OPINION ON OBJECTION TO CLAIMS OF WILLIAM GAUNTT AND AARON ARONOV
A. POPE GORDON, Bankruptcy Judge.
The Enstar Group, Inc. filed an objection, as amended, to the unsecured claims of William Gauntt and Aaron Aronov.
The parties submitted the objection to the court based on briefs and arguments of counsel.
The claims arise out of Enstar Group’s alleged obligation to indemnify Gauntt and Aronov from claims against them as directors and officers of Enstar Group.
The undisputed facts are as follows.
Enstar Group entered into an indemnity agreement with its directors and officers based upon Enstar’s obligations under the corporate bylaws and certificate of incorporation of Enstar Group. Under the agreement, Enstar is obligated to indemnify Gauntt and Aronov for losses arising in connection with their employment as directors and officers of Enstar Group.
Enstar Group purchased liability insurance from Reliance Insurance Company to insure the directors and officers as well as to insure Enstar’s obligation to indemnify the directors and officers.
The policy contains two distinct insuring clauses.
The first clause insures the directors against loss which the directors become legally obligated to pay as a result of any claim first made during the policy period against them for a wrongful act.
The second clause insures Enstar Group against loss for which Enstar is required to indemnify the directors or for which Enstar has indemnified, to the extent permitted by law, the directors from a claim against them for a wrongful act.
The limit of liability for Reliance under the policy is $10 million.
The policy contains a $10 million retention applicable generally when Enstar Group is required or permitted by law to indemnify the directors and officers. The policy makes Reliance liable for all covered loss in excess of the retention up to the policy limit.
The policy period originally ran from March 1, 1989 to July 1, 1990. The period was extended by endorsement to July 1, 1991.
The policy contains a subrogation clause in which Reliance waives any right of subrogation against both Enstar Group and the directors.
Shareholders of Enstar Group filed numerous civil actions against Enstar and its officers and directors, including Gauntt, Aronov, and Friedman (another Enstar director), alleging wrongful acts.
The actions were con
solidated in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Alabama.
Enstar filed a voluntary petition for relief under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on May 31, 1991.
Gauntt and Aronov filed claims in the bankruptcy case seeking indemnification for costs incurred in connection with the civil litigation.
The claims were based on Ens-tar’s asserted obligations under the indemnity agreement, corporate bylaws, and articles of incorporation.
In October 1993, Gauntt, Aronov, and Friedman settled the claims against them in the civil litigation in the collective amount of $6,434,000.00.
Reliance Insurance Company paid the collective settlement amount for Gauntt, Aro-nov, and Friedman. Reliance paid $1,230,-193.37 for defense costs incurred by Gauntt and Aronov in connection with the civil litigation.
Gauntt, Aronov, Friedman, and Reliance Insurance Company executed a mutual release of liability under the policy which became effective with the settlement of the civil litigation. Enstar Group was not a party to the mutual release.
The mutual release states that the settlement amount and defense costs were paid under the insurance policy:
WHEREAS, the Insurer has agreed to contribute $6,434,000 ... under its Directors and Officers Liability Policy ... for the policy period March 1, 1989 to July 1, 1990 ...
WHEREAS, the Insurer elected to advance the reasonable costs and expenses incurred by the ... Insureds pursuant to the terms of the D & 0 Policy ...
The mutual release preserved the right of Gauntt and Aronov to indemnification from Enstar, if any, including the right of Reliance to pursue such indemnification claim by “sub-rogation.”
In February 1994, the estates of Gauntt and Aronov executed instruments assigning to Reliance the claims of the estates for indemnification from Enstar Group.
The claims are set forth in the proofs of claim, as amended, filed in the bankruptcy case.
Reliance seeks to recover from Enstar Group the payments made for Gauntt and Aronov under two theories — assignment and subrogation.
Assignment
Rebanee first asserts that Rebanee holds by assignment the indemnification claims of Gauntt and Aronov against Enstar Group.
The claims of Gauntt and Aronov are dependent on their rights under the indemnity agreement, the corporate bylaws, and the articles of incorporation.
The express purpose of the indemnity agreement is to provide the directors and officers with indemnification to the “fubest extent permitted by law”:
WHEREAS, the Company has previously caused its Certificate of Incorporation and By-laws to be amended so as to limit the habihty of and broaden the indemnification rights of its Directors and Officers as permitted under recent amendments to the Delaware General Corporation Law; and,
WHEREAS, the Company is desirous of providing its Directors and Officers with limitation of habihty and indemnification to the fullest extent permitted by law....
However, Enstar Group is not hable under the agreement to indemnify the directors and officers to the extent the directors and officers are paid by insurance.
Because the claims of Gauntt and Aronov were paid in full by insurance, Enstar Group has no habihty under the indemnity agreement to indemnify Gauntt, Aronov, or the assignee — Rebanee Insurance Company.
Rebanee argues, however, that it seeks indemnification solely under the corporate bylaws and not under the indemnity agreement. Reliance quotes the following provision from the indemnity agreement:
Nothing herein shah be deemed to diminish or otherwise restrict the Indemnitee’s right to indemnification under any provision of the Certificate of Incorporation,
By-laws,
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OPINION ON OBJECTION TO CLAIMS OF WILLIAM GAUNTT AND AARON ARONOV
A. POPE GORDON, Bankruptcy Judge.
The Enstar Group, Inc. filed an objection, as amended, to the unsecured claims of William Gauntt and Aaron Aronov.
The parties submitted the objection to the court based on briefs and arguments of counsel.
The claims arise out of Enstar Group’s alleged obligation to indemnify Gauntt and Aronov from claims against them as directors and officers of Enstar Group.
The undisputed facts are as follows.
Enstar Group entered into an indemnity agreement with its directors and officers based upon Enstar’s obligations under the corporate bylaws and certificate of incorporation of Enstar Group. Under the agreement, Enstar is obligated to indemnify Gauntt and Aronov for losses arising in connection with their employment as directors and officers of Enstar Group.
Enstar Group purchased liability insurance from Reliance Insurance Company to insure the directors and officers as well as to insure Enstar’s obligation to indemnify the directors and officers.
The policy contains two distinct insuring clauses.
The first clause insures the directors against loss which the directors become legally obligated to pay as a result of any claim first made during the policy period against them for a wrongful act.
The second clause insures Enstar Group against loss for which Enstar is required to indemnify the directors or for which Enstar has indemnified, to the extent permitted by law, the directors from a claim against them for a wrongful act.
The limit of liability for Reliance under the policy is $10 million.
The policy contains a $10 million retention applicable generally when Enstar Group is required or permitted by law to indemnify the directors and officers. The policy makes Reliance liable for all covered loss in excess of the retention up to the policy limit.
The policy period originally ran from March 1, 1989 to July 1, 1990. The period was extended by endorsement to July 1, 1991.
The policy contains a subrogation clause in which Reliance waives any right of subrogation against both Enstar Group and the directors.
Shareholders of Enstar Group filed numerous civil actions against Enstar and its officers and directors, including Gauntt, Aronov, and Friedman (another Enstar director), alleging wrongful acts.
The actions were con
solidated in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Alabama.
Enstar filed a voluntary petition for relief under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on May 31, 1991.
Gauntt and Aronov filed claims in the bankruptcy case seeking indemnification for costs incurred in connection with the civil litigation.
The claims were based on Ens-tar’s asserted obligations under the indemnity agreement, corporate bylaws, and articles of incorporation.
In October 1993, Gauntt, Aronov, and Friedman settled the claims against them in the civil litigation in the collective amount of $6,434,000.00.
Reliance Insurance Company paid the collective settlement amount for Gauntt, Aro-nov, and Friedman. Reliance paid $1,230,-193.37 for defense costs incurred by Gauntt and Aronov in connection with the civil litigation.
Gauntt, Aronov, Friedman, and Reliance Insurance Company executed a mutual release of liability under the policy which became effective with the settlement of the civil litigation. Enstar Group was not a party to the mutual release.
The mutual release states that the settlement amount and defense costs were paid under the insurance policy:
WHEREAS, the Insurer has agreed to contribute $6,434,000 ... under its Directors and Officers Liability Policy ... for the policy period March 1, 1989 to July 1, 1990 ...
WHEREAS, the Insurer elected to advance the reasonable costs and expenses incurred by the ... Insureds pursuant to the terms of the D & 0 Policy ...
The mutual release preserved the right of Gauntt and Aronov to indemnification from Enstar, if any, including the right of Reliance to pursue such indemnification claim by “sub-rogation.”
In February 1994, the estates of Gauntt and Aronov executed instruments assigning to Reliance the claims of the estates for indemnification from Enstar Group.
The claims are set forth in the proofs of claim, as amended, filed in the bankruptcy case.
Reliance seeks to recover from Enstar Group the payments made for Gauntt and Aronov under two theories — assignment and subrogation.
Assignment
Rebanee first asserts that Rebanee holds by assignment the indemnification claims of Gauntt and Aronov against Enstar Group.
The claims of Gauntt and Aronov are dependent on their rights under the indemnity agreement, the corporate bylaws, and the articles of incorporation.
The express purpose of the indemnity agreement is to provide the directors and officers with indemnification to the “fubest extent permitted by law”:
WHEREAS, the Company has previously caused its Certificate of Incorporation and By-laws to be amended so as to limit the habihty of and broaden the indemnification rights of its Directors and Officers as permitted under recent amendments to the Delaware General Corporation Law; and,
WHEREAS, the Company is desirous of providing its Directors and Officers with limitation of habihty and indemnification to the fullest extent permitted by law....
However, Enstar Group is not hable under the agreement to indemnify the directors and officers to the extent the directors and officers are paid by insurance.
Because the claims of Gauntt and Aronov were paid in full by insurance, Enstar Group has no habihty under the indemnity agreement to indemnify Gauntt, Aronov, or the assignee — Rebanee Insurance Company.
Rebanee argues, however, that it seeks indemnification solely under the corporate bylaws and not under the indemnity agreement. Reliance quotes the following provision from the indemnity agreement:
Nothing herein shah be deemed to diminish or otherwise restrict the Indemnitee’s right to indemnification under any provision of the Certificate of Incorporation,
By-laws,
vote of shareholders or disinterested Directors, or under the General Corporation Law of Delaware or any other apphcable law. On the contrary, the rights granted to Indemnitee hereunder are intended to protect Indemnitee to the fullest extent permitted by law and shah be cumulative and in addition to any rights that Indemnitee may have from any other source (emphasis added).
This quoted provision references the scope of the right of the directors and officers to indemnification generally. It in no way prevents the directors and officers from specifically agreeing not to enforce the right against Enstar Group once the claim has been satisfied by a “valid and collectable insurance policy.”
The indemnity agreement controls the contractual relationship between Enstar Group and its directors. Reliance may not disregard the hmitation con-
tamed in the agreement.
Gauntt and Aronov had no rights to indemnity against Enstar Group remaining after Reliance paid the settlement amount and the defense costs of the civil litigation.
Reliance, therefore, received no rights against Enstar Group under the purported assignment of indemnification rights from Gauntt and Aronov.
Subrogation
Reliance next contends that the waiver of subrogation does not prevent Reliance from enforcing Enstar’s alleged liability for the $10,000,000 retention.
The parties dispute whether the retention was applicable to the payments made by Reliance for Gauntt and Aronov.
However, whether or not the retention was applicable, the provision waiving subrogation is absolute and unconditional:
In the event of any payment under this policy, the Insurer shall be subrogated to the extent of such payment to all rights of recovery therefore [sic] ...
It is further agreed that the Insurer waives any right to subrogate against the Company
and the Directors and Officers of the Company (emphasis added).
Reliance cites the following three cases to support its contention:
Transport Trailer Serv., Inc. v. The Upjohn Co.,
506 F.Supp. 442 (E.D.Pa.1981);
Fashion Tanning Co., Inc. v. Fulton County Elec. Contractors, Inc.,
142 A.D.2d 465, 586 N.Y.S.2d 866 (N.Y.App.Div.1989); and
Chavez v. Valmar Textile Processing, Inc.,
1991 WL 42999 (S.D.N.Y.1991).
Not one of the three' cases supports the contention advanced by Reliance that the waiver of subrogation is not applicable to the payments made by Reliance.
Both
Transport
and
Fashion Tanning
are factually inapposite for two reasons.
First, the subrogor and the defendant in each case were insured under
separate policies.
Therefore, there was no contractual relationship between the insurance company and the defendant
under the policy pursuant to which the company asserted rights of sub-rogation.
The courts applied general principles of insurance law in declining to impose an automatic bar to subrogation.
However, in the case
sub judice,
there is a contract which defines the relationship between the parties. Therefore the court must look to the contract — not general principles of insurance law — to determine the rights and duties of the parties. The contract expressly waived subrogation rights.
Second, neither
Transport
nor
Fashion Tanning
involved a waiver of subrogation.
In the case
sub judice,
Reliance waived subrogation rights in the very policy pursuant to which it currently asserts subrogation.
Chavez
is factually similar in that the sub-rogor and the defendant were “both insured under the very policy giving rise to the sub-rogation.”
In
Chavez,
Valmar Textile Processing, Inc. asserted a claim for indemnity against Windsor Textile Processing, Inc. Windsor had purchased a policy of insurance from The Travelers Companies in the amount of $1 million to insure its indemnity obligation to Valmar. The policy named both Valmar and Windsor as insureds. Windsor contended that Valmar could not sue Windsor because both were insured under the same policy. The court on motion for summary judgment held that Valmar’s indemnity claim was not barred to the extent Valmar’s claim
exceeded
the policy limit. The court reasoned as follows:
An insurer has no right of subrogation against its own insured for a claim arising from the very risk for which the insured was covered. This rule applies even where the insured has expressly agreed to indemnify the party from whom the insurer’s rights are derived and has procured separate insurance covering the same risk.
The court did not allow Valmar to recover from Windsor amounts covered under the policy purchased by Windsor.
Chavez
does not support Reliance’s argument because
Chavez
does not reference any waiver of subrogation.
In the case
sub judice,
Reliance expressly and unconditionally waived
any
right to sub-rogate against Enstar Group. The waiver by Reliance is broad enough to include the payments made for Gauntt and Aronov — whether or not the retention was applicable.
Reliance could have disputed policy coverage by exercising any of the following three options.
Rebanee could have filed an action for declaratory judgment prior to making the payments to determine whether the retention was appbcable. Rebanee did not do so.
Rebanee could have paid the money under a reservation of its right to determine whether the retention was appbcable. Rebanee did not do so.
Rebanee could have refused to pay “at the peril of being found in breach of its duty ...”
Rebanee cannot recover the money from Enstar Group. The claims filed by Gauntt and Aronov are due to be disallowed.
A separate order consistent with this opinion wib enter.
ORDER DISALLOWING CLAIMS OF WILLIAM GAUNTT AND AARON ARONOV
In accordance with the Opinion entered this day, it is hereby
ORDERED that the objection, as amended, filed by Enstar Group to the unsecured claims of Wilham Gauntt and Aaron Aronov is SUSTAINED, and the claims are DISALLOWED.