This maritime insurance case from Puer-to Rico arises on interlocutory appeal from
■ I.
As this comes to us on appeal from a motion for summary judgment, we review the district court’s ruling de novo, taking the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmovants, the defendants.
Rosado-Quiñones v. Toledo,
The plaintiffs, a group of insurance companies and underwriters including Lloyd’s of London, Gothaer Versicherungen AG, Great Lakes Reinsurance (UK) PLC, and ING Insurance SA, issued an insurance policy to William Pagán-Sánchez which provided hull, machinery, and liability coverage for his recently purchased forty-three-foot pleasure boat, the Gabriella. The effective dates of the policy were from January 31, 2003 to January 31, 2004. The policy was embodied in a twelve-page insuring agreement which includes a three-page section entitled “General Conditions & Warranties.”
On July 19, 2003, as the Gabriella was traveling to Culebra, an island off of Puer-to Rico, an exhaust hose came loose and the Gabriella began taking on water through the boat’s exhaust system. Attempts to pump out the water were unsuc-eessful, and the Gabriella flooded and sank. The insured later submitted a claim to the plaintiffs for $175,000 for the loss of the boat and $100,000 for the costs incurred during salvage operations.
The insurers began an'investigation into the circumstances surrounding the accident. The investigation found, inter alia, 1) that the loss of the Gabriella was caused by wear and tear, gradual deterioration, and lack of maintenance; and 2) that the vessel’s fire extinguishing equipment had not been inspected or certified within the preceding year, and that the automatic engine room fire extinguisher system had been disconnected prior to the loss. There was no finding, and it has never been asserted by the insurers, that the condition of the fire extinguishing equipment had any relation whatsoever to the sinking of the boat. However, the insurers do assert that the lack of maintenance of the fire extinguishing equipment violated an express warranty of the insurance contract providing that “such [fire extinguishing] equipment is properly installed and is maintained in good working order.”
The plaintiff insurers then sought a declaratory judgment in federal district court in Puerto Rico that the breach by the insured of the fire extinguisher warranty 1 in the insurance contract precluded payment of the insured’s claim. The defendants denied all the allegations and counterclaimed under the insurance contract for the amount of their original insurance claim.
Plaintiff insurers moved for summary judgment. The motion was referred to a magistrate judge who recommended that summary judgment be denied and that triable issues of material fact existed. In
II.
Appellate jurisdiction exists under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(3), which provides this court with jurisdiction over interlocutory appeals in admiralty cases of orders determining the rights and liabilities of the parties.
Our review of the district court’s summary judgment ruling is de novo.
Little-field,
A. Ambiguity of the Fire Extinguisher Warranty Clause
The district court erroneously held the fire extinguisher warranty clause was ambiguous. 2 Subsection 9 of the policy is entitled “General Conditions and Warranties.” Subsection 9(1) of the policy provides:
If the scheduled vessel is fitted with fire extinguishing equipment, then it is warranted that such equipment is properly installed and is maintained in good working order. This includes the weighing of tanks once a year and recharging as necessary.
This clause follows after subsection 9(k), which provides:
It is warranted that covered persons must at all times comply with relevant Statutes, Laws, by-laws and U.S. Coast Guard and other regulations, governing the use of the scheduled vessel.
It is clear that subsection 9(1) is a warranty provision. The clause plainly states that it is a warranty and it is located in the section of the policy where warranties are set forth.
The contract interpretation question of whether there is an ambiguity in the warranty clause is one for the court.
See Littlefield,
The first sentence of subsection 9(1) is a warranty from the insured that if the vessel is fitted with fire extinguishing equip
The date that the parties entered into the insurance contract does not matter. The insured warrants upon entering into the policy that the tanks have been weighed once a year and, if necessary, recharged, as part of the insured’s warranty of proper maintenance of fire extinguishing equipment. That this is a clear obligation is reinforced by the introductory clause in the contract that states: “We will provide the insurance coverage described in this insuring agreement, in return for payment to us of the premium due and compliance by covered persons with the provisions, conditions and warranties of this insuring agreement.” (Emphasis added.) Since the warranty is clear and unambiguous, it must be enforced as written under usual insurance law. See 2 Couch on Insurance, supra, § 21:11 (“[I]t is a well settled rule ... that clear and unambiguous clauses must be accepted as the expression of the intent of the parties, and enforced by the courts as written.”).
It is also undisputed that the insured failed to produce any evidence of compliance with the promissory warranty relating to the fire extinguishers. Thus, the insured was in breach of the promissory warranty.
B. Consequences of the Breach of Warranty
In light of the insured’s breach, the question, then, is the effect of this breach.
The district court reasoned that Puerto Rico law would apply. It acknowledged that Chapter 11 of Puerto Rico’s Insurance Code, which covers contract interpretation and construction, expressly excludes maritime insurance contracts from its coverage. 3 See P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 26, § 1101(1) (“The applicable provisions of this chapter shall apply to insurances other than ocean marine ... insurances.... ”). The court reasoned it should turn by default to the Puerto Rico Civil Code. In the absence of any statute or' case law on point, the court predicted that under the Puerto Rico Civil Code the breach of a warranty clause in a contract of maritime insurance would not excuse payment by an insurer unless the breach was related to the cause of the loss.
The insurers agree with the district court that “Puerto Rico law is silent on the issue” and that “the majority rule with
We turn to the relevant principles of choice of law analysis as most recently set forth by the Supreme Court in
Norfolk Southern Railway Co. v. Kirby,
There is no dispute this is a maritime insurance contract. We also agree that the prevailing view, under federal law and the law of most states, is that a breach of a promissory warranty in a maritime insurance contract excuses the insurer from coverage.
See Commercial Union,
Given this well-established general rule, in our view, the question becomes whether Puerto Rico has either clearly stated a contrary rule or demonstrated a strong interest in having a different rule. Only if so, would we address the question of whether this is inherently a local dispute to Puerto Rico. 6 Puerto Rico has done neither.
Here, the Puerto Rico legislature has expressed its intent to exclude maritime insurance contracts from its statutory provisions governing the interpretation and construction of insurance contracts. P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 26, § 1101(1). In addition, in twelve other provisions of its Insurance Code, the Puerto Rico legislature has excluded maritime insurance contracts from its insurance regulation. See P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 26, §§ 329(4)(e), 406, 412(4), 414(6), 905(1), 1001(l)(c), 1007a, 1007b, 1101(1), 1119(l)(c), 1202(l)(e), 3701(1), 3803(6). There is no Puerto Rico statute which expressly sets forth an interpretive rule for maritime contracts, much less an interpretive rule which expressly states that in such maritime contracts, a breach of an express promised warranty by the insured does not excuse the insurer from its payment obligations. 7 Moreover, there is no case law from the Puerto Rico Supreme Court supporting such a rule.
Nor is it clear as a matter of policy that Puerto Rico law would craft such a rule. It is true that Puerto Rico has some interest in protecting insureds who are residents and that it has adopted an insurance code to do so. But the Puerto Rico legislature has chosen rather emphatically to exclude maritime insurance contracts from the special protections it offers its insureds under its Insurance Code. That choice may well reflect Puerto Rico’s desire not to impose special burdens on maritime insurers, who are crucial to the island’s commerce, and, in turn, to encourage them to do business in Puerto Rico,
See Commercial Union,
Because Puerto Rico has not stated a contrary rule, we see no reason to apply anything other than the majority rule
We add a final note. This analysis has proceeded by reference to Puerto Rico law, despite an express choice of law clause in the insurance contract which states that if federal law does not apply, then New York law would apply. For reasons we do not understand, counsel for the insurers argued that New York law and Puerto Rico law were essentially equivalent and so consented to the court analyzing the case under Puerto Rico law. The district court suggested that the two laws are very different and that New York law follows the majority rule and would strictly enforce the warranty but Puerto Rico law would not. In light of the concession by counsel for the insurers, the court analyzed the matter under Puerto Rico law.
We are not certain that counsel, as a matter of litigation strategy, may vary the express terms of a choice of law clause. The issue has not been briefed to us. The concession greatly complicated this litigation. We agree with the district court that under New York law, the insured’s breach excuses the insurer from performance.
See Commercial Union,
We reverse and remand to the district court for entry of summary judgment for the insurers. No costs are awarded.
Notes
. The plaintiff insurers also alleged that the insured was in breach of other warranties— all unrelated to the loss itself — but none of those allegations are raised on appeal.
. The district court initially found it unnecessary to decide whether the fire extinguisher warranty clause was ambiguous because it held that even if the insured were in breach of the clause, that breach would have no effect on the insured's ability to recover under the policy. But in its denial of the insurers’ motion for reconsideration, the court changed its position and ruled that the clause was a warranty clause, not a representation, and that it was ambiguous.
. Chapter 11 provides that for cases within its coverage (that is, non-maritime insurance policies) misrepresentations, omissions, concealment of acts, and incorrect statements only prevent coverage when, inter alia, they materially alter the risk assumed by the insurer. P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 26, § 1110. We do not reach the question of whether the breach would prevent coverage under that provision.
. Unfortunately, neither of the parties called this case to the attention of either this court or the district court.
. There is general agreement that maritime insurance contracts fall within federal maritime jurisdiction, and as such, Congress and the courts have the power to fashion federal rules.
Wilburn Boat,
[bjeneath this surface agreement on general principles lies an abyss of confusion. One might think that construing a maritime insurance policy, in relation to damage occurring on the high seas, would be a paradigm case for a uniform body of federal law.... But the tensions in Supreme Court precedents are legendary ... with regard to the reach of state law in federal maritime law generally....
Cent. Int’l Co. v. Kemper Nat’l Ins. Cos.,
. As
Wilburn Boat
recognized, not “every term in every maritime contract can only be controlled by some federally defined admiralty rule,” and the federal government has "left much regulatory power” in the states “in relation to insurance companies and the contracts they make.”
. This is in distinct contrast with states which have statutes adopting the minority rule. See, e.g., Fla. Stat. § 627.409(2) ("A breach ... by the insured of any warranty ... of any wet marine ... insurance policy ... does not void the policy ... unless such breach ... increased the hazard by any means within the control of the insured.”).
