Appellate Case: 22-3275 Document: 010110960226 Date Filed: 11/29/2023 Page: 1 FILED United States Court of Appeals PUBLISH Tenth Circuit
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS November 29, 2023
Christopher M. Wolpert FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT Clerk of Court _________________________________
TEAM INDUSTRIAL SERVICES, INC.,
Plaintiff - Appellant,
v. No. 22-3275
ZURICH AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY; WESTAR ENERGY, INC.; ENDURANCE AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY; WESTCHESTER FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY,
Defendants - Appellees,
and
KELLI MOST, individually and as personal representative of the estate of Jesse Henson; CECILIA HENSON; DORIAN HENSON,
Defendants. _________________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Kansas (D.C. No. 2:19-CV-02710-HLT) _________________________________
Nolan C. Knight, Munsch Hardt Kopf & Harr, P.C., Dallas, Texas for Appellant.
Meredith A. Webster (joined by Larry D. Fields on the brief), Kutak Rock LLP, Kansas City, Missouri for Appellee Zurich American Insurance Company. Appellate Case: 22-3275 Document: 010110960226 Date Filed: 11/29/2023 Page: 2
John T. Bullock (joined by J. Eric Weslander and Kate M. Simpson on the briefs), Stevens & Brand LLP, Lawrence, Kansas for Appellee Westar Energy, Inc.
Kevin Brooks, Baker Sterchi Cowden & Rice L.L.C., Kansas City, Missouri, Manuel Mungia and Chad Schreiber, Chasnoff, Mungia, Valkenaar Pepping & Stribling, LLP, San Antonio, Texas, and Sarah R. Smith, Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith, LLP, Houston, Texas, on the brief, for Appellee Westchester Fire Insurance Company.
Brandon A. Howerton and Andrew D. Herold, Herold & Sager, Encinitas, California, on the brief, for Appellee Endurance American Insurance Company. _________________________________
Before HARTZ, MORITZ, and ROSSMAN, Circuit Judges. _________________________________
HARTZ, Circuit Judge. _________________________________
Plaintiff Team Industrial Services, Inc. (Team) suffered a $222 million
judgment against it in a wrongful-death lawsuit arising out of a steam-turbine failure
in June 2018 at a Westar Energy, Inc. (Westar) power plant. Team seeks coverage for
this liability from Westar, Zurich American Insurance Company (Zurich), and two
other insurance companies, arguing that it was, or should have been, provided
protection by Westar’s Owner-Controlled Insurance Program (OCIP) through
insurance policies issued by Zurich and the two other insurers.1 Team’s claims derive
from the fact that its liability for the failure at the Westar power plant arose from
work that had previously been performed by Furmanite America, Inc. (Furmanite),
1 Zurich issued the primary liability policy, with Westchester Fire Insurance Company and Endurance American Insurance Company providing two layers of excess coverage. The excess-coverage policies “‘followed form’ to the Zurich Policy, meaning those policies were generally governed by the terms of the Zurich Policy,” and the parties agree that the excess carriers need not be treated separately. Aplee. Br. at 4; see Aplt. Br. at 37–38. 2 Appellate Case: 22-3275 Document: 010110960226 Date Filed: 11/29/2023 Page: 3
which did have coverage under Westar’s OCIP. The United States District Court for
the District of Kansas granted summary judgment to Defendants, and Team appeals.
Although Team vigorously presents its arguments for reversal, we are not persuaded.
Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
The relevant facts are not disputed. In 2010 Westar entered into separate
Master Services Agreements (MSAs) with Furmanite and Team to perform work at
the Westar power plant and other sites. Team was to perform “pre-heat and stress
relieving” services and Furmanite was to perform “valve maintenance” services.
Team Indus. Servs., Inc. v. Zurich Am. Ins. Co. (Team Indus. Servs.), No. 2:19-CV-
02710-HLT, 2022 WL 16961237, at *2 (D. Kan. Nov. 16, 2022). Both MSAs state
that Furmanite and Team are independent contractors required to procure their own
liability insurance and to name Westar as an additional insured on the policies. They
both also state that “Contractor shall not assign or transfer any of its rights or
obligations . . . under this Contract without previous written consent of [Westar]
which consent shall not unreasonably be withheld.” Aplt. App., Vol. 3 at 75, 174.
In 2013 Westar instituted its OCIP, through which contractors and
subcontractors could obtain insurance protection for work performed at covered
locations. Westar had discretion to decide which contractors would be eligible to
enroll in the OCIP. Eligible contractors had to complete enrollment forms to be
considered for participation. During the time relevant to this dispute, insurance was
provided by a Zurich policy, whose premiums were paid by Westar. According to
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Zurich’s policy, an enrolled contractor’s “rights and duties under this policy may not
be transferred without [Zurich’s] written consent.” Aplt. App., Vol. 15 at 5.
With permission from Westar, Furmanite submitted an application seeking
enrollment in the OCIP and was enrolled in 2013. Furmanite then obtained login
credentials to an online portal operated by Westar’s insurance broker, Aon Risk
Services Southwest, Inc. (Aon), where Furmanite was required to report payroll hours
for each month. The payroll hours reported to Aon were used by Zurich to calculate
the premium to be paid by Westar for the relevant policy period. Westar never made
Team eligible to enroll in the OCIP, Team never submitted an enrollment application,
and it was never enrolled.
In February 2016 Team’s parent company acquired Furmanite’s parent
company. Although Team and Furmanite became “sister companies,” they were
distinct legal entities and never merged. In September 2017 Team and Westar
executed Change Order No. 2 to the Team Contract, which, as discussed more fully
below, consolidated the MSAs of Furmanite and Team, retiring the Furmanite MSA
and providing that purchase orders that had been issued to Furmanite would be
reissued to Team. After the execution of that change order, Team assumed
Furmanite’s workload at the power plant. Furmanite’s insurance coverage under the
Westar OCIP continued even though its service contract had been retired. See Team
Indus. Servs., 2022 WL 16961237, at *3 (“Westar may have submitted a 2018
re-enrollment on Furmanite’s behalf. . . . The bottom line is Furmanite’s coverage
continued, even after it perhaps should have ended.”). A Team employee used
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Furmanite’s login credentials to upload payroll hours to the Aon payroll portal, and,
for a number of months beginning in June 2017, 0 hours and 0 payroll were logged in
by a Team employee in Furmanite’s name for every month except April 2018. The
parties stipulated that the hours Team logged in under Furmanite’s name for April
2018 were for work by Team unrelated to the June 2018 accident.
In the proceedings below, Team argued that it inherited Furmanite’s coverage
under the OCIP via Change Order No. 2 and was therefore insured for the work it
performed at the power plant. In the alternative, Team requested that the court reform
the Zurich policy to list Team as an insured instead of Furmanite or enforce an
insurance agreement through the doctrine of promissory estoppel against Westar and
Zurich. Team also argued that Westar breached a fiduciary duty by failing to provide
OCIP coverage for Team. Westar and Zurich moved for summary judgment, and the
district court granted both motions. See Team Indus. Servs., 2022 WL 16961237,
at *1. It ruled that Change Order No. 2 unambiguously retired Furmanite’s MSA and
left Team’s MSA as the sole governing document. The court declined to reform the
Zurich policy and rejected the promissory-estoppel, breach-of-contract, and breach-
of-fiduciary-duty claims. We affirm.2
2 Team also appeals the denial of its request for a declaratory judgment. Our rejection of its appeal on the other causes of action also disposes of the request for declaratory judgment, which is predicated on the same claims. 5 Appellate Case: 22-3275 Document: 010110960226 Date Filed: 11/29/2023 Page: 6
II. DISCUSSION
We review de novo a grant of summary judgment, applying the same legal
standards that are to be used by the district court. See Merrifield v. Bd. Of Cnty.
Comm’rs, 654 F.3d 1073, 1077 (10th Cir. 2011). A grant of summary judgment is
appropriate if “the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material
fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
On review, “[w]e examine the record and all reasonable inferences that might be
drawn from it in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.” Merrifield,
654 F.3d at 1077 (internal quotation marks omitted). The parties do not dispute the
district court’s determination that Kansas law governs the substantive issues we
address on appeal. We start with the claims that Zurich breached a contractual
obligation to insure Team and that Westar breached a contractual obligation to
continue Furmanite’s OCIP coverage for the benefit of Team.
“The primary rule for interpreting written contracts is to ascertain the parties’
intent.” Osterhaus v. Toth, 249 P.3d 888, 896 (Kan. 2011). “If the terms of the
contract are clear, the intent of the parties is to be determined from the language of
the contract without applying rules of construction.” Id. Whether the contractual
language is ambiguous is a matter of law for courts to decide. See Waste Connections
of Kan., Inc. v. Ritchie Corp., 298 P.3d 250, 265 (Kan. 2013).
Team contends that the amendment to Team’s MSA by Change Order No. 2
unambiguously entitles it to Furmanite’s insurance coverage. We cannot agree.
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To begin with, enrollment in Westar’s OCIP does not happen automatically.
Westar alone designates which contractors are eligible, and eligible contractors must
apply to enroll in the program, and then be accepted by Westar, in order to receive
coverage. Also, under the express terms of the Zurich insurance policy, coverage
cannot be transferred without Zurich’s consent. Yet Team never enrolled, or was
even invited to enroll, in Westar’s OCIP. Nor did Zurich ever give written approval
to a transfer of coverage from Furmanite to Team. The failure to satisfy these
requirements would appear to be dispositive of Team’s breach-of-contract claims.
Team argues, however, that these failures were cured by Change Order No. 2,
which states:
Note: On February 29, 2016 Furmanite was acquired by TEAM Industrial Services, Inc. This change order will consolidate the two services contracts that Furmanite (902236) [Furmanite MSA] and TEAM (902228) [Team MSA] hold with Westar Energy and become effective as of September 1, 2017.
Furmanite Contract 902236 will be retired and all pending PO’s [purchase orders] under the previous FURMANITE supplier ID 0000533098 will be reissued under TEAM INDUSTRIAL SERVICES, INC., supplier ID 0000431446 to be governed by the terms & conditions of Contract 902228 [Team MSA].
Aplt. App., Vol. 2 at 294. The argument is creative, but unpersuasive.
The Change Order contains nary a mention of insurance coverage or the OCIP.
There is no ambiguity in the language of the change order from which one could infer
that Team would thereafter be provided insurance coverage through the Westar OCIP
or otherwise.
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Team nevertheless insists that all is resolved by the word consolidate in the
first paragraph of the change order. It contends that consolidation of the Furmanite
and Team service contracts necessarily results in coverage for Team by the insurance
already provided to Furmanite. There are at least two fatal flaws in this argument.
First, neither of the consolidated MSAs provides insurance coverage. Both
unambiguously state that contractors must procure and maintain their own liability
insurance. At most, the Furmanite MSA, as amended by what the parties referred to
as “Change Order No. 1” (which we quote later in this discussion) notes the possible
creation of the OCIP, but that change order does not even grant permission to
Furmanite to seek enrollment in the OCIP, much less provide coverage. Thus, even if
Team had been assigned the Furmanite MSA, it would not thereby obtain any
insurance coverage.
Second, Change Order No. 2 rendered the Furmanite MSA a nullity. It
explicitly states that the Furmanite service contract is “retired.” Team contends that
this unambiguous declaration in the change order cannot mean what it says because
such a construction would contradict the consolidate language earlier in the change
order. We disagree. We begin with the definition of consolidate adopted by the
district court and endorsed by both parties. The court said: “The ordinary meaning of
‘consolidate’ is ‘to join together into one whole: unite.’ Merriam-Webster.com
Dictionary, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/consolidate . . . Black’s
Law Dictionary defines consolidate as ‘To combine or unify (separate items) into one
mass or body, esp. in order to make them more effective or easier to deal with.’
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Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).” Team Indus. Servs., 2022 WL 16961237,
at *7. The thrust of Team’s argument is that if the two service contracts are to be
made “into one whole,” then the resulting whole must include the insurance coverage
that had been provided to Furmanite (even though, as just discussed above, that
coverage was not provided in the Furmanite MSA). But Team does not explain why
the resulting whole must adopt a provision in one service contract that does not
appear in the other. The short of the matter is that there are a number of ways in
which the two service contracts could be consolidated so that the parties end up with
a single contract. That is why the change order includes a second paragraph, which
sets forth how the consolidation should be accomplished—by, among other things,
retiring Furmanite’s service contract. One cannot infer from Change Order No. 2 that
Team was to be protected by insurance coverage previously held by Furmanite.
Team also appears to argue that it was, or should have been, covered by the
OCIP because of (1) language in Change Order No. 1 to the MSA between Westar
and Furmanite requiring Westar to maintain coverage for contractors participating in
the OCIP and (2) language in the OCIP documents requiring Westar to give notice if
coverage is being discontinued. Again, we are not persuaded.
Change Order No. 1 states: “[Westar], at its sole option and cost, reserves the
right to implement an Owner[] Controlled Insurance Program (OCIP), and, except as
otherwise provided herein, maintain at all times during the performance of this
Contract, the insurance specified in Attachment 4, Owner Controlled Insurance
Program Requirements.” Aplt. App., Vol. 2 at 293. According to Team, since
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Furmanite’s work for Westar was insured under the OCIP and that work was then
continued by Team, Westar was required to maintain coverage for that work.
This argument fails on at least two grounds. First, the Change Order does not
require Westar to do anything. It says that Westar “at its sole option and cost,
reserves the right to” implement an OCIP and maintain it during the contract. Id.
Second, the insurance policy was issued for contractors, not work. Coverage under
the OCIP and the Zurich policy was for work conducted by a particular insured
contractor. It made a difference who was doing the work. No contractor could
participate in the OCIP unless Westar authorized the company to submit an
application for enrollment and Westar approved the application. The MSAs stated
that no rights or duties under the contract could be transferred by the contractor
without Westar’s approval. See Aplt. App., Vol. 3 at 75, 174 (“Contractor shall not
assign or transfer any of its rights or obligations . . . under this Contract without
previous written consent of [Westar] which consent shall not unreasonably be
withheld.”). And the Zurich policy said that rights under the policy could not be
transferred without Zurich’s permission.3 Further, Team does not explain how
coverage would be implemented. Team had been performing, and would continue to
3 As Appellees point out in their brief, the absence of Zurich’s written consent was an independent basis for the district court’s rejection of the breach-of-contract claims. See Team Indus. Servs., 2022 WL 16961237, at *9, *11. But Team does not address that basis on appeal and therefore waived any challenge to those rulings. See Rivero v. Bd. of Regents of Univ. of New Mexico, 950 F.3d 754, 763 (10th Cir. 2020) (“If the district court states multiple alternative grounds for its ruling and the appellant does not challenge all those grounds in the opening brief, then we may affirm the ruling.”). 10 Appellate Case: 22-3275 Document: 010110960226 Date Filed: 11/29/2023 Page: 11
perform, a good deal of work that had never been performed by Furmanite. Now that
Team would be participating in the OCIP, would all its work be covered by the
Zurich policy or just the work previously performed by Furmanite? Such potential
complications are one reason why coverage would be contractor specific and not
based solely on the work performed. Change Order No.1 gave Team no right to
assume the insurance coverage provided to Furmanite.
As for the OCIP, the language in the program documents relied on by Team is:
“In the event [Westar], for any reason, is unable to furnish or after commencement of
Work or Services elects not to furnish or to continue to furnish the insurance as
specified . . . and upon 30 days written notice from [Westar] the following shall be
required.” Aplt. App., Vol. 4 at 46. The document proceeds to state that those
previously enrolled in the OCIP must obtain replacement insurance before the OCIP
coverage terminates, with Westar covering the cost of additional premiums. We think
it clear that the notice is to go only to contractors already covered by the OCIP, not
contractors—like Team—who are not enrolled in the program.
In sum, no contractual promise by Westar or Zurich entitled Team to coverage
under the OCIP. The district court properly rejected Team’s claims for breach of
contract.
Team’s remaining claims can be readily disposed of. First, it seeks reformation
of Westar’s OCIP insurance policy with Zurich, claiming that it was an error by
Westar “that le[]d Zurich to issue coverage in the name of [Furmanite rather than
Team].” Aplt. Br. at 53. “Reformation is that remedy by means of which a written
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instrument is made or construed to express or conform to the real intention of the
parties, when some error or mistake has been committed.” Liggatt v. Emps. Mut. Cas.
Co., 46 P.3d 1120, 1128 (Kan. 2002) (internal quotation marks omitted). The law of
reformation recognizes that “written contracts do not always accurately reflect the
parties’ antecedent agreement,” and is available only in instances of “mutual mistake
or fraud.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). “[W]hen a court determines an
instrument does not reflect the terms intended by the parties to it, the court then
revises the terms written in the instrument to reflect the intent of the parties.” Id.
(cleaned up). Since Zurich was necessarily one of the parties to the insurance
contract, reformation would require proof that Zurich intended to insure Team. But
Team provides no argument, much less evidence, that Zurich intended to name Team
as an insured. In any event, the Zurich policy explicitly protects Zurich from such
claims by requiring any transfer of coverage to be approved by Zurich in writing.
Aplt. App., Vol. 15 at 5 (“Your rights and duties under this policy may not be
transferred without [Zurich’s] written consent.”). Even if Westar made a mistake with
respect to Team’s coverage under the Zurich policy, reformation requires mistakes by
both parties to the contract.
Team also contends that Westar breached a fiduciary duty imposed by the
OCIP to ensure that Team was covered by the OCIP or at least provide notice to
Team if it was not to be covered for the work that had been performed by Furmanite.
But even if we assume that this duty imposed on Westar was a fiduciary duty, it was
not, as we explained above, a duty owed to Team because Team had never been
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covered under the OCIP. It would have been a duty owed only to Furmanite. And
because we have already rejected the argument that Team inherited Furmanite’s
OCIP coverage, we also reject the argument that any fiduciary duty owed by Westar
to Furmanite under the OCIP was automatically transferred to Team upon its
assumption of Furmanite’s work duties.
Finally, Team raises a perfunctory claim of promissory estoppel. Such a claim
may arise if “(1) [t]he promisor reasonably expected the promisee to act in reliance
on the promise, (2) the promisee acted as could reasonably be expected in relying on
the promise, and (3) a refusal of the court to enforce the promise would sanction the
perpetration of fraud or result in other injustice.” Mohr v. State Bank of Stanley, 770
P.2d 466, 481 (Kan. 1989). As best we can tell, Team is asserting that Westar is
estopped from denying that it was to provide coverage for Team under the OCIP
because of promises made to Team. First, Team incorporates its previous arguments
that Change Order No. 2 constituted a promise to cover Team under the OCIP. We
need not repeat why we reject that argument. Second, Team points to its reporting of
payroll data through the Aon portal after Team had taken over the work previously
performed by Furmanite. But there is no allegation that Westar knew about this
reporting, so it could hardly have expected to induce Team’s reliance. Nor was there
any evidence of a promise by Zurich to provide insurance coverage to Team.4
4 Because we rule in favor of Appellees on other grounds, we need not address their collateral-estoppel argument based on the judgment in the wrongful-death lawsuit. 13 Appellate Case: 22-3275 Document: 010110960226 Date Filed: 11/29/2023 Page: 14
III. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.