Contents    Prev    Next    Last



            Title MBIA Insurance Corporation v. PNC Bank, N.A.

 

            Date 2005

            By Alito

            Subject Misc

                

 Contents

 

 

Page 1





LEXSEE 2005 US APP LEXIS 21392


MBIA INSURANCE CORPORATION; WELLS FARGO BANK MINNESOTA, N.A., as Trustee of SFC Grantor Trust, Series 2000-1, SFC Grantor Trust, Series 2000-2, SFC Grantor Trust, Series 2000-3, SFC Grantor Trust, Series 2000-4, SFC Grantor Trust, Series 2001-1, SFC Grantor Trust 2001-2, SFC Owner Trust 2001-I and SFC Grantor Trust, Series 2001-3 v. ROYAL INDEMNITY COMPANY, Appellant, No. 03-4382 v. ROYAL INDEMNITY COMPANY, Third-Party Plaintiff v. PNC BANK, N.A.; STUDENT LOAN SERVICING LLC; ANDREW N. YAO; SFC ACCEPTANCE II LLC; SFC ACCEPTANCE III LLC; SFC ACCEPTANCE IV LLC; SFC ACCEPTANCE V LLC; SFC ACCEPTANCE VIII LLC; SFC ACCEPTANCE IX LLC; SFC FINANCIAL I LLC; SFC FINANCIAL II LLC; SFC ACCEPTANCE VI LLC; SFC ACCEPTANCE VII LLC, Third-Party Defendants WILMINGTON TRUST OF PENNSYLVANIA v. ROYAL INDEMNITY COMPANY, Appellant, No. 04-2207 v. ROYAL INDEMNITY COMPANY, Third-Party Plaintiff v. SFC FINANCIAL I, LLC, Third-Party Defendant


No. 03-4382, No. 04-2207


UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT



2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 21392


January 19, 2005, Argued

October 3, 2005, Filed


PRIOR   HISTORY:             *1           ON   APPEAL   FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT  OF  DELAWARE.  District  Court  Nos.  02- cv-01294 and 02-cv--01361. District Court Judge:  The Honorable Joseph J. Farnan, Jr.  MBIA Ins. Corp. v. Royal Indem. Co., 312 F. Supp. 2d 583, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS

5211 (D. Del., 2004)

MBIA Ins. Corp. v. Royal Indem. Co.,  286 F. Supp. 2d

347, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18337 (D. Del., 2003)


LexisNexis(R) Headnotes



COUNSEL:                            LAWRENCE          C.             ASHBY   PHILIP TRAINER,             JR.           Ashby    &                              Geddes   Wilmington, Delaware; MICHAEL H. BARR (Argued) KENNETH J. PFAEHLER Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal LLP New York, New York Counsel for Appellant.


RONALD   S.   RAUCHBERG   (Argued)   STEVEN   E. OBUS ANDRE G. CASTAYBERT FRANK SCIBILIA Proskauer Rose LLP New York, New York;  DAVID C. McBRIDE  JOHN  W.  SHAW  Young  Conaway  Stargatt

&   Taylor,   LLP   Wilmington,   Delaware   Counsel   for Appellees MBIA Insurance Corporation and Wells Fargo Bank Minnesota, N.A.


KEVIN  R.  SHANNON  Potter  Anderson  &  Corroon

LLP  Wilmington,  Delaware;  DAVID  H.  PITTINSKY


(Argued)   LAWRENCE   D.   BERGER   Ballard   Spahr Andrews  &  Ingersoll,  LLP  Philadelphia,  Pennsylvania Counsel for Appellee PNC Bank, N.A.


JOSEPH  H.  HUSTON,  JR.  (Argued)  THOMAS  G. WHALEN,   JR.   Stevens   &   Lee,   P.C.   Wilmington, Delaware  Counsel  for  Appellee  Wilmington  Trust  of Pennsylvania.


JUDGES: Before: ALITO, McKEE, and SMITH, Circuit

Judges.


OPINIONBY: ALITO


OPINION:


OPINION OF THE COURT


ALITO, Circuit Judge:


In  these  consolidated   *2     appeals,  we  are  called upon to construe a series of contracts. Appellant Royal Indemnity Company ("Royal") agreed in these contracts to  insure  the  repayment  of  principal  and  interest  on several  hundred  million  dollars  of  student  loans.  The named  beneficiaries  of  the  policies,  Wells  Fargo  Bank Minnesota, N.A. ("Wells Fargo") and Wilmington Trust of Pennsylvania ("Wilmington Trust"), n1 sued after the loans went into default and Royal failed to pay the claims


2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 21392, *2

Page 2



they submitted. Royal defended on the ground that the lender on the underlying obligations fraudulently induced it  to  issue  the  policies  and  that  this  fraud  entitled  it  to rescission.


n1  A  third  appellee-beneficiary,  PNC  Bank, N.A., reached a settlement with Royal prior to our decision. This opinion does not discuss its policy with Royal or its claims thereon.



The District Court entered summary judgment for the beneficiaries, and this appeal followed. We agree with the District  Court  that  Royal's policies  unambiguously  and effectively waive defenses to its *3    obligations based on fraud, but we conclude that Royal has raised a triable issue as to whether all of the losses claimed by the ben- eficiaries were covered under its policies. We thus affirm in part and reverse in part.


I.


Student Finance Corporation ("SFC") was founded in

1992 to cater to the vocational segment of the student loan market. Some of the loans it originated itself; others it ac- quired from the original lenders. Many of the loans were apparently made to students at truck-driving schools. At



all relevant times, SFC was owned and controlled by its founder and chief executive officer, Andrew N. Yao.


The capital for SFC's business came from financial in- stitutions like Wilmington Trust and Wells Fargo. In 1999, Wilmington Trust issued SFC a $75 million loan, taking a pool of student loans as security. Wells Fargo, by contrast, helped finance SFC by securitizing the older loans in its portfolio. In each securitization, student loans were pack- aged and sold to a trust settled for the specific purpose of holding title to the loans. Wells Fargo, as trustee, funded the purchase by selling certificated shares in the trust to institutional investors. The record reflects that Wells *4  Fargo raised approximately $450 million for SFC in eight securitizations from 1999 to 2002.


To encourage Wilmington Trust and the investors in Wells Fargo's trusts to part with their capital, SFC con- tracted with Royal to insure the repayment of interest and principal on the student loans. At issue in this case are ten

"Credit Risk Insurance Policies" issued by Royal. Eight of them insured the loans held by the Wells Fargo trusts

(one per trust), and two of them insured the loans pledged as collateral to Wilmington Trust. Each policy named ei- ther Wells Fargo or Wilmington Trust as beneficiary. The following table summarizes their terms:





Table 1. Summary of Policy Terms

Policy     Beneficiary             Inception                Liability Limit


RST 293334            Wells Fargo           1/22/99    $50,000,000.00

RST 293309            Wells Fargo           12/3/99    $53,053,642.08

RST 147522            Wells Fargo           4/30/00    $48,459,255.76

RST 147524            Wells Fargo           8/30/00    $29,999,999.94

RST 147525            Wells Fargo           11/27/00  $55,616,550.00

RST 147526            Wells Fargo           1/31/01    $48,286,713.44

RST 147538            Wells Fargo           10/19/01  $120,000,000.00

RST 147536            Wells Fargo           11/15/01  $80,000,000.00

RST 321276            Wilmington Trust 1/22/99    $75,000,000.00

RST 147533            Wilmington Trust 8/17/01    $5,518,459.00






*5



Royal alleges,  and  the  beneficiaries  do  not  dispute, that  SFC  procured  this  insurance  through  a  spectacu- lar fraud. According to Royal,  SFC misrepresented the creditworthiness and employment history of its student borrowers  and  conspired  with  schools  to  generate  as many loans as possible by altering or forging loan doc-






uments. As loans went into default, SFC allegedly paid some of them down by surreptitiously diverting the pro- ceeds  of  later  loans.  By  thus  masking  the  default  rates of the older loans,  SFC allegedly induced Royal to in- sure still more loans, whose proceeds then had to be ap- plied in Ponziesque fashion to pay down the earlier ones. According to Royal, some of the proceeds were also di- verted to Yao's personal accounts.


2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 21392, *5

Page 3



SFC's business proved unsustainable. In a March 2002 telephone call to Royal, Yao allegedly confessed that SFC had been paying down defaulted loans and explained that this  practice  could  no  longer  be  continued.  An  investi- gation launched by Royal revealed that SFC's loans had been  defaulting  at  rates -  over  80%  in  the  case  of  one pool -  well  in  excess  of  reported  figures.  Within  three months of Yao's call, SFC was in Chapter 7 bankruptcy, where it apparently *6   remains to this day. With SFC no longer paying down student loans, the defaults fell on the shoulders of Wilmington Trust and Wells Fargo, who turned to Royal to make good on its policies. Claims on those policies, which totaled only $38.6 million between

1999 and the spring of 2002, had piled up to $380 million by the end of 2002.


A flurry of lawsuits followed. Royal filed suit in Texas state court to rescind the policies, but this case was dis- missed after limited discovery for lack of personal juris- diction. In July 2002, Wells Fargo and MBIA Insurance Corporation ("MBIA") n2 sued Royal in the US District Court for the District of Delaware. Their complaint, which invoked  the  Court's  diversity  jurisdiction,  alleged  that Royal had wrongfully repudiated the trusts' eight policies by filing the Texas action and sought relief in the form of specific performance, a declaratory judgment that the policies were in effect, and damages. Wilmington Trust filed its own suit in Delaware federal court, alleging es- sentially the same claims.


n2   MBIA   issued   a   "Certificate   Guaranty Insurance  Policy"  guarantying  the  student  loans held by the Wells Fargo trusts. Royal and MBIA disagree about the function of this guaranty. MBIA characterizes it as backstop insurance for a risk pri- marily insured by Royal, while Royal characterizes it  as  supplemental  coverage  protecting  the  trusts from  risks  not  covered  under  the  Royal  policies. Royal no longer disputes, however, that MBIA has contractual standing to sue, so we assume that it is a proper plaintiff-appellee.


*7


Royal  defended  on  the  ground  that  SFC's  fraudu- lent inducement entitled it to rescission. The beneficia- ries  countered  that  the  policies  unambiguously  waived this defense. In separate opinions, the District Court en- tered summary judgment for the beneficiaries. See MBIA Ins. Corp. v. Royal Indem. Co., 312 F. Supp. 2d 583 (D. Del. 2004); MBIA Ins. Corp. v. Royal Indem. Co., 286 F. Supp. 2d 347 (D. Del. 2003). It found that the ten poli- cies unambiguously waived fraud in the inducement as a defense to payment, and it predicted that Delaware's high- est court would enforce them. The Court acknowledged



that  Delaware  law  was  reluctant  to  enforce  boilerplate waivers against unsophisticated parties, but it believed a clear waiver negotiated by sophisticated parties could be enforced. See 312 F. Supp. 2d at 586; 286 F. Supp. 2d at

355.


Since the Court concluded that Royal's waivers were enforceable,  and  that  they  clearly  covered  the  defense Royal  sought  to  present,  it  found  further  discovery  on that defense unnecessary. It awarded summary judgment to the beneficiaries, ordering Royal to pay $269,851,527 plus interest to Wells Fargo *8   and $12,908,966.43 plus interest to Wilmington Trust, and it further ordered Royal to pay subsequent claims as they came due. Royal timely appealed to this Court.


II.


We review an award of summary judgment de novo, applying the same test on review that the District Court should have applied. In re Ikon Office Solutions, Inc., 277

F.3d 658, 665 (3d Cir. 2002). Summary judgment should be awarded when "the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). All reasonable inferences from the record must be drawn in favor of the nonmoving party. Brewer v. Quaker State Oil Refining Corp., 72 F.3d 326, 333 (3d Cir. 1995). The Court may not weigh the evidence or assess credibility. Boyle v. County of Allegheny Pa., 139 F.3d 386, 393 (3d Cir. 1998).


Royal attacks the District Court's award of summary judgment on several grounds. It first argues that the Court erred in finding that the *9    text of its policies unam- biguously waived its defense to payment based on SFC's fraud. It further argues that waivers of the breadth and generality found in its policies are unenforceable under Delaware law. Finally, it argues that triable issues remain as to whether the policies covered all of the losses claimed by the beneficiaries. Since it is undisputed that Delaware provides the substantive law for this dispute, we turn to that state's law of contract to determine whether summary judgment was properly awarded.

III. A.


Delaware  follows  the  objective  theory  of  contract. See  Haft  v.  Haft,  671  A.2d  413,  417  (Del.  Ch.  1995); Progressive  Int'l  Corp.  v.  E.I.  Du  Pont  de  Nemours  & Co., No. C.A. 19209, 2002 WL 1558382, at *7 (Del. Ch.

2002) (unpublished opinion). Although the law of con- tract  generally  strives  to  enforce  agreements  in  accord


2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 21392, *9

Page 4




with their makers' intent, the objective theory considers

"objective  acts  (words,  acts  and  context)"  the  best  evi- dence of that intent. Haft, 671 A.2d at 417. Unambiguous written agreements should be enforced according to their terms, without using extrinsic evidence "to interpret the intent of the *10  parties, to vary the terms of the contract or to create an ambiguity." Eagle Indus., Inc. v. DeVilbiss Health Care, Inc., 702 A.2d 1228, 1232 (Del. 1997); see also City Investing Co. Liquidating Trust v. Cont'l Cas. Co., 624 A.2d 1191, 1198 (Del. 1993).


A contract is not ambiguous merely because the par- ties  disagree  about  its  proper  interpretation.  Whether  a contract is ambiguous is determined according to an ob- jective, reasonable-person standard and is a question of law. See Eagle Indus., 702 A.2d at 1233 n.8 ("The true test is what a reasonable person in the position of the par- ties would have thought it meant."). Words are to be given their ordinary meaning and should not be "tortured" to im- part ambiguity where none exists. Rhone-Poulenc Basic Chems.  Co.  v.  Am.  Motorists  Ins.  Co.,  616  A.2d  1192,

1196 (Del. 1992).


The language of Royal's waivers varies from policy to policy, but we agree with the District Court that each policy satisfies these standards of clarity. We consider the contracts in reverse chronological order, beginning with the  last  two  policies  Royal  issued  and  considering  the remaining eight in subsection *11   2 below.


1.


Policies RST 147536 and RST 147538 are the clear- est. Policy RST 147536 states in bold capital letters:


THE  RIGHT  OF  THE  BENEFICIARY TO                                     RECEIVE                                                 PAYMENT FOR                      LOSSES                                 UNDER   THIS POLICY       SHALL    BE           ABSOLUTE, CONTINUING,   IRREVOCABLE   AND UNCONDITIONAL                      IRRESPECTIVE OF (A) ANY FRAUD WITH RESPECT TO    THE                           STUDENT             LOANS,  (B) THE  GENUINENESS,  VALIDITY  OR ENFORCEABILITY   OF   ANY   .   .   . STUDENT  LOAN  OR  THE  BREACH OF  ANY  SUCH  CONTRACT  OR  ANY COVENANT   OR   REPRESENTATION OR   WARRANTY   MADE   THEREIN, OR             (C)                           ANY        OTHER                     RIGHTS OR         DEFENSES            THAT      MAY                        BE AVAILABLE TO                            THE           INSURER TO       AVOID   PAYMENT                             OF                            ITS OBLIGATION                                UNDER                                    THIS POLICY  (ALL  OF  WHICH  RIGHTS AND                    DEFENSES                              ARE                         HEREBY



EXPRESSLY        WAIVED                BY           THE INSURER) . . . .


App.  at  2221.  The  language  of  Policy  RST  147538  is virtually  identical.  See  App.  at  2253-54.  n3  The  poli- cies plainly strip Royal of a defense to payment based on fraud, first by declaring that its liability will be unaffected by "fraud with respect to the student loans" and then by

"expressly waiving" any other right or defense it could marshal to avoid payment.


n3  In  Policy  RST  147538,   clause  (C)  ap- pears as clause (D) and follows a new clause (C), which  leaves  Royal  liable  irrespective  of  "ANY FAILURE ON THE PART OF THE INSURED, THE SERVICER OR THE BENEFICIARY TO OBSERVE OR PERFORM ANY COVENANT OR CONDITION." App. at 2254.


*12


In the face of this clarion language, Royal contends that the phrase "with respect to the student loans" con- templates  only  the  microfraud  of  individual  schools  or students, not the macrofraud of SFC. The waivers were designed, argues Royal, only to protect Wells Fargo from obstreperous litigation over the validity of individual loan documents. In support of this position,  Royal points to clause (B), which homes in on "the genuineness, validity or enforceability of any . . . student loan." Invoking the expressio unius and ejusdem generis canons, it argues that clause (B) waives only a defense based on the "validity or enforceability" of a student loan and that clause (A) should be given a commensurately narrow meaning.


Aside from completely ignoring the blanket language of clause (C) (clause (D) in Policy RST 147538), Royal's argument  renders  clause  (A)  surplusage.  If  clause  (A) were limited to individual cases of fraud by schools or students, it would sweep no further than clause (B). The fraudulent inducement of a loan agreement by a student or school would render the defrauded party's obligations under that agreement voidable. See Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 164(1) *13   (1981). In such a case, the

"genuineness, validity or enforceability" of the loan would be affected. While the validity of the loans would not be affected by SFC's (or the schools') fraud on Royal, this is precisely the type of fraud that Royal now claims is not covered by clause (A), despite the fact that it clearly occurs "with respect to" the student loans within the or- dinary meaning of those words. See Webster's Third New International Dictionary 1934 (Philip Babcock Gove ed. in  chief,  unabr.  ed.  1971).  Since  Royal's  interpretation makes  clause  (A)  surplusage  and  reads  out  clause  (C)

(clause (D) in Policy RST 147538), it must be rejected.


2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 21392, *13

Page 5



Royal argues that the definition of "Student Loans" creates a triable issue as to whether the defense of fraudu- lent inducement was intended to be waived in a case such as this. The definition of "Student Loans" is restricted by each policy to the loans covered therein and does not in- clude any earlier loans SFC may have issued. Since the definition is so restricted, clause (A) could not be read, Royal argues, as waiving defenses based on misrepresen- tations about the earlier loans on which Royal relied.


Even  if  this  policy  wrinkle  created   *14    a  triable issue  as  to  the  scope  of  clause  (A),  it  would  not  fol- low that summary judgment was unwarranted. To estab- lish fraudulent inducement, Royal must show reasonable and detrimental reliance on a misrepresentation intention- ally or recklessly made to induce action or inaction. See Kronenberg  v. Katz,  872  A.2d  568,  585  n.25  (Del.  Ch.

2004);  Gloucester Holding Corp. v. U.S. Tape & Sticky Prods., LLC, 832 A.2d 116, 124 (Del. Ch. 2003). Even if clause (A) did not waive a defense based on misrepre- sentations with respect to earlier loans, Royal could not establish reliance on those representations in light of the clear "anti-reliance" language of clause (C) (clause (D) in  Policy  RST  147538).  See  Kronenberg,  872  A.2d  at

593. It is unfathomable that an insurer that intended to rely on extracontractual representations would agree that its obligations are "absolute, continuing, irrevocable and unconditional irrespective of . . . any other rights or de- fenses that may be available to the insurer . . . (all of which rights and defenses are hereby expressly waived by the insurer)." App. at 2221, 2254 (emphasis omitted). Royal cannot possibly claim *15   that its reliance on those rep- resentations was reasonable when it waived all defenses based on reasonable reliance. Since Royal's reliance was unreasonable  however  "Student  Loans"  is  defined,  the definition  of  that  term  does  not  create  an  ambiguity  in the policies, and the District Court did not err in finding Royal's waiver unambiguous.


2.


Each of the remaining eight policies contains some variant of the following language:


NOTWITHSTANDING      ANY        OTHER PROVISION   OF   THIS   POLICY   TO THE   CONTRARY,   THE   RIGHT   OF THE    BENEFICIARY    TO    RECEIVE PAYMENT  FOR  LOSS  UNDER  THIS POLICY            AFTER   PAYMENT             OF THE   INITIAL   PREMIUM   BY   THE INSURED SHALL BE ABSOLUTE AND UNCONDITIONAL, AND NO FAILURE ON THE PART OF THE INSURED OR THE   BENEFICIARY   TO   OBSERVE



OR  PERFORM  ANY  COVENANT  OR CONDITION   CONTAINED   IN   THIS POLICY              (INCLUDING        WITHOUT LIMITATION       THOSE                      CONTAINED IN  ARTICLE  III,  ARTICLE  IV  AND ARTICLE                               V)                                              SHALL                    ENTITLE THE        INSURER                                TO                           ANY         RIGHT OF            SET-OFF,                                                 COUNTERCLAIM OR         DEFENSE                                                 AGAINST                               THE BENEFICIARY                             OR          ANY                         OTHER PARTIES  OR  OTHERWISE  RELIEVE THE  INSURER  OF  ANY  LIABILITY TO MAKE ANY SUCH PAYMENT FOR LOSS TO THE BENEFICIARY UNDER THIS   POLICY,   SUBJECT   ONLY   TO THE LIMIT OF LIABILITY.


E.g., App. *16  at 5485 (original emphasis). In addition, seven of the policies contain some variant of the following language:


The  Insurer's  obligation  to  pay  any  Claim made under this Policy is absolute, uncondi- tional and irrevocable and shall not in anyway be  affected,  mitigated  or  eliminated  by  (y) a  breach  of  any  representation  or  warranty made by the Insured,  the Servicer,  Student Finance  Corporation  or  the  Beneficiary,  or

(z)  the  failure  of  the  Insured  or  Student Finance  Corporation  to  comply  with  the Underwriting Policies.


E.g., App. at 2021. The eighth policy, RST 321276, refers only to "the Insured," omitting mention of "the Servicer,"

"Student  Finance  Corporation,"  and  "the  Beneficiary." App. at 5499-500.


Though  none  of  the  eight  policies  uses  the  word

"fraud," no reasonable interpretation can be teased from this language that would preserve Royal's defense. The policies all declare that, after payment of the premium, Royal's  liability  will  become  "absolute"  and  "uncondi- tional" and "subject only to the limit of liability." Though such language might not contemplate a fraud that induced the policies in the first place, the policies also provide that Royal's liability *17   will be unaffected by "a breach of any representation." Since a misrepresentation is an es- sential  element  of  a  fraud,  it  follows  that  fraud  cannot affect Royal's liability. Finally, the policies provide that Royal's liability is unaffected by a "failure . . . to com- ply with the Underwriting Policies." This is a significant recital because the alleged fraud had its genesis in mis- representations that SFC's lending complied with certain underwriting policies. Royal cannot claim that it was en-


2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 21392, *17

Page 6



titled to rely on SFC's representations about its lending when it agreed to liability regardless of whether the lend- ing conformed to those representations.


Royal argues that a "breach of . . . representation" is not the same thing as a "misrepresentation" but refers in- stead to the failure of a condition set forth "in the contract or perhaps in specific accompanying contracts." Royal's Br.,  No.  03-4382,  at  41.  Although  the  policies  do  not list  any  "representations  and  warranties"  on  which  the parties may rely, Royal observes that the term sheet for each policy declares that "the statements in this Policy .

. . are the agreements and representations of the Insured" and that "this Policy embodies all *18   agreements ex- isting between the Insured and the Insurer or any of its representatives." E.g., App. at 5525. According to Royal, the phrase "breach of any representation" must refer to representations in the policies,  since those are the only

"agreements and representations of the Insured."


It is ironic that Royal should look to an integration clause for evidence that it was entitled to rely on SFC's extracontractual  representations.  Such  an  interpretation stands that clause on its head. Even under Royal's con- torted reading, however, the clause makes no mention of SFC's representations. SFC and the Servicer were not even parties to the policies, so their representations would have to be found outside the four corners of the agreements. In short, the phrase "breach of any representation . . . by  Student Finance Corporation" must refer to extracontrac- tual representations. Under the only reasonable interpre- tation of the policies, Royal has agreed that its liability will be unaffected by reliance on SFC's extracontractual representations.


Royal argues that even if the analysis above is correct it  has  not  waived  its  defense  of  fraudulent  inducement in Policy RST 321276 because *19    that policy refers only to a breach of representation by "the Insured." The Insured  on  that  policy  was  "SFC  Financial  I,  LLC,"  a special purpose entity affiliated with SFC. App. at 5477. Royal argues that since it relied on the misrepresentations of SFC rather than that special purpose entity, its common law defense of fraud in the inducement is unaffected by the policy.


As we noted earlier,  an agreement may foreclose a fraud defense not only by waiving "fraud" but also by set- ting forth terms clearly inconsistent with reasonable re- liance on extracontractual representations. Royal here has effectively disclaimed reliance on SFC's representations no less than those of SFC Financial I, LLC, even though the former is not mentioned in the agreement. Royal ad- mits that both entities were under the ownership and con- trol of Andrew Yao. See, e.g., Royal's Memorandum in Support of Its Motion for an Order Appointing a Chapter



11 Trustee at 5, App. at 4395 ("Yao . . . owned and con- trolled SFC  and all of its affiliates at all times pertinent to this case."). Since SFC Financial I, LLC, was an al- ter ego of SFC separated only by corporate formalities, Royal's disclaimer of reliance on the *20   former's rep- resentations made it unreasonable as a matter of law for it to rely on the representations of the latter.


Finally, Royal argues that even if the policies waive defenses based on fraud, they do not waive a defense based on the invalidity of the policies themselves. This argument does not identify a reasonable alternative construction of the policies so much as an alternative characterization of Royal's defense. Royal supposes that the policies are in- valid because it was fraudulently induced to issue them. However  recharacterized,  this  remains  a  defense  based on  fraud  and  is  waived  no  less  than  a  defense  that  in- voked SFC's "fraud with respect to the student loans" or

"a breach of its  representation."


3.


Because  we  conclude  that  the  agreements  on  their face waive Royal's fraud defense in unambiguous terms, we  need  not  consider  the  extrinsic  evidence  submitted by  the  parties.  n4  We  also  need  not  discuss  the  doc- trine of contra proferentem,  which operates against the insurer only when policy terms are ambiguous. See Twin City  Fire  Ins.  Co.  v.  Del.  Racing  Ass'n,  840  A.2d  624,

630  (Del.  2003).  Finally,  we  need  not  decide  whether the parties' agreements *21   are properly characterized as  insurance  policies  or  guaranties,  since  the  interpre- tive principles discussed above apply to both and would yield  the  same  result  in  either  case.  See  Westfield  Ins. Group v. J.P.'s Wharf, Ltd., 859 A.2d 74, 76 (Del. 2004); Universal Studios Inc. v. Viacom Inc., 705 A.2d 579, 589

(Del. Ch. 1997); see also Restatement (Third) of the Law of  Suretyship  and  Guaranty  §§  1-2  (1996)  (explaining that a finding of suretyship status depends on the rights and obligations set forth in the agreement, not the other way around). However characterized, the policies on their face waive Royal's defense to payment of its obligations based on fraud, and the District Court did not err in so finding.


n4  Royal  asserts,  citing  several  Third  Circuit cases,  that  this  Court  always  considers  extrinsic evidence in determining whether an agreement is unambiguous. These cases, however, were not de- cided  under  Delaware  law.  See,  e.g.,  In  re  New Valley  Corp.,  89  F.3d  143,  149  (3d  Cir.  1996)

("applying the federal common law of contract");

Mellon Bank, N.A. v. Aetna Bus. Credit, Inc., 619

F.2d 1001, 1005 (3d Cir. 1980) (Pennsylvania law). Although  no  text  can  be  read  in  a  vacuum,  the


2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 21392, *21

Page 7































*22  B.



Delaware Supreme Court has held that in determin- ing whether an ambiguity exists a court may con- sider only "undisputed background facts to place the contractual provision in its historical setting." Eagle Indus., Inc. v. DeVilbiss Health Care, Inc.,

702 A.2d 1228, 1232 n.7 (Del. 1997). "Undisputed background facts" do not include the self-serving parol evidence submitted by the parties, whose rec- ollections as to the intended meaning of the agree- ments predictably differ.


Even  if  we  considered  the  sworn  affidavit  of Royal's employee, William Hibberd, it would not lend ambiguity to the plain language of the Royal policies. Hibberd could state only that it was his

"understanding" that the policy language was not intended  to  leave  Royal  liable  in  the  case  of  a

"widespread fraud like the one that occurred here." E.g., App. at 5345. Hibberd's subjective impression of what the parties meant, recollected years after the events in question, is at very best a "scintilla" of ev- idence in support of the objective reasonableness of Royal's alternative construction of the policies.



The   boilerplate   nature   of   the   parties'   agreement weighed heavily in the Norton Court's calculus. See id. at 7 ("We see no reason why a court of equity should en- force a standard 'boiler plate' provision that would permit one who makes a material misrepresentation to retain the benefit  resulting  from  that  misrepresentation  at  the  ex- pense of an innocent party."). Since the scope of Royal's obligations turns not on a boilerplate merger clause but on waivers sculpted by parties of exquisite legal and fi- nancial sophistication, we do not believe Norton provides a  reliable  guidepost  for  our  decision.  See  Great  Lakes Chem.  Corp.  v.  Pharmacia  Corp.,  788  A.2d  544,  555

(Del. Ch. 2001) (distinguishing the agreements in Norton and  its  progeny  as  "simple  real  estate  contracts  having boilerplate, unnegotiated disclaimer language").


More reliable guidance may be found *24    in the

Chancery Court's recent decision in Kronenberg v. Katz,

872 A.2d 568 (Del. Ch. 2004). In a thoughtful opinion by  Vice  Chancellor  Strine,  the  Court  reasoned  that  an enforceable waiver of fraud should have "language that, when read together, can be said to add up to a clear anti- reliance  clause by which  the plaintiff has contractually promised that it did not rely upon statements outside the contract's four corners in deciding to sign the contract." Kronenberg, 872 A.2d at 593. The Court acknowledged that an integration clause could be read as a promise of

We next consider whether these waivers are enforce- able. The Delaware Supreme Court has not addressed the standards for effective waiver of a defense based on fraud in the inducement, so we must predict how it would decide this question. See Koppers Co. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.,

98 F.3d 1440, 1445 (3d Cir. 1996). The District Court rec- ognized that some authority had looked askance at broad waivers in adhesive form agreements but predicted that the  Delaware  Supreme  Court  would  enforce  an  unam- biguous  waiver  negotiated  by  sophisticated  parties.  We agree.


The Delaware Supreme Court's closest precedent on this question is its decision in Norton v. Poplos, 443 A.2d

1 (Del. 1982). In that case, the plaintiff sought to rescind a  real  estate  transaction  by  alleging  that  the  seller  had negligently misrepresented the land's zoning. The Court declined to find the claim barred by a standard integra- tion  clause  in  the  purchase  agreement  reciting  that  the purchaser had not relied on extracontractual representa- tions. Id. at 3. The Court noted that Delaware case law generally did not consider an integration clause a reliable indicium of intent *23    to waive a fraudulent induce- ment defense. See id. at 6. It concluded, after a survey of cases from other jurisdictions, that the better authorities extended this rule to negligent misrepresentations, allow- ing the claim to proceed despite the integration clause. See id.

nonreliance, since the clause recited that the contract was the "entire agreement" and superseded all prior "under- standings" and "inducements." See id. at 591. But it found the integration clause also susceptible to a "more tradi- tional interpretation," according to which the clause "sim- ply operates to police the variance of the agreement by parol evidence." Id. at 591-92. Since these competing in- terpretations of the clause left the parties' intent in doubt, the Court declined to enforce it to bar a fraud claim.


Royal protests that the sine qua non of enforceability

*25  is not clarity but specificity. A waiver, argues Royal, is nothing but the voluntary relinquishment of a known right. See Kallop v. McAllister, 678 A.2d 526, 532 (Del.

1996). Since a waiver must be voluntary, clear evidence of the party's intent to waive is required for enforcement. See Realty Growth Investors v. Council of Unit Owners, 453

A.2d 450, 456 (Del. 1982); George v. Frank A. Robino, Inc.,  334 A.2d 223,  224 (Del. 1975). A requirement of specificity serves this end by ensuring that parties do not, by promising the moon, unintentionally waive rights they had  not  really  contemplated.  Accordingly,  Royal  con- cludes,  Delaware  courts  will  refuse  to  enforce  even  a clear  waiver  of  fraud  unless  it  sets  forth  the  particular representations on which the induced party agreed not to rely.


Though this argument has some force, its conclusion


2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 21392, *25

Page 8



finds virtually no support in Delaware law. Cases have focused on the function of the terms at issue, see DRR, L.L.C. v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 949 F. Supp. 1132, 1137

(D. Del. 1996) (holding that an "as is" clause does not

"insulate  a  seller  from  suit  for  its  fraudulent  misrepre- sentations"); *26         Traylor Eng'g & Mfg. Co. v. Nat'l Container Corp., 45 Del. 143, 6 Terry 143, 70 A.2d 9, 13

(Del. 1949) (holding that a warranty cannot serve to dis- claim reliance on extracontractual representations for pur- poses of a fraud claim); DCV Holdings, Inc. v. Conagra, Inc.,  822 A.2d 396,  No. 02-550,  2003 WL 2008199,  at

*3 (Del. 2003) (unpublished table decision) (finding an all-inclusive warranty ambiguous with respect to waiver of fraud claims);  Kronenberg, 872 A.2d at 592 ("Many learned authorities state that typical integration clauses do not operate to bar fraud claims."), or the circumstances of their negotiation. See Norton, 443 A.2d at 7 (discounting

"'boiler plate' found in the merger clause"); Great Lakes,

788 A.2d at 555 (observing the "carefully negotiated dis- claimer language" crafted by "highly sophisticated par- ties, assisted by industry consultants and experienced le- gal counsel"). Although specificity and clarity often go hand in hand, we are unaware of any Delaware case that has made specificity a prerequisite to effective waiver.


In fact, a recent unpublished opinion of the Chancery Court appears to have rejected *27    the specificity re- quirement.  See  Progressive  Int'l  Corp.  v.  E.I.  du  Pont de Nemours & Co., 2002 Del. Ch. LEXIS 91, No. C.A.

19209, 2002 WL 1558382 (Del. Ch. July 9, 2002). The Court there held that an integration clause reciting that neither party would rely on extracontractual promises or representations foreclosed rescission based on fraud. The allegedly  defrauded  party  protested  that  the  clause  did not  identify  the  unreliable  representations  or  promises, but the Court found this omission insignificant:


If  adopted  as  law,  Progressive's  argument would impede commerce. It is not efficient for negotiators to identify all the material is- sues that are not part of the foundation of their relationship,  and  to  list  them  in  a  contrac- tual schedule. Indeed, that exercise would be wasteful and silly, as the integration clause in the License Agreement shows. By simple and unambiguous means, the parties to that Agreement identified all the representations and statements that could not have induced the execution of the Agreement:  all repre- sentations and statements not included in the text of the Agreement itself.



Id.  2002  Del.  Ch.  LEXIS  91,   WL   at  *10;  see  also

DeBakey  Corp.  v.  Raytheon  Serv.  Co.,  2000  Del.  Ch.




LEXIS  129,  No.  14947,  2000  WL  1273317,   *28    at

*27 (Del. Ch. Aug. 25, 2000) (rejecting a fraud counter- claim because the aggrieved party could have included the assurances on which it relied as representations and warranties in the agreement). Although the Progressive decision was not published, we believe its persuasive rea- soning provides a good model for the Delaware Supreme Court's own decision in this area.


The putative requirement of specificity seems rooted not  in  Delaware  case  law  but  in  a  line  of  New  York cases, and even there it has been applied inconsistently. Although the Second Circuit in Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co. v. Yanakas, 7 F.3d 310, 316 (2d Cir. 1993), de- clared specificity the "touchstone" of enforceability, other authority has focused on the clarity of the waiver rather than its detail. See Valley Nat'l Bank v. Greenwich Ins. Co., 254 F. Supp. 2d 448 (S.D.N.Y. 2003); Citibank, N.A. v. Plapinger, 66 N.Y.2d 90, 485 N.E.2d 974, 495 N.Y.S.2d

309  (N.Y.  1985).  The  Plapinger  Court  found  the  omis- sion of detail unimportant, deeming it "unrealistic in such circumstances to expect an express stipulation that defen- dants were not relying on a separate oral agreement." 485

N.E.2d at 977. *29   The Court in Valley National Bank reached a similar conclusion, distinguishing Yanakas as

"less applicable . . . where the drafter and more sophis- ticated party in the transaction now claims that the dis- claimer is too broad." 254 F. Supp. 2d at 458.


Royal  relies  heavily  on  JPMorgan  Chase  Bank  v. Liberty  Mutual  Insurance  Co.,   189  F.  Supp.  2d  24

(S.D.N.Y. 2002), a case brought over a natural gas forward contract between Enron and one of its affiliates. The affil- iate borrowed money from plaintiff bank to purchase the gas. Defendant surety guarantied that Enron would deliver it. Unbeknownst to the surety, the bank had agreed with Enron  that  the  affiliate  would  subsequently  repurchase the gas at a higher price. This secret side agreement trans- formed the forward contract into a simple loan. See id. at 26. The Southern District of New York concluded that the surety could avoid payment on the bond, rejecting the argument that "a general sweeping disclaimer can serve to disclaim any and all extrinsic fraud between sophisti- cated parties." Id. at 27. It read Plapinger and Yanakas to require "a clear indication that *30   the disclaiming party has knowingly disclaimed reliance on the specific representations that form the basis of the fraud claim." Id. Were JPMorgan Chase a case of garden-variety fraud, its analysis would be in tension with both Yanakas and Plapinger. See, e.g., Yanakas, 7 F.3d at 317 (finding the disclaimer  insufficient  in  part  because  it  contained  "no blanket disclaimer of the type found in Plapinger as to

'any other circumstance which might otherwise constitute a defense' to the Guarantee"). We agree with the District


2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 21392, *30

Page 9



Court, however, that JPMorgan Chase is "an unusual and extreme case that  . . . provides little guidance." 312 F. Supp. 2d at 589; 286 F. Supp. 2d at 358.


Though characterized as a fraudulent inducement, the transaction in JPMorgan Chase bordered on a fraud in the factum -  "the sort of fraud that procures a party's signa- ture to an instrument without knowledge of its true nature or  contents."  Langley  v.  FDIC,  484  U.S.  86,  93,  98  L. Ed. 2d 340,  108 S. Ct. 396 (1987) (citing U.C.C. § 3-

305(2)(c) cmt. 7 (1977)); see also Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 163 *31   (1981) (referring to a fraud with respect to the "character or essential terms of a proposed contract").  The surety  was asked to insure the  delivery of a commodity, when in fact it was guarantying a loan. See  JPMorgan  Chase,  189  F.  Supp.  2d  at  28.  In  such a  case,  where  the  party  does  not  even  know  the  "true nature" of what it is signing,  it is unsurprising that the standards for effective waiver would be stricter, if waiver is possible at all. Cf. Restatement §§ 163-164 (explaining that a contract fraudulently induced is voidable, whereas a "contract" procured through fraud in the factum is no contract at all).


Unlike Liberty Mutual, Royal does not seriously ques- tion the nature of the transactions covered by its policies. It characterizes SFC's business as a sham, but it does not deny that SFC was issuing student loans and that the re- payment of the interest and principal on those loans was insured by Royal's policies. A fairly obvious risk of this insurance decision was that SFC would misrepresent the quality  of  the  loans.  For  the  reasons  given  above,  the policies clearly assign this risk of fraud to Royal when they declare that its liability will be unaffected *32   by a "breach of any representation" or "fraud with respect to the student loans." Because the risk of fraud was so obvious, it is unimaginable that a party with Royal's ex- perience and knowledge would not have realized it was assuming that risk when it agreed to that language.


Many of the remaining cases cited by Royal involved alleged violations of the federal securities laws. See, e.g., Caiola  v.  Citibank,  N.A.,  295  F.3d  312  (2d  Cir.  2002); CP Kelco U.S., Inc. v. Pharmacia Corp., 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS  19139,  No.  CIV.A.01-240,  2002  WL  31230816

(D.  Del.  Oct.  2,  2002).  It  is  well  known  that  the  fed- eral securities laws provide broader fraud protection than the common law, having been enacted in response to the common law's perceived failure at stamping out fraud in the securities markets. See, e.g., Herman & MacLean v. Huddleston, 459 U.S. 375, 388-89, 74 L. Ed. 2d 548, 103

S. Ct. 683 (1983);  In re Data Sys. Sec. Litig., 843 F.2d

1537, 1544 (3d Cir. 1988). Since the analysis of cases like CP Kelco appears to have been colored by federal secu- rities law, we do not believe those cases provide reliable



guidance on this question of Delaware's common law of contract.   *33


The  lack  of  specificity  in  Royal's  waivers  does  not make them any less clear. As the Progressive Court put it, a "method of identification does not become unclear simply because it is terse." 2002 Del. Ch. LEXIS 91, 2002

WL 1558382, at *10. This is all the more true when the method  of  identification  is  hammered  out  by  sophisti- cated  parties  aided  by  consummate  legal professionals, who  can  be  expected  to  anticipate  the  subjects  it  will identify. Accordingly, we predict that when sophisticated parties have inserted clear anti-reliance language in their negotiated  agreement,  and  when  that  language,  though broad, unambiguously covers the fraud that actually oc- curs,  Delaware's  highest  court  will  enforce  it  to  bar  a subsequent fraud claim.


Royal  asserts  that  this  prediction  risks  giving  pro- tected  parties  a  "license  to  commit  fraud,"  CP  Kelco,

2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19139, 2002 WL 31230816, at *5, but the alternative poses its own danger. The danger is that a contracting party may accept additional compensa- tion for a risk that it has no intention of actually bearing. This  prevarication  may  amount  to  a  fraud  all  its  own. See Progressive Int'l, 2002 Del. Ch. LEXIS 91, 2002 WL

1558382, at *10 ("In essence, Progressive *34   is saying to the court, 'Believe us now when we tell you we made a false promise to DuPont then.'"); Danann Realty Corp. v. Harris, 5 N.Y.2d 317, 157 N.E.2d 597, 600, 184 N.Y.S.2d

599 (N.Y. 1959) ("The plaintiff made a representation in the contract that it was not relying on specific representa- tions not embodied in the contract, while, it now asserts, it was in fact relying on such oral representations. Plaintiff admits then that it is guilty of deliberately misrepresenting to the seller its true intention.").


Given the potential for misrepresentation from each side of the agreement, the safer route is to leave parties that can protect themselves to their own devices, enforcing the agreement they actually fashion. This rule will make for less prolix disclaimers and reduce the likelihood that an intended allocation of the risk of fraud will be frustrated by an unintentional omission from a long and tedious list of  representations.  Such  concerns  have  figured  promi- nently in recent Delaware case law. See Kronenberg, 872

A.2d at 593 (accommodating "contractual freedom and efficiency concerns" as well as a "public policy . . . intol- erant of fraud"); Progressive Int'l, 2002 Del. Ch. LEXIS

91,  2002  WL  1558382,     *35    at  *10.  When  sophis- ticated  parties  include  a  broad  but  unambiguous  anti- reliance clause in their agreement, the Delaware Supreme Court  will  likely  indulge  the  assumption  that  they  said what they meant and meant what they said.


It follows from the foregoing discussion that the Royal


2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 21392, *35

Page 10



waivers are in full force and effect. For the reasons given in Section A of this opinion, those waivers unambiguously strip Royal of the defense of fraud in the inducement. The District Court thus did not err in awarding the beneficia- ries summary judgment on them, and it also did not err in denying Royal further discovery into the beneficiaries' knowledge of the fraud. The agreements unambiguously waive Royal's fraud defense whether or not the benefi- ciaries had an inkling of the fraud before Royal, leaving Royal  with  no  remaining  defense  to  payment  that  dis- coverable evidence could support. To the extent set forth above, the judgment of the District Court is accordingly affirmed.


C.


We turn now to consider the scope of Royal's obliga- tions under the policies. The District Court ordered it to pay all claims submitted by Wells Fargo and Wilmington Trust, including claims that had been filed since the com- mencement *36    of the lawsuit. Royal argues that the Court overlooked triable issues regarding whether all of the claimed losses were covered under the policies and whether the beneficiaries' claims had been properly docu- mented. The beneficiaries counter that they are entitled to immediate payment under the policies and that Royal's de- fense based on SFC's alleged misappropriation is waived along with its other fraud defenses.


The scope of coverage is set forth in the first section of each policy. The language differs from policy to policy, but the substance is the same: Royal agrees to reimburse the insured or beneficiary under the policy for a "Loss" that occurs during the policy period. E.g., App. at 2247,

5479.  Critically,  "Loss"  is  defined  as  "for  any  Student Loan as to which a Claim is made in accordance here- with the Value as of the Default Date with respect to such Student Loan." E.g., App. at 2017, 5527. The "Value" of a Student Loan is simply the "principal balance outstanding

. . . as of the Default Date plus accrued interest thereon." E.g., App. at 2018, 5528. The "Default Date" is the first date of a "Default," e.g.,  App. at 2016,  5526,  which in turn is defined as:   *37


(i) a Student Loan becoming ninety (90) days or more delinquent (treating payments made by a Student but paid over to a bankruptcy court having jurisdiction over the Student as a  preference  item  as  not  having  been  paid by the Student),  with payments made after a delinquency applied to the earliest delin- quency,  or  (ii)  any  impairment  or  avoid- ance of the rights of the Beneficiary or the Insured in a Student Loan arising out of the bankruptcy or similar event or proceedings



with respect to Student Finance Corporation or the Insured, including without limitation pursuant to Section 362 of the United States Bankruptcy Code.


E.g., App. at 2032-33; see also, e.g., App. at 2016, 5479. These provisions give rise to a reasonable inference, if not an irresistible conclusion, that the "Loss" for which Royal agreed to reimburse the beneficiaries was the non- payment of interest and principal on the student loans. If a loss may be traced to something other than a "Default" - that  is,  "a  Student  Loan  becoming  ninety  (90)  days  or more delinquent" - it is not covered under the policies. n5

Under this highly reasonable interpretation, Royal need not reimburse *38    the beneficiaries for nonreceipt of loan proceeds misappropriated by SFC.


n5 We recognize that by their terms the poli- cies also extend coverage to losses resulting from the   impairment   of   the   beneficiaries'   rights   in bankruptcy. SFC entered bankruptcy in June 2002, but the parties have not discussed how this event af- fects their rights and obligations under the policies. We  leave  this  interesting  question  to  the  District Court.



Wells Fargo argues that SFC's misappropriation is just another form of fraud that Royal waived as a defense to payment. This argument misses the point. Royal's defense is not based on SFC's fraud per se but on the extent of coverage afforded by the policies. The waivers themselves make this distinction clear. In the first eight policies, Royal agreed that its "obligation to pay any Claim" would be un- affected by a "breach of any representation." In the last two policies, it agreed to waive any defense that would allow it "to avoid payment of its obligation under this pol- icy." Wells Fargo's *39   argument begs the question of whether a loss due to SFC's conversion is one of Royal's

"obligation s ."


We also reject Wilmington Trust's argument that its policies "require Royal to pay every Claim submitted to it upon the submission of a conforming 'Notice,' without more." Wilmington Trust's Br. at 40 (emphasis omitted). Although section III(A) of the Wilmington Trust policies provides that "any Claim . . . shall be paid by the Insurer within sixty (60) days," App. at 5481,  5528,  other lan- guage appears to contemplate that Royal may challenge claims prior to payment. Section III(C)(1) requires the in- sured or beneficiary to deliver with notice of its claims a

"written proof of loss form . . . identifying the applicable

Student Loans" and the unpaid balance on them. App. at

5481, 5528. The policies also require the insured to pro-


2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 21392, *39

Page 11



vide, upon Royal's request, "evidence reasonably avail- able with respect to circumstances surrounding a Loss." Id. Requiring such evidence prior to payment would serve no purpose if Royal were obligated to pay any claim upon receipt. Arguably, section III(A) simply lays out a time frame for payment of a claim that the parties have already agreed is valid.   *40


To  what  extent  SFC's  misappropriation  contributed to the beneficiaries' losses remains unclear. Royal points to evidence that Andrew Yao was receiving distributions from  SFC  at  the  rate  of  approximately  $1  million  per month while serving as its director, treasurer, and chief ex- ecutive officer. See App. at 4405-07. According to Royal, SFC's  tottering  financial  position  at  the  time  makes  it likely that some of this money was diverted from the in- come streams due the beneficiaries. The beneficiaries have not disputed this evidence on appeal, relying instead on the interpretive arguments rejected above. Having found the ten policies reasonably susceptible to an interpretation under which Royal would not be liable for losses due to SFC's misappropriation, we conclude that further devel- opment of the record is necessary to determine the extent of this misappropriation before Royal may be ordered to pay the beneficiaries' claims.


On  remand,   the  District  Court  must  first  decide



whether  or  not  the  policies  cover  losses  attributable  to SFC's alleged conversion. If not, it must then determine the extent to which SFC's misappropriation contributed to those losses. Further discovery may be *41   necessary, but  we  caution  that  this  remand  is  not  an  opportunity for  Royal  to  revive  its  rejected  fraudulent  inducement defense. The proceedings should be limited to deciding which of the losses claimed by the beneficiaries are cov- ered under the policies.


IV.


After careful consideration of the parties' arguments and submissions, we conclude that each of the ten Royal policies unambiguously and effectively waived its defense to payment of its obligations based on SFC's fraud. The District Court correctly denied Royal rescission, correctly declared the policies in full force and effect, and correctly ordered Royal to perform its obligations under them. That part of the District Court's decision is affirmed.


The remainder of the decision is vacated. Triable is- sues  regarding  the  scope  of  the  policies'  coverage  and the nature of the beneficiaries' losses preclude summary judgment. On remand, the District Court must determine whether the policies cover all of the losses claimed by the beneficiaries before ordering Royal to pay them.



Contents    Prev    Next    Last


Seaside Software Inc. DBA askSam Systems, P.O. Box 1428, Perry FL 32348
Telephone: 800-800-1997 / 850-584-6590   •   Email: info@askSam.com   •   Support: http://www.askSam.com/forums
© Copyright 1985-2011   •   Privacy Statement