"Does the decision of the New York Court of Appeals in [ Excess ] impose either a rule of construction, or a strong presumption, that a per occurrence liability cap in a reinsurance contract limits the total reinsurance available under the contract to the amount of the cap regardless of whether the underlying policy is understood to cover expenses such as, for instance, defense costs?"
( Global Reinsurance Corporation of America v. Century Indemnity Company,
I.
Reinsurance is the insurance of one insurer by another (see Matter of Union Indem. Ins. Co. of N.Y.,
There are two types of reinsurance: treaty and facultative. Under a reinsurance treaty, the cedent transfers to the reinsurer its risk under an entire line of business spanning multiple insurance policies (see Travelers,
The coverage provided under a facultative reinsurance contract is "memorialized in a certificate" (Barry R. Ostrager & May Kay Vyskocil, Modern Reinsurance Law and Practice § 1:03 [3d ed.2014]; accord William Hoffman, Facultative Reinsurance Contract Formation, Documentation and Integration,
Typically, the facultative reinsurer is obligated to indemnify the cedent up to a stated upper limit (see Travelers,
"Item 1-Type of Insurance
Blanket General Liability, excluding Automobile Liability as original.
Item 2-Policy Limits and Application
$1,000,000. each occurrence as original.
Item 3-[Cedent] Company Retention
The first $500,000. of liability as shown in Item # 2 above.
Item 4-Reinsurance Accepted
$250,000. part of $500,000. each occurrence as original excess of the [cedent] Company's retention as shown in Item # 3 above.
Item 5-Basis
Excess of Loss"
( Global Reinsurance,
An underlying third-party liability insurance policy will often require the insurer to either pay the insured's costs in defending covered claims, or to provide legal counsel and defend the claim itself (see e.g. Seaboard Sur. Co. v. Gillette Co.,
One recurring issue in reinsurance disputes is whether these defense costs, insofar as they are reinsured by a facultative reinsurance policy, count towards the limit in the reinsurance accepted clause ($250,000 in the example above). Here, Global averred that, as of the filing of its motion for summary judgment, Century billed it $327,149 under Certificate X, consisting of $82,627 in loss and $244,522 in expense. Global argued that, under the reinsurance accepted clause, its obligation to Century for both loss and expense payments under Certificate X is capped at $250,000 (see Global Reinsurance,
This brings us to the question certified by the Second Circuit: whether our 2004 decision in Excess,
"If Excess imposes a clear rule (or a presumption) with respect to these reinsurance policies, the rule would guide our interpretation of this and substantially similar policies. If, on the other hand, the standard rules of contract interpretation apply, we would construe each reinsurance policy solely in light of its language and, to the extent helpful, specific context"
(
II.
Our opinion in Excess addressed whether a reinsurer's obligation to pay loss adjustment expenses
"INTEREST: Goods and/or merchandise incidental to the Assured's business consisting principally of personal computers and/or as original.
"LIMIT: US$ 7,000,000 any one occurrence p/o US$ 13,500,000 any one occurrence excess of US$ 25,000,000 any one occurrence
"CONDITIONS: As original and subject to the same valuation, clauses and conditions as contained in the original policy or policies but only to cover risksof All Risks of Physical Loss or Damage but excluding Inventory Shortage. Including Strikes, Riots, Civil Commotions and Malicious Damage risks if and as original. Premium payable as original. Reinsurers agree to follow the settlements of the Reassured in all respects and to bear their proportion of any expenses incurred, whether legal or otherwise, in the investigation and defence of any claim hereunder. Service of Suit Clause (U.S.A.). Insolvency Clause"
(
We held that the reinsurers were entitled to summary judgment on the issue. "Once the reinsurers have paid the maximum amount stated in the policy, they have no further obligation to pay Factory Mutual any costs related to loss adjustment expenses" (
Although Excess did not say that third-party defense costs under any facultative reinsurance contract are unambiguously or presumptively capped by the liability limits in the certificate, some courts have nonetheless read our decision that way (see Utica Mut. Ins. Co. v. Munich Reinsurance America, Inc.,
"It is basic that principles of law 'are not established by what was said, but by what was decided, and what was said is not evidence of what was decided, unless it relates directly to the question presented for decision' " ( Knight-Ridder Broadcasting, Inc. v. Greenberg,
The Excess Court was simply not faced with the question presently before the Second Circuit: whether there is a blanket "presumption" or "rule of construction" that a limitation-on-liability clause applies to all payments by a reinsurer whatsoever. The only issue before the Court was whether that certificate's phrase "LIMIT: US$ 7,000,000," in context, established that the reinsurers' aggregate liability for both settlement costs and loss adjustment expenses was capped at $7 million. Each party seized on unique turns of phrase in the certificate to argue that they were entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Critically, we did not read the limit clause in isolation, but in light of the entire agreement as an integrated whole, "giv[ing] meaning to every sentence, clause and word" thereof ( Travelers,
In addition, the loss adjustment expenses were incurred in litigation between the insurer and its policyholder; they were not costs (such as third-party defense costs) that the insurer was obligated to pay under the terms of the underlying policy itself. Whether a similar (or even identical) limitation clause would apply to third-party defense costs, in a certificate reinsuring a liability insurance policy, was never at issue. Consequently, the Excess Court did not pass on whether a follow-form clause such as the one in that case, "subject[ing]" the reinsurance "to the same valuation, clauses and conditions as contained in the original policy," would require the reinsurers to cover third-party defense costs in excess of such a limit.
III.
We hold definitively that Excess did not supersede the "standard rules of contract interpretation" ( Global Reinsurance,
Reinsurance contracts are governed by the same principles that govern contracts generally (see Unigard Sec. Ins. Co., Inc. v. North River Ins. Co.,
Like any contract, a facultative reinsurance contract "that is complete, clear and unambiguous on its face must be enforced according to the plain meaning of its terms" ( Marin v. Constitution Realty, LLC,
"[I]t is important to emphasize that we are called upon to decide a narrow issue" ( Ehrenfield v. Bin Mahfouz,
Accordingly, the certified question should be answered in the negative.
Following certification of a question by the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit and acceptance of the question by this Court pursuant to section 500.27 of this Court's Rules of Practice, and after hearing argument by counsel for the parties and consideration of the briefs and the record submitted, certified question answered in the negative.
Chief Judge DiFiore and Judges Rivera, Stein, Fahey, Garcia and Wilson concur.
Notes
The parties are Global Reinsurance Corporation of America f/k/a Constitution Reinsurance Corporation (Global), a reinsurance company, and Century Indemnity Company f/k/a Insurance Company of North America (Century), an insurance company that reinsured some of its policies with Global. The underlying facts and procedural posture of this dispute are set forth in the opinion and order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, filed August 15, 2014 (
The question did not explicitly limit itself to "facultative" reinsurance. However, because the question is premised on what "the underlying policy ... cover[s]" (Global Reinsurance,
Loss adjustment expenses are "the expense incurred by the insurer to investigate and settle a claim" (CSX Corporation v. North River Insurance Company,
