Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's v. Boeing Company

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 30, 2008
Docket1-07-1667 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's v. Boeing Company (Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's v. Boeing Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's v. Boeing Company, (Ill. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION June 30, 2008

1-07-1667

CERTAIN UNDERWRITERS AT LLOYD’S, LONDON, ) CERTAIN LONDON MARKET INSURANCE ) COMPANIES, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiffs-Appellants, ) Cook County. ) v. ) ) THE BOEING COMPANY and ASTRO LIMITED, ) Honorable ) Sophia H. Hall, Defendants-Appellees. ) Judge Presiding.

PRESIDING JUSTICE QUINN delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiffs Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s, London, and Certain London Market Insurance

Companies1 sought a judicial declaration of their obligations under reinsurance and direct insurance

1 Plaintiffs’ original complaint for declaratory judgment and abridged complaint for

declaratory judgment state that the named plaintiffs, certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s, London,

and certain insurance companies doing business in the London insurance market are identified

“in Exhibit 1”; however, “Exhibit 1" was not attached to either complaint and was not included

in the record. Further, there is no specific pleading, list, table or schedule provided in the record

that names each of the plaintiffs involved in this case. Accordingly, we are unable to identify and

list specifically all the named plaintiffs in this opinion, as reflected in the caption. 1-07-1667

contracts involving defendant Astro Limited (Astro), serving as both the reinsured and direct, captive

insurer, and defendant Boeing Company (Boeing), the direct insured. The circuit court of Cook

County granted defendants’ motion to stay plaintiffs’ declaratory judgment action. Plaintiffs filed

this interlocutory appeal pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 307(a) (188 Ill. 2d R. 307(a)), arguing that

the circuit court abused its discretion by finding that overlapping issues and discovery complications

warranted a stay of the declaratory judgment proceedings until the completion of the underlying

international arbitration. For the following reasons, we find no abuse of discretion and affirm the

judgment of the circuit court.

I. BACKGROUND

Plaintiffs (sometimes, collectively, Reinsurers) are comprised of a number of insurers that

each subscribed to the facultative reinsurance of Astro in regard to its aviation liability policy issued

to Boeing for the period from July 1, 1999, to July 1, 2002. Boeing, a Delaware corporation, is a

designer and manufacturer of numerous aviation and aerospace products, including satellites and

advanced information and communication systems. Astro, Boeing’s wholly owned subsidiary, is a

limited liability company organized under the laws of, and based in, Bermuda. In this case, plaintiffs

sought a declaratory judgment to determine their obligations for liability coverage under both the

reinsurance and direct insurance policies concerning the loss of a telecommunications satellite.

Astro directly insured 80% of Boeing’s 1999 to 2002 aerospace liability coverage. A second

insurance policy issued by New-Jersey-based insurer Global Aerospace, Inc. (formerly Associated

Aviation Underwriters (AAU)), provided the remaining 20% coverage of the total limits of liability.2

2 On October 5, 2006, the circuit court granted Plaintiffs’ motion to voluntarily dismiss

2 1-07-1667

Astro’s liability insurance policy covered certain specified risks issued in favor of Boeing and its

subsidiaries.

Plaintiffs’ reinsurance contract provides 100% coverage of the original insurance limits

undertaken by Astro in the aviation liability policy it issued to Boeing. The “Lloyd’s Proportional

Reinsurance Policy” also contains a “Simultaneous Payments Clause,” which provides:

"In the event of a claim under the original policy [between Astro and

Boeing], Reinsurers hereon agree that any settlement or advance of

funds by the letter of credit or otherwise shall take place at the same

time as on the original in order that the Reinsured shall not be

required to advance funds on behalf of the Reinsurer."

In short, the terms of the simultaneous payments clause denote that Astro’s own coverage under its

reinsurance policy with plaintiffs is coextensive with its coverage obligation to Boeing.

Astro and its leading reinsurer, Kiln Syndicate 510 at Lloyd’s of London (Kiln), on behalf

of itself and a number of concurrent reinsurers, also entered into a “claims handling agreement” in

connection with the liability insurance afforded to Boeing under Astro’s policy for the period from

July 1, 1999 to July 1, 2002.3 The claims handling agreement designated Kiln and AAU as joint

Defendants Global Aerospace, Inc., and Global Aerospace Underwriting Managers Limited from

the instant case pursuant to section 2-1009 of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2-1009

(West 2000)). 3 The claims handling agreement identifies the concurrent reinsurers as Kiln, London

Underwriters at Lloyd’s, British Insurance Companies and other foreign insurers. Plaintiffs’

3 1-07-1667

claims leaders, stating that they “shall have sole discretion and exclusive control over the nature and

extent of [the preliminary] investigation which they may cause to be conducted, including the

selection or designation of investigators, adjusters and attorneys and over the negotiation,

adjustment, settlement and/or defense of claims or suits presented [against Boeing].” Pertinent to

this case, the claims handling agreement also provides:

"In the instance of a claim involving a significant conflict of interest

on the part of [Kiln], it will act solely in the interest of Boeing and

will divest itself of claims control on behalf of its other insureds in

any claims involving Boeing."

Turning to the circumstances involving the subject coverage claims, Thuraya Satellite

Telecommunications Private Joint Stock Company (Thuraya), a Saudi Arabian company, entered

into a September 1997 contract with Hughes Space and Communications International, Inc. (Hughes)

to construct a telecommunications satellite known as “Thuraya D1.” Boeing acquired the Hughes

corporate entity as a subsidiary in 2000 and renamed it Boeing Satellite Systems, Inc. (BSSI).

In October 2000, Thuraya D1 was launched without incident and successfully reached a

geosynchronous orbit approximately 93 miles above Saudi Arabia. Following the launch, Boeing

continued to monitor the performance of Thuraya D1 by means of telemetry data sent from the

satellite to the ground station.

reinsurance policy as provided in the record does not include a list, table or schedule naming

specific Reinsurers or syndicates that subscribed to the policy and, as a result, it is unclear which

plaintiffs are considered “concurrent reinsurers” under the claims handling agreement.

4 1-07-1667

In September 2001, Boeing allegedly first advised Thuraya of a decrease in Thuraya D1's

electrical output. Thuraya initially notified its insurers of the satellite’s power anomalies on

September 17, 2001.

Boeing continued to monitor Thuraya D1's electrical output through the fall of 2001 and

thereafter. On November 30, 2001, Boeing informed Thuraya that no defects had been identified

within Thuraya D1, but eventually isolated the power output problem to a degradation of the optical

properties of the “solar concentration array” (SCA), a feature on Thuraya D1 used to capture solar

radiation and convert it to electricity. By the spring of 2002, projections of Thuraya D1's continual

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