Benjamin v. Credit General Ins., Unpublished Decision (3-29-2005)

2005 Ohio 1450
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 29, 2005
DocketNo. 04AP-642.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2005 Ohio 1450 (Benjamin v. Credit General Ins., Unpublished Decision (3-29-2005)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benjamin v. Credit General Ins., Unpublished Decision (3-29-2005), 2005 Ohio 1450 (Ohio Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION
{¶ 1} Plaintiff-appellant, Ann H. Womer Benjamin, Superintendent of the Ohio Department of Insurance, in her capacity as liquidator of Credit General Insurance Company and Credit General Indemnity Company (collectively, "Credit General" or "the insurer"), appeals from a June 3, 2004 judgment of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas denying plaintiff's motion seeking a determination that intervenors-appellees, John Hancock Life Insurance Company and John Hancock Financial Services Company, Inc. (collectively, "Hancock"), violated Ohio insurance liquidation law and court orders placing Credit General in liquidation.

{¶ 2} The material facts in this case are not disputed. Credit General was an Ohio licensed property and casualty insurer; Hancock reinsured many of Credit General's policies. Reinsurance is insurance an insurance company purchases to cover all or a portion of the risks associated with insurance policies it issues. See Covington v. Am. Chambers Life Ins.Co., 150 Ohio App.3d 119, 2002-Ohio-6165, ¶ 20, fn. 1. The record indicates that the reinsurance contracts Hancock and the insurer entered into provided that Hancock would receive premium payments for the portion of Credit General's insurance risks it assumed. Upon the occurrence of a loss covered by one of Credit General's policies, Credit General would pay the policyholder's claim, including the reinsured portion, and then seek reimbursement from Hancock for the amount of the reinsured loss paid to the policyholder. The reinsurance contracts contained arbitration clauses the parties could invoke to resolve disputes between them.

{¶ 3} In 1999, Credit General initiated an action against Hancock in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio seeking declaratory relief and damages resulting from Hancock's alleged breach of its obligation to indemnify Credit General for reinsured losses. Credit General alleged that although Hancock initially reimbursed Credit General for reinsured losses in accordance with the parties' reinsurance contracts, Hancock refused in 1999 to further honor its contractual indemnification obligations. Hancock moved to stay the federal court action in order to arbitrate Credit General's claims. In a May 30, 2000 order, the federal court found Credit General's claims to be subject to arbitration pursuant to the parties' contract, and it dismissed Credit General's action without prejudice. Hancock and Credit General thereafter proceeded toward, but did not complete, arbitration.

{¶ 4} On November 27, 2000, the Ohio Superintendent of Insurance filed a motion in the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas requesting the court to place Credit General in liquidation because the insurer was insolvent and unable to carry on its insurance business. The common pleas court ("the liquidation court") granted the Superintendent's motion and issued Final Orders of Liquidation for Credit General pursuant to R.C. Chapter 3903, the Insurers Supervision, Rehabilitation, and Liquidation Act (the "Liquidation Act"). (Dec. 12, 2000 and Jan. 5, 2001 Liquidation Orders.)

{¶ 5} Ohio's Liquidation Act is a comprehensive statutory scheme which, among other things, regulates delinquency proceedings in connection with insolvent insurance companies. The Liquidation Act is designed to protect the "interests of insureds, claimants, creditors, and the public generally," to enhance the "efficiency and economy of liquidation," and "to minimize legal uncertainty and litigation." R.C.3903.02(D).

{¶ 6} Pursuant to the Liquidation Act, the liquidation court assumed exclusive subject matter jurisdiction over all claims and proceedings concerning assets of Credit General's liquidation estate, and it acquired in personam jurisdiction over Hancock, as Credit General's reinsurer. R.C. 3903.04(C)(2) and (E); R.C. 3903.28(G). The liquidation court appointed the Superintendent of Insurance to act as liquidator of Credit General and authorized the liquidator to pursue and defend all claims, including reinsurance claims, on behalf of the liquidation estate. See R.C. 3903.21 (setting forth general powers of liquidator) and R.C. 3903.32 (describing rights against reinsurers). Mirroring language set forth in R.C. 3903.24(A), the liquidation orders mandated that "[n]o civil action shall be commenced against Defendant [Credit General] or the Liquidator, whether in this state or elsewhere, nor shall any such existing actions be maintained or further prosecuted after the entry of this Order." (Liquidation Orders, ¶ 18.)

{¶ 7} On January 25, 2001, the liquidation court granted Hancock leave to intervene in the liquidation proceedings. Approximately one year later, Hancock filed two proofs of claim seeking from Credit General's liquidation estate approximately $64 million, largely representing Credit General's reinsurance losses Hancock allegedly paid.

{¶ 8} After reviewing and investigating Hancock's claims pursuant to R.C. 3903.43(A), the liquidator filed a complaint against Hancock in the liquidation court on January 30, 2004 to recover monies it claimed Hancock owed Credit General's liquidation estate. The liquidator specifically alleged that Hancock breached 13 of its reinsurance contracts with Credit General and refused in bad faith to pay Credit General and its liquidation estate at least $60 million in reinsurance monies due the insurer pursuant to the contracts. (Jan. 30, 2004 Complaint.)

{¶ 9} Relying on this court's decision in Benjamin v. Pipoly,155 Ohio App.3d 171, 2003-Ohio-5666, the liquidator further contended that despite contractual arbitration provisions, it was entitled to have its claim decided in a court of law. See Pipoly, supra (holding that because strong policies embodied in Ohio's insurance liquidation statutes regarding the state's interest in centralizing claims and defenses raised against an insolvent insurer into a single forum outweigh the general policy favoring arbitration as a means of settling disputes, arbitration clauses contained within agreements entered into by an insurer, later determined to be insolvent, cannot be enforced against the liquidator).

{¶ 10} In response to the liquidator's state action against it, Hancock filed a petition, based on diversity jurisdiction, to remove the liquidator's action from the state liquidation court to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio. Simultaneously, in Credit General's previously-dismissed action in the federal court for the Northern District of Ohio, Hancock (1) filed a motion to show cause why the liquidator, in commencing the state action against Hancock, should not be held in contempt for violating the federal court's May 30, 2000 order dismissing Credit General's federal action in favor of arbitration, and (2) filed a petition requesting the federal court to compel arbitration of the liquidator's and Hancock's disputes involving the reinsurance contracts. Finally, Hancock moved to consolidate the cases pending in the Northern and Southern Districts of Ohio federal courts and to dismiss or stay and transfer the Southern District action.

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Bluebook (online)
2005 Ohio 1450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benjamin-v-credit-general-ins-unpublished-decision-3-29-2005-ohioctapp-2005.