Commercial Union Insurance v. Seven Provinces Insurance

9 F. Supp. 2d 49, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9065, 1998 WL 327938
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJune 15, 1998
Docket95-10894-NG
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 9 F. Supp. 2d 49 (Commercial Union Insurance v. Seven Provinces Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial Union Insurance v. Seven Provinces Insurance, 9 F. Supp. 2d 49, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9065, 1998 WL 327938 (D. Mass. 1998).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

GERTNER, District Judge.

A trial was held in this action to recover on a policy of reinsurance. The dispute arises out of a reinsurance arrangement entered into thirty-five years ago between Employers’ Surplus Lines Insurance Company(“ESLIC”) and defendant Seven Provinces Insurance Company, Ltd. (“Seven Provinces”). ESLIC insured Teledyne, a California-based manufacturing company, through a number of different insurance policies. In 1963, ESLIC ceded a portion of the Teledyne risk covered by one of those policies to Seven Provinces.

In 1982, environmental contamination was discovered at a number of Teledyne sites. The company was faced with third-party suits and Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) claims for millions of dollars in clean-up costs. It submitted a claim to its insurers, including ESLIC’s successor-in-interest, plaintiff Commercial Union (“CU”). CU’s obligations to Teledyne under various policies and for various contaminated sites were litigated in California and eventually settled. Under the terms of the settlement, CU paid Teledyne $2.2 million and Teledyne released CU from all future liability for any environmental claims against Teledyne.

According to CU, one site in particular was the focus of negotiations: the “semiconductor site,” where Teledyne had carried on manufacturing activity since 1962, and for which clean-up costs were estimated to be $20.93 milhon. ESLIC had insured Teledyne the year after the site began operations, from July 1, 1963 to July 1, 1964, under a general liability policy that covered losses in excess of $50,000 and up to $1.95 million. CU allocated $843,000 of the $2.2 million to that site and billed its reinsurers accordingly. All loss in excess of $500,000 was covered by a reinsurer not a party to this case. Of the remaining $450,000, CU billed half, or $225,-000, to Seven Provinces. It then billed $180,-000 of its half of the risk to a pool of treaty reinsurers, leaving CU itself to absorb only $45,000 of the loss. 1 '

CU brings this suit in order to recover the $225,000 it billed Seven Provinces, as well as damages and attorneys fees under Mass. Gen. L. ch. 93A, for Seven Provinces’ failure to satisfy this claim for over four years. CU bases its claim for $225,000 in reinsurance on its internal records of the reinsurance relationship between the parties and on the fa-cultative certificate 2 (“fac. cert.”) formalizing that relationship. It bases its claim for 93A damages in part on the unique mores of the *52 industry, notably the obligation of “uberri-mae fidei,” the obligation to act with utmost good faith. See Compagnie de Reassurance d’Ile de France v. New England Reinsurance Corp., 944 F.Supp. 986, 992-94 (D.Mass.1996).

Seven Provinces raises several defenses to this claim. (1) The net retention claim: Seven Provinces argues primarily that the facul-tative certificate links' its reinsurance obligation to the amount of risk ESLIC (now Commercial Union) retained. Because $180,-000 of ESLIC’s $225,000 portion of the Tele-dyne risk was covered by a pool of treaty reinsurers, Seven Provinces’ obligation was reduced by equal measure, to $45,000. (2) The allocation claim: Seven Provinces has also raised a range of challenges to CU’s decision to allocate $843,000 of the $2.2 million Teledyne settlement to the semiconductor site: that it was not done in good faith; that it wrongly billed reinsurers for ex gratia payments, not required by the insurance policies that had been settled, but instead given voluntarily in order to obtain the general release from all future claims; that it failed to allocate any payments to a “difference in conditions” — essentially, property damage— policy ESLIC had issued to Teledyne; and that the entirety of Teledyne’s claim against CU was barred by the “owned property” exclusion in the ESLIC-Teledyne policy reinsured by Seven Provinces. (3) The 93A Claim: Seven Provinces argues in part that the mores of the reinsurance industry have changes and its behavior conforms to 1990s standards.

The Court heard six days of testimony and admitted numerous pages of exhibits documenting the relationship between the parties and between CU, ESLIC, and Teledyne. Specifically, several years of correspondence between the parties about the Teledyne claim were authenticated and made part of the record. Each side offered the testimony of the officers directly involved in this dispute, as well as of an expert in the customs and practices of the highly specialized world of reinsurance.

This memorandum provides my findings of fact and conclusions of law in my resolution of all of CU’s claims against Seven Provinces.

I. FINDINGS OF FACT

A. The Formation of the Reinsurance Relationship

The background to the formation of the reinsurance relationship between Seven Provinces and ESLIC is undisputed. During the early 1960s, both ESLIC and Seven Provinces operated in California through a managing general agent, Sayre & Toso. Sayre & Toso was authorized to write insurance and reinsurance business for ESLIC, Seven Provinces, and several other insurance companies. On October 29, 1963, it wrote a policy of reinsurance between ESLIC and Seven Provinces, memorializing that relationship in a facultative certificate, # SP016069. The facultative certificate was made up of a series of numbered, standardized forms. The first page of the certificate was a Seven Provinces’ form and the number beginning “SP” indicates “Seven Provinces,” making Seven Provinces technically the drafter of the agreement.

By the terms of the facultative certificate, the reinsurance relationship with Seven Provinces covered the ESLIC policy with Teledyne, policy #E506432, for the same period as the underlying policy, from July 1, 1963 to July 1, 1964, and on the same risks. The ESLIC policy with Teledyne was a general liability policy, covering risks in excess of $50,000 and up to $1,950,000. As a liability policy, it excluded coverage for damage to property owned by Teledyne. ESLIC had obtained reinsurance for all losses above $500,000 from another reinsurer, listed as “Brandt” in CU’s records. 3 Of the remaining $450,000 of risk it retained, ESLIC ceded $225,000 to Seven Provinces. Thus, by the express terms of the facultative certificate, Seven Provinces agreed that should Teledyne make a claim against ESLIC for $450,0000 under the ESLIC-Teledyne liability policy, *53 Seven Provinces would in effect reimburse ESLIC for half its loss.

However, Seven Provinces’ obligation was not unconditional; it was qualified by a “net retention” provision. After setting out the amount of reinsurance and the nature of the risk reinsured, the last page of the certificate contained the following paragraph 2:

[1] Being a reinsurance of and warranted same NETT 4

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Bluebook (online)
9 F. Supp. 2d 49, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9065, 1998 WL 327938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-union-insurance-v-seven-provinces-insurance-mad-1998.