Nationwide Mutual Insurance v. Home Insurance

150 F.3d 545, 1998 WL 442673
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 6, 1998
DocketNos. 97-3325, 97-3405
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 150 F.3d 545 (Nationwide Mutual Insurance v. Home Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nationwide Mutual Insurance v. Home Insurance, 150 F.3d 545, 1998 WL 442673 (6th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

BOGGS, Circuit Judge.

Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company (“Nationwide”) sued Home Insurance Company (“Home”), INA Corporation, Insurance Company of North America (“INA”), CIGNA Corporation, and CIGNA International Corporation.1 In its complaint, Nationwide alleged that Home and the CIGNA defendants had breached reinsurance contracts under which they were responsible for paying certain claims filed against Nationwide. Nationwide sought declaratory relief as well as compensatory and punitive damages. The district court stayed Nationwide’s claims against Home pending arbitration. The parties do not appeal this ruling.

After the claims against Home were dismissed pending arbitration, the CIGNA defendants sought summary judgment on the claims against them. The district court denied the CIGNA defendants’ motion, referred the claims against the CIGNA defendants to arbitration, and dismissed the entire case. This is the ruling that is the subject of the CIGNA defendants’ appeal. Nationwide cross-appeals the district court’s rejection of its third-party beneficiary argument, which it claims provides an alternative basis for holding that it can bring an action directly against the CIGNA defendants.

I

A. Nationwide’s Reinsurance Agreement With Home

In the 1960s, Nationwide entered into a reinsurance pool managed by the London firm of M.E. Rutty Underwriting Agency Limited (“Rutty”). As a member of this reinsurance pool, Nationwide authorized Rutty to get, underwrite, and administer direct insurance and reinsurance business. Rutty issued policies and contracts in the name of one of the pool members. The pool member whose name was on the insurance policy or reinsurance contract was directly responsible to the insured. However, the premiums and losses arising from the insurance policies and reinsurance contracts Rutty entered into on behalf of the pool members were divided proportionately among all of the pool members.

Nationwide and some other members of the Rutty Pool withdrew from the pool in 1966. After it withdrew from the pool, Nationwide still had ongoing obligations for continuing and contingent liabilities under insurance policies and reinsurance contracts Rutty issued in its name while it was a member of the pool. To “cut off” its potential future liabilities for insurance and reinsurance obligations arising from its participation in the pool, on June 22, 1977, Nationwide entered into a reinsurance agreement with Home. Under the agreement, Home reinsured2 Nationwide for “all losses which [Nationwide] [547]*547may be or may become liable to pay arising out of risks written for” Nationwide through the Rutty Pool. This reinsurance agreement contained a broad arbitration clause, permitting either party to compel arbitration as to any disputes relating to the agreement.

B. The CIGNA Defendants Accept AFIA’s Reinsurance Obligations

On December 31, 1983, the CIGNA defendants entered into purchase and assumption agreements with Home and the other members of AFIA. Under Section 1.1 of the purchase agreement, entitled “Purchase and Sale,” the CIGNA defendants agreed to purchase all interests in and rights to the policies and contracts that Home and the other AFIA members entered into through the AFIA pool. This included Home’s reinsurance contract with Nationwide for the Rutty Pool liabilities.

In fulfillment of its obligations under Sections 1.1 and 1.4 of the purchase agreement, CIGNA International Corporation caused its subsidiary, INA, to enter into an Insurance and Reinsurance Assumption Agreement (“Assumption Agreement”) with Home and the other AFIA members. Under this Assumption Agreement, INA assumed “as its direct obligation and agree[d] to pay on behalf of [Home] when payment thereof is due all insurance and reinsurance liabilities ... included in the AFIA obligations.” The Assumption Agreement further provided that “none of the [AFIA members] shall make any payments of any AFIA liability without the prior written approval of INA unless under order of a court_”

The Assumption Agreement between the CIGNA defendants and the AFIA members also contained an arbitration clause nearly identical to the one in the reinsurance agreement between Home and Nationwide, and it included a choice of law clause providing that New York law would govern the agreement. Finally, the Assumption Agreement also stated:

Nothing in this Assumption Agreement, express or implied, is intended, or shall be construed, to confer upon or give to any person, firm or corporation (other than the parties hereto ... ) any rights or remedies under or by reason of this Assumption Agreement, or any term, provision, condition, undertaking, warranty, representation, indemnity, covenant or agreement contained herein....

Some time after the Assumption Agreement was entered into, claims were made on policies Rutty had written in the name of Nationwide. These policies were among those reinsured by Home. The,reinsurance on them had passed to the CIGNA defendants through the Assumption Agreement.

C. The District Court’s Ruling

In 1995, Nationwide sued Home and the CIGNA defendants, alleging that they had breached contracts under which they were required to cover the claims against Nationwide arising from the policies and contracts from the Rutty Pool. After the claims against Home were stayed pending arbitration, the CIGNA defendants sought summary judgment on the claims against them.

The district court held that Nationwide was not a third-party beneficiary to the agreements between the members of AFIA and the CIGNA defendants. The district court did, however, conclude that Nationwide was an obligee-beneficiary of these agreements and, as such, could pursue a claim directly against the CIGNA defendants for breach of contract under the terms of the Assumption Agreement between Home and the CIGNA defendants. The court reasoned that the CIGNA defendants stood in the shoes of Home as a direct obligor to Nationwide for purposes of the reinsurance contract between Nationwide and Home. The district court further reasoned that the CIGNA defendants had assumed the reinsurance contract between Home and Nationwide and thus were bound by the arbitration provision in that agreement (the same one the district court relied upon to order arbitration of Nationwide’s claims against Home). Therefore, the district court denied the CIGNA defendants’ motion for ■ summary judgment, referred Nationwide’s claims against them to arbitration, and dismissed the entire case.

[548]*548II

The central issue on appeal is whether the district court erred in concluding that Nationwide could bring a claim directly against the CIGNA defendants by virtue of the CIG-NA defendants’ assumption of the reinsurance contract between Nationwide and Home, or whether Nationwide is limited to exercising its rights against Home with respect to payments under this reinsurance contract. The CIGNA defendants argue that Nationwide is precluded from suing them for reinsurance coverage because of the following language:

Nothing in this Assumption Agreement, express or implied, is intended, or shall be construed, to confer upon or give to any person, firm or corporation (other than the parties hereto ...

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Bluebook (online)
150 F.3d 545, 1998 WL 442673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nationwide-mutual-insurance-v-home-insurance-ca6-1998.