HARTFORD CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY, Twin City Fire
Insurance Company, Nutmeg Insurance Company, and
Pacific Insurance Company Limited,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
BORG-WARNER CORPORATION, BW-Transmissions & Engine
Components Corporation, Borg-Warner Equities Corporation,
Borg-Warner Insurance Holding Corporations, Borg-Warner
Insurance Services, Incorporated, and Borg-Warner Acceptance
Corporation, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 89-2920.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued June 6, 1990.
Decided Sept. 18, 1990.
James I. Rubin, Sue Payne, Robert N. Hermes, Stephanie Leider, Butler, Rubin, Newcomer, Saltarelli & Boyd, Chicago, Ill., for plaintiffs-appellants.
Lee A. Watson, Donald E. Egan, Clay A. Tillack, Linda L. Cashmore, Katten, Muchin & Zavis, Chicago, for defendants-appellees.
Before WOOD, Jr., FLAUM, and KANNE, Circuit Judges.
HARLINGTON WOOD, Jr., Circuit Judge.
The McCarran-Ferguson Act gives the states the power to regulate the insurance industry. See 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1012. As part of that power, Illinois, like most other states, has enacted a scheme for the liquidation or rehabilitation of insolvent insurers. See ILL.REV.STAT. ch. 73, pp 799-833.11. As creditors of an Illinois insurance company going through the rehabilitation process, Hartford Casualty Insurance Company and three of its subsidiaries have sued the insurance company's parent, Borg-Warner Corporation, and five of the parent's other subsidiaries. Because any federal court judgment in this case would upset the rehabilitation proceedings, we affirm the district court's decision to abstain.
I.
In 1974, Borg-Warner formed Centaur Insurance Company to serve as its captive insurer. In addition, Borg-Warner allowed Centaur to write insurance and reinsurance policies for nonaffiliated entities. From 1981 through 1984, Hartford ceded, or reinsured, some of its policies to Centaur. Of course, for taking on part of Hartford's exposed risk, Hartford had to pay substantial premiums to Centaur. As early as 1984, Centaur had begun to default on obligations it owed to Hartford.
In September 1987, the Illinois director of insurance started rehabilitation proceedings against Centaur in the circuit court for Cook County. Exempt from the Bankruptcy Code's coverage, see 11 U.S.C. Sec. 109, insolvent insurers generally must turn to state courts for relief. See generally Lac D'Amiante du Quebec v. American Home Assurance Co.,
Pursuant to an agreed order of rehabilitation, the director of insurance took control of Centaur's business and assets. Simultaneously, the rehabilitation court issued an order enjoining all actions against Centaur, its directors, officers, or stockholders. On January 11, 1988, the Illinois circuit court modified that order to permit actions against Centaur's directors, officers, and stockholders; actions against Centaur itself are still enjoined.
Shortly after the stay order was lifted, Hartford filed this complaint against Borg-Warner and its subsidiaries for their role in Centaur's demise. Hartford advances four theories for recovery: abuses of the corporate structure that justify piercing of the corporate veil, fraud, reckless misrepresentation, and promissory estoppel. According to its own estimates, Centaur's insolvency will cost Hartford up to $15,000,000. In the rehabilitation proceedings, Hartford has filed a claim for reinsurance debts that it asserts Centaur owes. Any liability that Borg-Warner would have to Hartford will be the difference between the amount that Centaur owes to Hartford and the amount of the dividend from Centaur's rehabilitation. Thus, the amount that Hartford would be able to collect from Borg-Warner is dependent on the state court adjudicating claims against insolvent Centaur, but it is unlikely that Hartford will receive all of the money owed by Centaur. Borg-Warner's liability is also dependent on interpretation of Centaur's reinsurance treaties with Hartford.
As part of the rehabilitation process, Illinois law authorizes the director of insurance to file a reorganization plan. ILL.REV.STAT. ch. 73, p 804(3). The director filed a reorganization plan for Centaur in May 1988. The plan provided for reinsurance claims, such as those owing to Hartford, to be paid out of any funds left after paying administrative costs and the primary or direct claims of Centaur's policyholders. Later, the director filed a complaint with the Illinois state court seeking to convert the proceedings to a liquidation. Borg-Warner opposed this change, and the state court granted the director's motion to withdraw the liquidation complaint voluntarily. Subsequently, the director filed a progress report on the status of the rehabilitation proceedings, stating that approximately half of the work necessary to evaluate claims against Centaur has been completed.1 Nevertheless, Hartford contends that it will be 1997 before the precise deficiency in Centaur's estate is known.
The district court dismissed Hartford's complaint without prejudice. Because Borg-Warner's liability to Hartford would not be fixed until the end of the state court proceedings, the district court found Hartford's claims to lack ripeness. In addition, because of an identity of issues with the state court--Centaur's liability to Hartford--the district court also held that abstention would be appropriate. Finally, the district court sua sponte dismissed Hartford's alter ego claim for a lack of standing. Hartford now appeals, both from the district court's initial order and from its denial of reconsideration.II.
After oral argument, although no question about jurisdiction had been raised, we, as a matter of course, examined Hartford's notice of appeal. Doubts about its adequacy arose in view of developing case law. We therefore requested additional briefing.2 Reproduced in its entirety, the notice of appeal reads:
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN
DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION
HARTFORD CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY, TWIN CITY FIRE
INSURANCE COMPANY, NUTMEG INSURANCE COMPANY,
PACIFIC INSURANCE COMPANY, LTD., Plaintiffs,
v.
BORG-WARNER CORPORATION, BW-TRANSMISSIONS & ENGINE
COMPONENTS CORPORATION, BORG-WARNER EQUITIES CORPORATION,
BORG-WARNER INSURANCE HOLDING CORP., BORG-WARNER INSURANCE
SERVICES, INC., and BORG-WARNER ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION, Defendants.
No. 88 C 0783
Judge Marshall
NOTICE OF APPEAL
Notice is hereby given that the plaintiffs in this action, hereby appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit from the following orders and judgement:
(1) The Memorandum Order and Judgement entered thereon dated April 17, 1989, dismissing plaintiffs' Complaint, without prejudice.
(2) The Memorandum Order dated August 9, 1989 denying plaintiffs' [sic ] Motion for Reconsideration of the April 17, 1989 Memorandum Order and Judgement entered thereon.
/s
One of the Attorneys for Plaintiffs
At issue is whether the list of the appellants in the notice of appeal's caption coupled with the body's reference to "the plaintiffs" together satisfy FED.R.APP.P. 3(c)'s specificity requirement.
None of the parties dispute who intended to appeal from the district court judgment, but lack of confusion over the putative appellants is an irrelevant inquiry after Torres v. Oakland Scavenger Co.,
After Torres, we have required "punctilious, literal and exact compliance" with FED.R.APP.P. 3(c)'s requirements for a notice of appeal. Allen Archery, Inc. v. Precision Shooting Equip., Inc.,
For example, in Allen Archery, the notice of appeal's caption listed "Precision Shooting Equipment, Inc. and Paul E. Shepley, Jr." as parties, but the body specified that only the corporation appealed from the judgment of the district court.
Thus, none of our precedents require us to reject Hartford's notice of appeal, but this lack of precedent does not instruct us how to rule on the notice of appeal in this case. Nevertheless, we think that the better and more rational result would be to accept Hartford's notice of appeal as effective. Read as a whole, the face of Hartford's notice of appeal unambiguously specifies each of the parties wanting to appeal, satisfying the requirements of rule 3(c). The caption lists Hartford Casualty Insurance Company and three of its subsidiaries as the "plaintiffs." We do not have a situation where other parties, not listed in the caption, are presenting themselves to this court as appellants. Most importantly, the body of the notice of appeal states that "the plaintiffs" appeal from the district court's order, which can only be understood as a reference back to the plaintiffs listed three inches above in the caption. We do not have to go outside the four corners of this notice of appeal, set forth on one sheet of paper, to ascertain who is appealing from the district court's judgment. We join the Tenth Circuit in ruling that a notice of appeal is sufficient where the caption names all of the parties seeking to appeal and where the text in the body sufficiently identifies the parties through the use of a generic term such as "plaintiffs" or "defendants." See Tri-Crown, Inc. v. American Fed. Savings & Loan Ass'n,
The result that we reach today comports with the general admonishment that we should construe our procedural rules to do substantial justice. See FED.R.CIV.P. 1. While all rules of procedures are harsh technicalities when applied strictly, see Torres,
Our holding is not to suggest that the notice of appeal accepted in this case is approved procedure. To file a notice of appeal not in "punctilious, literal and exact compliance" with rule 3(c) will cause needless and risky line drawing between jurisdiction and no jurisdiction. To be safe, appellants to this court are advised to list every appellant within the body of the notice of appeal. We turn to the merits of this appeal.3
III.
The district court dismissed the plaintiffs' complaint without prejudice on three alternative grounds: ripeness, abstention, and standing. As the appellant, Hartford naturally takes issue with each one of these grounds. In each party's brief, ripeness, abstention, and standing are treated as independent concepts, but we have not been able to separate these concepts as easily. Wright and Miller suggest that ripeness, abstention, and standing (as well as mootness and the political question doctrine) are manifestations of the same concept. See C. WRIGHT, A. MILLER & E. COOPER, FEDERAL PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE Secs. 3531.12, 3532.1, 3533.1 (1984). This position has support in the cases. Mootness and ripeness can be easily related: to the extent that ripeness represents a claim that is premature, mootness represents a claim that is too stale. When the ripeness inquiry involves concerns over state court or administrative proceedings, it can likewise begin to blend with abstention doctrines. See, e.g., Standard Alaska Prod. Co. v. Schaible,
We will leave to the commentators to develop the myriad of other interactions between these doctrines, but we will try to identify the competing concerns in this case. To a certain extent, Hartford's complaint raises ripeness problems. With the amount and existence of Hartford's damages dependent on the outcome of the state rehabilitation proceedings, it is difficult for a federal court to determine whether Hartford has sustained any injury. See Bankers Trust Co. v. Rhoades,
Looking to abstention doctrine, we find another troubled inquiry: what kind of abstention is appropriate? In Colorado River Water Conservation District v. United States,
Abstention under Colorado River rests "on considerations of '[w]ise judicial administration, giving regard to conservation of judicial resources and comprehensive disposition of litigation.' " Colorado River,
Although traditional Colorado River abstention does not apply to this case, its principles provide us with some guidance. Courts and legal scholars have tried to label the various kinds of abstention and then make broad rules about what cases fit under each label. Abstention is a much more amorphous concept. See New Orleans Pub. Serv. Inc. v. Council of City of New Orleans, --- U.S. ----,
In two circumstances, Burford abstention is appropriate. First, we should abstain from deciding difficult questions of state law bearing on policy problems of substantial public import whose importance transcends the result in the present case. NOPSI,
The Tenth Circuit has recently elucidated four factors that help in determining whether a federal court should exercise its jurisdiction within the context of the insurance industry. See Grimes v. Crown Life Ins. Co.,
Considering these factors and the most recent Supreme Court precedent, we believe that Burford abstention would be appropriate in this case. Pursuant to the McCarran-Ferguson Act, see 15 U.S.C. Secs. 1011-1015, the states have assumed primary responsibility for regulating the insurance industry. Under this regulatory power, most states have adopted statutes to govern the rehabilitation and liquidation of insolvent insurers. It is the states that have the paramount interest in an uniform insurance rehabilitation process. See Blackhawk Heating & Plumbing Co. v. Geeslin,
But Hartford belittles the policies involved in this litigation, characterizing this lawsuit as involving nothing more than a dispute between an insurer's parent and one of the insurer's customers. The importance of the state policies at issue, however, go far beyond the present litigation. It is these larger policies that we must consider, and not the comparatively small stakes of this litigation. See Lac D'Amiante,
That any federal court judgment would overlap with a state court's determination of the amount and existence of Centaur's liability to Hartford is clear. Borg-Warner would only be liable to Hartford for the deficiency in Centaur's debt. The deficiency that Centaur will owe to Hartford will depend on the amount that Hartford is able to collect on Centaur's debt from the state rehabilitation court. The amount, if any, of Centaur's debt to Hartford depends on interpretation of lengthy reinsurance treaties between these two parties. Therefore, to hear Hartford's case, a federal court would not only have to estimate the dividend that reinsurance creditors of Centaur will receive from the rehabilitation process but also would have to interpret the reinsurance treaties. The state rehabilitation court will also have to determine the dividend that reinsurance creditors will receive and interpret the reinsurance treaties to fix the exact amount of Hartford's claim.
Somewhat troubling is the state court's lifting of its moratorium against lawsuits suing Centaur's stockholders, officers, directors, employees, and other agents. The lifting of the moratorium was done at the behest of the Illinois director of insurance, providing Hartford with ammunition for its argument that even the state of Illinois would not consider its suit against Borg-Warner disruptive of Centaur's rehabilitation. The lifting of a general moratorium on lawsuits against Centaur's stockholders does not provide the unambiguous evidence that Hartford claims it does. We agree with the implied decision of the Illinois rehabilitation court that some suits against Centaur's stockholders could be appropriate at this time. That does not mean, however, that all of these suits should be blissfully entertained in federal court. In the circumstances of this case, the disruption of a federal court judgment justifies abstention.
Hartford devotes much of its brief to elaborating the harm that will befall it by our abstention from its case. Specifically, Hartford asserts that it will take ten years for the rehabilitation proceedings to be complete, and by this time, it will be impossible to bring any claims against Borg-Warner because the lapse of time will have destroyed the evidence. But abstention is not forever. By abstaining, we are only saying that at this time it is inappropriate for a federal court to hear this case. When the state rehabilitation court fixes the amount of the dividend to Centaur's reinsurance creditors and ascertains the amount of Centaur's liability to Hartford, the possibility of a federal court judgment upsetting the state proceedings will be minimized. When these conditions are met, Hartford can then come back to federal court with its lawsuit.
Any loss of evidence due to the passage of time is Hartford's own doing. With some types of abstention, we have held that a stay rather than a dismissal is an appropriate remedy. See LaDuke v. Burlington N. R.R.,
IV.
For a federal court to award a judgment to Hartford, it would have to invade the province of the state rehabilitation court in deciding damages. Therefore, the judgment of the district court abstaining from this case and dismissing Hartford's complaint without prejudice is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
Although some of these events occurred after the district court rendered its decision, we should consider these events, just as we would with a ripeness claim. See Buckley v. Valeo,
We remind both parties that the unpublished orders of this court as a general rule are not to be cited as precedent. 7TH CIR.R. 53(b)(2)(iv)
In this case, the question of the notice of appeal's adequacy turned upon subtle variations between its form and the form of notices of appeal rejected in other cases. Substantial judicial resources have been expended pondering over the minutiae involved in this inquiry. We join the Sixth Circuit in suggesting that a revision of rule 3(c) might clear up some of the confusion created in the wake of Torres. See Minority Employees,
Before the district court, Borg-Warner even moved alternatively, for a stay or dismissal without prejudice of Hartford's complaint. Thus, Hartford can hardly claim it never had the opportunity before this court to suggest the appropriateness of a stay
