United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Arch Insurance

578 F.3d 45, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 19023, 2009 WL 2591643
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedAugust 25, 2009
Docket08-1709
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 578 F.3d 45 (United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Arch Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Arch Insurance, 578 F.3d 45, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 19023, 2009 WL 2591643 (1st Cir. 2009).

Opinion

LIPEZ, Circuit Judge.

This appeal requires us to determine whether we have jurisdiction pursuant to the collateral order doctrine to review a district court order summarily dissolving a pretrial attachment, where the appellant chose not to seek an articulation of the basis for the court’s ruling and the record does not make the basis apparent. The context is a dispute between two sureties, both claiming rights to the same property. Appellant United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company (USF & G) and intervenorappellee Arch Insurance Company (Arch) are issuers of surety bonds. Each entered into surety and indemnification agreements with the defendant in this case, Eastern Contractors, Inc. (Eastern), a construction company, which ultimately defaulted on the bonds issued by both sureties pursuant to their respective agreements. Shortly after USF & G brought this action against Eastern in federal court, USF & G and Arch commenced ill-fated negotiations concerning a potential cooperation agreement for the sharing of Eastern’s assets. At the time, Arch was not yet a party to this litigation.

In August 2006, the district court granted USF & G’s request for an ex parte attachment on four parcels of real property owned by Eastern in Massachusetts. Arch, seeking to protect its own rights and recoup its losses, sued Eastern in Massachusetts state court, successfully attaching two of the same parcels of land in January 2007, 1 and eventually obtaining a judgment against Eastern. In June 2007, Arch moved to intervene in this action and dissolve USF & G’s attachment. That attachment was preventing Arch from immediately executing its judgment against Eastern, which had become insolvent and whose assets were almost certainly insufficient to cover the competing claims of its creditors. The district court allowed Arch to intervene and partially dissolved USF & G’s attachment. Arch moved for reconsideration, seeking total dissolution, and, in a margin order with no articulated reasoning, the district court dissolved the attachment in toto, though it stayed execution of the dissolution order pending this appeal.

The confused course of proceedings below and USF & G’s failure to seek an elaboration of the reasoning underlying the dissolution prevent us from confidently identifying the precise legal issue on which the district court ruled. Because it is the appellant’s burden to demonstrate the propriety of appellate jurisdiction under the stringent conditions of the collateral order doctrine, we refuse to engage in inappropriate speculation about the basis or bases for the district court’s decision and whether those uncertain bases would meet the *48 requirements of the doctrine. We therefore dismiss the appeal.

I.

A. Factual Background and the Master Surety Agreement

On May 18,1994, USF & G and Eastern executed a Master Surety Agreement (MSA). Of particular relevance to this action, the MSA contained both an indemnity clause (Paragraph 111(A)) and a collateral security clause (Paragraph 111(B)). The indemnity clause provided that Eastern agreed to:

exonerate, hold harmless, indemnify and keep indemnified [USF & G] from and against any and all demands, claims, liabilities, losses and expenses of whatsoever kind or nature (including but not limited to, interest, court costs and counsel fees) imposed upon, sustained, or incurred by [USF & G] by reason of: (1) [USF & G] having executed, provided or procured BOND(S) in behalf of [Eastern] or (2) [Eastern’s] failure to perform or comply with any of the provisions of this AGREEMENT.

The MSA’s collateral security clause further provided:

In order to exonerate, hold harmless, and indemnify [USF & G], [Eastern] shall, upon demand of [USF & G] place [USF & G] in funds before [USF & G] makes any payment; such funds shall be, at [USF & G’s] option, money or property, or liens or security interests in property. (The amount of such money or property or the value of the property to become subject to liens or security interests, shall be determined by surety.)

In reliance on the Agreement and in its capacity as a surety, USF & G issued a number of payment and performance bonds 2 for the benefit of several obligees, including the Algonquin Regional School District, to secure Eastern’s performance on various school construction projects in Northborough, Massachusetts. The Algonquin Regional School District terminated Eastern’s involvement in the project on December 15, 2005, and subsequently made demand under the performance bond issued by USF & G. As a result of Eastern’s default, the surety also received claims on the payment bonds issued in connection with the Algonquin project and several other projects.

B. Procedural History

Because our disposition of this case rests on our inability to discern the basis for the dissolution order and our unwillingness to engage in a detailed analysis of each possible basis to determine whether it provides jurisdiction under the collateral order doctrine, we describe the tangled procedural history in some detail.

1. The USF & G lawsuit

On June 21, 2006, USF & G sued Eastern in the United States District Court for *49 the District of Massachusetts. 3 The complaint cited various provisions of the MSA, including the indemnification and collateral security clauses and a clause stating that the surety’s “rights to indemnification, exoneration, and subrogation” could be “enforced as provided by applicable law or, at option of [USF & G] ... in any other manner provided at law or in equity.” The complaint alleged that, as a result of Eastern’s default, USF & G had already received approximately $4,329,919.92 in claims under several payment bonds, and that, based on its investigation, its exposure under the Algonquin performance bond “could exceed” $3.6 million. Taking these figures together, USF & G stated that “[a]s a direct and proximate result of Eastern’s defaults, USF & G has sustained, and anticipates further sustaining, losses in the form of costs to complete the Algonquin Project, and to resolve other bond claims, attorneys’ fees, expenses, and interest, in an amount in excess of $7,929,919.92.”

USF & G’s complaint asserted both contractual and common law rights. The former included a count for indemnity pursuant to the MSA, counts for specific performance of the MSA’s indemnity and collateral security clauses, and a count for breach of contract. The latter were counts for common law indemnity and the equitable remedy of quia timet/exoneration. 4

2. USF & G’s motion for an attachment

On August 10, 2006, USF & G filed an ex parte motion to attach four parcels of real property that Eastern owned in Massachusetts.

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Bluebook (online)
578 F.3d 45, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 19023, 2009 WL 2591643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-fidelity-guaranty-co-v-arch-insurance-ca1-2009.