Lamorak Insurance Company v. Certain London Market Company Reinsurers

CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 13, 2020
Docket1:18-cv-10534
StatusUnknown

This text of Lamorak Insurance Company v. Certain London Market Company Reinsurers (Lamorak Insurance Company v. Certain London Market Company Reinsurers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamorak Insurance Company v. Certain London Market Company Reinsurers, (D. Mass. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

CERTAIN LONDON MARKET COMPANY REINSURERS, Plaintiffs,

v. CIVIL ACTION NO. 18-10534-NMG

LAMORAK INSURANCE COMPANY, f/k/a ONEBEACON AMERICA INSURANCE COMPANY, Defendant.

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON CERTAIN LONDON MARKET COMPANY REINSURERS’ MOTION TO COMPEL (#100).

KELLEY, U.S.M.J.

This case is a reinsurance contract dispute. Plaintiffs, Certain London Market Company Reinsurers (LMR), filed a motion to compel, defendant, Lamorak Insurance Company (Lamorak), opposed, and LMR replied. (##100, 101, 104, 114.) Oral argument was held on September 25, 2020, on this motion and another pending motion (Lamorak’s motion for protective order, #108), after which the court ordered Lamorak to submit its privilege log and documents to the court for ex parte review. (#127.) On September 30, 2020, the court held an ex parte hearing with counsel for Lamorak to ask questions about the privilege log and certain documents. (#131.) On October 5, 2020, the court held a further argument on this motion and Lamorak’s motion for protective order. (#136.) For the reasons set out below, plaintiffs’ motion is allowed in part and denied in part. I. Facts. In 1970, Lamorak issued three excess liability policies to its insured, Olin Corporation (Olin). (#1-1 at 7.) LMR reinsured Lamorak for its liability under three facultative reinsurance

contracts (the Reinsurance Contracts). Id. at 8.1 Starting in the 1970s, Olin, a chemical manufacturing company, was held liable for the costs of remediating pollution at various sites. Beginning in 1983, Olin sued several of its insurers, including Lamorak, seeking indemnification for these costs. Litigation has continued on a site-by-site basis for more than thirty-five years. See generally Olin Corp. v. OneBeacon Am. Ins. Co., 864 F.3d 130 (2d Cir. 2017). In 2013, Olin and Lamorak went to trial in the Southern District of New York (the Olin Action) with respect to five Olin remediation sites (the Five Sites). Id. at 140-41. In 2015, after a jury trial, the district court entered judgment in favor of Olin against Lamorak in the amount of $87,187,173.63. Id. at 142. On appeal, the Second Circuit affirmed as to Lamorak’s liability, but vacated the judgment and

remanded for recalculation of damages. Id. at 135 n.1. On May 1, 2018, the district court entered a judgment in favor of Olin respecting the Five Sites, consisting of about $55 million in damages and $75 million in pre-judgment interest, for a total of about $130 million. (#102-1 at 3.) The judgment further ordered: “[I]f the London Market Insurers are found liable to Lamorak in contribution in the proceeding now pending in New York

1 Facultative reinsurance is “a type of reinsurance coverage that applies to a single policy or risk and is negotiated on an individual basis.” (#1-1 at 7.) State court, an amended judgment will then issue reducing the amount of the entered judgment by the amount of that contribution, plus the pre-judgment interest corresponding to that amount.” Id.2 On August 28, 2018, trial began in the Olin Action in connection with fifteen other sites (the Remaining Sites). Id. at 6. According to Lamorak’s memorandum in opposition to LMR’s motion to compel, Olin claimed past damages of about $36 million dollars and future costs of

about $27 million. (#104 at 4.) Olin and Lamorak reported the case settled on August 30, 2018, just four days after the start of the trial. (#102-1 at 6.) They settled all claims concerning the Five Sites and the Remaining Sites (with the exception of one site); Lamorak paid Olin $120 million. (#104 at 4.) Lamorak then billed LMR on September 7, 2018 (the Allocation), seeking payment from LMR under the simultaneous payments clause in the Reinsurance Contracts. Id. at 5. LMR asserts that Lamorak’s Allocation, which did not follow the same allocation of funds between liability and pre-judgment interest as the district court’s May 1, 2018 judgment concerning the Five Sites, is not reasonable. (#100 at 2-3.)3 Where the district court divided the $130 million judgment

between $55 million in damages and $75 million in pre-judgment interest, Lamorak’s Allocation assigned only $15 million of the $120 million settlement amount to pre-judgment interest, and only assigned pre-judgment interest to the Five Sites, with no pre-judgment interest allocated to the fifteen Remaining Sites. Id. at 2. The balance of $105 million was assigned to liability at the Five Sites and the Remaining Sites. Id.

2 Lamorak was suing other Olin insurers regarding the Five Sites in the New York Supreme Court. See Lamorak Ins. Co. v. Certain Underwriters at Lloyds, et al., No. 656466/2017 (N.Y. Supr. Ct., N.Y.Cty.).

3 The parties dispute the standard to be applied and who bears the burden of proof concerning whether the Allocation will pass muster. (Compare #114 at 1-2, with #104 at 9 and #107 at 4.) It suffices here to note that no matter how that dispute is resolved, the Allocation must be found to be reasonable. II. The Parties’ Dispute. A. The Privilege Log. LMR asks the court to order Lamorak to produce materials that Lamorak lists on a privilege log. Id. at 5. The privilege log consists of forty-two emails and attachments, primarily between Attorney Mark Muth, Senior Vice President and Special Counsel at Resolute Management, Inc.

(Resolute), and other Resolute employees, some of them attorneys. (#102-9; #105 at 1.) In his declaration, Attorney Muth avers that “Resolute acted as administrator for Lamorak respecting certain insurance business, including claims by [Olin] under Lamorak policies at issue [in the Olin Action].” (#105 at 1.) He states that he “managed the Olin Action for Lamorak from November 2010 on and negotiated the Lamorak settlement with Olin executed on August 31, 2018.” Id. He “made the decision on how to allocate [the $120 million settlement with Olin] to the potential exposures released under the settlement[,]” and he “communicated in confidence with other Lamorak representatives respecting the Olin Action, the settlement, and the allocation.” Id. at 2. Some of the emails include Marc Scarcella of Roux Associates, Inc. (Roux), a consulting

firm, where Scarcella leads “the Economic and Complex Analytics practice.” (#106 at 1.) Scarcella assisted Attorney Muth “in the settlement negotiations by creating spreadsheets that quantified certain Olin exposure scenarios at [Attorney Muth’s] direction.” (#105 at 1.) Scarcella was both a testifying expert in the Olin Action and a non-testifying consulting expert concerning the Olin exposure scenarios, which were used in negotiating the settlement with Olin. (#106 at 1.) Scarcella states in his declaration that he was the only person at Roux who worked on the exposure scenarios. Id. at 2. The emails are dated from August 23, 2018 to September 6, 2018. (#102-9.) Lamorak and Olin executed the settlement of the Olin Action on August 31, 2018, and Lamorak then billed LMR on September 7, 2018, so the documents are all from the precise time period in which Lamorak was settling the Olin litigation and drafting the Allocation in order to bill LMR. Thirty- six of the documents are dated before August 31, 2018, and so pre-date the execution of the settlement in the Olin Action. Id. B. LMR’s Position.

LMR refuses to pay the Allocation, in large part because LMR asserts that the Reinsurance Contracts do not cover pre-judgment interest, and the Allocation unreasonably minimizes the pre- judgment interest for which Lamorak is liable.

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Lamorak Insurance Company v. Certain London Market Company Reinsurers, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamorak-insurance-company-v-certain-london-market-company-reinsurers-mad-2020.