RESOLUTE MANAGEMENT INC. & another vs. TRANSATLANTIC REINSURANCE COMPANY & another
No. 14-P-573
Appellate Court of Massachusetts
April 29, 2015
87 Mass. App. Ct. 296 (2015)
Suffolk. November 13, 2014. - April 29, 2015. Present: GREEN, WOLOHOJIAN, & BLAKE, JJ.
In a civil action arising from a business dispute between the plaintiffs, a reinsurer and its agent, and the defendant reinsurers, a Superior Court judge erred in allowing the defendants’ motion to dismiss the plaintiffs’
In a civil action arising from a business dispute between the plaintiffs, a reinsurer and its agent, and the defendant reinsurers, a Superior Court judge erred in allowing the defendants’ motion to dismiss the plaintiff reinsurer‘s tortious interference with contractual relations claim pursuant to
CIVIL ACTION commenced in the Superior Court Department on April 30, 2013.
A motion to dismiss was heard by Thomas P. Billings, J.
Bryce L. Friedman, of New York (Kevin O‘Connor with him) for the plaintiffs.
John N. Thomas, of New York (Ben T. Clements with him) for the defendants.
1 2Background. We summarize the facts alleged in the plaintiffs’ complaint which, for purposes of our review of the defendants’ motion to dismiss, we accept as true, construing all reasonable inferences from those facts in the plaintiffs’ favor. See Iannacchino v. Ford Motor Co., 451 Mass. 623, 636 (2008).
National, a Nebraska corporation with a principal place of business in Nebraska, is an eligible surplus lines insurer and reinsurer in the Commonwealth whose business includes issuing reinsurance contracts and contracting to manage asbestos-related personal injury claims for Massachusetts-based insurers. National‘s business, in part, is to enter contracts with other insurers’ clients, pursuant to which it (or Resolute, as National‘s agent) resolves claims against those other insurers and collects reinsurance.
In 2001, National entered into an administrative service agreement (ASA I) with two major insurers, pursuant to which National was appointed to adjust, handle, agree to, settle, pay, compromise, or repudiate certain asbestos-related claims on behalf of a number of Massachusetts-based insurers, and also was appointed to collect reinsurance recoveries related to those claims from
Transatlantic is a reinsurer licensed to do business in Massachusetts, which it does on a regular basis. In March, 2010, after decades of being a subsidiary of American International Group, Transatlantic became an independent, publicly traded company. Because of a lack of operational flexibility and other factors (including anticipated adverse developments in so-called “legacy”4 asbestos claims), Transatlantic found it difficult to compete with National in the insurance and reinsurance markets. National and Resolute were so efficient in resolving claims against their insurer clients and in promptly collecting reinsurance that Transatlantic‘s business model was damaged and its business threatened. Despite a weak market, Transatlantic began to look for a merger partner.
In August, 2011, National offered to purchase Transatlantic for approximately fifty-two dollars per share, all cash, which was below Transatlantic‘s stated book value. Transatlantic rejected the offer, but in 2012 allowed itself to be acquired by Alleghany Corporation (Alleghany) (which was looking to enter the reinsurance market) for approximately $59.79 per share.
The merger of Alleghany and Transatlantic got off to a rocky start, in part because Transatlantic continued to be plagued by its asbestos-related claims. Transatlantic sought to commute (i.e., pay another entity to assume responsibility for a risk) its asbestos-related reinsurance obligations to a group of clients of National and Resolute, but the price Transatlantic was willing to pay was significantly less than the amount of its exposure to those clients, and neither National nor Resolute was willing to yield to Transatlantic‘s demands.
For years prior to the merger between Transatlantic and Alleghany, Resolute promptly billed Transatlantic for reinsurance benefits under ASA I, and Transatlantic regularly reviewed and audited information and data it received from National‘s insurer
This litigation followed. By complaint filed April 30, 2013, against Transatlantic and Alleghany, Resolute and National brought claims of tortious interference with contractual relations (ASA I, ASA II, and ASA III), and violation of
Discussion. For independent but similar reasons, central to determination of the viability of the plaintiffs’ complaint is an assessment of the relationship to the Commonwealth of the facts and circumstances giving rise to their claims. The plaintiffs’ claims for tortious interference with contractual relations are viable (at least for pleading purposes) if they are governed by Massachusetts law, but not if they are governed by New York law.5 Similarly, the plaintiffs are entitled to maintain a claim pursuant to
1. Applicability of
As a threshold matter, we note that the defendants have cited no appellate case in which the center of gravity of a § 11 claim was determined adversely to a plaintiff upon a motion to dismiss (as compared to a motion for summary judgment or after trial), and we are aware of none.6 In light of the multiple factors to be applied, and the nuanced and flexible approach to assessing them, as articulated in Kuwaiti Danish, see ibid., we find it difficult to imagine how such an assessment might be made on the basis of the allegations of the complaint alone — at least where, as in the present case, the loss occurred in Massachusetts, and substantial
To be sure, in light of the defendants’ principal physical presence in New York (of which the judge took judicial notice, see note 8, supra), it is entirely possible that the principal communications between the defendants concerning their determination to refuse further payments to Resolute took place outside the Commonwealth. Less influential, in our view, is the fact that certain of the insurers with which National contracted under the ASAs were headquartered outside Massachusetts — at least if, as alleged in the complaint, the claims National (or Resolute acting as National‘s agent) sought to adjust for them were based in Massachusetts. In any event, we are aware of no rule requiring a § 11 plaintiff to plead facts with particularity sufficient to withstand a claim by the defendant that the center of gravity of his claim is not within the Commonwealth. In our view, the allegations of the complaint are sufficient to warrant discovery and development of a factual record adequate to allow a judge to conduct that assessment. In the present procedural posture of the case, it was error to dismiss the plaintiffs’ claims under
2. Tortious interference with contractual relations. A similar (although not identical) concern shapes our view of the judge‘s conclusion that New York law should be applied to the plaintiffs’
For reasons quite similar to those discussed supra, the allegations of the complaint, standing alone, are inadequate to determine as a matter of law whether New York or Massachusetts law should be applied. The complaint does not state where the ASAs were entered into or, except in the most general terms, describe the rights and obligations of the parties to them. Nor does the complaint describe with particularity the claims that National undertook to resolve, including how many of those claims have a substantial connection to Massachusetts. Again, although it appears that many of the parties (if not their activities relevant to the complaint) are headquartered outside the Commonwealth, it is impossible for us to conclude as a matter of law on the basis of the complaint alone that New York (or any particular State, for that matter) has the most significant contacts with, and greatest interest in, the plaintiffs’ claims of tortious interference with the ASAs. As in our
However, even without resolution of the choice of law question we conclude that the judge correctly dismissed Resolute‘s claims because it was not a party to any of the contracts with which the defendants allegedly interfered, and it does not otherwise claim a cognizable legal interest on its own behalf in their enforcement.10 Resolute thus is unable to demonstrate the first of the elements described in Harrison v. NetCentric Corp., 433 Mass. 465, 476 (2001): “that [it] had a contract with a third party.”11
Conclusion. So much of the judgment as dismisses the plaintiffs’ claims under
So ordered.
Notes
“(1) A court, subject to constitutional restrictions, will follow a statutory directive of its own state on choice of law.
“(2) When there is no such directive, the factors relevant to the choice of the applicable rule of law include (a) the needs of the interstate and international systems, (b) the relevant policies of the forum, (c) the relevant policies of other interested states and the relative interests of those states in the determination of the particular issue, (d) the protection of justified expectations, (e) the basic policies underlying the particular field of law, (f) certainty, predictability and uniformity of result, and (g) ease in the determination and application of the law to be applied.”
Paragraph (1) of § 6 is inapplicable, as no Massachusetts statute governs choice of law on a claim for tortious interference with contractual relations.