Bankruptcy Lake v. General Star , 200 F.3d 479 ( 2000 )


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  • In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    No. 99-1321
    BANKRUPTCY ESTATE OF LAKE GENEVA SUGAR
    SHACK, INCORPORATED, a Wisconsin corporation,
    and BANKRUPTCY ESTATE OF DANA MONTANA,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    GENERAL STAR INDEMNITY COMPANY,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Wisconsin.
    No. 91 C 163--Lynn Adelman, Judge.
    Argued November 4, 1999--Decided January 11, 2000
    Before MANION, KANNE, and EVANS, Circuit Judges.
    EVANS, Circuit Judge. This is a diversity case
    based on the Wisconsin tort of bad faith in
    denying insurance coverage. The district court
    granted the motion of the General Star Indemnity
    Company (GenStar) for summary judgment and
    dismissed the case on the basis of claim
    preclusion. Bankruptcy Estate of Lake Geneva
    Sugar Shack, Inc. v. General Star Indemnity Co.,
    
    32 F. Supp. 2d 1059
    (E.D. Wis. 1999). The issue
    before us is whether this action is barred by a
    judgment in a case brought by the insurer in
    Walworth County, Wisconsin, a case in which
    counterclaims were filed, including one for
    breach of the contract.
    The Lake Geneva Sugar Shack, Inc. is a
    Wisconsin corporation that operated the Sugar
    Shack nightclub in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. Dana
    Montana was the sole shareholder and principal
    officer of the corporation. The Sugar Shack
    purchased insurance from General Star in July
    1989. In February 1990 a fire substantially
    damaged the building, and within 24 hours GenStar
    announced that it intended to deny coverage
    because it concluded that Montana was somehow
    involved in starting the fire. GenStar suspected
    that Montana had a financial motive to burn the
    building and it ordered a financial background
    check, which confirmed that the building was
    mortgaged and that the mortgage was cross-
    collateralized with other properties, including
    Montana’s home. As a result of GenStar’s advising
    the mortgage company that Montana set the fire,
    Montana lost a refinancing of her properties
    which had been approved. The building was
    demolished and the mortgagee foreclosed on her
    other properties, which were worth $3.327
    million.
    But GenStar did not formally deny coverage
    until after 11 months of investigation. During
    that time, which Montana contends was dragged out
    in an attempt to deplete her financial resources,
    GenStar refused to reinstate coverage and refused
    to refund her premiums.
    GenStar brought a declaratory judgment action
    against the Sugar Shack and Montana in the
    Walworth County circuit court, seeking to
    dissolve the insurance agreement. GenStar accused
    Montana of fraud, breach of the policy agreement,
    and other dastardly deeds. Sugar Shack and
    Montana then filed the present action in federal
    court, alleging claims of breach of contract and
    bad faith. The late Judge Robert W. Warren, to
    whom the case was assigned, stayed the federal
    action pending resolution of the state court
    case. In granting the stay request, Judge Warren
    said:
    If the court stays the action, it will be able
    to rely on the state court’s findings of fact
    instead of eliciting the facts contemporaneously
    alongside the state court in two separate
    proceedings. Any state court finding will reduce
    the amount of litigation in a parallel federal
    matter. If Montana prevails, she will not only be
    able to have her day in court, but she will be
    leveraged into a better bargaining position if
    she chooses to settle out of court. If General
    Star prevails, Montana’s claim will be mooted
    without both parties having to go through another
    expensive, time-consuming procedure.
    After the stay was entered, Montana (from here
    on, we will often refer to the plaintiffs simply
    as Montana) attempted to obtain a stipulation to
    consolidate all of her claims in the federal
    action with the Walworth County action. GenStar
    refused to consolidate the bad faith claim but
    agreed to consolidate the vicarious liability and
    breach of contract claims. The stipulation as to
    the latter claims was entered.
    In January 1994 Judge Warren inquired into the
    status of the federal action. GenStar responded,
    in writing, as follows:
    As all matters that were initially embraced in
    the federal court action have been embraced in
    the state court action, I see no reason why the
    federal court action can not simply be dismissed.
    Montana did not agree, and she wrote this letter
    to Judge Warren:
    In no event, should this matter be dismissed as
    the Walworth County action does not contain the
    same causes of action as this case. . . . A
    dismissal of this action would seriously
    prejudice the plaintiffs’ rights because it would
    create statute of limitations problems for the
    causes of action pled in this case that were not
    contained in the Walworth County case.
    Specifically, the plaintiffs’ Complaint contains
    a cause of action for bad faith which has never
    been alleged in the Walworth County case.
    Judge Warren responded by closing the case
    administratively/1 but saying:
    Nothing herein should be considered a dismissal
    or disposition of this matter, however, and
    either party may reopen the case at any time by
    advising the court and opposing counsel in
    writing that further proceedings are desired.
    On January 11, 1994, Montana’s attorney,
    Christopher Hale, appeared in Walworth County
    court and said he was considering bringing a
    motion to assert a bad faith claim in that court.
    GenStar contends that Hale expressly acknowledged
    at the January hearing the risk of his bad faith
    claim being barred by claim preclusion if he did
    not file it in Walworth County. But Montana
    contends that Hale was only concerned about the
    statute of limitations. Montana has the better of
    this dispute, both on the record and because of
    the principle that for purposes of summary
    judgment, disputes of fact are resolved in favor
    of the nonmovant. The transcript shows:
    THE COURT: Well, first of all, Bad Faith
    wouldn’t be an issue in this case, would it? It
    would come after a decision is rendered in the
    case it would seem to me. In other words, you’ve
    got a new lawsuit. Question arises whether his
    objection to the statute or not would survive--
    that would--I can’t see how that issue would come
    up here until it was a judgment in this case.
    MR. HALE: I think the law is, your Honor, and
    Mr. Baxter will correct me, that when facts
    giving rise to evidence that there was not a
    reasonable basis at the time of the denial of
    coverage that at that point in time your cause of
    action for Bad Faith accrues and you have two
    years to bring it and I think the case law has
    Bad Faith claims in trials like this where they
    are tried together with the arson case itself.
    Hale was clearly discussing the statute of
    limitations, not claim preclusion.
    Sugar Shack and Montana filed for bankruptcy in
    September 1994, which automatically stayed the
    Walworth County case. GenStar moved to lift the
    stay. Montana wanted to consolidate the Walworth
    County coverage claim with the federal bad faith
    claim under 28 U.S.C. sec. 1452(a), providing for
    removal of claims related to bankruptcy cases.
    However, instead, the bankruptcy court lifted the
    stay; plaintiffs appealed again, arguing for one
    forum, the federal forum. On appeal to the
    district court, GenStar again opposed the
    request, saying:
    As set forth in the Decision . . . Judge Warren
    realized the state law nature of those claims,
    and stayed further proceedings in the Federal
    Court Action until conclusion of the Walworth
    County Action. At that time, Appellants could
    proceed with the Federal Court Action and
    adjudicate their bad faith claim.
    . . . .
    . . . The Walworth County Action is the best
    forum for resolution of all claims other than the
    bad faith claim and the bad faith claim should be
    litigated in the Federal Court Action after
    completion of the Walworth County Action.
    Judge John W. Reynolds, to whom the bankruptcy
    appeal was assigned, said:
    If General wins in state court, obviously there
    is no bad faith claim. If General loses, issue
    preclusion will prevent General from relitigating
    most issues in the bad faith claim. The trustees
    would have a stronger case if claim preclusion
    and a final resolution of the state case would
    bar the federal action, thereby denying the
    trustees the right to ever raise the bad faith
    claim. Because the trustees have not raised this
    issue, the court assumes it is not a problem.
    After a 2-week trial in Walworth County, a jury
    found that GenStar breached the contract and
    awarded Montana and Sugar Shack $260,000 in
    insurance coverage damages and $3.327 million in
    consequential damages. The state trial judge, on
    motions after verdict, set aside both awards. The
    Wisconsin Court of Appeals affirmed in part and
    reversed in part, reinstating the $260,000 coverage
    award.
    Montana and Sugar Shack then sought to reopen
    and restore this case to the court’s active
    docket so they could pursue their bad faith
    claim. By letter dated March 9, 1998, Judge Lynn
    Adelman, to whom the case had now been assigned,
    raised the question of claim preclusion on his
    own motion and ordered briefing on the issue.
    Seizing the moment, GenStar moved for summary
    judgment, claiming that the case was in fact
    barred. Finding no controlling Wisconsin law on
    the issue before him, the judge conducted a
    general, Restatement-based, analysis of claim
    preclusion law as he predicted the Wisconsin
    courts would do in this situation. He then
    granted GenStar’s motion for summary judgment and
    dismissed the case. Sugar Shack and Montana
    appeal.
    We disagree with the conclusion that Wisconsin
    law offers too little guidance on this issue.
    Because existing snippets of Wisconsin law offer
    strong hints of how Wisconsin courts would view
    these facts, we cannot agree with the district
    court. Furthermore, even under a purely legal
    analysis of the issue as one of first impression
    in Wisconsin (such as the district judge
    conducted), the facts lead us to a conclusion
    contrary to the one reached in the district
    court.
    It can hardly be disputed that everyone assumed
    all along that the bad faith claim could proceed
    in federal court after the trial was completed on
    the other issues pending in state court. There
    was no issue of judicial economy and no way to
    avoid two trials. Even had the bad faith claim
    been filed in Walworth County, the state court
    judge stated that he would have tried that claim
    separately from the rest of the case. That suited
    GenStar, which quite naturally wanted bad faith
    issues kept out of the first trial. More than
    likely, GenStar was not very concerned all along
    with the stayed federal case because it thought
    it would win in Walworth County and the bad faith
    case would go away. Although GenStar tried to get
    rid of the bad faith suit when it incorrectly
    told Judge Warren that there was nothing left of
    the federal case, it did not object when he
    declined to dismiss the case. Plus, on more than
    one occasion, GenStar specifically acknowledged
    that the federal case could proceed after the
    state case was over.
    At least two Wisconsin cases strongly suggest
    that in this situation, Wisconsin courts would
    not be offended by the existence of an action
    based on the tort of bad faith and a separate
    action regarding coverage issues. That is what
    happened in Heyden v. Safeco Title Insurance
    Company, 
    175 Wis. 2d 508
    , 
    498 N.W.2d 905
    (Wis.
    App. 1993), overruled on other grounds, Weiss v.
    United Fire, 
    197 Wis. 2d 365
    , 
    541 N.W.2d 753
    (1995). Prior to the 1993 decision in Heyden, the
    court of appeals had issued (in 1989) an
    unpublished order which concerned precisely the
    issue before us. Even though the unpublished
    order is not controlling precedent (see sec.
    809.23(3) Wisconsin Statutes) there is no
    impediment to noting what the court of appeals
    said in the published decision about its holding
    in the unpublished order:
    [O]ur November 20, 1989, order, which is the law
    of this case, made it clear that I.W.S.’s "bad
    faith" action against Safeco is not barred by the
    earlier breach-of-contract action.
    At 520. Further, in a footnote, the court said:
    On November 20, 1989, this court summarily
    reversed the judgment of dismissal, holding that
    the breach-of-contract claim and the bad-faith
    claim "each arose from a separate transaction"
    for res judicata purposes.
    N.2, at 515. What we learn from Heyden, then, is
    that in at least one instance a bad faith claim
    was not barred by a prior breach of contract
    action. When we are predicting the course of
    Wisconsin law, clues like these indicate to us
    that Wisconsin courts might very well be willing
    to allow Montana’s bad faith claim to proceed.
    The second case is Davis v. American Family
    Mutual Insurance Company, 
    212 Wis. 2d 382
    , 
    569 N.W.2d 64
    (Wis. App. 1997), in which the insured
    was injured in a one-vehicle accident in Hennepin
    County, Minnesota, in a vehicle driven by an
    underinsured motorist. Davis settled with the
    driver (for less than the inadequate policy
    limits) and then claimed underinsured motorist
    benefits from his insurance company, American
    Family. American Family denied the claim and
    Davis sued in Minnesota, which allows an insured
    to sue for underinsured motorist benefits after
    the acceptance of a settlement for less than the
    policy limits of the underinsured motorist. Davis
    won. He then filed a bad faith action against
    American Family in Wisconsin. American Family
    moved to transfer the case to Minnesota; the
    Wisconsin judge granted the motion and said that
    to the extent claim is unavailable in Minnesota,
    he presumably would allow the parties to proceed.
    The Hennepin County court dismissed the case
    because Minnesota does not recognize a tort of
    bad faith. Back in Wisconsin, American Family
    moved for summary judgment on res judicata
    principles. The court granted the motion and
    Davis appealed. The court of appeals rejected the
    argument. Davis, even though he seemed clearly to
    be forum shopping, was allowed to proceed with
    his bad faith claim. In finding that the suit was
    not barred, the court relied heavily on what the
    trial judge said he would do:
    Davis argues that claim preclusion is
    inapplicable to this case. We agree. As a matter
    of law, claim preclusion does not apply when the
    plaintiff accepts the trial court’s invitation to
    file his claim elsewhere. Schneider v. Mistele,
    
    39 Wis. 2d 137
    , 
    158 N.W.2d 383
    (1968). "[A] prior
    judgment is not res adjudicata or an estoppel bar
    as to any matter which the court in the earlier
    case expressly refused to submit to the jury and
    expressly directed should be litigated in another
    forum, or in another action." 
    Id. at 141,
    158
    N.W.2d at 385 (footnote omitted). Here, the trial
    court granted a stay so that Davis’ bad faith
    claim could be tried in Minnesota, and ordered
    that "[t]o the extent that the claim and
    prosecution are unavailable in Minnesota, this
    court would retain jurisdiction and allow the
    parties to pursue action in this Court for
    ultimate determination." We conclude that the
    trial court’s order granting the stay but
    permitting Davis to return with his bad faith
    claim to Wisconsin prevents the application of
    claim preclusion to bar Davis’ bad faith claim.
    The situation bears a strong similarity to what
    happened in the present case.
    We think Wisconsin courts would look to the
    procedural history of Montana’s case, to what the
    judges and the parties said and assumed, and
    determine that, at least under these peculiar
    facts, the bad faith case is not barred.
    Our conclusion is consistent with the long-
    standing view of the Wisconsin courts that a
    breach of contract claim and a bad faith claim
    are separate claims. See Anderson v. Continental
    Ins. Co., 
    85 Wis. 2d 675
    , 
    271 N.W.2d 368
    (1978).
    In fact, in Warmka v. Hartland Cicero Mutual
    Insurance Company, 
    136 Wis. 2d 31
    , 
    400 N.W.2d 923
    (1987), the court said that the bad faith claim
    is not based on the policy (as is the breach of
    contract claim, of course) but grows out of a
    breach of a duty to properly investigate a claim.
    While these cases are not dispositive on the
    claim preclusion issue, taken together with
    Heyden and Davis they further bolster our belief
    that Wisconsin courts--at least in the odd
    circumstances of this case--would allow the bad
    faith claim to proceed.
    We hesitate to say more because the procedural
    facts before us make this a poor case in which to
    proclaim general principles of law. Particularly,
    it is not a good case for the federal courts to
    make unnecessary predictions about the future of
    Wisconsin law. That said, we will comment only
    briefly on the effect of the Restatement (Second)
    on Judgments (1982).
    In the absence of what it perceived to be a
    clear statement of Wisconsin law, the district
    court turned to the Restatement (Second) of
    Judgments (1982) to analyze whether the bad faith
    claim should be allowed to proceed. Determining
    that Wisconsin follows a transaction approach,
    the district court proceeded to look to the
    Wisconsin rule on counterclaims. Although it
    recognized that the Wisconsin rule generally
    provides for permissive counterclaims,/2 the
    court concluded that the permissive counterclaim
    rule did not answer the question whether a
    defendant may split its counterclaims, as Montana
    did here by bringing some in Walworth County and
    maintaining the bad faith claim in federal court.
    It is at this point that the analysis was guided
    by the Restatement, which says in the comment to
    sec. 21 that a defendant who interposes a
    counterclaim is in effect a plaintiff to whom the
    rules of merger apply--which means that a party
    who obtains a judgment cannot bring a separate
    action on any part of the original claim because
    the original claim is merged into the judgment.
    sec. 18(1). The district court then concluded
    that a defendant who obtains a judgment on a
    counterclaim is foreclosed from recovering on
    other counterclaims arising out of the same
    transaction.
    At best, we think the district court’s analysis
    stops one step short of the finish line. The
    Restatement also sets out exceptions to the general
    rule against splitting counterclaims in sec. 26.
    The Comment to that section notes that splitting is
    not prohibited when the opposing party consents to
    or acquiesces in the splitting. We will quote at
    length:
    (a) Consent to or acquiescence in splitting
    (Subsection (1)(a)). A main purpose of the
    general rule stated in sec. 24 is to protect the
    defendant from being harassed by repetitive
    actions based on the same claim. The rule is thus
    not applicable where the defendant consents, in
    express words or otherwise, to the splitting of
    the claim.
    The parties to a pending action may agree that
    some part of the claim shall be withdrawn from
    the action with the understanding that the
    plaintiff shall not be precluded from
    subsequently maintaining an action based upon it.
    The agreement will normally be given effect. Or
    there may be an effective agreement, before an
    action is commenced, to litigate a part of a
    claim in that action but to reserve the rest of
    the claim for another action. So also the parties
    may enter into an agreement, not directed to a
    particular contemplated action, which may have
    the effect of preserving a claim that might
    otherwise be superseded by a judgment, for
    example, a clause included routinely in
    separation agreements between husband and wife
    providing that the terms of the separation
    agreement shall not be invalidated or otherwise
    affected by a judgment of divorce and that those
    terms shall survive such a judgment.
    Where the plaintiff is simultaneously
    maintaining separate actions based upon parts of
    the same claim, and in neither action does the
    defendant make the objection that another action
    is pending based on the same claim, judgment in
    one of the actions does not preclude the
    plaintiff from proceeding and obtaining judgment
    in the other action. The failure of the defendant
    to object to the splitting of the plaintiff’s
    claim is effective as an acquiescence in the
    splitting of the claim.
    The record shows that GenStar clearly acquiesced
    in--and in fact encouraged--the splitting of
    Montana’s claim. Even under an analysis based on
    the Restatement, Montana must be allowed to
    proceed with her bad faith claim.
    The judgment of the district court is
    REVERSED and REMANDED.
    /1 A device which permits a district court to remove
    a case like this from its active docket and thus
    relieve the court from reporting on its status at
    periodic intervals.
    /2 For an exception, see A.B.C.G. Enterprises, Inc.
    v. First Bank Southeast, 
    184 Wis. 2d 465
    , 
    515 N.W.2d 904
    (1994).