In its recent decision in AXIS Surplus Lines Ins. Co. v. Halo Asset
Management, LLC, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 139065 (N.D. Tex. Sept. 27, 2013),
the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas had
occasion to consider whether an underlying complaint alleged conduct falling
within the scope of coverage afforded under a miscellaneous errors and
omissions policy.
AXIS insured Halo Management
under a professional liability policy, providing coverage for damages arising
out of Halo’s performance of “insured services,” a term defined by the policy
as:
Mortgage broker
services consisting of counseling, taking of applications, obtaining
verifications and appraisals, loan processing and origination services in
accordance with lender and investor guidelines and communicating with the
borrower and lender. Debt settlement and credit services including arbitration
and negotiations; real estate sales and brokerage services. …
While the policy was in force,
Halo was named as a defendant in a lawsuit regarding its participation in an
investment vehicle involving the purchase of at-risk residential mortgages for
repackaging as a new security. Halo was
to have processed and serviced the mortgages as part of this scheme. The claimant alleged, however, that the
underlying mortgages were never purchased and that his initial $5 million
investment was never returned. The
complaint alleged that Halo failed to perform due diligence on the entity that
was supposed to have purchased the mortgages, and that Halo failed to inform
the claimant that the mortgages, in fact, were not being purchased as intended. AXIS denied coverage to Halo on the basis
that the underlying complaint did not allege misconduct arising out of “insured
services.”
On motion for summary judgment,
AXIS argued that the underlying complaint did not involve any of the services
identified in the policy definition of “insured services,” and that definition
provides an “exhaustive definition” of the term. Halo, on the other hand, argued that by
employing the phrase “consisting of”
following the words “mortgage broker services,” the definition of “insured
services” was only intended to provide examples of covered professional
services. Halo further argued that the
non-legal definition of the term “broker” is broad and that as such, the concept
of “insured services” should be broadly construed.
The court rejected Halo’s reliance
on a lay dictionary, noting that Black’s Law Dictionary has a specific
definition of “mortgage broker,” which is an entity that markets mortgage loans
and brings lenders and borrowers together, but that does not originate or
service mortgage loans. The underlying
complaint, observed the court, related solely to Halo’s role in processing and
servicing loans that were to have been purchased by a third party. As such, the court concluded that:
The allegations
in the underlying action are fundamentally based on the Halo defendant's misuse
of the Claimant defendant's invested funds, not in mortgage broker services.
Taking the allegations in the petition as true, none of the funds even went to
purchase mortgages. The fact that the
proposed investment scheme was supposed to involve mortgages does not
overshadow the fact that the allegations ultimately stem from fraud and
misappropriation of funds.
Accordingly, the court agreed
that AXIS had no duty to defend the underlying complaint. The court, however, denied AXIS’ motion on
the duty to indemnify, noting that under Texas law, the duty to indemnify
cannot be determined based on the allegations in the complaint, but instead depended
on facts that would be considered at trial.
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