In
its recent decision in Lemons v. Mikocem,
LLC, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 133976 (E.D. Mich. Sept. 19, 2013), the United
States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan had occasion to
consider the issue of whether an insured’s notice of circumstances that could
give rise to a claim was sufficient to preserve coverage for a future
claim.
Federal
Insurance Company insured Indian Nation and its subsidiaries, including
Mikocem, under a directors and officers policy with an employment practices liability
coverage part. Indian Nation and Mikocem
operated funeral homes in Michigan and Tennessee. The policy provided claims made and reported
coverage for the period April 20, 2005 through April 20, 2006, but was extended
through October 20, 2006. Federal
decided not to renew the policy upon its expiration. On October 19, 2006, Federal received a
letter from Indian Nation accusing Federal not to renewing the policy because
of information it had learned in an Internet search; specifically, articles
regarding Indian Nation’s alleged investment fraud. The letter stated that:
Since [Federal] has chosen to non renew [sic] our account
please let this serve as notice of an "incident" or "claim"
to protect our rights under the policy. At this time no formal demands have
been made against the company, however if there are any formal demands they
will promptly be forwarded to [Federal] when they are received.
At
issue in the Lemons case was coverage
for a wrongful termination suit filed in April 2007 by John Lemons against
Mikocem. Lemons obtained a judgment
against Mikocem and then sought to enforce that judgment, as a garnishee,
against Federal. On motion for summary
judgment, Federal argued that it had no indemnity obligation with respect to
Lemons’ judgment against Mikocem because Lemons’ suit was not a claim first
made during the policy period. Lemons
argued in response that Indian Nation’s October 19, 2006 letter to Federal was
sufficient notice under the policy’s reporting provision, which states:
If during the Policy Period, or any applicable Extended
Reporting Period, an Insured becomes aware of a Potential Employment Claim or
Potential Third Party Claim which could give rise to any Employment Claim or
Third Party Claim (as such terms are defined in the Employment Practices
Liability Coverage Section) or becomes aware of circumstances which could give
rise to any Claim, other than an Employment Claim or a Third Party Claim (as
such terms are defined in the Employment Practices Liability Coverage Section),
and gives written notice of such Potential Employment Claim, Potential Third
Party Claim or circumstances to the Company as soon as practicable thereafter
but before the expiration or cancelation [sic] of this Policy, then any Claim
subsequently arising from such Potential Employment Claim, Potential Third
Party Claim or circumstances shall be
considered to have been made against the Insured during the Policy Year in
which the Potential Employment Claim, Potential Third Party Claim or
circumstances were first reported to the Company.
Notably,
the policy defined “Potential Employment Claim” as a complaint or allegation of
a wrongful act lodged with the insured’s human resources department or
functional equivalent thereof.
Lemons
did not contend that Indian Nation’s letter of October 19, 2006 qualified as
notice of a Potential Employment Claim.
He nevertheless contended that the policy’s reporting clause permitted
notice of three different events: Potential Employment Claims, Potential Third
Party Claims, or “circumstances which could give rise to any claim.” He argued that circumstances reporting serves
the purpose of “protect[ing] the insured when the insured is aware of facts
(“circumstances”) and their potential affect [sic], but lacks enough detail to
draw a legal conclusion as to a particular claim.” In other words, Lemons argued that the notice
provision allowed for reporting of specific types of potential claims (i.e.,
Potential Employment Claims and Potential Third Party Claims) but that the
policy also had a “catch-all” reporting provision that allowed for generic
reporting of circumstances that could result in any type of covered claim.
The
court rejected Lemons’ reading of the notice provision since it ignored the
clause immediately preceding the “notice of circumstances” language that
expressly carved out Employment Claims and Third Party Claims (i.e., the clause
stating “…other than an Employment Claim or a Third Party Claim.”) This qualifying clause, explained the court,
made clear that the policy only allowed reporting of circumstances for claims other than Employment Claims and Third
Party Claims. As such, concluded the
court, notice of circumstances alone was insufficient to preserve coverage for
employment claims first made subsequent to the policy’s expiration. As such, and because the October 19th
letter did not give sufficient details of a Potential Employment Claim, the
court agreed that Lemons’ wrongful termination claim could not be considered
one first made during the policy period for which coverage was available.
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