LLC (“NextEra”) and produced an Assignment and Bill of Sale. Id. Plaintiffs do not explain how this revelation related to the post-trial motion. On March 6, 2017, St. Paul and AIX produced a Joint Operating Agreement (“JOA”) between

AIX and NextEra which designated AIX as the well “operator” at the time of the incident. Id. The JOA required that NextEra be added as an additional insured on all of AIX’s insurance policies and stated that NextEra agreed to assume seventy-five percent of AIX’s liabilities “incurred in operations under” the JOA. Record Document 1 at 5-6. According to Plaintiffs,

this agreement was responsive to their discovery requests and contradicted AIX’s answer (and St. Paul’s adoption of said answer) stating that AIX was the “owner” of the well. Record Document 32 at 4. Despite this, AIX and St. Paul, represented by the same attorney, failed to disclose the existence of NextEra and the JOA prior to trial. Record Document 32 at 3-5. AIX and St. Paul suspensively appealed the trial court judgment to the Louisiana Court of Appeal for the Second Circuit. Plaintiffs’ damages award was largely affirmed. Record

Document 1 at 6. St. Paul then appealed to the Louisiana Supreme Court, which denied the writ on November 5, 2018. Id. Here the Court must interrupt its discussion of Plaintiffs’ allegations to correct a legal mischaracterization in those allegations.2 Throughout their pleadings, Plaintiffs erroneously label the excess jury verdict as an “excess judgment.” For example, in the original complaint Plaintiffs state:

The ruling of the Louisiana Second Circuit resulted in plaintiffs obtaining a judgment of $21,719,309.81. Thus, Plaintiffs obtained an excess judgment of $10,754,309.81 above the St. Paul policies, plus interest and costs.

Record Document 1 at 6 (emphasis added). And again, “Plaintiffs now have a final judgment that exceeds St. Paul’s policy limits by over $10,000,000.” Id. (emphasis added).

2 While a court must accept as true factual allegations in a complaint when ruling on a motion to dismiss, it should not accept as true legal conclusions. Arnold v. Williams, 979 F.3d 262, 266 (5th Cir. 2020). Importantly, no party was cast in judgment by any court for any amount in excess of the St. Paul insurance limits attributable to AIX. Stated another way, neither the judgment of the trial court nor of the court of appeal gave the Plaintiffs any legal right to collect any

amounts beyond the AIX insurance proceeds.

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Shephard v. St Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Co, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shephard-v-st-paul-fire-and-marine-insurance-co-lawd-2021.