Global Reinsurance Corporation of America v. Century Indemnity Company

CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 14, 2017
Docket124
StatusPublished

This text of Global Reinsurance Corporation of America v. Century Indemnity Company (Global Reinsurance Corporation of America v. Century Indemnity Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Global Reinsurance Corporation of America v. Century Indemnity Company, (N.Y. 2017).

Opinion

================================================================= This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the New York Reports. ----------------------------------------------------------------- No. 124 Global Reinsurance Corporation of America, successor in interest to Constitution Reinsurance Corporation, Respondent, v. Century Indemnity Company, successor in interest to CCI Insurance Company, successor in interest to Insurance Company of North America, Appellant.

Jonathan D. Hacker, for appellant. David C. Frederick, for respondent. Continental Casualty Company, et al.; Aon Benfield U.S., et al., amici curiae.

FEINMAN, J.: The narrow issue before us pertains to the scope of our prior ruling in Excess Insurance Co. Ltd. v Factory Mutual Insurance Co. (3 NY3d 577 [2004]). Pursuant to Rule 500.27 of this Court, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second

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Circuit has certified the following question to us: "Does the decision of the New York Court of Appeals in [Excess] impose either a rule of construction, or a strong presumption, that a per occurrence liability cap in a reinsurance contract limits the total reinsurance available under the contract to the amount of the cap regardless of whether the underlying policy is understood to cover expenses such as, for instance, defense costs?" (Global Reinsurance Corporation of America v Century Indemnity Company, 843 F3d 120, 128 [2d Cir 2017]).1 We now answer the certified question in the negative. Under New York law generally, and in Excess in particular, there is neither a rule of construction nor a presumption that a per occurrence liability limitation in a reinsurance contract caps all obligations of the reinsurer, such as payments made to reimburse the reinsured's defense costs. I. Reinsurance is the insurance of one insurer by another (see Matter of Union Indem. Ins. Co. of N.Y., 89 NY2d 94, 105-106 [1996]). "When entering into a reinsurance contract, an

1 The parties are Global Reinsurance Corporation of America f/k/a Constitution Reinsurance Corporation (Global), a reinsurance company, and Century Indemnity Company f/k/a Insurance Company of North America (Century), an insurance company that reinsured some of its policies with Global. The underlying facts and procedural posture of this dispute are set forth in the opinion and order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, filed August 15, 2014 (2014 WL 4054260 [SD NY Aug. 15, 2014]) and the order of the Second Circuit, filed December 8, 2016, certifying this question (843 F3d 120).

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insurance company agrees to pay a particular premium to a reinsurer in return for reimbursement of a portion of its potential financial exposure under certain direct insurance policies it has issued to its customers" (Travelers Cas. & Sur. Co. v Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's of London, 96 NY2d 583, 587 [2001]). "Through this indemnity relationship, the reinsured seeks to 'cede' or spread its risk of loss among one or more reinsurers" (id.). Through this process, reinsurance permits the cedent insurer to "minimize its exposure to catastrophic loss," "reduce the amount of the legally required reserves held for the protection of policyholders," and "increase [its] ability to underwrite other policies or make other investments" (Matter of Midland Ins. Co., 79 NY2d 253, 258 [1992]). There are two types of reinsurance: treaty and facultative. Under a reinsurance treaty, the cedent transfers to the reinsurer its risk under an entire line of business spanning multiple insurance policies (see Travelers, 96 NY2d at 587-588; Sumitomo Marine & Fire Ins. Co., Ltd.-U.S. Branch v Cologne Reinsurance Co. of America, 75 NY2d 295, 301 [1990]). By contrast, in facultative reinsurance, the reinsurer agrees to indemnify the cedent for all or a portion of the cedent's risk under a single policy in the event of loss (see 1A Couch on Ins. § 9:3 [3d ed. 2016]; Travelers, 96 NY2d at 587). In other words, "[f]acultative reinsurance is policy-specific" (Travelers, 96 NY2d at 587). For purposes of this certified question, we are

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concerned only with facultative reinsurance.2 The coverage provided under a facultative reinsurance contract is "memorialized in a certificate" (Barry R. Ostrager & May Kay Vyskocil, Modern Reinsurance Law and Practice § 1:03 [3d ed. 2014]; accord William Hoffman, Facultative Reinsurance Contract Formation, Documentation and Integration, 38 Tort Trial & Ins Prac L J 763, 809 [Spring 2003] ["By a certificate, the reinsurer attests that the facultative reinsurance placement is complete and the contract in effect"]). These certificates are usually "standard forms" (North River Ins. Co. v CIGNA Reinsurance Co., 52 F3d 1194, 1199 [3d Cir 1995]), "short and concise, using terms of art rather than lengthy, legalistic explications to define the obligations of the parties" (Ostrager & Vyskocil, § 2:02; see Sumitomo, 75 NY2d at 302). Typically, the facultative reinsurer is obligated to indemnify the cedent up to a stated upper limit (see Travelers, 96 NY2d at 588). For example, one of the certificates relevant to the underlying dispute, which the parties refer to as "Certificate X," reads:

2 The question did not explicitly limit itself to "facultative" reinsurance. However, because the question is premised on what "the underlying policy . . . cover[s]" (Global Reinsurance, 843 F3d at 128), we understand it to be a question solely about facultative reinsurance, rather than one about reinsurance treaties, which do not have a single "underlying policy."

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"Item 1 - Type of Insurance Blanket General Liability, excluding Automobile Liability as original. Item 2 - Policy Limits and Application $1,000,000. each occurrence as original. Item 3 - [Cedent] Company Retention The first $500,000. of liability as shown in Item #2 above. Item 4 - Reinsurance Accepted $250,000. part of $500,000. each occurrence as original excess of the [cedent] Company's retention as shown in Item #3 above. Item 5 - Basis Excess of Loss" (Global Reinsurance, 843 F3d at 123). Certificate X reinsures an underlying insurance policy of $1 million per occurrence, with the cedent retaining the first $500,000 of such liability, and the reinsurer assuming up to $250,000 in excess thereof. An underlying third-party liability insurance policy will often require the insurer to either pay the insured's costs in defending covered claims, or to provide legal counsel and defend the claim itself (see e.g. Seaboard Sur. Co. v Gillette Co., 64 NY2d 304, 309-310 [1984]). These expenses are distinct from indemnity payments for actual losses (see id. at 310 ["Though policy coverage is often denominated as 'liability insurance,' where the insurer has made promises to defend 'it is clear that (the coverage) is, in fact, 'litigation insurance' as well"], quoting International Paper Co. v Continental Cas. Co.,

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35 NY2d 322, 326 [1974]). One recurring issue in reinsurance disputes is whether these defense costs, insofar as they are reinsured by a facultative reinsurance policy, count towards the limit in the reinsurance accepted clause ($250,000 in the example above). Here, Global averred that, as of the filing of its motion for summary judgment, Century billed it $327,149 under Certificate X, consisting of $82,627 in loss and $244,522 in expense. Global argued that, under the reinsurance accepted clause, its obligation to Century for both loss and expense payments under Certificate X is capped at $250,000 (see Global Reinsurance, 843 F3d at 123).

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