CHARLES R. NORGLE, Sr., District Judge.
Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50(a), Aon Risk Services Insurance West, Inc. ("Aon") respectfully moves for judgment as a matter of law. In support, Aon states as follows.
During the week-long jury trial of this case, no evidence was presented upon which a reasonable jury could return a verdict in Horace Mann's favor against Aon. Aon, a third-party defendant, served as Horace Mann's insurance broker during the events in question in this lawsuit. This litigation commenced when Horace Mann's insurer, Lexington, filed a Complaint for Declaratory Judgment against Horace Mann, alleging four reasons why it was not obligated to provide insurance coverage to Horace Mann for the Burley Litigation. (Apr. 7, 2011 Compl. Dec. Judg. ¶¶ 33, 35-37, attached as Ex. A.) Horace Mann then filed a Third-Party Complaint against Aon alleging professional negligence. (June 30, 2011 Third Party Compl., attached as Ex. B.) Horace Mann alleged that, "[i]f Lexington is correct that Horace Mann failed to provide timely notice of the Burley Litigation" to Lexington and thus that Lexington does not owe coverage to Horace Mann, then Aon is to blame. (Id. ¶ 16, emphasis supplied. See also id. at ¶¶ 6, 7, 8, 18.)
For three independent reasons, no jury could reasonably find for Horace Mann. First, the record is barren of any evidence that Aon improperly advised Horace Mann or failed to follow its instructions. Second, according to Horace Mann's own Third-Party Complaint, Aon can only be liable in the event Lexington prevails on an untimely notice defense. Lexington, however, is no longer asserting the late notice defenses it relied upon in its Complaint for Declaratory Judgment. At trial, Lexington's sole basis for withholding coverage was that Horace Mann failed to report a March 3, 2011 email. But Horace Mann has not alleged, or adduced any evidence, that Aon did anything wrong with respect to the March 3, 2011 email. Third, no evidence was offered at trial in support of Horace Mann's claim that Aon's conduct proximately caused Lexington to withhold coverage and file the Complaint for Declaratory Judgment, thus imposing litigation expenses upon Horace Mann.
For these reasons, Aon respectfully requests that the Court grant it judgment as a matter of law.
"If, reviewing that evidence in the proper light, the nonmoving party did not introduce enough to support her claim, then judgment as a matter of law is correct." Massey v. Blue Cross-Blue Shield of Illinois, 226 F.3d 922, 924 (7th Cir. 2000) (affirming trial court's grant of judgment as a matter of law under Fed R. Civ. Pro. 50(a)). "The standard for granting judgment as a matter of law `mirrors' the standard for granting summary judgment." Pandya v. Edward Hosp., 1 F. App'x 543, 545 (7th Cir. 2001) (quoting Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Products, Inc., 120 S.Ct. 2097, 2109 (2000)). Under Rule 50(a):
Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(a).
In its Third-Party Complaint, Horace Mann alleges the following theory of professional negligence against Aon: "Aon breached its duties to Horace Mann by [1] improperly advising Horace Mann that notice to Lexington of the Burley Litigation was not required in August and September 2010 and [2] in failing to follow Horace Mann's instructions regarding providing prompt notice of the Burley Litigation to Lexington in August, September and December 2010." (Third Party Compl. ¶ 16.) The trial record contains no evidence in support of Horace Mann's allegations.
Horace Mann has not elicited any testimony that Aon ever advised Horace Mann that notice of the Burley Litigation was not "required" in August or September 2010. No witness testified that Aon provided such advice.
In fact, Horace Mann's theory of liability is that Aon should have reported the Burley Litigation as
Thus, the trial record contains no evidence that Aon "improperly advised" Horace Mann that notice of the Burley Litigation was not required in August or September 2010.
The undisputed evidence establishes that Aon followed every instruction Horace Mann gave to Aon. An insurance producer such as Aon "is not liable if he acts in good faith and with reasonable care, skill and diligence . . . in compliance
In this case, Horace Mann's Third-Party Complaint alleges that Aon failed to follow Horace Mann's instructions when, in August and September 2010, Aon failed to report the Burley Litigation to Lexington as a Potential Claim. (Trial Tr. Apr. 12, 2016 at 134:23-136:11; Exh. C.) The indisputable evidence in this case, however, establishes that Aon abided by Horace Mann's instructions regarding the Burley Litigation at every step:
In none of the above emails did Duris fail to abide by any instructions of Horace Mann. Littrell admitted on the witness stand that she understood Duris would notice the Burley Litigation to Lexington when he received a copy of the lawsuit (id. at 771:1-3; Exh. C) and that she informed Duris "that's fine." (Id. at 770:11-17; Exh. C.) Duris testified that he never told Littrell he would not send notice of the Burley Litigation. (Trial Tr. 723 at 19:21.) Littrell never testified to the contrary. Likewise, Duris confirmed that he did not submit the Burley Litigation to Lexington in August or September 2010 because he (a) awaited a copy of the complaint in the Burley Litigation to determine if a "Claim" had been filed against Horace Mann (id. at 19-25); and (b) he was instructed by Littrell that she "
Horace Mann promised the jury during opening statements that the evidence would show that "Aon advised" Horace Mann not to send a Notice of Potential Claim regarding the Burley Litigation in August or September 2010 because Aon wrongly feared that a "prior notice" provision under Exclusion 4(b) of the Policy would bar Horace Mann from receiving coverage. (Trial Tr. 127:2-3; 127-129; Exh. C.) The evidence has shown no such thing. Neither of the two Aon witnesses who testified in this matter, Vice President Ariel Duris (id. at 705:19; Exh. C) or Senior Account Executive Doug Neil (id. at 563:15; Exh. C), testified that they warned Horace Mann against submitting the Burley Litigation as a Potential Claim for any reason, let alone because of Exclusion 4(b).
Horace Mann's witnesses testified no differently. Nereida Littrell did not testify that Duris advised her not to file a Notice of Potential Claim in the Burley Litigation. In fact, Littrell admitted that she never even had a verbal conversation about the Burley Litigation with Duris or anyone else from Aon. (Trial Tr. 767:1-4; Exh. C.) Not a single email put into evidence at trial states that Aon advised Horace Mann against sending a Notice of Potential Claim in the Burley Litigation. Moreover, in a damning email Littrell sent to Lexington claims adjuster Alan Burkholz, Littrell put in writing the supposed reason why she decided to "withdraw" the Burley Litigation from consideration by Lexington. Littrell's email says nothing about Aon talking her out of filing a Notice of Potential Claim based upon Exclusion 4(b):
(Aon Ex. 54, emphasis supplied (attached hereto as Exh. K).) Even more damaging, Littrell's email statement above that Aon "verbally advised" her in connection with the Burley Litigation is irreconcilably at odds with her admission at trial that she never had a verbal conversation with Aon about the Burley Litigation. (Trial Tr. 767:1-4; Exh. C.)
The trial record is clear: Aon followed every instruction Horace Mann provided. Because no evidence was adduced to support Horace Mann's claim of professional negligence, the Court should grant Aon judgment as a matter of law.
In its June 30, 2011 Third-Party Complaint, Horace Mann made clear that it sought a finding of liability against Aon in the event Lexington were to prevail on the untimely notice defenses raised in its April 7, 2011 Complaint for Declaratory Judgment. (Third Party Compl. ¶ 7.) Lexington alleged in its Complaint that Horace Mann had failed to timely report a September 14, 2010 Letter, which Lexington believed was a "Claim" under the 2009-2010 Policy; failed to timely report a December 15, 2010 mediation; and failed to timely report a trial date in the Burley Litigation. (Compl. Dec. Judg. ¶¶ 33, 35-37.)
Horace Mann alleged in its Third-Party Complaint that Aon's liability was contingent upon a finding that Lexington was correct in its contentions that Horace Mann was untimely in reporting the Burley Litigation to Lexington. Horace Mann alleged:
(Third Party Compl. ¶ 16, emphasis supplied. See also id. at ¶¶ 6, 7, 8, 18.)
During the three-day trial between Lexington and Horace Mann, however, Lexington never once contended that Horace Mann was "untimely" in reporting the Burley Litigation to Lexington. Not once during trial did Lexington's sole witness, Alan Burkholz, testify that Horace Mann's reporting of the Burley Litigation was untimely. Timely notice of a Claim is not an issue in the dispute between Lexington and Horace Mann. And the trial record contains no evidence that Aon's actions proximately caused Lexington to file the Complaint for Declaratory Judgment and assert the untimely notice grounds for relief therein — Horace Mann was forced to concede that Horace Mann never reported the September 14, 2010 letter, the mediation, or the trial date to Aon or Lexington. (Trial Tr. 515:2-516:8; 727:17-728:25; 729:18-21; (Exh. C.)
Instead, since the September 4, 2013 Order wherein the Court rejected Lexington's late notice defenses asserted in the Complaint for Declaratory Judgment, Lexington's sole basis for withholding coverage has been that Horace Mann failed to inform Lexington that a Claim had been made against Horace Mann in the form of a March 3, 2011 email. All of the trial testimony in Horace Mann's case against Lexington centered on whether Horace Mann had properly reported the March 3, 2011 email to Lexington as a Claim.
It is undisputed, however, that Aon had nothing to do with Horace Mann's reporting of (or failure to report) the March 3, 2011 email. The trial record contains no evidence that Aon even received the March 3, 2011 email. Indeed, Horace Mann alleged in its own Third Party Complaint that Horace Mann stopped relying on Aon's advice on "January 11, 2011" (Third Party Compl. ¶ 17) — nearly two months before the March 3, 2011 email was authored. No evidence whatsoever was introduced at trial concerning any negligence on Aon's part with respect to the March 3, 2011 email.
Simply put, Lexington is no longer pursuing any untimely notice defenses. This reality is fatal to Horace Mann's case against Aon because the premise of Horace Mann's Third-Party Complaint was that "If Lexington is correct that Horace Mann failed to provide timely notice of the Burley Litigation," then Aon should be liable. (Third Party Compl. ¶ 16.) Based upon Horace Mann's own allegations, and given the total absence of any late notice defenses from Lexington, no basis exists for Aon to remain in this litigation.
During this trial and in previous motion practice, Horace Mann has contended that Aon proximately caused Horace Mann to incur the litigation costs of pursuing coverage from Lexington. As Horace Mann's counsel stated during his opening statement against Aon: "We haven't been paid for five years. Someone has to pay the cost of this litigation. . . .We're going to ask you if [Aon] make[s] these mistakes, they should be the ones to pay for it." (Trial Tr. 132:22-133:2; Exh. C.) In 2014, Aon moved for summary judgment. In its September 18, 2014 Order, the Court noted that, because "expert discovery . . . remains ongoing," Horace Mann's theory of liability against Aon remained viable "at this time." (Sept. 18, 2014 Order, ECF No. 178, at 3 (Exh. L).) The Court ruled "genuine issues of material fact remain as to whether Aon could have and should have reported a potential claim in August or September of 2010, and whether Aon's reporting of a potential claim would have prevented the instant litigation between Lexington and Horace Mann and the attendant damages" of Horace Mann's attorneys' fees. (Id.)
Horace Mann has now rested its case. No witness testified that Aon proximately caused Horace Mann to incur the costs of pursuing coverage from Lexington. During expert discovery, Horace Mann's expert Cowan opined that, "[i]f Aon had complied with Horace Mann's request" to send a Notice of Potential Claim "in August 2010, Lexington would not have denied coverage, and Horace Mann would have avoided this current litigation." (HM 142 (Exh. M), Cowan Report at 32, ¶ VII(B).)
Because the record contains no evidence that Aon proximately caused Horace Mann's litigation expenses against Lexington, judgment as a matter of law should be entered for Aon.
WHEREFORE, for the above reasons, Aon respectfully requests that the Court grant Aon judgment as a matter of law pursuant to Rule 50(a).