Porter Hayden Co. v. Century Indemnity Co.

939 F. Supp. 424, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14111, 1996 WL 549561
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedSeptember 17, 1996
DocketCivil Action AMD 96-2012
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 939 F. Supp. 424 (Porter Hayden Co. v. Century Indemnity Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Porter Hayden Co. v. Century Indemnity Co., 939 F. Supp. 424, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14111, 1996 WL 549561 (D. Md. 1996).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

DAVIS, District Judge.

This action involves a dispute between a former vendor of asbestos products and one of its liability insurers, and raises interesting questions as to the interplay among federal arbitration policy, pre-emption principles, choice-of-law doctrine and rules of contract interpretation. Pending before the Court is defendant’s motion to compel arbitration. No hearing is necessary. For the reasons set forth below, I shall compel arbitration of the dispute and dismiss this case without prejudice.

(i)

None of the facts material to the underlying procedural and jurisdictional issues are in dispute, and the facts are readily gleaned from the parties’ pleadings. Plaintiff is a Maryland corporation formerly in the business of installing and selling asbestos products. For several years, plaintiff has been a defendant in many of the thousands of mass tort claims arising out of the discovery that asbestos is a lethal substance. Defendant is a Pennsylvania corporation and a successor to one of plaintiffs liability carriers.

In 1987, plaintiff became a signatory to a certain agreement entitled “Agreement Concerning Asbestos Related Claims” or, as the parties have referred to it, the ‘Wellington Agreement.” As described by plaintiff,

The Wellington Agreement was created by insurers for the benefit of insurers providing coverage for asbestos claims. The primary purpose of the Agreement was to provide a facility for the administration of asbestos claims and to allow the carriers to deal with the numerous insurance coverage disputes between and among insurers as well as insureds in light of the differing court decisions in this area, as well as to simplify the procedures for handling claims, reduce the costs of such procedures to the insurers and to apply insurance arrangements in a consistent manner to achieve reasonable processing costs and to resolve and discontinue the various disputes and lawsuits concerning insurance coverage____

Thus, the Wellington Agreement “established the Asbestos Claims Facility to arrange for the evaluation, settlement, payment or defense of all asbestos related claims against” signatories to the Agreement, at substantial cost savings.

After 1987, pursuant to the terms of the Wellington Agreement, defendant made certain expenditures associated with damage claims asserted by workers and others against plaintiff (so-called “gap payments”), *426 which expenditures arguably should have been paid by one or more other insurance carriers which had issued policies to plaintiff, but which were not signatories to the Wellington Agreement. Under the Wellington Agreement, plaintiff had a duty to pursue claims against such non-signatory carriers and to reimburse a signatory-carrier, like defendant here, for the latter’s “gap payments” made on behalf of their insureds. Under the Agreement, as an inducement to the prompt and diligent pursuit of claims against non-signatory carriers for reimbursement of “gap payments,” interest (at a designated rate) on “gap payments” would not begin to accrue until two years after each such payment by a carrier, and periodic payments of interest were due quarterly. In the instant case, defendant asserts that plaintiff owes more than a quarter million dollars in principal and accrued interest on “gap payments” defendant made on plaintiff’s behalf between 1987 and 1995. Plaintiff takes a radically different view of the matter, contending that, inter alia, it owes no interest under the Agreement.

When the parties were not able to resolve this dispute, defendant instituted binding arbitration in May 1996, in accordance with the terms of the Wellington Agreement. Plaintiff promptly instituted the instant action in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City by filing a “Petition to Stay Arbitration” pursuant to state law. The gist of the Petition to Stay is that a three-year limitations period applies to defendant’s claims, and that therefore, any claim for interest accruing before May 1993 is barred. Relying upon Maryland caselaw interpreting the state’s version of the Uniform Arbitration Act, Md.Ann.Code, Cts. & Jud.Proc.Art., § 3-201 et seq. (1995 Repl. Vol., 1974), plaintiff contends that the issue of limitations/laehes is a justiciable and not an arbitrable issue. See Town of Chesapeake Beach v. Pessoa Constr. Co., Inc., 330 Md. 744, 625 A.2d 1014, 1016 (1993). Defendant timely removed the action to this Court, and has sought a stay of these proceedings and an order compelling arbitration, arguing that federal law and not state law applies.

GO

The principal issue in this ease is whether Maryland or federal law applies to the arbitration clause contained in the Wellington Agreement. The arbitration clause provides: “[Signatory Insureds and Insurers] shall resolve through alternative dispute resolution ... any disputed issues within the scope of the Agreement____” The Agreement also contains a choice-of-law provision, which states as follows in relevant part: “All disputes concerning the validity, interpretation and application of the Agreement ... and all disputes concerning issues within the scope of the Agreement shall be determined in accordance with the applicable common law of the states of the United States.” The parties differ widely in their respective interpretations of these provisions.

Plaintiff argues strenuously that Maryland arbitration law applies. This result is achieved as follows. The choice-of-law clause is properly understood as selecting the law of the state with the most significant interest in, or connection to, the particular dispute at issue or the particular parties involved in the dispute. In this ease, that state is Maryland. Maryland commits to a judicial rather than an arbitral forum the question whether limitations or laches bars arbitration of a dispute. Moreover, according to plaintiff, since the weighty federal interest in the enforcement of agreements to arbitrate clearly does not extend to those instances where there has not been an agreement to arbitrate, federal law is inapplicable to this dispute.

Plaintiff also contends that, even if federal law applies, the scope of the arbitration clause contained in the Wellington Agreement is not sufficiently broad to require arbitration of the limitations/laehes issue.

Defendant answers that the Wellington Agreement is clearly a contract within the scope of the Federal Arbitration Act, which should be applied in this case. Defendant asserts that plaintiff’s construction of the choice-of-law provision is “nonsense.” Although defendant was a participant in the drafting of the Wellington Agreement, it does not attempt to define the phrase “common law of the states of the United States” as it might be applied to the question of *427 arbitrability, but it simply suggests that the interpretation of the phrase, like everything else in the Agreement, is for the arbitrators.

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Bluebook (online)
939 F. Supp. 424, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14111, 1996 WL 549561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-hayden-co-v-century-indemnity-co-mdd-1996.