Defense Required Because Exclusion is Ambiguous

Defense Required Because Exclusion is Ambiguous

AI Collection of Facial Recognition Images Violates Illinois Statute

See the full video at https://rumble.com/v2wgqdk-defense-required-because-exclusion-is-ambiguous.html  and at https://youtu.be/ZviS2zl1Vas

After Wynndalco Enterprises, LLC was sued in two putative class actions for violating the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (“BIPA”) its business liability insurer, Citizens Insurance Company of America sued seeking a declaration that it has no obligation under the terms of the insurance contract to indemnify Wynndalco for the BIPA violations or to supply Wynndalco with a defense. The district court entered judgment on the pleadings for Wynndalco, finding that the language of the catch-all exclusion is ambiguous on its face and that, construing that ambiguity in favor of the insured, Citizens consequently had a duty to defend Wynndalco.

In Citizens Insurance Company of America v. Wynndalco Enterprises, LLC, et al., No. 22-2313, United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit (June 15, 2023) the litigation arose from a massive database of facial-image scans assembled by Clearview AI, an artificial intelligence firm that specializes in facial recognition software.

Clearview AI allegedly extracted in excess of three billion photographs of individuals from online social media; converted those images into biometric facial recognition identifiers using proprietary algorithms; collected the original images and their biometric counterparts into its database; and paired those images with information as to where those images were found on the Internet. Clearview AI has also created a facial recognition application or “app” that allows a user to identify an individual by uploading a photograph of that person to the app. The app then allows the user to see other photographs of that same person on the media platforms or websites where they appear, along with the identifying information (including their name, address, and other personal information) associated with that individual.

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Both suits allege that Wynndalco’s role in this transaction ran afoul of BIPA. Illinois became the first state in the nation to enact biometric data privacy legislation when it promulgated BIPA. Broadly speaking, BIPA codifies an individual’s right of privacy in and control over his or her biometric identifiers and biometric information.

At the time of the sale of the Clearview AI app to the Chicago Police Department, Wynndalco had business owner’s insurance coverage through a policy issued to it by Citizens. Section II of the policy sets forth the liability coverage for the business. Citizens contends that coverage of the class action claims is barred by a catch-all provision in a policy exclusion barring coverage for injuries arising out of certain statutory violations. The catch-all exclusion provided: “Any other laws, statutes, ordinances, or regulations, that address, prohibit or limit the printing, dissemination, disposal, collecting, recording, sending, transmitting, communicating or distribution of material or information.”

Illinois regards the proper interpretation of an insurance policy as a question of law. Policy terms that purport to limit the insurance company’s liability are construed in favor of coverage, but only when the terms are ambiguous or susceptible to more than one reasonable interpretation.

In some instances, the language of a policy exclusion may appear clear in isolation, but when compared with a separate policy provision granting coverage for the same type of action or injury that the exclusion ostensibly reaches, an ambiguity arises, in that the exclusion appears to take away with one hand coverage that the policy purports to give with the other. Because the aim of policy interpretation is to give effect to all provisions of the policy and avoid whenever possible construing one provision in a way that tends to nullify another provision, a court when confronted with such an ambiguity must consider whether the reach of the “swallowing” exclusion can be deemed narrower than its plain terms taken in isolation would otherwise suggest.

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There was no dispute that a literal, plain-text reading of the catch-all provision would include BIPA violations.

The text does not seem particularly ambiguous. Quite the opposite, it seems clear as a bell- and the clear message is that the provision sweeps broadly. The text is undoubtedly broad. The Seventh Circuit agreed with Wynndalco that the catch-all provision of the exclusion is ambiguous. A plain-text reading of that provision would swallow a substantial portion of the coverage that the policy otherwise explicitly purports to provide in defining a covered “personal or advertising injury,” and arguably all of the coverage for certain categories of wrongs-copyright infringement, to take one example- that are entirely statutory in nature.

On a plain text reading, the catch-all provision has an extremely broad sweep-so broad, in fact, that the exclusion on its face would eliminate coverage for a number of statutory injuries expressly included in the definition of “personal and advertising injur[ies]” that the policy purports to cover. This clash between competing provisions of the policy gives rise to the Seventh Circuit concluding there is an ambiguity in the insurance contract language and that  catch-all provision is “intractably ambiguous.”

Applying yet another well-established canon the ambiguity must be construed against Citizens and in favor of the insured. As the catch-all provision says nothing about injuries arising from statutes regulating privacy interests, and “[o]ral or written publication, in any manner, of material that violates a person’s right of privacy” is covered the Seventh Circuit concluded that the injuries alleged complaints at least potentially fall within the coverage of the Citizens policy. The Seventh Circuit concluded that Citizens thus owes its insured, Wynndalco, a duty to defend it against those complaints.

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Exclusions in policies exist to limit the coverages provided by the insuring agreement and cause it to provide less coverage than an unlimited insuring agreement. Since people are entitled to enter into any contract that the insurer is willing to offer and the insured is willing to accept, the court will usually not rewrite the contract. There was no question that the “catch-all” exclusion was clear and unambiguous but the District Court and the Seventh Circuit created an ambiguity because the exclusion limited the effect of the insuring agreements. In this case the Seventh Circuit rewrote the policy and provided the insured more coverage than was provided by the policy.

(c) 2023 Barry Zalma & ClaimSchool, Inc.

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