Halliburton Co. v. Highlands Insurance Group, Inc.

811 A.2d 277, 2002 Del. LEXIS 487, 2002 WL 31770323
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 11, 2002
Docket156,2001
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 811 A.2d 277 (Halliburton Co. v. Highlands Insurance Group, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Halliburton Co. v. Highlands Insurance Group, Inc., 811 A.2d 277, 2002 Del. LEXIS 487, 2002 WL 31770323 (Del. 2002).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This matter is before us again, this time on appellants’ motion for reargument. The procedural history of this case can be summarized briefly as follows.

Highlands Insurance Group, Inc. and its affiliate (collectively referred to as “Highlands”) brought this action against Halliburton Company and its affiliates (collectively referred to as “Halliburton”) in the Court of Chancery for declaratory and in-junctive relief. Both of the principal corporate entities are Delaware corporations. The central issue in the case ultimately involves insurance coverage for potential exposure of Halliburton to substantial asbestos claims. The contractual issue decided by the Court of Chancery and affirmed by an en Banc decision of this Court is that the operative documents that effected a spinoff of Highlands by Halliburton (the “Spin-off Documents”) terminated the relevant Highlands insurance policies (the “Fixed Cost Policies”) that may otherwise have provided coverage to Halliburton for its potential exposure to the asbestos claims.

The Court of Chancery decided the case adversely to Halliburton on cross motions for judgment on the pleadings. The factual background and the basis for the decision are set forth in detail in a memorandum opinion of the Court of Chancery which we incorporate herein by reference. 1

This Court originally heard oral argument before a panel 2 and then had rear-gument en Banc. 3 The Court en Banc affirmed the judgment of the Court of Chancery on the basis of that Court’s memorandum opinion. 4 Halliburton moved for reargument. At our request, a response to the motion was filed by Highlands. In this per curiam opinion we deny the motion for reargument.

Halliburton raises several issues in its motion for reargument. First, it contends that the Court of Chancery “clearly misstated the settled Delaware law on the right to plead alternatively with regard to the ambiguity of a contract.” Second, Halliburton contends that the Court of Chancery and this Court erred by not addressing why the Halliburton defendants “are, as a matter of law on the pleadings, not entitled to have the opportunity to prove mutual mistake.” Fundamentally, Halliburton insists that the Court of Chancery not only was wrong as a matter of law on the central issue of the interpretation of the Spin-off Documents, but also that the case is of such importance that “the stature and national position of this Court calls for a written opinion to deal with a case of this magnitude on plenary review.”

On the matter of the necessity for this Court to write an opinion, there is no need to do so. We thoroughly reviewed the decision below, the briefs of the parties and the contentions of counsel at oral argument. We considered carefully and thoroughly every argument and every authority advanced by the parties. When a trial court, as in this case, has correctly stated the facts and the law on the central *279 and dispositive issue, there is usually no need for this Court to restate the same analysis as that of the trial court, even if we would have stated differently some peripheral issues of which Halliburton now complains. We have again reviewed Halliburton’s claims on reargument and we again adopt the analysis of the Court of Chancery on the central and dispositive issue-namely, that the Spin-off Documents unambiguously show that the Fixed Cost Policies at issue here were terminated at the closing of the Spinoff.

Here the central question is one of contract interpretation. This case decides no landmark or novel corporate issues or matters of significant precedential value. The decision of the Court of Chancery, which we have adopted on the merits of the contractual dispute, marks no new advance in, or departure from, established Delaware law. To be sure, the outcome of this case may well affect the parties in a very significant economic manner. Many cases in the Delaware Courts, of course, have that effect. But that does not mean that this Court, as an appellate court, having comprehensively examined and analyzed the record, the authorities and the decision of the trial court, should rewrite in our words what a learned and very sophisticated trial judge has correctly written in his decision on the central issue in the case.

On the merits of the central issue, we agree with the Vice Chancellor’s opinion: All insurance policies between Highlands and the Halliburton entities, other than the policies that were specifically excepted from the effect of those termination provisions, were terminated as a result of the Spin-off Documents. 5 Contrary to Halliburton’s argument, the Insurance Products and Services Agreement (the “IPSA” and one of the Spin-off Documents) does not identify the Fixed Cost Policies as having been excepted from the termination. This is the key issue that Halliburton argued before this Court as well as the Court of Chancery. It was thoroughly considered by both Courts, neither of which accepted Halliburton’s argument. The motion for reargument predicated on this point is simply a replowing of old ground. 6

Halliburton argues in its motion, as it had already argued before the Court of Chancery and this Court, that the Spin-off Documents are ambiguous and the trial court should have examined Halliburton’s proffered extrinsic evidence. 7 We agree *280 with the Vice Chancellor that the documents are not ambiguous. 8 Accordingly extrinsic evidence was properly excluded. 9

Halliburton claims that, contrary to Court of Chancery Rule 8(e)(2), the Court of Chancery would not permit it to plead in the alternative. Halliburton claims that it was precluded from arguing that the Spinoff Documents unambiguously favor Halliburton or, alternatively, that they are ambiguous and Halliburton should be permitted to offer extrinsic evidence. 10 As we read the Vice Chancellor’s opinion, he rejected on the merits the alternative argument that the documents were ambiguous. The decision of the Court of Chancery establishes no rule that one is precluded as a matter of law from arguing in the alter-nátive. There is no doubt that alternative pleading, if clearly set forth as such, is permissible. 11

Finally, Halliburton argues that it was improperly precluded from arguing the defense of mutual mistake that it had pleaded. But, as we read the Vice Chancellor’s opinion, he did address Halliburton’s mutual mistake argument and rejected it. Without endorsing the entirety of the Vice Chancellor’s language, he was correct, in our view, in his rejection of Halliburton’s mutual mistake argument. 12

*281

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Bluebook (online)
811 A.2d 277, 2002 Del. LEXIS 487, 2002 WL 31770323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halliburton-co-v-highlands-insurance-group-inc-del-2002.