Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Ace American Reinsurance Co.

930 A.2d 701, 103 Conn. App. 319, 2007 Conn. App. LEXIS 340
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedAugust 14, 2007
DocketAC 25661
StatusPublished

This text of 930 A.2d 701 (Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Ace American Reinsurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Ace American Reinsurance Co., 930 A.2d 701, 103 Conn. App. 319, 2007 Conn. App. LEXIS 340 (Colo. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

PETERS, J.

General Statutes § 38a-27 (a) prohibits an unauthorized insurer from filing any pleading in an action instituted against it by “service made in accordance with the provisions of section 38a-25, section 38a-26 or section 38a-273” without (1) posting prepleading security in an amount sufficient to secure the payment of any final judgment which may be rendered against it or (2) “procur[ing] proper authorization to do an insurance business in this state.” The principal issue in this appeal is an issue of statutory construction about statutorily authorized methods of service of process to obtain access to prepleading security. The trial court held that the statutory reference to “service made in accordance with the provisions of section 38a-25” requires service to be made on the insurance commissioner or the secretary of the state and precludes service made on the unauthorized insurers’ contractually designated agents for service of process. Because we are persuaded that this holding assigns insufficient weight to General Statutes § 38a-25 (e), which authorizes service of process “in any other manner provided by law,” we disagree with the trial court’s judgment in favor of the defendant insurers. We are persuaded, however, that on remand, for constitutional reasons, the defendant insurers are entitled to a hearing about the amount *322 of prepleading security that they must provide. We reverse the judgment of the trial court and remand the case for further proceedings.

On April 1,2004, the plaintiffs, Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company and thirteen of its affiliates, 1 filed an amended fifty-seven count complaint seeking damages from the defendants, Ace American Reinsurance Company and various other reinsurance companies, 2 for alleged breach of numerous reinsurance contracts. In accordance with the terms of the reinsurance contracts, some of the defendants were served with process through service on identified agents in New York designated for that purpose.

On May 4, 2004, the defendants filed an answer and eighteen special defenses. In response, on May 29,2004, the plaintiffs filed a motion pursuant to § 38a-27 3 for *323 an order either to compel the posting of prepleading security or to strike the answer and special defenses of the defendants. In their opposition to this motion filed on June 25, 2004, the defendants who are involved in this appeal argued that the plaintiffs’ motions should be denied because service was not made on the defendants through the insurance commissioner as required by §§ 38a-27 and 38a-25.

On July 19, 2004, the court heard arguments from both parties and issued an oral decision denying the plaintiffs’ motion. In those arguments, the parties disagreed about whether service on the defendants’ contractual agent was service “made in accordance with the provisions of section 38a-25” and therefore triggering prepleading security under § 38a-27. In particular the court was required to interpret § 38a-25 (e), which provides that “[t]he right to effect service of process as provided under this section does not limit the right to serve legal process in any other manner provided by law,” and to decide whether that subsection permitted the plaintiffs to serve the defendants’ contractual agent for service for purposes of § 38a-27.

The court determined that § 38a-25 (e) did not allow the plaintiffs to serve the defendants through a contractual agent and still to obtain prepleading security. In denying the motion for prepleading security, the court *324 refused to “find that sections like § 38a-25 (e) [were] something that addresse[d] the method or manner of service, which is clearly what § 38a-27 (a) refers to in saying, ‘service made in accordance with the provisions of § 38a-25.’ ” Instead, the court explained that “§ 38a-25 (e) [was] a rule of construction that help[ed] govern . . . the other provisions of § 38a-25, but not a rule that creates or defines a manner or method of making service. . . . [0]ur statutes commonly include these sort of catchall provisions in service statutes, and . . . [it did not seem likely] that the purpose of including § 38a-25 (e) was to make the security statute applicable in a case involving reinsurance . . . but, rather, that is just the normal type of provision that our service statutes normally . . . use.”

On July 26, 2004, the plaintiffs appealed from the decision of the trial court to this court. On October 27, 2004, this court dismissed the appeal, without opinion, in response to the defendants’ motion to dismiss for lack of a final judgment. After granting the plaintiffs’ petition for certification to appeal, Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Ace American Reinsurance Co., 272 Conn. 910, 863 A.2d 701 (2004), our Supreme Court reversed the dismissal and remanded the case to this court to consider the merits of the plaintiffs’ appeal. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Ace American Reinsurance Co., 279 Conn. 220, 238, 901 A.2d 1164 (2006).

On appeal, the plaintiffs claim that the court improperly interpreted the language of the interconnected provisions of § § 38a-27 and 38a-25 and that they are entitled either to prepleading security or to a default judgment. The defendants, conversely, claim that the court properly construed § 38a-25 (e). In the alternative, they also claim that the plaintiffs are not entitled to invoke § 38a-27 because, as “industrial insureds,” they have no right to prepleading security. Finally, the defendants also *325 claim that, if we disagree with their statutory arguments, they are entitled, on remand, to a hearing prior to the court’s determination of the amount of prepleading security required to be posted. We agree with the plaintiffs as a matter of statutory interpretation, but agree with the defendants that they are entitled to a hearing on the amount of security that § 38a-27 requires them to post.

I

The plaintiffs’ only affirmative claim is that the court improperly interpreted § 38a-27 as requiring that service be made on the commissioner of insurance, pursuant to the substituted service provisions of § 38a-25, in order to obtain prepleading security. 4 The plaintiffs argue that the expansive nature of § 38a-25 (e), which provides that “[t]he right to effect service of process as provided under this section does not limit the right to serve legal process in any other manner provided by law,” permitted them to serve the defendants “in accordance with the provisions of § 38a-25,” as required by § 38a-27, by serving the defendants’ contractual agent for service of process.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
930 A.2d 701, 103 Conn. App. 319, 2007 Conn. App. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartford-accident-indemnity-co-v-ace-american-reinsurance-co-connappct-2007.