Shannon Hyland v. Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance , 885 F.3d 482 ( 2018 )


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  •                               In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 17-2712
    SHANNON HYLAND,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    LIBERTY MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Central District of Illinois.
    No. 1:15-cv-01264-JES-JEH — James E. Shadid, Chief Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED FEBRUARY 22, 2018 — DECIDED MARCH 15, 2018
    ____________________
    Before BAUER, EASTERBROOK, and ROVNER, Circuit Judges.
    EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge. Monteil Hyland was a pas-
    senger in a car owned by Kimberly Perkins and driven by
    Miquasha Smith—who, at age 16, was not lawfully behind
    the wheel when she smashed the car at 12:46 a.m. one Satur-
    day into two parked vehicles, seriously injuring Hyland.
    Smith has been convicted of aggravated reckless driving.
    Neither Smith nor her parents had auto insurance. But Per-
    kins had a policy of insurance with Liberty Mutual. It cov-
    2                                                         No. 17-2712
    ered her family, including her daughter Michiah Risby, plus
    anyone else driving the car with the family’s permission.
    Smith told Liberty Mutual that Risby gave her the car’s keys
    during a party; Risby denied doing that and said that she
    had given the keys to “Rob,” who was never identified.
    The police reported that Smith had told many incompat-
    ible stories about the events. Liberty Mutual believed its in-
    sured, Risby, and when Shannon Hyland (Monteil’s mother,
    acting as his next friend) sued Smith it told Shannon’s law-
    yer that it would not provide a defense or indemnity. (From
    now on, all references to “Hyland” are to Shannon Hyland,
    the plaintiff in both the state and federal suits.) Eventually
    Smith defaulted, and a state court entered a judgment for
    about $4.6 million. Smith assigned to Hyland whatever claim
    she had against Liberty Mutual. In this suit under the diver-
    sity jurisdiction, the district court concluded that Liberty
    Mutual’s failure either to defend Smith or to seek a declara-
    tory judgment of non-coverage violated Illinois law, making
    it liable for the entire tort judgment, even though the policy
    provided only $25,000 per person in coverage. 2017 U.S.
    Dist. LEXIS 124374 (C.D. Ill. Aug. 7, 2017). Liberty Mutual
    now concedes that it should have defended Smith while re-
    serving a right to decline indemnity, but it contends that its
    liability cannot exceed the policy’s cap.
    Appellate jurisdiction is the first problem we must ad-
    dress. The district court entered this judgment:
    IT IS ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that the Plaintiff, Shannon
    Hyland’s, Motion for Summary Judgment [19] is GRANTED in
    full. The Defendant, Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Co.’s, Motion
    for Partial Summary Judgment on Damages [20] is DENIED.
    Judgment is entered in favor of the Plaintiff and against the De-
    fendant. Case closed.
    No. 17-2712                                                   3
    A judgment providing that “[j]udgment is entered” is circu-
    lar. Judgments under Fed. R. Civ. P. 58 must provide the re-
    lief to which the prevailing party is entitled. See, e.g., Cooke
    v. Jackson National Life Insurance Co., 
    882 F.3d 630
    (7th Cir.
    2018) (collecting authority). This document does not do so.
    Judgments must not recite the pleadings and other papers
    that led to the decision. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(a). So this
    judgment omits what must be included and includes what
    must be omitted.
    We dismissed the appeal in Cooke, where a similar docu-
    ment had been entered, because the district judge had yet to
    decide how much the defendant must pay. In this case the
    judge’s     opinion     contains  the    principal    amount
    ($4,594,933.85) plus a formula (9% per annum) for determin-
    ing interest. The judge called this post-judgment interest,
    
    2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 124374
    at *35, by which he apparently
    meant post the state judgment of July 28, 2014. The process of
    adding interest should be sufficiently mechanical that the
    parties can agree on what Liberty Mutual owes under the
    district court’s decision.
    The judge’s opinion and the “Case closed” line in the
    judgment show that the district court is done with this litiga-
    tion. This makes the decision appealable notwithstanding
    the lack of a judgment conforming to Rules 54(a) and 58.
    Bankers Trust Co. v. Mallis, 
    435 U.S. 381
    (1978), permits an
    appeal when the case is over but the court has failed to enter
    a proper judgment. So we have jurisdiction—but once again
    we urge district courts to comply with these rules. “Courts
    enforce the requirement of procedural regularity on others,
    and must follow those requirements themselves.” Hol-
    lingsworth v. Perry, 
    558 U.S. 183
    , 184 (2010).
    4                                                            No. 17-2712
    Having appellate jurisdiction, we now must ask whether
    the district court had subject-matter jurisdiction, a question
    that the judge and the parties alike ignored. Jurisdiction de-
    pends on diversity of citizenship, and until oral argument of
    this appeal everyone had assumed that the citizenships of
    Monteil Hyland (Illinois) and Liberty Mutual (Massachusetts
    and Wisconsin) were all that mattered. (Shannon Hyland’s
    citizenship is irrelevant under 28 U.S.C. §1332(c)(2).) But 28
    U.S.C. §1332(c)(1) contains a special rule for suits against in-
    surers:
    in any direct action against the insurer of a policy or contract of
    liability insurance … to which action the insured is not joined as
    a party-defendant, such insurer shall be deemed a citizen of—
    (A) every State and foreign state of which the insured is a cit-
    izen;
    (B) every State and foreign state by which the insurer has
    been incorporated; and
    (C) the State or foreign state where the insurer has its princi-
    pal place of business[.]
    Perkins, Risby, and Smith, all arguably among the insureds,
    have not been joined as defendants, and as all three appear
    to be citizens of Illinois complete diversity is missing if this
    suit is a “direct action against the insurer” within the scope
    of paragraph (c)(1).
    Because Liberty Mutual is the only defendant, and Hy-
    land seeks money directly from it, it is tempting to call this
    suit a “direct action” and order its dismissal. But because the
    original state suit named as the defendant Smith, who might
    have called on Liberty Mutual for defense and indemnity
    (though she never did), things are not so easy. Hyland sues
    as Smith’s assignee, and a dispute between Smith and Liber-
    No. 17-2712                                                   5
    ty Mutual about its obligations to Smith would not be a di-
    rect action as insurance law uses that term.
    In 1964, when this part of paragraph (c)(1) was enacted,
    two states (Louisiana and Wisconsin) allowed what they
    called “direct actions” against insurers. These states permit-
    ted people who sought damages to sue the alleged wrong-
    doers’ insurers, bypassing the need to get a judgment
    against the supposed tortfeasor. The other 48 states insisted
    that plaintiffs sue the supposed wrongdoers. See Donald T.
    Weckstein, The 1964 Diversity Amendment: Congressional Indi-
    rect Action Against State “Direct Action” Laws, 
    1965 Wis. L
    .
    Rev. 268, 269–70. Some permitted plaintiffs to add insurers
    as additional defendants, while other states not only forbade
    this but also prohibited juries from learning whether a de-
    fendant had insurance. See Steven Plitt, et al., 7A Couch on
    Insurance §104:13 (3d ed. 2013).
    Justice Frankfurter was among those who noticed that
    the approach taken in Louisiana and Wisconsin allowed suit
    against an insurer under the diversity jurisdiction, even
    though both the injured party and the asserted injurer were
    citizens of the same state. He called for a legislative fix. See
    Lumbermen’s Mutual Casualty Co. v. Elbert, 
    348 U.S. 48
    , 56
    (1954) (concurring opinion). The Wright and Miller treatise
    is among many sources understanding the enactment of
    paragraph (c)(1) as a response to that suggestion. Charles
    Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Edward H. Cooper,
    13F Federal Practice & Procedure §3629 (3d ed. 2009).
    As far as we have been able to find, in 1964 no one
    knowledgeable about insurance law would have used the
    phrase “direct action” to mean anything other than a suit, by
    the purported victim of a tort, that omitted the supposed
    6                                                  No. 17-2712
    tortfeasor as a defendant. It is always possible that legisla-
    tors and the President used the phrase “direct action” more
    colloquially to include every suit in which an insurance
    company is the only defendant, but no contemporaneous ev-
    idence supports that reading.
    Since 1964 thousands of suits in which an insurer is the
    sole defendant—often suits among insurers seeking to allo-
    cate liability between primary and excess layers of cover-
    age—have been adjudicated without anyone thinking the
    practice incompatible with paragraph (c)(1). Many decisions
    hold that suits based on the insurer’s liability for its own
    conduct are not “direct actions” that fall under §1332(c)(1).
    See, e.g., Velez v. Crown Life Insurance Co., 
    599 F.2d 471
    , 473
    (1st Cir. 1979); Rosa v. Allstate Insurance Co., 
    981 F.2d 669
    ,
    674–75 (2d Cir. 1992); Beckham v. Safeco Insurance Co., 
    691 F.2d 898
    , 902 (9th Cir. 1982).
    Surprisingly, however, only one precedential appellate
    decision has addressed the question whether a suit following
    assignment of an insured’s claim against the insurer is a
    statutory “direct action.” Kong v. Allied Professional Insurance
    Co., 
    750 F.3d 1295
    , 1299–1301 (11th Cir. 2014), holds that it is
    not. We agree with both the reasoning and the conclusion of
    that decision. Because Hyland obtained a judgment against
    Smith and sues only as her assignee, this suit is unaffected
    by paragraph (c)(1). Complete diversity of citizenship exists,
    and the amount in controversy comfortably exceeds $75,000.
    Although the controversy exceeds $75,000, the judgment
    should not have exceeded $25,000. That’s the maximum Lib-
    erty Mutual promised to pay and all Smith lost when the in-
    surer declined to defend or indemnify.
    No. 17-2712                                                   7
    The district court gave two reasons for awarding Hyland
    more than the policy limit. One is that, under Illinois law, an
    insurer that fails to defend or seek a declaratory judgment is
    estopped to assert any policy defense. 
    2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 124374
    at *18–25. Relying principally on Clemmons v. Travel-
    ers Insurance Co., 
    88 Ill. 2d 469
    (1981), the district court saw
    the maximum indemnity as just another defense that the in-
    surer cannot assert. The second theory is that any damages
    proximately caused by an insurer’s neglect are recoverable,
    without regard to the policy limit. 
    2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 124374
    at *25–35. Here the court relied principally on Conway
    v. Country Casualty Insurance Co., 
    92 Ill. 2d 388
    (1982), and
    Delatorre v. Safeway Insurance Co., 
    2013 IL App (1st) 120852
    .
    In this court Hyland disclaims the estoppel theory, recogniz-
    ing that Clemmons has nothing to say about the circumstanc-
    es under which a judgment may exceed the policy’s limit.
    But Hyland defends the proximate-cause approach.
    Liberty Mutual insists that Illinois law limits damages to
    the policy limit, plus a maximum of $60,000 extra if the
    plaintiff shows that the refusal to defend or indemnify arose
    from bad faith. See 215 ILCS 5/155. It quotes this passage
    from Conway: a “mere failure to defend does not, in the ab-
    sence of bad faith, render the insurer liable for [the] amount
    of the judgment in excess of the policy 
    limits.” 92 Ill. 2d at 397
    . As Liberty Mutual sees things, bad faith and injury
    proximately caused by the insurer’s conduct are both neces-
    sary for a judgment to exceed the policy limit; proof of one
    but not the other won’t do. And the insurer adds that Hy-
    land has never alleged—and the district judge did not find—
    that it acted in bad faith. Smith was neither a named insured
    nor a member of Perkins’s family, and Hyland’s state-court
    complaint did not allege that Smith had Risby’s permission
    8                                                   No. 17-2712
    to drive the car. Because an insurer’s responsibilities under
    Illinois law depend on whether the complaint as drafted ar-
    guably comes within the policy’s coverage, see U.S. Fidelity
    & Guaranty Co. v. Wilkin Insulation Co., 
    144 Ill. 2d 64
    , 73
    (1991), it would not be possible to say that an insurer dis-
    plays bad faith by not defending when the complaint omits a
    fact (Risby’s consent) essential to the policy’s coverage.
    What’s more, Smith never asked Liberty Mutual to defend
    her. If Liberty Mutual is right that bad faith (or some equiva-
    lent, such as fraud) is essential to any award exceeding a pol-
    icy’s limit, then recovery is capped at $25,000.
    Hyland observes that Conway said that “damages for a
    breach of the duty to defend are … measured by the conse-
    quences proximately caused by the 
    breach.” 92 Ill. 2d at 397
    –
    98. This language does not directly address the insurer’s con-
    tention that both bad faith and proximate cause are essential.
    Liberty Mutual maintains that Cramer v. Insurance Exchange
    Agency, 
    174 Ill. 2d 513
    (1996), reinforces its view that Illinois
    requires bad faith plus proximate cause. For her part, Hyland
    does not so much as cite Cramer.
    We are reluctant to get into this dispute about the mean-
    ing of Illinois insurance law, for we lack the remit to supply
    an authoritative answer. It is enough for current purposes to
    say that, even if proximate cause by itself suffices, Hyland
    has not shown how the insurer’s conduct could have caused
    Smith any loss exceeding $25,000—and recall that Hyland is
    Smith’s assignee, so only Smith’s injury matters.
    The best situation for Smith would have been Liberty
    Mutual’s provision of a defense lawyer plus the tender of the
    policy limit toward a settlement or judgment. Then Smith
    would have been at least $25,000 to the good. A tender of
    No. 17-2712                                                  9
    cash would have been unlikely compared with a reservation
    of rights to decline indemnity later, but let us make condi-
    tions as favorable to Smith as they could be.
    The provision of a lawyer to defend Smith would have
    been valuable to her, independent of a policy-limit tender,
    only if a vigorous defense might have defeated Hyland’s
    claim or at least held damages under $4.6 million. Yet Hy-
    land has not argued in this court—and the district judge did
    not find—that either outcome was plausible. Smith had a re-
    stricted license, see 625 ILCS 5/6-113, yet was behind the
    wheel after the 11 p.m. curfew to which Illinois subjects 16-
    year-old drivers. 625 ILCS 5/6-110(a-1). Smith had too many
    passengers (the limit is one person under 20, 625 ILCS 5/6-
    107(g)), crashed into two parked cars at high speed, and was
    criminally convicted for her behavior. Smith’s liability was
    too clear for argument; counsel could not have hoped to de-
    feat Hyland’s suit. There was no difference between what
    counsel could have achieved and what actually happened (a
    default judgment when Smith did not defend herself).
    As for damages: the state judge awarded Hyland the
    amount that she proved after the default was declared. Hy-
    land has not argued that she asked for too much and pulled
    the wool over the state judge’s eyes. She’s in no position to
    contend that Liberty Mutual must pay her $4.6 million pre-
    cisely because that sum represents more money than her en-
    titlement—and she does not say anything of the sort. Nor
    does she offer any alternative. She does not contend, for ex-
    ample, that a vigorous defense could have held damages to,
    say, $2 million, and that $2.6 million (the $4.6 million award-
    ed less $2 million that should have been awarded) thus is the
    loss, from Smith’s perspective, proximately caused by the
    10                                                  No. 17-2712
    lack of a defense. Instead Hyland wants the whole $4.6 mil-
    lion, which is proper only if it is the right judgment—and
    thus not proximately caused by the absence of a lawyer dis-
    patched by Liberty Mutual to defend Smith.
    If Smith had a plausible defense, either to liability or to
    the amount of Hyland’s claim, then the insurer’s failure to
    send a lawyer to help Smith make those arguments could be
    seen as a proximate cause of the state-court judgment. But
    some judgment against Smith was inevitable and the
    amount of the judgment must be taken as justified. Hyland
    has not argued otherwise. The maximum loss caused by the
    failure to defend thus is $25,000, and the award in this suit
    cannot exceed that sum.
    Liberty Mutual is not satisfied with this conclusion. It al-
    so maintains that it does not owe interest on even the
    $25,000. That’s wrong. Illinois provides for post-judgment
    interest at 9% per annum. 735 ILCS 5/2-1303. The district
    judge found that Liberty Mutual should have paid the
    judgment against Smith in July 2014, and Liberty Mutual
    does not contest that decision to the extent that the principal
    obligation is capped at $25,000. Thus Smith’s substantive en-
    titlement, as a matter of Illinois law, is $25,000 plus interest
    from July 2014. This is what Hyland now holds by assign-
    ment. That the insurer later offered to pay $25,000 is irrele-
    vant; §5/2-1303 provides that interest stops only with tender
    of payment. (Liberty Mutual’s reliance on the policy’s lan-
    guage does not help it, because the policy limits interest only
    in suits that Liberty Mutual defended.) And Liberty Mutual
    does not contend that interest after the date of the federal
    judgment should run at the federal post-judgment rate ra-
    ther than the state post-judgment rate; we do not decide
    No. 17-2712                                             11
    whether a change from one rate to the other would be ap-
    propriate.
    The judgment is vacated, and the case is remanded for
    the entry of a judgment for $25,000 plus interest at 9% per
    annum from July 28, 2014, until the date of payment.