General Insurance Co. of America v. Walter E. Campbell Co.

107 F. Supp. 3d 466, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 68058, 2015 WL 3441951
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedMay 26, 2015
DocketCase No. WMN-12-3307
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 107 F. Supp. 3d 466 (General Insurance Co. of America v. Walter E. Campbell Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Insurance Co. of America v. Walter E. Campbell Co., 107 F. Supp. 3d 466, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 68058, 2015 WL 3441951 (D. Md. 2015).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

WILLIAM M. NICKERSON, Senior District Judge.

Before the Court are the following motions: a Motion to Certify Questions of Law to the Court of Appeals of Maryland filed by the Walter E. Campbell Company, Inc. (WECCO), ECF No. 219; a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, filed by United States Fire Insurance Company (U.S. Fire), The Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc. (The Hartford),1 St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company (St. Paul), Continental Insurance Company (Continental), National Indemnity Company (National Indemnity), and Plaintiff General Insurance Company of America (General Insurance) (collectively, Certain Insurers), ECF No. 220; WECCO’s motion to strike the evidence offered in support of Certain Insurers’ summary judgment motion, ECF No. 223; a Motion for Voluntary Dismissal filed by General Insurance and WECCO, ECF No. 237; and a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment filed by Property & Casualty Insurance Guaranty Corporation (PCIGC), ECF No. 239.2 The motions are all ripe. Upon [468]*468review of the filings and the applicable law, the Court determines that no hearing is necessary, Local Rule 105.6, and that: (1) WECCO’s motion to certify questions of law will be denied; (2) Certain Insurer’s motion for partial summary judgment will be granted; (3) WECCO’s motion to strike will be denied; (4) the motion for voluntary dismissal will be granted; and (5) PCIGC’s motion for partial summary judgment will be granted.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This action involves an insurance coverage dispute between WECCO — a company which for decades engaged in the business of handling, installing, disturbing, removing, and selling asbestos-containing insulation materials — and several of its insurers. Certain Insurers issued policies for WEC-CO between November 19, 1972, and April 1, 1983, a time period which Certain Insurers assert was after WECCO ceased selling or installing asbestos-containing products. This action already has a long procedural history and one that has been entangled with a parallel action that is currently resting in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia. The Walter E. Campbell Co. v. Gen. Ins. Co. of Am., Civ. No. 13-109 (D.C.) (the D.C. Action). A brief review of the procedural history relevant to the pending motions follows. A more detailed account of the procedural history of this action and the D.C. Action was provided in this Court’s previous opinions dated June 11, 2013, and January 16, 2014. ECF Nos. 131 and 146.

This action was filed in this Court by General Insurance, one of WECCO’s insurers, on November 9, 2012. Two months later, on January 7, 2013, WECCO filed the parallel action in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia raising essentially the same issues as raised here. The D.C. Action was subsequently removed to the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, remanded back to the Superior Court, removed again, and remanded again. On September 12, 2014, the Superior Court granted Certain Insurers’ motion to stay that action in light of the pendency of this action.

As the D.C. Action bounced back and forth, WECCO has made repeated efforts to prevent the resolution of the dispute between the parties from taking place in this Court. WECCO moved to realign the parties so that this case could be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, ECF No. 40; asked this Court to abstain from the exercise of its jurisdiction, ECF No. 104; and, in the pending motion to certify questions of law, ECF No. 219, asked this Court to have the Maryland Court of Appeals, instead of this Court, decide the central issues in this dispute. In its supplement to the motion to certify, ECF No. 238, WECCO again prays, as an alternative remedy to certification of questions of law to the Maryland Court of Appeals, that this Court stay this action in deference to the D.C. Action.

The motivation behind WECCO’s persistence is quite clear and has been the subject of commentary by both this Court and the Superior Court for the District of Columbia. As explained below, there is binding precedent in the Fourth Circuit on the two critical issues in this dispute — precedent that is unfavorable to WECCO’s position on both issues — and, by seeking another forum, WECCO hopes to avoid the application of that precedent. In all fairness, both courts have also recognized that [469]*469General Insurance engaged in its own forum shopping, electing to file' its action in this Court to take advantage of that favorable Fourth Circuit precedent, as opposed to filing in a Maryland state court where that precedent would not be binding.

At one point in this action, WECCO also expressed some uncertainty, real or feigned, as to whether Maryland law should apply to this dispute. In support of its earlier maneuvers to have this dispute resolved in the District of Columbia courts, WECCO suggested that “the law of the District of Columbia applies to some or all of the issues in this dispute.” ECF No. 104-1 at 15. In response to a previous motion for partial summary judgment filed by Certain Insurers, ECF No. 200, WEC-CO opposed the motion in part on the ground that Certain Insurers had submitted insufficient evidence to support the conclusion that Maryland law applied to the policies at issue. ECF No. 211 at 11-12. On June 11, 2014, this Court denied the previous motion for partial summary judgment as premature and permitted three months of limited discovery concerning choice of law issues. ECF No. 213. That discovery appears to have confirmed what was suspected all along — that Maryland law applies to this dispute — as WEC-CO makes no further mention of any unsettled choice of law issues in its motion to certify questions of law to the Maryland Court of Appeals.

In opposing Certain Insurers’ previous motion for partial summary judgment, WECCO also challenged the completeness of insurance policies submitted with the motion. Accordingly, in its Order of June 11, 2014, the Court also permitted discovery on that issue during the three month discovery period. WECCO has renewed its purported concerns about the completeness of the policies in opposing the current summary judgment motions. The completeness of the policies is also one of the primary issues raised in WECCO’s motion to strike the materials submitted in support of Certain Insurers’ renewed motion for partial summary judgment.

Certain Insurers’ renewed motion for partial summary judgment is substantially the same as the previous motion that was denied as premature. In this motion, Certain Insurers seek general declarations concerning the law that governs the interpretation of the policies at issue, the scope of the “completed operations hazard” provisions contained in the policies, and the resolution of which party bears the burden of proving that a claim falls in or out of the scope of those provisions. In addition, Certain Insurers seek a declaration that the completed operations hazard provisions in their policies apply to the claims raised in two specific suits: Emiline T. Good, P.R. of the Estate of Paul Good (dec.) v. The Walter E. Campbell Company, Inc., et al, No. 24X11000424 (Baltimore City Cir.Ct.) (the Good claim) and Evelyn Cunningham, Surviving Spouse and Personal Representative of the Estate of Joseph A Cunningham (dec.), et al. v. The Walter E. Campbell Company, Inc., et al., No. 24X12000283 (Baltimore City Cir.Ct.) (the Cunningham claim). The claims against WECCO in these actions were settled in 2014.

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107 F. Supp. 3d 466, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 68058, 2015 WL 3441951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-insurance-co-of-america-v-walter-e-campbell-co-mdd-2015.