Establishing Vacancy Through Rule 37 Sanctions: A Commentary on Ohio Security Insurance Company v. Best Inn Midwest, LLC
Introduction
The Seventh Circuit’s decision in Ohio Security Insurance Company v. Best Inn Midwest, LLC (No. 23-1696, decided July 10 2025) delivers a forceful message on two fronts: (1) the breadth of district-court discretion to impose discovery sanctions under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37, and (2) the consequences insureds face when obstructing an insurer’s attempt to validate a policy exclusion—here, the “vacancy” exclusion for acts of vandalism. In effect, the court blessed a creative yet severe sanction: deeming the insured hotel “vacant” as a matter of law, thereby eliminating coverage and ending the litigation.
Key Parties
• Plaintiff-Appellee: Ohio Security Insurance Company (commercial property insurer)
• Defendant-Appellant: Best Inn Midwest, LLC (hotel owner/operator in Indianapolis, Indiana)
The dispute arose after vandals damaged rooftop air-conditioning units. Ohio Security suspected that the hotel was largely unoccupied and therefore outside the policy’s vandalism coverage. It demanded proof of occupancy— guest logs, revenue records, payroll data—yet Best Inn repeatedly ignored or evaded both contractual requests and two separate court orders compelling production.
Summary of the Judgment
- The Seventh Circuit affirmed the district court’s Rule 37(b)(2)(A)(i) sanction that conclusively established the hotel was “vacant” from January 1 – December 20 2019, the relevant policy period.
- Because the “vacancy” exclusion applied, the policy provided no coverage for the AC-unit vandalism, and the insurer’s denial could not be “bad faith” as a matter of law.
- Summary judgment for Ohio Security on Best Inn’s counterclaim was proper; no genuine issue of material fact remained.
- The court emphasized that litigants are bound by their lawyers’ misconduct, leaving malpractice suits—not judicial leniency—as the proper remedy for aggrieved clients.
Analysis
Precedents Cited and Their Influence
- Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 501 U.S. 32 (1991) – Recognized inherent judicial authority to sanction abusive litigation practices. Provided the overarching framework for broad sanctioning power.
- United States v. Mitrovich, 95 F.4th 1064 (7th Cir. 2024) – Reaffirmed deferential abuse-of-discretion review of sanction orders, directly cited to underscore the appellate standard.
- Musser v. Gentiva Health Services, 356 F.3d 751 (7th Cir. 2004) – Earlier Seventh-Circuit articulation that Rule 37 sanctions are reviewed for abuse of discretion.
- Rice v. City of Chicago, 333 F.3d 780 (7th Cir. 2003) & Williams v. Chicago Board of Education, 155 F.3d 853 (7th Cir. 1998) – Enumerated factors for proportionality in sanctions (frequency, magnitude, prejudice, court time).
- Choice Hotels Int’l, Inc. v. Grover, 792 F.3d 753 (7th Cir. 2015) – Stated that parties are bound by counsel’s misconduct; used to dispose of Best Inn’s “blame-the-lawyer” argument.
- Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317 (1986) – Summary-judgment framework; once vacancy was deemed established, no triable issues remained.
Legal Reasoning
The Seventh Circuit’s reasoning followed a two-step path. First, it scrutinized the sanctions order for abuse of discretion, applying the proportionality factors. Finding that Best Inn ignored over a dozen informal requests and two formal court orders, the court agreed that lesser sanctions would leave Ohio Security “hamstrung”—unable to prove vacancy after records were allegedly stolen or burned. Hence, deeming vacancy conclusively established was proportionate.
Second, once vacancy was fixed as fact, summary judgment flowed automatically: the policy’s explicit language excluded vandalism losses when occupancy fell below 31 %. Because there was no coverage, there could be no bad-faith denial.
Impact on Future Litigation
- In Insurance Coverage Cases: Insurers may seek declaratory sanctions establishing policy exclusions when an insured withholds critical occupancy or maintenance records. This elevates record-preservation obligations for commercial property owners.
- On Discovery Practice: The decision validates creative issue-dispositive sanctions— not just monetary penalties—where a party’s obstruction strikes at the heart of the dispute.
- Attorney-Client Dynamics: Reinforces that clients bear the risk of their counsel’s missteps; malpractice actions, not leniency from the court, are the prescribed recourse.
- Appellate Review Standard: Confirms the Seventh Circuit’s deference to trial-court sanction decisions, making reversal difficult absent clear overreach.
Complex Concepts Simplified
Rule 37 grants courts tools to penalize parties who disobey discovery orders. Options range from fee-shifting to striking pleadings, or—as here—treating certain facts as established (issue-preclusion sanction).
Many commercial property policies void coverage for certain perils (e.g., vandalism, water damage) if the building is “vacant” for a defined period—often 60+ consecutive days. “Vacant” commonly means less than a threshold (31 % here) of usable space is occupied or in customary operation.
A tort claim alleging an insurer unreasonably refused coverage despite knowing liability was clear. If coverage never existed (because a policy exclusion applies), no bad-faith claim can stand.
Conclusion
Ohio Security v. Best Inn Midwest is a cautionary tale and a powerful precedent. It teaches that:
- Persistent discovery stonewalling—especially where documents are uniquely in a party’s control—can justify an issue-dispositive sanction under Rule 37.
- Clients cannot escape the fallout of their lawyers’ neglect or gamesmanship.
- Where a policy exclusion is established through sanctions, derivative tort claims like bad-faith denial vanish as a matter of law.
Looking forward, counsel for insureds must prioritize transparent cooperation in occupancy-related disputes, lest a court impose the ultimate penalty: deciding the central coverage fact against them. For insurers, the decision provides a roadmap to convert discovery frustration into definitive relief. Overall, the Seventh Circuit has fortified the judiciary’s arsenal to ensure “the orderly and expeditious disposition of cases,” echoing the Supreme Court’s admonition in Chambers.
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