Crum & Forster Specialty Insur v. DVO, Inc. ( 2019 )


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  •                              In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 18‐2571
    CRUM & FORSTER SPECIALTY INSURANCE
    COMPANY,
    Plaintiff‐Appellee,
    v.
    DVO, INC., formerly known as GHD,
    Inc.,
    Defendant‐Appellant.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Eastern District of Wisconsin.
    No. 1:16‐cv‐01619‐WCG — William C. Griesbach, Chief Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED JANUARY 16, 2019 — DECIDED SEPTEMBER 23, 2019
    ____________________
    Before BAUER, ROVNER, and HAMILTON, Circuit Judges.
    ROVNER, Circuit Judge. This appeal arises from a diversity
    action for declaratory relief brought by Crum & Forster Spe‐
    cialty Insurance Company (“Crum”) against GHD Inc., now
    known as DVO Inc. (“DVO”), seeking a determination that
    Crum does not have a duty to defend DVO in a state court
    action filed against DVO. Crum provided insurance to DVO,
    2                                                  No. 18‐2571
    and the question is whether the Errors & Omissions (“E&O”)
    coverage of the primary and excess insurance policies it pro‐
    vided to DVO, along with any exceptions in the policies, co‐
    vers the state court claim for a contract violation such that it
    imposes a duty for Crum to defend DVO in that action.
    The underlying contract claim was brought by WTE‐S&S
    AG Enterprise, LLC (“WTE”) against DVO. DVO designs and
    builds anaerobic digesters, which use microorganisms to
    break down biodegradable materials to create biogas. DVO
    and WTE entered into a Standard Form Agreement, created
    by the Engineers Joint Contract Documents Committee, un‐
    der which DVO was to design and build an anaerobic digester
    for WTE. The digester was to be used to generate electricity
    from cow manure which would then be sold to the electric
    power utility. WTE sued DVO for breach of contract, alleging
    that DVO failed to fulfill its design duties, responsibilities,
    and obligations under the contract in that it did not properly
    design substantial portions of the structural, mechanical, and
    operational systems of the anaerobic digester, resulting in
    substantial damages to WTE. It sought over $2 million in
    damages and fees.
    Crum initially provided a defense to DVO under a reser‐
    vation of rights, but a couple of months later advised DVO
    that it would no longer provide a defense. WTE later filed for
    bankruptcy and the case was transferred to the United States
    Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Illinois. Follow‐
    ing a trial, that court found in favor of WTE and ordered DVO
    to pay over $65,000 in damages and $198,000 in attorney’s
    fees.
    Crum issued primary and excess insurance policies to
    DVO for periods of time spanning from June 2011 until April
    No. 18‐2571                                                   3
    2014. Those policies provided coverage including commercial
    general liability (CGL) coverage, pollution liability coverage,
    E&O coverage, third party pollution coverage, and onsite
    cleanup liability coverage. The issue in this appeal concerns
    two provisions. The first is the provision in the E&O profes‐
    sional liability coverage, under which Crum is required to pay
    “those sums the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as
    ‘damages’ or ‘cleanup costs’ because of a ‘wrongful act’ to
    which this insurance applies.” Dist. Ct. Decision and Order
    (“Dist. Ct.”) at 3. The second relevant provision is the breach
    of contract exclusion that was added by an endorsement,
    which provides that the Policy does not apply to claims or
    damages based upon or arising out of breach of contract. 
    Id. DVO argued
    that the breach of contract exclusion was so
    broad as to render the E&O professional liability coverage il‐
    lusory, and therefore could not be enforced to preclude the
    duty to defend. The district court held that the professional
    liability coverage was not illusory because it would still apply
    to third party claims, and that even if it was determined to be
    illusory, the remedy would be to reform the contract to allow
    coverage to third party claims, not to allow coverage for all
    professional liability claims.
    A determination of a duty to defend under an insurance
    policy involves a three‐part inquiry: first, whether the type of
    claim asserted against DVO is the type for which coverage is
    provided by the policy; second, whether an exclusion provi‐
    sion in the policy precludes coverage; and third, if an exclu‐
    sion applies, whether that exclusion contains any exceptions
    that would reinstate coverage. Marks v. Houston Cas. Co., 
    881 N.W.2d 309
    , 322–23 (Wis. 2016); Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co. v.
    American Girl, Inc., 
    673 N.W.2d 65
    , 73 (Wis. 2004). There is no
    disagreement as to the first part. The state court claim against
    4                                                   No. 18‐2571
    DVO involves allegations that DVO entered into a contract
    with WTE to construct an anaerobic digester which would
    generate electricity from cow manure, and that DVO failed to
    fulfill its design duties because it did not properly design sub‐
    stantial portions of the structural, mechanical, and opera‐
    tional systems of the anaerobic digester causing damages. Un‐
    der the E&O coverage of the primary and excess insurance
    policies from Crum to DVO, Crum agreed to pay those sums
    that the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as damages
    or cleanup costs because of a wrongful act to which the insur‐
    ance applies. “Wrongful act” is defined to include a failure to
    render professional services, and “professional services” is
    defined as “those functions performed for others by you or by
    others on your behalf that are related to your practice as a
    consultant, engineer, [or] architect … .” Such a provision is a
    common one, and essentially provides coverage for profes‐
    sional malpractice. See 
    Marks, 881 N.W.2d at 324
    , quoting
    Grieb v. Citizens Cas. Co. of New York, 
    148 N.W.2d 103
    , 106
    (Wis. 1967) (“[a]n errors‐and‐omissions policy is professional‐
    liability insurance … designed to insure members of a partic‐
    ular professional group from liability arising out of the special
    risk such as negligence, omissions, mistakes and errors inher‐
    ent in the practice of the profession”); 1325 North Van Buren,
    LLC v. T‐3 Group. Ltd., 
    716 N.W.2d 822
    , 836 n. 13 (Wis.
    2006) (same). All parties agree that the alleged conduct here
    falls within that provision.
    The parties also agree, however, that the exclusion clause
    added as an endorsement to the contract, applies to preclude
    coverage. That provision states that:
    No. 18‐2571                                                      5
    This Policy does not apply to “damages”, “defense ex‐
    penses”, “cleanup costs”, or any loss, cost or expense, or
    any “claim” or “suit”:
    Based upon or arising out of:
    a. breach of contract, whether express or oral, nor any
    “claim” for breach of an implied in law or an implied
    in fact contracts [sic], regardless of whether “bodily in‐
    jury”, “property damage”, “personal and advertising
    injury” or a “wrongful act” is alleged.
    Appellant’s Appendix (“App.”) A116‐A119.
    The parties do not dispute that a determination of whether
    that exclusion applies must focus on the incident that alleg‐
    edly gave rise to the coverage, not the theory of liability. That
    is consistent with Wisconsin caselaw. For instance, the Wis‐
    consin Supreme Court in 1325 North Van Buren, rejected the
    argument that insurance liability is dependent on a theory of
    liability, and noted that claims of negligence in the failure to
    provide competent professional services could raise both tort
    and contract 
    claims. 716 N.W.2d at 838
    . Therefore, even a
    claim that purports to be a tort claim can be excluded under
    the breach of contract exclusion if it arises out of that contract.
    Here, the state court complaint against DVO alleged that
    DVO was contracted to design and construct the anaerobic di‐
    gester and, because of its faulty design, damages were in‐
    curred. That alleged a claim that arose out of the contract and
    therefore falls within the exclusion language.
    The sole issue, then, is whether the language in that breach
    of contract exclusion renders the exclusion broader than the
    grant of coverage, and therefore renders the coverage illu‐
    6                                                  No. 18‐2571
    sory. “In the insurance context, ‘[i]llusory policy language de‐
    fines coverage in a manner that coverage will never actually
    be triggered.’” 
    Marks, 881 N.W.2d at 328
    , (quoting Continental
    Western Ins. Co. v. Paul Reid, LLP, 
    715 N.W.2d 689
    , 691 (Wis.
    App. 2006)). If the purported coverage in a policy proves to
    be illusory, a court may reform the policy to meet the in‐
    sured’s reasonable expectation of coverage. 
    Id. Such contract
    reformation, however, is an extraordinary remedy not lightly
    taken. 
    Id. The district
    court rejected the argument that the coverage
    was illusory. It held that although coverage for professional
    malpractice would effectively fall within that exclusion as to
    claims alleged by the party to the contract, third parties could
    still bring tort claims against DVO that would not fall within
    the exclusion and would trigger the duty to defend in the
    E&O provision of the policy. The district court reasoned that
    as a contractor, designer, engineer and builder, DVO has a
    duty to use reasonable care in carrying out its contractual ob‐
    ligation so as to avoid injury or damage to the person or prop‐
    erty of third parties, even though they have no contractual re‐
    lationship with DVO.
    But that analysis cannot support the court’s conclusion. If
    more narrow language was used, the district court’s determi‐
    nation that third‐party liability would still be covered might
    have merit. But the language in the exclusion at issue here is
    extremely broad. It includes claims “based upon or arising out
    of” the contract, thus including a class of claims more expan‐
    sive than those based upon the contract. Wisconsin courts
    have made clear that the “arising out of” language is broadly
    construed. For instance, in Great Lakes Beverages, LLC v.
    Wochinski, 
    892 N.W.2d 333
    , 339 (Wis. App. 2017), the court
    No. 18‐2571                                                  7
    held that “the phrase ‘“arising out of” in an insurance policy
    is very broad, general and comprehensive and is ordinarily
    understood to mean originating from, growing out of, or
    flowing from.’” (quoting Trumpeter Developments v. Pierce
    County, 
    681 N.W.2d 269
    , 271 (Wis. App. 2004)); accord Shelley
    v. Moir, 
    405 N.W.2d 737
    , 739 (Wis. App. 1987). All that is re‐
    quired is some causal relationship between the injury and the
    event not covered. 
    Id. That same
    language has been applied by Wisconsin courts
    to exclude coverage for third‐party claims. For instance, in
    Great Lakes Beverages, the court considered whether AMCO In‐
    surance’s policies providing coverage for personal and adver‐
    tising injuries, including libel and slander, required coverage
    of Wochinski’s tortious interference claim which was based
    on the allegation that Great Lakes Beverages was falsely in‐
    forming people that Wochinski was subject to a non‐compete
    
    agreement. 892 N.W.2d at 339
    ‐40. The insurance policy ex‐
    cluded any advertising or personal injury arising out of a
    breach of contract, and the court held that the exclusion
    barred coverage even though Wochinski had never had a con‐
    tract with Great Lakes Beverages. 
    Id. The court
    held that the
    tortious interference claim arose out of a breach of contract
    because the truth or falsity of the representations depended
    on whether the non‐compete agreement in the contract be‐
    tween Wochinski and another party remained in effect. 
    Id. Therefore, Great
    Lakes Beverages held that the “arising out of”
    language in the exclusion is read broadly, and that it can be
    applied to bar a tort claim brought by a third party. See also
    
    Shelley, 405 N.W.2d at 739
    ‐40 (exclusion for claims arising out
    of bodily injury operated to exclude third‐party breach of con‐
    tract claim).
    8                                                    No. 18‐2571
    Under Wisconsin law, therefore, the term “arising out of”
    has been interpreted broadly to reach any conduct that has at
    least some causal relationship between the injury and the
    event not covered, which sweeps in third‐party claims as well
    when so related. And the “event not covered” in the policy
    here is itself quite expansive, explicitly applying the breach of
    contract exclusion to all contracts whether express or oral, and
    even including contracts implied in law or fact. Given that
    broad language, the exclusion would include even the claims
    of third parties. As to those third parties, the claims of profes‐
    sional negligence will fall within the contract exclusion be‐
    cause they necessarily arise out of the express, oral or implied
    contract under which DVO rendered the professional ser‐
    vices. See 1325 North Van 
    Buren, 716 N.W.2d at 838
    (noting
    that the claim based on a negligent act for its failure to adhere
    to professional standards is one sounding in negligence but
    arising in the context of a contract); Colton v. Foulkes, 
    47 N.W.2d 901
    , 903 (1951) (the contract creates the state of things
    which furnishes the occasion of the tort).
    To avoid that conclusion, Crum relies primarily on an un‐
    published Wisconsin appellate court opinion in General Casu‐
    alty Co. of Wisc. v. Rainbow Insulators, Inc., 
    798 N.W.2d 320
    (Wis. App. 2011). In that case, KBS filed a complaint for breach
    of contract against E & A Enterprises (“E & A”). E & A had
    contracted to handle metal stud framing and drywall for a
    condominium project and E & A created noise problems in
    the units by attaching resilient channels to drywall in the
    wrong direction and by using screws that were too long,
    which caused acoustical problems and required KBS to re‐
    move and reinstall the channels. 
    Id. at *1.
    No. 18‐2571                                                    9
    The court considered whether Acuity, an insurance com‐
    pany, had a duty to provide coverage. E & A had a profes‐
    sional liability policy with Acuity called the Contractor’s Er‐
    ror & Omissions Coverage which provided coverage for
    “damages because of property damage to your product, prop‐
    erty damage to your work, property damage to impaired
    property or recall expense that arises out of your product,
    your work, or any part thereof.” 
    Id. at *6‐7.
    The court held that
    the policy provided initial coverage, but held that such cover‐
    age was precluded under the “contract” exclusion, which ex‐
    cludes coverage for “damages arising out of any … [d]elay or
    failure by you or anyone acting on your behalf to perform a
    contract or agreement in accordance with its terms.” 
    Id. at 7.
    E & A argued that the contract exclusion was inapplicable be‐
    cause the alleged property damage arose out of negligent acts,
    errors, or omissions. 
    Id. The court
    held, however, that the
    characterization of the claim was not dispositive; it further
    held that the conduct alleged in the complaint, if proven,
    would constitute failure to perform a contract, and therefore
    the exclusion applied. 
    Id. The court
    rejected the argument that
    such an interpretation would render the policy useless, hold‐
    ing that the exclusion did not exclude all claims of any sort
    that might arise during the course of the work performed un‐
    der a contract. The court as an example stated that “because
    contractors owe common law duties of care to those with
    whom they contract, as to all other persons, the ‘contract’ ex‐
    clusion would not operate to preclude E & O policy coverage
    arising from a tort claim that involves conduct that is not a
    delay or failure to perform under a contract term.” 
    Id. at 8.
       Crum relies on that case as support for the notion that the
    exclusion does not render the coverage illusory here, but the
    comparison is a faulty one. First, the coverage provision was
    10                                                  No. 18‐2571
    different in General Casualty in that it covered property dam‐
    age not professional malpractice generally. The overlap be‐
    tween claims of professional malpractice and breach of con‐
    tract is complete, because the professional malpractice neces‐
    sarily involves the contractual relationship. Moreover, the ex‐
    clusion was more narrow in General Casualty. It applied only
    to damages arising out of delays or failures to perform a con‐
    tract or agreement in accordance with its terms. Thus, the exclu‐
    sion was tied to the terms of the contract, and would not nec‐
    essarily include conduct that was merely causally related to
    the contract or which flowed from the contract as here. Fi‐
    nally, the court’s analysis of the issue as to whether the cov‐
    erage was illusory was limited to a couple of sentences, with
    no further development of the reasoning, and even inter‐
    preted as broadly as Crum argues, we do not find it persua‐
    sive in light of the other, published Wisconsin cases consid‐
    ered above.
    Based on that Wisconsin caselaw, we hold that the breach
    of contract exclusion in this case rendered the professional li‐
    ability coverage in the E&O policy illusory. The district court
    recognized that possibility as well, but held that the contract
    could be reformed so as to avoid that impact. Specifically, the
    court held that if the policy was read so as to preclude such
    third‐party suits, then the exclusion would render the cover‐
    age illusory and the contract should be reformed so as to al‐
    low such suits. The court held, however, that such a refor‐
    mation would not help DVO because the state court suit was
    not brought by a third party.
    That focus on third‐party suits is misplaced in the context
    of the contract reformation here. The court itself raised the
    possibility that third‐party suits might not be excluded under
    No. 18‐2571                                                   11
    the language of the breach of contract exclusion, in an effort
    to demonstrate that the professional liability coverage was
    not therefore illusory (in that it provided coverage for third‐
    party suits). As we have held above, that conclusion is incon‐
    sistent with the broad “arising out of” language, which would
    exclude all claims for professional liability whether or not
    brought by third‐parties.
    When a policy’s purported coverage is illusory, the policy
    may be reformed to meet an insured’s reasonable expectation
    of coverage. 
    Marks, 881 N.W.2d at 328
    . Therefore, the focus
    now is not on the hypothetical third‐party actions, but on the
    reasonable expectation of coverage of the insured in securing
    the policy. There is, after all, no reason to believe that DVO in
    purchasing Errors and Omissions coverage to provide insur‐
    ance against professional malpractice claims had a reasonable
    expectation that it was obtaining insurance only for claims of
    professional malpractice brought by third parties.
    In determining the reasonable expectation of the insured,
    we consider the intended role of the coverage. Tri City Nat.
    Bank v. Fed. Ins. Co., 
    674 N.W.2d 617
    , 620 (Wis. App. 2003).
    “[T]he nature and purpose of the policy as a whole have an
    obvious bearing on the insured’s reasonable expectations as
    to the scope of coverage … .” Id., quoting 
    Shelley, 405 N.W.2d at 739
    . As we noted earlier, “[a]n errors‐and‐omissions policy
    is professional‐liability insurance … designed to insure mem‐
    bers of a particular professional group from liability arising
    out of the special risk such as negligence, omissions, mistakes
    and errors inherent in the practice of the profession.” 
    Marks, 881 N.W.2d at 324
    , (quoting 
    Grieb, 148 N.W.2d at 106
    ); 1325
    North Van 
    Buren, 716 N.W.2d at 836
    n. 13 (same). Accordingly,
    12                                                    No. 18‐2571
    because the breach of contract exclusion renders the profes‐
    sional liability coverage illusory, the contract should be re‐
    formed so as to meet the reasonable expectations of DVO as
    to the E&O policy’s coverage for liability arising out of negli‐
    gence, omissions, mistakes and errors inherent in the practice
    of the profession. See 
    Marks, 881 N.W.2d at 329
    (noting that if
    coverage is rendered illusory, “our task would be to reform
    the policy so that it ‘conform[s] to [the] real intent’ of the par‐
    ties; that is, to reform the policy so that it represents the ‘def‐
    inite and explicit agreement’ originally reached by the parties
    before any mistake occurred. … If a clause in Marksʹ policy
    renders the policy illusory, we consider whether to reform
    that clause.”)
    The breach of contract exclusion is set forth in an endorse‐
    ment. The endorsement modifies the insurance provided un‐
    der the following Parts:
    Commercial General Liability Coverage Part
    Contractors Pollution Liability Coverage Part
    Errors and Omissions Liability Coverage Part
    Third Party Pollution Liability Coverage Part
    Onsite Cleanup Coverage Part
    App. at A119. As such, it replaces the standard Contractual
    Liability provision. Because the breach of contract exclusion
    renders only the E&O coverage illusory, one possible refor‐
    mation would be to delete the applicability of the endorse‐
    ment only as to the E&O Part, and contractual liability under
    that Part would then revert back to the terms of the original
    Contractual Liability provision.
    No. 18‐2571                                                  13
    But we need not determine precisely what reformation is
    appropriate here. DVO did not file a cross‐motion for sum‐
    mary judgment. The district court on remand may consider
    DVO’s reasonable expectations in securing the coverage, and
    can reform the contract so as to give effect to that expectation.
    The focus, however, must be on that reasonable expectation,
    which was upended by the breach of contract exclusion that
    rendered it illusory. The availability of third‐party claims is
    irrelevant unless it is determined to be a part of DVO’s rea‐
    sonable expectation of coverage.
    The decision of the district court is REVERSED and the
    case REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with
    this opinion.