610 N.E.2d 1061 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1992
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *265 Defendant-appellant, Ohio Insurance Guarantee Association ("OIGA"), challenges the May 16, 1991 order of the Lorain County Court of Common Pleas granting summary judgment in favor of plaintiffs-appellees, Lorain County, *266 Lorain County Children Services ("LCCS"), and the Board of Commissioners of Lorain County (collectively "county"), in this declaratory judgment action.
The county initiated the instant proceedings on October 7, 1989 seeking, in essence, a declaration of coverage upon several insurance policies.1 Prior to the filing of the federal lawsuit, two corporations, Midland Insurance Company ("Midland") and Integrity Insurance Company ("Integrity"), had been rendered "insolvent insurers." R.C.
After a number of amendments to the complaint and various dismissals of other parties, only OIGA remained in the county's state-court declaratory judgment action. Motions for summary judgment were tendered by both sides. The trial court granted summary judgment for the county, precipitating this appeal. Two assignments of error have been raised.
"II. The trial court erred as a matter of law in denying defendant-appellant's motion for summary judgment because reasonable minds can come to but one conclusion and that conclusion is adverse to plaintiff-appellee Lorain County."
As a preliminary issue, the county argues that this appeal is moot. An affidavit of an assistant county prosecutor has been submitted to this court, attesting that Waters-Rimmer's federal lawsuit "was, in principle, settled," and that this agreement, "in principle, did not require the payment of any monies from the Ohio Insurance Guarantee Association." Generally, an appeal may not be based upon an abstract question devoid of a live controversy. *267
See Ohio Contract Carriers Assn., Inc. v. Pub. Util. Comm.
(1942),
We find it significant that we have been supplied with neither a final entry of the federal court terminating theWaters-Rimmer action, nor a formal settlement agreement executed by all interested parties. Indeed, OIGA has not joined the county's request for dismissal. Absent definite assurances that this appeal (which has already been briefed and argued) is, in fact, moot, prudence dictates that we resolve the case on the merits.
Since no factual disputes exist at this stage of the proceedings, our review is strictly a legal one. Ohio Ins. Guar.Assn. v. Simpson (1981),
OIGA was created, in large part, by the General Assembly in 1970 to help avoid "financial loss to claimants or policyholders because of the insolvency of an insurer." R.C.
"* * * Under the statutory scheme set forth in R.C. Chapter 3955, OIGA steps into the shoes of an insolvent insurance company for liability purposes and then acts as a source of last resort for uncompensated but otherwise valid claims. R.C.
OIGA has presented three independent rationales for refusing to supply coverage to the county. The first pertains strictly to the Midland excess liability policy. Our attention is directed to the final clause of R.C.
"* * * Notwithstanding any other provision of the Revised Code, the association shall not be liable to pay any claim filed with the association after the final date set by a court for filing claims in the liquidation proceedings of the insolvent insurer." *268
In an order dated April 3, 1986, a New York court appointed a liquidator and demanded that all claims against Midland be submitted within twelve months. In the Matter of the Applicationof Corcoran, New York Supreme Court, County of New York, Index No. 41294/1986. Obviously, the county was unable to meet the deadline imposed by R.C.
It is commonly accepted that upon the liquidation of an insolvent insurer, a firm date must be set after which no more claims against the company will be received. See R.C.
"The purpose of permitting the court to set a date beyond which no claim shall be presented allows the early liquidation of the insolvent insurance company and, therefore, benefits the claimants and policyholders of the insolvent company. See R.C.
The Ohio Insurance Guarantee Association Act supplies only a limited remedy and was not designed to indemnify all persons aggrieved by an insolvent insurer in every instance. When OIGA assumes the obligations contained in a policy, it is subrogated to the rights of the insured. OIGA may then seek reimbursement against the assets of the insolvent insurer in the liquidation proceedings. R.C.
By limiting the period in which claims may be submitted to OIGA to the period during which the liquidation proceedings are still open, the General Assembly has evidently intended to exclude those insureds whose rights to participate in the liquidation have lapsed. Accord Satellite Bowl, Inc. v. MichiganProp. Cas. Guar. Assn. (1988),
In its brief to this court, the county makes much of the instruction that the Ohio Insurance Guaranty Association Act is to be "liberally construed" to effect its purpose. R.C.
"The trend of decisions in other jurisdictions with similar insurance guaranty funds is to preclude recovery for late claims, even for equitable reasons. * * * As these decisions note, the courts do not have the power to create an exception to an express statutory scheme providing for claims against an insolvent insurer. We agree with these decisions that allowance of delinquent claims would prolong distribution of the insolvent company's assets to the detriment of other claimants and would adversely affect the guaranty associations. * * *" (Citation omitted.) Satellite Bowl,
This court is similarly constrained.
Taking an alternative approach, the trial judge found that the county had not been notified by the New York liquidator of the deadline for filing claims against Midland. OIGA was therefore estopped, the court concluded, from resorting to R.C.
This notion that a state-created association can be "estopped" from abiding by a state law due to the neglect of a foreign official is troubling indeed. Initially we note that the doctrine of equitable estoppel may only be employed to preclude a party from taking a position when that party, by his conduct, has induced another to change his position in good-faith reliance upon that conduct. State ex rel. Cities Serv. v.Orteca (1980),
More fundamentally, R.C.
We are aware that the Supreme Court of California held inMiddleton v. Imperial Ins. Co. (1983),
The issue of estoppel aside, the trial court's focus upon the lack of formal notice is misplaced. Even if Midland's liquidator had warned the county of the deadline for filing claims, there is no evidence in the record that county officials were aware of the potential lawsuit at that time.3 The law is quite clear in New York that neither the county nor OIGA would have been able to participate in Midland's liquidation under these circumstances. Jason v. Superintendent of Ins. (1979),
OIGA's second general basis for denying coverage to the county concerns the Integrity policy covering directors, officers and trustees of the LCCS board. The insurer was bound under the agreement:
"To pay on behalf of the Directors, Officers or Trustees, or any of them, their Executors, Administrators or Assigns, in accordance with the terms and conditions of the policy, all Loss which the said Directors, Officers or Trustees, or any of them, shall become legally obligated to pay by reason of any Wrongful Act committed by them, or any of them, during the policy period.
"To pay on behalf of the Organization, in accordance with the terms and conditions of the policy, all Loss arising from any claim or claims made *271 against the said Directors, Officers or Trustees, individually or collectively by reason of a Wrongful Act committed by them, or any of them, during the policy period, for which the Organization may be required or permitted by law to indemnify such Directors, Officers or Trustees."
The "organization," as defined in the policy, is the LCCS board. The agreement further provides:
"`Directors, Officers or Trustees' shall mean all persons who are, during the policy period, Directors, Officers or Trustees of the Organization except as listed under Item G of the Declarations.
"`Wrongful Act' shall mean any actual or alleged error or misstatement or misleading statement or act or omission or neglect or breach of duty by the Directors, Officers or Trustees in the discharge of their duties, individually or collectively, or any matter claimed against them solely by reason of their being Directors, Officers or Trustees of the Organization."
While the LCCS board was named in Waters-Rimmer's complaint, the directors, officers, and trustees were not. No conceivable cause of action was alleged against these individuals. Nevertheless, the trial court agreed with the county that "the policy covers more than the Directors, Officers and Trustees, but also the [LCCS] Board itself."
By the unambiguous language of the second paragraph of the insuring agreement, the organization was covered only for losses incurred as a result of the organization's indemnification of its directors, officers or trustees. Furthermore, the only "wrongful act" to which the policy applies is one committed by a director, officer, or trustee. No such conduct is alleged in the federal court complaint. The LCCS board simply is not covered under this agreement for claims directly against itself. The LCCS board procured and paid for only a limited policy of insurance which cannot be extended any further than what its plain terms establish. See Aultman Hosp. Assn. v. Community Mut.Ins. Co. (1989),
OIGA's third and final rationale for rejecting the county's claim applies to both the Midland and Integrity policies. OIGA argues that the county could be liable to Waters-Rimmer only for intentional conduct which cannot, as a matter of public policy, be covered by an insurance policy.
This analysis is not entirely correct. As the Supreme Court explained in Brodie v. Summit Cty. Children Serv. Bd. (1990),
Understandably, neither party has submitted any evidence upon Waters-Rimmer's underlying claim against the county. As a result, it is impossible to grant summary judgment upon this basis, since a genuine and material question of fact remains as to whether the county is liable for a failure to perform a ministerial act. See Temple, supra. Absent a stipulation that the case is to be decided by the court upon the materials submitted, the mere filing of cross-motions for summary judgment — even by all parties on all claims — does not guarantee that every issue can be resolved as a matter of law. SeeNationwide Mut. Ins. Co. v. Hudak (Oct. 15, 1980), Summit App. No. 9737, unreported.
We conclude, nevertheless, that the trial court erred by ordering OIGA to provide coverage upon the Midland policy, since the county's claim was not timely filed. R.C.
Judgment accordingly.
CACIOPPO, P.J., and COOK, J., concur.
"* * * even if the County, the Commissioners and [the LCCS board] had been aware of [Midland's] 1986 insolvency or April, 1987 claim filing deadline, it would have been impossible for a claim to have been filed with OIGA prior to April 3, 1987 because the Waters-Rimmer law suit [sic] was not filed until December 1987, more than eight (8) full months after the deadline for filing claims in the Midland liquidation proceedings; and because the County, the Commissioners and [the LCCS board] did not know and/or suspect or have reason to know that Waters-Rimmer would file suit until the law suit [sic] was actually filed. * * *" (Emphasis sic.) Appellee's Brief at 7.