City of Portland v. St. Paul Marine Ins. Co.

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedSeptember 10, 2009
DocketCUMcv-09-87and06-444
StatusUnpublished

This text of City of Portland v. St. Paul Marine Ins. Co. (City of Portland v. St. Paul Marine Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Portland v. St. Paul Marine Ins. Co., (Me. Super. Ct. 2009).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CUMBERLAND, ss. CIVIL ACTION Docket No. CV-Q.2.. 87 Consolidated with· /

-1~') CV-06:::.444 et a . -. , ,t · " \ r /' ·1: v- i .. '-. -- ! g,) v,l l j ,.

". ( " . CITY OF PORTLAND,

v. ORDER

ST. PAUL MARINE INSURANCE CO., et a1.,

Defendants.

Before the court are three motions: (1) a motion by defendant United National

Insurance Co. to dismiss; (2) a motion by defendants St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance

Co. and St. Paul Surplus Lines Insurance Co. (collectively, the "St. Paul companies") to

stay this action; and (3) a motion by American Horne Assurance Co. for summary

judgment.

1. Motion to Dismiss and Motion to Stay

The basis of the motions filed by both United National and the St. Paul

companies is the well-settled principle that determination of whether an insurer has a

duty to indemnify should ordinarily await the outcome of trial in the underlying action.

In this case, however, the court will depart from that principle for two reasons.

First, under the Maine Tort Claims Act, 14 M.R.S. § 8116, whether and to what extent

the City of Portland can assert a defense of sovereign immunity to the claims brought

by plaintiffs in CV-08-444 et a1. depends in part on whether the City has insurance

which "provides protection" in excess of the limit of liability in 14 M.R.S.A. § 8105 or in areas where the City would otherwise be immune. In this instance, therefore, the

question of liability and the existence of insurance are intertwined.

Moreover, because of the complexity of the underlying claims in this case ­

compounded by additional complexities with respect to the dates and nature of the

possible insurance coverage provided by defendants - there may be issues in the

underlying case which the insurers (as well as the plaintiffs and the City) should have

an opportunity to litigate to the extent those issues affect coverage.

The court notes that one of the purposes of the well-settled rule that the question

of indemnification should be considered after the trial of the underlying case is to avoid

duplication of trials and to resolve issues of liability before issues of coverage. See

Penney v. Capitol City Transfer Inc., 1998 ME 44 err 5, 707 A.2d 387, 389. Because of the

interrelationship of insurance coverage with immunity under the Maine Tort Claims

Act, that purpose is not served by dismissing the claims against defendant insurers as

premature in this case.

Indeed, in declining to rule on the City's appeal on the immunity issues in CV­

06-444, the Law Court expressly noted that its ruling would be "premature" because the

applicability of insurance had not yet been resolved. Wilcox v. City of Portland, 2009 ME

53 err 12, 970 A.2d 295, 298. This strongly points to the conclusion that the insurance

issues cannot be deferred under the particular circumstances of this case.

To be sure, there may be certain issues with respect to insurance coverage that

cannot be resolved until all or part of the underlying case has been tried.} There are

other issues, however - such as the effect of "mold exclusions" in certain of the

applicable policies - that are potentially capable of resolution at an initial stage. The

} One alternative on the table is that the liability issues in the underlying cases CV-06-444 et al. would be tried together, with separate damage trials to follow for those plaintiffs as to whom liability had been established.

2 outcome of these issues could in turn have the potential effect of simplifying both this

case and the issues in the underlying cases brought by the Wilcox plaintiffs.

Accordingly, United National's motion to dismiss and the St. Paul companies'

motion for a stay are both denied without prejudice to the possibility that at some point

a stay may be warranted with respect to certain of the insurance coverage issues.

2. American Home Assurance Co. Motion for Summary Iudgment

American Home Assurance's motion is based on a simple premise: that it issued

two sets of policies to Scotia Prince Cruises - a comprehensive marine liability policy

and an excess policy for the period from August 30, 2002 to August 30, 2003 and similar

policies for the period from September 30, 2003 to September 30, 2004 - and that the

City of Portland was not a named insured or an additional insured under any of those

policies.

Both the City and the individual plaintiffs in CV-06-444 et a1. have responded by

pointing out that the City had entered into certain contracts with Scotia Prince

requiring, inter alia, that the City be named as an additional insured on Scotia Prince's

insurance policies. They argue that there is a potential issue whether the Marsh

Agency, through which Scotia Prince placed its insurance coverage, was acting on

behalf of American Home when its employees allegedly represented that the City

would be covered as a named insured under certain of the American Home policies. 2

Pursuant to Rule 56(f) the City and the plaintiffs in CV-06-444 et al. also argue that they

cannot present affidavits on these issues because the necessary facts are not in their

2 The City also suggests that there may be a basis to reform the American Home policies under the doctrine of mutual mistake.

3 possession and that they can only obtain such facts by undertaking discovery of

American Home, the Marsh Agency, and perhaps Scotia Prince.

In response, American Home argues that the theories advanced by the City and

the Wilcox plaintiffs are tenuous. That may be, but it is not a basis on which the court

can grant summary judgment. American Home has also submitted additional affidavits

purporting to refute the Wilcox plaintiffs' claim that the Marsh Agency was acting as

American Home's agent when representations were allegedly made that the City would

be added as an additional insured. However, the court cannot grant summary

judgment based on affidavits submitted with reply papers to which the party opposing

summary judgment has not had an opportunity to respond. Moreover, those affidavits

do not change the situation that the parties opposing summary judgment do not have

the necessary facts in their possession at this stage in the case and need at least limi ted

discovery to determine whether there is a factual basis to substantiate their defenses to

the motion. 3

In the final analysis, if the facts are as described by American Home, then

American Home will be entitled to summary judgment.4 For now, however, the court

will defer acting on American Home's motion pursuant to Rule 56(f) until the City and

the Wilcox plaintiffs have had an opportunity for discovery. Thereafter American

3 After its reply papers had been submitted and the court took its summary judgment motion under advisement, American Home filed two additional memoranda offering further arguments. American Home did not seek leave to file those memoranda, and the civil rules make no provision for supplemental, rebuttal, and sur-rebuttal filings. The court will disregard both of American Home's supplemental filings and the responses of the City and the Wilcox plaintiffs to those filings.

4 This would be regardless of whether the City or Scotia Prince might have claims against the Marsh Agency or other parties who allegedly made misrepresentations with respect to the City's inclusion as an additional insured.

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Related

Penney v. Capitol City Transfer, Inc.
1998 ME 44 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1998)
Wilcox v. City of Portland
2009 ME 53 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2009)

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