Black, Davis & Shue Agency, Inc. v. Frontier Insurance Co. in Rehabilitation (In re Black, Davis, & Shue Agency, Inc.)

471 B.R. 381
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 2, 2012
DocketBankruptcy No. 1-06-bk-00051MDF; Adversary No. 1-11-ap-00160MDF
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 471 B.R. 381 (Black, Davis & Shue Agency, Inc. v. Frontier Insurance Co. in Rehabilitation (In re Black, Davis, & Shue Agency, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Black, Davis & Shue Agency, Inc. v. Frontier Insurance Co. in Rehabilitation (In re Black, Davis, & Shue Agency, Inc.), 471 B.R. 381 (Pa. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

MARYD. FRANCE, Chief Judge.

I. Introduction

Before me is a motion to dismiss or stay (“Motion”) the litigation of certain counterclaims setoffs asserted by Black, Davis and Shue Agency, Inc. (“Debtor”) against Frontier Insurance Company in Rehabilitation (“Frontier”) in response to claims filed by Frontier in Debtor’s case. For the reasons set forth below, the Motion will be granted in part and denied in part.

Debtor is an insurance agency located in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Prior to 2001, Frontier was an insurance carrier headquartered in New York whose business included underwriting lines of workers’ compensation insurance. The case before me arises from a contract executed between Frontier and Debtor in October 2000 (the “Agency Agreement”). Under the terms of the Agency Agreement, Frontier was to underwrite workers’ compensation insurance, and Debtor was to act as its agent by marketing and servicing policies for professional employer organizations (“PEOs”).1 The Agency Agreement also involved the creation of an offshore insurance provider, formed by Debtor’s principals and a third party, to reinsure the policies issued by Frontier.

In the two proofs of claims filed in Debtor’s bankruptcy case, Frontier asserts claims for damages as a result of Debtor’s breach of the Agency Agreement. In the counterclaims filed in this adversary proceeding, Debtor alleges that it was Frontier, not Debtor, who breached the Agreement. The claims and counterclaims before me are complicated by the insolvent status of Frontier, which a New York state court placed into receivership in 2001. On January 8, 2005, Frontier’s receiver, Gregory V. Serio (“Serio” or the “Receiver”) filed a lawsuit against Debtor in the District Court for the Southern District of New York at Case No. 05Civl5(MHD) seeking damages allegedly sustained as a result of Debtor’s breach of the Agency Agreement (hereinafter “the New York Federal Litigation”). The Receiver filed the action in federal court because of “the national and international scope of the facts and circumstances” of the case. (Declaration of H. Neal Conolly, Case No. l-06-bk-00051MDF, Docket # 574-7.) Among other allegations, Frontier alleged that Debtor breached the Agency Agreement by collecting premiums from clients and failing to remit them to Frontier. In response, Debtor filed counterclaims against Frontier alleging that, inter alia, Frontier breached the Agency Agreement by failing to audit premium payments. Magistrate Judge Dol-inger (“Judge Dolinger”), who was assigned to hear the case, issued an order in October 2005 in which he abstained from [390]*390deciding Debtor’s counterclaims. In December 2005, Judge Dolinger issued a mandatory preliminary injunction requiring Debtor to escrow approximately $1.5 million in premium payments received. In response to the injunction, Debtor filed the within bankruptcy case. Frontier filed two proofs of claim in the case reasserting allegations it alleged as the plaintiff in the New York Federal Litigation. In turn, Debtor filed the above-captioned adversary action reasserting the counterclaims it raised as the defendant in the same litigation.

In the within Motion, Frontier argues alternatively: (1) that Debtor is barred by the Rooker-Feldman doctrine from asserting counterclaims against Frontier that are identical to claims stayed by Judge Dolinger in the New York Federal Litigation; (2) that this Court should take judicial notice of the findings in Judge Doling-er’s injunction order and bar Debtor under principles of preclusion from relitigating issues decided in that matter; (3) that this Court should adopt Judge Dolinger’s reasoning and stay Debtor’s counterclaims, other than setoffs for commissions, if any, owed to Debtor; (4) that this Court is stayed from adjudicating Debtor’s counterclaims by the general stay of claims issued in the state court receivership; and (5) that some or all of the counterclaims should be dismissed under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure (“Fed. R. Civ.P.”) 12(b)(6) if this Court undertakes a review of Debt- or’s counterclaims independent of the review conducted by Judge Dolinger.2

Resolution of Frontier’s Motion requires consideration of the unusual posture of this case. First, the plaintiff in the New York Federal Litigation was the Receiver. His mandate under state law to marshal Frontier’s assets for purposes of rehabilitation or liquidation must be weighed against Debtor’s right to reorganize under the Bankruptcy Code. Second, Judge Dolinger issued two opinions in which he made findings about the merits of the parties’ claims and determined that certain claims against Frontier should be litigated in the state court receivership. In the matter to be decided herein, the parties disagree as to whether this Court is bound by those findings. Third, while Frontier’s Motion invokes legal principles related to abstention and comity, additional issues of this Court’s constitutional authority to hear Debtor’s counterclaims have arisen as a consequence of the Supreme Court’s decision in Stern v. Marshall, — U.S. -, 131 S.Ct. 2594, 180 L.Ed.2d 475 (2011), which was handed down while Frontier’s Motion was pending. Issues presented as a consequence of the Stem decision must also be addressed.

In the Background below, I will set forth the history of the parties’ relationship as it may be gleaned from the pleadings and discuss the terms of the Agency Agreement to the extent that they are not disputed. In the ensuing Discussion, I will address issues of preclusion and comity that have arisen because of the concurrent proceedings in the Frontier receivership in addition to the prior decisions issued by Judge Dolinger in the New York Federal Litigation. I also will assess the impact of the Stem decision on the Court’s constitutional authority to decide counterclaims asserted by Debtor. Finally, I will also consider whether it is appropriate to dismiss any counts of the Adversary Complaint under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6)3 and whether any form of abstention is warranted.

[391]*391II. Procedural History

On October 15, 2001, an Order was issued by the Supreme Court of the State of New York, County of New York, (hereinafter “the Rehabilitation Order”) appointing the Receiver to take possession of Frontier’s assets and attempt to rehabilitate the company. Included in the October 15, 2001 Order was a provision enjoining “all persons ... from commencing or prosecuting any actions, lawsuits, or proceedings against Frontier or the Superintendent as Rehabilitator.” (Motion to Dismiss/Stay Counterclaims, Case No. 1-06-bk-00051MDF, Docket # 574, Ex. E-2, p. 16.)

On January 3, 2005, the Receiver filed the New York Federal Litigation for breach of contract. On March 11, 2005, Debtor filed its answer and counterclaims for breach of contract against Frontier. In a Memorandum and Order issued on October 11, 2005, Judge Dolinger stayed the counterclaims in deference to Frontier’s ongoing rehabilitation proceedings in state court. Serio v. Black, Davis & Shue Agency, Inc., Case No. 05 Civ 15(MHD), 2005 WL 2560390 (S.D.N.Y. October 11, 2005) (hereinafter “Seño I ”). He did not, however, stay litigation of Debtor’s claim to set off commissions against premiums collected.4

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Bluebook (online)
471 B.R. 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/black-davis-shue-agency-inc-v-frontier-insurance-co-in-pamb-2012.