Travelers Insurance Co. v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co.

886 A.2d 46, 2005 Del. Ch. LEXIS 166
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedOctober 25, 2005
DocketC.A. 20418
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 886 A.2d 46 (Travelers Insurance Co. v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Travelers Insurance Co. v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co., 886 A.2d 46, 2005 Del. Ch. LEXIS 166 (Del. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

LAMB, Vice Chancellor.

The plaintiff in this case, Travelers Insurance Company, seeks enforcement of an arbitration award made in its favor against the defendant, Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company. Nationwide’s pending motion for summary judgment asks the court to deny enforcement of the arbitration panel’s decision, arguing that the panel erred in granting relief to Travelers.

In general, this court refuses to reconsider the decision of an arbitration panel. The strong public policy support for the resolution of disputes through arbitration requires that courts uphold the decisions reached by such panels, unless the party seeking to vacate presents evidence satisfying a few narrow statutory exceptions. 1 This case, however, presents extraordinary facts which render upholding the arbitration panel’s decision contrary to the same public policy which animates the courts’ deference toward arbitration. Simply put, the panel’s decision was plainly wrong, and in opposition to clear statutory mandate. Therefore, for the reasons stated below, the court vacates the arbitration panel’s award pursuant to 10 Del. C. § 5714. Any other result would be a gross injustice.

I.

This case arises out of an automobile accident on May 23, 1999, caused by Nationwide’s insured. As a result of that incident, Travelers paid $6,219.59 in PIP/No Fault benefits to its insured, Shelly Evans, who was the operator of the other vehicle involved in the accident. Travelers then sought to recover that sum from Nationwide under the principles of subrogation. Because both companies are signatories to an inter-company arbitration agreement, and have entered into Arbitration Forums, Inc.’s Automobile Subrogation Arbitration Agreement, Travelers’s claims were submitted to arbitration. The arbitration was scheduled for July 11, 2002. In the meantime, on December 18, 2001, Evans settled her claims against Nationwide on receipt of a payment of $50,000, which was the limit of Nationwide’s liability under its policy. 2 On June 17, 2002, Nationwide’s claim representative, Scott Smith, wrote a letter notifying both Travelers and Arbitration Forums of the settlement with Evans, advising that Nationwide had tendered its policy limits in payment of the underlying tort claim. 3

*48 For reasons that are difficult to understand, Travelers continued with the arbitration proceeding, even though undisputed deposition testimony establishes that Travelers received Smith’s letter before the hearing date of July 11, 2002. 4 Despite knowing that Nationwide had already paid its policy limits, the arbitration panel awarded Travelers $6,219.59 in satisfaction of its subrogation claim. 5 Nationwide did not pay the award, and on August 26, 2002, Travelers warned Nationwide by letter that it would pursue litigation if payment was not received. 6 Nationwide did not respond to Travelers’s request for payment. Finally, Travelers filed this suit seeking enforcement of Arbitration Forums’s award.

II.

As a general rule, a decision reached by an arbitration panel is not reviewed on the merits by Delaware courts. The grounds for vacating an arbitration award, where they exist, are narrowly circumscribed. Indeed, the relevant statute recognizes only five grounds for vacating an arbitration award, none of which are strictly applicable in this case. 7 .

In addition, Delaware courts have vacated arbitration awards when the arbitrators have exhibited what the courts have called “manifest disregard” of the law. Though this ground for vacatur does exist, as an outgrowth of the statutory vacatur grounds for cases in which the arbitrator exceeds his powers, 8 the scope of the court’s review in such cases is extremely limited. As this court has previously explained, an arbitrator’s decision can only be overturned if the arbitrator acted “ ‘in manifest disregard’ of the law, [or was] cognizant of the controlling law but clearly chose to ignore it in reaching [its] decision.” 9

Examples of this extraordinary remedy are necessarily rare in Delaware jurisprudence. The only case on point that the court has been able to discover, Beebe Medical Center v. Insight Health Services Corp., applied the manifest disregard test where the arbitration panel ignored its own internal directives by failing to consider the question of whether the panel was *49 evidently biased against one of the parties before it. 10

Because 10 Del. C. § 5714(a)(3) is modeled after the Federal Arbitration Act, however, “federal cases interpreting this section are most helpful.” 11 Examining federal jurisprudence is particularly helpful in this case as incidences of vacatur for manifest disregard in federal court, though still rare, 12 are far more plentiful than in Delaware. Among the manifest errors identified by federal courts are circumstances in which the panel’s judgment was found to be incompatible with a controlling statute. In Gas Aggregation Services Inc. v. Howard Avista Energy LLC, for example, a federal circuit court upheld a district court’s decision to vacate an arbitration award where the arbitration panel had granted attorneys’ fees in favor of the victorious party. As was clear from the evidence presented there, both parties were “sophisticated gas traders,” but the relevant statute plainly stated that awards of attorneys’ fees should only be made in cases of consumer transactions. 13 In another case, the Second Circuit vacated an arbitration panel’s decision where, in manifest disregard of the law, the panel granted punitive damages despite controlling New York precedent that forbade the award of such damages in arbitration. 14

The federal cases are also important in understanding what it means for the arbitrator’s disregard to be “manifest.” Though the standard requires intentionality, a finding of “manifest disregard” does not require the arbitration panel to expressly state that it is ignoring the law. 15 Rather, a court may infer the required knowledge of the law and intentionality on the part of the arbitrator if the court finds “an error that is so obvious that it would instantly be perceived as such by the average person qualified to serve as an arbitrator.” 16

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

WWEC Holdings III Corp. v. David Hackman
Court of Chancery of Delaware, 2026
Paul J. Miller v. William Joshua Mellor
Court of Chancery of Delaware, 2025
Orlando Cedres v. Geoffrey Services Corporation
Court of Chancery of Delaware, 2024
Howard Center v. AFSCME Local 1674 & Daniel Peyser
2023 VT 6 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2023)
Bon Ayre Land LLC v. Bon Ayre Community
Supreme Court of Delaware, 2016
SPX Corp. v. Garda USA, Inc.
94 A.3d 745 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2014)
Chase Bank USA, N.A. v. Hale
19 Misc. 3d 975 (New York Supreme Court, 2008)
S&L Enterprises Inc v. Ecolab Inc.
247 F. App'x 970 (Tenth Circuit, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
886 A.2d 46, 2005 Del. Ch. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travelers-insurance-co-v-nationwide-mutual-insurance-co-delch-2005.