Court Opinion

ID: 4298119
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-07-26 17:00:30.928523+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:26:03.485263
License: Public Domain

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
                                    File Name: 18a0375n.06

                                                  No. 17-2186

                              UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                                   FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

 ALTERRA EXCESS & SURPLUS CO.,                                    )
                                                                                                   FILED
                                                                  )                          Jul 26, 2018
            Plaintiff-Appellee,                                   )                     DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
                                                                  )
            v.                                                    )
                                                                  )
                                                                           ON APPEAL FROM THE
 EXCEL TITLE AGENCY,                                              )
                                                                           UNITED STATES DISTRICT
                                                                  )
                                                                           COURT FOR THE EASTERN
            Defendant,                                            )
                                                                           DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
                                                                  )
 WESTERN AMERICAN PROPERTIES,                                     )
                                                                  )
            Defendant-Appellant.                                  )

BEFORE:           ROGERS and BUSH, Circuit Judges; WATSON, District Judge*

        ROGERS, Circuit Judge. An insurance company sold a professional-liability insurance

policy to a title and escrow agency, under which the insurance company would not cover claims

that were known or foreseeable to the agency at the time of the policy’s inception. The insurance

company subsequently declined to pay a claim arising from the agency’s erroneous transfer of an

investor’s funds because, before the agency bought the policy, that investor had sent an email

threatening to sue the agency for this transfer. In this appeal, the investor (here as judgment

creditor of the agency) contends that the email threatened but did not affirmatively promise a

lawsuit, but this is not enough to say that the consequent suit was not foreseeable, especially given

        *
          The Honorable Michael H. Watson, United States District Judge for the Southern District of Ohio, sitting
by designation.
No. 17-2186
Alterra Excess & Surplus Co. v. Excel Title Agency, et al.

that the agency had also been sued for similar errors by other investors in the same scheme. The

investor also argues that the district court erred in presuming that the agency’s principals received

and read this email, but this argument is forfeited for failure to raise it properly below.

       The business then known as the Alterra Excess & Surplus Insurance Company

(subsequently merged into the Evanston Insurance Company) sold insurance policies against

claims of professional liability. One customer for its services was the Excel Title Agency. On

March 22, 2010, Excel submitted an application for professional liability indemnity, in an amount

up to $1 million. This policy had a “claims made” period running from April 10, 2010 to April

10, 2011, with a February 15, 2006 “retroactive date,” and covered “damages arising out of or

resulting from the performance or failure to perform ‘Professional Services.’” Alterra and Excel

agree that the policy is governed by Michigan law.

       This policy also included various limitations on Alterra’s obligation to indemnify Excel.

The one limitation relevant in this appeal is the so-called “Known Circumstances Exclusion,”

which excluded coverage for any “‘Professional Service’ performed and those services that should

have been performed or were omitted prior to the effective date of the Policy if any ‘Insured’ knew

or could have reasonably foreseen that the ‘Professional Service’ could give rise to a ‘Claim.’” In

other words, if before April 10th, 2010, Excel knew or could have reasonably foreseen that Excel

would be the subject of a professional-services claim, then Alterra was not obliged to indemnify

Excel for that claim. The policy application asked whether Excel knew “of any circumstances,

acts, errors or omissions that could result in a professional liability claim against [Excel],” and

Excel answered that it did not.

       Excel’s self-assessment was not accurate. In the summer of 2008, Excel had accepted large

amounts of funds from investors in the real estate schemes of one Corey Howard. Under the plan

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Alterra Excess & Surplus Co. v. Excel Title Agency, et al.

that Howard had promised to those investors, Howard would acquire foreclosed real estate

properties within a certain period and then sell the properties to the investors for around 50 percent

of fair market value. Excel’s role was to serve as an escrow agent holding investor funds as

earnest-money deposits, and then transfer funds to Howard when the properties closed. When

Howard was able to acquire only a fraction of the properties he had promised to obtain, Excel on

the direction of Howard nonetheless transferred large sums of the investors’ money to Howard, in

amounts well in excess of that necessary to pay for the properties that Howard had secured.

           Once the investors realized what Excel and Howard had done, they grew distressed.

Beginning in September 2008, one investor, the Mt. Tai Asset Management Corp., contacted Excel

and Howard to demand the return of the funds it had entrusted to Excel. Two other investors,

Hanover Exchange and Lincoln Properties, did the same. All three of these investors ended up

suing Howard and Excel; all three suits were resolved, and they are not directly at issue in this

appeal.

          This suit instead relates to the final investor in Howard’s scheme, Western American

Properties (WAP), and its principal, James Perley. WAP had also entrusted money with Excel,

and Perley also discovered that Excel had misdirected the funds. On July 28, 2009, therefore,

Perley sent the following email addressed to, among others, Howard and three Excel principals—

Janel Chipman, Judy Stirnemann, and Jenny Kinnard:

          I want you to know that unless suitable inventory or funds are returned by October
          22, 2009, I will take all action available against you. There will be no extensions
          on the 90 days; you have to either deliver the suitable inventory or the money owed
          to me. This money is the remaining deposit of $374,900 held by Excel Title and
          Escrow, and my money that was diverted to you outside of my instructions and
          direction of $649,800 on one occasion, and $536,446 on another separate occasion,
          by both Excel Title and Escrow, Janel Chipman, and Outlook Escrow, Karen
          Gardner. Sun [sic] of the amount owed is $1,561,146. If this does not happen by
          October 22, 2009, I will begin to proceed with all civil and criminal action, both
          state and federal, against you, Metro Equity Group, Peter Floratos, Kimiko Leong,

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Alterra Excess & Surplus Co. v. Excel Title Agency, et al.

       Excel Title and Escrow, Janel Chipman, Judy Stirnemann, Jenny Kinnard . . .
       among others.

Howard responded, and Perley followed up on this email with another the next day, also sent to

Howard and the three Excel principals, among others:

       Corey – I find it ironic that you are the one who is angry when I was the one who
       had $1,186,246 of my money diverted and not returned when I asked and demanded
       that it be returned. I also think it is fair to let everybody in this process know what
       the situation is for them so they will not be surprised or blindsided. I stand by my
       email. The ball is in your court as to if you can perform. It is totally up to you.

       Perley’s demands did not achieve the return of funds he had sought. Instead, on December

10, 2009, WAP and Perley sued for misappropriation of funds in the U.S. District Court for the

Central District of California against, among others, Howard, Excel, and the Excel principals. On

December 15, 2009, the district court dismissed that lawsuit without prejudice for lack of subject

matter jurisdiction because an additional defendant was a California citizen, as were Perley and

WAP. The record does not show whether Excel or the Excel principals received service or any

notice of this suit before its dismissal. WAP and Perley subsequently sued the non-diverse, non-

Excel party in California state court in March 2010.

       On October 20, 2010—during the “claims made” period of the policy—WAP again sued

Excel, the Excel principals, and Howard, this time in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District

of Michigan. On September 12, 2012, the court granted an unopposed motion for summary

judgment against Excel, and subsequently entered judgment against Excel in the amount of

$1,546,986. Excel does not contest that it owes this liability to WAP.

       After WAP won its judgment against Excel, WAP initiated a garnishment proceeding,

seeking to have Alterra pay the value of Excel’s professional liability indemnity policy over to

WAP. Alterra responded by filing the action below, a request for a declaratory judgment that it

was not obliged to so pay under the policy. Alterra then moved for summary judgment, and the

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No. 17-2186
Alterra Excess & Surplus Co. v. Excel Title Agency, et al.

district court granted that motion. The court below reasoned that Alterra was not required to

indemnify Excel if the Known Circumstances Exclusion applied, and Perley’s threats to sue, as

well as the similar threats made by other investors, made it clear that Excel did know of or could

reasonably have foreseen a claim. WAP moved for reconsideration on the grounds that there was

no evidence that Excel or its principals had received and opened this email, but the district court

denied that motion as founded on an “unsupported hypothetical.” WAP appeals.

       The district court properly granted summary judgment to Alterra. Under the Known

Circumstances Exclusion to the indemnification policy—determined by the district court to be

unambiguous and unchallenged in this respect by WAP on appeal—Alterra was not obliged to

indemnify Excel for any claims known or reasonably foreseeable to Excel on April 10, 2010. That

Perley and WAP might sue Excel was clearly such a foreseeable prospect at that time. A little

over eight months earlier, Perley had sent an email threatening to “begin to proceed with all civil

and criminal action, both state and federal, against . . . Excel Title and Escrow,” as well as its

principals. Then, in December 2009, Perley had followed through on his threat and sued Excel for

exactly the things promised in his email. The fact of this first suit would presumably have been

enough to make a second suit foreseeable, but the record does not establish whether Excel or its

principals were served or otherwise had notice before that first suit was dismissed.

       Even if Excel only possessed the email, however, the clear threat of litigation expressed in

the July 28, 2009 email unquestionably made WAP’s second and successful suit foreseeable prior

to April 2010. The email clearly stated that Perley was contemplating suing Excel for exactly the

things which Perley did ultimately sue Excel over. The obviousness of this threat could only have

been strengthened by the fact that the other investors in Howard’s scheme had also sued Excel by

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No. 17-2186
Alterra Excess & Surplus Co. v. Excel Title Agency, et al.

then. It was therefore clearly foreseeable to Excel that Perley might commence suit, and so the

consequent claim arising from that suit was also clearly foreseeable.

       Because WAP’s claims were foreseeable, they are excluded by the policy’s Known

Circumstances Exclusion. Under Michigan law, an insurance contract’s “clear and precise” terms

control. Henderson v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 596 N.W.2d 190, 193 (Mich. 1999). Here, the

policy was clear and precise—Alterra was not obliged to indemnify Excel for foreseeable claims,

like the one brought by WAP.

       Michigan law makes clear that a claim by WAP was reasonably foreseeable to Excel. For

example, in applying Michigan law we have held that a trustee who had failed to make required

payments for that trust and who then was forced to resign could have reasonably foreseen a

malpractice claim, and was therefore not required to be indemnified by her insurance company

under a similarly unambiguous exclusion provision. Thomson v. Hartford Cas. Ins. Co., 656 F.

App’x 109, 112 (6th Cir. 2016). In particular, we determined in Thomson that the consequent suit

there was foreseeable because the action to remove the trustee as trustee had outlined the same

allegations that “‘formed the basis’ for the successful malpractice claims that the plaintiffs later

filed” and so any reasonable lawyer would have realized that “the seeds of a malpractice claim”

were present. Id. at 113. That same logic applies here. Perley’s email presented to Excel and its

principals the very same facts and alleged violations of law forming the claim on which Perely

later successfully sued Excel. Even if the claim had yet to germinate—in the sense that Perley was

not filing immediate suit at the time of the email and it was possible that the litigation might not

ultimately commence—a claim was at least foreseeable at the time of the email, since all the things

necessary for that claim were there.

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No. 17-2186
Alterra Excess & Surplus Co. v. Excel Title Agency, et al.

        Similarly, we have also applied Michigan law to hold that a bank which had mis-

administered an estate was excluded from insurance coverage under the operation of an

unambiguous exclusion for foreseeable claims, also similar to the one at issue here. See Comerica

Bank v. Lexington Ins. Co., 3 F.3d 939, 945 (6th Cir. 1993). The bank there had argued that the

claims were not foreseeable because the beneficiaries had not previously objected to the estate’s

administration, but we rejected that argument because we determined that “no reasonable juror

could find that [the bank] could not have reasonably foreseen that at some point in the future it

would be subject to suit by the beneficiaries for this misconduct.” Id. It would have been similarly

unreasonable here for Excel not to foresee at least the possibility of a claim following the Perley

email, given that there is no dispute that Excel had obviously erred in its responsibilities.

        WAP argues that Perley’s email merely threatened suit rather than affirmatively promised

to begin litigation against Excel, but this is insufficient to prove that a claim brought as threatened

in the email was not foreseeable. Perley indeed stated that he would be satisfied if his money was

returned or suitable inventory was delivered, but Perley also pledged consequences if his

conditions were not met.       WAP offers no authority to support its argument that a suit is

unforeseeable when a party has conditionally threated to sue if unsatisfied, and this argument is

contrary to the contract’s clear exclusion of claims that “could have [been] reasonably foreseen,”

as opposed to were “likely” or “certain.”

        That Perley suggested that there was a possibility in which he would not bring suit does

not mean Excel could not at least foresee that a suit could well occur, since it was entirely

foreseeable that the conditions under which Perley would be satisfied might not (and likely would

not) be met. WAP also contends that Excel would not have foreseen that its actions were wrongful,

but this contradicts not only Perley’s credible threat to file suit, but also the fact that the district

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No. 17-2186
Alterra Excess & Surplus Co. v. Excel Title Agency, et al.

court hearing WAP’s subsequent suit against Excel did indeed determine that Excel was liable for

its actions.

        WAP additionally argues that the district court erred in presuming that Excel and its

principals read Perley’s email, but this argument was forfeited for WAP’s failure to properly raise

it below. WAP first argued that Excel might not have received or read the email in its motion for

reconsideration of the district court’s summary-judgment order, and this fact precludes us from

reviewing the issue now. “Arguments raised for the first time in a motion for reconsideration are

untimely and forfeited on appeal.” Evanston Ins. Co. v. Cogswell Props, LLC, 683 F.3d 684, 692

(6th Cir. 2012). Although it addressed the same issue of the email’s implication that it also raises

here, WAP’s response in opposition to Alterra’s motion for summary judgment never stated or

suggested that the email might not have been received or read. WAP therefore forfeited the new

and distinct issue of the email’s alleged non-receipt when it failed to present it before WAP’s

motion for reconsideration.

        It is true that the prudential and not jurisdictional nature of forfeiture also means that we

can allow a claim first raised in a motion for reconsideration “‘in exceptional cases’ or when the

rule would produce a “‘plain miscarriage of justice.’” Allstate Ins. Co. v. Glob. Med. Billing, Inc.,

520 F. App’x 409, 411 (6th Cir. 2013) (quoting Scottsdale Ins. Co. v. Flowers, 513 F.3d 546, 552

(6th Cir. 2008)). But it is not such an exceptional case or miscarriage of justice to decline to allow

WAP’s speculative, unsupported, and highly improbable argument that Excel never read or

received the email or its follow-up.

        We affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment.

                                                 -8-