In Re Viking Pump, Inc. and Warren Pumps, LLC Insurance Appeals

148 A.3d 633, 2016 Del. LEXIS 474
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 12, 2016
Docket518, 2014; 523, 2014; 525, 2014; 528, 2014
StatusPublished
Cited by102 cases

This text of 148 A.3d 633 (In Re Viking Pump, Inc. and Warren Pumps, LLC Insurance Appeals) 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
In Re Viking Pump, Inc. and Warren Pumps, LLC Insurance Appeals, 148 A.3d 633, 2016 Del. LEXIS 474 (Del. 2016).

Opinion

VALIHURA, Justice:

This is a consolidated appeal in an insurance-coverage dispute from separate judgments by the Court of Chancery and the Superior Court. Viking Pump, Inc. (“Viking”) and Warren Pumps, LLC (“Warren”) seek to recover under insurance policies issued to a third company, Houdaille Industries, Inc. (“Houdaille”). In the 1980’s, Viking and Warren acquired pump manufacturing businesses from Houdaille. As a result, Viking and Warren have been, confronted with potential liability flowing from personal injury claims made by plaintiffs alleging damages in connection with asbestos exposure claims dating back-to when the pump • manufacturing businesses were owned by Houd-aille (the “Houdaille-Era Claims”). Each year from 1972 through 1985, Houdaille purchased occurrence-based primary and umbrella insurance from Liberty Mutual Insurance Company (“Liberty”). Above the Liberty umbrella layer, Houdaille purchased layers of excess insurance. In total, Houdaille purchased 35 excess policies through 20 different carriers (the “Excess Policies”). Houdaille’s 14-year insurance tower offered $17.5 million in primary coverage, $42 million in umbrella coverage, and $427.5 million in excess coverage.

Viking and Warren now seek to fund the liabilities arising from the Houdaille-Era Claims using the comprehensive insurance program originally purchased by Houd-aille. The insurance companies that issued the Excess Policies (the “Excess Insurers”) contend that Viking and Warren are not entitled to use the Excess Policies to respond to the Houdaille-Era Claims. The Excess Insurers also dispute the extent of any coverage available, particularly with respect to defense costs.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A more detailed history of this litigation can be gleaned from several other significant opinions. 1

*641 A. The CouH of Chancery Proceedings

This litigation first arose in 2005," when Viking brought suit in the Court of Chancery claiming that it was the successor to insurance policies that Liberty had issued to Houdaille or, in the alternative, seeking partition of the Liberty policy limits. Liberty, Viking, and Warren settled that dispute.

Viking , and Warren then filed new complaints in the Court of Chancery against more than twenty other insurers that had issued excess policies to Houdaille. The parties cross-moved for summary judgment on how to allocate the. losses where the underlying asbestos injuries potentially trigger coverage against multiple policy periods, 2

With regard to allocation, the Court of Chancery considered the “pro rata,” and “all sums” approaches and observed that New York law, which governs interpretation of the policies, did not impose either approach on all insurance contracts. Rather, New York precedent required that the court “apply traditional principles of insurance contract interpretation to the policies at issue and then apply the approach that results from that interpretative exercise.” 3 Thus, under New York law, the method of allocation depended upon the language of the policy, 4 and the Court of Chancery held that the Houdaille policies “unambiguously provide for all sums allocation.” 5 In so holding, the Court of Chancery distinguished a leading New York case on the issue, Consolidated Edison Company of New York, Inc. v. Allstate Insurance Company , 6 on the ground that the policies in this dispute contain additional provisions— namely, the “Non-Cumulation” and “Prior Insurance” provisions — that the court viewed as inconsistent with pro rata alloca-tiqn. 7

B. The Superior Court Proceedings

Following the Court-of Chancery proceedings, the case was transferred to. the Superior Court on June 11, 2010 to hear and determine several other issues, one of which was whether the Excess • Policies were subject to vertical or horizontal exhaustion. The Superior Court held a three week trial in October and November 2012. The jury verdict was predominately in Warren and Viking’s favor. 8 Warren and Viking sought a judgment incorporating the verdict, and the defendants sought a judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

In a post-trial Opinion dated October 31, 2013, on Plaintiffs’ Motion for Final Judgment and Defendants’ Renewed Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law, the Superi- or Court held that, as a matter of New York law, Viking and Warren were obligated to horizontally exhaust all triggered *642 “primary and umbrella insurance layers before tapping” into any of Houdaille’s excess coverage. 9 In a subsequent Opinion dated February 28, 2014, the Superior Court clarified that this horizontal-exhaustion requirement was limited to the primary and umbrella coverage layers and not the excess coverage. 10

On June 9, 2014, the Superior Court entered a Final Judgment Order After Trial. 11 Warren moved to clarify and amend the judgment, which motion the Superior Court denied on August 20, 2014. All parties appealed, and this Court heard oral arguments. Following oral argument, because resolution of this appeal depended upon significant and unsettled questions of New York law that had yet to be answered in the first instance by the New York Court of Appeals, this Court advised the parties that it had decided to certify two questions to the New York Court of Appeals.

C. Certified Questions to the New York Court of Appeals

This Court certified the following questions to the New York Court of Appeals:

1. Under New York law, is the proper method of allocation to be used all sums or pro rata when there are non-cumulation and prior insurance provisions?
2. Given the Court’s answer to Question #1, under New York law and based on the policy language at issue here, when the underlying primary and umbrella insurance in the same policy period has been exhausted, does vertical or horizontal exhaustion apply to determine when a policyholder may access its excess insurance? 12

In an Opinion, dated May 3, 2016, the New York Court of Appeals answered the foregoing certified questions of law. 13 The Court held that “based on the policy language and the persuasive authority holding that pro rata allocation is inconsistent with non-cumulation and non-cumulation/prior insurance provisions, we hold that all sums allocation is appropriate in policies containing such provisions, like the ones at issue here.”

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148 A.3d 633, 2016 Del. LEXIS 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-viking-pump-inc-and-warren-pumps-llc-insurance-appeals-del-2016.