Northwestern National Insurance C. Marsh & McLennan, Inc.

817 F. Supp. 1424, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4407, 1993 WL 102066
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedApril 5, 1993
DocketCiv. A. 89-C-371
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 817 F. Supp. 1424 (Northwestern National Insurance C. Marsh & McLennan, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northwestern National Insurance C. Marsh & McLennan, Inc., 817 F. Supp. 1424, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4407, 1993 WL 102066 (E.D. Wis. 1993).

Opinion

*1426 DECISION AND ORDER

REYNOLDS, Senior District Judge.

In this action, filed March 81, 1989, plaintiffs Northwestern National Insurance Company and Northwestern National Casualty Company (collectively, “Northwestern”) claim that defendants M. Glynn Sutton (“Sutton”), Reliable Insurance of Louisiana, Inc., (“Reliable”), and Marsh & McLennan, Incorporated, and Marsh & McLennan of Louisiana, Inc., (collectively, “Marsh & McLen-nan”) breached their contractual obligations to procure complete “reinsurance” for Northwestern and misrepresented that complete reinsurance would be procured. On April 3, 1992, Sutton and Reliable filed a motion for summary judgment. The remaining defendants joined in that motion on April 29, 1992. An additional motion for summary judgment was filed on November 13, 1992, by Sutton and Marsh & McLennan. Northwestern moved for summary judgment on July 20, 1992.

For reasons stated below, defendants first motion is granted in with respect to the misrepresentation claims and denied with respect to the contract claims. The subsequent motion filed by Sutton and Marsh & McLen-nan is denied, and the motion filed by Northwestern is granted with respect to the liability component of the contract claim and denied in all other respects.

Jurisdiction in this court is based upon 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(3). Northwestern is a Wisconsin insurance company. Marsh & McLennan is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in New York. Reliable is incorporated and principally operated in Louisiana, and Sutton is a citizen of that state. Northwestern claims an amount in'controversy in excess of $50,000.

FACTS

This case arises out of the efforts of the Great Lakes Chemical Corporation (“Great Lakes”) to self-insure. 1 Its ability to do so was complicated somewhat by state statutes requiring companies of its size to obtain insurance from licensed insurers. To comply with these statutes, and yet at the same time take advantage of self-insurance, Great Lakes resorted to a not uncommon scheme known as insurance “fronting.” A front is established when a licensed carrier issues a policy to a company and the company promises, in return, to assume whatever risk the carrier has assumed under the policy or to reimburse the carrier for whatever amounts it is required to pay out under the policy. In addition, the company agrees to pay the carrier a fronting service fee .far below the cost of an actual insurance premium.

In this case, Northwestern, a licensed insurer in every state, agreed to act as Great Lakes’ fronting carrier. All was well during the first and fourth years of this arrangement' (covering the periods from April 1, 1982, to April 1,1983, and from April 1,1985, to April 1, 1986, respectively), when the Niagara Insurance Company (“Niagara”), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Great Lakes, agreed to “reinsure” Northwestern for the entire risk it assumed in insuring Great Lakes. 2 In the second and third years, however, Niagara complicated the arrangement by reinsuring only the first $100,000 of Northwestern’s potential liability. Responsibility for insuring the remainder of that liability was to be “retroceded” to the Republic Insurance Company (“Republic”). 3 It was in that transaction, the retrocession, that something apparently went wrong.

Specifically, because of the way the Republic policies were written, they did not cover Northwestern to the same extent Northwestern’s policies covered Great Lakes. Under the Great Lakes policy for year two — the only year for which Northwestern now seeks damages — Northwestern was required to pay up to $500,000 in claims against Great Lakes and was, in addition, required to assume whatever “loss adjustment expenses” or “de *1427 fense costs” were associated with resolving those claims. Thus, the total costs to Northwestern could, and did, rise well above $500,-000. In contrast, the policies issued in year two by Republic and Niagara, - which were supposed to cover Northwestern to’the full extent of its liability, instead only provided coverage up to the $500,000 limit. The defense costs Northwestern incurred beyond that limit were- not covered.

The remaining individual defendant, Sutton, is the broker who, according to North- 1 western, promised but failed to procure reinsurance that would cover all costs, including all defense costs,- incurred by Northwestern in connection with the Great Lakes policy. The other defendants, Marsh & McLennan and Reliable, are the brokerage firms with which Sutton was associated at relevant times. Again, Northwestern seeks damages from these defendants only with respect to the defense costs it incurred for year two of the fronting program.

Sutton, together with Theodore Knott, the director of both Niagara and its predecessor corporation, designed the Great Lakes fronting plan in the late 1970s. 4 In 1981, Sutton, then employed by Marsh & McLennan, sought and eventually obtained Northwestern’s agreement to act as the fronting carrier. In a March 3Í, 1982 letter from Northwestern’s Lexy Ozols (“Ozols”) to Robert Richards, a Marsh & McLennan employee, Ozols quotes Northwestern’s proposed commission for the Great Lakes arrangement and states: “As you know, wé must have acceptable reinsurance ... to the policy limits. It is my understanding that you will be placing the reinsurance.” (PL’s Ex. J.) As noted above, Niagara supplied the requested reinsurance for the first year of the fronting arrangement.

In March 1983, near the close of the fronting arrangement’s first year, Sutton proposed renewing it for another year, covering the period from April 1, 1983, to April 1, 1984. Under the renewal proposal, Niagara would continue to reinsure Northwestern up to Northwestern’s $500,000 indemnity limit. (Northwestern Proposed Facts at ¶ 16; Sutton Response to Northwestern Proposed Facts at ¶ 1.)

On April 28, 1983, however, Niagara informed Sutton that it had adjusted its reinsurance obligations; rather than reinsure Northwestern to the extent of Northwestern’s indemnity limit, as it had the previous year, Niagara now would reinsure only the first $100,000 of Northwestern’s liability and would retrocede the balance of its reinsurance obligation to another company, which turned out to be Republic. (Northwestern Ex. P.).' In his letter informing Sutton of this proposed change, Knott states, “[a]s soon as I have received the contract [between Niagara and Republic], I will forward it to you so that you may review it on behalf of Northwestern.” (Id.)

Sutton first informed Northwestern of Niagara’s retrocession plan on June 15, 1983, more than two months after the second year of the .fronting arrangement began. (Northwestern Ex. Q; Northwestern Proposed Facts at ¶ 17; Sutton Response to Northwestern Proposed Facts at ¶2. 5 ).

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817 F. Supp. 1424, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4407, 1993 WL 102066, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwestern-national-insurance-c-marsh-mclennan-inc-wied-1993.