G.R. SMITH, United States Magistrate Judge.
Before the undersigned in this insurance coverage dispute is plaintiff Colony Insurance Company's (Colony's) motion to compel defendant 944 Abereorn, LCC's (Abercorn's) discovery responses. Doc. 34. Colony also moves to amend its complaint. Doc. 35. The resolution of the legal issues driving those motions may conflict with that of the district judge when he resolves Abercorn's pending summary judgment motion, doc. 29. Thus, the Court must defer the motions to the district judge.
The dispute arises from water damage to a Savannah, Georgia apartment complex known as the "English Oaks Apartments." Abereorn owned it during the 2008-2009 term of a damage policy issued by Colony. Abereorn thus filed a damage claim with Colony. The parties conducted an appraisal under the policy's terms and Colony partially paid, doc. 29 at 3, doc. 42 at 3, 8, but then stopped and filed this Declaratory Judgment action to limit coverage. Doc. 1. Even though Abereorn lost the complex to foreclosure in July 2010,
The gist of Colony's "compel" motion turns on the water damages. It wants details on Abercorn's claim, but Abereorn says Colony has all it needs — indeed, the appraisal process resolved coverage, it contends. In fact, Abereorn moved to stay discovery pending its summary-judgment motion. Doc. 30 (motion); doc. 59 (Order denying it). Abereorn had recounted its discovery disclosures and insisted that "Colony has turned to needlessly expanding the scope of discovery in order to further delay the payment pursuant to the Appraisal Award, and to increase unnecessarily the cost of this litigation to [Abercorn]."
Colony's motion to amend its complaint centers on the misrepresentation and standing defenses that it wants to raise: "What began as a straight-forward action to set aside an unlawful appraisal," Colony contends, "has become an active investigation of insurance fraud." Doc. 70 at 1. Accusing Abercorn of "wordplay and gamesmanship," id. at 6, Colony recounts Abercorn's failure to disclose its foreclosure and questions Abercorn's claim that it purchased the right to collect the insurance policy proceeds. In fact, Colony sought documentation on that latter point but accuses Abercorn of giving it a false affidavit — during this litigation.
Both the compel and amend motions will be substantially affected (if not mooted outright) if Abercorn lost the insurable interest covered by the policy's proceeds, and thus lacks standing here. See Muhammad v. Allstate Ins. Co., 313 Ga.App. 531, 534, 722 S.E.2d 136 (2012) (insured's wholly owned corporation lacked standing to make a claim under home-owner's policy; insured lost any insurable interest in property following foreclosure). An
313 Ga.App. at 534, 722 S.E.2d 136. The parties have cited a number of cases that analyze pre- and post-foreclosure insurable interests. Doc. 63 at 6-8; doc. 70 at 10-11. That area of law is laced with subtle nuances. See, e.g., Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC v. Nationwide Mid. Fire Ins. Co., 2012 WL 1067854 at *5-7 (S.D.Ind. Mar. 29, 2012).
The compel and amend motions also pivot on an insurer's right to deny coverage based on the insured's misrepresentations:
Thompson v. Permanent General Assur. Corp., 238 Ga.App. 450, 451, 519 S.E.2d 249 (1999). "However, the insurer need not actually rely on the misrepresentation or suffer any prejudice therefrom." Scott v. Allstate Property & Cas. Ins. Co., 2010 WL 1254295 at *3 (S.D.Ga. Mar. 30, 2010) (quotes and cite omitted), reconsideration denied, 2010 WL 1526050 (S.D.Ga. Apr. 15, 2010).
A sub-issue arises — the degree of due diligence an insurer must exercise in evaluating an application for insurance. Here "[a]n insurer is entitled to rely on the statements of an applicant as true, without conducting an independent investigation." 16 GA. JUR. INSURANCE § 9:1 (Mar. 2012) (emphasis added) (citing Graphic Arts Mut. Ins. Co. v. Pritchett, 220 Ga.App. 430, 431-32, 469 S.E.2d 199 (1995)). Thus, no "buyer beware" or caveat emptor doctrine applies here.
Colony wants to amend its complaint so it can litigate Abercorn's standing
Abercorn further argues that Colony's motion to amend is untimely (well past this Court's January 3, 2012 Scheduling Order deadline for filing motions to amend, docs. 15 & 62) because, even though Abercorn never volunteered its "foreclosed" status to Colony, Colony could have easily found that out by checking the public records or even asking Abercorn, but it did not. Id. at 1-8.
Colony challenges many of the factual assertions Abercorn makes to support its arguments. In fact, it wants to add breach of contract and common law fraud theories to its complaint, then set aside the appraisal award.
These core issues (standing and misrepresentation) drive not only the amend and compel motions
Hence, an interpretation of the law embedded within those arguments here could conflict with the district judge's interpretation of the law in resolving the summary judgment motion. And given the subtle nuances resonating within those legal areas, see supra Part II(B), the chance of a conflict is reasonably high. This supplies good cause to reconsider and vacate the Court's prior ruling on Abercorn's stay motion, doc. 30, though Abercorn based that motion on different grounds than those illuminated here. Id. at 9-11 (it basically argues that the parties' appraisal process obviates the discovery Colony seeks and thus Abercorn is entitled to summary judgment based on the appraisal results). The district judge must decide, in reaching the pending summary-judgment motion, the insurable-interest if not other core issues detailed above.
Finally, serious fraud allegations have been raised, and it is for the district judge to draw the precise materiality/reliance/diligence line in addressing them.
Because Colony's compel and amend motions are inextricably intertwined with Abercorn's summary-judgment motion,
To defeat the misrepresentation defense the insured may show that the alleged misrepresentation was based on knowledge and belief regarding information that he does not control (in which case, the burden shifts to the insurer to inquire and examine for itself "so as to ascertain the truth." PHL Variable his. Co. v. Jolly, 800 F.Supp.2d 1205, 1213 (N.D.Ga.2011) (quotes and cite omitted), aff'd, 460 Fed.Appx. 899 (11th Cir.2012)). Another way is to show that "the insurer's reliance on information in the application ... is so utterly unreasonable that there could be no justifiable reliance." 44 AM.JUR.2D INSURANCE § 1026 (Feb.2012). "If evidence is presented that the insurer had, or was chargeable with, knowledge of facts which revealed the falsity of the representations prior to the insurer's reliance, the insurer must then establish by a preponderance of the evidence that it had no such knowledge or at least that its failure to discover the true facts was attributable to mere negligence." Id. Otherwise, "[m]isrepresentations, in order to avoid the contract of insurance, need not be the sole inducement to the contract nor the chief influence leading to action; it is enough if, as a contributory influence, they operate upon the mind and conduct of the other party to any material extent." Id.
Doc. 35 at 7-8 (emphasis added).
But Abercorn, Colony complains, has simply lobbed reams of documents at it and basically told it to "Go Fish." That does not honor the discovery standard, says Colony, and Abercorn has failed to specify on what pages the answers may be found. Colony has repeatedly told Abercorn that it can find none. Id. at 3. Abercorn responds that it has adequately responded, and it has set forth verbatim its initial and supplemental discovery responses to show that it has met Fed.R.Civ.P. 33(b)(3)'s disclosure standard. Doc. 48. All of this is moot if Abercorn lacks standing.