Waters Edge Living, LLC v. RSUI Indeminity Co.

355 F. App'x 318
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 3, 2009
Docket08-16847
StatusUnpublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 355 F. App'x 318 (Waters Edge Living, LLC v. RSUI Indeminity Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waters Edge Living, LLC v. RSUI Indeminity Co., 355 F. App'x 318 (11th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Plaintiffs Waters Edge Living, LLC and Waters Edge JW, LLC (collectively “Waters Edge”) appeal the district court’s dismissal with prejudice of their Amended Post-Interpleader Complaint for failure to state a claim on which relief could be granted. This lawsuit arises out of a dispute between competing claimants to a single insurance policy. The Amended Post-Interpleader Complaint, which is the operative one that we will refer to as “the complaint,” contains Waters Edge’s claims against RSUI Indemnity Company based on RSUI’s mishandling of an alleged agreement with Waters Edge for the payment of Waters Edge’s losses after Hurricane Katrina.

I.

When a case comes to us after the grant of a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim on which relief can be granted, “we take the factual allegations in the complaint as true and construe them in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.” Pielage v. McConnell, 516 F.3d 1282, 1284 (11th Cir.2008). Viewed through that lens, the facts for present purposes are as follows.

In July 2005 Waters Edge purchased the Waters Edge apartment complex in Gulfport, Mississippi, from a real estate trust controlled by Prime Income Asset Management, Inc. Prime retained no interest in the complex. As part of the deal, Prime agreed for the property to remain covered for Waters Edge’s benefit under Prime’s master property insurance policy for nine months following the closing. The *321 master policy also covered properties owned by Prime in Texas and Louisiana.

The master policy covered rent loss and estimated replacement cost in the event a covered property suffered damage. It also covered the cost of rebuilding to upgraded code specifications once rebuilding actually occurred. The master policy limit was $100,000,000 consisting of a primary policy with a $10,000,000 limit and two layers of excess coverage: (1) a first layer of excess coverage with a $10,000,000 limit and (2) a second layer of excess coverage with an $80,000,000 limit provided by RSUI. This appeal concerns only the RSUI policy.

Because the total value of the properties covered by the master policy exceeded $100,000,000, the possibility existed that there would not be enough coverage if multiple covered properties were damaged in a single event. Hurricane Katrina was that event. It destroyed the Waters Edge apartments and also damaged Prime’s covered properties in Louisiana.

The primary insurer paid the limit of its policy to Prime. Prime paid Waters Edge approximately $1.8 million out of this payment. Prime based the amount of that payment on the estimated value of Waters Edge’s anticipated lost rents.

Waters Edge then tried to recover the rest of its losses from RSUI. It did so by working with RSUI’s insurance adjuster. After a back and forth exchange spanning two months, Waters Edge and RSUI determined that Waters Edge’s property loss was $30,929,371, not including the cost of code upgrades that might be incurred once rebuilding actually occurred. RSUI’s adjuster sent Waters Edge a memorandum on January 23, 2006, stating:

Let’s wrap up for R/C [replacement cost] figure of $30,929,371 and move on. Your client is doubling their money so this represents a heck of a deal. The $30 M is subject to policy provisions as interpreted by RSUI.

On February 1, 2006 Waters Edge asked RSUI’s adjuster to confirm that agreement in writing. On February 2, the adjuster responded with a memorandum confirming that “the building loss at Waters Edge is $30.9 million subject to policy provisions.” That same day, the adjuster also wrote an email explaining that “subject to policy provisions is necessary until RC issue [is] resolved.” According to Waters Edge, this reservation meant that if the policy required it, RSUI might hold back 20% of the agreed loss as depreciation until rebuilding occurred. That reservation disappeared when RSUI provided “official word” that it would not withhold depreciation.

According to the complaint, all of this means that RSUI and Waters Edge reached an agreement that RSUI would pay Waters Edge’s replacement costs, which according to the parties’ agreement totaled $30,929,371. After a $1,000,000 policy deductible was factored in, $29,929,371 remained to be paid.

Because the damage to covered properties exceeded the policy limit, Prime feared that it would not be able to recover its own losses. Prime insisted that only it could receive payment under the terms of the RSUI policy and that it would therefore have to sign off as the policyholder on any payments made to Waters Edge. When Waters Edge learned through one of its mortgagees that RSUI was delaying payment while it waited on Prime, as policyholder, to make a claim, Waters Edge hired counsel and demanded payment from RSUI.

While these events unfolded, the first layer excess insurer paid its full $10,000,000 policy limit to Prime. When Waters Edge learned of this, it filed suit against RSUI. In the face of conflicting *322 demands from Waters Edge and Prime, RSUI delivered two checks to Waters Edge. One check was in the amount of $29,929,371, the amount that Waters Edge and RSUI had agreed on as the estimated replacement cost. The other check was for $2,039,652 to cover Waters Edge’s lost rents. RSUI included Prime as a co-payee on the checks. Because Prime would not sign off on the payments, Waters Edge could not receive any of the proceeds.

Now that the trench lines had been dug, the parties agreed to place the funds, totaling $31,969,023, into a custodial account until the stalemate could be broken. Meanwhile, RSUI continued to pay Prime for its losses. Those payments eventually totaled $30,448,038. This left only $17,582,939 of the policy proceeds remaining. Fearing that the remaining policy funds might not be enough to pay all of the remaining claims, RSUI deposited the full $17,582,939 in the custodial account along with the original $31,969,023, which was the total of the two checks on which it had listed Prime and Waters Edge as co-payees.

In an attempt to avoid being caught in no man’s land between two belligerents, RSUI filed counterclaims interpleading the funds in the custodial account so that Prime and Waters Edge would be forced to battle each other for the funds. Waters Edge and Prime each claimed the right to receive the remaining policy proceeds while challenging the losses claimed by the other. RSUI remained as neutral as Switzerland and sought only to limit its total liability to the $80,000,000 policy limit.

Just before trial, Waters Edge and Prime agreed to a settlement. Under the terms of their agreement, Waters Edge received $24,000,000 and Prime received the rest of the funds in the escrow account. At that point, RSUI had paid out the full $80,000,000 policy limit, but Waters Edge had received approximately $6,000,000 less than the amount stated in its agreement with RSUI.

RSUI probably hoped that the inter-pleader action would be the litigation-to-end-all-litigation regarding this policy, but that was not to be. While the settlement of the interpleader action extinguished Waters Edge’s claims against the escrow account, Waters Edge had reserved its separate claims against RSUI.

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355 F. App'x 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waters-edge-living-llc-v-rsui-indeminity-co-ca11-2009.