American Home Products Corp. v. Adriatic Insurance

668 A.2d 67, 286 N.J. Super. 24, 1995 N.J. Super. LEXIS 569
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedDecember 11, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 668 A.2d 67 (American Home Products Corp. v. Adriatic Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Home Products Corp. v. Adriatic Insurance, 668 A.2d 67, 286 N.J. Super. 24, 1995 N.J. Super. LEXIS 569 (N.J. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

KING, P.J.A.D.

We granted leave to appeal, R. 2:2 — 3(b); R. 2:5-6(a), on June 5, 1995 to review the order of the Law Division which declined to dismiss or stay this insurance coverage action on comity grounds, in deference to an earlier action pending in New York’s state court. We conclude that the plaintiffs have shown sufficient “special equities” to justify retention of jurisdiction over this New Jersey action. We affirm the March 20,1995 decision of the Law Division judge declining to dismiss or stay this action.

I.

American Home Products Corporation (AHP), incorporated in Delaware, is a manufacturer and distributor of agricultural, food and healthcare products throughout the United States and abroad. When the insurance contracts involved in this case were negotiated and issued, AHP’s corporate headquarters and insurance department were located in New York. AHP had usually litigated coverage disputes with its carriers in New York.

In April 1991, AHP and its subsidiaries filed actions in the Delaware state court against seventy-seven or more insurers, the defendants here, seeking a declaration that these insurers were required to defend and indemnify AHP for liability incurred in connection with environmental claims at thirty-plus cleanup sites in eleven states. AHP also sought money damages for remediation costs already incurred.

Two months later, in June 1991, Employers Insurance of Wausau (Wausau), an excess-liability carrier and a defendant in the Delaware actions, filed a declaratory judgment action in New York state court against AHP, several of its subsidiaries, and the seventy-six other insurers named as defendants in Delaware. The New York action was essentially identical to the Delaware action in legal import, including the same parties, waste sites, and insurance policies.

[32]*32In July 1991, Wausau and other insurers moved to dismiss AHP’s Delaware actions on forum non conveniens grounds. Their motion was granted in November 1991. Upon termination of the case in Delaware, the New York trial-level court dismissed as moot AHP’s then-pending motion to dismiss the New York action.

On June 1, 1992 AHP and its subsidiaries filed the present action in New Jersey, seeking declaratory relief against eighty insurance companies. The appellants in the present appeal (the insurers) are forty-three of these defendant insurance companies. This action is substantially similar to the case pending in New York; it involves the same issues and virtually the same parties.1 AHP concedes that any claims it may have against any of the parties here are pending in or could be joined in the action in New York.

One month after this New Jersey action was filed, AHP moved to dismiss the New York action on forum non conveniens grounds. Wausau and other insurance companies opposed AHP’s motion and cross-moved for an order enjoining AHP from proceeding in any jurisdiction other than New York. In December 1992, the New York trial-level judge dismissed the action, except as to the single New York site, on jforum non conveniens grounds.

Several insurance companies appealed. On December 15, 1994 New York’s Appellate Division reversed the forum non conveniens dismissal of the claims arising from the non-New York sites and reinstated the New York action in its entirety. AHP’s attempt to have the New York action dismissed on forum non conveniens grounds was effectively ended when AHP’s motion for reargument and its motion for leave to appeal to the Court of Appeals were denied. The New York court, however, refused to enjoin AHP from proceeding in New Jersey, considering that [33]*33issue “academic” once the New York action was reinstated. Possibly the New York court assumed that this New Jersey action would be stayed by our courts.

AHP had moved its world-wide corporate headquarters, including its insurance and law departments, from New York City to Madison, New Jersey in October 1993. On January 23,1995, after the New York action had been reinstated in its entirety, a number of the defendant insurers moved to dismiss or stay this New Jersey action, arguing that principles of comity and the entire-controversy doctrine so required. On March 20, 1995 Judge McLaughlin of Hudson County concluded that there were “special equities” which justified the denial of the insurers’ motion to dismiss, and he permitted this New Jersey action to proceed. We granted the insurers’ motion for leave to appeal on June 5, 1995.

II.

We now have the same complex litigation pending in two law suits in sister states in courthouses five miles apart. The insurers want to litigate in New York, the insured in New Jersey. Insofar as we can determine from this record and the parties’ representations, staged discovery has been proceeding in New Jersey at an efficient pace, at least since an April 24, 1994 “Case Management Order I” was entered by Judge McLaughlin. Discovery has been concentrated on eight sites, three in New Jersey and none in New York, all selected by the parties. The discovery undertaken has been deemed efficacious in both jurisdictions.

The fact that an action pending in another state involves the same parties and the same or substantially similar claims does not bar prosecution of a subsequent action here in New Jersey. However, the New Jersey action may, as a matter of sound discretion, be stayed by our courts until the prior action has been adjudicated. Cogen Technologies v. Boyce Eng’g, 241 N.J.Super. 268, 272, 574 A.2d 1018 (App.Div.), certif. denied, 122 N.J. 358, 585 A.2d 368 (1990); Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Co. v. Carriere, 163 N.J.Super. 7, 14, 394 A.2d 132 (App.Div.1978); Wallace, [34]*34Muller & Co. v. Leber, 67 N.J.L. 26-27, 50 A 586 (Sup.Ct.1901). The issue is one of comity, not lack of jurisdiction.

Our Supreme Court, in Yancoskie v. Delaware River Port Auth, 78 N.J. 321, 395 A.2d 192 (1978), held that when an action, essentially identical to one brought in New Jersey, is pending in another state, “our proper course under comity principles is not to exercise jurisdiction but to adhere to the general rule that the court which first acquires jurisdiction has precedence in the absence of special equities.” Id. at 324, 395 A.2d 192.

In 1990 we further explained the reasoning behind the Yancoskie rule:

A court having jurisdiction has the authority to refuse to proceed in a vexatious law suit focusing on a matter already proceeding in the courts of another state. We do not distrust the proceedings of the courts of our sister states as we once did. It has become necessary and commonplace in a national economy for courts to interpret and enforce the laws of other jurisdictions. In these circumstances, there is ordinarily no reason to entertain subsequent local litigation paralleling an already instituted action in another state.

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Bluebook (online)
668 A.2d 67, 286 N.J. Super. 24, 1995 N.J. Super. LEXIS 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-home-products-corp-v-adriatic-insurance-njsuperctappdiv-1995.