Travelers Casualty & Surety Co. of America v. J.O.A. Construction Co.

479 F. App'x 684
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 2, 2012
Docket09-1610
StatusUnpublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 479 F. App'x 684 (Travelers Casualty & Surety Co. of America v. J.O.A. Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Travelers Casualty & Surety Co. of America v. J.O.A. Construction Co., 479 F. App'x 684 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

COOK, Circuit Judge.

This appeal concerns a surety’s right to indemnification from a construction company under the terms of an indemnification agreement, and a purported conflict of interest that arose from defense counsel’s unauthorized joint representation of the insurance company in a collateral arbitration proceeding during the pendency of this dispute. Defendants-Appellants J.O.A. Construction Company, Inc. (“JOA”) and Johnson Akinwusi, JOA’s owner, appeal the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Plaintiff-Appellee Travelers Casualty & Surety Company of America (“Travelers”). Appellants also challenge the district court’s denial of their Rule 60 motion — filed during this appeal under the “Hirsch remand” procedure set forth in First National Bank v. Hirsch, 535 F.2d 343 (6th Cir.1976) — which argued that defense counsel’s conflict precluded them from filing opposition to Travelers’ motion for summary judgment. Finding no error, we affirm both judgments.

I.

A. The Indemnification Agreement

JOA has worked on commercial and government construction projects since 1989. For more than ten years, Travelers acted as JOA’s surety, issuing performance and payment bonds for JOA’s construction projects pursuant to indemnification agreements with JOA and Akinwusi. Under the agreements, Travelers’ bonds assure the project owner that JOA will perform the construction project (performance bonds), or assure suppliers and subcontractors that JOA will pay its contractual debts to them (payment bonds); in return, JOA and Akinwusi promise to indemnify Travelers for claims made on the bonds.

The relevant indemnification agreement in this case (the “Agreement”) provided that “[JOA and Akinwusi] shall exonerate, indemnify and save [Travelers] harmless from and against all Loss,” defining “loss” to include the following: *686 (Compl. Ex. A (General Agreement of Indemnification) ¶¶ 1, 3.) With regard to the adjustment of claims under the bonds, the Agreement vested Travelers with the “right, in its sole discretion, to determine for itself and [JOA] whether any claim, demand or suit brought against [Travelers or JOA in relation to a bond] shall be paid, compromised, settled, tried, defended or appealed, and its determination shall be final, binding and conclusive upon [JOA].” (Id. ¶ 4.) For Travelers to claim indemnification from JOA and Akinwusi under the Agreement, it had to present “[a]n itemized, sworn statement by an employee of [Travelers], or other evidence of payment,” which would serve as “prima facie evidence of the propriety, amount and existence of [JOA’s and Akinwusi’s] liability.” (Id. ¶ 3.) The Agreement also authorized Travelers to demand collateral from JOA and Akin-wusi in an amount “sufficient to discharge any Loss or anticipated Loss.” (Id. ¶ 5.)

*685 All loss and expense of any kind or nature, including attorneys’ and other professional fees, which [Travelers] incurs in connection with any Bond or this Agreement, including but not limited to all loss and expense incurred by reason of [Travelers’]: (a) making any investigation in connection with the Bond; (b) prosecuting or defending any action in connection with any Bond; (c) obtaining the release of any Bond; (d) recovering or attempting to recover Property in connection with any Bond or this Agreement; (e) enforcing by litigation or otherwise any of the provisions of this Agreement....

*686 B. The Underlying Litigation & Travelers’ Unopposed Motion for Summary Judgment

According to Travelers, bondholders began filing claims against JOA in 2007 for nonperformance and non-payment, and Travelers began investigating and paying those claims. Travelers invoked its right to collateral in May 2007 and then filed suit in August 2007 after JOA and Akin-wusi failed to pay. Appellants, represented by John Grylls, answered Travelers’ complaint in October 2007. Travelers moved for summary judgment in July 2008, presenting a sworn statement documenting more than $6 million in net losses and requesting more than $2 million in collateral. (R. 15 & Ex. C.) JOA and Akinwusi did not respond to the motion, and the district court granted summary judgment to Travelers in March 2009, awarding $6,024,714.64 in damages, directing JOA and Akinwusi to turn over their financial records to Travelers and post collateral totaling $2,352,978.18, and granting leave for Travelers to seek additional losses incurred between the date of its motion and the date of judgment. Travelers Cas. & Sur. Co. of Am. v. J.O.A. Const. Co. (“Travelers I”), No. 07-13189, 2009 WL 928848, at *3-4 (E.D.Mich. Mar. 31, 2009).

C. Appellants’ Rule 60 / Hirsch Motion Asserting Attorney Conflict

JOA and Akinwusi timely appealed in April 2009 and then filed a Rule 60 motion in the district court seeking a Hirsch remand. Likening the unopposed summary judgment to a default judgment, Appellants alleged that an undisclosed conflict of interest prevented Grylls, their longtime defense counsel, from opposing Travelers’ summary judgment motion. Appellants revealed that, before and during this litigation, Grylls simultaneously represented JOA and Travelers in collateral proceedings initiated by bondholder Consolidated Electric (the “Consolidated Electric” proceedings). Travelers contends that its interests aligned with JOA in that dispute because Consolidated Electric named both as defendants. The Consolidated Electric proceedings concluded at the end of October 2007 — soon after Grylls filed Appellants’ answer in this litigation — with a $465,288 arbitration award to Consolidated Electric. Travelers paid the arbitration award.

Grylls began his joint representation of JOA, Akinwusi, and Travelers in the Consolidated Electric proceedings in January 2007. His initial letter to Travelers indicated that JOA selected him to represent Travelers in that case. (R. 31, Ex. 1, Ex. A (letter and answer).) After Travelers filed this suit against JOA and Akinwusi in July 2007, Grylls sent a conflict letter to all three parties alerting them to the potential conflict and requesting that all three consent to his simultaneous repre *687 sentation in the Consolidated Electric proceedings. (R. 24-8 (“conflict letter” of August 20, 2007).) The conflict letter concluded by noting that, in the event that Travelers sought to utilize the firm in future actions involving JOA, consent would waive the right to “seek to disqualify this law firm ... on the basis of any representation of J.O.A. with respect to the Travelers suit against J.O.A.” (Id.) Only Travelers expressly consented, but Grylls continued his joint representation of Travelers and Appellants in the Consolidated Electric proceedings without objection, while representing Appellants in this litigation. Travelers’ records from this period reflect that the surety paid Grylls more than $20,000 for his legal services between September and December 2007. (See R. 24-9.)

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Bluebook (online)
479 F. App'x 684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travelers-casualty-surety-co-of-america-v-joa-construction-co-ca6-2012.