WIENER, Circuit Judge:
This case is before us for a second time.
Following an extensive analysis of the meaning of "sub-contractor" in Louisiana law, the district court impliedly ruled that Kindra was Bayou's sub-contractor when it granted Bayou and NYMAGIC's motion for summary judgment excluding coverage under NYMAGIC's policy. For the reasons explained below, we disagree with that conclusion and hold that, for purposes of the sub-contractor exclusion in the NYMAGIC policy, Kindra was Bayou's contractor—not its sub-contractor—so that
Bayou entered into a contract of affreightment calling for Memco to transport the cargo from Louisiana to Illinois on one of Memco's barges.
The cargo was loaded onto Memco's barge in Louisiana without incident. Instead of unloading the cargo in Illinois itself, however, Bayou entered into an entirely separate contract with Kindra, a stevedoring company, for Kindra to offload Bayou's cargo in Illinois. It was during the course of Kindra's unloading of the cargo from Memco's barge that Kindra's employee, Campbell, was seriously injured.
Campbell sued Bayou in Illinois state court. The parties later settled for six million dollars, four million of which was paid either by or on behalf of Bayou. National Union Fire Insurance Co. of Louisiana ("NUFIC-LA"),
After Bayou sued those insurance carriers, NYMAGIC agreed to fund a substantial portion of the settlement between Campbell and Bayou. NYMAGIC conditioned its agreement on Bayou's dismissing all of its claims against NYMAGIC and assigning its claims against its other insurers to NYMAGIC. After Bayou agreed to those conditions, the parties were realigned, with NYMAGIC joining Bayou as a plaintiff (NYMAGIC and Bayou are currently the Plaintiffs-Appellees herein).
In Bayou I, we disposed of issues relating to coverage under Evanston's primary general liability policy.
We review a district court's summary judgment de novo.
NYMAGIC's excess wharfinger policy was written as a "following form" to Bayou's primary wharfinger policy issued by NUFIC-LA. A "following form" excess policy incorporates by reference all terms and conditions of the primary insurance policy.
This appeal turns on whether Campbell's employer, Kindra, was a sub-contractor of Bayou for purposes of this NYMAGIC policy exclusion. There are two possible alternatives: (1) Kindra was a sub-contractor of Bayou, so NYMAGIC is off the hook for coverage of Campbell's injuries, and NUFIC-PA is on the hook; or (2) Kindra was not a sub-contractor of Bayou, so NYMAGIC is on the hook, and NUFIC-PA is off.
As Louisiana law controls in this diversity case,
As noted by the district court, NYMAGIC's policy does not expressly define "sub-contractor." An undefined term is not necessarily ambiguous, however; such a term is to be given its "generally prevailing meaning."
We agree with that definition as far as it goes, but here it begs the question, "which other person's work?" To hold that Campbell's injuries were excluded from coverage under the policy, the court had to have found that his employer, Kindra, was a sub-contractor of Bayou, "hired to do part of" Bayou's "work." Despite our respect for the district court, we must disagree with it in this instance. Our non-deferential de novo review
We begin our analysis with a review of the definitions of "sub-contractor" that the district court considered:
An in-depth analysis of the foregoing definitions makes it pellucid that an indispensable prerequisite to sub-contractor status is the pre-existence of a primary contract, i.e., an agreement between a principal party (the paying party) and a prime contractor (the performance party). The most recent edition of Black's Law Dictionary highlights the requirement of a pre-existing contract between two primary parties in even stronger terms than in some previous editions, defining "sub-contractor" as "[o]ne who is awarded a portion of an existing contract by a contractor, esp. a general contractor."
Within the set of all bilateral, or synallagmatic, contracts in Louisiana
Later, in an entirely separate payment/performance contract, the performance party (Kindra) promised only a performance, viz., to offload the cargo of the paying party (Bayou) from the barge at point B for an agreed price—a stereotypical stevedoring performance—and the paying party (Bayou) promised only to pay the agreed price to the performance party (Kindra) for doing so. Thus, in each independent contract, Bayou's only obligation was to pay for a performance, and the only obligation of the performance party— Memco in one contract and Kindra in the other—was to do "work," viz., for Memco, the transporting of Bayou's cargo from Louisiana to Illinois by barge; for Kindra, the unloading of Bayou's cargo from that barge in Illinois.
These entirely separate contracts were too attenuated to produce a sub-contractor relationship between Bayou and Kindra (or for that matter, between Bayou and Memco). Bayou was the paying party, not the performance party, under both the transporting contract with Memco and the unloading contract with Kindra. Memco was never a paying party that contracted with Bayou for Bayou to remove its own cargo from the barge; Memco simply limited its own obligation, i.e., its performance under the single transporting contract, to the hauling of Bayou's cargo, never assuming the additional stevedoring "work" of loading or unloading it onto and off of its barge. Consequently, when Bayou thereafter contracted directly with Kindra for Kindra to unload Bayou's cargo at the end of the voyage, Kindra was Bayou's contractor, not its sub-contractor.
Under the law of Louisiana applicable to this area of commerce, it is a legal impossibility for a single performance party to be both the contractor and the sub-contractor of a single paying party while simultaneously performing precisely the same work. A paying party's contractor is one who directly contracts with the paying party to provide a specified performance. By contrast, a paying party's sub-contractor is a third party who directly contracts only with the paying party's performance contractor (or another sub-contractor)—but not directly with the paying party itself— to perform some lesser portion of the total performance owed by the performance contractor (or another sub-contractor). Obviously, then, Kindra could not have been both the offloading contractor and the offloading sub-contractor of Bayou simultaneously, and Kindra never entered into any contract with Bayou's other performance contractor, Memco.
Plaintiffs-Appellees nevertheless contended, and the district court agreed, that the Bayou/Kindra stevedoring contract created a contractor/sub-contractor relationship between Bayou and Kindra. In doing so, they rely on the statement in the affreightment contract between Memco and Bayou that "[i]t shall be the obligation of ... [Bayou], or its consignee, to unload and remove the Cargo from the barge
The above-quoted statement on which Plaintiffs-Appellees would rely demonstrates nothing more than complete and careful contract draftsmanship, spelling out, rather than leaving to inference, that Memco's sole performance obligation to Bayou was transportation and did not include the stevedoring function of loading or unloading the cargo. That function always was, and remained, the responsibility of only Bayou as owner of the cargo. It cannot be read to make Bayou a performance party to do the stevedoring as "part of" Memco's "work" because Memco never undertook to do that work in the first place. Indeed, even if we were to agree with Plaintiffs-Appellees (which we do not) that Bayou's retained responsibility for unloading its own cargo from Memco's barge at the end of the voyage somehow made Bayou a performance contractor of Memco, Louisiana law would at most make (1) Memco the principal party, (2) Bayou the prime contractor of Memco, and (3) Kindra (as Bayou's stevedoring contractor) the sub-contractor of Memco—but not the sub-contractor of Bayou. In short, even when viewed in the light urged by Plaintiffs-Appellees, Bayou never had a sub-contractor at any stage of these transactions.
This is perhaps best illustrated by comparing the facts of the instant case with a hypothetical example. Suppose that Bayou had elected to contract with XYZ stevedoring to load the cargo in Louisiana and to unload it in Illinois. XYZ would have been Bayou's contractor for purposes of NYMAGIC's policy exclusion, and any XYZ employee injured during the course of the stevedoring work would have been covered. But, in turn, if XYZ had contracted with Kindra to do the part of XYZ's stevedoring work that consisted of unloading the cargo in Illinois, Kindra would have been Bayou's sub-contractor, i.e., the party hired to do part of the work of Bayou's contractor, XYZ, and Kindra's employee would have been excluded from coverage under NYMAGIC's policy.
As Bayou was the principal party (paying party) and not the prime contractor (performance party) under both its barge transportation agreement with Memco and its offloading agreement with Kindra, there is no way for Kindra to have been a sub-contractor of Bayou within the intendment of the NYMAGIC policy's exclusion of coverage for injuries sustained by employees of Bayou's sub-contractors. Kindra contracted directly with Bayou—not with some contractor of Bayou—to offload Bayou's cargo, so Kindra was Bayou's contractor, not its sub-contractor. Consequently, NYMAGIC's coverage exclusion does not apply to Campbell's injuries because he was the employee of a contractor of Bayou, not of a sub-contractor of Bayou. We therefore REVERSE the district court's summary judgment and REMAND this case to that court for further proceedings consistent herewith.