Continental Casualty Co. v. Employers Insurance Co. of Wausau

85 A.D.3d 403, 923 N.Y.S.2d 538
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 2, 2011
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 85 A.D.3d 403 (Continental Casualty Co. v. Employers Insurance Co. of Wausau) 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
Continental Casualty Co. v. Employers Insurance Co. of Wausau, 85 A.D.3d 403, 923 N.Y.S.2d 538 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Judgment, Supreme Court, New York County (Richard E Braun, J.), entered April 22, 2009, after a nonjury trial resulting in findings of fact and conclusions of law (same court and Justice), dated October 14, 2008, as amended November 24, 2008 and December 5, 2008 (also brought up for review), declaring, inter alia, (1) that plaintiffs Continental Casualty Company and American Casualty Company of Reading, Pa. (collectively CNA), defendant Employers Insurance Company of Wausau (Wausau) and defendant Employers Liability Assurance Company now known as OneBeacon America Insurance Company (OneBeacon) each had and has an equal duty to defend defendant Robert A. Keasbey Company (Keasbey) in past and future asbestos-related personal injury actions (asbestos actions) against Keasbey from the commencement of each asbestos action until it is established that the asbestos exposure alleged therein did not occur at a work site or within a time period covered by the insurer’s policy, (2) that CNA is entitled to be reimbursed by OneBeacon for one quarter of the cost of defending Keasbey in the asbestos actions to the date of judgment, and (3) that indemnity obligations with respect to each asbestos action are to be allocated pro rata to each year of asbestos exposure at a given site, with each insurer obligated to pay for [404]*404years and sites within its coverage and with any OneBeacon coverage to be deemed primary to any CNA or Wausau coverage, unanimously reversed, on the law and the facts, without costs, the judgment vacated, Supreme Court’s findings of fact reversed to the extent inconsistent herewith and new findings substituted as set forth below, and it is declared that (1) CNA has no further obligation to defend or indemnify Keasbey in asbestos actions pursuant to the primary comprehensive general liability insurance policies it issued to Keasbey covering, in aggregate, the period from February 15, 1970 to February 15, 1987, and Wausau has no further obligation to defend or indemnify Keasbey in asbestos actions pursuant to the primary comprehensive general liability insurance policies it issued to Keasbey covering, in aggregate, the period from February 15, 1968 to February 15, 1970, (2) CNA is not entitled to be reimbursed by OneBeacon for any portion of the costs of defending Keasbey in asbestos actions from March 1, 2003 to September 30, 2007, or for any portion of the costs of defending the same actions after September 30, 2007, because CNA has failed to establish that it gave OneBeacon timely notice of any of those actions, (3) to the extent CNA has paid for Keasbey’s defense in any asbestos actions commenced against Keasbey after September 30, 2007, any claim by CNA against OneBeacon for reimbursement of such defense costs is barred unless CNA establishes that it provided OneBeacon with timely notice of that particular action under the terms of the OneBeacon policies, and CNA’s complaint dismissed to the extent it seeks relief different from, in addition to, or inconsistent with the foregoing, and the matter remanded for entry of judgment consistent herewith.

Keasbey (which ceased operating in the mid-1990s and was dissolved in 2001) installed asbestos insulation at numerous sites in the tri-state area over many years. Wausau issued Keasbey two successive primary comprehensive general liability (CGL) policies covering the period from February 1968 to February 1970, and CNA issued Keasbey 17 successive primary CGL policies covering the period from February 1970 to February 1987. None of the foregoing CNA and Wausau policies contains an asbestos exclusion.

Although Keasbey never purchased a policy directly from OneBeacon, it was covered by two “wrap-up” policies issued by OneBeacon, each of which provided liability coverage to all contractors on a specified construction project at the Indian Point Nuclear Power Plant for claims arising from work on that project during the policy period. Specifically, OneBeacon issued [405]*405one wrap-up policy covering all contractors involved in construction work at Unit 2 at Indian Point from February 1966 to April 1974 and another, similar, policy covering all contractors involved in construction work at Unit 3 at Indian Point from June 1967 to July 1977. During the periods of these policies, Keasbey installed asbestos-containing insulation in the turbines at Unit 2 and Unit 3 at Indian Point, which in each case involved approximately two months of work. Each of the foregoing OneBeacon policies provides that it “applies only to work performed at the [specified] project.” Neither OneBeacon policy contains an asbestos exclusion provision.

Pursuant to its policies’ products/completed operations coverage, CNA began defending Keasbey in asbestos actions in the 1970s. This coverage under Keasbey’s primary CNA policies was exhausted by 1992, as was similar coverage under the Wausau policies and all other primary policies. Thereafter, excess insurers, including CNA under policies other than those at issue on this appeal, assumed Keasbey’s defense. CNA continued to defend Keasbey as an excess insurer until August 2000, when it believed its excess coverage had been exhausted.1 Another excess insurer continued to defend Keasbey until 2002.

In May 2001, attorneys for claimants in the asbestos actions sent CNA a letter asserting that Keasbey’s exposure to asbestos liability fell within the scope of the CNA primary policies’ operations coverage, which (unlike the long-exhausted products/ completed operations coverage) has no aggregate limit. CNA responded by filing suit against the claimants in October 2001, seeking a declaration that Keasbey’s potential asbestos liability is not within the CNA policies’ operations coverage. To avoid default judgments, however, CNA took over Keasbey’s defense in 2002.

The claimants’ assertion that their claims fell within CNA’s operations coverage prompted CNA to undertake a review of Keasbey’s records to determine whether any other primary coverage was available. Since the 1980s, those records had been in the possession of the law firm CNA had retained to defend Keasbey in the asbestos cases. In February 2003, CNA found evidence in Keasbey’s records that Keasbey was covered by the aforementioned OneBeacon wrap-up policies. By letter dated February 24, 2003, CNA notified OneBeacon of an asbestos action brought by a claimant (Michael O’Reilly) allegedly exposed to asbestos while working at Indian Point from 1968 to 1975, [406]*406and tendering the defense of the case to OneBeacon. Thereafter, in April 2003, CNA commenced the present declaratory judgment action (superseding the action commenced in October 2001), naming as defendants (in addition to the personal injury claimants, who have been certified as a class) OneBeacon and Wausau.2 CNA’s complaint seeks a judgment declaring, inter alia, (1) that Keasbey’s potential asbestos liability falls under the exhausted products/completed operations coverage of the CNA policies (not the operations coverage), (2) that OneBeacon is obligated to assume Keasbey’s defense in present and future asbestos actions, and (3) that OneBeacon is obligated to reimburse CNA for the amounts the latter has spent on Keasbey’s defense in asbestos actions since March 1, 2003 (after the February 24, 2003 letter).3

On the appeal taken from the order entered after the Phase I trial in this matter (60 AD3d 128 [2008], supra),

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 A.D.3d 403, 923 N.Y.S.2d 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-casualty-co-v-employers-insurance-co-of-wausau-nyappdiv-2011.