C.S. McCrossan Inc. v. Federal Insurance Company
Opinion
C.S. McCrossan Inc. sued Federal Insurance Company for coverage under a crime insurance policy. Both moved for summary judgment. The district court
1
granted the Company's motion.
C.S. McCrossan Inc. v. Federal Ins. Co.
,
I.
The Company issued McCrossan an insurance policy for "Employee Theft" and "Forgery":
(A) The Company shall pay the Parent Organization for direct loss of Money , Securities , or Property sustained by an Insured resulting from Theft or Forgery committed *1144 by an Employee acting alone or in collusion with others.
....
(D) The Company shall pay the Parent Organization for direct loss sustained by an Insured resulting from Forgery or alteration of a Financial Instrument committed by a Third Party .
(bolded words in original, defined in policy). The policy excluded from coverage certain loss "committed by any authorized representative of an Insured ." An Insured under the policy included McCrossan and its subsidiaries.
Blakeley Properties, LLC and Stewart Properties, LLC own commercial rental properties. Brookstone, Inc. and Valhalla Investments, Inc. were Blakeley's and Stewart's respective agents to "manage, operate, control, rent and lease" several properties.
Both hired Balderson Management, Inc. to manage these properties. Blakeley separately hired Balderson as well.
Balderson's owner and principal, Cynthia Balderson, managed properties with the help of an "administrative person," as relevant here, her daughter Stephanie Castillo. Castillo was the primary user of Balderson's property management system, the sole copy of which was on her computer. Unlike Cynthia, her duties (and authority) did not include signing checks from any accounts.
Castillo stole around $570,000 from Blakeley and $250,000 from Stewart over the course of several years. She created fake invoices in the property management system, printed checks (from Blakeley's and Stewart's accounts) payable to herself or for her benefit, manipulated the system to show payment to a vendor, and forged Cynthia's signature on each check. She pled guilty to eight counts of theft by swindle and was sentenced to 80 months' imprisonment. State v. Stephanie Lantgen Castillo , No. 27-CR-15-503 (Minn. Dist. Ct. Hennepin Cty. Nov. 23, 2015) (sentencing order).
McCrossan submitted a claim to the Company, seeking coverage under the "Forgery" and "Employee Theft" insuring clauses. The Company denied the claim. McCrossan sued for breach of the insurance policy. Both parties moved for summary judgment. The district court granted summary judgment to the Company. It concluded Stewart was not an Insured under the policy; Castillo was an authorized representative of Blakeley, precluding coverage under "Forgery;" and Castillo was not Blakeley's employee, precluding coverage under "Employee Theft." McCrossan appeals.
II.
This court reviews de novo "the district court's grant of summary judgment and its interpretation of state insurance law."
*1145
Grinnell Mut. Reinsurance Co. v.
Schwieger
,
In this diversity action, Minnesota substantive law controls this court's analysis of the insurance policy.
Jerry's Enters., Inc. v. U.S. Specialty Ins. Co.
,
"The interpretation of an insurance contract is a question of law."
Jerry's Enters.
,
A.
McCrossan seeks recovery for Blakeley's and Stewart's losses. The policy covers loss to an Insured. The Company admits Blakeley is an Insured.
Stewart, however, is not. An Insured includes McCrossan and "any Subsidiary ." Subsidiary is defined in the policy, as, in relevant part:
any entity while more than fifty percent (50%) of the outstanding securities representing the present right to vote for election of or to appoint directors, trustees, managers, members of the Board of Managers or equivalent positions of such entity are owned, or controlled, by the Parent Organization , directly or through one or more Subsidiaries .
While the policy was in effect, Stewart was wholly-owned by a McCrossan individual. Without citing authority, McCrossan argues Stewart is an Insured because it was not in a "materially different position" than other McCrossan-related entities the Company admits are covered. The policy's language calls for ownership or control by McCrossan. Ownership and common management by McCrossan individuals, even McCrossan board members, does not meet this test. Because Stewart does not meet the policy's definition of Subsidiary, it is not an Insured.
See
*1146
Depositors Ins. Co. v. Dollansky
,
B.
As for Blakeley's loss, McCrossan claims coverage under the "Forgery" and "Employee Theft" insuring clauses.
The Company admits McCrossan met its initial burden to demonstrate coverage under the "Forgery" clause. The Company argues, however, that the "Authorized Representative" exclusion applies, which excludes from coverage:
loss or damage due to Theft , Forgery , Computer Fraud , Funds Transfer Fraud , Money Orders And Counterfeit Currency Fraud , Credit Card Fraud or other fraudulent, dishonest or criminal act (other than Robbery or Safe Burglary ) committed by any authorized representative of an Insured , whether acting alone or in collusion with others, provided that this Exclusion (A)(14) shall not apply to otherwise covered loss under Insuring Clauses (A), Employee Theft Coverage, or (I), Client Coverage, resulting from Theft or Forgery committed by an Employee acting in collusion with such authorized representative.
The parties dispute whether Castillo was an "authorized representative" of Blakeley, a term not defined in the policy.
The most relevant case is
National City Bank of Minneapolis v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co.
,
This court is bound by the Minnesota Supreme Court's instruction that "being an 'authorized representative' has an agency requirement."
True, as McCrossan contends,
National City
does not say that agency is the only requirement to be an authorized representative. However, the authorized representative exclusion unambiguously applies here, where Blakeley's empowerment of Castillo to act on its behalf enabled her crime.
2
See
BancInsure, Inc. v. Highland Bank
,
Blakeley authorized Balderson to act on its behalf for property management. Balderson's duties included managing bank accounts, all accounting (rental billing, deposits, distributions, and disbursements), approving invoices, and maintaining property management software. (The scope of the duties Blakeley granted Balderson and reserved for itself is detailed by the district court.
C.S. McCrossan
,
Not every individual working for an authorized representative is also an authorized representative. The facts of each case determine whether the individual is empowered to act on the principal's behalf.
*1148
Contrary to McCrossan's argument that Castillo lacked authority, her (undisputed) duties-done on behalf of Blakeley-included: bookkeeping (including processing invoices and printing checks), inputting vendor information, collecting rents, following up on property-rental leads, making cold calls, and handling tenant requests. The sole copy of the property management system-necessary to Castillo's scheme-was on her computer, and Cynthia rarely accessed it. Cynthia testified that she planned to have Castillo take over Balderson once she retired, and, in connection with that, Castillo was getting more involved in tenant issues. Jane McCrossan, Blakeley's manager, testified that she knew and was not surprised that independent auditors decided to interview Castillo about fraud as a standard part of two of McCrossan's annual audits. Though Castillo's position was an "administrative person," McCrossan swore in its proof of loss that "Castillo was responsible for co-managing the McCrossan Subsidiaries' properties and leasing those properties out." Castillo's role at Balderson authorized her to conduct the activities that led to her crimes, thus the authorized representative exclusion applies.
See
Colson Servs. Corp. v. Insurance Co. of N. Am.
,
In light of these facts, Castillo's lack of check-signing authority does not preclude her from being an "authorized representative," as McCrossan argues. The term's unambiguous meaning does not impose such a requirement.
See
Storms, Inc. v. Mathy Const. Co.
,
While exclusions are construed narrowly against the insurer, viewing the record most favorably to McCrossan, the authorized representative exclusion unambiguously excludes coverage here because Castillo acted as Blakeley's authorized representative.
See
Latterell v. Progressive N. Ins. Co.
,
As for coverage under "Employee Theft," McCrossan argues that if Castillo was Blakeley's authorized representative, she must have been its employee. As relevant *1149 here, an "Employee" means any "Contractual Independent Contractor." The policy defines that term as:
any natural person independent contractor while in the regular service of an Organization in the ordinary course of such Organization's business, pursuant to a written contract between such Organization , and either (A) such natural person independent contractor, or (B) any other entity acting on behalf of such natural person independent contractor, for services.
McCrossan/Blakeley did not have a written contract for services with Castillo. Blakeley did have a contract with Balderson. Viewing the record most favorably to McCrossan, Balderson was not acting on behalf of Castillo.
The parties agree that acting "on behalf of" means "in the interest of," "as the representative of," or "for the benefit of."
Harleysville Ins. Co. v. Physical Distrib. Servs., Inc.
,
Still relying on
Colony Tire
, McCrossan calls it an "absurd result" that Castillo's actions are not covered-despite McCrossan not giving her authority to sign checks-while a crime committed by Cynthia-an authorized signer-would be covered as employee theft. Analyzing Cynthia's acts under
Colony Tire
presents different facts and law than present here. Castillo's acts are not covered by the plain and ordinary meaning of the insurance policy here.
See
Engineering & Const. Innovations, Inc. v. L.H. Bolduc Co.
,
The district court properly granted the Company summary judgment on McCrossan's claims for Blakeley's loss.
* * * * * * *
The judgment is affirmed.
The Honorable Joan N. Ericksen, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.
McCrossan argues that equating "authorized representative" with "agent" is inconsistent with other provisions in the insurance policy. It does not object to defining "authorized representative" to cover "a person or company empowered to act on an entity's behalf." This court need not address whether McCrossan's proposed definition requiring "authority to bind" is reasonable, making "authorized representative" ambiguous. McCrossan itself does not view the formulations "as meaningful[ly] different."
Reference
- Full Case Name
- C.S. MCCROSSAN INC. Plaintiff - Appellant v. FEDERAL INSURANCE COMPANY Defendant - Appellee
- Cited By
- 17 cases
- Status
- Published