ANDRIAS, J.
In this insurance dispute arising out of the insured's monetary settlement of a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) proceeding and related private litigation predicated on the insured's violations of federal securities laws, we conclude that defendant insurers should be granted summary judgment declaring that plaintiffs are not entitled to coverage for the portion of the SEC disgorgement payment, $140 million, allegedly representing the improper profits acquired by third-party hedge fund customers, at issue in this appeal.
In 2003, the SEC began an investigation to determine whether Bear Stearns violated securities laws between 1999 and September 2003 by knowingly facilitating "late trading" and deceptive "market timing" for certain hedge fund customers, and affirmatively assisting those customers in evading detection, thereby enabling them to earn hundreds of millions of dollars in profits at the expense of mutual fund shareholders. In 2006, the SEC notified Bear Stearns that it intended to institute civil proceedings against it seeking monetary sanctions of $720 million.
In March 2006, after Bear Stearns made a formal offer of settlement, the SEC issued an "Order Instituting Administrative and Cease-and-Desist Proceedings, Making Findings, and Imposing Remedial Sanctions ... Pursuant to ... Sections 15(b) and 21C of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934" in which Bear Stearns, "without admitting or denying the findings [made pursuant to its offer of settlement]," agreed to pay "disgorgement in the total amount of $160,000,000" and "civil money penalties in the amount of $90,000,000." After defendant insurers refused to indemnify Bear Stearns, plaintiffs commenced this action for breach of contract and a declaration that defendants have a duty to indemnify Bear Stearns, asserting that all the claims fall within the definition of "Loss" under the subject insurance policies.
In a prior appeal, this Court held that, as a matter of public policy, Bear Stearns could not seek recoupment of any portion of the $160 million disgorgement payment and dismissed the complaint (91 A.D.3d 226 [1st Dept 2011]). The Court of Appeals reversed and reinstated the complaint, stating that "the Insurers
While recognizing that other courts, as a matter of contract interpretation or public policy, have held that the risk of being ordered to disgorge "ill-gotten gains" is not insurable, the Court of Appeals, referencing Bear Stearns's argument that the rule "should apply only where the insured requests coverage for the disgorgement of its own illicit gains," stated that "the documentary evidence does not decisively repudiate Bear Stearns' allegation that the SEC disgorgement payment amount was calculated in large measure on the profits of others" (21 NY3d at 336). With respect to the public policy prohibition barring an insured from seeking indemnification for intentionally harmful conduct, the Court found that "[t]he SEC order, while undoubtedly finding Bear Stearns' numerous securities laws violations to be willful, does not conclusively demonstrate that Bear Stearns also had the requisite intent to cause harm" (21 NY3d at 335).
As to the personal profit exclusion, which bars coverage for claims against the insured "based upon or arising out of the Insured gaining in fact any personal profit or advantage to which the Insured was not legally entitled," the Court found that "[b]ecause Bear Stearns alleges, and the SEC order does not conclusively refute, that its misconduct profited others, not itself, this exclusion does not defeat coverage under CPLR 3211" (21 NY3d at 337). As to the prior knowledge exclusion in the Lloyd's policy, which negates coverage for any claim arising from a wrongful act committed before March 21, 2000 (the effective date of the Lloyd's policy) if "any officer" of Bear Stearns, by that date, "knew or could have reasonably foreseen" that such wrongful act could lead to a claim, the Court agreed with the motion court that "`numerous disputed factual assertions remain concerning Bear Stearns' knowledge of the relevant facts prior to March 21, 2000, and whether a person in Bear Stearns' position could have reasonably foreseen that those facts might be the basis of a claim under the Policies' (2010 NY Slip Op 33799[U], *12)" (21 NY3d at 337).
We first consider whether or not the insurers should have been granted summary judgment dismissing the complaint
The primary professional liability policy, to which the excess policies follow form, provides that the Insurers are to "pay on behalf of [Bear Stearns] all Loss which [Bear Stearns] shall become legally obligated to pay as a result of any Claim ... for any Wrongful Act of [Bear Stearns]." "Loss" is defined as:
Vigilant argues that there is no coverage because the United States Supreme Court in Kokesh v SEC (581 US ___, 137 S.Ct. 1635 [2017]) conclusively defined the nature of the SEC disgorgement remedy as a penalty, not a loss, and that the Court of Appeals did not resolve this issue when it reversed to deny the insurers' motions to dismiss.
In Kokesh, decided after the Court of Appeals' prior decision reinstating the complaint, the United States Supreme Court held that SEC disgorgement constitutes a penalty, and is therefore subject to the five-year statute of limitations of 28 USC § 2462. In so ruling, the Supreme Court reasoned that SEC disgorgement (i) is imposed as a consequence for a wrong committed against the public, rather than a wrong against particular individuals; (ii) is meant to punish the violator and deter others from similar violations; and (iii) in many cases, does not compensate the victims of securities violations; rather, the wrongdoer pays disgorged profits to the district court, which has discretion to determine how and to whom to distribute the money (581 US at ___, 137 S Ct at 1643-1644).
The Supreme Court's rationale as to the nature of disgorgement in Kokesh applies with equal force to the issue of whether
Plaintiffs argue that even if the Supreme Court's reasoning behind the holding that disgorgement is a penalty extends beyond the limited context of Kokesh, it has no application here because the Court of Appeals has rejected the argument that the instant claim is not a loss under the policies and has suggested that a disgorgement payment of a third-party gain is recoverable under an insurance policy. However, application of the doctrine of the "law of the case" is not warranted under the particular circumstances before us.
The law of the case is applicable to "legal determinations that were necessarily resolved on the merits in a prior decision" (Brownrigg v New York City Hous. Auth., 29 A.D.3d 721, 722 [2d Dept 2006]). On the prior appeal, the Court of Appeals stated that "the Insurers do not earnestly dispute that the claims fall within the policy's definition of Loss" (21 NY3d at 333), but did not rely on the policy language in denying defendants' motions. Instead it focused on the public policy issue. Furthermore, the doctrine does not apply where a motion for summary judgment follows a motion to dismiss that was not converted to a motion for summary judgment pursuant to CPLR 3212(c) (see Alvarado v City of New York, 150 A.D.3d 500, 500 [1st Dept 2017]; Rosen v Mosby, 148 A.D.3d 1228, 1233 [3d Dept 2017], lv dismissed 30 N.Y.3d 1037 [2017]; 191 Chrystie LLC v Ledoux, 82 A.D.3d 681, 682 [1st Dept 2011]).
Even if the Court of Appeals' prior determination is viewed as addressing the contractual issue, "while the law of the case doctrine is intended to foster `orderly convenience' ..., it is not an absolute mandate which limits an appellate court's power to reconsider issues where there are extraordinary circumstances,
In reinstating the complaint, the Court of Appeals stated that "at this CPLR 3211 stage, the documentary evidence does not decisively repudiate Bear Stearns' allegation that the SEC disgorgement payment amount was calculated in large measure on the profits of others" (21 NY3d at 336). By this ruling, the Court suggested that, while public policy bars insurance coverage for the disgorgement of illicit gains, it does not preclude recovery of a disgorgement payment to the extent the payment was based on the gains of third parties. In adopting this view, the Court stated:
However, Kokesh has now provided the missing precedent, establishing that disgorgement is a penalty, whether it is linked to the wrongdoer's gains or gains that went to others. In Kokesh, the Supreme Court, emphasizing that when a sanction "can only be explained as ... serving either retributive or deterrent purposes," it is a "punishment," rejected the SEC's argument that disgorgement is remedial because it simply puts the defendant back in the position "he would have occupied had he not broken the law" (581 US at ___, 137 S Ct at 1644-1645). The Court explained:
The United States Supreme Court has thereby made clear that SEC disgorgement is a penalty because it punishes a public wrong, and its purpose is deterrence, whether you are remitting your own ill-gotten gains or those you generated for your customers through violations of the securities law, even if you did not directly share in those profits.
Kokesh has significance beyond the narrow issue of the statute of limitations because the Supreme Court analyzed the fundamental nature and purpose of the SEC's disgorgement remedy, which does not change into some different nature for purposes of insurance coverage. Thus, as defendants argue, Kokesh and the long-standing legal principles on which it relied fatally undermine the motion court's holding that the $140 million of the SEC disgorgement remedy that plaintiff seeks to recover is a covered loss under the policies. Indeed, if the $140 million portion of the disgorgement payment Bear Stearns seeks to recover reflects the gains of Bear Stearns's customers rather than of Bear Stearns itself, it makes it more, not less, of a penalty.
The fact that the disgorgement payment was later placed in a Fair Fund for distribution and could be used to offset Bear
Accordingly, the judgment of the Supreme Court, New York County (Charles E. Ramos, J.), entered August 14, 2017, awarding plaintiffs sums of money, including prejudgment interest, as against defendant insurers Vigilant Insurance Company, The Travelers Indemnity Company, Federal Insurance Company, National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pa., and Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, should be reversed, on the law, without costs, plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment denied, defendants' motions for summary judgment declaring that plaintiffs are not entitled to coverage for the SEC disgorgement payment granted, and it is so declared. The appeals from the order of the same court and Justice, entered April 17, 2017, as amended by the order of the same court and justice entered on or about August 11, 2017, should be dismissed, without costs, as subsumed in the appeals from the judgment.
Judgment, Supreme Court, New York County, entered August 14, 2017, reversed, on the law, without costs, plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment denied, defendants' motions for summary judgment declaring that plaintiffs are not entitled to coverage for the SEC disgorgement payment granted, and it is so declared. Appeals from order, same court and Justice, entered April 17, 2017, as amended by order, same court and Justice, entered on or about August 11, 2017, dismissed, without costs, as subsumed in the appeals from the judgment.