The plaintiff, Stateline Steel Erectors, Inc. (Stateline) appeals an order of the Superior Court {Groff, J.) granting summary judgment to the defendants, William Shields, and the insurance agency for which he worked, Shoff-Darby Insurance Agency, Inc., upon negligence and breach of contract сlaims brought on Stateline’s behalf. We reverse and remand.
The relevant facts follow. This appeal concerns the defendants’ provision of insurance services to Stateline in 1995. At that time, Stateline provided steel erection services to subcontractors. Stateline’s contracts routinely required it to indemnify the subcontractors for claims arising out of its work. Stateline sought insurance coverage from the defendants, who obtained insurance for Stateline from Liberty Mutual Insurance Company. Unbeknownst to Stateline, the insurance policy еxcluded coverage for claims arising out of Stateline’s contracts. In addition, it provided only $100,000 of relevant coverage.
In November 1995, one of Stateline’s employees was severely injured while working on a Stateline project. The employee successfully sued the project’s general contractor, the provider of the project’s structural steel, and the project’s steel erector (collectively, the contractors), for damages. This suit was settled. The contractors sought to be indemnified by Stateline for their cоsts in defending and settling the employee’s lawsuit.
Stateline and Liberty Mutual entered into a settlement agreement with the contractors and their insurers. Pursuant to this agreement, Stateline stipulated that it was liable for a substantial judgment upon the contractors’ indemnification claims. Stateline assigned to the contractors any claims it had for liability arising from the employee’s accident, including any claims regarding the provision of insurance coverage to
In exchange, the contractors agreed “not to attempt to satisfy the remainder of the stipulated judgment in any wаy against Stateline” or its insurer. They promised to satisfy the stipulated judgment only through the payment from Stateline’s insurer and the prosecution of the assigned claims. The contractors further agreed not to “sue, continue with or bring further litigations against” Stateline arising out of the employee’s accident or the contractors’ indemnification claims.
Stateline signed a separate stipulation of judgment that provided, in pertinent part, that it agreed to a payment “by its insurance carrier in full satisfaction of the judgment.” The stipulation further stated that the cоntractors would “not attempt to satisfy the remainder of the stipulated judgment in any action against [Stateline].”
The contractors subsequently filed negligence and breach of contract claims, in Stateline’s name, against the defendants. The defendants moved for summary judgment. The trial court ruled in their favor, finding neither claim viable because Stateline suffered no loss due to the defendants’ alleged failure to procure adequate insurance coverage. The court found that because the contractors agreed not to sue Stateline to recover the excess judgment, Stateline “was never liable for a judgment that exceeded its available insurance coverage.” Thus, the court reasoned, Stateline was never damaged by the defendants’ alleged negligence or breach of contraсt.
In reviewing the trial court’s grant of summary judgment, we consider the affidavits and other evidence, and all inferences properly drawn from them, in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. Sintros v. Hamon,
As this case presents an issue of first impression, we look to other jurisdictions for guidance. See id. There is a split of authority as to whether an insured who has been released from the legal obligation to pay an excess judgment has any right against an allegedly negligent insurance agent, which could be assigned to others. The majority of jurisdictions have found such assignments valid. See McLellan v. Atchison Ins. Agency Inc.,
Jurisdictions have used different approaches to find such assignments valid. Many jurisdictions distinguish between a release and a covenant not to execute on a judgment. In these jurisdictions, an assignment is valid if it is coupled with a covenant not to execute bеcause the insured remains liable for the excess judgment; an assignment coupled with a release is void because the release extinguishes the insured’s liability. See, e.g., Kobbeman,
In other jurisdictions, the legal basis for the insured’s claim against its insurance agent still exists even though the insured is insulated from liability by either a release or a covenant not to execute. See Campione,
A minority of jurisdictions have ruled that even a covenant not to execute extinguishes an insured’s liability for an excess judgment. As the Oregon Court of Appeals has explained:
Had [the] insurance agents procured the coverage alleged to be deficient, that coverage would not have become implicated, unless the insured became legally obligated to pay more than what was already paid on his behalf by his insurer. Under the covenant, however, he can never be required to pay any more than the coverage under the existing insurance.
Oregon Mutual,
In our view, the benefits of such settlement agreements outweigh the risks. We believe it preferable to uphold assignments under these circumstances than to allow a negligent party to escape liability. See McLellan,
Like other courts, we believe that the risk of collusion can be diminished by requiring the contractors to bear the burden of proof on the assigned claims and by recognizing that the defendants, who were not parties to the settlement agreement, cannot be bound by its terms. See Campione,
To recover against thе defendants, the contractors must prove the essential elements of their negligence and breach of contract claims and will have to establish that Stateline’s damages exceeded its insurance coverage. Neither the settlement agreement betweеn the contractors and the employee nor that between the contractors and Stateline is conclusive on this point, however. See Campione,
We note that the risk of collusion in this case is particularly low. In the typical case, the settlement agreement is between the insured, who is the tortfeasor, and the injured party. See Campione,
By contrast, in this case, the injured party, the employee, is not a party to the agreement at issue. The agreement is between the insured, Stateline, and the parties Stateline is contractually obligated to indemnify, the contractors. Presumably, the stipulated judgment in this case represents the amount the contractors actually spent to defend against and settle the employee’s lawsuit.
Today’s decision is consistent with New Hampshire law governing assignments generally. In New Hampshire, “an assignee obtains the rights
When Stateline entered into the settlement agreement, it had claims against the defendants for damages owed to the contractors because оf the defendants’ alleged failure to procure adequate insurance. When Stateline assigned these claims to the contractors, the contractors obtained the right to pursue them. See Steinmetz,
Our decision today is also consistent with our other decisions regarding the assignment of insurance claims-Dumas v. State Mutual Auto Insurance Co.,
In Allstate,
In this case, as in Dumas and Allstate, the insured has been damaged, even if, because of the settlement agreement, the stipulated judgment was never levied against it. Stateline must still endure the adversity of litigation and might suffer diminishment of its credit rating, among other intangiblе harms. See Kobbeman,
The defendants argue that Stateline was prоtected by a full release, not merely a covenant not to execute. Thus, they assert, even under the majority rule, Stateline had no viable cause of action to assign to the contractors. We disagree.
Contrary to the defendants’ assertions, the agreement did not include a full release. Although the trial court did not reach this issue, the proper interpretation of a contract is a question of law for this court to decide. Lawyers Title Ins. Corp. v. Groff,
A covenant not to sue or a covenant not to execute is distinguishаble from a release. 9 R. MCNAMARA, New HAMPSHIRE PRACTICE, PERSONAL Injury, Tort and Insurance Practice § 23.03, at 23-3 (3d ed. 2003). “Unlike a release,' a covenant not to sue does not relinquish a right or claim, or extinguish a cause of action.” Id. “A covenant not to sue recognizes the continuation of the obligation or liability; thе party making the covenant not to sue agrees only not to assert any right or claim based upon the obligation.”./d
The agreement does not state that the contractors “release” Stateline from liability. To the contrary, the contractors merely agreed “not tо attempt to satisfy the remainder of the stipulated judgment in any way against Stateline” and not to “sue, continue with, or bring further litigations” against Stateline arising out of the employee’s accident or the contractors’ indemnification claims. The contractors promised to sеek
According to the plain meaning of its terms, the agreement was a covenant not to sue or execute the judgment against Stateline, not a release. See Tip’s Package Store,
Reversed and remanded.
