In re Liquidation of Castlepoint National Ins. Co.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 15, 2021
DocketA158646
StatusPublished

This text of In re Liquidation of Castlepoint National Ins. Co. (In re Liquidation of Castlepoint National Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Liquidation of Castlepoint National Ins. Co., (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 6/15/21 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

In re CASTLEPOINT NATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY in Liquidation. RICARDO LARA, as Insurance Commissioner, etc., A158646 Plaintiff and Respondent, v. (San Francisco City and County CASTLEPOINT NATIONAL Super. Ct. No. CPF16515183) INSURANCE COMPANY et al., Defendants and Respondents; ALESCO PREFERRED FUNDING VIII, LTD., et al., Claimants and Appellants.

This case concerns the scope of injunctions and releases from a California insurance insolvency proceeding and whether they bar claims in a New York lawsuit. The appellants here are some of the plaintiffs in the New York lawsuit.1 They requested clarification from the San Francisco Superior

The appellants are Alesco Preferred Funding VIII, Ltd., Alesco 1

Preferred Funding XI, Ltd., Alesco Preferred Funding XII, Ltd., Alesco Preferred Funding XIV, Ltd., Hildene Opportunities Master Fund II, Ltd., NFC Partners, LLC, Wolf River Opportunity Fund LLC, Wolf River Partner Fund, and WT Holdings, Inc. The complaint in the New York lawsuit names additional entities not listed as appellants here. We presume the difference

1 Court as to whether its orders “prohibit or stay” their New York claims. In the insolvency case, the trial court appointed the California Insurance Commissioner (Commissioner) as conservator, and later as liquidator, of CastlePoint National Insurance Company (CastlePoint). As part of this process, the court issued injunctions and approved releases pertaining to claims filed against or on behalf of CastlePoint or its assets. In May 2019, the San Francisco Superior Court denied the New York Plaintiffs’ motion, finding “all but one of . . . ten causes of action in the New York Action are barred by the . . . injunctions issued by this Court and releases approved by this Court in the underlying CastlePoint liquidation proceedings.” The New York Plaintiffs appeal. Having reviewed the parties’ briefs and the record, including requested supplemental briefing, we conclude that some of the causes of action in the New York lawsuit are not barred. The causes of action that may proceed are those relating to: (i) the alleged breach of so-called “successor obligor provisions”; and (ii) an alleged $143 million payment from ACP Re, Ltd. (ACP) to shareholders of Tower Group International, Ltd. (Bermuda) (TGIL). These causes of action are not asserted against CastlePoint or the insurance companies that were merged into it. There is no indication the Commissioner could have asserted these causes of action on behalf of the insolvent insurance companies. As a result, permitting them to proceed in New York will not interfere in any meaningful way with the plan for CastlePoint’s liquidation, especially given the New York Plaintiffs’ agreement not to assert any judgment against the insolvent insurance companies’ estate or assets. (Webster v. Superior Court (1988) 46 Cal.3d 338, 350–351 (Webster).)

is not material to the questions we address. Even though there are additional plaintiffs in New York, we refer to the appellants collectively as the “New York Plaintiffs.”

2 But, as we further explain, prior to entering into releases, the Commissioner could have asserted fraudulent conveyance causes of action and a cause of action for unjust enrichment because they are based on alleged improper transfers of assets of the insolvent insurance companies. Those causes of action are barred by the injunctions and releases in the liquidation proceeding. As a result, we affirm in part and reverse in part the trial court’s order. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND I. The California Insolvency Proceeding In July 2016, the Commissioner petitioned to be appointed as conservator of CastlePoint pursuant to section 1011 of the Insurance Code.2 The petition explained that CastlePoint was a property and casualty insurer owned by Tower Group Inc. (TGI) and an affiliate of an insurance holding company that consisted of ten insurance companies from six different states (the Tower Insurance Companies).3 TGIL was their ultimate parent company.4 Due to concerns in 2013 about the financial condition of the Tower Insurance Companies, TGIL’s stock price declined, and TGIL “began considering options for a sale.” In 2014, ACP, a reinsurer, acquired TGIL and

2 Undesignated statutory references are to the Insurance Code. The ten insurance companies were CastlePoint, Tower Insurance 3

Company of New York, Tower National Insurance Company, Hermitage Insurance Company, CastlePoint Florida Insurance Company, North East Insurance Company, Massachusetts Homeland Insurance Company, Preserver Insurance Company, York Insurance Company of Maine, and CastlePoint Insurance Company. In their complaint, the New York Plaintiffs refer to this entity as 4

“Tower Group International, Ltd.” They alleged it “is a company organized and existing under the laws of Bermuda.” We presume it is the same TGIL referred to in the Commissioner’s petition.

3 its subsidiaries, including the ten insurance companies. The Michael Karfunkel Family 2005 Trust (Karfunkel Trust) is the beneficial owner of ACP. As explained in the petition, ACP “immediately entered into several related post-closing transactions with AmTrust Financial Services, Inc.” (AmTrust) “and National General Holdings Corp.” (National General) “under which certain operating assets of the Tower Insurance Companies were sold to AmTrust (commercial lines insurance assets) and to National General (personal lines insurance assets).” The transaction involved affiliates of AmTrust and National General agreeing “to pay up to $250 million in additional policyholder claims.” Over the next 15 months, the financial condition of the ten insurance companies continued to deteriorate. In 2016, the Tower Insurance Companies, TGIL, and ACP worked with insurance regulators from six states “to develop a plan to address the increasingly distressed financial condition of the Tower Insurance Companies in a manner that would best protect policyholders and other creditors.” They agreed the ten insurance companies would be merged into CastlePoint, which the Commissioner would then place into conservatorship. “The primary purpose of this consolidation was to allow for an efficient and orderly conservation process by obviating the need for ten receivership proceedings (one for each of the ten Tower Insurance Companies) in six different domiciliary states.” With the approval of insurance regulators from the other states, the Tower Insurance Companies were merged into CastlePoint. After these mergers, the Commissioner petitioned for appointment as conservator of CastlePoint.

4 A. The Injunctions in the Insolvency Proceeding In July 2016, the Commissioner was appointed as conservator. In the conservation order, the trial court vested in the Commissioner title to all property and assets of CastlePoint, including rights of action. The conservation order contains a number of injunctions. In paragraphs 4, 8, 21, and 22, it enjoins legal proceedings or conduct “interfering with” the conservator’s possession or management of CastlePoint property or assets. Around the same time, the Commissioner entered into a conservation agreement with a number of entities including AmTrust, National General, and the Karfunkel Trust.

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