Continental Casualty Company v. Law Offices of Melbourne Mills ( 2012 )


Menu:
  •                     RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
    File Name: 12a0102p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    _________________
    X
    Plaintiff-Appellee, -
    CONTINENTAL CASUALTY COMPANY,
    -
    -
    -
    Nos. 10-5813/5814
    v.
    ,
    >
    -
    -
    LAW OFFICES OF MELBOURNE MILLS, JR.,
    -
    PLLC; MELBOURNE MILLS, JR., (10-5813);
    -
    MILDRED ABBOTT, et al. (10-5814),
    Defendants-Appellants. -
    N
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Kentucky at Lexington.
    No. 06-00272—Joseph M. Hood, District Judge.
    Argued: January 20, 2012
    Decided and Filed: April 13, 2012
    Before: SILER, CLAY, and ROGERS, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: James A. Shuffett, Lexington, Kentucky, William T. Ramsey, NEAL &
    HARWELL, PLC, Nashville, Tennessee, for Appellants. Richard A. Simpson, WILEY
    REIN LLP, Washington, D.C., for Appellee. ON BRIEF: James A. Shuffett,
    Lexington, Kentucky, William T. Ramsey, Kendra E. Samson, NEAL & HARWELL,
    PLC, Nashville, Tennessee, for Appellants. Richard A. Simpson, WILEY REIN LLP,
    Washington, D.C., for Appellee.
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    ROGERS, Circuit Judge. This case involves whether a malpractice liability
    policy is properly rescinded for incomplete responses to questions on the applicable
    insurance applications. After lawyer Melbourne Mills, Jr., was successfully sued for
    1
    Nos. 10-5813/5814 Continental Cas. Co. v. Law Offices of Melbourne Mills,           Page 2
    et al.
    millions of dollars for legal malpractice, his ostensible malpractice insurance carrier,
    Continental Casualty Company, sought a judicial declaration that it was entitled to
    rescind Mills’s insurance policy for the time period covered by the class action. The
    district court granted Continental summary judgment, holding that Mills’s failure to
    disclose an ongoing state bar association inquiry constituted a material misrepresentation
    when the policy renewal application specifically asked if “any attorney [was] subject to
    any disciplinary inquiry . . . during the expiring policy period.” On Mills’s appeal, there
    are two alternative bases for affirming the judgment in favor of Continental: (1) Mills’s
    negative response to a different question constituted a material misrepresentation in light
    of the ongoing bar association inquiry which ultimately led to Mills’s disbarment, and
    (2) the policy’s dishonesty exclusion clause bars coverage of any claim arising out of a
    “dishonest, fraudulent, or . . . malicious act or omission.” In 2010, the Kentucky
    Supreme Court issued an order which permanently barred Mills from the practice of law
    in Kentucky. This order constituted a sufficient “regulatory ruling” under the dishonesty
    exclusion clause to bar coverage. Each of these two bases supports upholding the
    district court’s grant of summary judgment.
    Continental sued below to rescind a malpractice insurance policy for the Law
    Offices of Melbourne Mills, Jr., after Mills and other attorneys allegedly breached their
    fiduciary duties during the negotiations of a large class action settlement. Mills and
    others, including Shirley Cunningham and William Gallion, represented a group of over
    400 plaintiffs in a class action suit against American Home Products for injuries related
    to the use of the diet drug Fen-Phen. At the outset of the suit, it was agreed that the
    lawyers’ fees would be determined by contingency fee contracts, limited to 30% of the
    clients’ gross recovery. In May 2001, American Home Products agreed to settle the
    class action for almost $200 million. The plaintiffs in the action together received only
    $74 million, or 37% of the settlement, while the lawyers received the following: Mills
    received $23 million; Cunningham received $26 million; Gallion received $30 million;
    Stan Chesley received $20 million; and consultants and other counsel received $7
    million. The remaining $20 million was used to establish The Kentucky Fund for
    Nos. 10-5813/5814 Continental Cas. Co. v. Law Offices of Melbourne Mills,         Page 3
    et al.
    Healthy Living, Inc. Mills served as a member of the Fund’s Board of Directors, for
    which he allegedly received a monthly compensation of $5,350.
    In early February 2002, Mills learned that the Kentucky Bar Association
    (“KBA”) was investigating complaints filed against him in connection with the Fen-Phen
    class action.   The Inquiry Commission Complaint stated that Mills was under
    “investigation” for “fees obtained in settlement of certain [claims regarding the use of
    Fen-Phen and other pharmaceuticals] . . . [that] were divided with other counsel not in
    your firm,” as well as allegations concerning a paralegal in Mills’s office who was
    “conducting the unauthorized practice of law” as part of the work on the class action. On
    February 11, 2002, Mills’s attorney, William Johnson, attended a hearing of the KBA’s
    Inquiry Commission with respect to an application for a subpoena duces tecum that was
    served on Mills.
    In August 2003, Mills applied to renew his professional liability insurance with
    Continental for the 2003– 2004 year. Continental had insured Mills’s law office for
    many years prior to this application.
    Question 3 of the application asked: “Are there any claims, or acts or omissions
    that may reasonably be expected to be a claim against the firm, that have not been
    reported to the Company or that were reported during the expiring policy period?” In
    response, Mills checked “NO,” but made a notation to “See Schedule 2.” Schedule 2,
    entitled E&O Claims, stated: “In addition to Melbourne Mills, Jr., the lawyers currently
    serving in the firm include two of counsel partners, David L. Helmers and E. Patrick
    Moores. The information regarding the of counsel attorneys is contained on the attached
    attorney information sheet.”
    Question 4 of the 2003 application read: “Has any attorney been disbarred,
    suspended, formally reprimanded or subject to any disciplinary inquiry, complaint or
    proceeding for any reason other than non-payment of dues during the expiring policy
    period?” Again, Mills checked “NO,” but wrote that Continental should “See Schedule
    3.” Schedule 3, entitled Disciplinary Proceedings, stated:
    Nos. 10-5813/5814 Continental Cas. Co. v. Law Offices of Melbourne Mills,                 Page 4
    et al.
    During the current year no attorney has been disbarred, suspended,
    formally reprimanded or subject to any disciplinary inquiry, complaint
    or proceeding. In prior years, attorneys in the Firm have responded to
    inquiries filed by all jurisdictions exercising jurisdiction and control over
    attorney conduct. There have been no adverse findings regarding any
    attorney or other party’s conduct.
    According to Mills, at the time of the 2003 application, he did not know the status of the
    2002 KBA investigation; in his own words, the case “lay in limbo for years at a time.
    Just nothing was done.”
    In August 2003, Continental granted an insurance policy, entitled Lawyers’
    Professional Liability Policy, to the Law Offices of Melbourne Mills, Jr. The policy
    contained various exclusions, including a Dishonesty Exclusion which stated:
    This Policy does not apply . . . to any claim based on or arising out of any
    dishonest, fraudulent, or criminal or malicious act or omission by an
    Insured except that this exclusion shall not apply to personal injury. The
    Company shall provide the Insured with a defense of such claim unless
    or until the dishonest, fraudulent, criminal or malicious act or omission
    has been determined by any trial verdict, court ruling, regulatory ruling
    or legal admission, whether appealed or not. Such defense will not waive
    any of the Company’s rights under this Policy.
    In 2005, the Fen-Phen class action members asserted legal malpractice claims
    against Mills and others in Abbott, et al. v. Chesley, et al. The Boone County Circuit
    Court determined that the attorneys “breached their fiduciary duties to the Plaintiffs
    when they paid themselves fees over and above the amount to which they were entitled
    to under their fee contracts with their clients.” As a result, the class plaintiffs were
    awarded $42 million. Continental initially provided Mills a defense in this case;
    however, Continental also fully reserved its rights, including the right to rescind the
    policy.
    Continental sought a judicial declaration that it was entitled to rescind the
    insurance policy granted to the Law Offices of Melbourne Mills, Jr., for the period
    covering August 21, 2003 to August 21, 2004. The district court granted summary
    Nos. 10-5813/5814 Continental Cas. Co. v. Law Offices of Melbourne Mills,          Page 5
    et al.
    judgment in favor of Continental, holding that Continental was entitled to void the policy
    because Mills’s 2003 application included material misrepresentations and omissions
    regarding the ongoing KBA ethical inquiries. Because the district court found that
    “Mills knew that a bar complaint had been filed against him in early 2002,” and the
    “KBA’s investigation was ongoing,” the district court held that Mills’s response to
    Question 4 constituted a material misrepresentation under section (2) of K.R.S. § 304.14-
    110. This section provides that a misrepresentation prevents recovery under a policy if
    it is “[m]aterial either to the acceptance of the risk, or to the hazard assumed by the
    insurer.” The district court noted that the “ongoing KBA inquiry into Mills’s actions
    with respect to the Fen-Phen Action is precisely the type of information Continental
    needed to evaluate its potential for current and future risk.” The district court also
    determined that Mills’s response to Question 4 satisfied section (3) of K.R.S. § 304.14-
    110, which provides that a misrepresentation shall bar coverage if “[t]he insurer in good
    faith would either not have issued the policy or contract, or would not have issued it at
    the same premium rate . . . if the true facts had been made known to the insurer as
    required . . . by the application for the policy.” In doing so, the district court relied
    heavily on the testimony of a Continental employee who stated that disclosure of the
    investigation would have led Continental to take “one of several potential restrictive
    underwriting actions in order to address potential exposure.” Holding that Mills’s
    response to Question 4 entitled Continental to rescind the policy, the district court
    determined that it was not necessary to address whether Mills’s answer to Question 3
    was a material misrepresentation or whether Continental was entitled to summary
    judgment based upon exclusionary language in the policy.
    In addition to the grant of summary judgment to Continental, a money judgment
    for $233,674.49 was entered against Mills, which was the amount of the defense costs
    Continental paid on his behalf in the initial class action.
    On June 10, 2010, the same day that the money judgment was entered, the district
    court also granted Continental leave to file supplemental authority, namely: (1) the May
    20, 2010 Order of the Kentucky Supreme Court which disbarred Mills from the practice
    Nos. 10-5813/5814 Continental Cas. Co. v. Law Offices of Melbourne Mills,           Page 6
    et al.
    of law in Kentucky, and (2) the August 27, 2009 Findings of Fact and Conclusions of
    Law of the Trial Commissioner, which the Kentucky Supreme Court used to reach its
    decision to disbar Mills. The district court held that it could take judicial notice of the
    Order of the Supreme Court disbarring Mills and the Findings of Facts because the
    documents came under Fed. R. Evid. 803(8), the public records exception to
    inadmissible hearsay. In the alternative, the district court determined that the documents
    had the “guarantees of trustworthiness” which allowed them to be admitted pursuant to
    Fed. R. Evid. 807. In allowing these documents to be included in the record, the district
    court noted that it did not reach the issue of whether the dishonesty bar in the policy
    voided Mills’s insurance, and “[s]hould an appellate court have reason to review the
    additional grounds upon which Continental moved for summary judgment, these
    documents could be essential to a complete record.”
    Mills and the class members, who intervened to protect their ability to recover
    against Mills, now appeal.        They argue that Mills did not make a material
    misrepresentation on the 2003 insurance renewal application, and thus the policy should
    not have been rescinded. Mills and the class action plaintiffs also maintain that the
    district court erred by allowing Continental to file supplemental authority that was both
    a finding of fact and hearsay after the court had already granted summary judgment.
    Because Mills made a material misrepresentation in his malpractice insurance
    application with Continental, the policy was properly voided under Kentucky law.
    Though the district court determined that the policy was void due to Mills’s response to
    Question 4 of the 2003 application, Mills’s answer to Question 3 represented a material
    misrepresentation, and provides an alternative basis for affirmance. According to K.R.S.
    § 304.14-110, a misrepresentation voids an insurance policy if the misrepresentation is
    “material” to the acceptance of risk or if the insurance company would not have issued
    the policy if the true facts had been made known. Though this standard is disjunctive,
    Mills’s response to Question 3 was both a misrepresentation that was material to
    Continental’s acceptance of risk and, if Continental had known of the investigation
    Nos. 10-5813/5814 Continental Cas. Co. v. Law Offices of Melbourne Mills,           Page 7
    et al.
    against Mills, Continental would not have issued the policy or would not have issued the
    policy at that rate.
    Mills’s answer to Question 3 of the 2003 application was a material
    misrepresentation. Question 3 of the application asked: “Are there any claims, or acts
    or omissions that may reasonably be expected to be a claim against the firm, that have
    not been reported to the Company or that was reported during the expiring policy
    period?” In response, Mills checked “NO,” but made a handwritten notation to “See
    Schedule 2.” Schedule 2, entitled E&O Claims, stated: “In addition to Melbourne Mills,
    Jr., the lawyers currently serving in the firm include two of counsel partners, David L.
    Helmers and E. Patrick Moores. The information regarding the of counsel attorneys is
    contained on the attached attorney information sheet.”
    Mills’s answer to Question 3 was a misrepresentation because in August of 2003,
    when he was filling out the application, Mills knew of not only the ongoing KBA
    investigation, initiated in February 2002 but unresolved at that time, but also all of the
    acts surrounding the Fen-Phen class action settlement negotiations, which reasonably
    could have—and ultimately did—lead to a malpractice claim. Even though the class
    action members did not bring the legal malpractice suit until 2005, in August 2003 Mills
    still knew that, collectively, the lawyers in the Fen-Phen class action paid themselves
    over $126 million. According to one uncontested document put forth by the class
    members, the lawyers were limited to fees of a little over $60 million. Mills knew that
    the clients had not been told all of the pertinent facts regarding the settlement offer and
    the fee splitting arrangement, and that the KBA had subpoenaed the financial records
    from the case as a result of the 2002 inquiry. In sum, Mills was aware that he had
    engaged in conduct that led to the disbarment of him and two of his co-counsel. Mills
    knew that his conduct was egregious and that his “acts” and “omissions” could have
    “reasonably be[en] expected” to lead to “a claim against the firm.”            Mills was
    unquestionably required to disclose this information to Continental when filling out the
    policy renewal application.
    Nos. 10-5813/5814 Continental Cas. Co. v. Law Offices of Melbourne Mills,            Page 8
    et al.
    Mills’s failure to disclose his actions in response to Question 3 was also material
    to Continental’s acceptance of risk, K.R.S. § 304.14-110(2), and had an impact on
    Continental’s decision to issue the policy at the rate that it did, K.R.S. § 304.14-110(3).
    Mills incorrectly argues that K.R.S. § 304.14-110 requires that the insured make an
    intentional misrepresentation; the plain language of the statute requires only that the
    misrepresentation be “material.” According to Kentucky case law, a misrepresentation
    is material if “the insurer, acting reasonably and naturally in accordance with the usual
    practice of . . . insurance companies under similar circumstances, would not have
    accepted the application if the substantial truth had been stated therein.” Mills v. Reserve
    Life Ins. Co., 
    335 S.W.2d 955
    , 958 (Ky. 1960). A misrepresentation is material if there
    is sufficient evidence that the insurance company would not have issued the policy or
    would have issued a different policy if it had knowledge of Mills’s actions and omissions
    under K.R.S. § 304.14-110(3).        Therefore, many of the reasons that support a
    determination of “materiality” under K.R.S. § 304.14-110(2) also support a holding that
    Mills’s misrepresentation satisfied section (3) of the statute as well.
    Mills’s failure to disclose the circumstances surrounding the Fen-Phen class
    action and the ongoing KBA investigation was material to Continental, which likely
    would not have issued the policy, or would have issued a different policy, had it known
    of Mills’s acts and omissions during this time. Because Continental has a duty to defend
    all claims against its insured, including non-meritorious claims, Continental has an
    interest in all potential claims.    This is “precisely the kind of information that
    Continental [sought and] would need to evaluate its potential for current and future risk.”
    Cont’l Cas. Co. v. Lampe & Hamblin, PLLC, No. 3:03CV604-H, 
    2004 WL 5708261
    ,
    at *4 (W.D. Ky. Nov. 1, 2004) (“Lampe”). In this case, that risk was amplified by the
    enormity of the $200 million class action settlement. Mills had a duty to disclose this
    information in response to Question 3, and when he did not, he affected Continental’s
    opportunity to consider and weigh its options when issuing the Policy.
    Peter Brinkman, underwriter for Continental, also testified that he could “state
    without hesitation or qualification that an affirmative response to Question 3 . . . of the
    Nos. 10-5813/5814 Continental Cas. Co. v. Law Offices of Melbourne Mills,           Page 9
    et al.
    2003 application would have been material to Continental’s underwriting of policies
    issued to the Firm.” Though the class members argue that the testimony of the insurance
    company’s own employee is not sufficient for a finding of materiality, this is not correct.
    In Lampe the district court applied Kentucky law and determined that a
    misrepresentation was material solely on the basis of commonsense assumptions
    regarding what would have an impact on the decision making process of a reasonable
    insurance company. Underlying documents or employee testimony were not necessary
    to support this determination. 
    Id. at *2.
    Both Mills and the class action members dispute the district court’s finding and
    argue that an answer to Question 3 reflects the “subjective state of the applicant’s mind,”
    and thus the question of materiality should be determined by a jury. However, in
    reviewing a policy under K.R.S. § 304.14-110, this court has not hesitated to declare that
    a misrepresentation was “plainly material.” See Cook v. Life Inv. Ins. Co., 126 F. App’x
    722, 729 (6th Cir. 2005). In addition, while Question 3 is subjective, the ongoing
    investigation by the KBA, as well as the circumstances surrounding the class action
    settlement, meant that Mills knew that there was the potential for a “claim” against him,
    and thus the only possible answer to Question 3 was “YES.” The purpose of K.R.S
    § 304.14-110 is to “encourage honesty . . . on the part of potential insureds and to
    dissuade misrepresentations,” 
    Progressive, 891 F. Supp. at 381
    ; therefore, even if Mills
    did not “know” that the Fen-Phen class action members would initiate a lawsuit against
    him, he should have let Continental know of the possibility of a claim in light of the
    complaints and inquiry. Mills’s reference to Schedule 2, which does not answer
    Question 3 at all, further suggests that Mills understood and was trying to get around
    Continental’s clear attempt to learn of any current and potential future risk.
    Mills resurrects an argument raised in Lampe, comparing malpractice coverage
    to Kentucky’s universal automobile liability insurance coverage and arguing that the
    “expressed public interest” in legal malpractice insurance “outweighs any right of an
    insurer to rescind an insurance contract.” Lampe, 
    2004 WL 5708261
    , at *3. The district
    court in Lampe considered this argument carefully but rejected it, concluding “that a
    Nos. 10-5813/5814 Continental Cas. Co. v. Law Offices of Melbourne Mills,            Page 10
    et al.
    Kentucky court would not find public policy of the state so strongly in favor of lawyers
    liability insurance coverage that it could outweigh an insurer’s right to rescission as is
    the case with automobile liability coverage.” 
    Id. at *3
    -*4. In any event, Mills did not
    make this argument during the proceedings before the district court and this court will
    not review issues raised for the first time on appeal, because “[o]ur function is to review
    the case presented to the district court, rather than a better case fashioned after a district
    court’s unfavorable order.” DaimlerChrysler Corp. Healthcare Benefits Plan v. Durden,
    
    448 F.3d 918
    , 922 (6th Cir. 2006). Accordingly, we need not consider this new
    argument on appeal. See Post v. Bradshaw, 
    621 F.3d 406
    , 415 (6th Cir. 2010).
    As a final argument, the Fen-Phen class action plaintiffs suggest, as best we can
    understand, that if Continental had known of Mills’s ongoing investigation, and as a
    result had cancelled or not renewed the 2001– 2002 policy, Mills could have purchased
    a three-year extended reporting period (“ERP”), thus covering Mills during the time
    frame encompassing the claims of the class action plaintiffs. However, this argument
    makes little sense, as the opportunity for Mills to purchase the ERP would have expired
    60 days after the hypothetical non-renewal or cancellation in 2002, and thus would have
    occurred almost ten months prior to the 2003 misrepresentation that is at the crux of this
    case.
    Though not argued on appeal, the class action plaintiffs made a similar argument
    below with regard to a potential ERP after the cancellation or non-renewal of the 2002–
    2003 policy. However, in addition to not being adequately raised, this claim suffers
    from the following weakness: such an ERP would have had to been purchased at 175%
    of the premium rate. Thus, even under this speculation, Continental was deprived of the
    ability to charge a higher premium due to Mills’s misrepresentation. Therefore, the
    hypothetical existence of the ERP does not change the materiality analysis.
    In sum, Mills’s response to Question 3 failed to disclose the circumstances
    surrounding the Fen-Phen class action and the ongoing KBA investigation, and this
    Nos. 10-5813/5814 Continental Cas. Co. v. Law Offices of Melbourne Mills,         Page 11
    et al.
    information was material to Continental’s risk assessment. These conclusions are
    sufficient to uphold the district court’s grant of summary judgment.
    In addition, the policy could have been rescinded under the plain terms of a
    clause in the policy excluding coverage for dishonest acts. The clause provides:
    This Policy does not apply . . . to any claim based on or arising out of any
    dishonest, fraudulent, or criminal or malicious act or omission by an
    Insured except that this exclusion shall not apply to personal injury. The
    Company shall provide the Insured with a defense of such claim unless
    or until the dishonest, fraudulent, criminal or malicious act or omission
    has been determined by any trial verdict, court ruling, regulatory ruling
    or legal admission, whether appealed or not. Such defense will not waive
    any of the Company’s rights under this Policy.
    Although Kentucky law states that an insurance policy “should be liberally
    construed” and “all doubts [should be resolved] in favor of the insureds,” this does not
    mean that the clear terms should not be interpreted “according to their ‘plain and
    ordinary meaning.’” K.M.R. v. Foremost Ins. Group, 
    171 S.W.3d 751
    , 753 (Ky. App.
    2005) (citing Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co. v. Nolan, 
    10 S.W.3d 129
    , 131-32 (Ky. 1999)).
    See also Scottsdale Ins. Co. v. Flowers, 
    513 F.3d 546
    , 564 (6th Cir. 2008). Policies
    should reflect “the parties’ mutual understanding at the time they entered into the
    contract and ‘[s]uch mutual intention is to be deduced, if possible, from the language of
    the contract alone.’” 
    K.M.R., 171 S.W.3d at 753
    (quoting 
    Nolan, 10 S.W.3d at 131
    .32).
    In this case, the dishonesty exclusion clause can only be interpreted to mean that
    the parties did not intend for the policy’s legal malpractice coverage to include acts that
    were objectively fraudulent or dishonest. To the extent that the clause requires a court
    or regulatory ruling, the requirement is satisfied by the May 20, 2010 Order of the
    Kentucky Supreme Court which disbarred Mills from the practice of law in Kentucky.
    Ky. Bar Ass’n v. Mills, 
    318 S.W.3d 89
    , 93 (Ky. 2010). After granting Continental’s
    motion for summary judgment, the district court properly granted Continental leave to
    file the disbarment order as supplemental authority. The Kentucky Supreme Court
    ruling is within the plain language of Fed. R. Evid. 803(8), the public records exception,
    Nos. 10-5813/5814 Continental Cas. Co. v. Law Offices of Melbourne Mills,         Page 12
    et al.
    and thus is not inadmissible hearsay. Moreover, the class action members concede that
    the Disbarment Order may be considered as part of the record, and that this court may
    take judicial notice of it as part of our de novo review on summary judgment.
    The Kentucky Supreme Court’s ruling determined that Mills had committed
    “dishonest” and “fraudulent . . . act[s] or omission[s],” and thus is sufficient to bar
    coverage under the dishonesty exclusion clause of the policy. In addition to other
    violations, the Kentucky Supreme Court found that Mills violated S.C.R. 3.130– 8.3(c)
    by deceiving his clients into accepting the individual settlement amounts
    devised by a fraudulent method; misrepresenting to the Boone Circuit
    Court that his clients had agreed to donate a substantial portion of the
    total settlement received to charity; failing to inform the Boone Circuit
    Court that he had contingent fee contracts with all of his clients which set
    a specific fee; providing, or assisting in providing, false or misleading
    information to the Boone Circuit Court about the fees and expenses . . . ;
    and misappropriating, or participating in the misappropriation of, his
    clients’ funds and the subsequent cover up.
    
    Id. (emphasis added).
    As the court found that Mills’s “participat[ed] in the misappropriation of . . .
    clients’ funds,” Mills’s argument that he did not personally misappropriate funds, and
    thus did not act fraudulently, is not persuasive. Even if he did not himself engage in the
    misconduct, the Kentucky Supreme Court found that Mills’s acted dishonestly “by
    failing to exercise professional judgment independent of his co-counsel.” 
    Id. This omission
    is covered by the dishonesty exclusion clause. Similarly, Mills’s assertion that
    he did not act fraudulently because, unlike his colleagues, he was acquitted of criminal
    charges, also fails because the dishonesty exclusion clause does not require a criminal
    conviction to bar coverage. Therefore, the May 20, 2010 Order of the Kentucky
    Supreme Court disbarring Mills from the practice of law is a sufficient basis for
    precluding coverage under the policy’s dishonesty exclusion clause.
    Because it is not necessary to rely on the August 27, 2009 Findings of Fact and
    Conclusions of Law of the Trial Commissioner to affirm the district court’s grant of
    Nos. 10-5813/5814 Continental Cas. Co. v. Law Offices of Melbourne Mills,      Page 13
    et al.
    summary judgment, we do not address whether this document was inadmissible hearsay
    and whether the district court erred by allowing Continental to file it as supplemental
    authority. We also do not address whether Mills’s response to Question 4 warranted
    rescission of the policy.
    The judgment of the district court granting summary judgment to Continental is
    affirmed.