OPINION
AXIS Insurance Company brought this declaratory judgment action to determine whether it would ever be required to indemnify part of PNC Financial Services Group’s liabilities from a separate underlying litigation. Sort of. More accurately, AXIS brought this - declaratory judgment action to determine whether five specific defenses > would absolve AXIS-of any obligation to indemnify PNC for the litigation liabilities. What if those defenses failed? AXIS purports to “reserve the right to raise all other terms and conditions .[of the insurance policies] as defenses to coverage for any.claim.” This attempt to hedge against a final, definitive decision determining AXIS’s obligations pushes this case — already of questionable maturity for judicial resolution — clearly into the realm of unripeness. AXIS’s request for a declaratory judgment is unripe and thus unready for determination by a United States District Court.
I. BACKGROUND
In December of 2008 AXIS issued a first-layer excess blended liability insurance policy to PNC. ECF No. 1 at 1-3, 5. Essentially, the AXIS policy provides up to $25,000,000 of insurance coverage after a different insurance policy — issued by Houston Casualty Company- — is exhausted. ECF -No. 1 at 5. At issue in this case is whether AXIS will be required to pay any portion of its policy coverage to PNC. AXIS says no, and that we should decide this right now; PNC says yes, but that we •may not need to decide the issues in this case at all. Underlying PNC’s latter contention is the intersection of two related eases with the present action.
The first is the “Overdraft Litigation,” or The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc., et al. v. Houston Casualty Company, et al., No. 2:13-cv-00331-CB-MPK (W.D.Pa.), pending before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit at its Docket Nos. 15-1656,- 15-1717. In the Overdraft Litigation, PNC sought a . declaratory judgment against AXIS and Houston Casualty Company seeking to recover litigation and settlement liabilities
The second intersécting case is the “NPS Litigation,” or Jo Ann Howard & Assocs., P.C. v. J. Douglas Cassity, et al., incl. PNC Bank, N.A., No. 09-1252 (E.D.Mo.). The present declaratory judgment action seeks to determine whether AXIS must cover part of PNC’s final liabilities from the NPS Litigation. ECF No. 1 at 13-14. In March of 2015, the jury in the NPS Litigation found PNC liable for over $390 million in compensatory and punitive damages. However, the execution of that judgment has been stayed until the district court in Missouri rules on a host of post-trial motions and the appeals process is completed.. See Jo Ann Howard & Associates, P.C. v. Cassity, No. 4:09CV01252 ERW,
Procedurally, PNC has filed a Motion to Stay the proceedings here until these two intersecting cases are resolved. This Court thinks a different issue is in play and has so advised counsel twice — first in a telephone status conference, ECF No. 26, and then again at the oral argument on PNC’s Motion to Stay. ECF No. 34. In AXIS’s Complaint, it included the following “Reservation of Rights:”
The HCC Policy and the AXIS Policy contain terms, conditions, and limitations on coverage that are relevant to the claim arising from' the Underlying Action but that are not implicated by this declaratory judgment action. Nothing in this. complaint should be construed as a waiver by AXIS of any coverage defenses under the HCC Policy or the AXIS Policy, and AXIS reserves the right to raise all other terms and conditions as defenses to coverage for any claim made under the AXIS Policy, including the claim arising from the Underlying Action, as appropriate.
ECF No. 1 at 19.
Each party addressed the ripeness of the action in their briefs, but did not focus
II. DECLARATORY JUDGMENT RIPENESS
The Third Circuit’s test for the ripeness in declaratory judgment actions comes from Step-Saver Data Sys., Inc. v. Wyse Tech.,
A. Adversity
“For there to be an actual controversy the defendant must be so situated that the parties have adverse legal interests.” Step-Saver,
Other district courts in the Third Circuit have debated whether this type of contingency renders parties non-adverse and claims unripe. See Evanston Ins. Co. v. Layne Thomas Builders, Inc.,
Likewise, in Home Ins. Co, v. Perlber-ger, 900 -F.Supp. 768 (E.D.Pa.1995) the court noted — but did not hold — that “the adversity of the parties’ interests as to the duty to indemnify will not be complete until after the resolution of [the underlying litigation], when it would be clear whether” a claim for indemnity could be asserted. Id. at 773. See also See Pennsylvania Am. Water Co. v. Trunov, No. 1;CV-12-0545,
Though Legion and Powell — like the cases in the preceding analysis — are similar to the present case, this Court believes that the Overdraft Litigation and the NPS Litigation create ample antecedent contingencies, such that the parties are not sufficiently adverse to .create a ripe action. More importantly, as noted below, even if the parties were sufficiently adverse, AXIS’s claims lack the requisite conclusiveness and utility to warrant a-ripe declaratory judgment action.
B. Conclusiveness
The second factor in the Step-Saver analysis scrutinizes how “conclusive” a judicial judgment would be in ,a requested declaratory judgment action. The “conelusivenegs” prong examines two facets of a potential declaratory judgment. First, “whether the parties’ rights will be definitively; decided by a declaratory judgment.” Step-Saver,
Though this case is plainly based upon a “hypothetical set of facts”
Of course, if this Court found in AXIS’s favor as the case is now pled, that might conclusively determine the parties rights; but Step-Saver counsels that a ripe declaratory judgment should definitively decide the parties rights. See Step-Saver,
Consider again the contrast with Pittsburgh Mack In Pittsburgh Mack, the court explained that the requested “declaratory judgment will be conclusive because it will establish whether the [defendant] is obligated to indemnify or hold harmless [the plaintiff].” Pittsburgh Mack,
Finally, it is worth noting’ that Step-Saver also counseled against a finding of conclusiveness when a requested declaratory judgment is based upon a “contingency.” See Step-Saver,
C. Utility
The final prong of the Step-Saver ripeness test assesses the “practical help, or utility” that the requested judgment would provide. This third step analyzes “whether the parties’ plans of actions are likely to be affected by a declaratory judgment,” Step-Saver,
Of course, almost any judicial judgment affecting the rights of a party is useful, to some degree, as a form of risk reduction. That is, a reduction in future uncertainty. However, to render a requested declaratory judgment ripe — and to make the utility prong mean anything — the action must achieve more than that minimum. See, e.g., Invensys Inc.,
As such, this Court concludes that AXIS’s requested declaratory judgment is of insufficient utility. First, as above, the utility of this action is limited by the fact that it could result in an inconclusive judgment. If the Court were to find hi favor of AXIS,' PNC’s - “future - plans of action” would be affected to the extent that PNC , would (presumably) not’be able to pursue indemnification from AXIS.
Second, the hardship to AXIS of withholding judgment now is not excessive. Again, withholding judgment (or rendering a judgment in this action against AXIS) would leave AXIS with the risk of a liability in the future, but bearing risk is what insurance companies do. AXIS will be in no worse position than it was when it entered into the insurance contracts in 2008. AXIS also asserts the burden of monitoring the NPS Litigation in order to determine whether it should associate in PNC’s defense of that case; however, the Court has no reason to believe that these monitoring costs are so arduous or burdensome that they would drag the case back into the realm of ripeness.
The Court believes that it does not have the power to hear this case because the claim is not ripe. However, even if the Court could hear the case, it concludes that it should not exercise its discretion to do so.
The Declaratory - Judgment Act,- 28 U.S.C. § 2201, states: “In a case of actual controversy within its jurisdiction ... any .court of the United States, upon the filing of an appropriate pleading, may declare the rights and other legal relations of any interested party seeking such declaration, whether or not further relief is or could.be sought.” Id. (emphasis added). As Step-Saver explained, there is a “considerable amount of discretion” built into the Declaratory Judgment Act. Step-Saver,
In Reifer v. Westport Ins. Corp., 751 F.3d.l29 (3d Cir.2014), the Third Circuit set out eight factors that should guide the “sound and reasoned discretion” of a district court considering not to exercise jurisdiction over a declaratory judgment action: “(1) the likelihood that a federal court declaration will resolve the uncertainty of obligation which gave rise to the controversy; (2) the convenience of the parties; (3) the public interest in settlement of the uncertainty of obligation; (4) the availability and Relative convenience of other remedies; (5) a general policy of restraint when the same issues arp pending in a state, court; ,(6) avoidance of dupli-cative litigation; (7) prevention of the use of the declaratory action as a method of procedural fencing or as a means to provide another forum in a race for res judica-ta; and (8) (in the insurance context), an inherent conflict of interest between an insurer’s duty to defend in a -state court and its attempt to characterize that suit in federal court as falling within the scope of a policy exclusion.” Id. at 146.
Measuring the Reservation of Rights clause against these factors counsels against the .exercise-of discretion over this action. Considering -factor (1), this action may not resolve the uncertainty of the obligation which gave rise to the controversy, because the uncertainty can only be resolved if the court finds in favor of AXIS’s current defenses. As explained extensively above, ruling that AXIS’s five pled defenses are unsuccessful would not resolve the indemnification question; the uncertainty surrounding the indemnification obligation would still remain. As to factor (2), it does not appear that either party would, be materially inconvenienced. AXIS obviously wants the issues to be decided now (or else they wouldn’t have filed, the áction and contested PNC’s Motion to Stay) but this Court does not believe that AXIS 'would be unfairly or unduly prejudiced by either waiting until the liability becomes certain or bringing all of its possible defenses in one declaratory judgment action. The public interest is also a wash; it does not appear that the public would have much of any interest in the expedited resolution of these issues. Indeed, one might even argue that the exercise of judicial resources to reach a potentially inconclusive judgment in piecemeal litigation is against the public interest. But see Westfield Ins. Co. v. Icon Legacy Custom Modular Homes & Icon Legacy, No. 4:15-CV-00539,
Still, this Court recognizes that Reifer placed emphasis on the existence of a pending parallel proceeding. Though the absence of such a proceeding does not require the exercise of jurisdiction, such an absence “militates significantly in favor of exercising jurisdiction.” Id. at 144. Indeed, many of the district courts tasked with applying Reifer have proceeded to hear declaratory judgment actions when there is not a parallel pending state action See, 1100 Adams St. Condo. Ass’n, Inc. v. Mt. Hawley Ins. Co., 2014WL 5285466, at *4-5 (D.N.J. Oct. 15, 2014) report and recommendation adopted sub nom. 1100 Adams St. Condo. Ass’n, Inc. v. Tarragon Corp.,
Nonetheless, this Court believers that the better course is to follow the lead of the court in Cent. Transp., LLC v. Mainfreight, Inc.,
IV. CONCLUSION
The contingent nature of any liability that PNC could assert against AXIS puts this case on uncertain jurisdictional footing. Adding AXIS’s Reservation of Rights clause to the mix definitively tips that balance towards a lack of ripeness. The Article III and prudential requirements of ripeness, as defined by the Third Circuit’s Step-Saver test, are not met here. Furthermore, even if the Court could properly hear this case, it would elect not to exercise its discretionary declaratory judgment jurisdiction. Therefore, this Court will dismiss AXIS’s Complaint without prejudice.
An appropriate Order will issue.
Notes
. The Court expresses no judgment about the likelihood or merits of this result; merely that, as acknowledged by both AXIS and PNC, it is a not insignificant possibility.
. During both the status conference and at oral argument, counsel for AXIS advised the Court that it was not currently aware of any other coverage defenses. That said, AXIS has also stuck by its guns, and its "Reservation of Rights” remains in its Complaint in this case, and is therefore before the Court.
, In a number- of other cases, coúrts have laid down firm proclamations to the effect that there is no adversity, (and thus no ripe ' claim) when the underlying action fixing liability has not concludéd. See, e.g., Victoria Ins. Co. v. Mincin Insulation Servs., Inc.,
. Namely: Assuming that PNC seeks indemnity for some or all of the liability arising from the NPS Litigation, do the pled defenses provide a proper defense against any such coverage?
. Of note, PNC implies that the claims are not predominantly legal. See ECF No. 31 at 11 (arguing' that ‘‘[f]acts relevant to AXIS’ claims — and PNC’s defenses to those claims— remain to be decided”).
. Specifically, AXIS asks the Court to determine: (1) Count I — whether the NPS Litigation involves the same subject matter as a number of cases listed in a 2012 Release agreement between PNC and AXIS; (2) Count II — whether the NPS Litigation involves "Wrongful Act(s)” (as that policy term would be interpreted) committed before or after PNC acquired a subsidiary company; (3) Count III — whether certain prior lawsuits and the NPS Litigation constitute a "single claim” under the AXIS policy, such that the claim may have been first made before the policy period; (4) Count IV — whether, under the terms of the policy, the NPS Litigation arises out of the same facts and circumstances as certain prior litigations; and (5) Count V— whether the AXIS Policy covers claims against a successor in interest, as PNC is claimed to be in the underlying litigation. ECF 1 at 14-19.
. After the inevitable appeal, given that $25 million of coverage may be on the line.
. It is rational for AXIS to bring this action in an effort to wipe the risk of its liability off of its balance sheet. Indeed, it is also rational for AXIS to — if allowed — attempt to hedge its chances of success by bringing ■ its claims piecemeal. However, just because that approach may make good litigation sense for AXIS does not mean that it makes good judicial sense for this Court.
