No. 91SC592Supreme Court of Colorado.
Decided December 14, 1992. Opinion Modified, and as Modified Rehearing Denied January 11, 1993.
Certiorari to the Colorado Court of Appeals
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Popham, Haik, Schnobrich Kaufman, Ltd., Wiley Daniel, Richard G. Sander; Comey Boyd, Eugene J. Comey, Sean M. Fitzpatrick, Robert F. Schiff, Linda S. Madrid, for Petitioner Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Rothgerber, Appel, Powers Johnson, Timothy J. Judson, Tennyson W. Grebenar, Franklin D. O’Loughlin, for Petitioner Glenn R. McGowan.
Berryhill, Cage North, P.C., Jack W. Berryhill; Meager Geer, Robert E. Salmon, William M. Hart, for Respondent.
D’Amato Lynch, Robert M. Yellen, for Amicus Curiae National Union Fire Insurance Company.
EN BANC
JUSTICE QUINN delivered the Opinion of the Court.
[1] This case raises two questions decided by the court of appeals i Federal Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Bowen, 824 P.2d 41 (Colo.App. 1991). The court of appeals held that the terms of a “regulatory exclusion” in a directors’ and officers’ liability insurance policy issued by American Casualty Company to the Buena Vista Bank and Trust Company, a state-chartered banking institution that later was declared insolvent and was closed by the Colorado Banking Commission, unambiguously excluded coverage for claims “based upon or attributable to” actions brought by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), either in the FDIC’s capacity as a bank regulator or in its capacity as liquidator of the insolvent bank on behalf of the bank’s depositors, creditors, and stockholders. The court of appeals also held that neither federal nor state public policy precluded judicial enforcement of the regulatory exclusion under circumstances where the FDIC obtained a judgment against the insolvent bank’s former directors for negligence and breach of fiduciary duty in managing the bank and then attempted to garnish the insurance proceeds as an asset of the bank. We granted the FDIC’s petition for certiorari to review the court of appeals’ resolution of these issues. Although we conclude that the regulatory exclusion is unambiguously written so as to exclude coverage for common law claims asserted by the FDIC against the former directors of the insolvent bank, we hold that judicial enforcement of the regulatory exclusion contravenes the important public policy underlying the Colorado Banking Code of 1957, §§ 11-1-101 to -11-11-110 and 11-22-101 to -11-23-125, 4B C.R.S. (1987 1992 Supp.), of vesting the FDIC, in its role as liquidator of an insolvent state-chartered bank, with the authority and responsibility for protecting the legitimate interests of the bank’s depositors, creditors, and stockholders by marshalling the bank’s assets and equitably compensating them for their losses resulting from the negligence and breach of fiduciary duty on the part of the bank’s former directors. By the term “the bank’s assets,” we mean the property interest of both the Buena Vista Bank and the bank’s former directors in the directors’ and officers’ liability police issued to the bank. We accordingly reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand the case to that court for consideration of any other issues raised by the parties in the original appeal to that court and not resolved by the court of appeals in its opinion.I.
[2] On August 28, 1986, the Colorado Banking Board closed the state-chartered Buena Vista Bank and Trust Company due to its insolvency and appointed the FDIC as liquidator for the bank pursuant to section 11-5-105(1)(a), 4B C.R.S. (1992 Supp.). Upon the FDIC’s appointment all the assets, business, and property of the bank were deemed to have been transferred from the bank and the banking board to the FDIC.
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§ 11-5-105(3)(a), 4B C.R.S. (1992 Supp.). In August 1988 the FDIC commenced a civil action against three former directors of the Buena Vista Bank, in which it alleged that the directors had negligently managed the bank and had breached their fiduciary obligations to the bank’s depositors, creditors, and stockholders. The FDIC subsequently obtained a 3.2 million dollar default judgment against two of the bank directors[1] and then served a writ of garnishment on American Casualty Company, which had issued a liability policy covering the bank’s directors and officers in the amount of one million dollars. The insurance policy, entitled Directors’ and Officers’ Liability Insurance Policy Including Bank Reimbursement, provided as follows:
[3] “In consideration of the payment of the premium and in reliance upon all statements made and information furnished to The Insurer (a stock insurance company, hereinafter called the Insurer) including the statements made in the application and subject to all of the terms, conditions, and limitations of this policy, the Insurer agrees: [4] “(a) With the Directors and Officers of the Bank that if, during the policy period any claim or claims are made against the Directors and Officers, individually or collectively, for a Wrongful Act, the Insurer will pay, in accordance with the terms of this policy, on behalf of the Directors and Officers or any of them, their heirs, legal representatives or assigns all Loss which the Directors and Officers or any of them shall become legally obligated to pay. [5] “(b) With the Bank that if, during the policy period, any claim or claims are made against the Directors and Officers, individually or collectively, for a Wrongful Act, the Insurer will pay, in accordance with the terms of this policy, on behalf of the Bank all Loss for which the Bank is required to indemnify or for which the Bank has to the extent permitted by law, indemnified the Directors and Officers.” [6] The insurance policy also provided that the liability coverage was applicable to “a shareholders’ derivative action brought by a shareholder of the institution other than by an insured.” [7] American Casualty Company answered the writ of garnishment by denying that it held or possessed any personal property owed to or owned by the judgment debtor-directors of the Buena Vista Bank. American Casualty Company’s denial was based on a “regulatory exclusion” contained in the policy which provided as follows: [8] “It is understood and agreed that the Insurer shall not be liable to make any payment for Loss in connection with any claim made against the Directors [or] Officers based upon or attributable to any action or proceeding brought by or on behalf of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Federal Savings Loan Insurance Corporation, any other depository insurance organization, the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, or any other national or state regulatory agency (all of said organizations and agencies hereinafter referred to as `Agencies’), including any type of legal action which such Agencies have the legal right to bring as receiver, conservator, liquidator or otherwise, whether such action or proceeding is brought in the name of such Agencies or by or on behalf of such Agencies in the name of any other entity or solely in the name of any Third Party.” [9] The FDIC traversed American Casualty Company’s answer by stating that asPage 1289
liquidator of the Buena Vista Bank it had obtained a judgment against the bank directors and that the insurance liability limit of one million dollars constituted personal property which American Casualty Company presently owed to the two bank directors against whom the 3.2 million dollar judgment had been entered.
[10] The district court found that American Casualty Company was presently indebted to the bank’s former directors in the amount of its liability policy limit of one million dollars as the result of the judgment entered in favor of the FDIC against the bank directors based on the FDIC’s common law claims of negligence and breach of fiduciary duty. The district court then ruled that the regulatory exclusion applied only to claims which the FDIC might bring in its administrative capacity as a bank regulator and not, as here, as the representative of an insolvent bank’s depositors, creditors, and stockholders. The district court next concluded that the regulatory exclusion in the liability policy was “unenforceable because it contravened state and federal public policy and impairs the federal and state statutorily imposed duties of FDIC/Receiver.” [11] American Casualty Company appealed to the court of appeals, which reversed the order sustaining the writ of garnishment and ordered the writ dismissed because, in its view, the regulatory exclusion was unambiguous and excluded any and all claims that the FDIC might bring in its capacity as liquidator, and the regulatory exclusion was not violative of any federal or state public policy. In reversing the judgment of the district court, the court of appeals did not consider American Casualty Company’s argument that the district court abused its discretion and violated American Casualty Company’s constitutional rights by denying its motion for a continuance of the garnishment hearing, by failing to conduct a full evidentiary hearing on the garnishment issue, and by failing to consolidate the garnishment proceeding and a declaratory action filed by American Casualty Company but dismissed by the district court.[2] We thereafter granted the FDIC’s petition for certiorari to review the decision of the court of appeals.II.
[12] We first consider whether the terms of the regulatory exclusion are ambiguous. The FDIC’s argument on this issue proceeds as follows: the language of the regulatory exclusion is ambiguous in that it might apply to all claims brought by the FDIC or, instead, only to claims relating to losses caused by so-called “secondary suits,” which the FDIC describes as lawsuits brought by a third party or parties against a bank director or officer as a result of some previous action taken by the FDIC;[3] in the face of that ambiguity, the exclusion must be construed in favor of the FDIC; and thus, the FDIC contends, the regulatory exclusion does not preclude coverage for the FDIC’s claims directly asserted against the former directors of the insolvent Buena Vista Bank. We need not delay long in answering this argument, as we find the regulatory exclusion clear and unambiguous.
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Chacon v. American Family Mut. Ins. Co., 788 P.2d 748 (Colo. 1990). It is a well-established principle of contract law that a court cannot rewrite an unambiguous insurance contract nor limit its effect by a strained construction. Mid-Century Ins. Co. v. Liljestrand, 620 P.2d 1064, 1067 (Colo. 1980). If the insurance policy is clear and unambiguous, it should be enforced according to its plain terms. Kane v. Royal Ins. Co. of America, 768 P.2d 678, 680 (Colo. 1989). It is only where the terms of an agreement are ambiguous or are used in some special or technical sense not apparent from the terms themselves that the court should construe the agreement against the insurer and in favor of coverage Chacon, 788 P.2d at 750. A mere disagreement between litigating parties about the meaning of an insurance provision, however, does not serve to create an ambiguity. Kane, 768 P.2d at 680.
[14] The plain terms of the regulatory exclusion exclude coverage for any loss sustained by the directors and officers which results from “any action” brought by the FDIC as “receiver, conservator, liquidator, or otherwise,” whether brought in the name of the FDIC or in the name of a third party. In our view, the insurance policy issued by the American Casualty Company unqualifiedly states that no coverage will be afforded under the policy for any suit brought by the FDIC against the bank’s directors or officers. Other courts have analyzed the language of similar regulatory exclusions and have found the language to be clear and unambiguous. See, e.g., American Casualty Co. of Reading, Pa. v. Federal Deposit Ins. Corp., 944 F.2d 455, 460 (8th Cir. 1991); St. Paul Fire Marine v. Federal Deposit Ins. Corp., 765 F. Supp. 538, 549 (D. Minn. 1991); American Casualty Co. of Reading, Pa. v. Baker, 758 F. Supp. 1340, 1345 (C.D. Cal. 1991). We similarly hold that the language of the regulatory exclusion excludes coverage for the FDIC’s common law claims against the former directors of the Buena Vista Bank for negligence and breach of fiduciary duty.III.
[15] We turn now to consider whether the regulatory exclusion is void as contrary to public policy. The FDIC contends that judicial enforcement of the regulatory exclusion violates the public policy of federal and state banking law by depriving the FDIC of its authority to act in a manner calculated to protect the interests of an insolvent bank’s depositors, creditors, and stockholders by marshalling the bank’s assets and equitably distributing those assets to pay the claims of depositors, creditors, and stockholders resulting from the bank’s former directors’ negligence and breach of fiduciary duty.
§ 178(1) (1981); see Kaiser Steel Corp. v. Mullins, 455 U.S. 72, 83-84
(1982); Martin Marietta Corp. v. Lorenz, 823 P.2d 100, 109 (Colo. 1992) University of Denver v. Industrial Comm’n of Colo., 138 Colo. 505, 509, 335 P.2d 292, 294 (1959). We have not hesitated to apply this principle to terms and conditions of insurance contracts which undermine legislatively expressed policy. See, e.g., Meyer v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 689 P.2d 585, 589 (Colo. 1984) (household exclusion in automobile liability policy held invalid as contrary to public policy expressed in Colorado Auto Accident Reparations Act); Newton v. Nationwide Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 197 Colo. 462, 468, 594 P.2d 1042, 1046 (1979) (insurance policy provision which permitted insurer to subtract PIP payments from uninsured motorist coverage so as to reduce that coverage to less than statutory minimum violative of public policy in Colorado Auto Accident Reparations Act). It is in light of that long-established principle that we must evaluate the regulatory exclusion in the context of federal and state banking law. Although we view the validity of the regulatory exclusion as an “open question” under
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federal law and one we need not resolve here, we conclude that, as a matter of state law, the judicial enforcement of the regulatory exclusion undermines the authority and responsibility which the Colorado Banking Code vests in the FDIC, as liquidator of a state-chartered insolvent bank, for protecting the interests of the bank’s depositors, creditors, and stockholders by making equitable payment to them out of the bank’s assets as compensation for losses caused by the negligence and breach of fiduciary duty of the bank’s former directors.
A.
[17] The Federal Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act (FIRREA) authorizes the appointment of the FDIC as conservator or receiver for an insolvent state-chartered bank, and states:
(10th Cir. 1992), in the context of the precise question at issue here — i.e., whether a regulatory exclusion in a directors’ and officers’ liability policy should be held void as contrary to public policy. The Tenth Circuit began its analysis with the observation that the purpose of FIRREA was to revamp “the deposit insurance fund system in order to strengthen the country’s financial system” and, to that end, Congress “enhanced the regulatory and enforcement powers of the FDIC.”975 F.2d at 681. The court further noted that, because FIRREA encompasses Congress’s concerns about the powers of the FDIC to recover from parties responsible for a bank’s failure, the FDIC’s argument “might provide a basis for voiding the exclusion at issue here” in the absence of a congressional statement on the question of the validity of regulatory exclusions. Id. The court then added: [25] “Congress, however, did consider the very question here, and explicitly stated its intentions to remain neutral on that question. 12 U.S.C. § 1821(e)(12) states: [26] `(12)(B) No provision of this paragraph may be construed as impairing or affecting any right of the conservator or receiver to enforce or recover under a directors’ or officers’ liability insurance contract or depository institution bond under other applicable law.’ [27] “12 U.S.C. § 1821(e)(12)(B). FIRREA’s legislative history further indicates Congress’s cognizance of the regulatory exclusions in directors’ and officers’ liability insurance. For example, the section by section analysis of FIRREA states:
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[28] `. . . [18 U.S.C. § 1821(e)(12)] remains neutral regarding such litigation [i.e., where FDIC challenges clauses in directors’ and officers’ liability insurance contracts] and regarding the FDIC’s ability under other provisions of State or Federal law, current or future, to pursue claims on such contracts or bonds. For example, if the law of a particular state declares limitations on the enforceability of directors’ or officers’ liability contracts to be void as against public policy, the FDIC could pursue a claim on such a contract under that State’s law.‘” [29] (S. Rep. No. 19, 101st Cong., 1st Sess. 315 (1989)). 975 F.2d at 681-82. (Emphasis and last set of brackets added.) Although the court held that 18 U.S.C. § 1821 could not be read to express a public policy voiding regulatory exclusions because of Congress’s neutrality on the question,[4] it went on to state that “other statutes, state or federal, could articulate a public policy voiding these exclusions.” 975 F.2d at 682. The Tenth Circuit’s analysis thus makes clear that, while Congress has expressed no intent to influence the development of case law relating to the validity of a regulatory exclusion under FIRREA, Congress has expressed support for the FDIC to pursue such claims where regulatory exclusions violate the public policy of a particular state. The appropriate focus for resolving the issue in this case, therefore, is the statutory scheme of the Colorado Banking Code of 1957, to which we now turn.Page 1293
B.
[30] Section 11-5-102(3)(a), 4B C.R.S. (1992 Supp.) states:
C.R.C.P. 23.1, the purpose underlying these requirements is the avoidance of multiple litigation by individual stockholders or small groups of stockholders. Bell v. Arnold, 175 Colo. 277, 282, 487 P.2d 545, 547
(1971). The FDIC’s common law claims against the bank’s former directors and the FDIC’s subsequent effort to garnish the proceeds of the directors’ and officers’ liability policy served the function of avoiding a multiplicity of lawsuits not only by stockholders but by depositors and creditors as well.[5] [35] Moreover, American Casualty Company’s insurance policy expressly provides liability coverage in a shareholders’
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derivative action against the bank or its directors. If the bank’s stockholders could have brought a derivative action against the bank or its former directors for negligence and breach of fiduciary duty and then could have garnished the proceeds of the insurance policy to satisfy the judgment, it strains logic to prohibit the FDIC from garnishing the same insurance proceeds to satisfy the previously determined legal liability of the former directors for losses caused not only to the bank’s depositors and creditors but also to the bank’s stockholders. In our view, the common law action filed by the FDIC against the bank’s former directors and the FDIC’s subsequent effort to garnish the proceeds of the officers’ and directors’ liability policy in satisfaction of the judgment is entirely consistent with section 11-5-107, 4B C.R.S. (1987), which was enacted in 1957 as part of the Colorado Banking Code and states:
[36] “Among its other powers, the federal deposit insurance corporation, in the performance of its powers and duties as such liquidator, has the right and power, upon the order of a court of record of competent jurisdiction, to enforce the individual liability of the directors of any such banking institution.”[6] [37] The FDIC’s responsibility as statutory liquidator of an insolvent bank to protect the interests of the bank’s depositors, creditors, and stockholders is further evidenced by the statutory priority scheme for the payment of claims against the bank. In 1989, the General Assembly enacted the “Public Deposit Protection Act” as part of the Colorado Banking Code of 1957. § 11-10.5-101 to -112, 4B C.R.S. (1992 Supp.). One of the express purposes of the 1989 statute is to ensure the expedited repayment of public funds held on deposit by a bank “that are either not insured by or are in excess of the insured limits of federal deposit insurance” in the event of default or subsequent liquidation of the bank. § 11-10.5-102(1), 4B C.R.S. (1992 Supp.). Section 11-5-105(5)(a), 4B C.R.S. (1992 Supp.), establishes the following priorities for paying claims made against a liquidated bank: [38] “(I) Obligations incurred by the banking board, fees and assessments due to the division of banking, and expenses of liquidation, all of which may be covered by a proper reserve of funds; [39] “(II) Claims of depositors having an approved claim against the general liquidating account of the bank; [40] “(III) Claims of general creditors having an approved claim against the general liquidating account of the bank; ” (IV) Claims otherwise proper that were not filed within the time prescribed by this code; [41] “(V) Approved claims of subordinate creditors; and [42] “(VI) Claims of stockholders of the bank.” IV.
[43] Although the validity of the regulatory exclusion in American Casualty Company’s liability policy is not settled under federal banking law, we are satisfied that the regulatory exclusion is contrary to the public policy expressed in state banking law. While it is true that the Colorado Banking Code does not require a bank to purchase a directors’ and officers’ liability policy, that fact is not controlling on the issue before us. What we consider of critical importance is that the Colorado Banking Code vests the FDIC, as the statutory
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liquidator of an insolvent bank, with an array of rights and responsibilities designed to protect the interests of the bank’s depositors, creditors, and stockholders. These rights and responsibilities include the following: the FDIC’s right to enforce the powers and privileges of depositors and creditors in order to obtain some satisfaction for losses caused to them by the bank’s former directors, § 11-5-105(4), 4B C.R.S. (1992 Supp.); the FDIC’s right to enforce the individual liability of the bank’s former directors to depositors, creditors, and stockholders as well, § 11-5-107, 4B C.R.S. (1987); and the FDIC’s responsibility for marshalling the bank’s assets and paying the valid claims of the depositors, creditors, and stockholders in accordance with a statutory priority scheme, § 11-5-105(5)(a), 4B C.R.S. (1992 Supp.).
[44] Pursuant to the Colorado Banking Code, the FDIC, as liquidator of the Buena Vista Bank, had the right to sue the bank’s former directors for the negligence and breach of fiduciary duty and also had the responsibility of marshalling the bank’s assets — in this case, the proceeds of an officers’ and directors’ liability insurance policy — in order to provide some equitable compensation to the bank’s depositors, creditors, and stockholders for losses sustained by them as the result of the former directors’ negligence and breach of fiduciary duty. The regulatory exclusion in American Casualty Company’s liability policy, however, nullifies the ability of the FDIC to carry out its statutory charge. [45] While American Casualty Company’s liability policy provides coverage for losses resulting to the depositors, creditors, and stockholders as the result of the bank directors’ negligence and breach of fiduciary duty, the regulatory exclusion precludes coverage for those very same losses when, as here, the FDIC, in carrying out its rights and responsibilities as statutory liquidator, has sought to protect the interests of the bank’s depositors, creditors, and stockholders by suing the bank’s former directors and obtaining a judgment against them for their negligence and breach of fiduciary duty. In so excluding coverage, American Casualty Company’s liability policy undermines the statutory ability and responsibility of the FDIC to protect the interests of the bank’s depositors, creditors, and stockholders and, in that respect, directly conflicts with the public policy of the Colorado Banking Code. [46] We accordingly reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand the case to that court for consideration of any other issues raised by the parties in the original appeal to that court and not resolved by the court of appeals in its opinion. [47] JUSTICE ERICKSON concurs in part and dissents in part.(6th Cir. 1990) (section 1821 does not provide a basis for a dominant public policy that justifies voiding the regulatory exclusion in the directors’ and officers’ liability policy). At the time of FIRREA’s passage in the House on August 4, 1989, the Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee of the House of Representatives seemed to look quite favorably on judicial invalidation of regulatory exclusions. House Report No. 101-54(I) expressly noted that FIRREA “retains current law for the treatment of exclusionary clauses in directors and officers liability insurance contracts or financial institution bonds. Nothing in subsection (c) impairs or affects any rights a conservator or receiver already appointed had under current law immediately prior to the enactment of this Act or with regard to institutions to which a conservator or receiver is appointed in the future to enforce or recover under a directors or officers insurance policy contract or financial institution bond.” In the section reviewing the “current law for the treatment of exclusionary clauses”, the House Report states: “The majority of courts which have considered the provisions in contracts which provide that coverage terminates upon appointment of a receiver have found such provisions to be against public policy and therefore unenforceable. In a recent case [Branning, 721 F. Supp. at 1184], the Court held that such a clause `substantially hinders FSLIC’s exercise of its federal powers and therefore is contrary to federal policy’. The Court stated further: “`If the court were to enforce the FSLIC exclusion as written, all of FSLIC’s claims, regardless of their origin or status under the policy, would not be covered simply because FSLIC rather than a shareholder, depositor, or third party prosecuted the claim. Private parties to an insurance contract may not frustrate the Congressional purpose behind receivership by annulling FSLIC’s federal powers.'” (Brackets added).
Accordingly, the court of appeals remanded
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the case to the district court with directions to dismiss the writ of garnishment and to modify the dismissal of ACC’s declaratory judgment action to reflect that the dismissal was without prejudice.
[51] We granted certiorari to decide two issues: (1) whether the court of appeals erred in determining that the Regulatory Exclusion unambiguously excludes coverage for claims asserted by the FDIC; and (2) whether federal or state public policy precludes enforcement of the Regulatory Exclusion when the claim against the D O Policy is asserted by the FDIC, acting in its capacity as receiver, rather than by a shareholder of a failed state-chartered bank. [52] The majority concludes that while the regulatory exclusion is unambiguous, judicial enforcement of the regulatory exclusion contravenes the public policy of Colorado as reflected in the Colorado Banking Code of 1957. Maj. op. at 2. In deciding the public policy question on state policy grounds, the majority virtually ignores the decisions of the federal courts that have addressed the federal public policy issue and have held that federal public policy does not preclude enforcement of regulatory exclusions contained in directors’ and officers’ liability insurance policies.[8] The majority states only that “Congress has expressed no intent to influence the development of case law relating to the validity of a regulatory exclusion under [the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA)].” Maj. op. at 14. [53] Because I believe the General Assembly has not expressed a greater public policyPage 1297
determination regarding the liquidation of state-chartered banks by the FDIC than has Congress regarding the liquidation of financial institutions containing federally insured deposits by the FDIC, I am unpersuaded by the majority’s holding that state public policy is violated in a situation where federal public policy clearly is not. Moreover, I do not believe that we should read a public policy regarding regulatory exclusions into the Colorado Banking Code when the General Assembly has not affirmatively addressed the issue or disclosed such a policy.[9] Therefore, while I agree with the majority that the D O Policy is unambiguous, I respectfully dissent from section III of the majority opinion.
I
[54] The Regulatory Exclusion contained in the D O Policy that ACC issued to the Buena Vista Bank would be void and unenforceable if the exclusion violates state public policy by attempting to dilute, condition, or limit, statutorily mandated coverage. Terranova v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 800 P.2d 58, 60 (Colo. 1990); see also FDIC v. American Casualty Co., 975 F.2d 677, 682 (10th Cir. 1992) (finding that state statutes could articulate a public policy voiding regulatory exclusions). Additionally, parties cannot by private contract abrogate statutory requirements or conditions affecting the public policy of the state. University of Denver v. Industrial Comm’n, 138 Colo. 505, 509, 335 P.2d 292, 294 (1959). However, a contract, freely entered into by the parties, does not violate public policy unless there are definite statements in the law reflecting that policy. Muschany v. United States, 324 U.S. 49, 66 (1945); St. Paul Mercury Ins. Co. v. Duke University, 849 F.2d 133, 135 (4th Cir. 1988); see also Superior Oil Co. v. Western Slope Gas Co., 549 F. Supp. 463, 468 (D. Colo. 1982) aff’d, 758 F.2d 500 (10th Cir. 1985) (holding that a court is not warranted in voiding a contract as contrary to public policy until it is fully convinced that a public policy is clearly revealed in the laws of the jurisdiction). The majority apparently finds a “definite statement” of public policy in the Colorado Banking Code. However, in my view, there is no clear revelation of public policy or statutory inhibition in the laws of Colorado.
II
[55] Congress enacted FIRREA in 1989. As the majority explains, the Senate report of FIRREA states:
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[18 U.S.C. § 1821(e)(12)] remains neutral regarding such litigation and regarding the FDIC’s ability under other provisions of State or Federa law, current or future, to pursue claims on such contracts or bonds. For example, if the law of a particular State declares limitations on the enforceability of director’s or officer’s liability contracts to be void as against public policy, the FDIC could pursue a claim on such a contract under that State’s law.” [57] S. Rep. No. 19, 101st Cong., 1st Sess. 315 (1989) (emphasis added). I do not read this statement in the same way as the majority. In my view, the Senate statement requires that an individual state affirmativel declare specific limitations on the enforceability of directors’ and officers’ liability insurance policies to be void as against public policyand adopt the public policy into that state’s laws. [58] Both the majority and the FDIC assert that the General Assembly has established a public policy allowing the invalidation of regulatory exclusions based only on Section 11-5-105, 4B C.R.S. (1992 Supp.), of the Colorado Banking Code.[10] Section 11-5-105 was rewritten and adopted in 1989. Several subsections were amended in 1990 and 1991. Despite the opportunity to express a public policy in either of the two amendments to section 11-5-105 following the enactment of FIRREA, the General Assembly has never affirmatively expressed such a public policy in the Colorado Banking Code. Absent clear legislative direction, I find no public policy prohibiting regulatory endorsements in directors’ and officers’ liability insurance policies sold to state-chartered banks. Had the General Assembly intended to restrict the use of limiting endorsements like regulatory exclusions, it could have accepted the Congressional invitation and affirmatively adopted such a public policy into the Colorado Banking Code.
III
[59] The FDIC advances two arguments in support of its state public policy claim. First, the FDIC asserts that the rights granted to it under section 11-5-105(4) are rooted in the need of the FDIC to control all aspects of post-bank failures and that enforcement of the Regulatory Exclusion impliedly violates a mandate of the Colorado Banking Code. Second, the FDIC asserts that the Regulatory Exclusion is unenforceable because it conflicts with Colorado law by impermissibly discriminating against the FDIC. Discrimination occurs because an insured versus insured endorsement included in the D O Policy allows coverage for shareholder derivative claims which are brought directly by shareholders, whereas the Regulatory Exclusion precludes coverage for the same claims when asserted by the FDIC.[11] I do not agree that either of the FDIC’s arguments illustrate a violation of state public policy and would affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.
A
[60] The majority holds that the Regulatory Exclusion in the D O Policy contravenes
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the statutory grant of power from the General Assembly to the FDIC to marshall and collect the Buena Vista Bank’s assets. See § 11-5-105(3)-(4), 4B C.R.S. (1992), (providing that the FDIC as receiver shall succeed by operation of law to possession of all the assets, business, and property and shall have all the powers and privileges provided by the laws of Colorado with respect to the liquidation of a bank).
[61] However, the majority does not point to legislative history, any statute enacted by the General Assembly, or any decision rendered by this court, or by the court of appeals that establishes or suggests a public policy that regulatory exclusions included in directors’ and officers’ liability insurance policies are unenforceable when purchased by state-chartered banks. In fact, there is no statutory requirement that state-chartered banks are required to carry directors’ and officers’ liability insurance, or that they are required to carry only directors’ and officers’ liability insurance without regulatory exclusions. However, the result of the majority’s opinion in this case is that if a state-chartered bank wishes to purchase directors’ and officers’ liability insurance, the bank is now required to purchase that insurance without a regulatory exclusion. [62] In my view, the majority has misinterpreted the Colorado Banking Code. The Colorado Banking Code provides that “[s]tate bank directors . . . shall have the same rights as directors . . . of corporations for profit as set forth in section 7-3-101.5 [of the Colorado Corporations Code].” § 11-3-121, 4B C.R.S. (1987) (emphasis added). Section 7-3-101.5, 3B C.R.S. (1992), establishes the right of directors to indemnification from the corporation for profit (or bank) for claims brought against the director in his capacity as a director. Among the rights of the corporation for profit (or bank) which are included in section 7-3-101.5, is the right to: [63] “purchase and maintain insurance on behalf of a person who is or was director . . . of the corporation [or bank] . . . against any liabilityasserted against or incurred by him in such capacity or arising out of his status as such, whether or not the corporation [or bank] would have the power to indemnify him against such liability under the provisions of this section.” [64] 7-3-101.5(9), 3B C.R.S. (1992 Supp.). Moreover, there is no provision in the Colorado Corporations Code prohibiting corporations for profit from purchasing liability insurance containing regulatory exclusions. State-chartered banks, by the express language of the Colorado Banking Code, therefore may not be prohibited from also purchasing liability insurance containing regulatory exclusions. Directors of state-chartered banks “shall have the same rights” as directors of corporations for profit. Therefore, in my view, there is no provision in the Colorado Banking Code, including the statutory grant of power to the FDIC, which diminishes or restricts the right of state-chartered banks to purchase directors’ and officers’ liability insurance containing exclusions from coverage in myriad of circumstances. [65] The majority uses the powers granted to the FDIC by the Colorado Banking Code to foreclose the ability of state-chartered banks to preclude liability insurance coverage for the benefit of directors against claims asserted by regulators. This conclusion does not account for the statutory provision that the ability to insure or not insure against such claims lies not in the Colorado Banking Code, but rather, in the Colorado Corporations Code. Certainly, the majority may not judicially amend the Colorado Corporations Code to prohibit corporations for profit from purchasing directors’ and officers’ liability insurance containing regulatory exclusions. However, the clear implication of the majority opinion is that corporations for profit may not purchase directors’ and officers’ liability insurance containing regulatory exclusions because the rights relating to the indemnification and insurance of directors of state-chartered banks and directors of
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corporations for profit are the same. The majority opinion restricts and prevents state-chartered banks and corporations for profit from purchasing directors’ and officers’ liability insurance containing regulatory exclusions, a right derived from the Colorado Corporations Code, and not the Colorado Banking Code.
[66] I do not share the majority’s view that this court may judicially legislate that state-chartered banks may not purchase directors’ and officers’ liability insurance containing regulatory exclusions, or that based on Colorado public policy, the regulatory exclusions are unenforceable. Nothing in either the Colorado Banking Code or the Colorado Corporations Code requires or supports such a conclusion Schlessinger v. Schlessinger, 796 P.2d 1385, 1389 (Colo. 1990); see also FDIC v. American Casualty Co., No. 90-CV-0265-J, slip op. at 17 (D. Wyo. July 3, 1991) (stating that a court cannot judicially impose a limitation on a non-required insurance policy any more than it can require a bank to purchase insurance in the first place). In my view, it is within the clear province of the General Assembly to determine whether prohibiting regulatory exclusions in directors’ and officers’ liability insurance contracts issued to state-chartered banks is necessary for the protection of the public good. B
[67] The FDIC’s second state public policy claim is based on its assertion that section 11-5-105 furnishes the FDIC the right to bring a shareholder derivative action against the directors and officers of a state-chartered bank.[12] Therefore, the FDIC claims, and the majority accepts without analysis, that because the Regulatory Exclusion conflicts with a statutory right, it must be void as against public policy.[13] While the FDIC claims that it could bring a shareholder derivative action, the fact remains that the FDIC has not asserted a shareholder derivative claim in this case. Throughout the prosecution of its claims against the former directors of the Buena Vista Bank and the garnishment of the D O Policy, the FDIC has never claimed that it was acting in its capacity as a shareholder, or that it was derivatively suing the directors of the bank.[14]
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by the FDIC because the FDIC did not raise, or argue, the question before either court. The FDIC did not claim to be acting on behalf of shareholders in its petition for a writ of certiorari, nor did we accept the shareholder derivative action issue for review. The issue of whether the FDIC, acting as a receiver of a failed state-chartered bank, may pursue claims against directors or officers of a failed state-chartered bank on behalf of shareholders by way of a shareholder derivative action is not before this court and should not be addressed. Because the issue was not properly presented for appellate review, we should not determine the question of whether a regulatory exclusion’s bar to coverage for derivative claims asserted by the FDIC violates the public policy of Colorado. See People v. Kruse, No. 91SC442, slip op. at 8 (Colo. 1992) (holding that claims not raised in the district court or court of appeals are not properly before the Supreme Court for review on certiorari) Vigoda v. Denver Urban Renewal Auth., 646 P.2d 900, 907 (Colo. 1982) (holding that issue raised only in answer brief cannot be fairly within the issues raised by petition for certiorari); Sherman Agency v. Carey, 195 Colo. 277, 280, 577 P.2d 759, 761 (1978) (holding that Supreme Court would not consider issue not mentioned in petition for certiorari even though matter was argued before it); Berge v. Berge, 189 Colo. 103, 104, 536 P.2d 1135, 1136 (1975) (holding that Supreme Court need not consider issue not raised in petition for certiorari).
IV
[69] The majority concludes that the FDIC is statutorily charged with marshalling, collecting and distributing the assets of the failed Buena Vista Bank. Maj. op. at 15. However, the Buena Vista Bank chose to purchase, pursuant to a statutory grant of power, a directors’ and officers’ liability insurance policy containing a regulatory exclusion. Because I view the regulatory exclusion to bar coverage under the D O Policy for all claims asserted against the policy by the FDIC, the D O Policy is not therefore, an asset which the FDIC can marshall or seize by a writ of garnishment. See FDIC v. Zaborac, 773 F. Supp. 137, 145
(C.D. Ill. 1991); Continental Casualty Co. v. Allen, 710 F. Supp. 1088, 1099-1100 (N.D. Tex. 1989).[15]
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11-5-107, 4B C.R.S. (1987). However, recovery of any judgment obtained from such a claim would be limited to the assets of the individual directors.
[72] Absent an express statutory requirement or legislative pronouncement by the General Assembly to the contrary, we should not now hold that directors’ and officers’ liability insurance policies issued to state-chartered banks containing regulatory exclusions are the type of contracts which are prohibited by the public policy of Colorado. Accordingly, I dissent from section III of the majority opinion and would affirm the court of appeals decision. [73] I am authorized to say that CHIEF JUSTICE ROVIRA and JUSTICE LOHR join in this concurrence and dissent.reference to a claim that the FDIC was acting in its capacity as a shareholder of a failed state-chartered bank and was therefore proceeding derivatively against the directors or the D O Policy. Whether the FDIC could have pursued a shareholder derivative action is not an issue in this case.