SunTrust Mortgage Incorporated v. United Guaranty Residential Insurance , 508 F. App'x 243 ( 2013 )


Menu:
  •                               UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 11-1956
    SUNTRUST MORTGAGE, INC.,
    Plaintiff – Appellee,
    v.
    UNITED GUARANTY    RESIDENTIAL    INSURANCE   COMPANY     OF   NORTH
    CAROLINA,
    Defendant – Appellant,
    and
    AIG UNITED GUARANTY CORPORATION,         a/k/a   United    Guaranty
    Corporation; JOHN DOES 1-10,
    Defendants.
    No. 11-2086
    SUNTRUST MORTGAGE, INC.,
    Plaintiff – Appellee,
    v.
    UNITED GUARANTY    RESIDENTIAL    INSURANCE   COMPANY     OF   NORTH
    CAROLINA,
    Defendant – Appellant,
    and
    AIG UNITED GUARANTY CORPORATION,    a/k/a   United   Guaranty
    Corporation; JOHN DOES 1-10,
    Defendants.
    Appeals from the United States District Court for the Eastern
    District of Virginia, at Richmond.    Robert E. Payne, Senior
    District Judge. (3:09-cv-00529-REP)
    Argued:   October 24, 2012          Decided:   February 1, 2013
    Before WYNN and THACKER, Circuit Judges, and James K. BREDAR,
    United States District Judge for the District of Maryland,
    sitting by designation.
    Affirmed in part and vacated in part by unpublished opinion.
    Judge Wynn wrote the opinion, in which Judge Thacker joined.
    Judge Bredar wrote a separate opinion concurring in part and
    dissenting in part.
    ARGUED: Theodore B. Olson, GIBSON, DUNN & CRUTCHER, LLP,
    Washington, D.C., for Appellant. Raymond A. Cardozo, REED SMITH
    LLP, San Francisco, California, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: William
    E. Wegner, Christopher Dusseault, Matthew A. Hoffman, Melissa
    Case, GIBSON, DUNN & CRUTCHER, LLP, Los Angeles, California;
    Thomas H. Dupree, Jr., Erik R. Zimmerman, GIBSON, DUNN &
    CRUTCHER, LLP, Washington, D.C.; Wyatt B. Durrette, Jr., J.
    Buckley Warden IV, DURRETTECRUMP PLC, Richmond, Virginia, for
    Appellant. S. Miles Dumville, Curtis G. Manchester, REED SMITH
    LLP, Richmond, Virginia; Tillman J. Breckenridge, REED SMITH
    LLP, Washington, D.C., for Appellee.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
    2
    WYNN, Circuit Judge:
    In this insurance contract case, Defendant United Guaranty
    Residential     Insurance      Company       of      North     Carolina      (“United
    Guaranty”)     argues   that   the     district      court     erred    in   granting
    summary judgment in favor of Plaintiff SunTrust Mortgage, Inc.
    (“SunTrust Mortgage”) on its breach of contract claim, denying
    United    Guaranty’s      counterclaim       based    on     SunTrust     Mortgage’s
    first    material   breach     defense,      awarding        damages    to   SunTrust
    Mortgage, and making certain sanctions and evidentiary rulings.
    For the reasons discussed below, we affirm the district court’s
    breach of contract and sanctions and evidentiary rulings and
    vacate    as   to   the     district     court’s       first     material     breach
    determination.
    I.
    SunTrust Mortgage makes mortgage loans on real property.
    At the heart of this dispute are “IOF Combo 100 Loans,” certain
    second lien loans with an interest-only option.
    In 1998, SunTrust Mortgage and United Guaranty entered into
    an insurance contract, the “Master Policy,” insuring SunTrust
    Mortgage against payment defaults on certain loan products.                       It
    is undisputed that United Guaranty authored the Master Policy.
    Master Policy Section 4, titled “Exclusions from Coverage,”
    states that United Guaranty “shall not be liable for, and this
    3
    Policy shall not apply to” certain listed exclusions.                            J.A. 237.
    One such exclusion, in Section 4.14, is “Failure to Conform to
    Reporting      Program      Guidelines.”          J.A.    238.       It    provides   that
    “[a]ny Claim [is excluded from coverage] if the Loan did not
    meet the Reporting Program               Guidelines . . . .”               Id.   The term
    “Reporting Program Guidelines” is defined in Section 1.36 as
    “the    guidelines       designated      as   such       in    the   Reporting     Program
    Manual.”       J.A. 232.         The term “Reporting Program Manual,” as
    defined in Section 1.37, “means the document designated as such
    by [United Guaranty] in effect as of the date of this [Master
    Policy], as it may be amended and restated by [United Guaranty]
    from    time    to       time,   which     contains           the    Reporting     Program
    Guidelines and which sets forth the terms and conditions under
    which the Insured is to report or apply for coverage under this
    Policy.”       Id.       When the Master Policy was executed in 1998,
    there    existed     a    document    titled       “Reporting         Program     Manual.”
    That document did not, however, provide underwriting guidelines
    for the loans at issue here, which were developed after the
    Master Policy had been executed.
    In   June     2004     and   October       2005,        the    parties     executed
    amendments to the Master Policy.                    Those amendments, the “Flow
    Plans,” specified, among other things, guidelines that SunTrust
    Mortgage was to use in underwriting its loans.                            United Guaranty
    drafted nearly all the provisions in the Flow Plans, including,
    4
    crucially, an “Underwriting Guidelines” provision stating that
    “loans will conform to SunTrust Mortgage guidelines that are
    currently being used and have been mutually agreed upon.”                J.A.
    252.    That provision, identical in both the 2004 and 2005 Flow
    Plans, makes no reference to e-mail correspondence, a Guideline
    Matrix, or any other documents beyond the “SunTrust Mortgage
    guidelines that are currently being used and have been mutually
    agreed upon.”     Id.
    In 2005, United Guaranty created a spreadsheet containing,
    in   summary    form,   information   about   the   insured   loans.     That
    document,      called   the   “Guideline   Matrix,”    stated,   under    the
    heading for the IOF Combo 100 Loans at issue here, “Yes, if DU
    approved.”      J.A. 634.     The abbreviation “DU” stands for “Desktop
    Underwriter,” an automated underwriting method.               According to
    United Guaranty, the Guideline Matrix memorialized the “SunTrust
    Mortgage guidelines that are currently being used and have been
    mutually agreed upon.”        J.A. 252.
    By contrast, SunTrust Mortgage contends that the “SunTrust
    Mortgage guidelines that are currently being used and have been
    mutually agreed upon” for the loans at issue were those set
    forth in an over-100-page document created by SunTrust Mortgage.
    That document indicated, among other things, that IOF Combo 100
    Loans “MUST be traditionally underwritten[.]”          J.A. 966, 1067.
    5
    In 2007, United Guaranty began denying SunTrust Mortgage
    claims on IOF Combo 100 Loans that had been underwritten without
    using    Desktop     Underwriter.       Also     in   2007,    United    Guaranty
    informed SunTrust Mortgage that certain IOF Combo 100 Loans that
    had    not   been    underwritten     through     Desktop     Underwriter    were
    “ineligible for continued coverage . . . .”               J.A. 674.
    SunTrust Mortgage, in turn, claimed that United Guaranty
    denied and rescinded coverage without a legitimate basis in the
    Master Policy or Flow Plans.                Accordingly, in 2009, SunTrust
    Mortgage     filed   this   action    against    United     Guaranty.       United
    Guaranty counterclaimed.
    Thereafter, United Guaranty discovered that an e-mail cited
    in    SunTrust     Mortgage’s   first    amended      complaint    differed      in
    substance from a version of the same e-mail in United Guaranty’s
    possession.      After a forensic examination showed that the cited
    e-mail had been altered, United Guaranty moved for emergency
    relief, and the district court ordered additional discovery into
    the matter.      The district court also permitted SunTrust Mortgage
    to file a second amended complaint omitting the reference to the
    suspect e-mail.
    In May 2010, after the district court dismissed its fraud
    claims in its second amended complaint, SunTrust Mortgage filed
    its third amended complaint—the operative complaint for purposes
    of    this   appeal—alleging    two     causes   of   action    for     breach   of
    6
    contract.        United Guaranty counterclaimed, seeking declaratory
    judgments regarding the loans at issue and SunTrust Mortgage’s
    obligation to continue making premium payments.
    In August 2010, United Guaranty moved for sanctions against
    SunTrust    Mortgage      relating       to   the     adulterated        e-mail       scheme.
    The district court held a three-day evidentiary hearing on the
    sanctions       motion    and    found    that       SunTrust      Mortgage’s         former
    employee        Mary     Pettitt       deliberately          altered           e-mails     to
    manufacture documentary support for her view that the Guideline
    Matrix was an internal United Guaranty tracking document not
    binding    on     SunTrust      Mortgage.           The    district      court     ordered
    SunTrust     Mortgage      to    pay    United       Guaranty’s         fees    and    costs
    associated       with    the    sanctions         motion.      Notwithstanding            its
    ruling    regarding      the    e-mail    adulteration,           the    district        court
    excluded evidence regarding the SunTrust Mortgage e-mail fraud,
    as well as parol evidence regarding the Guideline Matrix.
    Thereafter, the district court granted summary judgment in
    SunTrust Mortgage’s favor on its first breach of contract claim.
    As for United Guaranty’s declaratory judgment counterclaims, the
    district    court       initially      granted,      but    then    revoked,       summary
    judgment    in    United       Guaranty’s         favor.     To    determine          whether
    United Guaranty’s failure to pay claims under the Master Policy
    constituted a first material breach excusing SunTrust Mortgage
    from paying premiums going forward, the district court conducted
    7
    a   bench    trial.     The   district       court   then    ruled    in    SunTrust
    Mortgage’s favor, concluding, among other things, that United
    Guaranty’s breach of contract and breach of the implied covenant
    of good faith and fair dealing—for collecting premiums on loans
    it disputed were covered—constituted, in combination, a first
    material     breach   entitling      SunTrust    Mortgage     to    cease    premium
    payments under the policy.
    Finally, the district court held a bench trial on damages,
    after    which   it   awarded      SunTrust   Mortgage      over    forty    million
    dollars.       With   this    appeal,    United      Guaranty      challenges    the
    district court’s various rulings.
    II.
    With its first argument, United Guaranty contends that the
    district     court    erred   in    granting     SunTrust      Mortgage     summary
    judgment on its breach of contract claim.                   Specifically, United
    Guaranty argues that the district court erred in excluding the
    Guideline Matrix and related evidence as parol evidence and that
    a reasonable jury, with that evidence before it, could determine
    that the Guideline Matrix established the terms of coverage.                     We
    review the district court’s summary judgment decision de novo.
    In re Peanut Crop Ins. Litig., 
    524 F.3d 458
    , 470 (4th Cir.
    2008).      Upon doing so, we conclude that the district court did
    8
    not    err,       and    that   SunTrust     Mortgage    was    entitled      to   summary
    judgment.
    This        contract        dispute     is     before     us     on     diversity
    jurisdiction;            undisputedly,     Virginia     law    applies.       The      parol
    evidence rule, at the heart of United Guaranty’s argument, “has
    nowhere been more strictly adhered to in its integrity than in
    Virginia.”          Erlich v. Hendrick Const. Co., Inc., 
    217 Va. 108
    ,
    112,       
    225 S.E.2d 665
    ,     668   (1976)   (quotation        marks   omitted). 1
    Under Virginia law, the rule provides that “where an agreement
    is complete on its face, is plain and unambiguous in its terms,
    the court is not at liberty to search for its meaning beyond the
    instrument itself.”              Globe Iron Const. Co. v. First Nat’l Bank
    of Boston, 
    205 Va. 841
    , 848, 
    140 S.E.2d 629
    , 633 (1965).
    In effect, the rule recognizes that “where parties have
    reduced          their    contract    to   a   writing    which    imposes         a   legal
    obligation in clear and explicit terms the writing shall be the
    sole memorial of that contract . . . .”                        Pulaski Nat’l Bank v.
    1
    While called an “evidence” rule, “[t]he view that the
    parol evidence rule is substantive rather than procedural has
    received such widespread recognition that it may be said to be
    universally accepted.”   11 Williston on Contracts § 33:4 (4th
    ed. 2012).   Accordingly, because it is a substantive rule, we
    look to the pertinent state law to resolve United Guaranty’s
    parol evidence challenge.   See Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins, 
    304 U.S. 64
    , 78 (1938).
    9
    Harrell, 
    203 Va. 227
    , 233, 
    123 S.E.2d 382
    , 387 (1962).                        It
    therefore     logically    follows   that     “when    the   language   in    an
    insurance policy is clear and unambiguous, courts . . . give the
    language its plain and ordinary meaning and enforce the policy
    as written.”      P’ship Umbrella, Inc. v. Fed. Ins. Co., 
    260 Va. 123
    , 133, 
    530 S.E.2d 154
    , 160 (2000).                  And thus, “[h]owever
    inartfully it may have been drawn, the court cannot make a new
    contract    for   the   parties,   but    must   construe    its   language   as
    written.”     Berry v. Klinger, 
    225 Va. 201
    , 208, 
    300 S.E.2d 792
    ,
    796 (1983).
    Further,      Virginia    law       dictates     that   ambiguities      in
    insurance contracts be construed against insurers and in favor
    of insureds and coverage.      Indeed,
    [a]s we have recognized, the courts of Virginia
    consistently   apply   two   rules  in   construing the
    language of insurance policies. “First, where language
    in   an   insurance   policy   is  susceptible   of two
    constructions, it is to be construed liberally in
    favor of the insured and strictly against the insurer
    . . . . Second, where two interpretations equally fair
    may be made, the one which permits a greater indemnity
    will prevail.” Jefferson-Pilot Fire & Casualty Co. v.
    Boothe, Prichard & Dudley, 
    638 F.2d 670
    , 674 (4th Cir.
    1980)    (citing    Fidelity    &   Casualty    Co.  v.
    Fratarcangelo, 
    201 Va. 672
    , 
    112 S.E.2d 892
     (1960);
    Ayers v. Harleysville Mutual Casualty Co., 
    172 Va. 383
    , 
    2 S.E.2d 303
     (1939)). “Where an insurance policy
    is susceptible of two constructions, one of which
    would effectuate coverage and the other not, it is the
    court’s duty to adopt that construction which will
    effectuate coverage.” Mollenauer v. Nationwide Mutual
    Insurance Co., 
    214 Va. 131
    , 
    198 S.E.2d 591
    , 592 (1973)
    (per curiam).     Accord White v. Blue Cross, 
    215 Va. 601
    , 
    212 S.E.2d 64
    , 65 (1975) (per curiam).
    10
    Joseph    P.    Bornstein,         Ltd.   v.     Nat’l      Union       Fire    Ins.       Co.   of
    Pittsburgh, Pa., 
    828 F.2d 242
    , 245 (4th Cir. 1987).
    The    threshold      question       before         us    is    whether       the   Master
    Policy is unambiguous as a matter of law.                              If yes, it must be
    enforced as written.               SunTrust Mortgage argues that the Flow
    Plans unambiguously identify the “SunTrust Mortgage guidelines”—
    and not the Guideline Matrix—as setting forth the applicable
    underwriting         guidelines       for      the     IOF       Combo        100    loans.      By
    contrast, United Guaranty argues that under the Master Policy
    and    Flow     Plans,       the    Guideline         Matrix          and     related      e-mail
    communications establish the applicable underwriting guidelines.
    The     parties    executed        the       Flow    Plans       after       the    Master
    Policy.        The    Flow    Plans       thus      represent         the     parties’      final
    expression of their intent.                    The Flow Plans clearly delineate
    that    “SunTrust      Mortgage       guidelines”           set       forth    the    governing
    underwriting guidelines for the IOF Combo 100 loans.                                   We agree
    with SunTrust Mortgage that the Flow Plans simply do not reflect
    an    understanding      that      United      Guaranty          guidelines         provide      the
    operative underwriting requirements.                            Instead, the Flow Plans
    plainly state that SunTrust Mortgage’s guidelines govern, and
    those guidelines do not mandate the use of Desktop Underwriter
    for coverage.
    11
    United     Guaranty        nevertheless          contends       that       the       phrase
    “SunTust Mortgage guidelines” refers not to a SunTrust Mortgage
    document but instead to United Guaranty’s guidelines that it
    used    specifically        for      SunTrust           Mortgage,          as     opposed       to
    guidelines        that      United         Guaranty           used      for       its        other
    policyholders.        Although the parties reasonably could have been
    expected to designate underwriting guidelines furnished by the
    insurer,        the      Flow      Plans’         language           reflects          no     such
    understanding.
    As the district court noted, the Master Policy, prior to
    its amendment by the Flow Plans, originally indicated that “the
    Reporting       Program    Manual,     and,        by    extension,             the    Reporting
    Program       Guidelines    housed     therein,          is    a     U[nited]         G[uaranty]
    document—a       document       designated         by     U[nited]         G[uaranty,         and
    U[nited]       G[uaranty]         alone,     that        sets        forth        underwriting
    guidelines that [SunTrust Mortgage] is to follow.”                                    J.A. 1080.
    But the Flow Plans amended the Master Policy.                                   And the Flow
    Plans    make    plain     that    SunTrust        Mortgage         guidelines,         and   not
    United Guaranty guidelines, control.
    Moreover, even if we believed there to exist a conflict
    between the Master Policy and the Master Policy as amended by
    the Flow Plans, we would be obligated, under Virginia law, to
    read    any    resulting    ambiguity        in    favor       of    the    insured,        i.e.,
    SunTrust      Mortgage,     and    coverage.            See,       e.g.,    Jefferson-Pilot
    12
    Fire & Cas., 
    638 F.2d at 674
     (“[W]here language in an insurance
    policy    is    susceptible      of   two     constructions,            it     is    to     be
    construed liberally in favor of the insured and strictly against
    the   insurer.”);       Joseph   P.   Bornstein,         Ltd.,    
    828 F.2d at 245
    (“Where an insurance policy is susceptible of two constructions,
    one of which would effectuate coverage and the other not, it is
    the     court’s    duty     to   adopt      that    construction             which        will
    effectuate coverage.” (quotation marks omitted)).                            We therefore
    would    read     the   Master    Policy      and    Flow      Plans         in     SunTrust
    Mortgage’s favor.
    United Guaranty nevertheless urges us to consider evidence
    outside the four corners of the Master Policy, arguing that it
    is not a fully integrated contract.                  United Guaranty contends
    that outside evidence is necessary to understand the partially
    integrated policy’s terms.
    Under     Virginia     law,     the     partial      integration              doctrine
    “allows parties to a contract to supplement the terms of the
    writing with extrinsic evidence only if: (1) the parties did not
    reduce    their    entire    agreement      to    writing;       (2)    the       extrinsic
    evidence does not contradict or vary the written terms; and (3)
    the   extrinsic     evidence     involves        items    on     which       the    parties
    agreed contemporaneously with the writing.”                        Swengler v. ITT
    Corp. Electro-Optical Prods. Div., 
    993 F.2d 1063
    , 1069 (4th Cir.
    13
    1993) (emphasis added).        On the facts before us, United Guaranty
    simply cannot jump those hurdles.
    At a minimum, we cannot agree that the Master Policy leaves
    unspecified      the   governing     underwriting       guidelines.        To    the
    contrary, the Flow Plans, which amended the Master Policy, made
    quite clear that the SunTrust Mortgage guidelines then in place,
    and to which the parties had mutually agreed, controlled the
    underwriting      requirements.        It      is   undisputed    that   SunTrust
    Mortgage had its own guidelines in place, and those guidelines
    indicated that the loans “MUST be traditionally underwritten[.]”
    J.A. 966, 1067.         At least as to the underwriting guidelines,
    therefore, the parties had indeed reduced them to writing.                       And
    because United Guaranty cannot satisfy even the first of the
    three elements necessary to admit evidence under the partial
    integration doctrine, United Guaranty’s argument fails.
    United Guaranty also suggests that the public policy behind
    Virginia’s rule of reading ambiguities in insurance contracts
    against insurers and in favor of insureds makes little sense in
    the commercial context.        Yet United Guaranty cites not a single
    Virginia case stating as much.                 And this Court has repeatedly
    applied the rule in commercial cases.                 See, e.g., Highway Exp.
    Inc. v. Fed. Ins. Co., 
    19 F.3d 1429
     (4th Cir. 1994) (unpublished
    table    case    applying    rule    in    commercial       insurance    context);
    Joseph    P.    Bornstein,   Ltd.,    
    828 F.2d 242
        (applying    rule    to
    14
    commercial      insurance      case);       Jefferson-Pilot            Fire    &    Cas.,    
    638 F.2d 670
     (same).          United Guaranty provides us with no support
    for changing course here.
    United Guaranty further argues that summary judgment was
    inappropriate based on a single footnote in a thirty-year-old
    case, Gen. Accident Fire & Life Assurance Corp., Ltd. v. Akzona,
    Inc., 
    622 F.2d 90
    , 93 n.5 (4th Cir. 1980).                               In Akzona, this
    Court       determined    that     the       insurance         policy     at       issue    was
    ambiguous and stated, in the pertinent footnote, that summary
    judgment      was   inappropriate        due      to    material       factual      disputes.
    Notably, one such dispute preventing summary judgment was the
    authorship of the policy at issue.                     
    Id.
    By contrast, here, no material factual disputes hindered
    the district court at summary judgment, and the Master Policy’s
    and    Flow    Plans’    authorship         was   clear—United          Guaranty      drafted
    them.         “[S]tate   and     federal       courts        in   Virginia         have    often
    resolved any ambiguity by strictly construing or interpreting
    the     unclear     provisions        against      the       party     who     drafted      the
    agreement. . . . This cannon of construction is especially true
    in the context of insurance policies.”                        John V. Little, Contract
    Law    in    Virginia,   Vol.     1    at    90-91      (Virginia       CLE    Pubs.       2011)
    (citing, e.g., Gov’t Employees Ins. Co. v. Moore, 
    266 Va. 155
    ,
    165, 
    580 S.E.2d 823
    , 828 (2003) (observing that Virginia courts
    have    consistently      construed         policies         against    insurers      because
    15
    they “‘are contracts whose language is ordinarily selected by
    insurers     rather       than     policyholders’”)).          United       Guaranty’s
    reliance on Akzona is therefore misplaced.
    Finally,     even     assuming    for     the   sake   of   argument        that,
    somehow,    the   Guideline        Matrix     and   related   evidence       could    be
    considered, they would be of little help to United Guaranty’s
    cause.     The Guideline Matrix states for “Eligible 1st Mortgage
    Programs” that are “Interest Only” “Yes, if DU approved.”                           J.A.
    634.     Nothing is defined or explained in the minimalist matrix.
    And the e-mails that United Guaranty sought to put before a jury
    indicate     that      the        Guideline      Matrix     was,      for     example,
    “operational” (J.A. 835) and contained “grids of what [United
    Guaranty] will insure” (J.A. 838).                  They further indicate that
    United Guaranty sought to “confirm that data we have here” were
    “accura[te].”       
    Id.
         Reading the terse Guideline Matrix provision
    and pertinent e-mails in favor of the insured and coverage, as
    we must, we cannot conclude that they unambiguously demonstrate
    the    parties’   intent      that    the     Guideline     Matrix,    and    not    the
    SunTrust     Mortgage        guidelines,         govern—and    only     under       that
    circumstance      would     the    Master     Policy   as   amended    by    the    Flow
    Plans be read in United Guaranty’s favor.
    In sum, it may be that United Guaranty intended that the
    Guideline Matrix set forth the requirements for coverage.                            But
    United     Guaranty,       which     undisputedly      authored       the    operative
    16
    provisions, did not draft the Master Policy as amended by the
    Flow Plans to clearly reflect that.                 Under Virginia law, United
    Guaranty is stuck with the provisions it drafted, and summary
    judgment for SunTrust Mortgage on its breach of contract claim
    was proper.
    III.
    United Guaranty next argues that the district court erred
    in granting judgment in favor of SunTrust Mortgage on United
    Guaranty’s declaratory judgment counterclaim regarding SunTrust
    Mortgage’s     obligation      to   pay    renewal       premiums.        We    review    a
    judgment following a bench trial, such as this one, under a
    mixed standard of review:           Factual findings may be reversed only
    for clear error, while conclusions of law are examined de novo.
    Roanoke Cement Co., L.L.C. v. Falk Corp., 
    413 F.3d 431
    , 433 (4th
    Cir. 2005).
    Here,     the    district      court        convened       a    bench     trial     to
    determine whether United Guaranty had committed a first material
    breach and whether SunTrust Mortgage was entitled to attorney’s
    fees under Virginia Code § 38.2-209(A).                         Section 38.2-209(A)
    allows   for    attorney’s     fees    but       states    that      “attorney’s       fees
    shall    not   be    awarded    unless     the     court    determines         that    the
    insurer, not acting in good faith, has either denied coverage or
    failed   or    refused   to    make   payment       to    the       insured    under   the
    17
    policy.”      Id.        The parties settled the fee issue before trial.
    Indeed, SunTrust Mortgage’s counsel represented in open court
    that   settling          the    fee     issue    would       allow      United     Guaranty     to
    “escape the possibility of a finding of bad faith,” saving it “a
    huge amount of money and the possibility of stigma.”                                 J.A. 1127.
    The bench trial was, therefore, solely about the first material
    breach issue.
    SunTrust Mortgage raised, in its answer to the counterclaim
    and elsewhere, its “first material breach” affirmative defense.
    But it did not raise, as an affirmative defense or otherwise, a
    breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
    Notably, the district court pointed out that SunTrust Mortgage
    “did    not    employ          the    precise     phrase         ‘breach      of    an   implied
    covenant of good faith and fair dealing’” in its briefing either
    before   or        after       the    bench     trial      on    the    counterclaim          until
    prompted      to    do     so    by    court     order.          J.A.    1418,      1488.       And
    SunTrust      Mortgage          conceded      that      it      “did    not   use    the      words
    ‘implied duty of good faith’” in its brief setting forth the
    basis for its first material breach defense.                              Appellee’s Br. at
    53.
    The    district          court    declared        that      United     Guaranty        had,
    nevertheless, “not shown that it was prejudiced by [SunTrust
    Mortgage’s] arguing after trial, for the first time explicitly,
    that   [United       Guaranty]          breached      an     implied      covenant       of   good
    18
    faith   and     fair   dealing   in   continuing      to    collect   premiums    on
    performing IOF Combo 100 Loans.”              J.A. 1489.      The district court
    determined that United Guaranty breached its implied covenant of
    good    faith    and    fair   dealing   vis-à-vis         SunTrust   Mortgage    by
    collecting premiums under the Master Policy without intending to
    pay claims.        The district court relied on its good faith and
    fair dealing determination to hold that the cumulative effect of
    United Guaranty’s breaches constituted a material breach of the
    policy.       Specifically, the district court stated that United
    Guaranty’s “breaches, considered in combination, constituted a
    material breach of the insurance policy.”              J.A. 1515.
    It is axiomatic that a “party must affirmatively state any
    avoidance or affirmative defense . . . .”                    Fed. R. Civ. P. 8.
    Further, “it is a frequently stated proposition of virtually
    universal acceptance by the federal courts that a failure to
    plead an affirmative defense as required by Federal Rule 8(c)
    results in the waiver of that defense and its exclusion from the
    case . . . .”          5 Fed. Prac. & Proc. Civ. § 1278 (3d ed. 2012).
    See also, e.g., S. Wallace Edwards & Sons, Inc. v. Cincinnati
    Ins. Co., 
    353 F.3d 367
     (4th Cir. 2003) (holding insurer waived
    affirmative defense of insurance policy’s two-year limitations
    period for filing suit by failing to raise issue until summary
    judgment   stage       and   noting   that    the   delayed    assertion   of    the
    defense prejudiced the opposing party); Sales v. Grant, 
    224 F.3d 19
    293,   296    (4th    Cir.     2000)      (holding        that    this   Court     had   “no
    trouble” deeming affirmative defense waived because “mention of
    qualified     immunity       in    [the   defendants’]           answers    consisted     of
    only a single, cursory sentence on the matter, contained in a
    listing      of     several       affirmative         defenses:       ‘The      individual
    defendants are protected by qualified immunity from suit’” and
    because      defendants      failed       to    pursue      affirmative        defense   in
    motions and at trial).
    The district court deemed good faith and fair dealing an
    affirmative       defense.         J.A.   1504       (discussing     the     “affirmative
    defense brought by the insured in its capacity as a defendant
    that, by failing to perform the policy consonant with the duty
    of   good    faith    and     fair      dealing,      the   insurer      has    materially
    breached the policy and therefore may not pursue its own claim
    (in this instance for declaratory relief) under the policy”).
    Even SunTrust Mortgage conceded at oral argument that good faith
    and fair dealing is an affirmative defense.                        And, “[a]ffirmative
    defenses     that    raise        new   facts       and   arguments,       which   [],    if
    proven, would defeat the plaintiff’s claim and thus are true
    affirmative defenses[,] include mitigation of damages, failure
    of plaintiff to fulfill conditions precedent, breach of covenant
    of good faith and fair dealing, and waiver.”                             Def. Against a
    Prima Facie Case § 2:1 (rev. ed. 2012) (emphasis added).
    20
    Nevertheless,         the     district       court     made   plain     that    the
    implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing was not raised
    until    after      trial—long      after    an     affirmative     defense    must    be
    raised.        SunTrust Mortgage has therefore waived the good faith
    and     fair    dealing      issue,    and        the    district   court     erred   in
    considering it.            Further, “[t]he prejudice to United Guaranty—
    deciding a $92 million claim based on a theory that was raised
    for the first time by the court months after trial—is obvious.”
    Appellant’s Br. at 49.                United Guaranty states, for example,
    that it would have called numerous additional witnesses at trial
    and adduced substantial additional testimony in its favor, had
    it known that good faith and fair dealing was at issue.                               The
    district court itself acknowledged as much when, in discussions
    regarding the settlement of the bad faith attorney’s fees issue,
    the district court noted that “removing the bad faith portion of
    the two-step trial” would “eliminate a lot of witnesses . . . .”
    J.A. 1169-70.
    Not only did SunTrust fail, as a matter of fact, to put
    United Guaranty on notice that an alleged breach of the implied
    covenant       of   good    faith     and   fair        dealing   was   at   issue—even
    Virginia state law would not have put United Guaranty on notice.
    The district court held that “the extent to which the behavior
    of the party failing to perform or to offer to perform comports
    with standards of good faith and fair dealing” is a factor in
    21
    deciding     the    first       material      breach     issue.         J.A.       1515.      The
    district court cited not a single Virginia state case for that
    proposition.           Instead, its sole support was a district court
    opinion, RW Power Partners, L.P. v. Va. Elec. & Power Co., 
    899 F. Supp. 1490
          (E.D.     Va.    1995).         In   RW    Power       Partners,      the
    district court cited the Restatement (Second) of Contracts §
    241,     which     lists       five     factors      “useful       in    identifying          the
    materiality of a breach . . . .”                        Id. at 1496.               The last of
    those five factors is good faith and fair dealing.
    The district court here conceded that “the Supreme Court of
    Virginia      has       not      formally       adopted       Section          241     of     the
    Restatement”        with       its     multi-factor      test.          J.A.       1514     n.63.
    Nevertheless,          the     district    court       asserted      that      the     Virginia
    Supreme Court “has cited its commentary in expounding on the
    type of evidence required to establish material breach,” J.A.
    1514-15,     citing      to     Horton    v.    Horton,      
    254 Va. 111
    ,      116,    
    487 S.E.2d 200
    ,     204       (1997).      But    the    Virginia        Supreme       Court    in
    Horton cited the Restatement merely for the proposition that the
    “evidence required to establish a material breach of contract
    will   vary      depending        on    the     facts    surrounding           a     particular
    contract.”       Horton, 254 Va. at 116, 
    487 S.E.2d at 204
    .                            Nowhere
    in   Horton      did     the    Virginia       Supreme       Court      even       mention    the
    implied covenant of good faith and fair, much less hold that it
    should be considered as a factor in a first material breach
    22
    analysis.         And we have found no other Virginia Supreme Court
    cases     so     holding.        In    other    words,     even      the    undisputedly
    applicable substantive law would not have suggested to United
    Guaranty that an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing
    claim inhered in SunTrust’s first material breach defense.
    In sum, the record reveals that United Guaranty’s alleged
    breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing
    was not raised until after the district court had held its bench
    trial.     By that late date, the prejudice to United Guaranty was
    “obvious,”       and   SunTrust       Mortgage    had     waived      the    issue.       We
    therefore       vacate    the    district       court’s       judgment      in   favor    of
    SunTrust Mortgage as to first material breach, which relied on
    the good faith and fair dealing determination.
    IV.
    United     Guaranty       next     contends           that    “[i]f      SunTrust
    [Mortgage]        is   excused     from    paying      $92     million      in   premiums
    because United Guaranty committed a first material breach, that
    amount must be deducted from SunTrust [Mortgage]’s damages . . .
    .”      Appellant’s Br. at 63.                 Because we vacate the district
    court’s        judgment     on   the    first     material       breach      issue,      the
    district       court’s    damages      award    does    not    need    to    reflect     any
    premium savings, as they no longer exist.                            United Guaranty’s
    argument is, therefore, moot.
    23
    V.
    Finally,      United      Guaranty       argues         that    the      district         court
    abused its discretion by declining to impose harsher sanctions
    for SunTrust Mortgage’s misconduct relating to the fraudulent e-
    mail alterations.          The district court ordered SunTrust Mortgage
    to pay United Guaranty’s attorney’s fees and expenses incurred
    in connection with United Guaranty’s motion for sanctions, but
    rejected United Guaranty’s motion to dismiss SunTrust Mortgage’s
    complaint altogether.           This Court reviews the appropriateness of
    sanctions       imposed    by     a     district         court       for          an   abuse      of
    discretion.       United States v. Shaffer Equip. Co., 
    11 F.3d 450
    ,
    462 (4th Cir. 1993).
    A district court’s authority to dismiss a case based on a
    party’s misconduct derives from the court’s “inherent power.”
    Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 
    501 U.S. 32
    , 44-45 (1991).                                      “Because
    the inherent power is not regulated by Congress or the people
    and is particularly subject to abuse, it must be exercised with
    the greatest restraint and caution, and then only to the extent
    necessary.”      Shaffer, 
    11 F.3d at 461
    .
    The    Supreme       Court   has        called      dismissal           “a    particularly
    severe     sanction,”      yet    one        that       falls       within         the       court’s
    discretion.        Chambers,          
    501 U.S. at 45
    .          This        Court     has
    recognized      that     dismissal          may    be    warranted           “when       a     party
    deceives    a    court    or    abuses       the    process         at   a    level      that     is
    24
    utterly inconsistent with the orderly administration of justice
    or undermines the integrity of the process.”                      Shaffer, 
    11 F.3d at 462
    .        In Shaffer, we identified six factors for courts to
    consider in determining whether dismissal is appropriate:
    (1) the degree of the wrongdoer’s culpability; (2) the
    extent of the client’s blameworthiness if the wrongful
    conduct is committed by claims against blameless
    clients; (3) the prejudice to the judicial process and
    the administration of justice; (4) the prejudice to
    the victim; (5) the availability of other sanctions to
    rectify the wrong by punishing culpable persons,
    compensating harmed persons, and deterring similar
    conduct in the future; and (6) the public interest.
    
    Id. at 462-63
    .             Further, we directed courts to give particular
    consideration to the broader policy of deciding cases on the
    merits.       
    Id. at 463
    .
    When     a    party’s        sanctionable    conduct      is     spoliation      of
    evidence,       to        justify    dismissal,      the    district         court     must
    “conclude       either       (1)    that   the     spoliator’s        conduct    was    so
    egregious as to amount to a forfeiture of his claim, or (2) that
    the effect of the spoliator’s conduct was so prejudicial that it
    substantially denied the defendant the ability to defend the
    claim.”       Silvestri v. Gen. Motors Corp., 
    271 F.3d 583
    , 593 (4th
    Cir. 2001).
    Here,        the     district       court    concluded         that      Pettitt’s
    spoliation      of    evidence       constituted     a   fraud   on    the     court   for
    which SunTrust Mortgage could be held responsible.                             The court
    also    held     that       SunTrust    Mortgage’s       management      and    in-house
    25
    counsel abused the judicial process by encouraging the use of
    one     of      Pettitt’s      altered        e-mails       in     SunTrust        Mortgage’s
    litigation efforts against United Guaranty. 2                              The court then
    weighed      the       Shaffer        factors    to     determine         the    appropriate
    sanction.            Though   the     court     found      that    some    of    the   factors
    weighed      in       favor      of     granting        dismissal,         after       thorough
    consideration of all factors as well as the broader policies
    articulated in Shaffer, the district court decided in favor of a
    less severe sanction.
    For       at    least    two      reasons,      we    are     persuaded       that   the
    district court did not abuse its discretion in rejecting United
    Guaranty’s request for dismissal.                     First, despite its assertion
    to    the       contrary,        United       Guaranty       was     not        significantly
    prejudiced beyond the attorney’s fees and additional expenses it
    incurred in litigating its sanctions motion.                         While the district
    court     found       that    Pettitt      spoliated        evidence,       the     original,
    unaltered e-mails eventually came to light and were before the
    court     for     its    merits       determinations.             United    Guaranty       was,
    therefore, not “substantially denied the ability to defend the
    claim.”      Silvestri, 
    271 F.3d at 593
    .
    2
    SunTrust Mortgage’s first amended complaint referenced a
    February 22, 2008 e-mail that Pettitt had altered.
    26
    Second, the integrity of the judicial process was not so
    greatly    frustrated       as     to     warrant       the     “particularly       severe
    sanction” of dismissal.              Chambers, 
    501 U.S. at 45
    .                   SunTrust
    Mortgage’s misconduct was certainly egregious and burdened an
    already    stretched       court        with      several       months     of    needless
    litigation.          However,      because        the        unaltered    e-mails      were
    preserved,     the      negative    effects        of    SunTrust        Mortgage’s     bad
    behavior on the judicial process were only temporary.                           Moreover,
    because we affirm the district court’s summary judgment ruling
    in favor of SunTrust Mortgage, including the district court’s
    determination that parol evidence was inadmissible in this case,
    the evidence affected by SunTrust Mortgage’s misconduct has no
    bearing on the outcome of SunTrust Mortgage’s breach of contract
    claim. 3
    In    the    alternative,          United       Guaranty       argues      that    the
    district     court      should     have      given      an    adverse-inference        jury
    instruction      with     respect       to    SunTrust        Mortgage’s     misconduct.
    Specifically, United Guaranty contends that “[t]he jury should
    be instructed to presume that Pettitt’s testimony would have
    been favorable to United Guaranty, and to interpret SunTrust
    3
    The parol evidence included both Pettitt e-mails and any
    testimony Pettitt would have provided with respect to the
    Guideline Matrix, had she not invoked the Fifth Amendment and
    refused to testify.
    27
    [Mortgage]’s   misconduct    as    indicative   of   the   weakness   of
    SunTrust [Mortgage]’s case.”        Appellant’s Br. at 73.     However,
    after the district court denied United Guaranty’s requested jury
    instruction, it granted SunTrust Mortgage’s motion for summary
    judgment.   Because we affirm the district court’s decision to
    grant summary judgment, SunTrust Mortgage’s breach of contract
    claim will not be put to a jury.          Therefore, any alleged error
    regarding a refused jury instruction is moot.
    Lastly, United Guaranty contends that the district court
    should not have granted SunTrust Mortgage’s motion to exclude
    evidence of the Pettit alterations from consideration by the
    jury under Federal Rule of Evidence 403(b).          Again, because the
    breach of contract claim will not reach a jury, any alleged
    error stemming from the district court’s Rule 403(b) ruling is
    moot.
    VI.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm in part and vacate in
    part the orders on appeal.
    AFFIRMED IN PART AND VACATED IN PART
    28
    BREDAR, District Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in
    part:
    I respectfully dissent in part and concur in part with the
    majority’s disposition of this case.
    Although both of the parties in the court below argued the
    language    at     issue      in    the     2004    and     2005     Flow   Plans     was
    unambiguous, the district court, I believe, incorrectly found as
    a matter of law that a patent ambiguity existed such that it
    altered the fundamental balance of power between the parties.
    The district court focused on three words in the Flow Plans,
    specifically, “SunTrust Mortgage guidelines,” and did not give
    any weight to the equally important modifying language, “that
    are currently being used and have been mutually agreed upon.”
    The majority’s opinion follows a similar direction.                             But, as I
    see   it,   this    modifying         language       holds     the    key   to     proper
    interpretation      of     the     contract     between      SunTrust     Mortgage    and
    United   Guaranty    and      cannot      be   disregarded.          As   the    Virginia
    Supreme Court has said, “no word or clause in a contract will be
    treated as meaningless if a reasonable meaning can be given to
    it, and parties are presumed not to have included needless words
    in the contract.”           TM Delmarva Power, LLC v. NCP of Virginia,
    LLC, 
    557 S.E.2d 199
    , 200 (Va. 2002).
    The   language     in      question      is   clear    and   unambiguous.        It
    means what it says, that is, “SunTrust Mortgage guidelines that
    are currently being used and have been mutually agreed upon.”
    It is only after the rubber meets the road that we learn the
    parties believe this language applies to different documents, or
    different sets of documents.            Thus, this is a classic example of
    a latent ambiguity, defined by Virginia courts as a term of an
    agreement or instrument “‘which, upon application to external
    objects, is found to fit two or more of them equally.’”                  Zehler
    v. E.L. Bruce Co., 
    160 S.E.2d 786
    , 789 n.5 (Va. 1968) (citing 9
    Wigmore, Evidence § 2472, at 233 (3d ed. 1940)).                      “A latent
    ambiguity exists where language ‘while appearing perfectly clear
    at the time the contract[ ] [is] formed, because of subsequently
    discovered or developed facts, may reasonably be interpreted in
    either of two ways.’”          Virginia Elec. & Power Co. v. Norfolk S.
    Ry. Co., 
    683 S.E.2d 517
    , 526 (Va. 2009) (quoting Galloway Corp.
    v. S.B. Ballard Constr. Co., 
    464 S.E.2d 349
    , 354 (Va. 1995)).
    The contested phrase clearly implies a factual predicate,
    and   the   predicate    set    forth    in   the   Master   Policy   was   that
    underwriting    guidelines      would    originate    with   United   Guaranty.
    But the district court relied upon a disputed factual allegation
    by SunTrust Mortgage——that SunTrust Mortgage had devised its own
    underwriting guidelines and that United Guaranty had agreed to
    them——to decide that the parties used this language to permit
    substitution    of      SunTrust    Mortgage’s       guidelines   for    United
    Guaranty’s guidelines.          Whether United Guaranty had agreed to
    30
    SunTrust Mortgage’s underwriting guidelines was hotly disputed
    by United Guaranty.
    Procedurally, it was incorrect for the district court to
    rely upon SunTrust Mortgage’s extrinsic evidence to resolve this
    matter upon summary judgment.             This was pled as a jury case, and
    extrinsic evidence as to the meaning of the language in question
    should only have been considered by the jury to determine which
    guidelines fit the phrase. Virginia courts for more than two
    centuries have recognized the propriety of receiving extrinsic
    evidence to resolve a latent ambiguity.                   Gatewood v. Burrus, 7
    Va.   (3     Call.)   194,    
    1802 WL 650
    ,   at    *3    (Va.     1802).      And
    resolution of a latent ambiguity by resort to extrinsic evidence
    is a question of fact for the jury, not for the court.                         Ewell v.
    Brock, 
    91 S.E. 761
    , 762 (Va. 1917).                     Alternatively, the Flow
    Plans   reference     a   collateral        agreement,        which    is   clearly   a
    proper subject for admission of extrinsic evidence——again, to be
    considered by the jury.            See J.E. Robert Co. v. J. Robert Co.,
    Inc.,   of    Virginia,      
    343 S.E.2d 350
    ,   343    (Va.        1986).     United
    Guaranty was entitled to submit extrinsic evidence to the jury
    and have it determine which document or set of documents fit the
    language in the Flow Plans.
    This Court has previously made it clear that the intention
    of contracting parties is a question of fact that cannot be
    resolved on summary judgment and that, “[i]f there is more than
    31
    one permissible inference as to intent to be drawn from the
    language employed, the question of the parties’ actual intention
    is a triable issue of fact.”      Bear Brand Hosiery Co. v. Tights,
    Inc., 
    605 F.2d 723
    , 726 (4th Cir. 1979), cited in Gen. Acc. Fire
    & Life Assur. Corp., Ltd. v. Akzona, Inc., 
    622 F.2d 90
    , 93 (4th
    Cir. 1980).      See also Cram v. Sun Ins. Office, Ltd., 
    375 F.2d 670
    , 674 (4th Cir. 1967) (“the intent of the parties to an
    ambiguous contract is a question of fact which cannot properly
    be resolved on motions for summary judgment”); Am. Fid. & Cas.
    Co. v. London & Edinburgh Ins. Co., 
    354 F.2d 214
    , 216 (4th Cir.
    1965)    (“Not   merely   must   the    historic   facts   be   free   of
    controversy [in summary judgment proceeding] but also there must
    be no controversy as to the inferences to be drawn from them.”).
    Because a genuine dispute of material fact existed on SunTrust
    Mortgage’s main claim against United Guaranty, I would rule that
    summary judgment for SunTrust Mortgage was improper. *
    *
    SunTrust Mortgage has relied in its brief on case law from
    Virginia that sets forth a presumption of choosing an insured’s
    interpretation over an insurer’s interpretation of disputed
    contractual language.    (Appellee’s Br. 31.) Such a presumption
    should logically be employed only if, after employing the
    traditional tools of contract construction, one is still left
    with two or more reasonable interpretations.    To rely upon the
    presumption in the first instance, without proper consideration
    of extrinsic evidence, as this case shows, results in a failure
    to ascertain the intentions of the contracting parties, and the
    Virginia Supreme Court has indicated that determining the
    parties’ intent is the whole point of interpreting contracts,
    (Continued)
    32
    I would also reverse the evidentiary ruling, barring the
    admission    of    United       Guaranty’s       Guideline    Matrix    and    SunTrust
    Mortgage’s altered email messages on the issue of which party’s
    underwriting guidelines governed.                  The Guideline Matrix should
    have been submitted to the trier of fact as extrinsic evidence
    pertaining    to     the    underwriting          guidelines.        And   the    email
    messages    were    highly       relevant    evidence      that   displayed      guilty
    knowledge    by    SunTrust       Mortgage’s       key    employee     that    SunTrust
    Mortgage’s position was contradicted by the course of dealing
    between the parties.             See, e.g., J.A. 696 (notes from SunTrust
    Mortgage affirming Mary Pettit’s agreement to United Guaranty’s
    terms bound SunTrust Mortgage).                  This evidence bore directly on
    the   question     of   how     to    resolve     the    latent   ambiguity      in   the
    contract.          Excluding         this   evidence       unfairly     tied     United
    Guaranty’s hands in defending itself in this lawsuit.
    Because I believe summary judgment was improperly granted
    to SunTrust Mortgage on its claim against United Guaranty, I
    would also hold that summary judgment was improperly granted to
    SunTrust    Mortgage       on    United     Guaranty’s       counterclaim      for    the
    simple reason that the record is yet incomplete as to whether
    United Guaranty breached its contract of insurance with SunTrust
    including insurance contracts, Virginia Farm Bureau Mut. Ins.
    Co. v. Williams, 
    677 S.E.2d 299
    , 302 (Va. 2009).
    33
    Mortgage; thus, it is premature to consider whether SunTrust
    Mortgage properly and timely raised the affirmative defense of
    first material breach.          I would not, however, disagree with the
    majority’s reasoning as to the failure of SunTrust Mortgage’s
    affirmative defense were the counterclaim properly before the
    Court on its merits.         And I would further conclude that it would
    be    unconscionable    to     require   United     Guaranty       to    continue   to
    provide insurance coverage on loans for which SunTrust Mortgage
    is excused from paying renewal premiums.
    Finally, I would affirm the ruling of the district court on
    its sanctions ruling as being within the scope of discretion
    afforded to district courts on such matters.
    In   summary,   I     respectfully     dissent    from      the    majority’s
    affirmance      of   summary    judgment      on   SunTrust    Mortgage’s      claim
    against United Guaranty, concur with the reversal of summary
    judgment against United Guaranty on its counterclaim, dissent
    from the majority’s affirmance of the granted motion in limine,
    and    concur   with   the     majority’s     affirmance      of   the    ruling    on
    sanctions.
    34
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 11-1956, 11-2086

Citation Numbers: 508 F. App'x 243

Judges: Bredar, James, Thacker, Wynn

Filed Date: 2/1/2013

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 8/6/2023

Authorities (25)

Roanoke Cement Company, L.L.C. v. Falk Corporation Hamilton ... , 413 F.3d 431 ( 2005 )

In Re Peanut Crop Ins. Litigation , 524 F.3d 458 ( 2008 )

Henry S. Cram v. Sun Insurance Office, Ltd., Robert S. ... , 375 F.2d 670 ( 1967 )

Bear Brand Hosiery Company v. Tights, Inc. , 605 F.2d 723 ( 1979 )

Mark N. Silvestri v. General Motors Corporation, Dfendant-... , 271 F.3d 583 ( 2001 )

American Fidelity and Casualty Company, Inc. v. The London ... , 354 F.2d 214 ( 1965 )

s-wallace-edwards-sons-incorporated-v-the-cincinnati-insurance , 353 F.3d 367 ( 2003 )

general-accident-fire-and-life-assurance-corporation-limited-v-akzona , 622 F.2d 90 ( 1980 )

joseph-p-bornstein-ltd-a-virginia-professional-corporation-joseph-p , 828 F.2d 242 ( 1987 )

united-states-v-shaffer-equipment-company-anna-shaffer-berwind-land , 11 F.3d 450 ( 1993 )

jefferson-pilot-fire-casualty-company-a-north-carolina-corporation-v , 638 F.2d 670 ( 1980 )

Erie Railroad v. Tompkins , 58 S. Ct. 817 ( 1938 )

michael-stanley-swengler-v-itt-corporation-electro-optical-products , 993 F.2d 1063 ( 1993 )

Chambers v. Nasco, Inc. , 111 S. Ct. 2123 ( 1991 )

Government Employees Insurance Co. v. Moore , 266 Va. 155 ( 2003 )

Partnership Umbrella, Inc. v. Federal Insurance , 260 Va. 123 ( 2000 )

Erlich v. Hendrick Construction Co. , 217 Va. 108 ( 1976 )

Berry v. Klinger , 225 Va. 201 ( 1983 )

Pulaski Bank, Ex'r v. Harrell , 203 Va. 227 ( 1962 )

White v. Blue Cross of Virginia , 215 Va. 601 ( 1975 )

View All Authorities »