Steadfast Insurance v. Agricultural Insurance

475 F. App'x 683
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedMarch 30, 2012
DocketNo. 10-5113
StatusPublished

This text of 475 F. App'x 683 (Steadfast Insurance v. Agricultural Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steadfast Insurance v. Agricultural Insurance, 475 F. App'x 683 (10th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

CERTIFICATION OF QUESTION OF STATE LAW

DAVID M. EBEL, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-Appellee Steadfast Insurance Co. (“Steadfast”) issued successive insur-[684]*684anee policies to the Grand River Dam Authority (“GRDA”), providing GRDA with first-level excess general liability coverage from 1993 through 2002. Steadfast defended GRDA against a number of flooding claims made during this time period. Although the flooding at issue spanned the entire nine-year period of coverage, Steadfast and GRDA agreed that the amounts Steadfast paid on those claims would be allocated to a single Steadfast policy, the 1993-94 policy. Defendant-Appellant Agricultural Insurance Co. (“Agricultural”) provided GRDA with second-level excess liability insurance during this same time period, which was triggered once Steadfast had reached its policy limits for a given year. In this case, Agricultural alleged that Steadfast artificially allocated all of the flooding claims it paid on GRDA’s behalf to Steadfast’s 1993-94 policy, wrongfully triggering Agricultural’s second-level excess coverage for that year. The district court held that Agricultural did not have a viable cause of action for equitable subrogation against Steadfast under Oklahoma law because the insured, GRDA, had agreed with Steadfast to allocate its payment of the flooding claims to only the 1993-94 policy and had further agreed to release Steadfast from any further liability under that policy. Agricultural appeals that determination.

I. QUESTION CERTIFIED

Pursuant to 10th Cir. R. 27.1 and Okla. Stat. tit. 20, § 1602, the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit requests that the Oklahoma Supreme Court exercise its discretion to consider the following certified question of Oklahoma law which “may be determinative of an issue” presented by this appeal and on which “there is no controlling” Oklahoma law. Okla. Stat. tit. 20, § 1602.

Whether a second-level excess insurer can assert a claim for equitable subrogation against a first-level excess insurer even though the insured has agreed with the first-level excess insurer that the first-level insurer has exhausted its coverage limits and thus has released the first-level excess insurer from any further obligation under the policy?

II. STATEMENT OF FACTS

The parties stipulated to the following facts: GRDA “is a conservation and reclamation district created pursuant to Oklahoma statute for the purpose of utilizing the waters of the Grand River and its tributaries.” (ApltApp. at 91 ¶ 1 (quotation omitted).) GRDA owns and operates the Pensacola Dam, which “impounds the waters from the Neosho (Grand) and Spring Rivers in a containment known as Grand Lake.” (Id. at 92 ¶¶ 2-3.) The dam produces hydroelectric power.

Beginning in 1994, landowners upstream from the dam filed four separate lawsuits in Oklahoma state court, alleging GRDA had intentionally raised the level of water contained by the Pensacola Dam in order to increase production of electricity, knowingly causing or worsening floods that damaged these landowners’ property. The state-court lawsuits, referred to as the Wagoner, Roberts, Dalrymple and Allman actions, involved claims resulting from a number of floods occurring from September 1992 through May 1999.1 Dalrymple was pursued as a class action.

A. GRDA’s general liability insurance coverage

During this time period, GRDA’s primary general liability insurer was the [685]*685State of Oklahoma, which provided $200,000 in coverage for each insured occurrence. Steadfast then provided GRDA with first-level excess general liability insurance coverage up to $10 million, including defense costs.2 The initial policy Steadfast issued GRDA was effective from May 16, 1993, until May 16, 1994 (“1993-94 policy”). That policy also covered “all claims from any occurrences” from May 16, 1986, through May 16, 1993, of which GRDA “had no knowledge prior to” May 16, 1993. (Id. at 301 (emphasis omitted).) Steadfast subsequently issued GRDA four additional policies that provided similar coverage from May 16, 1994, through May 16, 2002. “The Limits of Insurance of [each of these policies applied] separately to each consecutive annual period.” (Id. at 280.)

Agricultural provided GRDA with a second layer of excess general liability insurance from May 16, 1993, through May 16, 1994.3 This policy provided up to $15 million in excess liability coverage and was a “following form” policy, meaning it provided coverage on the same terms as Steadfast’s first-level excess liability policy.

B. GRDA’s defense of the flooded landowners’ claims

GRDA initially defended itself against the flooded landowners’ claims. In 1996, after spending over $400,000 in its own defense, GRDA tendered its defense of those claims to Steadfast. Steadfast accepted defense of GRDA under Steadfast’s 1993-94 policy, “subject to a reservation of rights,” and disclaimed any coverage under the later Steadfast policies. Steadfast’s disclaimer was based, in part, on its contention that all of the flooding claims resulted from a single decision made by GRDA in 1992 to raise the operating level of Grand Lake.

Steadfast expended approximately $1.5 million defending GRDA against the flooded landowners’ claims and paid just under $122,000 to satisfy several judgments for money damages entered against GRDA. In addition, Steadfast and GRDA, through mediation, settled the claims of eighty-eight of the ninety-four remaining Dal-rymple class members’ claims.4 Steadfast contributed over $8.3 million toward this settlement.

The settlement agreement between GRDA, Steadfast, and the eighty-eight settling Dalrymple plaintiffs stated that Steadfast’s more than $8.3 million “payment hereunder exhausts all available policy limits provided under its 93-94 policy and, therefore, Steadfast shall not be liable under its 93-94 policy to any party for any indemnity or defense expense for any [686]*686claim for any flood event that occurred on or before May 16, 1994.” (Id. at 684.) The parties agreed to this even though, as a result of this settlement, the Dalrymple plaintiffs released claims against GRDA based on floods occurring from 1992 through the time of the settlement, September 2005. After this settlement, GRDA turned to its second-level excess insurer, Agricultural, which agreed, “subject to a reservation of rights,” to defend GRDA against the remaining Dalrymple claims, as well as claims asserted in the Wagoner, Roberts and Allman actions. (Id. at 100 ¶¶ 38-40.)

C. Procedural background of this litigation

While the four state-court actions against GRDA were ongoing, Steadfast sued GRDA and Agricultural in federal court, seeking a declaration that, under Oklahoma law, it had no obligation to cover any of the state-court claims being pursued against GRDA or, if Steadfast did have such an obligation, that obligation was limited to the coverage provided under Steadfast’s 1993-94 policy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
475 F. App'x 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steadfast-insurance-v-agricultural-insurance-ca10-2012.