United States Sugar Corporation v. Commerce and Industry Insurance Company

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedDecember 2, 2022
Docket1:22-cv-21737
StatusUnknown

This text of United States Sugar Corporation v. Commerce and Industry Insurance Company (United States Sugar Corporation v. Commerce and Industry Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Sugar Corporation v. Commerce and Industry Insurance Company, (S.D. Fla. 2022).

Opinion

United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida

United States Sugar Corporation, ) Plaintiff, ) ) Civil Action No. 22-21737-Civ-Scola v. )

) Commerce and Industry Insurance ) Company, Defendant. )

Order This matter is before the Court on Plaintiff United States Sugar Corporation’s (“US Sugar”) motion for judgment on the pleadings. (Mot., ECF No. 13.) Defendant Commerce and Industry Insurance Company (“C&I”) has responded in opposition. (Resp., ECF No. 18.) US Sugar has replied. (Reply, ECF No. 39.) After careful consideration of the briefing, the record, and the relevant legal authorities, the Court grants in part US Sugar’s motion for judgment on the pleadings. (ECF No. 13.) 1. Background This matter is a coverage dispute between US Sugar and its then-general commercial liability insurer, C&I. The dispute arose over US Sugar’s defense of a putative class-action lawsuit relating to US Sugar’s practice of pre-harvest sugarcane burning (the “Underlying Lawsuit”). (Compl. ¶¶ 1-11, ECF No. 1.) US Sugar pleads a single count for breach of contract against C&I, alleging that C&I has breached the terms of the Umbrella Prime Commercial Umbrella Liability Policy1 that US Sugar held with C&I by failing to pay US Sugar’s defense expenses after those expenses exceeded the Policy’s “Self-Insured Retention” limit of $1,000,000. (Compl. ¶¶ 99-103.) That Self-Insured Retention limit—a common feature of commercial liability policies—requires US Sugar to bear responsibility for the initial costs of liability under the Policy, much like a car insurance or health insurance plan’s deductible. (Id. ¶ 4.) Although US Sugar ultimately prevailed in the Underlying Lawsuit, it alleges that it incurred “the burden of seven-figure attorneys’ fees and costs” after C&I denied coverage under the Policy and that those costs should count against the Policy’s Self-Insured Retention limit. (Id. ¶¶ 7-8.) The parties now dispute the application of the terms of the Policy, specifically the Self-Insured Retention limit, to US Sugar’s incurred attorneys’ fees and costs.

1 The “Policy” is identified as Policy Number 044212320 and attached as Exhibit E to the Complaint, ECF No. 1-5. The devil, of course, is in the details. Although the arguments made by the parties regarding coverage for US Sugar’s expenses in the Underlying Lawsuit are expansive and thorough, each side’s position can be summarized relatively succinctly. US Sugar argues that Endorsement 26 to the Policy, which modifies the Policy’s basic terms regarding self-insured retention limits, controls the Policy’s other terms and establishes that “Defense Expenses” erode the Policy’s Self- Insured Retention limit for general liability of $1,000,000. (Mot. at 1-3.) Therefore, US Sugar argues, the Policy requires that C&I cover any of US Sugar’s expenses above and beyond the $1,000,000 retention incurred in defending the Underlying Lawsuit. (Id.) C&I, on the other hand, argues that Endorsement 23, which alters the Policy’s standard language disclaiming coverage for pollution-related harms, controls this dispute. (Resp. at 2-3.) And under the terms of Endorsement 23, Defense Expenses do not erode the Self-Insured Retention limit. (Id.) Rather, Endorsement 23 provides that C&I is responsible only to indemnify US Sugar for actual liability expenses in excess of the Self-Insured Retention limit. (Id.) C&I also argues that the motion for judgment on the pleadings is procedurally improper, which the Court will address separately. Neither party disputes that the damages sought in the Underlying Lawsuit fit within the Policy’s “Pollution” exception to general liability. (Mot. at 4, 14-16; Resp. at 8-10.) Nor does either party dispute, as a conceptual matter, that US Sugar’s attorneys’ fees and defenses incurred defending the Underlying Lawsuit qualify as “Defense Expenses” under the Policy. (Mot. at 11; Resp. at 8-12.) C&I disputes whether US Sugar’s Defense Expenses exceeded the $1,000,000 Self- Insured Retention limit, however. (Answer ¶¶ 8, 94, ECF No. 10; Resp. at 4-5.) Central to the resolution of the motion are the terms of the Policy itself. US Sugar attaches the Policy in its entirety to the complaint, and C&I does not challenge the Policy’s authenticity. (Compl. Ex. E, ECF No. 1-5; see generally Resp.) Comprising ninety-one pages, including declarations, terms, schedules, and thirty-three separate endorsements modifying those declarations, terms, and schedules, the Policy is hardly a model of simplicity. Nevertheless, the Court will focus on the portions of the Policy that the parties themselves identify as controlling: Item 5 of the Declarations (the original Self-Insured Retention Limit, at page 5 of the Policy)2; Section I of the Terms (the “Insuring Agreement,” at page 6); Subsection M of Section IV of the Terms (the “Payment of Loss” provision, at pages 9-10) Subsection Q of Section V of the Terms (the “Pollution Exclusion,” at pages 15-16); Subsection P of Section VII of

2 For ease of reference, the Court will refer to the page numbers stamped on the upper right-hand side of the Policy by CM/ECF, as it is submitted at ECF No. 1-5. the Terms (the definition of a “Loss,” at page 25); Endorsement 23, which modifies Section V(Q), the Pollution Exclusion (at pages 72-74); and Endorsement 26, which modifies Item 5 of the Declarations, the original Self-Insured Retention Limit, among other provisions (at pages 78-82). The Insuring Agreement of the Policy provides, among other items, the following:

We [C&I] will pay on behalf of the Insured [US Sugar] those sums in excess of the Retained Limit that the Insured becomes legally obligated to pay as damages by reason of liability imposed by law because of Bodily Injury, Property Damage or Personal Injury and Advertising Injury . . . . The amount we [C&I] will pay is limited as described in Section IV. Limits of Insurance.

(Policy § I(A), at 6.) In the Limits of Insurance Section, the Policy provides that C&I will not make payments unless certain conditions are met, including the following:

M. We will not make any payment under this policy unless and until:

1. the total applicable limits of Scheduled Underlying Insurance have been exhausted by the payment of Loss to which this policy applies and any applicable, Other Insurance have been exhausted by the payment of Loss; or 2. the total applicable Self-Insured Retention has been satisfied by the payment of Loss to which this policy applies.

(Id. § IV(M), at 9-10.) The Declarations establish the Self-Insured Retention limit at $10,000. (Id. at 5.) Under the original terms, the Policy excludes from coverage any damage caused by “Pollution,” which includes “the discharge, dispersal, seepage, migration, release, or escape of Pollutants anywhere at any time.” (Id. § V(Q) at 15-16.) Finally, the Policy defines a Loss to mean “those sums actually paid as judgments or settlements, provided, however, that if expenses incurred to defend a Suit or to investigate a claim reduce the applicable limits of Scheduled Underlying Insurance, then Loss shall include such expenses.” (Id. § VII(P), at 25.) Endorsements 23 and 26 make several key changes to these essential provisions. First, Endorsement 23 deletes Subsection Q of Section V, the Pollution Exclusion, and replaces it with a revised version that includes a new exception to the pollution exclusion. (Policy, End. 23, at 72.) Under the revised terms, the Policy will cover damages caused by Pollution if the Pollution is caused by certain acts outside of US Sugar’s control or by accident, provided US Sugar complied with certain other requirements. (Id. at 72-73.) Second, Endorsement 23 amends Item 5 of the Declarations, the Self- Insured Retention, to have a limit of $1,000,000. (Id.

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United States Sugar Corporation v. Commerce and Industry Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-sugar-corporation-v-commerce-and-industry-insurance-company-flsd-2022.