Thabault v. Chait Ex Rel. Estate of Chait

541 F.3d 512, 2008 WL 4138407
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedSeptember 9, 2008
Docket06-2209
StatusPublished
Cited by90 cases

This text of 541 F.3d 512 (Thabault v. Chait Ex Rel. Estate of Chait) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thabault v. Chait Ex Rel. Estate of Chait, 541 F.3d 512, 2008 WL 4138407 (3d Cir. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

FUENTES, Circuit Judge.

For over 20 years, the Insurance Commissioner for the State of Vermont (the “Commissioner”) has served as receiver of Ambassador Insurance Company (“Ambassador” or “the company”) and sought to recover damages for claims paid on insurance policies following the company’s downward spiral and ultimate collapse. 1 In 1985, the Commissioner brought a professional malpractice claim against Coopers & Lybrand (“Coopers”), on behalf of the company, alleging that Coopers failed to disclose the insolvency of Ambassador following their 1981 and 1982 audit and *516 negligently issued unqualified and favorable audit opinions with knowledge that the financial statements were untrue and materially understated the company’s loss reserves. At trial in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey, the Commissioner presented a traditional malpractice claim and proved to the jury that but for Coopers’s negligence, Ambassador would not have continued to write insurance policies, which resulted in its ultimate failure. At the close of a nine-week trial, the jury awarded the State of Vermont $119.9 million in damages. The judgment reached $182.9 million after the District Court added prejudgment interest. PriceWaterhouseCoopers (“PwC”), the successor in interest to Coopers, appeals the jury verdict. We will affirm the jury’s verdict in its entirety.

I. Factual Background

Ambassador was an insurance company incorporated in Vermont, with its principal place of business in North Bergen, New Jersey. Arnold Chait (“Chait”) founded Ambassador in 1965 and served as the company’s president and chief executive officer. Ambassador was a surplus lines insurance company, which insured high-risk businesses and individuals who were unable to get insurance from other companies at standard rates. In 1971, Chait formed a holding company to raise capital for Ambassador named Ambassador Group. Chait and his wife, Doris Chait, owned approximately 65% of the Ambassador Group stock; the remainder was publicly held.

By virtue of its Vermont domicile, Ambassador was regulated by the Vermont Department of Banking and Insurance (the “Insurance Department”). According to Vermont statute, Ambassador was required to file an annual financial statement with the Insurance Department (“annual Vermont statement”) each year by March 15th. The applicable statute required the annual Vermont statement to be “verified by oath of two of its executive officers,” but did not require that the statement be audited. See Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 8, § 3561 (1984). The statute also authorized periodic on-site examinations by the Insurance Department examiners. Id. § 3563.

Ambassador was also required to file an annual financial statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“annual SEC statement”). Unlike the annual Vermont statement, the annual SEC statement had to be audited. To audit the Ambassador Group’s annual SEC statements that were filed between 1979 and 1982, Ambassador retained Coopers. Coopers did not audit the annual Vermont statements that Ambassador filed with the Insurance Department; however these statements incorporated Coopers’s loss reserves calculations from the audited annual SEC statements.

From January to May 1981, two Vermont state examiners conducted an on-site examination of Ambassador’s annual Vermont statements for the five-year period ending December 31, 1979, and detected no significant problems. In particular, the Vermont state examiners concluded that Ambassador’s loss reserves reported in 1979 were adequate. The first downturn in Ambassador’s financial strength was reflected in its 1981 annual SEC statement, which showed an underwriting loss. Thereafter, in February 1982, Ambassador Group’s stock price dropped by almost half. Ambassador Group’s 1982 annual SEC statement recorded an overall loss and showed a drop in its “surplus.” 2 In *517 April 1983, Ambassador also failed seven of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners’s early warning tests that the Insurance Department used to monitor insurers’ financial condition.

Following this downturn, in March 1983, the Insurance Department retained Kramer Capital Consultants (“Kramer”), an independent financial consulting firm for insurance companies and regulators, to conduct a special examination of Ambassador, including its loss reserves. Kramer, relying on Coopers’s audited annual SEC statements, concluded that there were no material deficiencies in Ambassador’s reported loss reserves and that it was solvent. Nonetheless, it reported that Ambassador’s “financial condition has materially deteriorated, and the [cjompa-ny may be deemed to be operating in a hazardous financial condition.” (App. 2038.) In light of this report, the Insurance Department presented Chait with a plan requiring Ambassador to halt its growth by reducing premium volumes by 30%. Chait accepted the plan but he failed to abide by it and continued to increase Ambassador’s premium volumes. In September 1983, the Insurance Department ordered Ambassador to cease payment of dividends and ordered Kramer to resume its on-site examination.

Within two months, Kramer issued a report concluding that Ambassador was $3 million insolvent. 3 Immediately, the Insurance Department filed a complaint against Ambassador in Vermont state court, seeking to enjoin Ambassador from conducting further business and to have the Commissioner appointed as receiver. Based on its conclusion that “it is unsafe and inexpedient for Ambassador to continue business,” the state court appointed the Commissioner as Ambassador’s receiver. (App.1789.) In 1984, the Commissioner concluded that Ambassador could not be successfully rehabilitated and, accordingly, obtained an order of liquidation.

In May 1985, the Commissioner filed this action in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey. The complaint alleged, among other things, negligent mismanagement and misfeasance, breach of fiduciary duty, fraud and negligent misrepresentation against Arnold and Doris Chait and Richard Tafro, Ambassador’s former vice president of finance. Relevant here, the complaint also asserted a cause of action for negligent auditing practices against Coopers.

In his claim against Coopers, the Commissioner alleged that Coopers was negligent in its audit of Ambassador’s 1981 and 1982 financial statements. 4 Specifically, the Commissioner claimed that as a result of its audit of Ambassador Group and its subsidiaries, Coopers either knew or should have known in early 1982 that Ambassador was only marginally solvent and should not have continued writing new insurance policies. He further alleged that if Coopers had issued the adverse audit opinion that it should have the regulators could have acted to protect Ambassador and its policyholders, claimants and creditors.

*518

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541 F.3d 512, 2008 WL 4138407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thabault-v-chait-ex-rel-estate-of-chait-ca3-2008.