St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. AmerisourceBergen Corp.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 20, 2022
DocketG059967
StatusPublished

This text of St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. AmerisourceBergen Corp. (St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. AmerisourceBergen Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. AmerisourceBergen Corp., (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 6/20/22

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

ST. PAUL FIRE AND MARINE INSURANCE COMPANY et al., G059967

Plaintiffs and Appellants, (Super. Ct. No. 30-2020-01168930)

v. OPINION

AMERISOURCEBERGEN CORPORATION et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

Appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, Randall J. Sherman, Judge. Affirmed. Requests for judicial notice granted. Simpson Thacher & Bartlett and Chet A. Kronenberg for Plaintiffs and Appellants. Reed Smith, Raymond Cardozo, Courtney C.T. Horrigan, Kim M. Watterson, Amber S. Finch and Katherine J. Ellena for Defendants and Respondents. * * * St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company (St. Paul Fire & Marine) and the appellants listed in the margin below (see fn. 1; collectively, the St. Paul Insurers or sometimes St. Paul) appeal from the trial court’s order staying their declaratory judgment 1 insurance coverage action. The trial court issued the stay in recognition of the bellwether case of national importance that is ongoing in West Virginia (the West Virginia or WV coverage action), which, like this one, arises from the opioid prescription abuse and addiction crisis plaguing the country. The WV coverage action commenced in March 2017, nearly four years before plaintiffs filed their complaint here. At the time the trial court issued its stay, proceedings had progressed significantly in West Virginia. Millions of pages of discovery have been produced; there have been voluminous motion practice, hearings, and rulings, including denial of summary judgment motions; there has also been an appeal to West Virginia’s high court and a recent remand from that court. In Orange County, in contrast, all answers to the complaint remained pending at the time the trial court issued the stay; in fact, the trial court was still considering motions to quash service of summons for lack of personal jurisdiction over many defendants. The trial court found that in this action and in the WV coverage action “some of the same insurance policies are at issue in both cases, and the West Virginia court will be interpreting at least one of St. Paul’s policies to determine whether they cover opioid litigation, an answer that presumably will be the same whether the

1 The St. Paul Insurers are, as noted, St. Paul Fire & Marine, plus: St. Paul Mercury Insurance Company (St. Paul Mercury), Travelers Casualty and Surety Company, Travelers Property Casualty Company of America, and The Travelers Indemnity Company. All five companies are affiliated in the sense that each is a wholly-owned subsidiary of a larger entity, The Travelers Companies, Inc. They are also affiliated in this litigation, as a practical matter, in that they jointly filed their complaint below and jointly appeared below and on appeal represented by the same counsel, uniformly advancing the same claims and arguments together.

2 underlying litigation is in West Virginia or some other state.” The trial court concluded, “It is therefore in the interests of comity and the conservation of judicial resources to avoid potential conflicting rulings and allow the earlier-filed case to proceed first, eliminating the risk of multiple and inconsistent judgments in different cases.” The court then stayed further proceedings on the St. Paul Insurers’ complaint in Orange County “pending resolution of the West Virginia action.” Meanwhile, back in West Virginia, the trial court hearing the coverage action entered a much blunter assessment of St. Paul Fire & Marine’s California filing: “St. Paul has filed the California Coverage Action for improper purposes, namely, delay and forum shopping . . . .” The trial court here was aware of that finding, plus other evidence in the already substantial record, including the West Virginia court’s additional finding that “[w]hatever differences exist between this action and St. Paul’s California Coverage Action, at a minimum, St. Paul is asking the California court to issue declarations governing the parties already before this Court, interpreting the exact same insurance policy language already before this Court, regarding the same type of cases already before this Court, and regarding the same cases on which this Court permitted the Insurer Defendants to take discovery, raising the identical coverage issues already pending before this Court, including coverage issues on which this Court has already issued rulings.” St. Paul challenges the trial court’s stay order, arguing it constitutes an abuse of discretion. But a trial court’s broad discretion to dismiss an action “in the interest of substantial justice” because it “should be heard in a forum outside this state” becomes broader still when the court enters a stay rather than a dismissal order. (Code 2 Civ. Proc., § 410.30, subd. (a); see, e.g., Morris v. AGFA Corp. (2006) 144 Cal.App.4th

2 All further undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.

3 1452, 1463.) “[A] stay gives effect to the general rule that a court ordinarily has inherent power, in its discretion, to stay proceedings when such a stay will accommodate the ends of justice.” (People v. Bell (1984) 159 Cal.App.3d 323, 329.) St. Paul fails to meet its burden to demonstrate an abuse of discretion in the trial court’s stay order. We therefore affirm the order.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND As the trial court explained below, the WV coverage action “involves whether St. Paul Fire & Marine and other insurers were obligated to defend and indemnify the ABC Entities against prescription opioid lawsuits in West Virginia that 3 settled in January 2017 for $16 million.” One of the ABC Entities, ABDC initiated the WV coverage action in March 2017 by filing suit in West Virginia state court against at least some of its insurance carriers, including St. Paul Fire & Marine. ABDC sought breach of contract damages and declaratory relief regarding the scope of coverage afforded by policies issued by the insurers, including primary coverage and excess general liability policies. (AmerisourceBergen Drug Corporation v. ACE American Insurance Co. et al. (Cir. Ct. Boone County W.Va., 2017, No. CC-03-2017-C-36).) The coverage dispute arose out of earlier litigation that had marked the beginning of the legal fallout from the opioid prescription abuse and addiction crisis. In

3 The ABC Entities include AmerisourceBergen Corporation (ABC), Bellco Drug Corporation (Bellco or BDC), MWI Veterinary Supply, Inc., PharMEDium Services, LLC, ASD Specialty Healthcare, LLC (ASD Specialty), and AmerisourceBergen Drug Corporation (ABDC). These same entities are the pharmaceutical or distributor defendants in the St. Paul Insurers’ declaratory judgment action here, and they were the moving parties that obtained the stay below and are the respondents on appeal. In their moving papers below, the ABC Entities identified ABC as their parent company and the rest of the ABC Entities as “present and former ABC subsidiaries named as Defendants” in this California action.

4 the first of thousands of similar lawsuits filed around the country, the West Virginia Attorney General in 2012 sued ABDC in West Virginia state court alleging that ABDC negligently, recklessly, or intentionally distributed prescription opioids to West Virginia pharmacies, hospitals, and doctors in a manner that contributed to the opioid addiction crisis. The lawsuit sought damages for costs for medical care and drug treatment for West Virginians who became addicted to opioids. Once the West Virginia Attorney General’s lawsuit (the WV AG action) settled in January 2017, ABDC demanded that St. Paul Fire & Marine and other insurers contribute to the settlement, but they rejected the demand.

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Bluebook (online)
St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. AmerisourceBergen Corp., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-paul-fire-marine-ins-co-v-amerisourcebergen-corp-calctapp-2022.