Las Vegas Sands, Inc. v. National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, PA
D. Nev.11/8/2023
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1 J. Randall Jones, Esq. (#1927) r.jones@kempjones.com 2 Michael J. Gayan, Esq. (#11135) m.gayan@kempjones.com 3 KEMP JONES, LLP 3800 Howard Hughes Parkway 4 Seventeenth Floor 5 Las Vegas, Nevada 89169 Telephone: (702) 385-6000 6 Facsimile: (702) 385-6001 7 Robin L. Cohen, Esq. (Admitted pro hac vice) 8 Marc T. Ladd, Esq. (Admitted pro hac vice) Alexander M. Sugzda, Esq. (Admitted pro hac vice) 9 Jason D. Meyers, Esq. (Admitted pro hac vice) COHEN ZIFFER FRENCHMAN 10 & MCKENNA LLP 1325 Avenue of the Americas 11 New York, NY 10019 12 Telephone: (212) 584-1890 Facsimile: (212) 584-1891 13 rcohen@cohenziffer.com mladd@cohenziffer.com 14 asugzda@cohenziffer.com jmeyers@cohenziffer.com 15 16 Attorneys for Plaintiffs Las Vegas Sands, Inc. n/k/a Las Vegas Sands, LLC & Las Vegas 17 Sands Corp. 18 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 19 DISTRICT OF NEVADA 20 LAS VEGAS SANDS, INC. n/k/a LAS Case No.: 2:22-cv-00461-JCM-BNW 21 VEGAS SANDS, LLC; and LAS VEGAS SANDS CORP. 22 STIPULATION AND [PROPOSED] Plaintiffs, ORDER TO WITHDRAW 23 PLAINTIFFSâ MOTION TO SEAL 24 v. [ECF NO. 93] AS TO EXHIBITS 18 & 19 25 NATIONAL UNION FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PITTSBURGH, PA., 26 27 Defendant. 1 Plaintiffs Las Vegas Sands, Inc. n/k/a Las Vegas Sands, LLC and Las Vegas Sands Corp. 2 (together, âPlaintiffsâ) and Defendant National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, 3 Pa. (âNational Unionâ) (collectively, the âPartiesâ), through their respective counsel of record, 4 hereby stipulate and agree to withdraw Plaintiffsâ Motion to Seal, ECF No. 93, as to Exhibits 18 5 and 19, as follows: 6 1. On September 26, 2022, the Court granted the Partiesâ Stipulated Confidentiality and 7 Protective Order (the âProtective Orderâ). See ECF No. 35; ECF No. 38. 8 2. On September 29, 2023, Plaintiffs filed their Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, 9 ECF No. 95, with an accompanying Motion to Seal certain exhibits, including Exhibits 18 and 10 19. ECF No. 93. Exhibits 18 and 19 are documents that National Union produced and marked 11 as Confidential pursuant to the Protective Order. 12 3. Plaintiffs also filed a redacted version of their Motion for Summary Judgment, ECF No. 13 94, with redactions relevant to the proposed sealed exhibits, including Exhibits 18 and 19. 14 Attached as Exhibit A is an updated unredacted version of Plaintiffsâ Motion for Summary 15 Judgment (ECF No. 94) reflecting the change in status of Exhibits 18 and 19 to unsealed. 16 4. On October 19, 2023, the Court issued an Order denying in part Plaintiffsâ Motion to 17 Seal as to Exhibits 18 and 19, and directing Plaintiffs to file a renewed motion to seal Exhibits 18 18 and 19 by November 20, 2023, that explains what compelling reasons exist for their sealing 19 (the âOrderâ). ECF No. 111. 20 5. On October 20, 2023, the Parties met and conferred regarding the Courtâs Order and 21 whether Exhibits 18 and 19 need to be sealed. National Union did not object to unsealing 22 Exhibits 18 and 19. Thus, the parties agree that Plaintiffs may withdraw their Motion to Seal 23 (ECF No. 93) as to Exhibits 18 and 19 such that those documents will be publicly filed. 24 IT IS SO STIPULATED. 25 DATED this 1st day of November, 2023. 26 KEMP JONES, LLP 27 _/s/ Michael J. Gayan___________________ J. Randall Jones, Esq. (#1927) Las Vegas, Nevada 89169 2 Robin L. Cohen, Esq. (Admitted pro hac vice) Marc T. Ladd, Esq. (Admitted pro hac vice) 3 Alexander M. Sugzda, Esq. (Admitted pro hac vice) Jason D. Meyers, Esq. (Admitted pro hac vice) 4 COHEN ZIFFER FRENCHMAN & MCKENNA LLP 5 1325 Avenue of the Americas New York, New York 10019 Attorneys for Plaintiffs Las Vegas Sands, Inc. 7 n/k/a Las Vegas Sands, LLC & Las Vegas Sands Corp. = 9 ||DATED this 1st day of November, 2023. oS E 10 PRHLAW LLC /s/ Courtney A. Palko = 12 Paul R. Heymanowski, Esq. (#94) S 8 Charles H. McCrea, Esq. (#104) 520 South Fourth Street, Suite 360 22% Las Vegas, Nevada 89101 14 = Michael J. Hartley (Admitted pro hac vice) 15 Courtney A. Palko (Admitted pro hac vice) BAUTE CROCHETIERE HARTLEY & McCOY LLP 16 777 South Figueroa Street, Suite 3800 Los Angeles, California 90017 Attorneys for Defendant National Union Fire Insurance 18 Company of Pittsburgh, PA. 19 20 ORDER 21 Based on the foregoing stipulation by the Parties, and for other good cause appearing, 22 IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDICATED, and DECREED that Plaintiffsâ Motion 23 || to Seal, ECF No. 93, is withdrawn as to Exhibits 18 and 19. IT IS SO ORDERED 24 IT IS SO ORDERED. 25 DATED: 1:31 pm, November 08, 2023 26 xg latae btn 27 BRENDA WEKSLER 2g UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE EXHIBIT A 1 J.Randall Jones, Esq. (#1927) r.jones@kempjones.com 2 Michael J. Gayan, Esq. (#11135) m.gayan@kempjones.com 3 KEMP JONES, LLP 3800 Howard Hughes Parkway 4 Seventeenth Floor Las Vegas, Nevada 89169 5 Telephone: (702) 385-6000 6 Facsimile: (702) 385-6001 7 Robin L. Cohen, Esq. (Admitted pro hac vice) Marc T. Ladd, Esq. (Admitted pro hac vice) 8 Alexander M. Sugzda, Esq. (Admitted pro hac vice) Jason D. Meyers, Esq. (Admitted pro hac vice) 9 COHEN ZIFFER FRENCHMAN 10 & MCKENNA LLP 1325 Avenue of the Americas 11 New York, NY 10019 Telephone: (212) 584-1890 12 Facsimile: (212) 584-1891 rcohen@cohenziffer.com 13 mladd@cohenziffer.com 14 asugzda@cohenziffer.com jmeyers@cohenziffer.com 15 Attorneys for Plaintiffs Las Vegas Sands, Inc. 16 n/k/a Las Vegas Sands, LLC & Las Vegas Sands Corp. 17 18 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 19 DISTRICT OF NEVADA 20 LAS VEGAS SANDS, INC. n/k/a LAS Case No.: 2:22-cv-00461-JCM-BNW VEGAS SANDS, LLC; and LAS VEGAS 21 SANDS CORP. 22 PLAINTIFFSâ MOTION FOR Plaintiffs, PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT 23 v. ORAL ARGUMENT REQUESTED 24 25 NATIONAL UNION FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PITTSBURGH, PA., 26 Defendant. 27 1 Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56, Plaintiffs Las Vegas Sands, Inc. n/k/a 2 Las Vegas Sands, LLC (âLVSIâ) and Las Vegas Sands Corp. (âLVSCâ; together with LVSI, 3 âLVSâ) move for partial summary judgment against Defendant National Union Fire Insurance 4 Company of Pittsburgh, Pa. (âNational Unionâ) on LVSâs Second and Third Causes of Action 5 (Breach of Contract for Duty to Defend/Defense Costs Coverage and Breach of Contract for 6 Settlement Coverage) in the Complaint (the âMotionâ). See ECF No. 1. Specifically, LVS 7 requests summary judgment in its favor that National Union is obligated under its Directors, 8 Officers and Private Company Liability Insurance Policy, Policy No. 360-88-71, for the policy 9 period of October 6, 2003 to December 6, 2004 (the âPolicyâ) to pay LVSâs defense costs 10 incurred in defending against the underlying lawsuit Richard Suen & Round Square Co. v. Las 11 Vegas Sands Inc. n/k/a Las Vegas Sands LLC, No. A493744 (Nev. Dist. Ct., Clark Cnty.) (the 12 âSuen Actionâ or âSuenâ) up to the full Policy limit, and is obligated to pay LVSâs settlement 13 payment in Suen only in the case and to the extent that the Court finds the Policy limit is not 14 already exhausted by payment of defense costs. 15 This Motion is based upon: (1) this Notice; (2) the following Memorandum of Points 16 and Authorities; (3) the accompanying Declaration of Marc T. Ladd (the âLadd Declarationâ) 17 filed concurrently herewith; (4) the exhibits1 attached to the Ladd Declaration; (5) all pleadings 18 and papers on file in this action; and (6) such other matters as may be presented to the Court at 19 the Courtâs request and/or at the time of a hearing on this Motion if set. 20 DATED this 29th day of September, 2023. 21 KEMP JONES, LLP 22 _/s/ Michael J. Gayan____________________ 23 J.Randall Jones, Esq. (#1927) Michael J. Gayan, Esq. (#11135) 24 3800 Howard Hughes Parkway Seventeenth Floor 25 Las Vegas, Nevada 89169 26 Robin L. Cohen, Esq. (Admitted pro hac vice) 27 Marc T. Ladd, Esq. (Admitted pro hac vice) 1 Alexander M. Sugzda, Esq. (Admitted pro hac vice) Jason D. Meyers, Esq. (Admitted pro hac vice) 2 COHEN ZIFFER FRENCHMAN & MCKENNA LLP 3 1325 Avenue of the Americas New York, New York 10019 4 Attorneys for Plaintiffs Las Vegas Sands, Inc. 5 n/k/a Las Vegas Sands, LLC & Las Vegas Sands 6 Corp. 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 1 MEMORANDUM OF POINTS AND AUTHORITIES 2 I. INTRODUCTION 3 The underlying Suen Action was litigated for over a decade in the Nevada state courts, 4 through years of discovery, motion practice, two full jury trials and the start of a third trial, and 5 it reached Nevadaâs highest court twice before ultimately settling in 2019. However, the issue 6 of whether National Union improperly evaluated coverage and denied its obligation to pay 7 LVSâs defense costs in Suen that entire time is straightforward. Under Nevada law, determining 8 whether an insurer owes a defense obligation is achieved by comparing the allegations of the 9 complaint with the terms of the policy, and the insured is entitled to defense coverage if there is 10 even a âpotential for coverageâ based on those allegations.â2 Here, National Union never even 11 did this analysis. Rather, within 24 hours of receiving notice of Suen, National Union made the 12 decision to deny defense coverage, based entirely on a single Policy exclusion intended for loss 13 arising from a claim for âcontractual liabilityâ under an âexpress contract or agreement.â In the 14 process, however, National Union completely missed the Suen complaintâs other allegations and 15 causes of action beyond breach of contract, including a claim for quantum meruit that, by 16 definition, could not arise out of an âexpress contract.â Since then, National Union has spent the 17 last decade attempting to backfill that initial incomplete and hasty denial by claiming that the 18 quantum meruit claim was âimpliedlyâ denied (it was not), by arguing that LVS never contested 19 the denial (it did), and by alleging all-new coverage defenses. However, none of this changes 20 the simple fact that National Union had an obligation to contemporaneously pay LVSâs defense 21 costs for Suen until its Policy limit was exhausted. 22 Suen arose from a business relationship between Hong Kong citizen Richard Suen (and 23 his company Round Square Company Limited (âRound Squareâ)) and LVS, LVSâs then- 24 Chairman and CEO Sheldon Adelson, and LVSâs then-president William Weidner. Suen alleged 25 that Mr. Suen and his associates had provided services to LVS in and around 2000-01 to assist 26 LVS in getting approved to conduct gambling-related activities in the Macau Special 27 1 Administrative Region (âMacau SARâ) in the Peopleâs Republic of China, such as by 2 introducing Messrs. Adelson and Weidner to government officials and advising on potential 3 investors. When, after that, LVS continued with the formal concession process, plaintiffs alleged 4 LVS and Mr. Suen exchanged three short faxes in July and September 2001 stating that Mr. 5 Suen would get a 2% ownership interest and a âsuccess feeâ of $5 million if LVS obtained the 6 concession and opened a casino property. However, when LVS opened the Macau SAR property 7 later in 2004, LVS refused Suenâs request for payment because in the years after those faxes 8 Suen had done nothing to help LVS obtain the concession. The partiesâ subsequent negotiations 9 for an alternative fee fell through, and Mr. Suen and Round Square sued in October 2004 (the 10 âSuen Complaintâ) asserting claims for (1) breach of contract (based on the three 2001 faxes 11 allegedly making a âcontractâ), (2) fraud, and (3) quantum meruit for the reasonable value of 12 the services the plaintiffs alleged they provided. National Union received LVSâs notice of the 13 Suen Complaint on November 2, 2004. On November 3, National Union decided to deny 14 coverage. 15 While National Union acknowledged in 2004 that LVSI and its executives were insureds 16 under the Policy, and that the Suen Action would trigger the Policyâs coverage grant, National 17 Union claimed it had reviewed the Suen Complaint and the Policy and found defense coverage 18 was precluded under the Policyâs exclusion 4(h) (the âContract Exclusionâ). The Contract 19 Exclusion, as written, excludes coverage for loss in connection with a claim alleging, arising out 20 of, or based on the âactual or alleged contractual liability of the Company under any express 21 contract or agreement[.]â However, it was apparent from National Unionâs denial letterâžșand it 22 has since been confirmed by National Unionâs internal documents produced in this actionâžșthat 23 National Union did not evaluate the entire Suen Complaint for defense coverage. Specifically, 24 National Union missed that the Complaint sought non-contractual relief under a claim for 25 quantum meruit that was irrespective of any contract,3 and it failed to evaluate the allegations of 26 the fraud cause of action. When LVSâs broker wrote to National Union on LVSâs behalf to point 27 1 out the many inaccuracies in the denial letter, National Unionâs claims handler ignored it, never 2 logged that it happened in the claim log, and falsely reported internally to her superiors that 3 National Union âdid not receive a responseâ to the letter.4 With no support from its insurer, LVS 4 turned its attention fully toward defeating Suen on the merits. 5 Through two separate jury trials, the court and then a jury in Suen determined that there 6 was no contract between the parties. Rather, each time, the only basis for plaintiffsâ recovery 7 was quantum meruit, which, under Nevada law, is not âcontractual liabilityâ and only exists âin 8 the absence of an express contractâ or agreement,5 elements that are required for the Contract 9 Exclusion to apply. Thus, while National Union breached its duty to pay defense costs for the 10 Suen Action at the outsetâžșbecause the Suen Complaint allowed for the possibility of coverage 11 outside the Contract Exclusionâžșthat the Exclusion never applied was borne out in the Suen 12 Action verdicts in 2008 and 2013. As such, in 2017, after the Supreme Courtâs second decision 13 that affirmed the liability on quantum meruit, LVSâs broker reached out again to National Union 14 to conduct an actual coverage analysis this time. On the surface, National Union agreed to take 15 another look; however, National Union had no intention of âre-visitingâ its prior denial, a 16 decision made even âeas[ier]â by the fact that LVS no longer purchased insurance with National 17 Union.6 Tellingly, National Unionâs re-review of the file confirmed that it never analyzed 18 coverage for the quantum meruit claim in the first denial. Nevertheless, based solely on the 19 Policy and first amended complaint, National Union now insisted that quantum meruitâžșthe 20 claim LVS was just found liable onâžșalso fell under the Contract Exclusion. 21 There is no dispute that the Contract Exclusion would apply to the Suen plaintiffsâ claims 22 for breach of contract and breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing (the latter added 23 by amendment in Suen in 2005). Those claims sought damages for alleged contractual liability 24 based on an alleged contract (the 2001 faxes). But National Unionâs interpretation in 2017 that 25 expanded the scope of the Contract Exclusion to the quantum meruit claim to avoid all coverage 26 27 4 Ex. 1 at APP00003-04. 5 Atwell v. Westgate Resorts, Inc., 2019 WL 4738010, at *4 (D. Nev. Sept. 28, 2009) (emphasis 1 not only ran contrary to Nevada law, it required that National Union rewrite the terms of the 2 Exclusion. Under Nevada law, an insurer has a defense obligation for the entire lawsuit as long 3 as a single allegation in the complaint is arguably covered, and exclusions are interpreted 4 narrowly and only apply when the insurerâs reading is the âonly reasonableâ interpretation.7 The 5 quantum meruit claim never arose from, or was based on, alleged contractual liability under an 6 express contract pursuant to the Contract Exclusion: there was no express contract, and, if Suen 7 never sent the three 2001 faxes that he alleged had formed a âcontract,â the Suen plaintiffs still 8 had the same allegations and claim for quantum meruit that they ultimately prevailed on. And 9 the fraud count was always potentially coveredâžșwhich National Union tacitly admitted in 10 2017âžșmeaning National Union should have been, at a minimum, paying LVSâs defense costs 11 from 2004 until the fraud count was dismissed in 2010. But National Union has paid nothing, 12 and it now maintains that the Contract Exclusion always applied to the fraud count as well. 13 In addition to the Contract Exclusion, National Union has also asserted that the Policyâs 14 Exclusion 4(a) bars coverage. Exclusion 4(a), referred to as the âIllegal Profit Exclusion,â 15 precludes coverage where the insured made a profit or gained an advantage to which it was ânot 16 legally entitledâ and a âfinal adjudicationâ establishes that such conduct took place. Courts have 17 held that this Exclusion is intended for corporate malfeasance, such as insider trading, where an 18 insured must return illegal profits or gains. The Suen Action never accused the LVS insureds of 19 obtaining a profit or advantage that was illicit in nature or that the LVS insureds were not legally 20 entitled to (nor was there any final adjudication establishing this took place). Rather, the Suen 21 plaintiffs sought their fair compensation for the alleged services they rendered to LVS. Same as 22 with the Contract Exclusion, National Unionâs interpretation of the Illegal Profit Exclusion to 23 the facts here exceeds all reasonable bounds. 24 The Suen Action has always satisfied the Policyâs insuring agreement, and no exclusion 25 applies. Thus, National Union owed LVS a defense obligation from the outset of the Suen Action 26 until the Policy limit was exhausted. LVSâs defense costs alone for the Suen Action are 27 approximately $34 million, far in excess of the Policyâs $250,000 retention and $20 million 1 limit. Even if National Union had the right to challenge the reasonableness of these costs despite 2 having denied coverage (it does not), LVSâs costs were reviewed for reasonableness in real time 3 by in-house attorneys, and were reasonable and necessary under the Brunzell8 factors, given the 4 size and nature of the Suen litigation. Accordingly, LVS respectfully requests judgment on its 5 Second Cause of Action for the Duty to Pay Defense Costs for the full Policy limit. LVS also 6 requests judgment on its Third Cause of Action for the Duty to Indemnify the Suen settlement 7 only if the Court finds that the Policy limit was not already exhausted by defense costs. 8 II. STATEMENT OF UNDISPUTED FACTS 9 A. The Policy Provides Broad Defense Costs And Indemnity Coverage For The Company And Its Executives 10 11 The Policy was issued to Interface Group Holding Company, Inc., an LVS-related 12 company, for the policy period of October 6, 2003 to October 6, 2004, which was extended twice 13 by endorsement to December 6, 2004. ECF No. 49-1, Declarations Item 3, and Endts. 23 and 14 24. Las Vegas Sands, Inc. (LVSI), LVSâs primary operating company at the time of issuance, 15 was added as a named insured by endorsement. Id., Endt. 12. The Policy provides $20 million 16 in coverage, excess of a $250,000 self-insured retention, for âLossâ arising from a âClaimâ first 17 made during the Policy period for allegations of âWrongful Acts.â Id., Declarations Items 4 and 18 5 and § 1. The Policy defines âLossâ to include âdamages . . . settlements, pre- and post- 19 judgment interest, and Defense Costs,â the latter of which is defined as the âreasonable and 20 necessary fees, costs and expenses consented to by [National Union] resulting solely from the 21 investigation, adjustment, defense and appeal of a Claim against the Insureds . . . .â Id. §§ 2(k) 22 and 2(e). 23 The Insuring Agreement further provides that National Union âshall, in accordance with 24 and subject to Clause 8, advance Defense Costs of such Claim prior to its final dispositionâ 25 based on âa Claim . . . for any actual or alleged Wrongful Act.â Id. § 1.B (emphasis added). 26 Similarly, the Defense Provisions subsection provides that, â[r]egardless of whether [a] defense 27 is . . . tendered, [National Union] shall advance Defense Costs (excess of the applicable retention 1 amount) of such Claim prior to its final disposition.â Id. § 1.9 Under Clause 8 of the Policy, LVS 2 has the option to (1) tender to National Union an obligation to carry out the defense, âeven if 3 such Claim is groundless, false or fraudulent,â or (2) retain its own attorneys, and in that event, 4 National Union âshall advance nevertheless, at the written request of [LVS], Defense Costs prior 5 to the final disposition of a Claim.â Id. § 8. Accordingly, the Policy requires that National Union 6 contemporaneously advance Defense Costs based on allegations. Furthermore, there is no 7 provision in the Policy for the allocation or limitation of coverage for Defense Costs based on 8 covered and non-covered claims or causes of action included in a single lawsuit. 9 National Unionâs almost 20-year refusal to cover any costs associated with Suen is based 10 on the Contract Exclusion. That Exclusion provides that National Union âshall not be liable to 11 make any payment for Loss in connection with a Claim made against an Insured . . . alleging, 12 arising out of, based upon or attributable to any actual or alleged contractual liability of the 13 Company under any express contract or agreement.â Id., Endt. 6. In its legal briefing, National 14 Union also has cited Exclusion 4(a), the Illegal Profit Exclusion, which provides, in relevant 15 part, that National Union shall not be liable to make payment for Loss in connection with a 16 Claim âarising out of, based upon or attributable to the gaining of any profit or advantage to 17 which a final adjudication adverse to the Insured(s) or an alternative dispute resolution 18 proceeding establishes the Insured(s) were not legally entitled.â Id., Endt. 4. 19 B. The Suen Action 20 On or about October 15, 2004, Richard Suen, a citizen of Hong Kong, and his company, 21 Round Square, filed the Suen Action in the District Court of Clark County, Nevada, against 22 LVSI, LVSC, and Messrs. Adelson and Weidner, both officers of LVS.10 ECF No. 1-2. The 23 24 9 Additionally, a âNoticeâ clause on the first page of the Policy states: âIN ALL EVENTS, THE INSURER MUST ADVANCE DEFENSE COSTS PAYMENTS PURSUANT TO THE 25 TERMS HEREIN PRIOR TO THE FINAL DISPOSITION OF A CLAIM.â Id., Declarations. 10 LVSI was incorporated in Nevada in April 1988 (Ex. 3) and acted as the primary operating 26 company until August 2004, when LVSC was formed and incorporated in Nevada to act as the new parent company over all LVS entities (Ex. 4 at APP00031-32). Accordingly, on December 27 17, 2004, LVSI became a wholly-owned subsidiary of LVSC after LVSC acquired 100% of LVSIâs capital stock in âa reorganization of entities under common control, in a manner similar 1 Amended Suen Complaint was filed in the Suen Action on or about May 17, 2005. ECF No. 1- 2 3.The Amended Suen Complaint contained essentially the same allegations as the original Suen 3 Complaint, the primary differences being that it (1) dismissed LVSC as a defendant since LVSI 4 was the operating company at the time of the acts alleged in the Complaints, not LVSC11 (see 5 Ex. 9, dismissing LVSC), and (2) added a cause of action for Breach of the Implied Covenant 6 of Good Faith and Fair Dealing. ECF No. 1-3 ¶¶ 32-37. 7 The original and Amended Suen Complaints alleged that Suen and Round Square had 8 performed certain activities to assist LVS in obtaining a concession to conduct casino and resort 9 activities in the Macau SAR, such as meeting with defendants on strategy, advising on 10 presentations for meetings with government officials, and introducing defendants to such 11 officials and other influential individuals in 2000 and 2001. See ECF No. 1-2 ¶¶ 14, 18, 40-41; 12 ECF No. 1-3 ¶¶ 13, 17, 46-47. These services allegedly provided by Suen and his group were 13 described in paragraphs 14 and 18, and 13 and 17, of the original and Amended Suen 14 Complaints, respectively. As LVS moved forward with the formal process for the gaming 15 concession, Messrs. Suen and Weidner exchanged three faxes in 2001 negotiating a payment to 16 plaintiffs if a casino was opened in the Macau SAR, including that Suen would get a $5 million 17 âsuccess feeâ and a 2% ownership interest in the property being opened. ECF No. 1-2 ¶¶ 15-17; 18 ECF No. 1-3 ¶¶ 14-16; ECF Nos. 71-1, 71-2, and 71-3. 19 A few years later in 2004, after LVS was granted a gaming concession in the Macau 20 SAR and opened its first property, Mr. Suen reached out to LVS for compensation. However, 21 LVS denied that the plaintiffs had done anything to help procure the concession: defendants 22 claimed the meetings Mr. Suen played a part in arranging did not impact (and under applicable 23 law, could not have impacted) the decision by the Macau SAR authorities to grant the concession 24 25 company called Las Vegas Sands, LLC, of which LVSC remains the sole member and parent 26 corporation to this day. Exs. 6 and 7. 11 In 2013, the Suen case caption was mistakenly changed to âLas Vegas Sands Corp.â based on 27 LVSâs counselâs erroneous statement in a hearing that LVSC was the correct party. On March 26, 2019, the court entered an order on stipulation of the parties rectifying that error and 1 to LVS. See, e.g., Ex. 10 at APP00205-08; Ex. 11 at APP00267-68. Rather, it was LVSâs 2 substantial experience in the gaming industry and diligent efforts during the application process 3 in the Macau SAR well after the meetings that got LVS the concession. See id. The parties 4 discussed an alternative fee for Mr. Suen, including a âprocurement dealâ under which Mr. Suen 5 would work for LVS as a purchasing agent. See, e.g., Ex. 10 at APP00191 and APP00224-26; 6 Ex. 11 at APP00246. However, Mr. Suen declined the offer, and following subsequent requests 7 for compensation which LVS rejected, Mr. Suen brought suit in October 2004. See id.; ECF No. 8 1-2. According to the Suen Complaint, plaintiffs asserted that the three, cursory faxes in 2001 9 made up a âcontractâ that LVS breached, and the Amended Suen Complaint alleged that LVS 10 had additional liability for breaching the contract in bad faith. ECF No. 1-2 ¶¶ 15-17, 24-31; 11 ECF No. 1-3 ¶¶ 14-16, 24-37. However, the plaintiffsâ Complaints also contended that LVS and 12 Messrs. Adelson and Weidner had committed fraud, and that, regardless of any supposed 13 contract, they should be compensated for the reasonable value of the services they performed 14 (i.e., introductions to influential government officials and advising on the presentations for those 15 officials) under a claim for quantum meruit. ECF No. 1-2 ¶¶ 32-42; id. ¶ 40 (quantum meruit 16 claim referencing allegations of services in ¶ 18 as supporting that claim); ECF No. 1-3 ¶¶ 38- 17 48. 18 After four years of litigation, in April 2008, the Suen trial court granted summary 19 judgment to LVS on the two contract claims (breach and covenant of good faith and fair dealing), 20 holding that â[t]here was no contract betweenâ the plaintiffs and LVS, and it also dismissed the 21 cause of action for fraud, leaving only quantum meruit. Suen v. Las Vegas Sands, Inc., No. 22 A493744, 2008 WL 2692509, at *1 (Nev. Dist. Ct., Clark Cnty., Apr. 4, 2008); Suen v. Adelson, 23 No. A493744, 2006 WL 5894934, at *1 (Nev. Dist. Ct., Clark Cnty., Mar. 15, 2006). At trial, 24 LVS was found liable on quantum meruit. Suen v. Las Vegas Sands, Inc., 2008 WL 2660819, at 25 *1 (Nev. Dist. Ct., Clark Cnty., May 24, 2008) (Pls.â Special Verdict Form); see also Suen v. 26 Las Vegas Sands, Inc., No. A493744, 2008 WL 6831952, at *1 (Nev. Dist. Ct., Clark Cnty., 27 June 30, 2008). Both sides appealed, and on November 17, 2010, the Supreme Court of Nevada 1 the breach of contract counts and ordered a new trial. Las Vegas Sands, Inc. v. Suen, 367 P.3d 2 792 (Table), 2010 WL 4673567, at *1 (Nev. 2010). The Supreme Court also rejected LVSâs 3 argument that Suen could not recover in quantum meruit for the âeffortsâ of his business 4 associates, stating that a valid claim for quantum meruit can be asserted â[w]hen there is no 5 express agreement but the plaintiff asserts a right to reasonable compensation.â Id. at *2. 6 In 2013, a second trial was conducted, and the court instructed the jury that plaintiffs 7 sought to establish liability on one of two alternative legal theories: contract and quantum meruit. 8 ECF No. 49-2, at APP114. The court instructed the jury on the quantum meruit claim as follows: 9 Plaintiffsâ second claim is for quantum meruit. If you find there was not an enforceable contract, Plaintiffs seek in the alternative to establish 10 a claim of quantum meruit against Las Vegas Sands. 11 Id. at APP136. The trial court continued: 12 To establish a claim for quantum meruit, a Plaintiff must prove . . . [t]he Plaintiff performed [a] service at the request of or with the knowledge 13 and acquiescence of the Defendant; and . . . Plaintiff performed under such circumstances as reasonably notified Defendant that the Plaintiff 14 expected to be compensated. 15 Id. at APP137. 16 The jury again rejected that there existed a contract or agreement with the plaintiffs that 17 LVS breached, and instead found LVS liable solely on the theory of quantum meruit. ECF No. 18 49-3; Suen v. Las Vegas Sands Corp., No. 04A493744, 2013 WL 3142652, at *1 (Nev. Dist. Ct., 19 Clark Cnty., May 28, 2013). LVS appealed, and in 2016, the Supreme Court of Nevada ordered 20 a new trial, agreeing with LVS that the juryâs award for the reasonable value of the plaintiffsâ 21 efforts on the quantum meruit claim was not supported by the evidence. Las Vegas Sands Corp. 22 v.Suen, 132 Nev. 998 (Table), 2016 WL 4076421, at *5 (2016). LVS continued defending itself 23 against the Suen Action, including preparing for the third trial, until 2019, when the parties 24 entered into a confidential settlement resolving the case. Ex. 12. 25 Over the course of its fifteen-year defense of the Suen Action, LVS incurred and paid 26 approximately $34,176,225.49 in defense costs and related expenses. See Ex. 13. 27 1 C. National Unionâs Coverage Denial 2 On October 29, 2004, LVS, through its broker representatives at Aon, gave notice to 3 National Union and attached the Suen Complaint. ECF No. 49-4; see also ECF No. 1-4 at 1. The 4 notice stated that LVS had not yet retained defense counsel and made the following request of 5 National Union: 6 Please acknowledge receipt of this claim and provide AIGâs consent to the retention of defense counsel, and authorization to incur defense 7 costs. If there are any litigation management guidelines, which you would request the Insureds to comply with, please provide a copy of 8 those guidelines. 9 ECF No. 49-4 at NU00012156. The notice specifically called out to National Union that the 10 Suen Complaint alleged three causes of action: âBreach of Contract, Fraud, and Quantum 11 Meruit,â and it requested that Joe McManus, LVSâs representative at Aon, be copied on any 12 response. Id.; see also Ex. 14 (Conboy Tr.) 167:9-14; Ex. 15 (National Union sending Policy 13 information and documents to Mr. McManus as LVSâs representative). Unbeknownst to Aon or 14 LVS (until this litigation), fewer than 24 hours after receiving the notice on November 2, 2004 15 (Ex. 1 at APP00018), National Union decided to deny coverage. On November 3rd, Assistant 16 Vice President Anthony Tatulli, who would later become head of AIGâs financial lines for North 17 America, wrote on the assignment sheet for complex claims: âbreach of contract suitâ and under 18 âCoverageâ he concluded: âDenial â Breach of contract exclusion; 4(q) exclusions . . . 4(a) + 19 4(c) [exclusions].â Id. at APP00017. A day later, on November 4th, Mr. Tatulli wrote to LVS, 20 copying Mr. McManus, stating that AIG Complex Claims Director Maureen Conboy was 21 assigned to the Suen claim and would be providing a coverage letter. Id. at APP00018. 22 On November 30, 2004, Ms. Conboy sent a letter copying Mr. McManus denying 23 coverage. ECF No. 1-4. The letter stated that LVSI and Messrs. Adelson and Weidner were 24 Insureds under the Policy, and acknowledged that the Complaint triggered the coverage grant. 25 Id. at 1-2; Ex. 14 (Conboy Tr.) 243:15-244:6 (no dispute that Suen alleged âClaimsâ for 26 âWrongful Actsâ). Nevertheless, based on National Unionâs âreview of the Complaint and the 27 provisions of the Policy,â the letter stated that there was no coverage for Suen under the Contract 1 alleged agreement,â i.e., the 2001 faxes. ECF No. 1-4 at 1 and 3; see also Ex. 14 (Conboy Tr.) 2 247:20-248:4. Ms. Conboyâs letter missed, however, that the Suen Complaint had alleged a 3 separate claim for quantum meruit, stating that â[t]he [Suen] Complaint states two claims for 4 relief, breach of contract and fraud.â ECF No. 1-4 at 2; Ex. 14 (Conboy Tr.) 261:7-11. As such, 5 there was no evaluation of the quantum meruit claim. Ex. 14 (Conboy Tr.) 245:10-246:11; see 6 also id. 250:22-25. (â[T]here is no analysis in this letter of the allegations supporting the 7 quantum meruit claim for relief.â). Moreover, there also was no attention given to the allegations 8 of fraud either, even though the common practice, including at National Union, was to determine 9 defense coverage separately for each cause of action asserted in a suit. Id. 250:6-21; Ex. 16 10 (Trager Tr.) 215:5-10. Instead, the November 30th letter exactly followed Mr. Tatulliâs 11 November 3rd directiveâžșit denied coverage based on the Contract Exclusion; it cited exclusions 12 4(a) and 4(c), even though those exclusions required a âfinal adjudicationâ establishing the 13 excluded conduct; and it said Exclusions 4(q)(2) and (q)(3) precluded coverage, even though 14 these exclusionsâžșrelating to anti-trust claims and the failure of LVS to render professional 15 services to a clientâžșnever remotely applied to the allegations in Suen. Compare ECF No. 1-4 16 at 3 with Ex. 1 at APP00017.12 National Unionâs failure to evaluate the allegations in Suen was 17 carried over into its internal claim logging system. Ex. 17 (claim note repeating that Suen alleged 18 two causes of action). Mr. McManus at Aon was copied on the denial letter. ECF No. 1-4 at 4. 19 A week later, on December 7, Mr. McManus sent an email on LVSâs behalf to a contact 20 of his at National Union (Mr. David Guild) that attached the denial letter and provided a separate, 21 numbered rebuttal to each ground asserted in National Unionâs letter. Ex. 18; Ex. 16 (Trager 22 Tr.) 174:16-20. Mr. McManus, among other things, disputed that the Contract Exclusion applied 23 to the entire suit (âit is far from clear that any âexpressâ agreement existed at any timeâ), 24 commented that there was no analysis of the fraud count (âthe complaint sounds in fraud as 25 wellâ), remarked that exclusions 4(a) and (c) required final adjudication and Suen had just been 26 filed, and asked âhow in the world does [exclusion 4(q)(3)] apply???â Ex. 18. Mr. McManus 27 1 understood it was âappropriate to issue a reservation [of National Unionâs rights]â but 2 questioned â[h]ow [wa]s this an outright denial?â based on the presence of the two other non- 3 contract claims. Id. Mr. McManus said a more formal response would be forthcoming, but in 4 the meantime he asked National Union to consider all of these points, and requested that 5 National Union respond âas soon as you can.â Id. 6 Mr. Guild forwarded Mr. McManusâs December 7th email to Ms. Conboy that same day 7 (he also sent it to AIGâs head of financial lines (Ex. 19, Ex. 20 (Hughes Tr.) 177:19-20)), saying 8 âsee broker comments/questions.â Ex. 18. However, there is nothing in National Unionâs files 9 indicating that National Union did anything in response to Mr. McManusâs email, and no 10 documentation that coverage for Suen was further evaluated. To the contrary: Ms. Conboy 11 represented to her superiors in emails and in the internal claim log that National Union never 12 âreceive[d] a responseâ to the denial letter (Ex. 1 at APP00003-04 and Ex. 17), which she 13 conceded at deposition may not have been accurate. Ex. 14 (Conboy Tr.) 280:3-17 (âMaybe itâs 14 right. Maybe itâs wrong [that no response was received]. I donât â I donât really know why it 15 matters but it says what it says.â). Ultimately, there is no evidence that National Union again 16 considered coverage for Suen. Without support from its insurer, LVS turned its focus toward 17 defending itself against the Suen Action and defeating the case. Ex. 21 (Little Tr.) 42:11-17. 18 However, following years of litigation, after the Nevada Supreme Courtâs second 19 decision in the Suen Action in 2016 that affirmed liability solely on quantum meruit, it was clear 20 LVS would be liable for Suen. Accordingly, Ron Goldstein at Aon, on LVSâs behalf, reached 21 out to Kieran Hughes, AIG Vice President of Financial Lines, in the hopes of getting a serious 22 coverage evaluation for Suen. Ex. 2 at APP00022. However, it was clear no such consideration 23 would be given. Mr. Hughes responded (after removing LVSâs in-house counsel from the email) 24 to Aonâs request for a coverage evaluation that LVS should âbe preparedâ that National Union 25 would ânot [be] re-visitingâ coverage for this claim in part because the claim log said no 26 response to National Unionâs denial was received (which was incorrect), and, in any event, LVS 27 was not presently purchasing coverage from AIG. Id. at APP00021 (âIâm also informed that 1 [decision to deny] is easy.â). Tellingly, when Mr. Hughes did review the Suen file, Mr. Hughes 2 not only incorrectly believed that no response to the denial was received, but he also mistakenly 3 thought (based on Ms. Conboyâs denial letter) that the original Suen Complaint had only two 4 causes of action for breach of contract and fraud, and assumed that the claim for quantum meruit 5 that was not addressed in the 2004 denial letter must have been added in by the Amended Suen 6 Complaint filed in 2005. Ex. 22 at APP00397-400. 7 Mr. Hughes assigned Suen to Complex Claims Director Andrew Trager, and on June 29, 8 2017, Mr. Trager sent a letter reiterating that Suen satisfied the elements for triggering coverage. 9 ECF No. 1-5 at 3. Contrary to the November 2004 letter, the June 2017 letter addressed coverage 10 for each claim in the Amended Suen Complaint, and this time, National Union said the Contract 11 Exclusion excluded coverage for the two contract claims (breach of contract and breach of the 12 covenant of good faith and fair dealing) and the quantum meruit claim. Id. at 4. The final letter 13 contained Mr. Hughesâ comments intended to be directed to Mr. Trager (evidencing Mr. Trager 14 did not review Mr. Hughesâ edits before sending it to LVS13) and demanded that LVS provide 15 National Union with a dozen categories of Suen documents, even though its denial was based 16 on the Amended Suen Complaint alone. Id. at 5. Nevertheless, National Union acknowledged 17 that the fraud countâžșwhich was fully dismissed by 2010âžșdid not unambiguously fall within 18 the Contract Exclusion, and asked for billings by LVSâs defense counsel that could be possibly 19 allocated just to that fraud count, which was impossible now thirteen years into Suen. Id. at 4 20 (after denying coverage for breach and quantum meruit counts, stating, â[a]s to the fraud count, 21 we reserve rights . . . .â); see also ECF No. 1-6 at 3 (âWe are continuing to investigate and 22 consider coverage as to plaintiffsâ fraud claim.â); Ex. 23 at APP00402 (National Union 2017 23 claim notes stating that National Union is considering âpotential coverage pursuant to the fraud 24 countâ); Ex. 20 (Hughes Tr.) 150:17-151:2; id. 153:18-155:2; id. 157:5-12 (Mr. Hughes 25 agreeing that National Union acknowledged potential coverage for the fraud count in August 26 2017). 27 1 A week later, LVS challenged National Unionâs position that the Contract Exclusion 2 applied to the quantum meruit claim, which was separate from any alleged contract. See ECF 3 No. 49-5 at NU00011654-55. National Union responded on August 8, 2017 that LVSâs reading 4 of the Contract Exclusion was âtoo narrow,â and it applied to the quantum meruit claim too, 5 even though the quantum meruit claim exists only in the absence of an express agreement. ECF 6 No. 1-6 at 1.14 National Union again admitted at the very least that the fraud count would not 7 automatically fall under the Contract Exclusion. ECF No. 1-6 at 3. Nevertheless, it became clear 8 to LVS that National Union was not going to pay any amounts for the Suen Action. Ex. 24 9 (Batarseh Tr.) 64:2-17. 10 III. APPLICABLE LEGAL STANDARDS 11 A. Summary Judgment Standard 12 âThe purpose of summary judgment is to avoid unnecessary trials when there is no 13 dispute as to the facts before the court.â Nw. Motorcycle Assân v. U.S. Depât of Agric., 18 F. 3d 14 1468, 1471 (9th Cir. 1994). The court shall grant summary judgment âif the movant shows that 15 there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a 16 matter of law.â Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a); see also Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322-23 17 (1986). The âmere existence of some alleged factual dispute between the parties will not defeat 18 [summary judgment]â; rather, âthe requirement is that there be no genuine issue of material 19 fact.â Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 247-48 (1986). An issue of fact is genuine 20 only if there is âsufficient evidence favoring the nonmoving party for a jury to return a verdict 21 for that party.â Id. at 249. Once the moving party shows the absence of material fact, the 22 nonmoving party âmay not rely on denials in the pleadings but must produce specific evidence, 23 through affidavits or admissible discovery material, to show that the dispute exists.â Bhan v. 24 NME Hosps., Inc., 929 F.2d 1404, 1409 (9th Cir. 1991). âIn essence . . . the inquiry [is] whether 25 the evidence presents a sufficient disagreement to require submission to a jury[.]â Id. at 251-52. 26 27 14 Moreover, National Union continued to ignore that the Contract Exclusion, by its plain terms, applied only to the liability of the âCompany,â and would not under any circumstance apply to 1 Issues of insurance policy interpretation, including the triggering of an insurerâs defense 2 obligation, involve objective analysis of questions of law and are appropriate on summary 3 judgment. See Century Sur. Co. v. Casino W., Inc., 2010 WL 762188, at *2 (D. Nev. Mar. 4, 4 2010), affâd, 578 F. Appâx 720 (9th Cir. 2014). 5 B. Rules Of Insurance Policy Interpretation And The Insurerâs Duty To Defend And Pay Defense Costs 6 7 âIn the insurance context,â Nevada courts âbroadly interpret clauses providing coverage, 8 to afford the insured the greatest possible coverage.â Fed. Ins. Co. v. Am. Hardware Mut. Ins. 9 Co., 184 P.3d 390, 392 (Nev. 2008) (citation omitted). âWhen construing an insurance policy 10 under Nevada law, the Court must read the policy âas a whole,â and âits language should be 11 analyzed from the perspective of one untrained in law or in the insurance business. Policy terms 12 should be viewed in their plain, ordinary and popular connotations.ââ Danganan v. Am. Family 13 Mut. Ins. Co., 2019 WL 4855140, at *3 (D. Nev. Sept. 30, 2019) (citation omitted). âIf a term 14 in an insurance policy is ambiguous, it will be construed against the insurer, because the insurer 15 drafted the policy.â Id. (citation omitted). Lastly, âclauses excluding coverage are interpreted 16 narrowly against the insurer.â Natâl Union Fire Ins. Co. of State of Pa., Inc. v. Renoâs Exec. Air, 17 Inc., 682 P.2d 1380, 1383 (Nev. 1984). 18 A liability policy âcreates two contractual duties between the insurer and the insured: the 19 duty to indemnify and the duty to defend,â and â[t]he duty to defend is broader than the duty to 20 indemnify.â Century Sur. Co. v. Andrew, 432 P.3d 180, 183 (Nev. 2018) (citation omitted); 21 United Natâl, 99 P.3d at 1158 (citation omitted). Whereas the duty to indemnify arises when 22 there is âactual coverageâ under the policyâs coverage grant for settlements or judgments, the 23 duty to defend arises when there is simply âarguable or possible coverageâ or the âpotentialâ for 24 coverage under the policy, and â[i]f there is any doubt about whether the duty to defend arises, 25 this doubt must be resolved in favor of the insured.â United Natâl, 99 P.3d at 1158 (citation 26 omitted). Furthermore, as both parties now agree,15 Nevada follows the âfour cornersâ or 27 15 Previously, National Union refused to admit in its filings to the Court that its obligation to pay 1 âcomplaintâ rule for an insurerâs defense obligation, i.e., â[d]etermining whether an insurer owes 2 a duty to defend is achieved by comparing the allegations of the complaint with the terms of the 3 policy,â id. (citation omitted), and this determination is made at the outset of the litigation. 4 Zurich Am. Ins. Co. v. Ironshore Specialty Ins. Co., 497 P.3d 625, 631 & n.9 (Nev. 2021); Centex 5 Homes v. Zurich Specialties London Ltd., 2017 WL 2232134, at *3 (D. Nev. May 19, 2017) 6 (Mahan, J.); Andrew, 2014 WL 1764740, at *6 (rejecting insurerâs attempt to look beyond facts 7 alleged in complaint to find grounds to deny defense coverage; âthe Nevada Supreme Court 8 would adopt the four corners ruleâ). Importantly, each cause of action in a suit is analyzed for 9 defense coverage, and âit is well established that where an insurer has a duty to defend, the 10 obligation generally applies to the entire action, even though the suit involves both covered and 11 uncovered claims, or a single claim only partially covered by the policy.â Jaynes Corp. v. Am. 12 Safety Indem. Co., 2013 WL 5428095, at *2 (D. Nev. Sept. 26, 2013); Hanover Ins. Co. v. Paul 13 M.Zargis, Inc., 714 F. Appâx 735, 737 (9th Cir. 2018) (same). 14 Moreover, National Unionâs obligation to advance defense costs is governed by the same 15 standard as if it had carried out the defense. See, e.g., Acacia Research Corp. v. Natâl Union Fire 16 Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, Pa., 2008 WL 4179206, at *11 (C.D. Cal. Feb. 8, 2008) (holding that 17 National Unionâs âduty to advance defense costs is [as] broad as the duty to defend . . . [t]he 18 agreement to advance defense costs must be similarly interpreted; it would be an anomaly to 19 require [National Union] to advance defense costs only for meritorious claims.â (citation 20 omitted)). Accordingly, the âduty to advance defense costs extends to costs incurred defending 21 against claims that are potentially covered under the policy.â Braden Partners, LP v. Twin City 22 Fire Ins. Co., 2017 WL 63019, at *10-11 (N.D. Cal. Jan. 5, 2017); see also Lexington Ins. Co. 23 v.Devaney, 50 F.3d 15 (Table), 1995 WL 105985, at *2 (9th Cir. 1995) (â[The insurer] correctly 24 points out that it had no duty to defend, but only to reimburse defense costs as part of the loss 25 26 under the four corners rule. See ECF No. 61 at 15-16. However, now National Union submitted an expert rebuttal report on its bad faith that repeatedly states that Nevada âis a four corners 27 jurisdiction,â and National Unionâs witnesses in discovery testified they excluded defense coverage based on the Suen Complaints alone. Ex. 25 at APP00444 & n.49, APP00445, 1 under the policy. However, under California law a breach of the duty to pay the costs of defense 2 under a D&O policy will be treated much the same as a breach of the duty to defend.â). 3 IV. ARGUMENT 4 A. The Suen Action Satisfies The Policyâs Coverage Grant 5 The allegations contained in the Suen Action are precisely the type of liability for which 6 the Policy provides coverage. The Insuring Agreement provides that National Union will pay 7 LVSâs Loss for Claims first made against LVS or an Individual Insured âduring the Policy 8 Period . . . and reported to [National Union] pursuant to the terms of this policy for any actual 9 or alleged Wrongful Act . . . .â ECF No. 49-1 § 1. National Union admitted that the allegations 10 in Suen constituted a covered âClaimâ for âWrongful Actsâ under the Policy, and that the Action 11 was filed against both LVSI and Messrs. Adelson and Weidner, all of whom were insureds under 12 the Policy. Supra at Section II.C. Finally, the Suen Action was filed during the Policy period 13 and was timely reported to National Union on October 29, 2004. ECF No. 49-1, Endt. 24; ECF 14 No. 49-4 at NU00012156; see also ECF No. 1-4 at 1. Accordingly, the allegations in the Suen 15 Action triggered National Unionâs duty to pay defense costs unless an exclusion to coverage 16 applied. 17 B. No Policy Exclusion Applies To Preclude Coverage For Defense Costs Incurred In The Suen Action 18 19 Because the Suen Action falls within the coverage grant provided by the Policy, National 20 Union has argued that a Policy exclusion, specifically the Contract Exclusion, applies to bar 21 coverage. Under Nevada law, in order for an exclusion to apply, the insurer must: (1) draft the 22 exclusion in âobvious and unambiguous language,â (2) âdemonstrate that the interpretation 23 excluding coverage is the only reasonable interpretation of the exclusionary provision,â and (3) 24 establish that the exclusion âplainly applies to the particular case before the court.â Casino W., 25 329 P.3d at 616. Neither the Contract Exclusion nor the Illegal Profit Exclusion unambiguously 26 establishes that coverage is excluded for the allegations in the Suen Complaints, and therefore, 27 National Union had a duty to advance LVSâs Defense Costs for the Suen Action until the $20 1 1. The Contract Exclusion Does Not Apply To Preclude Coverage For The Suen Action 2 From the time that National Union first denied coverage the day after it received notice 3 in November 2004 until the time that it denied coverage again in August 2017, the only real 4 basis National Union has put forward for avoiding coverage has been the Contract Exclusion. 5 However, National Unionâs unduly broad reading of the Contract Exclusion is not supported by 6 the plain language of the Policy, it ignores the allegations of the Suen Action, and it is contrary 7 to longstanding tenets of Nevada law, including those regarding insurance policy interpretation. 8 The Contract Exclusion applies to Loss from a Claim that alleges, arises out of, is based 9 upon or is attributable to actual or alleged âcontractual liabilityâ under an âexpress contract or 10 agreement.â Supra at Section II.A. While the Suen plaintiffsâ breach of contract claim was the 11 only cause of action that National Union actually considered when it quickly denied coverage 12 in 2004, the original and Amended Suen Complaints contained two other causes of 13 actionâžșquantum meruit and fraudâžșthat always were potentially covered for the purposes of 14 defense coverage, and never unambiguously fell within the Contract Exclusion. 15 Regarding the quantum meruit claim, both Nevada courts and the Ninth Circuit hold that 16 a claim for quantum meruit arises only in the absence of an express contract. Atwell v. Westgate 17 Resorts, Inc., 2019 WL 4738010, at *4 (D. Nev. Sept. 28, 2009) (âIn the absence of an express 18 contract, a party may be able to recover under the theory of quantum meruit.â); Mobius 19 Connections Grp. v. TechSkills, LLC, 2012 WL 194434, at *8 (D. Nev. Jan. 23, 2012) (stating 20 that, only where âthere is no express agreement as to compensation, then one can recover the 21 reasonable value of their services under a quantum meruit claimâ); Govât Comp. Sales Inc. v. 22 Dell Mktg., 199 F. Appâx 636, 639 (9th Cir. 2006) (âA plaintiff cannot recover in quantum 23 meruit if there is an express contract . . . .â). Indeed, the Nevada Supreme Court in Suen 24 underscored what was evident from the Suen Complaints when it stated that the plaintiffs could 25 obtain compensation under quantum meruit only â[w]hen there is no express agreement[.]â Las 26 Vegas Sands, Inc., 2010 WL 4673567, at *2 (emphasis added); Mielke v. Standard Metals 27 Processing Inc., 2015 WL 18886709, at *5 (D. Nev. Apr. 24, 2015). Nevada courts are not 1 when there is no express contract covering the services or materials furnished.â See, e.g., Vortt 2 Exploration Co., Inc. v. Chevron U.S.A., Inc., 787 S.W.2d 942, 944 (Tex. 1990); Zawada v. Pa. 3 Sys. Bd. Of Adjustment, Bhd. of Ry. & S.S. Clerks, Freight Handlers, Express & Station Emps., 4 140 A.2d 335, 338 (Pa. 1958) (âThat the two actionsâquantum meruit and express contractâ 5 are utterly distinct in nature is clear beyond question.â (citations omitted)). 6 The original Suen Complaintâs claim for quantum meruit always presented the 7 possibility of coverage for the purposes of defense coverage because that claim was by necessity 8 pled if there were no contract damages under an âexpress contract or agreementâ as required by 9 the Exclusion. Indeed, the elements for a claim for quantum meruit do not require any contract 10 or agreement, let alone an âexpressâ one, for LVS to have been held liable. Suen, 2010 WL 11 4673567, at *2.16 Quantum meruit simply requires a service provided with the knowledge of the 12 defendant, in circumstances where the plaintiff would expect to be compensated. Id.17 See also 13 Cass, Inc. v. Prod. Pattern & Foundry Co., 2017 WL 1128597, at *19 (D. Nev. Mar. 23, 2017) 14 (plaintiff was allowed to assert claim for quantum meruit in the alternative in the event there 15 was no express contract). Nor was LVSâs potential liability for the quantum meruit claim arising 16 out of âcontractual liabilityâ under an express contract as required by the Contract Exclusion. 17 Indeed, the Suen Action plaintiffs stated their quantum meruit claim as one for providing some 18 service to the insuredsâžșservices detailed in paragraphs 14 and 18 of the original Suen 19 Complaint, and included meeting with defendants on strategy, advising on presentations for 20 meeting with government officials, and introducing defendants to such officials and other 21 influential individuals. ECF No. 1-2 ¶¶ 14 and 18. These services were performed irrespective 22 23 16 Since Ms. Conboy missed the quantum meruit claim in the Suen Action, she did not consider 24 or analyze the elements of quantum meruit under Nevada law when she wrongly denied LVSâs coverage claim. Ex. 14 (Conboy Tr.) 251:1-252:4. 25 17 See also, e.g., Indian Harbor Ins. Co. v. Satterfield & Pontikes Construction, Inc., 2011 WL 26 3502483, at *3 (S.D. Tex. Aug. 10, 2011) (because the liability for quantum meruit arose only in the absence of an express contract or agreement, the policyâs breach of contract exclusion did 27 not apply to coverage for defense costs). National Union contended that Indian Harbor was distinguishable from Suen on the ground that the quantum meruit claim in Indian Harbor was 1 of the three faxes subsequently sent in 2001 that the plaintiffs claimed made up a âcontractâ in 2 paragraphs 15-17. ECF No. 1-2 ¶¶ 15-17 and 40; see also ECF No. 1-3 ¶¶ 14-16 and 46.18 And, 3 in the Complaints, plaintiffs sought âcompensation for the reasonable value of their servicesâ 4 rendered for their quantum meruit claim (ECF No. 1-2 ¶ 41, ECF No. 1-3 ¶ 47), not contractual 5 liability. And while, under the law, National Union had a duty to pay LVSâs Defense Costs at 6 the outset of the case triggered by the Suen Complaintsâ allegations alone (supra at Section 7 III.B.), nothing transpired in the fifteen-year Suen case that would have negated that initial 8 defense obligation: plaintiffs ultimately prevailed on the alternative ground of quantum meruit 9 because there was no âexpress contract or agreementâ between plaintiffs and LVS, as recognized 10 by the trial court in the jury instructions in both Suen Action trials and by the Nevada Supreme 11 Court. See supra at Section II.B.; 2016 WL 4076421, at *4-5.19 12 Within twenty-four hours of receiving notice, National Union made the snap decision to 13 deny coverage for Suen based on an exclusion for âbreach of contract,â and a host of other 14 inapplicable exclusions. Ex. 1 at APP00017. National Union then sent a letter denying coverage 15 based on an incomplete review of the Suen Complaintâs allegations, completely missing the 16 Complaintâs third cause of action for quantum meruit, and then it simply ignored the email sent 17 by LVSâs broker representative contesting National Unionâs grounds for denial. Supra at Section 18 II.C. And National Union has been trying to backfill that initial, incorrect evaluation for the Suen 19 20 18 For example, in Netherlands Insurance Co. v. Lexington Insurance Co., 2013 WL 2120817, at *4 (W.D. Ky. May 15, 2013), the defendant insurer (an AIG-affiliated company) argued that 21 the plaintiff insurer could not recover under quantum meruit because âquantum meruit only applies to situations when there is no applicable contract.â The court rejected the argument 22 because quantum meruit could apply âin the alternative, meaning that if there was no express contract between the parties, the theory applies.â Id. (emphasis added). 23 19 Moreover, even if the Suen plaintiffs or the Nevada courts had couched the quantum meruit claim as one for breach of an âimplied contract,â that still would not be sufficient to deny 24 coverage for Defense Costs because the Contract Exclusion requires an âexpress contract or 25 agreement.â Had National Union sought to broaden the Contract Exclusion to apply to implied contracts, it could have easily done soâžșas other policies provide. See, e.g., Evanston Ins. Co. v. 26 Rells Fire Prot. Inc., 2018 WL 3603066, at *2 (W.D. Wash. Apr. 4, 2018) (âThe breach-of- contract exclusion applies to â[c]laims arising out of breach of contract, whether written or oral, 27 express or implied, implied-in-law, or implied-in-fact contractâ . . . .â); Am. Intâl Specialty Lines Ins. Co. v. U.S. Olympic Comm., 219 A.D.2d 458, 458-59 (N.Y. App. Div. 1995) (finding that 1 Action ever since, but its continued pursuit to avoid coverage has rung hollow. For example, in 2 2017, when National Union did address coverage for the quantum meruit claim,20 but maintained 3 the Contract Exclusion applied to that claim as well, it stated: 4 Plaintiffâs quantum meruit claim . . . is based entirely and exclusively on an alleged agreement between Las Vegas Sands and the plaintiffs 5 for the payment of compensation in exchange for certain services. Thus, plaintiffsâ quantum meruit claim is excluded under the Contract 6 Exclusion, as it plainly arises out of, is based upon or attributable to an alleged contractual liability of Las Vegas Sands pursuant to an alleged 7 agreement between the parties. 8 ECF No. 1-6 at 1 (emphasis added). First, in referring to precluding all liability as arising out of 9 an âalleged agreement,â National Union sidestepped both the requirement that the loss arise out 10 of a claim for âcontractual liabilityâ and the requirement that there must be an âexpress contract 11 or agreementâ for the Contract Exclusion to be triggered. The Contract Exclusionâs use of the 12 words âactual or allegedâ modifies the language immediately following it, i.e., the âcontractual 13 liability.â In other words, the Contract Exclusion applies when contractual liability is ultimately 14 proven or allegedâžșas the claim for breach of contract alleged in the Suen Action. But those 15 words do not modify the Contract Exclusionâs requirement for an âexpress contract or 16 agreementââžșthere still has to be an âexpress contract or agreementâ that the âactual or alleged 17 contractual liabilityâ is based on, and here for quantum meruit there was none. 18 Second, even if National Unionâs attempt to broaden the scope of the Contract Exclusion 19 beyond its plain terms were allowed, its application is still wrong under the facts of Suen. 20 Contrary to National Unionâs contention, the claim for quantum meruit in the Complaint was 21 not âbased entirely and exclusively on an alleged agreement.â ECF No. 1-6 at 1. Rather, the 22 quantum meruit claim was based on the services rendered (including those in the Complaintâs 23 paragraph 18), and the claim existed irrespective of the 2001 faxes, and thus did not âarise out 24 25 20 National Unionâs corporate representative, Mr. Trager, testified in this litigation that it was 26 National Unionâs position that the initial 2004 denial letter impliedly addressed the quantum meruit claim (Ex. 16 (Trager Tr.) 115:4-116:24; id. 120:9-121:21), even though this assertion 27 was contradicted by National Unionâs own internal documents (supra at Section II.C.), and Mr. Tragerâs own letter in 2017 that addressed each Suen count specifically and individually (ECF 1 of,â nor was it âbased uponâ or âattributable to,â contractual liability under an express contract. 2 See, e.g., Crosby Est. at Rancho Santa Fe Master Assân v. Ironshore Specialty Ins. Co., 578 F. 3 Supp. 3d 1123, 1133 (S.D. Cal. 2022) (holding that a nearly identical contract exclusion did not 4 apply to claims that âcould exist irrespective of the [express agreement] between the partiesâ); 5 see also Lifespan Corp. v. Natâl Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, Pa., 59 F. Supp. 3d 427, 452 6 (D.R.I. 2014) (âNational Unionâs Exclusion 4(k) does not apply to a breach of fiduciary duty 7 claim, even if it occurs within the context of a contract or agreement.â). Here, the quantum 8 meruit claim did not arise out of an express contract; it exists only in the absence of the contract 9 claim. 10 While National Union has criticized LVSâs interpretation of the Contract Exclusion as 11 ânarrowâ (ECF No. 1-6 at 1), that is the proper analysis under Nevada law. Nevada law holds 12 that exclusions are construed narrowly and apply only when the insurerâs interpretation is the 13 only reasonable one, and policies are interpreted âso as to afford the greatest possible coverage 14 to the insured.â Casino W., 329 P.3d at 616. And this is especially the case in the context of a 15 defense obligation, where coverage is triggered if the claim is even potentially or arguably 16 covered, with any doubts resolved in favor of obligating the insurer to defend. Supra at Section 17 III.B. At a minimum, LVSâs interpretation that the Contract Exclusion does not apply to the 18 quantum meruit claim is reasonable, and therefore, National Union had a duty to pay all the 19 Defense Costs incurred for Suen for the length of the case until the Policy limit was exhausted. 20 However, even if the quantum meruit claim were precluded by the Contract Exclusion 21 (and it is not), there is no dispute that the Suen plaintiffsâ claim for fraud was a covered 22 âWrongful Actâ under the Policy and does not fall within the Contract Exclusion. Even in 2017, 23 National Unionâs letter conceded that the Contract Exclusion did not unambiguously apply to 24 the fraud count that was potentially covered, and it asked LVS to submit copies of defense 25 invoices for work done to defend that specific claim (which was effectively impossible), before 26 LVS realized that National Union was not going to pay for anything. ECF No. 1-6 at 3. 27 Accordingly, LVS is entitled to coverage for its Defense Costs through at least November 2010, 1 2. The Illegal Profit Exclusion Does Not Apply To Preclude Coverage For The Suen Action 2 While National Unionâs decades-long denial has been based on the Contract Exclusion, 3 National Union has cited the Illegal Profit Exclusion 4(a) in the Policy as well. ECF No. 1-4 at 4 3; ECF No. 1-5 at 3-4. This Exclusion, however, does not get National Union any closer to 5 avoiding coverage. The Illegal Profit Exclusion applies to any Claim for Loss âarising out of, 6 based upon or attributable to the gaining of any profit or advantageâ to which the insured was 7 ânot legally entitled,â and requires a âfinal adjudication . . . establish[ing]â that such illicit 8 conduct took place. Supra at Section II.A. That never happened in Suen, nor would it have 9 impeded National Unionâs obligation to pay Defense Costs on a contemporaneous basis as the 10 Policy required. 11 Indeed, courts have refused to broaden the intended scope of the Illegal Profit Exclusion 12 as National Union attempts to do here, stating that the Exclusionâs purpose is âclearâto prevent 13 the looting of corporate assets by directors and officers and then, after being forced to remit the 14 funds, turning to an insurer seeking indemnification for their wrongful acts under a directors and 15 officers policy.â Nicholls v. Zurich Am. Ins. Grp., 244 F. Supp. 2d 1144, 1160 (D. Colo. 2003); 16 see also Alstrin v. St. Paul Mercury Ins. Co., 179 F. Supp. 2d 376, 400 (D. Del. 2002) (analyzing 17 a nearly identical National Union exclusion 4(a) and finding that it âwould be applicable in cases 18 of theft, such as insider trading, [where] an element of the cause of action that must be proved 19 requires that the insured gained a profit or advantage to which [it] was not legally entitledâ but 20 is inapplicable where the gain might be incidental to the conduct). The Ninth Circuit also has 21 rejected a similarly broad reading of the exclusion beyond this intended purpose to apply to the 22 gaining of any economic benefit. In Research Corp. v. Westport Insurance Corp., 289 F. Appâx 23 989, 991 (9th Cir. 2008) (applying Arizona law), the court considered an exclusion for âany 24 âclaimâ, or âlossâ alleging or âarising out ofâ . . . [a]n âinsuredâsâ unjust enrichment, obtaining 25 profit, or advantage to which the âinsuredsâ were not entitled.â The court held that applying the 26 exclusion as broadly as the insurer argued would âamount to illusory coverageâ because âno 27 coverage [would be] afforded under the policy for any economic damages,â thus âeviscerat[ing] 1 Corporate looting and insider trading were not the allegations here. The Suen plaintiffs 2 alleged that LVS breached a contract, or that they had performed services for which they 3 believed they were entitled to reasonable value under quantum meruit. The plaintiffs sought 4 âcompensationâ from LVS. ECF No. 1-2 ¶ 41 and ECF No. 1-3 ¶ 47. At no point was there any 5 charge that LVS obtained a profit or advantage to which it was not legally entitled, nor was there 6 any final adjudication establishing the same. The factfinders in Suen that held for the plaintiffs 7 on quantum meruit did not find that LVS was ânot legally entitledâ to keep a profit or advantage 8 that it had to return; rather, they found that LVS should separately compensate the Suen plaintiffs 9 for their services. The Nevada Supreme Court repeatedly said that the Suen plaintiffs sought and 10 then were awarded âcompensation.â Suen, 2010 WL 4673567, at *1, *2, *4, *8; Suen, 2016 WL 11 4076421, at *5 (ârelying solely on the success fee does not ensure reasonable compensationâ for 12 Suen plaintiffsâ services). Quantum meruit is not a claim for the return of âany profit or 13 advantage to which [a defendant] was not legally entitled,â but rather a claim for âreasonable 14 compensationâ where âthere is no express agreement.â Suen, 2010 WL 4673567, at *2. 15 The Illegal Profit Exclusion does not apply to the Suen Action because the factual 16 predicates for its application are absent. That is why National Union in 2017âžșafter the second 17 and last Nevada Supreme Court decisionâžșstill acknowledged that, at a minimum, the fraud 18 cause of action was potentially covered. Construing the Illegal Profit Exclusion narrowly, as 19 required under Nevada law, the Exclusion does not retroactively apply to excuse National Union 20 from its duty to advance LVSâs Defense Costs for Suen, and it does not ultimately apply to 21 National Unionâs duty to cover the settlement. 22 C. LVSâs Defense Costs Exceeded the Policy Limit And Were Reasonable And Necessary To Its Defense Of The Suen Action 23 24 National Union was obligated to contemporaneously pay LVSâs and Messrs. Adelson 25 and Weidnerâs Defense Costs as they were incurred during Suen, based solely on the allegations 26 in the Suen Complaints, beginning in October 2004. Instead, National Union breached that duty, 27 denied coverage, and refused to pay any Defense Costs for the next fifteen years in the Suen 1 excluded by the Contract Exclusion. With no insurance, LVS prudently defended Suen, and its 2 costs were reasonable and necessary to that defense. 3 Courts have held that a policyholderâs fees and costs are presumed to be reasonable, and 4 the insurer bears the burden of proving otherwise when the insurer has wrongly denied coverage 5 and left the policyholder to defend against the underlying claim on its own, and thus has every 6 financial incentive to minimize its costs. See, e.g., Taco Bell Corp. v. Contâl Cas. Co., 388 F.3d 7 1069, 1076 (7th Cir. 2004) (finding âwhere there are market incentives to economize, there is 8 no occasion for a painstaking judicial reviewâ of defense costs); Chicago Title Ins. Co. v. 9 F.D.I.C., 172 F.3d 601, 606 (8th Cir. 1999) (âan insurerâs ability to dispute the reasonableness 10 of attorney fees is diminished when it has improperly declined a tender of defenseâ (quotation 11 omitted)); Arenson v. Natâl Auto. & Cas. Ins. Co., 310 P.2d 961, 967-68 (Cal. 1957) (âAn 12 insurance company may not wrongfully refuse to defend its insured and thus force the insured 13 into the position of having to engage outside counsel, and then, because the defense was not 14 handled in a manner to the liking of the [insurer], refuse to hold the insured harmless against 15 payment of fees for all services reasonably performed in such defense.â).21 16 Assuming a showing of reasonableness is necessary, under Nevada law, the Court has 17 discretion in choosing the âmethod upon which a reasonable fee is determined,â such as a 18 lodestar amount or a contingency fee, subject only to âreason and fairness.â Shuette v. Beazer 19 Homes Holdings Corp., 124 P.3d 530, 548-49 (Nev. 2005) (quotation omitted). Though the 20 Court is not limited to one specific approach, it must conduct its analysis by âconsidering the 21 requested amount in light of the [Brunzell] factors,â which include âthe advocateâs professional 22 qualities, the nature of the litigation, the work performed, and the result.â Id. 23 LVSâs Defense Costs are reasonable under the Brunzell factors. First, Suen was one of 24 the longest and most complex civil actions in Nevadaâs history, a fifteen-year litigation that 25 involved years of discovery, depositions, and motion practice, two trials and the start of a third, 26 27 21 See also Columbus McKinnon Corp. v. Travelers Indem. Co., 367 F. Supp. 3d 123, 155 n.15 (S.D.N.Y. 2018) (â[I]f Defendants are required to reimburse Plaintiff for defense costs because 1 and two separate appeals to the Nevada Supreme Court. Second, LVSâs defense counsel 2 obtained several favorable outcomes in the Suen Action by obtaining dismissals of claims 3 (including the fraud claims against LVSâs executives), and getting affirmances and reversals at 4 the Nevada Supreme Court. Third, the plaintiffs in Suen were seeking hundreds of millions of 5 dollars in damages. Fourth, LVS had numerous layers of in-house attorneys, including LVSâs 6 general counsel, associate general counsel, and assistant general counsel, review the defense 7 invoices in the Suen Action for reasonableness and necessity before they were paid, and they 8 disputed certain amounts that they determined were unreasonable or unnecessary. See Exs. 26, 9 27, 28; see also Ex. 24 (Batarseh Tr.) 73:25-74:16.22 LVS incurred and paid at least 10 approximately $34,176,225.49 in Defense Costs and related expenses for Suen, of which LVS 11 has been able to produce the defense invoices and proofs of payment for $33,072,714.30. Ex. 12 13.23 All of the Defense Costs in the Suen Action were both reasonable and necessary. However, 13 at the very least, $20 million of LVSâs Defense Costs were reasonable and necessary for Suen, 14 which National Union cannot dispute. As such, the Policy limit is exhausted by coverage for 15 LVSâs Defense Costs alone. 16 D. To The Extent The Policy Limit Is Not Exhausted By Defense Costs, The Suen Settlement Exhausts Any Remaining Limit 17 18 Even if the Policy were not exhausted by Defense Costs, the settlement in Suen does 19 exhaust the limit. See Ex. 12. The duty to indemnify provides policyholders with financial 20 protection against judgments and settlements. See Century Sur. Co. v. Andrew, 432 P.3d 180, 21 183 (Nev. 2018); ECF No. 49-1 § 2(k). As opposed to the mere âpotential for coverageâ standard 22 for defense coverage, the âduty to indemnify arises when an insured becomes legally obligated 23 to pay damages in the underlying action that gives rise to a claim under the policy. In other 24 22 The reasonableness and necessity of LVSâs Defense Costs in Suen is discussed in more detail 25 in the Rebuttal Expert Report of Kirk Lenhard, dated July 31, 2023. Ex. 29. 26 23 The proofs of payment include detailed CounselLink records, LVS processing sheets, copies of checks, ACH records, and bank statements that include defense counselâs name, defense 27 counselâs invoice number, the purchase order or reference number, the payment reference or check number, the originating bank account number, the pay code description (e.g., âCHECK,â 1 words, for an insurer to be obligated to indemnify an insured, the insuredâs activity and the 2 resulting loss or damage must actually fall within the policyâs coverage.â Century Sur. Co. v. 3 Casino W., Inc., 2010 WL 762188, at *5 (D. Nev. Mar. 4, 2010), affâd, 578 F. Appâx 720 (9th 4 Cir. 2014) (quotation omitted). Here, LVS settled the Suen Action for less than the amount that 5 the court awarded in the second trial for Suen six years earlier, thus minimizing the potential 6 exposure LVS faced. See supra at Section II.B. National Union has never challenged the 7 reasonableness of LVSâs settlement, nor could it in light of LVSâs prudent business decision to 8 finally end the fifteen-year litigation prior to its third trial. Additionally, for the reasons stated 9 above, the only remaining claim in Suen at the time of settlement was quantum meruit, and no 10 exclusion applies to that claim. Accordingly, to the extent that the Court finds that the $20 11 million Policy limit is not exhausted by reasonable and necessary Defense Costs, the Suen 12 settlement is still covered, and any remaining coverage under the Policy is exhausted. 13 V. CONCLUSION 14 For the foregoing reasons, LVS respectfully requests that the Court grant this Motion for 15 partial summary judgment on LVSâs Second and Third Causes of Action, ruling that National 16 Union breached its obligations under the Policy by failing and refusing to pay the Defense Costs 17 and settlement incurred for the Suen Action. DATED this 29th day of September, 2023. 18 19 KEMP JONES, LLP 20 _/s/ Michael Gayan_______________ J.Randall Jones, Esq. (#1927) 21 Michael J. Gayan, Esq. (#11135) 3800 Howard Hughes Parkway 22 Seventeenth Floor 23 Las Vegas, Nevada 89169 24 Robin L. Cohen, Esq. (Admitted pro hac vice) Marc T. Ladd, Esq. (Admitted pro hac vice) 25 Alexander M. Sugzda, Esq. (Admitted pro hac vice) Jason D. Meyers, Esq. (Admitted pro hac vice) 26 COHEN ZIFFER FRENCHMAN 27 & MCKENNA LLP 1325 Avenue of the Americas 1 Attorneys for Plaintiffs Las Vegas Sands, Inc. n/k/a Las Vegas Sands, LLC & Las Vegas Sands 2 Corp. 3 4 5 PROOF OF SERVICE 6 I hereby certify that on the 29th day of September, 2023, I served a true and correct copy 7 of the foregoing PLAINTIFFSâ MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT via 8 the United States District Courtâs CM/ECF electronic filing system to all parties on the e-service 9 list. 10 Paul R. Hejmanowski (#94) 11 Charles H. McCrea (#104) HEJMANOWSKI & McCREA LLC 12 520 South Fourth Street, Suite 320 Las Vegas, Nevada 89101 13 Michael J. Hartley (Admitted Pro Hac Vice) 14 Courtney A. Palko (Admitted Pro Hac Vice) 15 777 South Figueroa Street, Suite 3800 Los Angeles, California 90017 16 Attorneys for Defendant National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pa. 17 Attorneys for Plaintiff/Counterclaim Defendants 18 19 /s/ Pamela McAfee__________________ 20 An employee of Kemp Jones LLP 21 22 23 24 25 26 27
Case Information
- Court
- D. Nev.
- Decision Date
- November 8, 2023
- Status
- Precedential