New Hampshire Insurance Company, Appellant-Respondent, v Clearwater Insurance Company, Respondent-Appellant.
Supreme Court, Appellate Division, First Department, New York
March 24, 2015
129 A.D.3d 99 | 7 N.Y.S.3d 38
Friedman, J.
APPEARANCES OF COUNSEL
Sidley Austin LLP, New York City (William M. Sneed of the bar of the State of Illinois, admitted pro hac vice, and Alan J. Sorkowitz of counsel), for appellant-respondent.
Crowell & Moring LLP, New York City (Harry P. Cohen and Brian J. O’Sullivan of counsel), for respondent-appellant.
OPINION OF THE COURT
Friedman, J.
Plaintiff New Hampshire Insurance Company (New Hampshire) has settled, along with several affiliated liability insurers under common corporate control (collectively, AIG), hundreds of millions of dollars of claims—most but not all of which are asbestos-related personal injury claims—with nonparty Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corporation (Kaiser), a common insured of the settling carriers. AIG’s settlement agreement with Kaiser does not address the allocation of losses to particular claims, policies or carriers beyond providing that AIG may effect such an allocation “for its own purposes, in its own books and records,” which AIG has done. That allocation ascribes 100% of the settlement amount to asbestos product liability claims within the coverage of Kaiser’s New Hampshire excess policy (issued for the period from June 1973 to June 1976) and none of the amount to other settled claims—for bad faith, defense costs in addition to policy limits, and premises liability—that Kaiser had asserted against certain other AIG carriers, but not against New Hampshire.
New Hampshire has brought this action against defendant Clearwater Insurance Company (Clearwater), a reinsurer of
While discovery was in its early stages, and before any witnesses had been deposed, New Hampshire moved for summary judgment in its favor. Concerning the allocation issue, New Hampshire argued that Clearwater, as a reinsurer, was bound, as a matter of law, by New Hampshire’s allocation of settled claims to the reinsured policy under general principles of the law of reinsurance. We agree with Supreme Court that this argument is unavailing. As more fully discussed below, even if the subject reinsurance certificate, in spite of its lack of a clause expressly so providing, generally obligates Clearwater to “follow the settlements” made by New Hampshire with its insured—a question that we need not, and do not, decide on this appeal—the cedent’s allocation decisions are not “immune from scrutiny” (USF&G, 20 NY3d at 420). In particular, even where the “follow the settlements” doctrine applies, the reasonableness of a cedent’s decision not to attribute any portion of a settlement to settled claims that were not covered by the reinsured policy may, on a proper record, present an issue of fact (see id. at 414, 422-425 [finding that the reasonableness of the cedent’s attribution of none of the settlement amount to the insured’s bad faith claims, which were not covered by reinsurance, presented a triable issue]). Accordingly, given the undeveloped factual record of this case, Supreme Court properly denied New Hampshire summary judgment on the allocation issue (2013 NY Slip Op 32812[U] [2013]). However,
Factual and Procedural Background
The Subject Insurance Policy
The underlying insurance policy at issue in this dispute was issued by New Hampshire to Kaiser in 1973 and covered the three-year period from June 6, 1973 to June 6, 1976. The policy, designated as policy number 5173-0230 (hereinafter, the NH-Kaiser policy), afforded Kaiser high-level excess liability coverage, with an annual per-occurrence limit of $50 million and an annual aggregate limit of liability of $50 million for products liability losses. The NH-Kaiser policy attached in excess of specified underlying umbrella policies with an annual per-occurrence limit of $50 million and an aggregate annual limit of $50 million for products liability losses. Thus, the NH-Kaiser policy was not implicated until Kaiser’s covered losses for a given year during the policy period exceeded $50 million.
Although the NH-Kaiser policy apparently was the only one that New Hampshire issued to Kaiser, the record reflects that six other AIG-affiliated carriers issued Kaiser a total of 48 excess liability policies, at various levels of coverage, during the period from 1970 to 1985. The aggregate limits of Kaiser’s 49 AIG policies (including the NH-Kaiser policy) totaled approximately $575 million.
The Subject Reinsurance Contract
New Hampshire ceded a portion of its risk under the NH-Kaiser policy to Clearwater (which was then known as Skandia) pursuant to a contract entitled “Casualty Facultative Reinsurance Certificate No. 0567,” dated July 10, 1973 (hereinafter, the Clearwater-NH certificate).1 The Clearwater-NH certificate originally provided that Clearwater would indemnify New
The Clearwater-NH certificate provides that Clearwater’s “liability . . . shall follow [New Hampshire’s] liability in accordance with the terms and conditions of the policy reinsured hereunder except with respect to those terms and/or conditions as may be inconsistent with the terms of this Certificate.” It also contains a provision under which New Hampshire “warrants that it shall retain for its own account, subject to treaty reinsurance only, if any, the amount specified on the face of this Certificate.” New Hampshire further agreed that it would “notify [Clearwater] promptly of any event or development which [New Hampshire] reasonably believes might result in a claim against [Clearwater]” and would “forward to [Clearwater] copies of such pleadings and reports of investigations as are pertinent to the claim” under the certificate. The Clearwater-NH certificate also gives Clearwater the right to associate with New Hampshire in the defense of any claim made against the reinsured policy.
The Claims against Kaiser and Ensuing Coverage Litigation
Kaiser was first named as a defendant in asbestos-related personal injury actions in the late 1970s. Eventually, the asbestos-related claims against Kaiser numbered in the hundreds of thousands. The asbestos claims arose from Kaiser’s sale of asbestos-containing products or from alleged asbestos exposure at Kaiser’s manufacturing premises. Also relevant to this action are personal injury claims against Kaiser arising from alleged exposure to substances and conditions other than asbestos (including benzene, volatile coal tar pitch, and excessive noise) at Kaiser’s manufacturing premises. The accumulation of these claims forced Kaiser into chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings in 2002.
In 2000, Kaiser commenced a declaratory judgment action in California state court (the asbestos products action) against
In 2001, Kaiser commenced a separate declaratory judgment action in California state court (the premises action) against certain of its insurers concerning coverage for personal injury claims based on exposure to substances or conditions at Kaiser’s manufacturing premises (premises claims), including claims for workplace exposure to asbestos, silica, coal tar pitch volatiles, and benzene, and claims for noise-induced hearing loss. Lexington was the only AIG carrier named as a defendant in the premises action.
The Kaiser Settlement
In 2006, Kaiser’s total unliquidated liability for personal injury claims of all kinds was estimated to be as high as $2.5 billion, while the aggregate limits of its remaining solvent insurance coverage then totaled approximately $1.5 billion. The remaining aggregate limits of Kaiser’s coverage from the AIG carriers were then approximately $568 million.
In April 2006, Kaiser and the AIG carriers, including New Hampshire, resolved their coverage disputes by entering into a settlement agreement (the Kaiser settlement), which was approved by the bankruptcy court on May 9, 2006, and went into effect upon Kaiser’s emergence from bankruptcy on September 16, 2006. The Kaiser settlement essentially requires Kaiser’s seven AIG carriers, collectively, to pay a trust that had been created to liquidate claims against Kaiser up to the full amount of the AIG carriers’ aggregate remaining policy limits as of 2006—approximately $568 million—on a quarterly basis over a
As previously noted, the Kaiser settlement does not allocate the settlement amount to particular claims, policies or carriers. Rather, the Kaiser settlement provides that the “AIG Member Companies shall have the right to allocate the Settlement Amount, or any portions thereof, solely for its [sic] own purposes, in its own books and records, to the various types and classifications of claims under the Subject Policies released by [Kaiser].” AIG chose to allocate 100% of the settlements to asbestos products claims and 0% of the settlement payments to any of the other kinds of claims—including premises claims, bad faith claims and defense costs claims—that had been released. The settlement payments were allocated to policies using “a ground-up, rising bathtub approach” (as described in the record by New Hampshire’s administrator), under which
“payments [are] allocated on the basis of horizontal exhaustion, which means losses are allocated to the lowest layer of coverage first and, like a bathtub, fill from the bottom layer up. Under that approach, a given layer of coverage is not implicated until the layer beneath it is completely exhausted” (North Riv. Ins. Co. v Ace Am. Reins. Co., 361 F3d 134, 138 n 6 [2d Cir 2004]).
The Instant Action
Pursuant to AIG’s “bathtub” methodology, AIG projected, when it began making payments under the Kaiser settlement in 2006, that it would begin allocating payments to the NH-Kaiser policy in 2011. When AIG began billing Clearwater for its 8% share of the settlement payments allocated to the NH-
In February 2013, New Hampshire moved for summary judgment in its favor, thereby staying disclosure pursuant to
In the order appealed from, Supreme Court granted New Hampshire’s motion only to the extent of dismissing Clearwater’s second, third and seventh affirmative defenses, and otherwise denied the motion. New Hampshire has appealed and Clearwater has cross-appealed, each party challenging the portion of Supreme Court’s order by which it is aggrieved. For
Discussion
We turn first to the question, raised by New Hampshire’s appeal, of whether, contrary to Supreme Court’s determination, New Hampshire was entitled to summary judgment holding Clearwater, as reinsurer of the NH-Kaiser policy, bound by New Hampshire’s allocation to the NH-Kaiser policy of amounts paid under the Kaiser settlement. Again, the Kaiser settlement left entirely to the discretion of AIG (of which New Hampshire is a subsidiary) the allocation of the losses paid pursuant to the settlement among Kaiser’s various AIG carriers and policies, “solely for [AIG’s] own purposes, in its own books and records.” In its exercise of that prerogative, AIG has allocated all amounts paid under the Kaiser settlement to asbestos products claims for which Kaiser had sought coverage under the NH-Kaiser policy and none to other settled claims (premises claims, bad faith claims, and defense costs claims) that Kaiser had not raised against New Hampshire before settling. As previously noted, although our reasoning differs in certain respects from that of Supreme Court, we affirm the denial of summary judgment to New Hampshire on this issue.
In addressing the allocation issue, Supreme Court first held that Clearwater is collaterally estopped to deny that the Clearwater-NH certificate imposes on it, as reinsurer, a duty to “follow the settlements” made by New Hampshire, its cedent, with New Hampshire’s insured. At this point, an explanation of the “follow the settlements” doctrine is in order.5 Where it applies, the “follow the settlements” doctrine “ordinarily bars
“a reinsurer is required to indemnify for payments reasonably within the terms of the original policy, even if technically not covered by it. A reinsurer cannot second guess the good faith liability determinations made by its reinsured .... The rationale behind this doctrine is two-fold: first, it meets the goal of maximizing coverage and settlement and second, it streamlines the reimbursement process and reduces litigation” (Travelers, 96 NY2d at 596 [citation and internal quotation marks omitted]).
Stated otherwise, as “an exception to the general rule that contract interpretation is subject to de novo review” (North Riv. Ins. Co. v CIGNA Reins. Co., 52 F3d 1194, 1206 [3d Cir 1995]), the “follow the settlements” doctrine “insulates a reinsured’s liability determinations from challenge by a reinsurer unless they are fraudulent, in bad faith, or the payments are clearly beyond the scope of the original policy or in excess of the reinsurer’s agreed-to exposure” (Allstate Ins. Co. v American Home Assur. Co., 43 AD3d 113, 121 [1st Dept 2007], lv denied 10 NY3d 711 [2008] [internal quotation marks and brackets omitted]; see also North Riv. Ins. Co. v Ace Am. Reins. Co., 361 F3d at 141 [noting that “the typical follow-the-settlements requirements” are that the settlement be “in good faith, reasonable, and within the applicable policies“]; National Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, Pa. v American Re-Ins. Co., 441 F Supp 2d 646, 650-651 [SD NY 2006] [a reinsurer must indemnify the cedent for a settlement if the claim is “at least arguably within the scope of the insurance coverage that was reinsured” (internal quotation marks omitted)]; Staring § 18:9;
The basis for Supreme Court’s collateral estoppel finding against Clearwater on the question of whether it had a duty to “follow the settlements” was a Massachusetts state trial court decision captioned Lexington Ins. Co. v Clearwater Ins. Co. (28 Mass L Rptr 519, 2011 WL 3715546, 2011 Mass Super LEXIS 127 [2011]). Lexington construed a provision of a reinsurance certificate issued by Clearwater (when known as Skandia) to another AIG carrier (Lexington) as a “follow the settlements” clause.6 The Clearwater-NH certificate contains a provision substantially identical to the certificate provision at issue in Lexington, and Supreme Court held that this sufficed to collaterally estop Clearwater from relitigating the meaning of the relevant contractual language.
In view of its finding that Clearwater has a duty under the Clearwater-NH certificate to “follow the settlements,” Supreme Court held that New Hampshire’s decisions concerning the allocation of settlement payments among its policies are entitled to “deference” (2013 NY Slip Op 32812, *6, citing USF&G, 20 NY3d at 419). Nonetheless, recognizing that, even under the “follow the settlements” doctrine, “a cedent’s allocation decisions . . . are not immune from scrutiny” (id. at 420), the court denied New Hampshire summary judgment on the ground that the existing record raises a triable issue concerning the reasonableness of New Hampshire’s allocation. In this regard, the court noted that discovery had still been “in its infancy” when stayed by New Hampshire’s summary judgment motion.
Initially, contrary to Supreme Court’s view, the Massachusetts decision does not give rise to collateral estoppel barring Clearwater from denying that a duty to “follow the settlements” arises from the same language in the Clearwater-NH certificate. “[T]he doctrine of collateral estoppel does not operate to bar relitigation of a pure question of law” (Sterling Natl. Bank v Eastern Shipping Worldwide, Inc., 35 AD3d 222, 223 [1st Dept 2006], citing American Home Assur. Co. v Interna-tional Ins. Co., 90 NY2d 433 [1997]). The interpretation of an unambiguous contract is a question of law for the court (Sterling Natl. Bank, 35 AD3d at 223; Taussig v Clipper Group, L.P., 13 AD3d 166, 167 [1st Dept 2004], lv denied 4 NY3d 707 [2005]), as is the determination of whether contractual language is ambiguous (see Kass v Kass, 91 NY2d 554, 566 [1998]; Banco Espirito Santo, S.A. v Concessionaria Do Rodoanel Oeste S.A., 100 AD3d 100, 107 [1st Dept 2012]). Accordingly, the Massachusetts court’s construction of the relevant language of the reinsurance certificate in that case is not binding on Clearwater in this action concerning a different certificate issued to a different cedent with respect to an underlying policy covering a different insured.
The language of the Clearwater-NH certificate that Supreme Court, following Lexington, construed as a “follow the settlements” clause is as follows (with references to “Skandia” replaced by references to “Clearwater“):
“1. [CLEARWATER’S] LIABILITY: [Clearwater’s] liability under this Casualty Facultative Reinsurance Certificate (‘Certificate’) shall follow the ceding Company’s (‘Company’) liability in accordance with the terms and conditions of the policy reinsured hereunder except with respect to those terms and/or conditions as may be inconsistent with the terms of this Certificate.”
We respectfully disagree with the view of the Lexington court (which Supreme Court incorrectly believed to be binding on Clearwater in this action) that the above-quoted paragraph 1 of the Clearwater-NH certificate constitutes a “follow the settlements” clause. The provision contains no reference to the cedent’s voluntary handling of claims—absent are the words “settlement,” “compromise,” “payment,” “allowance,” and “adjustment,” as well as any permutations of the foregoing and any words to similar effect. This contrasts with “follow the settlements” clauses, which, as one would expect, employ language referring in some way to the cedent’s claims-handling decisions (see e.g. USF&G, 20 NY3d at 418 [“follow the settlements” clause provided: “All claims in which this reinsurance is involved, when allowed by the (cedent), shall be binding upon the Reinsurers, which shall be bound to pay or allow, as the case may be, their proportion of such loss” (emphasis added)]; Excess Ins. Co. Ltd. v Factory Mut. Ins. Co., 3 NY3d 577, 580 [2004] [“follow the settlements” clause provided: “Reinsurers
Rather than a “follow the settlements” clause, paragraph 1 of the Clearwater-NH certificate constitutes a “following form” clause. The purpose of a “following form” clause is “to achieve concurrency between the reinsured contract and the policy of reinsurance, thereby assuring the ceding company, that by purchasing reinsurance, it has covered the same risks by reinsurance that it has undertaken on behalf of the original insured under its own policy” (Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v Home Ins. Co., 882 F Supp 1328, 1345 [SD NY, 1995]). Accordingly, “[a] ‘following form’ clause in a policy of reinsurance incorporates by reference all the terms and conditions of the reinsured policy, except to the extent that the reinsurance contract by its own terms specifically defines the scope of coverage differently” (id., quoted in Staring § 12:5). This is precisely the effect of paragraph 1 of the Clearwater-NH certificate, which, to reiterate, provides that “[Clearwater’s] liability . . . shall follow [New Hampshire’s] liability in accordance with the terms and conditions of the policy reinsured hereunder” (see e.g. Unigard Sec. Ins. Co., Inc. v North Riv. Ins. Co., 4 F3d 1049, 1055 [2d Cir 1993] [identifying as a “Follow the Form Clause” a provision in a reinsurance certificate to the effect that the reinsurer’s liability “shall follow that of (the cedent) and, except as otherwise provided by this Certificate, shall be subject in all respects to all the terms and conditions of (the cedent’s) policy“]). The authors of one treatise on reinsurance law caution that “a ‘follow the form’ clause should not be confused with a ‘follow the fortunes’ clause or a ‘follow the settlements’ clause” (Ostrager § 2:03 [a] at 73).
The absence from the Clearwater-NH certificate of a “follow the settlements” clause raises the question of whether a duty of the reinsurer to “follow the settlements” may be implied in a reinsurance contract that lacks such a provision. This question, which apparently has not yet been addressed by a New York state appellate court, has received different answers from the courts of other jurisdictions that have addressed it, and “[t]here is no judicial consensus on this issue” (7 Business
In USF&G, the Court of Appeals observed that “to say that a cedent’s allocation decisions are entitled to deference [under the ‘follow the settlements’ doctrine] is not to say that they are immune from scrutiny” (20 NY3d at 420). The Court went on to hold that “objective reasonableness should ordinarily determine the validity of an allocation” (id.), meaning that “[t]he reinsured’s allocation must be one that the parties to the settlement of the underlying insurance claims might reasonably have arrived at in arm’s length negotiations if the reinsurance did not exist” (id.). Applying this standard to the facts of USF&G, the Court held that a triable issue existed as to the reasonableness of the cedent’s decision to allocate none of the subject settlement to the insured’s claims against it for bad faith refusal to defend, to which reinsurance was not applicable (id. at 422-425). The Court reached this conclusion based on evidence in the record from which “it could be found that [the cedent] faced a significant risk of an adverse verdict on the bad faith claims” (id. at 422) and from which “it could be
Aside from the fact that USF&G was decided on a much more fully developed record than exists here, the allocation issue in the instant case largely parallels the allocation issue in USF&G. Clearwater, the reinsurer, challenges the decision of New Hampshire, the cedent—a decision that New Hampshire made unilaterally, without the insured’s participation, under the terms of the Kaiser settlement—to allocate 100% of the payments made under the settlement to asbestos products claims covered by the NH-Kaiser policy, and none of those payments to other categories of claims (premises claims, bad faith claims, and defense cost claims) that, although released in the settlement, Kaiser had asserted only against other AIG carriers, not New Hampshire, before the settlement was made. On this undeveloped record, we have no way of telling whether or not it was reasonable to allocate no portion of the settlement to claims that were not asserted against New Hampshire or were not even covered by its policy. It may be that the allocation could be justified on the ground that the claims given no allocation were highly unlikely to prevail, or so small in value relative to the asbestos products claims as to be immaterial, but we simply have no basis to make such a determination on this record.9 As Supreme Court observed, “New Hampshire has failed to come forth with affidavit proof sufficient to establish that the allocation of the settlement did not unduly burden Clearwater with amounts attributable to policies of other AIG carriers.” (2013 NY Slip Op 32812, *7.) Further, even if New
New Hampshire argues that, in denying it summary judgment on the allocation issue, Supreme Court unjustifiably disregarded copious case law approving New Hampshire’s “bathtub” method of claims allocation as “reinsurance-blind and reinsurance-neutral.” As Supreme Court correctly recognized, however, this argument misconceives the nature of Clearwater’s objection to the allocation. The point was aptly expressed by Supreme Court as follows: “Clearwater does not dispute the bathtub method of allocation, but rather the nature of the claims to which the settlement was allocated.” (Id.) We also agree with Clearwater’s restatement of the same point: “[T]he question is not what methodology AIG uses to fill its bathtub, but, rather, what AIG is pouring into its bathtub as an initial matter.”
Since the record does not establish that the allocation of the Kaiser settlement passes muster even under the forgiving standard that applies under the “follow the settlements” doctrine, it follows that New Hampshire is not entitled to summary judgment on the allocation issue in the event the “follow the settlements” doctrine is ultimately held not to apply. New Hampshire does not argue that it has established, on the present record, that the allocation of the Kaiser settlement resulted in New Hampshire paying only for claims that were actually covered
We now turn to Clearwater’s cross appeal, which challenges Supreme Court’s order insofar as it granted New Hampshire summary judgment dismissing Clearwater’s second and third affirmative defenses, based on New Hampshire’s alleged failure to meet the reporting and notice requirements under the Clearwater-NH certificate, and Clearwater’s seventh affirmative defense, alleging that New Hampshire failed to abide by its $2 million retention warranty under the Clearwater-NH certificate. For the reasons discussed below, we hold that Supreme Court erred in granting New Hampshire summary judgment dismissing these defenses.
Clearwater’s affirmative defenses alleging that New Hampshire did not meet the loss notice and reporting requirements under the Clearwater-NH certificate should not have been dismissed, as issues of fact exist as to whether New Hampshire met those requirements.11 The requirements are intertwined and exist to ensure that a reinsured apprises the reinsurer of potential liabilities in order to enable the reinsurer to set reserves and to potentially associate in the defense and control of the underlying claims (see Unigard Sec. Ins. Co., Inc. v North Riv. Ins. Co., 4 F3d 1049, 1065 [2d Cir 1993]). Here, at the very least, issues of fact exist concerning the sufficiency of New Hampshire’s reporting and notice. New Hampshire’s reliance on a notice of loss it provided to Clearwater in 1997 is misplaced. While the 1997 notice informed Clearwater of the claims against Kaiser, it concluded by advising Clearwater that New Hampshire did not believe that its excess layer, and correspondingly, Clearwater’s reinsurance thereof, would be implicated. Discovery should continue to determine what New Hampshire knew of the mounting losses and when it knew, or
In the event New Hampshire’s notice to Clearwater of the Kaiser losses is determined to have been late, a triable issue also exists as to whether Clearwater was prejudiced by such late notice. Clearwater claims that it was prejudiced because New Hampshire’s allegedly late notice resulted in disadvantageous commutation agreements between Clearwater and its own reinsurers, or retrocessionaires (see Insurance Co. of State of Pa. v Argonaut Ins. Co., 2013 WL 4005109, *12 n 13, 2013 US Dist LEXIS 110597, *39 n 13 [SD NY, Aug. 6, 2013, No. 12-Civ-6494 (DLC)]). Since New Hampshire’s summary judgment motion was premature, given that it was made when discovery was still “in its infancy” (as Supreme Court noted in discussing the allocation issue), Clearwater’s submissions in opposition to the motion sufficiently raised the issue of whether it had been prejudiced by the alleged late notice.
The court also erred in granting New Hampshire summary judgment dismissing Clearwater’s seventh affirmative defense, which raised the issue of whether New Hampshire had retained $2 million of risk under the NH-Kaiser policy as required by New Hampshire’s retention warranty in the Clearwater-NH certificate.12 While New Hampshire submitted an affidavit by an administrator asserting in conclusory fashion that New Hampshire had complied with the retention warranty, Clearwater is entitled to test this claim through further discovery. In any event, an issue of fact was raised by evidence Clearwater submitted suggesting that New Hampshire had pooled the retention with other AIG companies.
Accordingly, the order of the Supreme Court, New York County (Ellen M. Coin, J.), entered November 1, 2013, which granted plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment to the extent of dismissing defendant’s second, third, and seventh affirmative defenses, and otherwise denied the motion, should be mod-
Mazzarelli, J.P., Saxe and Feinman, JJ., concur.
Order, Supreme Court, New York County, entered November 1, 2013, modified, on the law, to deny plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment insofar as it sought dismissal of the second, third and seventh affirmative defenses, and otherwise affirmed, with costs.
