Grode v. Mutual Fire, Marine & Inland Insurance Co.

688 A.2d 233, 1996 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 559
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 26, 1996
StatusPublished

This text of 688 A.2d 233 (Grode v. Mutual Fire, Marine & Inland Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grode v. Mutual Fire, Marine & Inland Insurance Co., 688 A.2d 233, 1996 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 559 (Pa. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

[234]*234MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

LORD, Senior Judge.

We have before us a petition to terminate the rehabilitation of The Mutual Fire, Marine and Inland Insurance Company (Mutual Fire) and a request for discharge.

Ten years ago, on December 8, 1986, this Court granted the petition of George F. Grode, then Commonwealth Insurance Commissioner, to rehabilitate Mutual Fire. In his petition, Commissioner Grode sought, with the consent of Mutual Fire’s then officers and directors, inter alia, his appointment as statutory rehabilitator of Mutual Fire, as well as the authority to take possession of its assets in order to manage and administer them under orders of this Court. Section 515(a), Article V of the Act of May 17, 1921, P.S. 789 as amended, 40 P.S. §§ 221.1— 221.63 (Act). Commissioner Grode submitted a proposed plan for the rehabilitation of Mutual Fire when he filed his petition.

President Judge James Crumlish, Jr. thereupon directed the rehabilitator to provide meaningful notice to all policyholders, creditors and others on whom it was determined the rehabilitation would have a substantial effect. The Court also appointed a policyholders committee. Numerous objections to the proposed rehabilitation plan were lodged and a hearing date on the plan and objections thereto was fixed for June 3,1987. The proposed plan, with alterations, was thereafter approved on June 26, 1987, and the statutory rehabilitator, by now Insurance Commissioner Constance Foster, was directed to report to the Court on the progress of the rehabilitation and the feasibility of implementing the plan. After an interim report and a requested extension of time, the statutory rehabilitator filed her report on May 2, 1988. It was decided at that time that any rehabilitation of an estate of this magnitude would require the appointment of a deputy rehabilitator on site every day as well as the retention of legal counsel and other staff to accomplish the paramount goal of collecting those reeoverables comprising a significant portion of the estate’s assets.

The statutory rehabilitator’s report on the 1987 plan indicated that the plan was not feasible, and the Court, after consultation with the rehabilitator, directed her to submit an amended plan. In the interim, notices of balance due were sent to all reinsurers of Mutual Fire. An amended plan was formulated and filed on January 31, 1989. Again, numerous objections were filed. The Court held hearings on the amended 1989 plan and those provisions of it to which objections were made. On consideration of those objections, upholding some and rejecting others, the Court modified the 1989 amended plan and approved it as modified. The Court directed the statutory rehabilitator to begin implementation of the plan immediately.1

Under that plan, the statutory rehabili-tator was to implement a proportional payment method for policyholder claims. The proportional payment plan called for the re-habilitator to issue, from cash available to the estate, interim partial payment of Class 4 policyholder claims as those claims become adjusted. Cash available was to be allocated to adjusted claims, case reserves for unadjusted claims, IBNR (incurred but not reported) loss estimates and an estimation margin. The total amount of Class 4 adjusted claims and actuarial estimates of case reserve and IBNR was to be determined as of a certain record date (but at least yearly).

Under the proportional payment method, the statutory rehabilitator was to determine, in her expertise and discretion, and on Court review, the percentage to be paid on each adjusted claim, given Mutual Fire’s cash available. The percentage would increase cumulatively each year by the record date. For example, if sufficient cash was available, claimants would receive fifteen percent payment of their claims. If collections were such that, at the next record date, a thirty percent payment could be made, claimants whose claims were newly adjusted received [235]*235thirty percent payment, while those receiving fifteen percent on the previous record date received an additional fifteen percent payment to equalize payment on claims, and the process was to continue, if possible, until one hundred percent payment on all adjusted claims was effected. This methodology obviated the need to wait until every last estate asset was collected in order to ensure equitable distribution of those assets. It meant immediate, albeit partial, payment on policyholder claims. In addition, as part of this program, immediate one hundred percent payment of claims of $5,000 or less was approved by the Court. This “small claims” payment saved the estate the administrative costs of keeping open files of this size. A special provision was enacted for full payment of claims on a hardship basis, when certain financial or other criteria were met.

The rehabilitation plan also established a Class 6 Fund, for the general unsecured creditor class of claims, which class was comprised primarily of insurance entities who had ceded portions of their business to Mutual Fire to reinsure. Twenty-five percent of all reinsurance recoverables Mutual Fire collected was to be placed in a segregated account to be used for payment to Class 6 creditors only after all claims of a higher priority had been paid.

Although appeals were taken from this Court’s order modifying and approving the 1989 plan, requests for stays pending appeals were denied and payment of 516 “small” claims — those' under $5,000 — was made on April 5,1990. Thereafter, in December 1990, the first distribution under the proportional payment methodology, representing payment of twenty percent of all adjusted claims, was made. Mutual Fire distributed $17.2 million on 1,035 claims. The Class 6 fund was also established at that time. In early 1991, President Judge Crumlish established, pursuant to Section 508 of the Act, 40 P.S. § 221.8, financial and claims reporting procedures, requiring the rehabilitator to file quarterly reports that included, inter alia, an income statement, statutory surplus and reserve analyses, schedules of actual-to-budget expenditures, monthly cash flows, and asset collection and claims caseload summaries.2 In December 1991, another twenty percent payment was made in the amount of $26 million on adjusted claims over $5,000, bringing the payout on claims to forty cents on the dollar.

In August 1992, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, on consideration of the appeals taken, and with a single modification affecting pre-rehabilitation judgment creditors, affirmed this Court’s order upholding the rehabilitation plan. Writs of certiorari of the Court’s order were thereafter denied by the United States Supreme Court on January 19, 1993. A seventy percent payment was made in December 1993, and a one hundred percent payment of all known, adjusted claims was made the following year, with a one hundred percent reserve established for all the remaining unsettled, unadjusted claims. The Court then directed the rehabilitator to pay outstanding claims as they became adjusted.3

Assets henceforth collected would now be available to distribute to the Class 5 surety bond program participants and to the Class 6, general unsecured creditor claimants, as well as to claims made after the Class 4 bar date (Class 8 claims). In 1995, a bar date for claims of general unsecured creditors was established and proofs of claims from those claimants were submitted to Mutual Fire.

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Related

Grode v. Mutual Fire, Marine & Inland Insurance
572 A.2d 798 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1990)
Foster v. Mutual Fire, Marine & Inland Insurance
676 A.2d 652 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1996)
Foster v. Mutual Fire, Marine & Inland Insurance
614 A.2d 1086 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1992)
Amerinet, Inc. v. Xerox Corp.
506 U.S. 1080 (Supreme Court, 1993)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
688 A.2d 233, 1996 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grode-v-mutual-fire-marine-inland-insurance-co-pacommwct-1996.