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U.S. Sur. Co. v. Stevens Family Ltd.
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE
Michael Joseph Dudek, Stephanie M. Keddy, Thomas Scott Leo, Leo & Weber, P.C., Chicago, IL, for Plaintiff.
Karl W. Roth, William P. Foley, Roth Law Group LLC, Chicago, IL, for Defendants.
Defendants Stevens Family Limited Partnership, Thomas Stevens, Lillia Stevens, Matthew S. Stevens and Edna M. Howard (collectively “Indemnitors” 1) have filed their Second Amended Answer & Affirmative Defenses (“ADs”) to Surety's First Amended Complaint (“FAC”) that seeks their performance of collateralization and indemnification.2 Most recently Surety has moved to strike the ADs, and that motion has been fully briefed by the parties and is ripe for decision. For that purpose this opinion will draw upon, without any need to repeat, this Court's statement of the background facts and its analysis of the Agreement and of the parties' rights and obligations in its November 26, 2012 memorandum opinion and order (“Opinion,” 905 F.Supp.2d 8543).
Before this second opinion turns to substantive issues, something needs to be said about a purported fundamental premise that Indemnitors' counsel impermissibly advance on their clients' behalf. It is inexplicable (and frankly inexcusable) for any lawyers who devote any part of their practice to federal court litigation to continue to cite the now discredited formulation in Conley v. Gibson, 355 U.S. 41, 45–46, 78 S.Ct. 99, 2 L.Ed.2d 80 (1957)—see defendants' Response at 5—as the standard for federal pleadings. Nearly seven years have elapsed since the Supreme Court held in Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 562–63, 127 S.Ct. 1955, 167 L.Ed.2d 929 (2007) that the Conley v. Gibson formulation was overly generous and had outlived its usefulness—and as every federal practitioner must know, two years later Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678, 129 S.Ct. 1937, 173 L.Ed.2d 868 (2009) repeated and reinforced Twombly's addition of the requirement of “plausibility” to federal pleadings. Counsel ought to realize that such citation of overruled authority can cast a cloud on their general credibility.
That aside, however, when indemnitors' ADs are scrutinized through the proper lens of plausibility, they clearly fail to survive. Opinion at 858 explains that California law provides the substantive rules of decision here. And California law recognizes the reality that a surety that puts up its own major money commitment through a bond is entitled to define and enforce the remedies specified in its agreement with the indemnitors on whose liabilities it has had to make good—a relationship inherently different from that created by the issuance of an insurance contract (see the extended—and extensive—analysis in Cates Constr., Inc. v. Talbot Partners, 21 Cal.4th 28, 86 Cal.Rptr.2d 855, 980 P.2d 407, 418–25 (1999)). Indeed, the intermediate appellate California decision on which Indemnitors seek to place their principal reliance—Arntz Contracting Co. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 47 Cal.App.4th 464, 54 Cal.Rptr.2d 888, 899 (1996), decided three years before Cates—also held that quite unlike the obligation of an insurer to its insured, a surety is not required to give a heightened degree of consideration to the interests of its indemnitor—there is no fiduciary-like special relationship between those parties.4
In this instance Agreement ¶ 3.1 is unambiguous in vesting sole and unequivocal discretion in Surety as to such enforcement:
Surety shall have the right in its sole and absolute discretion to determine whether any claims under any Bond or Bonds shall be paid, compromised, adjusted, defended, prosecuted or appealed.
So both Cates and Arntz () uniformly reject the position that Indemnitors try to promote here.
Indemnitors are not alone in having placed their bet on Arntz as the asserted authority supporting their ADs 1 and 2, each of which asserts that Surety should have undertaken a different course of action other than making good on a bond claim by paying $440,000 in settlement—and consequently asserts that Surety's handling of the matter amounted to a failure to mitigate its damages.5 Just as Indemnitors seek to call Arntz to their aid by thrusting a fiduciary-like obligation on Surety, that same approach was advanced by defendant Highland Partnership, Inc. (“Highland”) in a recent California District Court case, Travelers Cas. & Surety Co. of Am. v. Highland P'ship, Inc., 2012 WL 5928139 (S.D.Cal. Nov. 26, 2012).
In Highland P'ship the District Court flatly rejected that position, and the analysis there applies with equal force here.6 Moreover, Highland P'ship (like this case) dealt with claims settled by the surety (there Travelers) on which Highland (there the indemnitor, like Indemnitors here) sought to second guess its surety on grounds comparable to those asserted in Indemnitors' ADs here.
Thus, after torpedoing the contention that a surety's obligation equates to that of an insurer for purposes of evaluating the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing (Highland P'ship at *5), the Highland P'ship court went onto analyze that implied covenant in its application to surety agreements ( id. at *6) and, after quoting the language of the contract there that—just like the one here—vested “sole discretion” in the surety, that court concluded ( id. at *7):
Pursuant to this paragraph, Travelers argues it was given the authority to settle claims against it in its sole discretion, and any determination made by Travelers was to be binding and conclusive upon Defendants. The only precautionary language in the paragraph states that Travelers should be indemnified for all loss it believed as “necessary or expedient.” However, even this precautionary language allows Travelers to settle claims it deemed necessary or expedient, not both. See AIU Ins. Co. v. Super. Ct. (1990) 51 Cal.3d 807, 821, 274 Cal.Rptr. 820, 799 P.2d 1253 (). Thus, because all parties to the Indemnity Agreement are sophisticated business people, and the Court will not rewrite the parties contract after the fact to facilitate a different result, the Court finds the implied covenant conflicts with the parties explicit agreement. See, e.g., Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's of London v. Super. Ct. (2001) 24 Cal.4th 945, 968, 103 Cal.Rptr.2d 672, 16 P.3d 94 ().7
After that discussion, which as already stated applies to this case with at least equal force, Highland P'ship went on to discuss the claims that Travelers as surety had paid, and it then cited Arntz and other California caselaw as holding “[t]o successfully establish a bad faith defense, an indemnitee, such as Defendants, must prove that the surety engaged in ‘objectively unreasonable conduct’ in handling its obligations under the indemnity agreement” ...
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