Scott, Blane, and Darren Recovery, LLC et al v. Auto-Owners Insurance Company
Filing
79
ORDER denying 52 --motion for partial summary judgment; granting 56 --motion for partial summary judgment; denying 73 --motion to dismiss; denying as moot 75 --motion to strike. The clerk is directed to ENTER JUDGMENT against the plaintiffs and for the defendant on each of the two counts in the complaint (Doc. 1), to ENTER JUDGMENT against the plaintiffs and for the defendant on the defendant's claim for declaratory judgment in the counterclaim for declaratory relief (Doc. 43), to TERMINATE any pending motion, and to CLOSE the case. Signed by Judge Steven D. Merryday on 5/26/2017. (BK)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA
TAMPA DIVISION
SCOTT, BLANE, AND DARREN
RECOVERY, LLC, et al.,
Plaintiffs,
v.
CASE NO.: 8:15-cv-153-T-23MAP
AUTO-OWNERS INSURANCE
COMPANY,
Defendant.
____________________________________/
ORDER
Scott, Blane, and Darren Recovery, LLC, (SBD) and Anova Food, Inc., sue
(Doc. 1) Auto-Owners Insurance Company for breach of an insurance policy and for
bad-faith denial of coverage. Auto-Owners counterclaims (Doc. 43) for a declaratory
judgment that Auto-Owners owed no duty under the insurance policy to defend and
to indemnify Anova. SBD and Auto-Owners submit (Docs. 52, 56) cross-motions for
summary judgment on Auto-Owners’s duty to defend. Also, Auto-Owners moves
(Doc. 73) to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(1), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
BACKGROUND
Auto-Owners issued Anova a policy of commercial general-liability insurance.
(Docs. 1-2, 1-3) Auto-Owners delivered the policy to Anova’s Florida agent, who
delivered the policy to Anova’s Florida headquarters. (Doc. 52 at 4) The policy
covers “advertising injury” “caused by an offense committed in the course of
advertising [one’s] goods, products or services.” (Doc. 1-4 at 4–5; Doc. 1-7 at 30)
“Advertising injury” means an injury arising from an “[o]ral or written publication of
material that slanders or libels a person or organization or disparages a person’s or
organization’s goods, products or services.” (Doc. 1-4 at 11; Doc. 1-7 at 30) The
policy excludes “advertising injury” that “aris[es] out of the failure of goods, products
or services to conform with any statement or representation of quality of
performance.” (Doc. 1-4 at 5)
The policy requires Anova to notify Auto-Owners in writing as soon as
practicable of any “suit or claim” against Anova; directs Anova to send Auto-Owners
a copy of any “demands, notices, summonses, or legal papers received in connection
with the claim or suit” (Doc. 1-4 at 8–9; Doc. 1-7 at 27–28); and requires AutoOwners both to defend Anova from a lawsuit alleging “advertising injury” and to pay
damages that Anova is “legally obligated to pay” for causing an “advertising injury.”
(Doc. 1-4 at 4; Doc. 1-7 at 23)
In July 2007, King Tuna sued Anova in federal court in Oregon
(Doc. 1-13, 4–16) and alleged that “[i]n public marketing materials, Anova claims
that its tuna products are superior to its competitors’ offerings” because Anova uses
the patented “Clearsmoke” treatment for tuna. (Doc. 1-13) The Oregon complaint
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alleges that the advertisements are “literally false” and that “in actual practice Anova
sells raw tuna products which are treated and processed in a manner substantially
different from the representations in Anova’s advertising and marketing
communications.” (Doc. 1-13) The Oregon complaint alleges that the labeling and
the advertising violate the Lanham Act and violate Oregon law.
In August 2007, Anova sent to Auto-Owners two letters about the Oregon suit,
and each letter included a copy of the complaint. (Doc. 1-14 at 2) Auto-Owners
responded and denied coverage. Auto-Owners stated that “[n]one of the claims
made against Anova in the lawsuit seeks damages arising out of . . . advertising
offenses as defined in the policy.” (Doc. 22-1 at 13–14) In November 2007, King
Tuna voluntarily dismissed the Oregon action.
Several weeks later King Tuna sued Anova for a similar claim in federal court
in California. King Tuna alleged (1) that Anova falsely advertised that “its tuna
products are superior to its competitors’ offerings” due to Anova’s use of a patented
treatment and (2) that Anova falsely advertised that the patented treatment used
“only one ingredient” to produce filtered wood smoke. (Doc. 1-8) Anova failed to
notify Auto-Owners about the California action and failed to tender the California
complaint to Auto-Owners. Anova eventually prevailed, but incurred an attorney’s
fee and costs of $3,656,484.93.
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SBD and Anova sued (Doc. 1) in January 2015 and asserted that Auto-Owners
wrongfully denied coverage and wrongfully refused to defend Anova in the Oregon
action and the California action. A May 23, 2016 order (Doc. 35) denies AutoOwner’s motion (Doc. 17) to dismiss and determines that “Florida law governs the
parties’ rights and liabilities under the policy.” (Doc. 35 at 8–9)
ANALYSIS
Standing
Auto-Owners moves (Doc. 73) to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(1), and argues that
SBD lacks standing. During discovery, Auto-Owners obtained a May 2010 closing
document that transfers all of Anova’s assets and liabilities to Anova Holding USA,
LLC. (Doc. 73 at 2) Also, Auto-Owners found records showing that Scott, Blane
and Darren Recovery LLC formed in April 2014, which leads Auto-Owners to
conclude that SBD failed to exist in 2010 when Anova transferred all of Anova’s
assets to Anova Holding LLC. Auto-Owners argues that Anova incorrectly pleads
that “Anova Food, Inc., has transferred to SBD the right to pursue the claims,”
(Doc. 1 at 1) and concludes that Anova Food, Inc., could not have transferred rights
to the King Tuna Claim to SBD because Anova no longer owned the rights when
SBD formed. (Doc. 56 at 9)
Anova moves (Doc. 75) to “strike [the exhibits] accompanying Auto-Owners’s
motion to dismiss.” Auto-Owners attached several exhibits to the motion to dismiss
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but cites only a single page from Darren Zobrist’s 133-page deposition, which AutoOwners claims amounts to conclusive evidence that Anova Food, Inc., failed to
transfer a right to the King Tuna claim to SBD.
Zobrist’s deposition confirms that Anova transferred an interest in the claim to
SBD through a series of intermediary transfers. On May 31, 2010, Anova transferred
all assets and claims to Anova Holding USA, LLC. On June 24, 2011, Anova
Holding USA, LLC, transferred the claims to individual members, and on April 17,
2014, the individual members formed SBD and transferred their interests in the
claims to SBD. (Doc. 74 at 4) The plaintiffs successfully establish standing.
1. Duty to Defend
The duty to defend, triggered by some covered event, arises from the “eight
corners” of the policy and the complaint. Mid-Continent Casualty Co. v. Royal Crane,
LLC, 169 So.3d 174 (Fla. 4th DCA 2015). An insurer must defend the entire action if
the complaint alleges any claim that might come within the indemnity obligation. A
fair and reasonable doubt about whether an insurer is under the duty to defend is
resolved in favor of the insured. Jones v. Florida Ins. Guar. Ass'n., 908 So. 2d 435, 443
(Fla. 2005). An insurer must defend a claim even if the insurer lacks certainty
whether the policy provides coverage. Mid–Continent Cas. Co. v. Am. Pride Bldg. Co.,
LLC, 601 F. 3d 1143, 1149 (11th Cir. 2010). The duty to defend is triggered if the
complaint alleges coverage under the policy. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co. v.
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Compupay, Inc., 654 So. 2d 944 (Fla. 3d DCA 1995) (Baskin, J.). To establish the
duty to defend, Anova need not prove that Auto-Owners covered the claim or that
coverage existed but must show that the injury appeared to fall within the policy’s
coverage for “advertising injury.”
A. “Advertising Injury”
Auto-Owners argues that Auto-Owners owed no duty to defend Anova
(Doc. 56 at 12) (1) because the Oregon complaint does not allege a covered
“advertising injury” (Doc. 56 at 13); (2) because neither an express statement nor an
implied statement disparages King Tuna (Doc. 56 at 14); and (3) because no
statement about a manufacturer’s own product impliedly disparages a competing
product. (Doc. 56 at 19) In response, Anova argues (1) that under the policy AutoOwners had a duty to defend Anova because King Tuna “appears” to allege an
“advertising injury” (Doc. 66 at 4), (2) that Auto-Owners conflates the duty to defend
with the duty to indemnify (Doc. 66 at 4), and (3) that the King Tuna complaint
alleges an advertising injury claim arguably covered by the policy. (Doc. 66 at 6)
B. Express and Implied Disparagement
The “crux of disparagement is a comparison suggesting that another brand is
inferior.” E.S.Y. Inc. v. Scottsdale Ins. Co., 139 F. Supp. 3d 1341, 1353 (S.D. Fla. 2015)
(Altonaga, J.). Contrary to Anova’s assertion (Doc. 66 at 7) that King Tuna’s
Oregon complaint (Doc. 1-13) included a copy of Anova’s webpage, which made
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“specific and explicit comparisons” between Anova’s and King Tuna’s
manufacturing processes, the Oregon complaint fails to allege Anova’s direct
disparagement of King Tuna, King Tuna’s products, or any third party or
organization.
In the absence of an allegation of direct disparagement, a plaintiff can rely on
an allegation of disparagement by necessary implication, which exists only if an
advertisement claims superiority to a competitor’s product and fails to name the
competitor but permits identification of the competitor. In other words, depending
on the wording of the policy, Florida law permits a claim for “advertising injury”
even though the alleged false advertisement fails to explicitly identify the plaintiff that
brought the false advertising action.
King Tuna alleges that Anova claims Anova’s products are superior to the
products of Anova’s competitors. (See Doc. 1-13, ¶ 12, 13, 16, 26; Doc. 56 at 6)
Anova relies on Vector Prods., Inc., v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 397 F.3d 1316
(11th Cir. 2005) . However, Vector is of no assistance to Anova because in Vector the
alleged disparaging advertisement targeted the “leading brand,” not Vector’s
competitors at large. As the parties agree, Hartford Cas. Ins. Co. v. Swift Distribution,
Inc., 326 P.3d 253, 261 (Cal. 2014), provides useful guidance:
In evaluating [disparagement claims], courts have required that the
defendant's false or misleading statement have a degree of specificity
that distinguishes direct criticism of a competitor's product or business
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from other statements extolling the virtues or superiority of the
defendant's product or business. A false or misleading statement
(1) must specifically refer to the plaintiff's product or business, and
(2) must clearly derogate that product or business. Each requirement
must be satisfied by express mention or by clear implication. . . . We
[hold] under the First Amendment that all injurious falsehoods must
specifically refer to, or be ‘of and concerning,’ the plaintiff in some
way.
An insurance contract is interpreted according to the policy’s plain meaning.
Garcia v. Fed. Ins. Co., 969 So.2d 288, 291 (Fla. 2007) The policy unambiguously
states Auto-Owners’ obligation to defend an alleged advertising injury that
“disparages a person’s or organization’s goods, products or services.” The policy
evinces no agreement by Auto-Owners to insure against a loss arising from Anova’s
advertising the superiority of Anova’s product to the field of competing products.
King Tuna alleged that Anova’s statement about Anova’s product indirectly harmed
King Tuna. Anova advertised generic assertions about the superiority of Anova’s
product. Because the Oregon complaint does not allege a covered “advertising
injury” and because Anova’s advertisements failed to impliedly disparage King Tuna,
Auto-Owners owed no duty to defend.
2. Nonconformity Exclusion
An insurer need not defend an action if the pleading shows that a policy
exclusion applies. Federal Ins. Co. v. Applestein, 377 So. 2d 229, 231 (Fla. 3d DCA
1979) (Schwartz, J.) The policy excludes from coverage an advertising injury
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“[a]rising out of the failure of goods, products or services to conform with any
statement or representation of quality or performance.” (Doc. 1-7 at 24) AutoOwners claims that the “nonconformity” exclusion negates any duty to defend.
Anova argues that “specific factual findings [not yet determined at the time Anova
tendered the Oregon claim to Auto-Owners] in the underlying case as to the quality
of the goods are required in order to prove that the nonconformity exclusion bars
recovery.” (Doc. 66 at 9) Also, Anova argues that the exclusion is inapplicable
because King Tuna alleges that Anova misrepresented not the “quality” of the final
product, but the “process” by which Anova treated raw tuna. (Doc. 66 at 10)
Anova’s argument lacks merit. The exclusion clause is unambiguous. King
Tuna alleges that Anova’s product failed to conform to Anova’s advertised statement
of quality.1 Anova’s proposed distinction between “process” and “quality” — arrant
hair-splitting in this instance — is meritless. The “process” used to prepare Anova’s
product is intimately associated with the product’s “quality.” The alleged advertising
injury followed as a consequence of the purported failure of Anova’s product to
1
Specifically, the Oregon complaint alleges that “[t]he Clearsmoke process purports to treat
tuna with [hickory wood chip smoke]. . . . Anova represents that the Clearsmoke process has ‘One
ingredient only: Hickory Wood Chips.’” (Doc. 1-13 at 8) “Anova’s marketing and advertisements
are literally false as in actual practice Anova sells raw tuna products which are treated and processed
in a manner substantially different from the representations in Anova’s advertising and marketing
communications.” (Doc. 1-13 at 9)
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conform with Anova’s assertion as to the quality of Anova’s product. The exclusion
clause negates any duty to defend.
3. Insurer’s Right to Receive Notice as a Condition Precedent to Maintaining an
Action on a Claim
Auto-Owners argues (Doc. 56 at 21) that (by failing to tender the California
complaint to Auto-Owners) Anova failed to comply with conditions precedent to
Auto-Owners’s duty to defend. Under the policy, Anova must notify Auto-Owners
of any amended pleadings or other new information. Auto-Owners argues that
because Anova breached Auto-Owners’s right to receive notice of the California
lawsuit, Anova cannot succeed on a claim that Auto-Owners breached the duty to
defend.
Anova argues compliance with the policy due to Anova’s providing AutoOwners with notice of King Tuna’s claims in the Oregon suit. (Doc. 66 at 11) AutoOwners cites (as addressing this “exact issue”) G.M. Sign, Inc. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine
Ins. Co., Case No: 1:14-cv-2977, 2016 WL 5340541 (N.D. Ga. June 9, 2016)
(Ross, J.), which holds that an insurer owes no duty to defend an insured in a second
action after the same insurer denied defense of the first and identical action.
However, G.M. Sign Inc. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co., No. 16-14905, 2016
WL 7473781 (11th Cir. Dec. 29, 2016) (per curiam), holds under Georgia law that
after an insurer denies coverage for the first claim the insured is released from a
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notice obligation as to that claim and that the insurer cannot assert lack of notice as a
defense to coverage. But in G.M. Sign the plaintiff sued in Illinois state court and
removed to federal court. The insurer refused coverage. The federal court dismissed
the claims without prejudice. Immediately after dismissal in federal court, the same
claims were filed again in Illinois state court. Here, King Tuna filed a different claim
in a different state.
Anova is obligated to notify Auto-Owners of an “[o]ccurence, claim, or
suit.” (Doc. 1-4 at 7) The policy defines “occurrence” and “suit” but fails to define
“claim.” Anova argues that the definition of the word “claim” is ambiguous, that
any ambiguity is construed in favor of Anova, and that King Tuna’s two separate
actions against Anova are, arguably, the same “claim.” However, none of the
authority that Anova cites involves a second action adding a new claim filed in a new
jurisdiction.
The policy states clearly that Anova must tender Auto-Owners a copy of any
“demands, notices, summonses, or legal papers received in connection with [a] claim
or suit.” Thus, the policy obligated Anova to notify Auto-Owners of the new action.
Also, because the scope of the duty to defend is broader in California, Auto-Owners
was denied the opportunity to assess whether coverage existed under California law.2
2
Under Oregon law, whether an insurer is under a duty to defend depends on the complaint
and the insurance policy. Ledford v. Gutoski, 319 Or. 397, 877 P.2d 80 (1994). In California, the duty
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Not every failure of the insured to cooperate with the insurer excuses the
insurer’s defending an action. But a failure that constitutes a “material breach” and
that “substantially prejudices the rights of the insurer” in defending the action will
release the insurer from the duty to defend. Ramos v. NW Mut. Ins. Co.,
336 So. 2d 71, 75 (Fla. 1976). In some instances, particularly if the facts are not
disputed, the presence of “substantial prejudice” is determinable as a matter of law.
Ramos, 336 So.2d at 75. An insured’s failure to comply with a policy requiring the
insured to provide timely written notice to the insurer of a claim might negate an
insurer’s coverage obligation if the insurer is prejudiced by late notice. Tiedtke v. Fid.
& Cas. Co. of N.Y., 222 So. 2d 206, 209 (Fla. 1969); State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v.
Curran, 135 So. 3d 1071, 1079 (Fla. 2014). Here, Auto-Owners suffered substantial
prejudice because Anova denied Auto-Owners the ability to attempt to negotiate a
settlement of the California claim and denied Auto-Owners the ability to examine the
new state law claim under California law.
CONCLUSION
Auto-Owners’s Rule 12(b)(1) motion (Doc. 73) to dismiss is DENIED. The
motion (Doc. 75) to strike exhibits attached to the motion (Doc. 73) to dismiss is
to defend is ascertained by comparing the complaint’s allegations with the policy. Montrose Chemical
Corp. v. Super. Ct. of Los Angeles County, 6 Cal. 4th 287 (Cal. 1993). But “[f]acts extrinsic to the
complaint also give rise to a duty to defend when they reveal a possibility that the claim may be
covered by the policy.” Montrose, 6 Cal. 4th at 295.
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DENIED AS MOOT. Auto-Owners’s motion (Doc. 56) for partial summary
judgment is GRANTED. Anova’s motion (Doc. 52) for partial summary judgment
establishing Auto-Owners’s duty to defend is DENIED. Auto-Owners’s
counterclaim (Doc. 43) for declaratory relief is GRANTED. Auto-Owners owed no
duty under the insurance policy to defend or to indemnify Anova under the
circumstances presented in this action and for the reasons explained in this order.
The clerk is directed to enter judgment against the plaintiffs and for the defendant on
each of the two counts in the complaint (Doc. 1), to enter judgment against the
plaintiffs and for the defendant on the defendant’s claim for declaratory judgment in
the counterclaim for declaratory relief (Doc. 43), to terminate any pending motion,
and to close the case.
ORDERED in Tampa, Florida, on May 26, 2017.
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