Travelers Indemnity Co. of Connecticut v. Attorney's Title Insurance Fund, Inc.

194 F. Supp. 3d 1224, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 88077, 2016 WL 3629606
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedJuly 7, 2016
DocketCase No: 2:13-cv-670-FtM-38CM
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 194 F. Supp. 3d 1224 (Travelers Indemnity Co. of Connecticut v. Attorney's Title Insurance Fund, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Travelers Indemnity Co. of Connecticut v. Attorney's Title Insurance Fund, Inc., 194 F. Supp. 3d 1224, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 88077, 2016 WL 3629606 (M.D. Fla. 2016).

Opinion

ORDER1

SHERI POLSTER CHAPPELL, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE

This matter comes before the Court on Plaintiffs Travelers Indemnity Company of Connecticut and St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company’s Motion for Final Summary Judgment (Doc. # 353) filed on April 4, 2016. Defendant Section 10 Joint Venture, LLP filed a Response in Opposition (Doc. #385) on April 25, 2016, in which Defendants Sky Property Venture, LLC, CAS Group, Inc., Attorneys’ Title Insurance Fund, Inc., and Florida Title [1227]*1227Co.2 joined (Doc. # 375; Doe. # 397). Additionally, the Court entertained oral argument on May 24, 2016, The matter is ripe for review.

Undisputed Material Facts3

This case derives from a real estate fraud scheme that resulted in years of state court litigation between the Defendants to this action. Eventually, the Defendants resolved that state court litigation by entering into a Coblentz4 agreement, which relieved ATIF from any liability and shifted that liability to ATIF’s insurance providers. At issue in this action is whether the Plaintiffs, Travelers and St. Paul, two of ATIF’s insurance providers, are liable for the full, or a partial, amount of that agreement. Plaintiffs argue that they are not, and have filed this action to seek a declaratory judgment from the Court specifying as much.

To place this case in context, the Court must first discuss the underlying state court litigation. That litigation began when ATIF sued Section 10 Joint Venture LLP, Sky Property Venture LLC, and CAS Group, Inc. to recover $3 million that it had to pay as the title insurer for fraudulently sold property. The basis for that action was a belief that the sellers who orchestrated the fraud reinvested their proceeds in a property owned by Section 10 (“the Property”). ATIF asserted three claims: equitable lien/constructive trust, in-junctive relief, and unjust enrichment (“ATIF Lawsuit”). To ensure potential buyers of the Property were aware of the ongoing litigation, ATIF recorded a lis pendens. Section 10 counterclaimed for slander of title, wrongful lis pendens, declaratory judgment, tortious interference, and wrongful injunction (“2008 Counterclaim”).

In addition to the counterclaims, Section 10 also secured an order from the state court requiring ATIF to post a bond if it wished to maintain the Us pendens. ATIF never responded to the court’s order, but the court never dissolved the lis pendens either. After ATIF ignored two more state court orders requiring a bond, the court eventually discharged the lis pendens. Nearly three years later, Section 10 retained new counsel and filed amended counterclaims for slander of title and tor-tious interference (“2011 Counterclaim”). Ten months later, Section 10 filed a motion for leave to file a second amended counterclaim, alleging that, because of ATIF’s “wrongful filing, recording, and maintaining” of the lis pendens, Section 10 suffered a $42.68 million loss in the Property’s value from the time ATIF instituted the lis pendens to when the state court ultimately discharged it.

ATIF did not oppose the motion for leave and agreed to allow Section 10 to file the second amended counterclaim, which asserted one claim for slander of title based on the lis. pendens. Shortly thereafter, Section 10 lost the Property to foreclosure. ATIF responded by agreeing to dismiss its equitable lien/construetive trust and injunctive relief claims, leaving only its claim for unjust enrichment. ATIF also moved to dismiss the second amended counterclaim and moved for summary judgment on that counterclaim. Section 10 responded by filing another motion for [1228]*1228leave to file a third amended counterclaim. The court granted ATIF’s motion to dismiss with prejudice, leaving only ATIF’s single unjust enrichment claim. Section 10 then renewed its motion for leave to file the third amended counterclaim. The court again denied that motion, but noted that Section 10 may pursue its malicious prosecution claim in a separate action after the ATIF Lawsuit was resolved. Unsatisfied, Section 10 filed an amended motion for leave to file the third amended counterclaim and a new action against ATIF for malicious prosecution (“Malicious Prosecution Action”).

During this same period, ATIF and Section 10 attended non-binding arbitration and mediation. Those events resulted in ATIF allowing Section 10 to file its third amended counterclaim and joining in a request that the ATIF Lawsuit and the Malicious Prosecution Action be consolidated into one action. The court granted their request and consolidated the cases, which consisted of ATIF’s unjust enrichment claim against Section 10 and Section 10’s slander of title and malicious prosecution claims against ATIF (“Consolidated Action”).

Against that backdrop, the Court turns now to Plaintiffs’ role in the instant litigation. From 2007 to 2012, Plaintiffs insured ATIF with a commercial general liability policy and a commercial umbrella liability policy.5 In June 2013, ATIF submitted Section 10’s motion for leave to file the third amended counterclaim and a copy of the counterclaim to Plaintiffs for a coverage evaluation. Over the next two months, Plaintiffs questioned ATIF about the motion and proposed counterclaim, but ATIF provided only limited information, alleging the information was confidential based on Florida’s Mediation Privilege Statute. At the end of July, ATIF tried once again to gain coverage by submitting the Malicious Prosecution Action complaint to Plaintiffs. In doing so, ATIF alerted Plaintiffs that it “understood an order was likely to be entered permitted other claims ... as counterclaims.” Two days later, the court entered an order allowing Section 10 to file the third amended counterclaim. ATIF forwarded a copy to Plaintiffs and asked them to consider the now live third amended counterclaim in its coverage decision.

In early September, Plaintiffs issued their coverage decision for both the Malicious Prosecution Action claim and the 2013 Counterclaim, agreeing to defend ATIF subject to a reservation of rights. Plaintiffs reserved them right “to initiate a declaratory judgment action to determine the scope of its obligations ... and — if appropriate under applicable law — to withdraw from the defense... and/or to seek recoupment of attorneys’ fee [sic] and other litigation expenses.” One week later, ATIF and Section 10 agreed in principal to the Coblentz agreement and ATIF rejected Plaintiffs’ offer of a defense subject to a reservation of rights. Hours later, ATIF and Section 10 “executed” the Coblentz agreement. Under that agreement, ATIF agreed to a consent judgment in Section 10’s favor on all pending claims set forth in the Consolidated Action with damages totaling roughly $40 million. Due to nature of the Coblentz agreement, however, Section 10 could only enforce this judgment against ATIF’s insurers. To assist Section 10 in this task, ATIF assigned all of its rights under the policies to Section 10.

With Section 10 now seeking to enforce the Coblentz agreement against them, [1229]*1229Plaintiffs seeks summary judgment in its favor on the basis that there is no coverage under its policies for any of the claims presented. .

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194 F. Supp. 3d 1224, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 88077, 2016 WL 3629606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travelers-indemnity-co-of-connecticut-v-attorneys-title-insurance-fund-flmd-2016.