National Union v. Cargill, No. 21-3141 (8th Cir. 2023)
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National Union Fire Insurance Co. of Pittsburgh (National Union) filed suit to obtain a declaration that it owed no payment to Cargill, Inc. under the employee theft clause of the insurance policy held by Cargill. Cargill counterclaimed for breach of contract. The district court granted judgment on the pleadings for Cargill, ruling that Cargill had suffered a covered loss resulting directly from an employee’s theft. National Union appealed.
The Eighth Circuit affirmed and held that the district court did not err by concluding there were no disputes as to any material facts that precluded granting Cargill’s Rule 12(c) motion. Further, the court wrote that Cargill’s insurance policy provided coverage for employee “theft,” which was defined in the policy as “the unlawful taking of property to the deprivation of the Insured.” Additionally, the insured’s loss must have resulted “directly from” employee theft to be covered by the policy. Finally, the court concluded that the date of Cargill’s notice letter was the appropriate date to begin calculating prejudgment interest.
Court Description: [Kelly, Author, with Wollman and Kobes, Circuit Judge] Civil case - Insurance. The district court did not err in determining that Cargill suffered a covered loss resulting directly from an employee's theft when an employee embezzled money by misrepresenting the price at which grain was sold; the district court did not err by concluding there were no disputes as to material facts; the employee exercised such control over the grain that her actions amounted to a covered unlawful taking; the employee's conduct caused Cargill to ship grain to her location and the district court did not err in determining that the amount of covered loss included the shipping costs for the grain; the district court properly applied Minnesota law in determining the starting date for prejudgment interest was the date Cargill send National a notice later.
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