The Hartford S.B. Ins. v. Indus. Risk Ins., No. Cv94-705105 (Oct. 26, 1995)

1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 12269
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1995
DocketNo. CV94-705105
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 12269 (The Hartford S.B. Ins. v. Indus. Risk Ins., No. Cv94-705105 (Oct. 26, 1995)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Hartford S.B. Ins. v. Indus. Risk Ins., No. Cv94-705105 (Oct. 26, 1995), 1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 12269 (Colo. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The facts relevant to a discussion of the legal issues raised in this case will be discussed more fully in the opinion. But preliminarily it should be said that this case arises out of a dispute between the parties regarding a Reinsurance Agreement between them. This agreement provided for an arbitration process to resolve disputes over insurance coverage. Article 9 of the agreement sets out the agreement on arbitration.

The plaintiff, Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection and Insurance Company (HSB) informed the chairman of the arbitration panel selected by Industrial Risk Insurers (IRI) purportedly in compliance with Article 9 that it objected to the so-called Phase II arbitration process that was about to commence.

The plaintiff then filed this present action seeking an injunction restraining IRI from proceeding with the arbitration. The claim is made that (1) the IRI Loss Committee; failed to follow the methods set forth in Article 9 in selecting the arbitrators and (2) the committee wrongfully imposed arbitration procedures upon the arbitration panel and the parties.

It should be noted, however, that HSB is not merely seeking CT Page 12270 to restrain the defendant from proceeding with arbitration rather in its pleadings asks the court to in effect enforce the arbitration provision of the agreement by either itself appointing arbitrators pursuant to Article 9 or directing IRI to proceed with arbitration in compliance with its interpretation of Article 9.

This then is not a case where one or the other side is saying the dispute between the parties is not covered by the arbitration agreement. HSB seems to concede that. IRI on the other hand has filed a motion to stay proceedings in the HSB action and a motion to compel HSB to in effect arbitrate with the panel selected by the IRI Loss Committee.

I
As noted in this case the parties entered into a Settlement Agreement to arbitrate the dispute between them in two phases. The agreement provided the arbitration would be conducted pursuant to Article 9 of a 1975 Reinsurance Agreement entered into by HSB with IRI's predecessor in interest Factory Insurance Association.

Section B of Article 9 is the part of the 1975 agreement or Treaty that is relevant to a resolution of this matter. That section reads as follows:

"B. The IRI Boiler and Machinery Loss Subcommittee shall be appointed by the IRI Standing Loss Committee and shall consist of five members, two of whom shall be representatives of (IRI). Members which do not maintain inspection service for boiler and machinery insurance and two of whom shall be representative of IRI members which maintain inspection service for boiler and machinery insurance; the fifth member shall be a representative of the Reinsurer involved in the loss."

There can be no dispute that the Loss Committee under Article 9 is charged with the task of picking members of the Phase II arbitration panel. The initial question presented is whether given that assignment the Loss Committee complied with the contractual obligations set forth in Article 9 when it let it be known in January of 1994: that "current or former CEO's or senior executives" of IRI member companies would be eligible to serve on the panel. In an earlier opinion in this matter the court CT Page 12271 said: . . . "in the narrow case where it is claimed arbitrators were not chosen in the specific manner agreed to by the parties, the resolution of that claim is a jurisdictional one which the courts should decide before the arbitrators hear the case on the merits," Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection and Insurance Companyv. Industrial Risk Insurers, 12 Conn. L Rptr. 464, 468 (1994). At an earlier point the opinion said

"Also the resolution of this particular dispute is simply a matter of contract interpretation . . . (HSB's) claim rests on questions of compliance with the particular contract provisions of this case and the rather mechanical question of whether arbitrators who have been appointed were appointed in accordance with the agreement to arbitrate."

The question becomes whether under the terms of Article 9 retirees can be selected as representatives of member companies to be panel members for the Phase II arbitration. This issue can be presented in two ways or from two perspectives (1) Reading Article 9 as a contractual term either the Loss Committee did or did not have the right to appoint retirees. (2) Even assuming the Loss Committee did have the authority under this contractual provision to conclude retirees could be representatives of member companies on the Phase II panel, was the Loss Committee decision on this matter dictated or improperly influenced by IRI staff and outside counsel for IRI staff?

The first question is strictly one of contract interpretation, the second question I suppose could be categorized as raising matters dealing with reasonable expectation of contract performance and goes to the larger issue of whether, as HSB seems to imply at one point in its brief, the very decision to consider retirees as appropriate representatives was part and parcel of a larger scheme by IRI staff and counsel to in effect select a panel of its own choosing, see pages 92-96 of HSB Post Hearing Brief of April 7, 1995.

Dealing strictly with the first question of contract interpretation the basic principles to be applied by a court seeking to interpret provisions of an arbitration are clear. As said in Volt Information Sciences v. Board of Trustees,489 U.S. 468, 478:

. . . "(The FAA) simply requires courts to enforce privately negotiated agreements to arbitrate like other contracts in CT Page 12272 accordance with their terms. . ."

In interpreting Article 9 on this issue Federal interpretive guidelines based on a policy of favoring arbitration are not applicable. Thus the so-called "positive assurance" test mandates that doubts in the interpretation of contract language should be resolved in favor of "coverage," that is arbitration United SteelWorkers of America v. Warrior Gulf Navigation Co., 363 U.S. 574,582 (1960). But whether or not retirees should be able to sit on a Phase II arbitration panel under this article has nothing to do with coverage.

Also assuming that the Loss Committee had a fiduciary duty to HSB in formulating arbitration procedure and/or the Loss Committee was required to act in the utmost good faith in discharging its Article 9 responsibilities, it is difficult to see how, if the word "representative" in Article 9 is subjected to a purely linguistic analysis, an overarching fiduciary duty would require an entity in the position of the Loss Committee to interpret the word representative to bar retirees from service on the Phase II panel. In other words there is nothing about retirees as such that has been presented to the court to indicate they couldn't exercise arbitration responsibilities in a knowledgeable, intelligent, efficient, and fair manner.1 Common sense would indicate otherwise especially since the defined pool of retirees here would be "Former CEO's or senior executives".

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Bluebook (online)
1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 12269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-hartford-sb-ins-v-indus-risk-ins-no-cv94-705105-oct-26-1995-connsuperct-1995.