Piermount Iron Works, Inc. v. Evanston Insurance

963 A.2d 818, 197 N.J. 432, 2009 N.J. LEXIS 13
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 29, 2009
DocketA-19 September Term 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 963 A.2d 818 (Piermount Iron Works, Inc. v. Evanston Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Piermount Iron Works, Inc. v. Evanston Insurance, 963 A.2d 818, 197 N.J. 432, 2009 N.J. LEXIS 13 (N.J. 2009).

Opinion

Justice LaVECCHIA

delivered the opinion of the Court.

New Jersey’s insurance regulations require licensed writers of commercial insurance policies to provide written notice of nonre-newal to policy holders. See N.J.A.C. ll:l-20.1(a) and 20.2(a). Failure results in automatic policy renewal and continued coverage until such time as the insurer provides appropriate notice of termination or renewal. See N.J.A.C. 11:1 — 20.2(j). Among the few exceptions to that requirement is one that is significant to the dispute that spawned this appeal. Subsection (a) of N.J.A.C. 11:1— 20.1 expressly exempts surplus lines carriers from the regulation’s requirements. A “surplus lines insurer” is “an unauthorized insurer in which an insurance coverage [in New Jersey] ... may be placed” through operation of surplus lines law, N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.40 to -6.69 (surplus lines law). See N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.41; see also N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.42 (setting conditions for allowing surplus lines coverage through unauthorized insurers when coverage cannot be procured from authorized insurers); 1 Eric Mills Holmes & Mark S. Rhodes, Appleman on Insurance § 2.17 (2d ed. 1996) (“Surplus lines insurance is often a source of last resort for the placement of liability or property insurance on unusual risks.”).

In this matter, a surplus lines carrier issued a commercial-lines insurance policy for excess insurance coverage to a New Jersey insured. As then required by statute, the insurer used a policy form common to New Jersey commercial insurers. 1 The form contained a standard provision promising notice to the policy holder if the insurer intended not to renew the policy. However, *436 in this dispute the insurer did not seek to initiate unilateral nonrenewal and had not provided the insured with notice of nonrenewal. Rather, when requested to do so, the insurer had provided a renewal price quote to which the insured neither responded nor submitted any payment. Nevertheless, because the standard policy form contained the nonrenewal notice provision, the question that has arisen is whether the surplus lines insurer must be held to N.J.AC. 11:1 — 20.2(j)’s regulatory penalty of automatic renewal and the required continuation of post-term coverage for its non-paying insured. We conclude that the regulatory penalty has no applicability to a surplus lines insurer under the circumstances of this setting.

I.

The facts and procedural history to this insurance dispute may be summarized as follows. Plaintiff Piermount Iron Works, Inc. (Piermount) is a construction contractor. In need of excess liability insurance to enhance the coverage that was provided through its primary commercial liability insurance policy, Pier-mount sought an umbrella policy through the surplus lines market.

Toward that end, Piermount engaged the services of Morris Winograd Agency (Winograd), a retail insurance broker. Wino-grad turned to Insurex, Inc. (Insurex), an authorized surplus lines insurance broker that focused its efforts on securing a policy from Evanston Insurance Company (Evanston). In order to obtain the Evanston policy that ultimately would insure Piermount, Insurex contacted Bums & Wilcox, Ltd. (B & W), a surplus lines wholesaler licensed in New Jersey. In addition to being a surplus lines wholesaler, B & W also engages in business as Illinois RB Jones Company, the managing agent for Evanston. In that capacity, B & W solicits, receives, and accepts proposals for insurance contracts to be issued by Evanston. B & W wrote the contract for Evanston’s initial umbrella policy covering Piermount for a period of one year, effective in March 2000, as well as for the renewal *437 policy, which took effect in March 2001. The coverage question in this matter arises under the terms of the 2001 policy.

The 2001 umbrella policy had a term of one year and, therefore, its expiration date was March 13, 2002. The policy also contained a provision stating:

When We Do Not Renew.
If we decide not to renew this policy, we will mail or deliver to the first named insured shown in the Declaration written notice of the non-renewal not less than 30 days before the expiration date or such other period as may be required by law.

It is undisputed that Evanston did not send a notice of renewal to Piermount.

That said, Winograd, which knew when the Evanston insurance policy was set to expire, submitted a renewal application to Evanston. The umbrella policy application represented that Pier-mount had secured effective primary insurance coverage with Lexington, a New Jersey domestic insurer, at a renewal quote of $32,000. 2 Winograd’s renewal application was inaccurate, however. Lexington already had notified Piermont about an audit performed on Piermount’s account, which revealed that Piermount was more than $90,000 in arrears on its premium payments. As a result, Lexington had refused Piermount a renewal-quote offer until the premium arrearage was paid. Thus, at the time Pier-mount submitted its application to Evanston, Winograd and Insu-rex had secured a thirty-day extension for Piermount’s then-extent primary policy with Lexington. However, they had not yet received an offer from Lexington that it would write for Pier-mount a renewal policy to cover the time period pertinent to and required for the umbrella policy application to Evanston. That information, however, was not made known to Evanston.

On March 22, 2002, Evanston, responding to Winograd’s renewal application, sent to Winograd’s surplus lines broker Insurex a *438 renewal price quote offering surplus lines coverage to Piermount. Evanston did not receive any response to that offer. Furthermore, neither Piermount nor its broker paid the renewal premium to Evanston.

On March 28, 2002, after the Evanston surplus lines excess liability policy expired, a construction accident occurred in which Jay Jacobs, an employee of Piermount, was injured. The accident occurred at a location managed by general contractor J.T. Magen & Company, Inc. (Magen). Jacobs prevailed in a lawsuit filed in New York against Magen. Subsequently, Magen successfully brought a claim for indemnification against Piermount. Magen wanted coverage as an additional insured from Lexington under Piermount’s primary policy, and from Evanston under Piermount’s excess policy. Evanston refused to pay, however, claiming that its coverage expired on March 13, 2002, and that Piermount failed to effectuate a renewal. Ultimately, the Jacobs ease settled for $2 million. Lexington and Magen’s liability insurer, Travelers, Inc. (Travelers), each paid half of that amount.

Piermount filed the instant action in New Jersey against Evans-ton, seeking a declaration of coverage under the umbrella liability policy. Travelers intervened, seeking reimbursement of the $1 million it had contributed to the Jacobs settlement.

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963 A.2d 818, 197 N.J. 432, 2009 N.J. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/piermount-iron-works-inc-v-evanston-insurance-nj-2009.