Unigard Security Insurance v. North River Insurance

762 F. Supp. 566, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21607
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 23, 1991
Docket88 Civ. 0789 (RWS)
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 762 F. Supp. 566 (Unigard Security Insurance v. North River Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Unigard Security Insurance v. North River Insurance, 762 F. Supp. 566, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21607 (S.D.N.Y. 1991).

Opinion

MODIFIED OPINION

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Prior Proceedings .571

FINDINGS OF FACT. 571

1. The Parties.571

2. The Underlying Insurance Involved.571

3. The Reinsurance Certificate Issued by Unigard to North River.572

4. The Asbestos Injury Crisis.573

a. Owens-Corning’s Situation.574

b. Crum & Forster’s Situation.574

5. The Wellington Agreement.575

a. The Facility.576

b. The Indemnity and Expense Percentage Allocation Formulas.576

*569 c. Confidentiality of the Facility’s Data.577

d. The Trigger of Insurance Coverage Under the Facility.577

6. The Termination of the Asbestos Claims Facility.578

7. Reinsurance Claims Handling at Unigard.578

8. Communications With Respect to the Facility.579

9. Insurance Industry Custom and Practice.580

a. Setting of Reserves.580

i. In general.580

ii. Excess insurers and reinsurers.581

b. Notice.581

i. To direct insurers.581

ii. To reinsurers.581

c. Reinsurer involvement in claims.581

10. North River’s Involvement with the Facility.582

a. North River’s Analysis of Its Exposure.582

b. The Aetna Exhaustion.582

c. North River’s Response to the Aetna Exhaustion.583

11. North River’s Notice on the Certificate.584

12. North River’s Reserves on XS-3672 . 584

13. Unigard’s Response to the Notice on the Certificate.585

14. Claims Paid Under XS-3672 . 585

15. The Costs of Defense.586
16. The Stub Period XS-3672(A).586
17. The North Shore Audit.586

CONCLUSIONS OF LAW .586

1. Jurisdiction.586

2. Unigard Must Follow the Fortunes of North River on XS-3672. 586

3. North River’s Consent to the Wellington Agreement Did Not Implicate

Any of the Provisions of the Certificate.587

a. North River Was Not Required to Issue Notice When It Signed the Wellington Agreement.588

b. North River’s Failure to Notify Unigard of Its Intent to Sign the Wellington Agreement Was Not Intentional.588

c. Neither the Producer Allocation Scheme Nor the Use of the Triple Trigger Altered the Risk of the Certificate.589

4. Unigard Cannot Escape Liability on the Grounds of Untimely Notice .590

a. Notice Was Not Required Prior to March, 1987 . 590

b. Notice Should Have Been Sent After the Aetna Exhaustion .591

c. The Timeliness of Notice Must be Judged Under an Objective Standard.591

d. Under an Objective Test, North River’s Notice was Untimely.591

e. Unigard’s Inability to Show Prejudice from North River’s Late Notice Prevents it From Escaping Liability .592

i. The “no prejudice” rule in the insurance context.592

ii. The different needs of insurers and reinsurers justify applying a different rule in the reinsurance context.592

iii. Unigard has not shown prejudice from North River’s untimely notice.593

5. Under the Following Form Clause Unigard Must Pay Expenses in Excess of the Limits of the Certificate.594

6. Unigard Owes the Full Payment for the Policy Period on XS-3672(A).595

CONCLUSION.596

*570 SWEET, District Judge.

This diversity action involves a faculta-tive reinsurance certificate (the “Certificate”) issued by plaintiff Unigard Security Insurance Company (“Unigard”) to defendant North River Insurance Company (“North River”). Unigard seeks a declaratory judgment relieving it of any obligation to indemnify North River for losses paid by North River to its insured Owens-Corning Fiberglass Corporation (“Owens-Corning”). North River by way of counterclaim seeks to recover such indemnification. Based upon the findings of fact and conclusions of law set forth below, judgment will be entered granting relief to North River on its counterclaims in accordance with this opinion.

This action is significant not only because of North River’s counterclaim for over $15 million in indemnity and related expenses but also because it raises, apparently for the first time, significant issues concerning reinsurance for losses suffered by a manufacturer of asbestos and its insurer. These issues include the effect upon the “follow the fortunes” and “right to associate” clauses of the Certificate and any Unigard reinsurance obligations of the participation of Owens-Corning and North River in the Asbestos Claims Facility (the “Facility”), an instrumentality which sought on behalf of insurers and manufacturers to handle asbestos bodily injuries claims. In addition, determinations are required as to the notice of coverage required to be given by the insurer North River to its reinsurer Unigard and the timeliness of such notice and the obligation of the rein-surer for defense costs and the coverage for a stub period of the policy.

These issues are presented against the complicated factual background arising out of the mass tort asbestos.litigation, which has to date defied the efforts of the courts to provide a speedy and effective resolution of the hundreds of thousands of claims brought to recover damages by injured plaintiffs and their representatives against hundreds of manufacturers and users of asbestos products throughout the nation. Traditional litigation has been so far unsatisfactory in resolving this mass tort dispute in an efficient, cost-effective and equitable manner. 1 The potentially overwhelming nature of this litigation is well-recognized, and the ultimate resolution of the issues presented here has the potential to affect obligations in the billions of dollars.

Prior Proceedings

This action was filed by Unigard on February 3, 1988. Discovery was had, and on July 12, 1990 an opinion was filed denying the summary judgment sought by Unigard (the “July Opinion”). That opinion described the parties and issues, and the findings contained there remain unchanged but are supplemented as set forth below.

Following the July Opinion, additional discovery was conducted, and as if the action were not complicated enough, the parties concluded that North River would assume the role of plaintiff and Unigard the role of defendant for purposes of the presentation of evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
762 F. Supp. 566, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/unigard-security-insurance-v-north-river-insurance-nysd-1991.