Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's v. Foster Wheeler Corp.

36 A.D.3d 17, 822 N.Y.S.2d 30
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedSeptember 28, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 36 A.D.3d 17 (Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's v. Foster Wheeler Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's v. Foster Wheeler Corp., 36 A.D.3d 17, 822 N.Y.S.2d 30 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Friedman, J.E

The question presented is whether New York law or New Jersey law governs a large number of excess liability insurance [19]*19policies, under which the insured seeks coverage for a portion of the costs of defending and paying asbestos-related personal injury claims that have been asserted against it since the 1970s. For the reasons discussed below, we conclude that New Jersey law applies.

This declaratory judgment action seeks an apportionment of responsibility for the defense and indemnity costs of hundreds of thousands of asbestos-related personal injury claims (the asbestos claims) among defendant Foster Wheeler Corporation (FW Corp.), its subsidiary, Foster Wheeler Energy Corp. (FW Energy), and their liability insurers. The asbestos claims, which have been asserted in jurisdictions throughout the United States since the 1970s, are based on allegations that the claimants or their decedents were exposed to asbestos contained in boilers and other steam-generating equipment designed and built for industrial customers by FW Corp. (from the early twentieth century until 1973) or by FW Energy (since 1973, when FW Energy took over FW Corp.’s commercial operations). FW Corp. was incorporated under New York law from 1900 until 2001, when it was merged into another entity in a corporate restructuring. FW Energy, which is now a subsidiary of FW Corp.’s successor-by-merger, has been incorporated under Delaware law at all times since its formation in 1973. We use the term “Foster Wheeler” to refer to FW Corp. and FW Energy collectively.

From its founding in 1900 until 1962, Foster Wheeler’s principal place of business was located in New York City. From 1962 to the present, Foster Wheeler’s principal place of business has been in New Jersey. After the 1962 move to New Jersey, Foster Wheeler continued to maintain a small office in New York City, where only one employee was assigned on a full-time basis. It is undisputed that, at all relevant times, Foster Wheeler’s operations relating to the design and building of asbestos-containing products were conducted throughout the United States, and that its customers purchasing such products were similarly widespread.

Before the order appealed from was rendered, Foster Wheeler reached settlements with all of its insurers except for defendants-respondents (the nonsettling insurers). From 1970 to 1981, the nonsettling insurers sold Foster Wheeler certain excess liability policies (the unsettled policies) that covered various periods between February 1, 1970 and October 1, 1982. Thus, all of the unsettled policies were issued while Foster Wheeler’s principal place of business was in New Jersey. The [20]*20nonsettling insurers (of which there are about 30) had their principal places of business in various states at the times their policies were issued; five were domiciled in New York, three in New Jersey. It is undisputed that almost all of the nonsettling insurers are licensed to do business in both New York and New Jersey.

The parties agree that the underlying asbestos claims are based on injuries that are deemed, for purposes of insurance coverage, to have been suffered continuously over extended periods of time. This makes it necessary to allocate each injury “horizontally” over the period of its occurrence in order to determine the coverage obligation of each nonsettling insurer. The conflict-of-laws issue in this case arises from the circumstance (on which the parties agree, as more fully discussed below) that New York and New Jersey prescribe different mathematical methods of performing such an allocation. The matter is further complicated by the need, once an allocation is made to each year (whichever method is used), to allocate the loss for that particular year “vertically” among the various layers of insurance purchased for that year, with primary policies paying first within each year. Thus, as the nonsettling insurers point out, “the way in which liabilities are allocated to policies in the primary layers will determine when those primary policies are exhausted, and thus when excess layer policies [such as the unsettled policies] are reached, if at all.”

Since there is no suggestion that methods of allocating a loss “horizontally” over time can be derived from the terms of the relevant policies, such an allocation method must be supplied by the applicable state law. As the relevant policies do not contain choice-of-law provisions, we are required to make that determination in accordance with our state’s established choice-of-law principles.

As previously indicated, the parties agree (and we accept for purposes of this appeal) that New York and New Jersey (the only states suggested as the source of applicable law on the allocation issue) each uses a different mathematical method of effecting a pro rata allocation of an insured loss over the period of its occurrence. The “ ‘time-on-the-risk’ method” that was approved by the New York Court of Appeals in Consolidated Edison Co. of N.Y. v Allstate Ins. Co. (98 NY2d 208, 225 [2002]) derives the portion of the total loss allocable to the term of a given policy “by multiplying the [total loss] by a fraction that has as its denominator the entire number of years of the [21]*21claimant’s injury, and as its numerator the number of years within that period when the policy was in effect” (Stonewall Ins. Co. v Asbestos Claims Mgt. Corp., 73 F3d 1178, 1202 [2d Cir 1995]).1 The New Jersey Supreme Court, on the other hand, has adopted the method of “proration on the basis of policy limits, multiplied by years of coverage” (Owens-Illinois, Inc. v United Ins. Co., 138 NJ 437, 475, 650 A2d 974, 993 [1994]). Under the New Jersey method (which has been referred to as “time-plus-hmits”), the proportion of the total loss allocable to the term of a given policy is the ratio of the total coverage purchased (or risk retained) during the term of that policy to the total coverage purchased (or risk retained) during the entire period of the injury’s occurrence (excluding any time during which insurance for the risk was unavailable) (see Carter-Wallace, Inc. v Admiral Ins. Co., 154 NJ 312, 322-323, 712 A2d 1116, 1122 [1998] [illustrating how the method operates]). It is undisputed that the time-plus-limits method, by “intentionally assigning] a greater portion of indemnity costs to years in which greater amounts of insurance were purchased” (154 NJ at 326, 712 A2d at 1123 [internal quotation marks and citation omitted]), would make tens of millions of dollars more coverage available to Foster Wheeler than would the time-on-the-risk method.

In the proceedings before the motion court, Foster Wheeler moved for partial summary judgment declaring all disputed issues to be governed by New Jersey law, while the nonsettling insurers moved for partial summary judgment declaring New York law to govern. In the order appealed from, the motion court ruled that New York law applies. We now reverse and hold that New Jersey law applies.

Under New York’s “center of gravity” or “grouping of contacts” approach to choice-of-law questions in contract cases, we are required to apply the law of the state with the “most significant relationship to the transaction and the parties” (Zurich Ins. Co. v Shearson Lehman Hutton, 84 NY2d 309, 317 [1994], quoting Restatement [Second] of Conflict of Laws [hereinafter, Restatement] § 188 [1]). This approach generally dictates that a contract of liability insurance be governed by the law of “the [22]

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Bluebook (online)
36 A.D.3d 17, 822 N.Y.S.2d 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/certain-underwriters-at-lloyds-v-foster-wheeler-corp-nyappdiv-2006.