Axis Insurance Company v. American Specialty Insurance & Risk Services
Axis Insurance Company v. American Specialty Insurance & Risk Services
Opinion
In the
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 23-1698 AXIS INSURANCE COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellant, v.
AMERICAN SPECIALTY INSURANCE & RISK SERVICES, Defendant-Appellee. ____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, Fort Wayne Division. No. 1:19-cv-00165-DRL — Damon R. Leichty, Judge. ____________________
ARGUED JANUARY 9, 2024 — DECIDED AUGUST 6, 2024 ____________________
Before ROVNER, HAMILTON, and JACKSON-AKIWUMI, Circuit Judges. HAMILTON, Circuit Judge. Pursuant to an indemnification clause in a contract, plaintiff-appellant AXIS Insurance Com- pany sought indemnification from defendant-appellee Amer- ican Specialty Insurance & Risk Services for claims that AXIS settled. The parties’ contract did not require AXIS to give American Specialty the opportunity to choose between ap- proving the settlement payment and assuming the defense 2 No. 23-1698
itself. But American Specialty argues that AXIS was obliged to do so under Indiana law. The district court agreed with Amer- ican Specialty and granted summary judgment for it. We reverse. Insurance companies like AXIS and American Specialty bargain for the rights and obligations they hold in a contractual relationship like this one, including the specifics of a promise of indemnification. The contract in this case did not obligate AXIS to tender the defense to American Specialty before settling claims against AXIS. To the contrary, the con- tract required AXIS to provide notice of claims to American Specialty, but AXIS otherwise retained nearly complete con- trol over settlement decisions. Additionally, Indiana case law does not hold that the ten- der of defense is an implied condition in an indemnification agreement. Indiana law respects the freedom to contract in in- surance agreements. We see no reason to think the Indiana Supreme Court would depart from that respect for contrac- tual freedom and impose an implied requirement like the one advocated by American Specialty. I. Factual and Procedural Background AXIS is an insurance company that specializes in insur- ance policies for professional sports teams and other organi- zations in entertainment industries. In 2008, AXIS signed a contract with American Specialty that allowed American Spe- cialty to “accept proposals for insurance, negotiate, under- write and accept insurance coverages on [AXIS’s] behalf….” The parties’ contract stipulated that if American Specialty acted negligently in these tasks, it would indemnify AXIS for any resulting losses. That indemnification provision lies at the core of this case. No. 23-1698 3
A. Insurance for the Buccaneers In May 2013, an agent for the professional football team Tampa Bay Buccaneers reached out to American Specialty asking for an insurance quote. The Buccaneers wanted to ob- tain a variety of insurance coverages, including employer’s li- ability coverage. American Specialty sent back an insurance proposal and binder on behalf of AXIS. These documents mentioned employer’s liability coverage, but everyone in- volved in this litigation—AXIS, American Specialty, and the Buccaneers—has interpreted the language differently. When a Buccaneers’ player later asserted a substantial personal in- jury claim against the team, the parties to the insurance pur- chase disagreed about whether the Buccaneers’ policy in- cluded employer’s liability coverage. The Buccaneers be- lieved that the policy included it because that was what the team had requested. Alternatively, the Buccaneers demanded that AXIS and American Specialty cover any gap in coverage due to employer’s liability being left off the policy. AXIS in- sisted that the policy did not include employer’s liability cov- erage because, regardless of what the binder and proposal said, the policy that was actually issued to the Buccaneers did not include it. American Specialty was caught in the middle. It agreed with AXIS that the actual policy did not include em- ployer’s liability coverage, but it concluded that a mistake had been made in issuing the policy. American Specialty urged AXIS to reform the policy to include employer’s liability cov- erage. American Specialty and AXIS worked together for several years, but effective February 2014, they agreed to terminate their contract. The parties’ contract was in effect when the in- surance policy was issued to the Buccaneers, but the two 4 No. 23-1698
companies were no longer working together when the dis- puted claim arose. B. The Tynes Infection and Claim Nobody recognized the absence of employer’s liability coverage until it became the center of debate during the re- view of a claim. In March 2015, lawyers for Buccaneers kicker Lawrence Tynes sent a demand letter and a draft complaint to the Buccaneers alleging that he had suffered a career-end- ing injury after contracting a Methicillin-resistant Staphylo- coccus Aureus (often known as “MRSA”) infection at the team’s facility. Tynes alleged that he contracted the infection while rehabilitating from a medical procedure that was per- formed on his kicking foot. The draft complaint sought over $15 million in compensatory damages for the career-ending injury. Tynes had won two Super Bowls and had kicked game-winning field goals in overtime in two separate confer- ence championship games. See Rich Cimini, Tynes Lives Dream Yet Again, ESPN (Jan. 23, 2012, 2:34 AM), https://perma.cc/PX9J-BD8B. The draft complaint named the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the Tampa Bay Mall Limited Partnership (the owner and operator of the Buccaneers’ practice facility) as defendants. American Specialty quickly notified AXIS of the imminent claim. After reviewing the claim, AXIS denied coverage to the Buccaneers and refused to indemnify the team for Tynes’ claims. The employer’s liability issue became apparent immedi- ately. AXIS had denied coverage to the Buccaneers on Tynes’ claims because it believed that employer’s liability insurance was not part of the insurance policy it had actually issued. No. 23-1698 5
American Specialty, however, told AXIS that the policy should be reformed to include employer’s liability coverage— American Specialty said that a “mistake” had been made that left employer’s liability coverage off the Buccaneers’ policy even though the team had requested it. AXIS and American Specialty exchanged emails about their conflicting views. In those emails, American Specialty said twice that the Bucca- neers’ insurance policy should have included employer’s lia- bility coverage. AXIS stressed that the policy did not include the coverage and that it would seek indemnification from American Specialty for any losses resulting from American Specialty’s negligence in preparing the policy. AXIS and American Specialty had ended their cooperative business relationship the year before. When the dispute arose about coverage of the Tynes claim, AXIS told American Spe- cialty that AXIS itself would handle the Tynes claim due to the potential exposure it presented. On April 8, 2015, AXIS in- structed American Specialty to “keep an administrative file, pay bills and chronicle the claim with file note entries as nor- mal.” AXIS reiterated this message a few weeks later, saying that “American Specialty has no authority in this matter and should not be involved in the claims handling in any way.” On May 4, 2015, outside counsel for AXIS echoed the same message in another email: Please also be advised that American Specialty has no authority with respect to handling this claim, and that all claim management activity, including determinations and evaluations of coverage issues, are solely within AXIS’s pur- view. American Specialty is not to have any role in the directing or managing of the defense of 6 No. 23-1698
this claim. American Specialty’s primary obliga- tion is to maintain an administrative file, pro- cess expenses, chronicle the file with claim note entries, report as requested, review the report- ing completed by defense counsel, and report to AXIS accordingly. C. The Tynes Litigation and Settlement Tynes and the Buccaneers did not reach a quick settle- ment, so Tynes filed suit. The parties in the lawsuit agreed to attempt mediation. In an email sent on October 5, 2016, the Buccaneers’ attorney informed AXIS and American Specialty of the planned mediation and said that the Buccaneers ex- pected both companies to attend. AXIS emailed American Specialty separately to explain that it was confident in its legal position about the lack of employer liability coverage but was interested in a “market solution” to the matter (presumably a negotiated settlement, especially keeping in mind that litiga- tion of the coverage issue would require disclosure of Ameri- can Specialty’s emails siding with the Buccaneers and urging AXIS to reform the policy in the team’s favor). American Spe- cialty did not respond to this email. Though American Spe- cialty sent a few more emails before mediation, it did not say anything to AXIS about settling the claims. In December 2016, AXIS attended a mediation session along with Tynes and the Buccaneers. American Specialty did not attend. The parties who attended the mediation session reached a confidential settlement, ending the Tynes suit. D. This Lawsuit for Indemnification AXIS’s contribution to the Tynes settlement set the stage for this lawsuit. In April 2017, AXIS demanded that American No. 23-1698 7
Specialty indemnify it for the settlement payment that AXIS had made. American Specialty refused. After a failed attempt at arbitration, AXIS filed this suit against American Specialty seeking indemnification for its contribution to the Tynes set- tlement, as well as attorney fees and costs. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, though AXIS moved for only partial summary judgment. AXIS sought to reduce the number of issues that would be decided at trial by negating several of American Specialty’s affirmative defenses. American Specialty, on the other hand, argued that it should win outright because AXIS made its set- tlement payment without giving American Specialty the op- portunity to approve the settlement or assume the defense. Without this offer, American Specialty argued, AXIS’s settle- ment payment was voluntary because AXIS could not show it was actually liable on the underlying claim. The district court agreed with American Specialty and granted it summary judgment. AXIS Ins. Co. v. American Spe- cialty Ins. & Risk Servs., Inc., 662 F. Supp. 3d 950, 960 (N.D. Ind. 2023). Starting with Indiana case law, the court noted that in- demnitors do not need to reimburse “voluntary” settlement payments by indemnitees. Id. at 955. But whether a payment is “voluntary” can be hard to say; Indiana law does not draw a sharp boundary. So the court looked to other sources—cases from other jurisdictions and a treatise—and concluded that a settlement payment is not voluntary in two circumstances: first, if an indemnitee gives notice and an opportunity to de- fend to its indemnitor, id. at 955–57, and second, if the indem- nitee shows that it was “actually liable” on the underlying claim, id. at 956, 959. In the first circumstance, the court rea- soned that giving indemnitors a choice ensured that 8 No. 23-1698
indemnitees would not abuse indemnification agreements to shift liability onto indemnitors improperly. Id. at 956. Regard- ing the second circumstance, no payment could be deemed voluntary if an indemnitee is actually liable to the claimant. The district court found that, although AXIS had invited American Specialty to the Tynes mediation, it never offered American Specialty the opportunity to choose between ap- proving the settlement and assuming the defense of a poten- tial coverage claim by the Buccaneers. Id. at 957–58. Rather, the court found that AXIS prevented American Specialty from defending the claim for months and never clearly reversed its position. Id. at 958. Because AXIS did not tender the defense to American Specialty, the court concluded that AXIS had to show actual liability on the potential claim by the Buccaneers. The court found that AXIS could not make that showing and granted summary judgment to American Specialty, finding no duty to indemnify AXIS for its payment toward the Tynes settlement with the Buccaneers. Id. at 959. II. Analysis The issue on appeal is whether the indemnification agree- ment required AXIS to give American Specialty the oppor- tunity to choose between approving the settlement agreement and assuming the defense. The parties agree that Indiana law governs their contract, so our role is to apply Indiana law as we predict the Indiana Supreme Court would today. Circle Block Partners, LLC v. Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co., 44 F.4th 1014, 1018 (7th 2022). Indemnity agreements like the one in this case are gov- erned by contract law. Bethlehem Steel Corp. v. Sercon Corp., 654 N.E.2d 1163, 1167 (Ind. App. 1995). Parties can “define their No. 23-1698 9
mutual rights and obligations” through contract and decide for themselves what sorts of preconditions an indemnitee must satisfy before being entitled to indemnification. Id. at 1168. As explained below, the parties’ contract does not say that AXIS was obliged to tender the defense to American Spe- cialty. So there is no textual basis for concluding that the par- ties intended to require AXIS, if it wanted indemnification, to give American Specialty the opportunity to assume the de- fense. To the contrary, the fact that other preconditions to set- tlement were included but tender of defense was not signals that the parties did not intend for tender of defense to be a precondition to settlement. American Specialty resists this conclusion. Echoing the district court’s reasoning, American Specialty argues that, as a matter of common law, its promise to indemnify AXIS was subject to an implied condition precedent: that AXIS had a duty to tender the defense to American Specialty (absent proof of AXIS’s actual liability to the Buccaneers). No appel- late precedent in Indiana holds that such a duty exists, and we do not predict that the Indiana Supreme Court would do so now. Sophisticated insurance companies like American Specialty know that indemnification agreements are gov- erned by principles of contract law. See Bethlehem Steel, 654 N.E.2d at 1167–68. If an indemnitor wants the right to choose between approving a settlement or assuming the defense, it can bargain for that right. But if it does not, an indemnitor cannot cry foul when it knows its indemnitee is facing pres- sure to settle, especially when the indemnitor refuses even to respond to the indemnitee’s communications. 10 No. 23-1698
A. Indemnification Under the Parties’ Contract The agreement between AXIS and American Specialty consisted of three documents: the Program Manager Agree- ment, the Underwriting Guidelines Addendum, and the Claims Service and Management Agreement. Together, these documents spelled out the rights and obligations that AXIS and American Specialty owed each other. The parties identify three provisions as relevant to whether AXIS needed to give American Specialty the opportunity to approve the Tynes set- tlement or to assume the defense. First is the indemnification provision itself. In Section 27.4 of the Program Manager Agreement, American Specialty agreed “to defend, indemnify, and hold AXIS harmless from and against all claims … which result from any negligent or wilful acts” by American Specialty. Section 27.4 did not say anything about giving American Specialty a right to defend claims against AXIS that are subject to the duty to defend and indemnify. American Specialty argues, however, that this provision linked American Specialty’s obligation to “defend” and “in- demnify” AXIS, such that AXIS could not seek indemnifica- tion unless it also gave American Specialty the opportunity to defend. This conclusion does not follow from the text. Section 27.4 was a one-way street—it listed only obligations that American Specialty owed to AXIS. It did not specify obliga- tions that AXIS owed American Specialty, such as a duty to tender the defense. Holding AXIS’s contractual rights against it would rewrite the plain terms of the contract, and Indiana courts teach us not to pick up the pen ourselves when parties have stated their intentions clearly. Bethlehem Steel, 654 N.E.2d at 1168. No. 23-1698 11
A related contract provision, Section 27.6 of the Program Manager Agreement, listed procedures that AXIS had to fol- low to secure indemnification from American Specialty. Sec- tion 27.6 stated: “Upon the assertion … of any claim that may give rise to liability …, the party seeking indemnifications shall promptly notify the other party, in writing, of the exist- ence of such claim and the indemnity claimed.” Such notice requirements are routine under indemnification agreements and familiar to any driver or homeowner who has needed to notify a home- or auto-insurance carrier of an accident. But that requirement of written notice was the only condition the contract imposed on AXIS for seeking indemnification. Ab- sent from Section 27.6 is any requirement that AXIS tender the defense to American Specialty. 1 Finally, Section 4.2 of the Claims Service and Management Agreement reserved authority for claims settlement to AXIS. That provision said: AXIS shall retain ultimate settlement authority for all claims serviced hereunder, and reserves
1 American Specialty argues that AXIS forfeited arguments based on
Section 27.6 by failing to refer to this provision in its summary judgment briefing. We reject the forfeiture argument. To preserve an argument for appeal, a party must have raised the “substantive argument” in the district court but need not have presented all aspects of the argument in the dis- trict court. E.g., Dr. Robert L. Meinders, D.C., Ltd. v. United Healthcare Servs., Inc., 7 F.4th 555, 561 (7th Cir. 2021). As we said in Meinders, a party on appeal can refer to provisions of an underlying contract in addition to those referenced in the trial court, so long as the party makes the same substantive arguments in both places. Id. Also, the Northern District of Indiana requires summary judgment briefs to be substantially shorter than the appellate page limit, and we ordinarily expect appeals to present fewer issues than were addressed in the district court. 12 No. 23-1698
the right, upon notice to [American Specialty], to override [American Specialty] in the adjust- ment and settlement or rejection of any claim, and shall have the option to assume or direct the handling and settlement of any individual claim. Like the provisions in the Program Manager Agreement, Sec- tion 4.2 did not impose any conditions on AXIS for settling a claim. Instead, it reserved to AXIS nearly complete control in settling claims within the scope of the indemnification agree- ment. The only obligation imposed upon AXIS in this provi- sion was the duty to provide notice if AXIS sought to override American Specialty’s decision in a settlement proceeding. Ob- viously, that obligation was not triggered in this case because American Specialty stayed silent and did not participate in the mediation or settlement negotiations. Nowhere in the parties’ contract was there a requirement that AXIS give American Specialty an opportunity to approve the settlement or to assume the defense in order to secure in- demnification. The parties could have contracted for such a requirement. As Section 27.6 of the Program Manager Agree- ment shows, the parties agreed that AXIS had to provide writ- ten notice of claims to receive indemnification. But they did not agree to the additional terms argued by American Spe- cialty. B. Indemnification Under Indiana Law We stress again that indemnification disputes are gener- ally governed by the terms of a contract. Bethlehem Steel, 654 N.E.2d at 1167–68. But American Specialty argues, and the district court found, that AXIS had a duty under the common No. 23-1698 13
law of Indiana to tender the defense to American Specialty, at least if AXIS wanted indemnification for potential liability to the Buccaneers. We disagree with that proposition. No tender- of-defense requirement was an implied term of the contract. No Indiana precedent holds that indemnification agree- ments include an implied contractual term requiring indem- nitees to tender the defense before settling a claim. In three cases, the Indiana Court of Appeals and a federal district court found that a settlement payment was not voluntary where, as a matter of fact, the indemnitee notified the indemnitor of the proposed settlement and gave it an opportunity to approve the settlement or to assume the defense. Sequa Coatings Corp. v. Northern Indiana Commuter Transp. Dist., 796 N.E.2d 1216, 1230 (Ind. App. 2003) (indemnitor ignored “repeated requests for indemnification and assistance in defending against the litigation”); Sink & Edwards, Inc. v. Huber, Hunt, & Nichols, Inc., 458 N.E.2d 291, 293 (Ind. App. 1984) (indemnitor received no- tice of “intention to settle and [was] given the opportunity to take over the defense of the action”); Price v. Amoco Oil Co., 524 F. Supp. 364, 367 (S.D. Ind. 1981) (settlement effectuated after notice “and an opportunity to assume the defense of the action”). But the fact that the indemnitees in those cases ten- dered the defenses does not mean that the tenders were es- sential to the courts’ findings that those payments were not voluntary. None of the opinions indicated whether the con- tracts required the tender of defense, none found the tender of defense to be an implied contractual requirement, and none found that the tender of defense was an essential prerequisite to settling claims. 2
2 The court granted rehearing in Sequa Coatings to clarify its holding
on a different issue in that case. Sequa Coatings Corp. v. Northern Indiana 14 No. 23-1698
As the district court recognized, some courts in other ju- risdictions have developed a framework for assessing the vol- untariness of settlement payments for which indemnification is sought. In these jurisdictions, if an indemnitee gives its in- demnitor notice and an opportunity to defend, then the in- demnitee must show only potential liability for its payment to be deemed non-voluntary. If the indemnitee does not sat- isfy these conditions, though, it must show actual liability. See, e.g., Chevron Oronite Co. v. Jacobs Field Servs. N.A., Inc., 951 F.3d 219, 226 (5th Cir. 2020) (applying Louisiana law and also considering case law from Fifth Circuit); Genger v. Genger, 76 F. Supp. 3d 488, 501 (S.D.N.Y. 2015) (applying New York law). But other courts—including the other two states in this cir- cuit—have reached the opposite conclusion and held that, in the absence of an express term in a contract, indemnitees do not need to tender the defense so long as the indemnitor has notice of the claims. See Cincinnati Cos. v. West American Ins. Co., 183 Ill. 2d 317, 323–26, 701 N.E.2d 499, 502–04 (1998) (con- cluding that duty to defend was triggered where insurer is put on notice of claims against insured; an explicit offer to as- sume the defense was not required); Towne Realty, Inc. v. Zur- ich Ins. Co., 201 Wis. 2d 260, 267–69, 548 N.W.2d 64, 66–67 (1996) (same). The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts addressed this issue in Psychemedics Corp. v. City of Boston, 486 Mass. 724, 161 N.E.3d 399 (2021). The city of Boston relied on a private company, Psychemedics Corporation, to conduct hair follicle testing of police officers to detect illegal drug use. Officers
Commuter Transp. Dist., 800 N.E.2d 926 (Ind. App. 2003). The rehearing did not alter the court’s reasoning relevant here. No. 23-1698 15
sued the city alleging that the follicle testing was unreliable and had a disparate impact on people of color. The city sought indemnification from Psychemedics based on a contract pro- vision stipulating that Psychemedics would “assume the de- fense of” the city and “hold [it] harmless” from all suits and claims arising from “wrongful or negligent” acts by Psyche- medics. Id. at 725, 728. Psychemedics sought a declaratory judgment that it was not required to indemnify the city be- cause the city had not allowed it to assume the defense of the cases brought by the police officers. So the issue decided by the Massachusetts court matches the issue we confront today: if no contractual provisions resolve the issue, does an indem- nitee need to explicitly tender the defense to secure indemni- fication? Id. at 731. The Massachusetts court reversed a grant of summary judgment to Psychemedics, holding that material facts needed to be resolved as to whether Psychemedics had an op- portunity to assume the defense. Id. at 743–44. Critical to the court’s holding was its conclusion that, between contracting parties, the obligation to indemnify is triggered after an in- demnitee “alert[s] the indemnitor to the existence of the claim.” Id. at 736. No explicit tender of defense was required. Id. at 735–40. Indiana law tracks the reasoning in Psychemedics. As Indi- ana courts have emphasized, contract law governs indemnity disputes, and courts may not rewrite a contract that defines parties’ mutual rights and obligations. Bethlehem Steel, 654 N.E.2d at 1167–68. That idea has led at least one Indiana court to reject the doctrine of implied contractual indemnity be- cause “sophisticated commercial entities” were “free to in- clude an indemnity provision” in their contract but “failed to 16 No. 23-1698
do so.” Indianapolis-Marion County Public Library v. Charlier Clark & Linard, PC, 929 N.E.2d 838, 852 (Ind. App. 2010). Sim- ilarly, here, we decline to add new rights and obligations to a contract between two sophisticated insurance companies. Even if we thought Indiana courts might be inclined to add new ink to the parties’ contract under other circum- stances, this case is not a promising candidate for predicting adoption of an implied requirement for an explicit tender-of- defense requirement. The undisputed facts show that AXIS notified American Specialty that it was considering settling a claim within the scope of the indemnification clause. Ameri- can Specialty did not respond with an argument against set- tlement. That would have been difficult, given American Spe- cialty’s earlier correspondence urging AXIS to cave by re- forming the policy to provide employer’s liability coverage. American Specialty instead responded with … silence. At the very least, an indemnitor who disagrees with the choice to set- tle should be proactive and communicate its concerns rather than remain silent and hope that a court will bail it out later. C. Application to this Case The most extraordinary feature of this case is American Specialty’s silence in response to AXIS’s communications, in- cluding the invitation to plan for and participate in the medi- ation of the Tynes claim against the Buccaneers. Recall that for over a year and a half, AXIS and American Specialty were aware that Tynes was asserting claims against the Buccaneers and disputed whether AXIS was obliged to cover the Bucca- neers. As part of the back-and-forth emails, AXIS told Ameri- can Specialty that it expected American Specialty to indem- nify any losses resulting from the mistake concerning em- ployer’s liability coverage. No. 23-1698 17
As the district court found, the Tynes claims were within the scope of the parties’ indemnification agreement. AXIS In- surance, 662 F. Supp. 3d at 955 n.1. AXIS managed the defense of the claims until the Buccaneers informed both insurance companies that the parties were going to attempt mediation. AXIS agreed to attend mediation and urged American Spe- cialty to attend as well. But American Specialty did not re- spond and did not go to the mediation. The only issue on appeal is whether, as the district court found, AXIS was required to provide American Specialty an explicit tender of defense. Because this requirement was not included in the parties’ contract and it does not arise under Indiana common law, we conclude that AXIS was not re- quired to tender the defense as a condition precedent to in- demnification for settlements of potential liability. American Specialty resists our conclusion that AXIS was not required to choose between tendering the defense of the Buccaneers claim against AXIS or giving up indemnification unless AXIS could show actual liability to the Buccaneers. American Specialty argues that for months AXIS had denied American Specialty the opportunity to engage in the defense at all, so without an opportunity to control defense of the Buc- caneers’ claim, American Specialty was essentially forced to indemnify a voluntary settlement payment. AXIS’s insistence on its contractual right to control the de- fense and settlement of indemnified claims did not mean it gave up its right to indemnification. American Specialty can- not be as ignorant of insurance disputes as this argument por- trays it to be. As a sophisticated insurance company, Ameri- can Specialty should have known to communicate any con- cerns it had about settling when the Buccaneers and AXIS 18 No. 23-1698
invited American Specialty to mediate the Tynes claims. In- stead of engaging with AXIS in good faith, American Spe- cialty stayed silent. Indiana courts are loath to reward such refusals to communicate. See Sequa Coatings Corp., 796 N.E.2d at 1230 (finding that indemnitor “was estopped from assert- ing that it was not given the opportunity to determine whether the settlement agreement was reasonable because it never responded to [indemnitee’s] letters informing it of [in- demnitee’s] intent to enforce the indemnity clause”); see gen- erally Monroe Guar. Ins. Co. v. Magwerks Corp., 829 N.E.2d 968, 975–76 (Ind. 2005) (recognizing that “insurers have a duty to deal in good faith with their insureds” under Indiana law). Finally, Indiana courts treat whether a settlement payment was “fair and reasonable” as a question separate from whether procedural requirements for indemnification were followed. E.g., Sink, 458 N.E.2d at 297; see also Price, 524 F. Supp. at 367–68 (considering separately whether a settlement was fair and reasonable). The parties did not raise this issue in their motions for summary judgment, so we express no opinion on this second question as it relates to AXIS’s settle- ment payment. The judgment of the district court is REVERSED and this case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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