Susan Gallinger v. North Star Hospital Mutual Assurance, Ltd.

64 F.3d 422, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 24303
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 29, 1995
Docket94-2617
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 64 F.3d 422 (Susan Gallinger v. North Star Hospital Mutual Assurance, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Susan Gallinger v. North Star Hospital Mutual Assurance, Ltd., 64 F.3d 422, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 24303 (8th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

64 F.3d 422

Susan GALLINGER, Arizona Director of Insurance, as Receiver
of Great Global Assurance Company, Appellant,
v.
NORTH STAR HOSPITAL MUTUAL ASSURANCE, LTD., A Bermuda
Company, Defendant,
and
Allen Memorial Hospital; Finley Hospital; Hancock County
Memorial Hospital; Jackson County Public Hospital;
Jefferson County Hospital; Sartori Memorial Hospital;
Spencer Municipal Hospital; Covenant Medical Center, Inc.,
Successor to St. Francis Hospital; Abbott Northwestern
Hospital, Inc., Successor to Eitel Hospital; Albany Area
Hospital, Formerly Known as Albany Community Hospital;
Samaritan Bethany, Inc., Formerly Known as Bethany
Samaritan, Inc.; Douglas County Hospital; Elders' Home,
Inc.; Elim Homes, Inc.; Fairfax Community Home, Inc.;
Fairmont Community Hospital Association, Inc.; Foundation
of Guardian Angels; Gillette Children's Hospital; Glenwood
Retirement Home; Grandview Christian Home; Green Pine
Acres Nursing Home; HealthEast, Formerly Known as Health
Resource Center, Inc.; Immanuel-St. Joseph's Hospital of
Mankato; All Health Corporation, Formerly Known as King
Care Centers, Inc.; Lakeview Memorial Hospital Association,
Inc.; Lyngblomsten Care Center, Inc.; Lac Qui Parle Health
Care Services, Formerly Known as Madison Hospital
Association; Mercy Hospital and Health Care Center,
Formerly Known as Mercy Hospital and Nursing Home;
Methodist Hospital; Metropolitan-Mount Sinai Medical
Center, Owned by HealthOne Corporation, Successor to
Metropolitan Medical Center, Also Known as Centercare, and
to Mount Sinai Hospital; Minneapolis Children's Medical
Center; Monticello-Big Lake Community Hospital; North
Country Hospital, Formerly Known as Bemidji Community
Hospital; Riverview Healthcare Association, Formerly Known
as Riverview Hospital; Seminary Memorial Home; Shady Lane
Nursing Home; St. John's Regional Health Center, Formerly
Known as St. John's Hospital; St. Luke's Hospital of
Duluth; St. Therese Home Auxiliary; United District
Hospital and Home; United Hospital Incorporated; Villa of
St. Francis Nursing Home; Ridgeview Medical Center,
Formerly Known as Waconia Ridgeview Hospital; Watonwan
Memorial Hospital; Weiner Memorial Medical Center, Inc.;
Wood Dale Home, Inc.; Bozeman Deaconess Hospital; C-M
Medical Facilities, Inc., Owner of Central Montana Medical
Center, Formerly Known as Central Montana Hospital and
Nursing Home; Garfield County Health Center, Inc., Formerly
Known as Garfield County Hospital and Home Association;
Glendive Medical Center, Formerly Known as Glendive
Community Hospital; and Holy Rosary Hospital, Appellees,
and
Liberty County Hospital, Defendant,
and
Northern Montana Hospital; Montana Children's Home and
Hospital, Owner of Shodair Children's Hospital; St. John's
Lutheran Hospital, Libby, Montana; St. Patrick's Hospital;
St. Peter's Community Hospital; Brookings
Hospital/Brookview Manor; Dell Rapids Community Hospital;
Five Counties Hospital and Nursing Home; Hand County
Memorial Hospital; Mobridge Regional Hospital; Pioneer
Memorial Hospital; Platte Community Memorial Hospital,
Inc.; Rushmore Health System, Inc., Successor to Rapid City
Regional Hospital; Sioux Valley Hospital Association; St.
Benedict Hospital; and St. Michael's Hospital, Inc., Appellees.

No. 94-2617.

United States Court of Appeals,
Eighth Circuit.

Submitted June 15, 1995.
Decided Aug. 29, 1995.

Joseph Anthony, Minneapolis, MN, argued (Mary L. Knoblauch and Douglas L. Elsass, on the brief), for appellant.

Eric Magnuson, Minneapolis, MN, argued (Richard J. Nygaard, Thomas J. White and Thomas J. Hoben, on the brief), for appellees.

Before BOWMAN, Circuit Judge, HEANEY, Senior Circuit Judge, and MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.

MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.

In 1978, a group of 13 hospitals formed North Star Hospital Mutual Assurance, Ltd. (NSHMA), an entity through which they intended to insure themselves for malpractice and other types of general liability. Membership in the company, which was incorporated in Bermuda, later grew to almost 250 hospitals and nursing homes.

Although the NSHMA members did not hold shares of stock in the company, the members were subject to various Bermuda statutes that treated those members in a manner analogous to shareholders in a corporation. For instance, under the legislation authorizing the formation of the company in Bermuda, the "liability of each member ... [was] limited to the premiums or any unpaid ... portion thereof, due" to the company. Under that same legislation, no member was to be required to "pay any dues or assessments in addition to such premiums"; rather, "the property and assets" of the company were to be "liable for its debts and liabilities."

Under the legislation authorizing the formation of the company in Bermuda, the members of the company were granted the power to approve a set of bylaws proposed by the company's initial board of directors. Under that same legislation, the members were also given the power to "revoke, alter, amend or add to" the bylaws by resolution. The original bylaws for NSHMA provided that each member's base premium could be increased by up to 100 percent in any particular year, depending upon that member's insurance losses for that year (those increases were called general and specific experience modifiers). In 1981, however, the members of NSHMA, through a resolution passed at a general meeting, deleted the provision allowing for experience modifiers from the bylaws of the company.

In mid-1983, a company called Great Global Assurance (GGA) began providing workers' compensation insurance to NSHMA members. NSHMA agreed to be GGA's reinsurer for claims under GGA policies. In early 1986, however, an Arizona state court placed GGA into receivership because of insolvency; the receiver for GGA then canceled all insurance policies that had been issued by GGA.

For payment of claims, GGA policyholders turned as an alternative to the various insurance guaranty funds of the states in which the policyholders were located. Those insurance guaranty funds sought to recover their own payments of over $15 million from the receiver for GGA. In response, in mid-1991, the receiver for GGA sued NSHMA and 67 of its members in federal district court in Minnesota. The complaint alleged that NSHMA was the reinsurer for GGA's policies and therefore that NSHMA and its members were liable to GGA for the amounts sought by the state insurance guaranty funds from the receiver for GGA. The complaint contended that the NSHMA members could be held individually liable for the debts of NSHMA itself because "NSHMA was a mere instrumentality and alter ego of the ... defendants" and that the defendants "conducted, managed and controlled the affairs of NSHMA as though NSHMA was their own business." (The receiver for GGA sought relief against the NSHMA members on account of the fact that NSHMA itself was--and is--insolvent.)

The complaint asserted claims for breach of contract, civil conspiracy, promissory estoppel, and unjust enrichment. The receiver for GGA asked for $15 million in damages.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 F.3d 422, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 24303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/susan-gallinger-v-north-star-hospital-mutual-assurance-ltd-ca8-1995.