Continental Casualty Company v. Winder Laboratories, LLC, --- F.4th ----, 2023 WL 4504183, No. 21-11758 (11th Cir. Jul. 13, 2023)
Winder, a generic pharma manufacturer, sought insurance
coverage for a false advertising lawsuit. The court of appeals affirmed the
finding that there was no coverage, but also that Winder didn’t have to pay the
insurers back for the representation they offered during the coverage dispute.
As relevant “personal and advertising injury” was defined to
include an injury “arising out of” either “[o]ral or written publication, in
any manner, of material that slanders or libels a person or organization or
disparages a person’s or organization’s goods, products or services” or “[t]he
use of another’s advertising idea in [the insureds’] ‘advertisement.’ ”1 The
policies also had a “failure to conform” provision that excluded coverage for
injuries “[a]rising out of the failure of goods, products or services to
conform with any statement of quality or performance made in [the insureds’]
‘advertisement.’ ” Neither policy at issue included a reimbursement provision
allowing the insurers to recoup defense costs.
The underlying lawsuit by Concordia asserted various claims
under the Lanham Act and Georgia law, focusing on the allegation that Winder
“falsely or misleadingly advertised their B-Donna product, and subsequently
their Phenohytro product, as generic [equivalents] to [Concordia’s product]
DONNATAL directly to the pharmaceutical industry, including to potential
purchasers.”
The insurers agreed to defend, subject to a reservation of
rights to disclaim coverage, but also included a “not-so-standard reimbursement
provision”: “VFI specifically reserves its right to seek reimbursement of
defense costs incurred on [the insureds’] behalf for all claims which are not
potentially covered by the VFI Policy.” The insurers also sued for a
declaratory judgment that they had no duty to defend or indemnify. The district court held that Concordia’s
allegations were “squarely” excluded by the “failure to conform” provision
because the “operative complaint [was] based entirely upon allegations that
[Winder] misrepresented the quality” of Winder’s products.
Winder argued that Concordia’s complaint alleged a “personal
and advertising injury” because it included allegations that Winder copied
Concordia’s DONNATAL label inserts. But did the false advertising claim hinge
on the alleged label copying? If so, there would be coverage; if not, and the claim
rested on allegations that Winder actively misrepresented its drugs, then the
alleged injury arose from the “failure of goods ... to conform with any
statement of quality or performance made in [the insureds’] ‘advertisement,’ ”
and the insurers were protected by the “failure to conform” exclusion.
The court of appeals agreed with the latter approach. The
copying allegations were clearly in service of the misrepresentation of
equivalence claim—copying was merely one of the means by which the misrepresentation
was allegedly carried out. This was not a “personal and advertising injury”
stemming from “[t]he use of another’s advertising idea”—i.e., Concordia’s
labels. The specific allegation that Winder made “false or misleading”
representations and statements about its products by “marketing the products as
‘generics’ that are comparable to and/or substitutable for [Concordia’s]
DONNATAL,” was a “textbook” of failure-to-conform.
Also, Winder argued that Concordia’s false advertising claim
relied on statements made by non-party drug databases for which Winder wasn’t
responsible; but Concordia clearly alleged that Winder’s initial alleged misrepresentations
were the but for cause of its injuries. Winder further alleged that it only
made true statements which couldn’t “fail ... to conform with any statement of
quality or performance ....” However, the underlying complaint, which
determined coverage, alleged misrepresentations.
At least Winder wasn’t required to reimburse the insurers. “[B]ecause
insurers under Georgia law have a broad duty to defend when there is ‘even
arguably’ a covered claim, the insurers had an active duty to defend up until
the point when the district court ruled otherwise. Simply put, under the facts
of this case, the insurers were under a duty to defend until the district court
ruled that they were not.” No new contract was created by the insurers’
reservation of rights letter, and just asserting a right to reimbursement in a
reservation of rights letter isn’t enough if the insurance contract did not
contemplate a right to recoupment.
There was no consideration for the reimbursement provision. Importantly,
“a promise to perform a preexisting contractual obligation does not constitute
consideration for a new agreement.” The parties’ contracts already required a
defense against certain third-party lawsuits, so the letters were no more than a
promise to perform an existing obligation. Further, the underlying contract
didn’t provide which party would select legal counsel, so offering Winder the option
to choose counsel didn’t give up anything on the insurers’ side.
Nor was Winder unjustly enriched by retaining “the benefit
of an expensive defense to which they knew they were not entitled.” Even
assuming this argument didn’t immediately fail due to the existence of a
written contract, there was nothing “unjust” about requiring the insurers to
fulfill their contractual obligations. “[W]e cannot say that an insured is
unjustly enriched when its insurer tenders a defense in order to protect its
own interests, even if it is later determined that the insurer did not owe a
defense.”
Georgia law wouldn’t require this, the court predicted. “The
duty to defend is extremely broad under Georgia law.” There was no majority
rule favoring recoupment nationwide; the current case law “appears to be
more-or-less in equipoise with the recent trend favoring the ‘no recoupment’
rule.” More importantly, in Georgia, the broad duty to defend is “foundational.”
But a rule allowing for broadscale reimbursement without any contractual
provision securing that right would collapse the duty to defend into the duty
to indemnify. “That is, if the duty to defend required insurers to mount a
defense but the defense was widely reimbursable upon a court’s determination
that no ongoing duty to defend exists, the duty to defend would simply become
the duty to indemnify.” [This seems technically untrue—you could have a rule
separating the duty to defend from the duty to indemnify as long as a court
agreed that the allegations of the complaint created the duty to defend but an ultimate
finding/narrowing of the case could avoid the duty to indemnify—but that kind
of distinction does at least push against the breadth of the duty to defend.]
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