Case Information
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
SECOND SUPPLEMENTAL ORDER ON CROSS MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
(Docs. 19, 20)
In its July 2023 Ordеr, the court concluded that the Employer's Liability Exclusion in defendant Mt. Hawley Insurance Company's excess-liability policy does not bar plaintiff Reidy Contracting Group, LLC's claim for coverage, and granted partial summary judgment to Plaintiffs on that issue. (Doc. 31 at 18.) At the same time, the court recognized Mt. Hawley's alternative argument based on a different provisiоn (the "Endurance Limitation") [1] arising from an "Additional Insured" endorsement to the primary policy issued by Endurance American Specialty Insurance Co. and incorporated into the Mt. Hawley policy:
This insurance does not apply to: . . "Bodily injury" or "property damage" arising out of any act, omission or negligence of the additional insured(s) or any of their "employees" or "temporary workers", other than the general supervision of work performed for the additional insured(s) by you.
*2 (Doc. 19-21 at 155-156; Doc. 20-22 at 52-53; see also Doc. 31 at 7 n.1.) The court granted Mt. Hawley an opportunity to supplement the record with evidence supporting its argument that this limitation applies and that the "general supervision" exception does not apply. (See Doc. 31 at 19.)
Mt. Hawley filed a memorandum and exhibits on August 18, 2023, arguing that Reidy was "actively negligent in connection with the underlying ceiling collapse" and that Reidy's liability "would not have arisen out of its general supervision of the work by named insured Vanquish Contracting Corp." (Doc. 32 at 1.) According to Mt. Hawley, "[a]ll or substantially all of the negligence that could bе allocated to a contractor in connection with the accident arises from acts and omissions that predated Vanquish's work on the site, i.e., the decision to permit the ceiling at issue to stay in place, accompanied by the decision to not alter the plans or supplement site safety in response." (Id. at 1-2.)
Plaintiffs filed a memorandum and exhibits in response, arguing: (1) Mt. Hawley failed to timely disclaim based on the Endurance Limitation, and New York Insurance Law § 3420(d) applies; (2) the Endurance Limitation is unavailable based on Mt. Hawley's own "ripeness" argument; and (3) the factual record developed in the underlying litigation shows that the Endurance Limitation does not apply. (See Doc. 33.) The court granted Mt. Hawley an opportunity to file a further supplemental brief on the timeliness issue. (Doc. 35.) Mt. Hawley filed its supplemental brief in December 2023. (Doc. 36.)
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Background
The court presumes familiarity with the facts of this case as discussed in the July 2023 Order. (See Doc. 31.) After the court's July 2023 Order, the parties in the underlying state-court litigation filed a stipulation of discontinuance, reflecting that a settlement was reached in that case. See Stipulation of Discontinuance, Zhigue v. Lexington Landmark Properties LLC, No. 823/2013 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. Mar. 11, 2024), NYSCEF No. 278. Additional facts are set forth below as necessary.
Analysis
I. Timeliness of Mt. Hawley's Disclaimer Based on the Endurance Limitation
Plaintiffs argue that the first time Mt. Hawley ever asserted the Endurance Limitation as to Reidy was on November 11, 2022, when Mt. Hawley movеd for summary judgment in this action. Plaintiffs maintain that Mt. Hawley's attempt to disclaim on that basis now—years after it first disclaimed coverage in February 2013-is unenforceable under New York Insurance Law § 3420(d)(2). [2] (Doc. 33 at 4.) Mt. Hawley maintains that Plaintiffs' arguments under are "invalid as a matter of law." (Doc. 36 at 2.)
Section 3420(d)(2) of New York's Insurance Law provides as follows: If under a liability policy issued or delivered in this state, an insurer shall disclaim liability оr deny coverage for death or bodily injury arising out of a motor vehicle accident or any other type of accident occurring within this state, it shall give written notice as soon as is reasonably possible of such disclaimer of liability or denial of coverage to the insured and the injured person or any other claimant.
Mt. Hawley contends that is inapplicable for а variety of reasons. (See Doc. 36.) The court considers those arguments in turn.
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A. Claims Between Insurers; Real Party in Interest
As Mt. Hawley observes, courts have held that § 3420(d)(2)'s notice requirement does not apply to claims between insurers. See Old Republic Gen. Ins. Corp. v. Century Sur. Co., No. 17 Civ. 3415,
Here, one of the named parties in this action, Reidy, is a general contractor, not an insurer. But Reidy entered into the settlement in the underlying litigation. See Stipulation of Discontinuance, Zhigue v. Lexington Landmark Properties LLC, No. 823/2013 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. Mar. 11, 2024), NYSCEF No. 278. Thus, according to Mt. Hawley, Reidy is left "with no actual interest" in this federal case and Reidy's insurer Merchants is the "real party in interest" with respect to the claim for reimbursement against Mt. Hawley. Tech. Ins. Co. v. First Mercury Ins. Cо.,
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Fire Ins. Co.,
In First Mercury, as here, the plaintiffs were an insurer and its insured. Unlike this case, however, the insured in First Mercury sought no relief in the complaint. Tech. Ins. Co. v. First Mercury Ins. Co., No. 160472/2017,
B. Section 3420(d)(2)'s Applicability to Denial for Lack of Insured Status
Section 3420(d)(2)'s notice requirement is inapplicable where denial of coverage was based on a lack of insured (or additional insured) status, as opposed to a disclaimer based on an exclusion. See Zappone v. Home Ins. Co.,
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unnecessary when a claim falls outside the scope of the policy's coverage portion."); Crespo v. City of New York,
In support, Mt. Hawley notes that the Endurance Limitation quoted above appears in paragraph "A" of the "Additional Insured" endorsement immediately after the provision stating that "the following" are included as additional insureds:
Any entity required by written contract or as required in writing from a municipality as a сondition of issuing a permit (hereinafter for purposes of this endorsement called "additional insured") to be named as an insured is an insured but only with respect to liability arising out of your premises, 'your work' for the additional insured, or acts or omissions of the additional insured, in connection with their general supervision of 'your work' to the extent set forth below . . . . (Doc. 19-21 at 155; sеe also Doc. 31 at 2-3.) Mt. Hawley asserts that this language (the "Coverage Grant") "limits additional insured status to liability arising out of an additional insured's general supervision of the named insured's work." (Doc. 36 at 4.)
The court is unpersuaded. Consistent with the plain language of the Coverage Grant, "additional insured" status is not limited only to liability arising out of an additional insured's general supervision of the named insured's work. The grant extends "additional insured" status to entities (like Reidy) required by written contract to be so named with respect to liability arising out of the named insured's (Vanquish's) work for the additional insured. This is consistent with the court's previous description of Reidy as an "additional insured" for purposes of analyzing the Employer's Liability Exclusion. (See Doc. 31 at 6; id. at 7 n.1.) As the court previously observed, Reidy is an "entity required by written contract" to be named as an insured." (Id. at 7.) And the scaffold accident is "within the scope of work covered by the Endurance and Mt. Hawley policies." (Id.)
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Mt. Hawley concedes that the language following the Coverage Grant—including the Endurance Limitation quoted above—is "exclusionary language." (Doc. 36 at 4.) But Mt. Hаwley maintains that the Endurance Limitation is more than an exclusion because it removes Reidy as an "additional insured" in the first instance. (See id.) Citing American Ref-Fuel Co. of Hempstead v. Employers Ins. Co. of Wausau,
In American Ref-Fuel, the Town of Hempstead was an additional insured under a provision providing coverage for any organization for which the plaintiff-the operator of a municipal incinerator and the named insured-"agreed by written contract to procure bodily injury or property damage liability insurance, but only for liability arising оut of operations performed by you or on your behalf."
Reasoning that it was unclear "who was responsible for the alleged condition which purportedly caused the claimant's injuries," the Appellate Division held that "no timely disclaimer was required" on the issue of potential coverage for the Town. Id. at 54 (citing United Servs. Auto. Ass'n v. Meier,
*8 status where liability arose out of anything other than "oрerations performed by you or on your behalf."
American Ref-Fuel is distinguishable. Like the grant in American Ref-Fuel, the Coverage Grant here is limited. It extends "only with respect to liability arising out of [1] your premises, [2] 'your work' for the additional insured, or [3] acts or omissions of the additional insured, in connection with their general supervision of 'your work.'" (Doc. 19-21 at 155 (bracketed numbers аdded).) To come within the third category, the additional insured's actions or omissions must be in connection with their "general supervision" of the insured's work. If the additional insured's relevant conduct was not "general supervision," then the third category would not apply. But unlike the grant in American Ref-Fuel, the limitations in the Coverage Grant are phrased in the alternative, and thе second category (liability arising out of "'your work' for the additional insured") does not depend on any inquiry into "general supervision." Reidy is an "additional insured" under that second category.
In this court's view, the Endurance Limitation that follows the Coverage Grant is more like an exclusion than like a carve-out from "additional insured" status. The plain language of the endоrsement supports that conclusion. The Coverage Grant, by its terms, describes the entities that "are included as additional insureds." (Doc. 19-21 at 155.) The Endurance Limitation, in contrast, begins with the phrase "This insurance does not apply to." (Id.) That language is "in the nature of a policy exclusion." Meier,
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C. Whether Mt. Hawley was Prohibited from Issuing a Disclaimer Under the Endurance Limitation Before Resolution of the Underlying Litigation
Finally, Mt. Hawley asserts that it could not properly have issued a § 3420(d)(2) notice during the pendency of the underlying litigation because the Endurance Limitation made the existence of coverage turn on whether Reidy was "actively at fault" and because, according to Mt. Hawley, a liability insurer is prohibited from denying coveragе "based on a material question of its insured's fault that is at issue in the underlying litigation." (Doc. 36 at 5-7.) For the latter proposition, Mt. Hawley relies primarily upon 622 Third Avenue Co. v. National Fire Insurance Co. of Hartford,
That ruling was an application of the rule that "extrinsic evidence may terminatе the duty to defend . . . when extrinsic evidence unrelated to the underlying merits unambiguously shows that there is no possibility of coverage." Id. at 476 (emphasis added) (citing Int'l Bus. Machs. Corp. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
To the extent the declaratory judgment might resolve an issue adversely to the insured, it would be inherently unfair to fоrce the insured to litigate against the insurance company; under those circumstances, rather than obtaining the benefit of the company's resources and expertise in defending against the plaintiff, those resources, for which the insured had bargained, would be turned against the insured and used to help establish his or her liability.
2 Allan D. Windt, Insurance Claims and Disputes § 8:4 (6th ed.); see also City of N.Y. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., No. 15 Civ. 8220,
*10 insurer could defeat its duty by proving, in a collateral action, the existence of a fact that is relevant to the merits of the underlying suit, it would follow that the insurer could subvert its obligation to defend against meritless suits. Worse, such a posture would place the insured in an untenable position: the insured would have to argue, in the declaratory аction, that the fact in question is disputed, even as the insured made the opposite argument in the underlying action to try and defeat its own liability.").
Mt. Hawley concedes that 622 Third concerns "the circumstances in which an insurer can seek to be relieved of a duty to defend" but, according to Mt. Hawley, "its principles apply equally and for the same reasons tо the duty to indemnify." (Doc. 36 at 6.) The court is not persuaded. Neither 622 Third nor the other authorities that Mt. Hawley cites indicates that a liability insurer cannot deny coverage when extrinsic evidence shows that coverage is unavailable. The duties to defend and to indemnify are different, the former being "far more expansive" than the latter. 622 Third,
Here, the evidence relevant to whether Reidy was "actively at fault" overlaps with the facts at issue in the (now settled) state-court litigation. But Mt. Hawley did not institute a declaratory action seeking to be relieved of the duty to defend. The rule in 622 Third regarding extrinsic evidence is inapplicable because it concerns the duty to defend, not the duty to indemnify or the obligation to provide notice of a denial of coverage based on a policy exclusion. Indeed, Mt. Hawley relied on the Endurance Limitation before the underlying settlement when, on November 11, 2022, Mt. Hаwley moved for summary judgment. (See Doc. 20-27 at 14-15.)
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D. Conclusion as to Timeliness of the Disclaimer
For the reasons above, the court rejects each of Mt. Hawley's three arguments against application of
's notice requirement. The court further concludes that Mt. Hawley failed to give timely written notice of a disclaimer based on the Endurance Limitation under
. Mt. Hawley's failure to comply with
"precludes denial of coveragе based on a policy exclusion" such as the Endurance Limitation at issue here. Golden Ins. Co. v. Ingrid House, Inc.,
II. Remaining Issues
Because Mt. Hawley cannot now deny coverage based on the Endurance Limitation, it is unnecessary for the court to reach Plaintiffs' remaining arguments regarding Mt. Hawley's "ripeness" assertion and regarding the applicability of the Endurance Limitation on its merits. This ruling-together with the court's prior ruling that the Employer's Liability Exclusion does not bar Reidy's claim for coverage (Doc. 31)—enables the court to dispose of the cross-motions for summary judgment as follows.
Conclusion
Plaintiffs' Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 19) is GRANTED and Defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 20) is DENIED.
Dated this day of March, 2024.
NOTES
Notes
The court previously referred to the provision as an "exclusion." (Doc. 31 at 7 n.1; Doc. 35 at 1.) As discussed below, Mt. Hawley asserts that the provision contains "exclusionary language" but that is not an "exclusion" to which New York Insurance Law § 3420(d) applies. (See Doc. 36 at 4.) The court did not intend to prejudge any issue by describing the language as an "exclusion" and refers to it here simply as a "limitation."
Plaintiffs also argue that, even if does not apply, Mt. Hawley's disclaimer "issued numerous years later is untimely as a matter of law." (Doc. 33 at 4.) The court need not reach that issue for the reasons discussed below.
