In 1999 Lear Corporation, which specializes in automotive interiors, purchased UT Automotive, Inc. (UTA), the automotive operations of United Technologies Corporation, through an intermediary called Nevada Bond. Lear spun off UTA’s electrical motors division to Johnson Electric Holdings Ltd. while retaining the balance of the business. Automobile and motors businesses come with risks of environmental liability, given their reliance on long-lasting fluids that can leak and reach the ground. The transactions therefore included reciprocal agreements to indemnify. Nevada Bond promised to cover any environmental costs associated with “a discontinued operation ... or assets no longer used ... by UTA” as of the closing, plus any other environmental liabilities of which it then had notice. Lear promised to indemnify Nevada Bond for all subsequently arising environmental liabilities. Lear and Johnson Electric agreed to parallel arrangements. Lear believes that, with respect to the electrical-motors assets, all past, present, and future liabilities have been apportioned between Johnson Electric and Nevada Bond, so that even if Lear should be held liable (because it is in the chain of title), one or the other must indemnify it. But this generality does not identify which of the two must pay. Each may insist that the other is responsible, leaving Lear at risk in the meantime — and holding the bag, if either should become insolvent.
Two years after Johnson Electric acquired United Technologies’ electric-motor business, a suit was filed in Columbus, Mississippi. The plaintiffs contend that hazardous substances have leaked from UTA’s automobile-parts manufacturing facility, which Johnson Electric now owns. The complaint named Lear, Nevada Bond, and Johnson Electric among the defendants. Lear and Nevada Bond took the position that, because the Columbus plant is still operating, and there was no actual
With Nevada Bond and Johnson Electric each insisting that the other bears any liability, Lear filed this action against both under the diversity jurisdiction, asking the court for a declaratory judgment that one or the other must assume the defense of the Mississippi litigation and pick up the tab at the end. The district court dismissed the action to the extent that Lear sought relief against Johnson Electric, see
Neither the parties nor the district judge devoted much attention to what must be the first issue in every federal suit: subject-matter jurisdiction. Lear is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Michigan. Nevada Bond is a Nevada corporation with its principal place of business in Connecticut (United Technologies’ home state). So far, so good. But Johnson Electric is a foreign entity “limited by shares” under Bermuda law with its principal place of business (which is to say, its corporate headquarters) in China. Until we raised the issue at oral argument, everyone had assumed that a Bermuda “limited” organization is just like a U.S. corporation, so that jurisdiction is supplied by 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(3), which covers suits between “citizens of different States and in which citizens or subjects of a foreign state are additional parties”. That depends on thinking of Johnson Electric as the “citizen.” Perhaps, however, a Bermuda “limited” organization is similar to a U.S. limited liability company, which like a partnership is disregarded for purposes of determining citizenship. Instead courts look to the citizenship of all partners or investors. See
Carden v. Arkoma Associates,
Counsel did not get the point. The parties’ joint memorandum discusses such questions as whether a Bermuda corporation is a “subjeet[ ] of a foreign state” — to which the answer is yes, given Bermuda’s status as an overseas territory of the United Kingdom, see
JPMorgan Chase Bank v. Traffic Stream (BVI) Infrastructure Limited,
Lear, Nevada Bond, and Johnson Electric agreed that their transactions would be governed by Delaware law. Delaware courts postpone adjudication about indemnity “until there is a judgment against the party seeking it.”
Dana Corp. v. LTV Corp.,
A declaration that A must indemnify B if X comes to pass has an advisory quality; and if the decision would not strictly be an advisory opinion (anathema under Article III) it could be a mistake, because it would consume judicial time in order to produce a decision that may turn out to be irrelevant. Declaratory decisions about indemnity differ in this respect from the more common decision that an insurer has a duty to defend the client in ongoing litigation. Defense may be required even if there never turns out to be any liability to indemnify; and a court that has devoted considerable effort to determining the scope of a defense obligation to resolve the parties’ immediate dispute may find it prudent to specify the scope of an indemnity duty at the same time if that subject also is in debate. Here, by contrast, the judge found that Johnson Electric did not have any duty to defend Lear in the Mississippi litigation, which made it less attractive to try to wade into the parties’ debate about indemnity — and impossible for an appellate court to say that the district judge abused her discretion by steering clear for now.
Lear (and thus Nevada Bond) has retained any liability attributable to “a dis
Determining the meaning of the words “operation” and “assets” may require the court to learn a good deal about the economic context of this transaction (and the businesses in which United Technologies and Johnson Electric engage), and perhaps to probe the bargaining history of the transactions to learn whether the parties exchanged views about this subject. The endeavor would be unnecessary if the plaintiffs in Mississippi fail to show that the grounds are contaminated, or if it turns out that any leaks came from ongoing operations. Only if the Mississippi litigation ends in liability stemming from pollution caused by production facilities that were closed before the sale in 1999 will the current dispute require resolution. Waiting to see the outcome in Mississippi may be aggravating for Lear, but it has value from the judiciary’s perspective— and that is one permissible consideration in the declaratory-judgment calculus. No one has a legal entitlement to declaratory or other equitable relief in circumstances such as these.
All well and good, Lear allows, but it insists that it suffers an
unconditional
loss that could be alleviated now by a declaratory judgment: it must pay counsel to carry on the litigation in Mississippi. That cost should be shifted to Johnson Electric immediately, Lear submits. Yet this is just an effort to create a defense obligation through the back door. As the district court held, the contract gives Johnson Electric an option but not a duty to defend Lear in any environmental litigation. This also means that Johnson Electric need not underwrite the ongoing costs of Lear’s defense. Perhaps, once the Mississippi litigation is over, any legal expenses will be deemed part of the sum covered by the indemnity; the agreement defines “Covered Liabilities” to include the costs and expenses of litigation. But no duty to defend means no duty to pay for the outlays of defense on a current basis. Payment abides the decision about indemnity. If Lear wants to escape these ongoing expenses, all it has to do is roll over and play dead in the Mississippi litigation. Either Nevada Bond or Johnson Electric must pay in the end, so Lear has no real risk unless it is that one of these parties might become unable to pay when the time comes; and the prospect of Lear’s default might induce one or both of these to take up the defense after all. It is to guard against such an eventuality, which might
AFFIRMED
