Petition of Bird

222 B.R. 229, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 815, 32 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1050, 1998 WL 388962
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 9, 1998
Docket14-10673
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 222 B.R. 229 (Petition of Bird) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petition of Bird, 222 B.R. 229, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 815, 32 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1050, 1998 WL 388962 (N.Y. 1998).

Opinion

DECISION ON MOTION TO MODIFY PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION, OR IN THE ALTERNATIVE, RECONSIDER THE MARCH 12 RULING

JEFFRY H. GALLET, Bankruptcy Judge.

Northwestern National Insurance Company (“Northwestern”) moves pursuant to §§ 105(a) and 304 of Title 11 of the United States Code, and the Bankruptcy Code (the “Code”) to modify the preliminary injunction entered by Chief Judge Tina L. Brozman on April 15, 1998 (the “Order”), or, in the alternative, reconsider my bench ruling of March 12, 1998 (the “March 12th Ruling”). Northwestern seeks a modification to permit it to commence third-party actions against North Atlantic Insurance Company (the “Debtor”), its officers and directors with respect to certain contracts of insurance or reinsurance that Northwestern maintains were assumed by, or novated to, a predecessor of the Debt- or pursuant to various agreements entered into between 1978 and 1980. 1 For the reasons set forth below, Northwestern’s motions to modify the Order and, in the alternative for reconsideration, are denied.

BACKGROUND

The Debtor is in a “winding up” in England, pursuant to the Insolvency Act of 1986, under the supervision of the High Court of Justice, Chancery Division, Companies Court (the “High Court”). The High Court appointed Colin Graham Bird and Paul Antho *232 ny Brereton Evans as joint provisional liquidators (the “Joint Liquidators”).

The Joint Liquidators filed a petition in this court pursuant to § 304 of the Code. They successfully sought a preliminary injunction to enjoin at least forty-seven lawsuits pending against the Debtor in the United States. Chief Judge Brozman has extended the preliminary injunction semiannually since, the most recent time being by the Order.

Northwestern, a Wisconsin property and casualty insurance company, is currently in runoff. It has ceased writing business other than certain accident and health policies.

Bellefonte Insurance Company (“Belle-fonte”) was a property and casualty insurer whose business consisted of three primary components: (i) business written through United Kingdom brokers (“U.K. Branch Business”), (ii) business written through United States brokers (“U.S. Business”) and (iii) business written through other brokers. In December 1979, Armco Equity Corporation, an affiliate of Bellefonte, acquired the Debtor’s predecessor, British National Life Insurance Society (“BNLIS”). Subsequently, in 1979 and 1980, Bellefonte and BNLIS entered into several transfer agreements that, Northwestern contends, transferred all of the Bellefonte U.K. Branch Business to BNLIS (the “Transfer Agreements”).

In 1983, Bellefonte’s U.S. Branch Business was merged into Universal Reinsurance Corporation (“Universal”). In 1992, Universal merged with Northwestern. The net result of these mergers and transfers appears to be that Bellefonte’s U.K. Branch Business ended up with the Debtor and the U.S. Business with Northwestern.

To secure its obligations under the Transfer Agreements, BNLIS posted security by letters of credit and a trust established under New York law on March 29, 1982 among Bellefonte, BNLIS and the Chase Manhattan Bank, as trustee. They modified the trust in 1986 to replace the letters of credit with a second trust set up under New Jersey law among these parties except that Midlantic National Bank was the trustee. They intended the trusts to provide security for payment to Bellefonte or its successors of amounts for the U.K. Branch Business called for in the Transfer Agreement if the Debtor, or its predecessors, was unable or unwilling to pay. Northwestern believes that the trusts are currently underfunded.

From the effective date of the Transfer Agreements until the commencement of the Debtor’s liquidation, the Debtor paid the claims that the trust covered. It also administered the policies, defended the claims and paid out claims relating to the U.K. business directly to policyholders. Finally, the Debt- or apparently bore the burden of engaging and paying counsel to direct the defense of numerous proceedings brought by policyholders in the United States against Belle-fonte.

This procedure changed when the Debtor filed for liquidation. The Joint Liquidators have taken the position that the estate can no longer afford to deplete its assets to defend actions brought against Bellefonte in the United States. This stance has led to disputes with Northwestern over the terms of the Transfer Agreements, regarding whether the Debtor assumed liability for the U.K. Branch Business and whether that business was novated to BNLIS, the Debtor’s predecessor.

If a novation and assumption did occur, then the Debtor will be wholly liable to Belle-fonte policyholders and Northwestern will not be liable to them. If no novation occurred, then Northwestern and the Debtor will have a reinsurance relationship and Northwestern will have to pay the claims and seek reimbursement from a potentially insolvent Debtor. It is important to note that as far as the Joint Liquidators are concerned, neither finding affects the Debtor’s liabilities. The only change will be in the identity of the estate’s creditors, either Northwestern or individual policyholders.

Successfully proving a novation certainly changes Northwestern’s financial picture. If it establishes a novation, Northwestern will pay nothing to anyone. The entire liability is the Debtor’s. If it fails to sustain a novation, it must pay the claims and look to the Debtor for repayment, to the extent money is available.

*233 The rub is that the novation issue must be decided policy by policy. Despite the intent of the insurance companies, each policyholder must have consented to the primary financial responsibility under' the policy being changed. Significantly, Northwestern’s comprehensive and well done moving papers omit any documents or persuasive evidence that any policyholder has agreed to removal of Northwestern as a financially responsible party.

It may be that somewhere, or somehow, Northwestern can be successful in its novation theory. It is not, however, clear to me where or when. What is clear is that if I grant this motion, I will put the Debtor to considerable expense to defend more than twenty law suits and the policyholders claiming against Northwestern will be substantially delayed in having their claims resolved.

In my March 12th Ruling, I denied the joint request of Northwestern and the Joint Liquidators to extend the preliminary injunction over Northwestern until the dispute regarding novation and assumption is resolyed. To have granted the motion would have been grossly unfair to Northwestern’s claimants. Northwestern now seeks modification of the preliminary injunction so that it may commence third-party actions against the Debt- or, and its former officers and directors to determine whether certain contracts were assumed by or novated to the Debtor, and seeking appropriate damages for fraudulently failing to effect a novation. It is undisputed that as many as twenty-eight lawsuits involving the U.K. Branch Business name Northwestern and Bellefonte as defendants. Northwestern also seeks reconsideration of my March 12th Ruling denying it a stay of the outstanding suits against it.

The Joint Liquidators and several claimants against Northwestern oppose the motion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
222 B.R. 229, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 815, 32 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1050, 1998 WL 388962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petition-of-bird-nysb-1998.