Dickson, J.
Appellees Continental Casualty Company and Twin City Fire Insurance Co. (collectively “CNA”), have petitioned for rehearing with respect to our opinion in this matter, Wellpoint, Inc. v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co., 29 N.E.3d 716 (Ind. 2015). The petition asserts a single claim—that a portion of our opinion exceeds the power granted by Trial Rule 56(B), which states that “[w]hen any party has moved for summary judgment, the court may grant summary judgment for any other party upon the issues raised by the motion although no motion for summary judgment is filed by such party.” T.R. 56(B) (emphasis added). CNA does not challenge our reversal of the trial court’s grant of its motion for summary judgment, but argues that our opinion should not have also granted summary judgment for Anthem as to issues not raised by CNA’s summary judgment motion. CNA seeks modification of the fifth paragraph of our opinion to clarify that its summary judgment motion “raised only certain issues of law prior to the close of discovery,” Pet. for Reh’g at 13, and revision of our concluding language that could be read to foreclose defenses not raised in the summary judgment proceedings. Appellants Wellpoint, Inc. and Anthem Insurance Companies, Inc. (collectively “Anthem”) respond that summary judgment in Anthem’s favor is proper and further that CNA has waived any additional affirmative defenses.
We agree Trial Rule 56(B) limits our authority to grant summary judgment for Anthem to the issues raised in CNA’s motion. Response to Pet. for Reh’g at 1. Anthem contends CNA should have raised this objection to the trial court. Anthem’s second argument is that Trial Rule 56(B) authorizes its requested relief because CNA’s motion for summary judgment “did not request summary judgment only as to certain specified affirmative defenses” but rather summary judgment as to certain specified counts and CNA had the duty to assert its affirmative defenses in response to Anthem’s request for summary judgment in its favor. Id. at 3–4.
Generally, an affirmative defense is waived “if not asserted in response to a motion for summary judgment that dispose[s] of the entire issue of liability.” Reiswerg v. Statom, 926 N.E.2d 26, 32 (Ind. 2010). And when a “plaintiff moves only for partial summary judgment on an issue or an element but not as to liability, the defendant is under no obligation to present all of its affirmative defenses at the summary judgment stage.” Id. In the present case, however, it was not the plaintiff Anthem but the defendant CNA who sought summary judgment and raised some but not all of its affirmative defenses. Success as to many of these claims would have entitled CNA to establish its non-liability on one or more counts of Anthem’s complaint. But a denial of summary judgment as to all of CNA’s asserted issues does not dispose of the entire issue of liability. The general waiver rule is thus inapplicable. For waiver of a contention to occur, it must be “placed in issue by the movant.” Id. at 33. When, as here, the defendant moves for summary judgment and the plaintiff is the non-moving party, the defendant has no duty to raise all of its affirmative defenses unless another moving party “has first addressed and presented evidence on that element.” Id. at 30 (citing Jarboe v. Landmark Cmty. Newspapers, Inc., 644 N.E.2d 118, 123 (Ind. 1994)). In the absence of a duty to raise one or more affirmative defenses, a defendant’s failure to do so cannot constitute waiver. This principle is also consistent with the unequivocal limitation in Trial Rule 56(B) precluding courts from granting summary judgment for a non-moving party except as to issues raised by the motion.
We decline to find waiver of unasserted defenses by CNA in this case. As the moving party, CNA controls the definition of the issues raised by its summary judgment motion for purposes of Trial Rule 56(B). In its motion for summary judgment, CNA sought summary judgment for any one of four “reasons”/”defenses” at issue, see Appellants’ App’x at 620, which we consolidated as “three principle claims.” Slip opin. at 7, 29 N.E.3d at 722. See Memorandum of Law in Support, Appellants’ App’x at 620 n.3 (“[T]his Motion addresses those defenses which are dispositive . . . .”); CNA’s Reply in Support of its Motion for Summary Judgment, id. at 6013 (“Each of these reasons, in and of themselves, is a complete stand alone basis for summary judgment in favor of [CNA].”). Although a finding for CNA on any one of these defenses would dis-pose of the entire issue of its liability, a finding against CNA on one defense does not necessarily foreclose other defenses. In this context, a court could grant summary judgment to either party, but such judgment would be limited to “the issues raised by the motion.” T.R. 56(B).
We conclude that rehearing should be granted to modify our opinion to address only the issues raised in the summary judgment proceeding. …
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Rush, C.J., and Rucker, David, and Massa, JJ., concur.