Court Opinion

ID: 2972004
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-09-22 16:43:05.513221+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:43:38.785843
License: Public Domain

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
                            File Name: 05a0227n.06
                             Filed: March 30, 2005

                                           No. 03-2618

                           UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                                FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

NASSIF INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.,       )
                                     )
      Plaintiff-Appellant,           )
                                     )
v.                                   )                     ON APPEAL FROM THE
                                     )                     UNITED STATES DISTRICT
CIVIC PROPERTY AND CASUALTY COMPANY; )                     COURT FOR THE EASTERN
NEIGHBORHOOD SPIRIT PROPERTY AND     )                     DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
CASUALTY COMPANY,                    )
                                     )
      Defendants-Appellees.          )

Before:          BOGGS, Chief Judge; KENNEDY and MARTIN, Circuit Judges.

                 PER CURIAM. Appellant Nassif Insurance Agency (hereinafter NIA) appeals a

grant of summary judgment for Appellees, Civic Property and Casualty Company and

Neighborhood Spirit Property and Casualty Company (hereinafter the Companies) on the ground

that disputed questions of fact remained concerning NIA’s termination as an insurance agent for

the Companies. Because the district court correctly concluded that NIA failed to rebut the

Companies’ evidence that NIA was terminated for legitimate business reasons, we affirm the

ruling.

                                                I

          NIA is an independent insurance agency owned by Walid Nassif and located in

Dearborn, Michigan. At the time of the dispute, NIA’s clientele was composed primarily of
No. 03-2618
Nassif

members of the large Arab-American community living in East Dearborn. NIA was a non-

exclusive agent of the Companies, which specialized in providing insurance to businesses and

homeowners in underserved urban areas. At the time the dispute arose, the Companies had four

agents serving the Dearborn area and more policyholders in East Dearborn than in any other part

of Michigan except the City of Detroit.

       NIA became a non-exclusive agent of the Companies in 1997. The agency agreement

Walid Nassif signed gave him the authority to execute insurance policies “in accordance with the

Company’s underwriting rules and regulations. . . .” Either party could terminate the

relationship on 90 days’ written notice for any reason and without stating a reason.

       In Fall 2001, the Companies identified seven or eight agencies, including NIA, which

were not complying with the underwriting guidelines and other rules and which were

experiencing high loss ratios on the policies they wrote. Each of these agencies was offered the

opportunity to correct its practices under the Unprofitable Agency Rehabilitation Plan. This plan

primarily required the agencies to make proper inspections of new properties and to improve

their loss ratios–a result that would presumably follow from insuring only properties that met the

Companies’ standards. Upon signing the Rehabilitation Plan, the agent’s authority to bind

policies was suspended. The agent was also warned that “failure to meet all of the conditions of

this plan could result in the termination of their appointment with the company.”

       NIA apparently did not sign the Rehabilitation Plan. Still trying to bring NIA into

compliance, the Companies sent Walid Nassif a letter in mid-October 2001 notifying him that his

authority to bind policies had been suspended and outlining the procedure to rehabilitate his

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agency. The letter stated that the suspension would continue until he was notified otherwise in

writing. The procedure for bringing the agency into compliance was the same as that provided

in the Rehabilitation Plan. Nassif claims not to have received the letter. However, in early

November 2001, the Companies’ representatives met with Nassif in person, told him that his

authority had been suspended, explained what steps he needed to take to improve his agency,

and gave him another copy of the October letter. Nassif claims that this meeting was the first he

heard of his suspension and that at the end of the meeting he was told he could have his authority

to bind policies back. He has produced no written evidence that his suspension was lifted.

       NIA not only continued to bind policies after the suspension but its salesmen also

continued to fail to meet the Companies’ inspection requirements. At least three of the

properties for which NIA wrote policies were determined by later inspectors not to meet the

Companies’ guidelines. As Appellant was already suspended, the Companies were unwilling to

accept even a single non-complying policy from NIA. On April 18, 2002, the Companies

notified Appellant that they were terminating the agency, effective August 18, 2002, “for failure

to comply with your business plan and violation of your binding authority.”

       NIA sued the Companies, claiming 1) that they terminated NIA because of its high loss

ratios in violation of the Michigan Essential Insurance Act, Mich. Comp. Laws § 500.1209; 2)

that they terminated Nassif’s customers after his termination; and 3) that they failed to pay him

commissions on policies he had written. NIA acknowledged prior to the hearing on the motion

for summary judgment that it had no evidence on issue two, and NIA does not appeal issue three.

       At the close of discovery, the Companies filed a motion for summary judgment. The sum

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total of NIA’s rebuttal evidence was an unsigned, unnotarized “affidavit” by Walid Nassif. The

district judge granted summary judgment for the Companies. NIA timely filed this appeal.

                                                  II

       We review a grant of summary judgment de novo. Summers v. Leis, 368 F.3d 881, 885

(6th Cir. 2004). Summary judgment is appropriate where the evidence offered by the parties in

the form of “pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, . . . admissions on file, [and]

affidavits” demonstrates no genuine issue of material fact such that the moving party is entitled

to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). In deciding a motion for summary

judgment, the court considers all factual evidence and draws all reasonable inferences in favor of

the non-moving party. Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 587

(1986). Once the moving party has met its burden of persuasion, the non-moving party must

offer more than a mere scintilla of evidence in rebuttal. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477
U.S. 242, 252 (1986); accord Liberty Mut. Fire Ins. Co. v. Massarone, 326 F.3d 813, 815 (6th

Cir. 2003). That evidence must be of the kind admissible at trial. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e).

       Under Section 500.1209(2)-(3) of the Michigan Essential Insurance Act (MEIA),

insurance companies cannot terminate non-exclusive agents “primarily” because of the location

in which they sell insurance or because of a high actual or expected loss ratio, if that ratio is

“related in whole or in part to the geographical location of that business.” Mich. Comp. Laws §

500.1209(3)(a)-(b). The purpose of the statute is to prevent so-called “redlining.” Novak v.

Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co., 599 N.W.2d 546, 551 (Mich. 1999). It does not prevent the

termination of agents who fail “to perform as provided by the contract between the parties.”

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Mich. Comp. Laws § 500.1209(2)(d).

        NIA claimed that it was terminated in violation of the MEIA because it sold policies in a

geographic region with high loss ratios. The Companies argued that they ended their

relationship with NIA not because of the location in which the Agency sold its policies but rather

because NIA failed to abide by the Companies’ rules and guidelines.1 The Companies offered

admissible evidence in the form of depositions, internal business documents, contracts, and

affidavits to buttress their claims.

        In rebuttal, Appellant offered only the unsigned, unnotarized “affidavit” of Walid Nassif,

which made the following conclusory assertions: (1) that his authority to bind policies was

restored to him at the November 7, 2001 meeting; (2) that he “followed all of the Defendants’

recommendations;” (3) that he obtained prior approval for all policies he wrote even though

there was no requirement that he do so; and (4) that the Companies told him he was being

terminated due to his high loss ratio.

        1
         NIA cites the dissent in Beydoun v. Republic Ins. Co., a case that also deals with an
Arab-American insurance agent who sells insurance in East Dearborn being terminated for
malfeasance, as evidence that NIA cannot be terminated because of its high loss ratios. No. 96-
1292, 1997 LEXIS 12018 (6th Cir. May 21, 1997). However, the majority’s interpretation of the
MEIA says exactly the opposite:
        When an agent handles only a particular circumscribed territory such as East
        Dearborn and suffers huge losses over a long period of time, the losses -- literally
        speaking -- bear some ‘relationship’ to the ‘location’ of the risks underwritten.
        But firing an agent with huge losses that are clearly related to flawed business
        practices is not redlining, and there is no Michigan case suggesting that it is.
        GNB’s termination under these circumstances clearly does not constitute
        redlining and is not in violation of the Michigan Essential Insurance Law [sic].
Id. at *10.

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       Unsigned affidavits do not comply with Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e). See DeBruyne v. Equitable

Life Assurance Soc’y, 920 F.2d 457, 471 (7th Cir.1990); Mason v. Clark, 920 F.2d 493, 495 (8th

Cir. 1990); Wright v. Asset Acceptance Corp., No. C-3-97-375, 2000 WL 33216031, at *5 (S.D.

Ohio 2000) (“it is axiomatic that an ‘affidavit’ which is unsigned and not notarized cannot

qualify as proper Rule 56 evidence.”). However, even if Nassif’s affidavit were admissible,

under Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e), an affidavit offered in response to a motion for summary judgment

must “set forth specific facts” and not rest on “mere allegations.” Nassif’s affidavit does not

give specific facts. Furthermore, conspicuously absent from NIA’s case is any written evidence

to support his claims. He does not, for instance, provide a letter reauthorizing him to bind

policies after his suspension, nor does he rebut the Companies’ documents showing that he sold

policies on unacceptable properties. The fact that he might only have done so several times is

irrelevant since the Companies gave him ample warning that any further breaches of policy

could be grounds for termination.

       NIA failed to produce a scintilla of evidence that the Companies had terminated his

agency contract for anything other than failure to follow the proper underwriting guidelines and

rules. We therefore AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.

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