• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Reinsurance Focus

New reinsurance-related and arbitration developments from Carlton Fields

  • About
    • Events
  • Articles
    • Treaty Tips
    • Special Focus
    • Market
  • Contact
  • Exclusive Content
    • Blog Staff Picks
    • Cat Risks
    • Regulatory Modernization
    • Webinars
  • Subscribe
You are here: Home / Archives for Arbitration / Court Decisions / Contract Interpretation

Contract Interpretation

NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS DISMISSES LAWSUIT INVOLVING REINSURANCE FOR PRIVATE MORTGAGE INSURANCE

August 3, 2017 by John Pitblado

In a lawsuit filed by the Rehabilitator for a private mortgage insurance provider, the District Court found that the causes of action either failed to meet the Iqbal pleading standard, contained implausible allegations, or was barred by the protection of RESPA’s “safe harbor” provision and its four year statute of limitations.

The PMI program was described by the Court as follows: home purchasers seeking to borrow more than 80% of the home’s purchase price were able to do so if they purchased PMI to compensate the lender in case the borrower defaulted. “In order to protect themselves from losses due to defaults, insurance providers of PMI would purchase reinsurance in order to shift some of the risk of default. The PMI provider would pass on the reinsurance premium to the borrower in the form of a higher premium for the PMI. The PMI provider would split the premium with the reinsurer, which is called a ‘ceding payment’ in accordance with the risk assumed.”

With respect to the provisions of the PMI provider and the reinsurer, the Court found the provisions contained therein “say nothing which could give rise to a duty requiring [the reinsurer] to make any disclosures to the borrowers at all.” Furthermore, the Court found the Complaint did not allege “who the affected borrower was, the specific regulation violated, how it was violated, and most important, how [the PMI provider] was damaged.”

People of the State of Illinois, ex rel., Anne Melissa Dowling, Acting Director of Insurance of the State of Illinois, as Rehabilitator for Triad Guaranty Insurance Corporation and Triad Guaranty Assurance Corporation v. AAMB Reinsurance, Inc., and Bank of America Corporation, 1:16-cv-07477 (USDC N.D. Ill. June 1, 2017)

This post written by Nora A. Valenza-Frost.

See our disclaimer.

Filed Under: Contract Interpretation, Reinsurance Claims

SUPREME COURT HOLDS FEDERAL ARBITRATION ACT PREEMPTION APPLIES TO CONTRACT FORMATION RULES

May 22, 2017 by Carlton Fields

Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court rejected the Kentucky Supreme Court’s use of a clear-statement rule to require that powers of attorney specifically authorize a representative to enter into an arbitration agreement, finding that the rule violated the Federal Arbitration Act’s (“FAA”) equal treatment principle. The plaintiffs in two consolidated cases were the wife and daughter of individuals who lived and died at a Kindred Nursing Centers facility. They each held powers of attorney with broad authority to manage their family members’ affairs. When each plaintiff signed the necessary paperwork to move their family member into the Kindred facility, they signed binding arbitration agreements.

The present dispute arose from a lower court action in which the plaintiffs sued Kindred over allegations that substandard care caused their family members’ deaths. Kindred moved to dismiss the suits on the basis of the arbitration agreements, the lower courts denied those motions, and the Kentucky Supreme Court affirmed. The state’s highest court found that one plaintiff’s (Wellner) power of attorney was not broad enough to permit her to enter into an arbitration agreement on behalf of her husband, but that the other plaintiff’s (Clark) power of attorney was sufficiently broad. However, the Kentucky court invalidated both arbitration agreements based upon a so-called clear-statement rule—that a power of attorney must specifically state that the representative has the power to enter into an arbitration agreement lest the individual’s “sacred” right of access to the courts and to trial by jury be violated. This rule complied with FAA’s demands that arbitration agreements be treated equally, the court explained, because it would apply to arbitration and other contracts implicating “fundamental constitutional rights.”

Justice Kagan authored an opinion for seven justices that squarely rejected the Kentucky Supreme Court’s reliance on the clear-statement rule, holding that it failed to put arbitration agreements on “an equal plane” with other contracts. The FAA includes an equal treatment principle that courts may invalidate arbitration agreements based upon generally applicable contract defenses, but not on legal rules singling out arbitration. The Supreme Court found that the clear-statement rule did exactly what its prior precedent (Concepcion) barred: it adopted a legal rule turning on the distinctive, primary characteristic of an arbitration agreement—the waiver of the right of access to the court and to a jury trial.

The Supreme Court dismissed the Kentucky court’s attempt to sidestep the equal treatment principle by suggesting the clear-statement rule could apply to other fundamental constitutional rights, referring to the hypothetical examples as “patently objectionable and utterly fanciful contracts.”  The Court stated that adopting the respondents’ view “would make it trivially easy for States to undermine the Act—indeed, to wholly defeat it.”

Importantly, the Supreme Court rejected an argument by respondents attempting to salvage the clear-statement rule by characterizing it as only affecting contract formation, and thus, outside of the FAA’s purview. In rejecting that characterization, the Court relied upon the FAA’s text as well as case law. By its terms, the FAA states arbitration agreements be treated as “valid, irrevocable, and enforceable,” thus covering the initial “valid[ity]” of arbitration contracts.” The Court explained that its discussion of duress in Concepcion, a doctrine involving unfair dealing at the contract formation stage, would not make sense if the FAA did not apply to the contract formation stage. Furthermore, if respondents were correct, states could easily make an end-run around it by declaring everyone incompetent to sign arbitration agreements—a rule only affecting contract formation.

In dispensing with the consolidated cases, the Court reversed and ordered enforcement of Clark’s arbitration agreement because the Kentucky court had invalidated that agreement only based on the clear-statement rule. On the other hand, the Court vacated and remanded Wellner’s case for the state court to determine whether its interpretation of the power of attorney was independent of the clear-statement rule.

Kindred Nursing Ctrs. Ltd. P’ship v. Clark, No. 16-32 (USSC May 15, 2017).

This post written by Thaddeus Ewald .
See our disclaimer.

Filed Under: Arbitration Process Issues, Contract Formation, Contract Interpretation, Week's Best Posts

PUTATIVE CLASS ACTION INVOLVING A PATENTED REINSURANCE ARRANGEMENT FOR WORKERS’ COMPENSATION COVERAGE LARGELY SURVIVES DISMISSAL

April 25, 2017 by Michael Wolgin

The case is pending in a federal district court in New York, and involves three allegedly interconnected contracts purportedly “designed to circumvent [state] insurance laws,” including the laws of New York. The three contracts include: (1) a workers’ compensation insurance contract between a licensed insurer and an insured; (2) a reinsurance contract between the licensed insurer and an affiliated reinsurer; and (3) a “reinsurance and profit sharing” contract between the reinsurer and the insured. The plaintiffs (insured employers) allege that the “reinsurance and profit sharing” contract was an illegal contract of insurance that modified the workers’ compensation insurance contract issued by the licensed insurer. The plaintiffs also claim that the “reinsurance and profit sharing” contract was materially misleading, and misled insureds to assume liability for a portion of the losses they believed they had insured. Additional claims asserted by the plaintiffs include breach of contract, rescission, violation of New York law prohibiting deceptive trade practices, and unjust enrichment. The defendants (various alleged members of the Berkshire Hathaway Group) moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim.

In a lengthy opinion, the court granted in part and denied in part the motion to dismiss. Regarding claims for rescission based on alleged violations of the New York Insurance Laws governing workers’ compensation insurance, the court granted dismissal, reasoning that enforcement of those laws rests with the Superintendent of Insurance and that no private right of action exists. The court permitted claims for rescissory damages to proceed however, as reimbursement of amounts charged and paid over and above the filed rates of the policies is contemplated by New York law and “promotes the legislative purpose of the NYIL to ensure that parties adhere to filed rates.” The court also held that the claims for breach of contract (based on plaintiffs’ contention that the reinsurance and profit sharing contract modified the workers’ compensation insurance policies) and unjust enrichment, should survive dismissal. As to the claims for deceptive trade practices, the court held that for certain named plaintiffs, the claims were time-barred, but for other plaintiffs, the claims could proceed. National Convention Services, L.L.C. et al. v. Applied Underwriters Captive Risk Assurance Co., Inc., et al., Case No. 15-cv-07063 (USDC S.D.N.Y. Mar. 9, 2017).

This post written by Michael Wolgin.

See our disclaimer.

Filed Under: Contract Interpretation, Reinsurance Regulation, Week's Best Posts

COURT AFFIRMS DISMISSAL OF CEDENT’S CLAIMS ASSERTING REINSURANCE PREMIUM FRAUD SCHEME, BASED ON EXPIRATION OF LIMITATIONS PERIOD

January 31, 2017 by Michael Wolgin

The appellant (Guarantee Trust) had forwarded reinsurance premiums to the reinsurer to be held in a custodial account for the payment of claims. Guarantee Trust initially sued Kribbs, the founder of the reinsurer, alleging that he acted in concert with an employee inside Guarantee Trust’s organization to improperly obtain the funds from the account for Kribbs’ own use. During depositions (six years after filing suit), Guarantee Trust discovered the identity of two of its own employees, whom Guarantee Trust named in its re-filed action after having voluntarily dismissed the initial complaint. To address the running of the statute of limitations, Guarantee Trust argued that the limitations period was tolled due to fraudulent concealment. The trial court, however, dismissed Guarantee Trust’s claims, finding that Guarantee Trust provided no reason why it could not have discovered its claims against the two employees sooner through reasonable diligence.

On appeal, the court addressed the tolling issue under both the discovery rule and fraudulent concealment, and affirmed the circuit court’s decision. The court found it was significant that Guarantee Trust knew at the time it filed its original complaint that one of its own employees was involved in the alleged wrongdoing, and that Guarantee Trust had been provided in 2008 with discovery responses disclosing a short list of potential witnesses that included the two employees later addressed at depositions. The court concluded that the trial court correctly determined that Guarantee Trust failed the “reasonable diligence” test. The Court also found no fraudulent concealment during discovery that would toll the statute of limitations. Guarantee Trust Life Ins. Co. v. Kribbs, Case No. 15 L 11262, (Ill. App. Ct. Dec. 29, 2016).

This post written by Gail Jankowski.

See our disclaimer.

Filed Under: Contract Interpretation, Week's Best Posts

NY HIGHEST COURT ASKED CERTIFIED QUESTION ON REINSURER LIABILITY CAP

January 3, 2017 by John Pitblado

The Second Circuit certified to the New York Court of Appeals the question of whether its 2004 decision (Excess Insurance Co. v. Factory Mutual Insurance Co., 3 N.Y.3d 577 (2004)) imposed
“either a rule of construction, or a strong presumption, that a per occurrence liability cap in a reinsurance contract limits the total insurance available under the contract to the amount of the cap regardless of whether the underlying policy is understood to cover expenses such as, for instance, defense costs?”

Relying on the Second Circuit’s decision in Bellefonte Reinsurance Co. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., the SDNY previously determined the limits in the reinsurance certificates capped the reinsurer’s liabilities for both the cedent’s indemnity payments (“losses”) and its defense costs (“expenses”). Courts across the United States have reached different results on this issue.

Noting the potential economic impact of a reversal of Bellefonte and Unigard Security Insurance Co. Inc. v. North River Insurance Co., the panel stated its intention “is to seek the New York Court of Appeals as to whether a consistent rule of construction specifically applicable to reinsurance contracts exists” and that the “interpretation of the certificates at issue here is a question of New York law that the New York Court of Appeals has a greater interest and greater expertise in deciding.”

Global Reinsurance Corp. of Am. v. Century Indem. Co., Docket No. 15-2164-cv (2d Cir. Dec. 8, 2016).

This post written by Nora A. Valenza-Frost.

See our disclaimer.

Filed Under: Contract Interpretation, Reinsurance Claims, Week's Best Posts

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 37
  • Page 38
  • Page 39
  • Page 40
  • Page 41
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 95
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Carlton Fields Logo

A blog focused on reinsurance and arbitration law and practice by the attorneys of Carlton Fields.

Focused Topics

Hot Topics

Read the results of Artemis’ latest survey of reinsurance market professionals concerning the state of the market and their intentions for 2019.

Recent Updates

Market (1/27/2019)
Articles (1/2/2019)

See our advanced search tips.

Subscribe

If you would like to receive updates to Reinsurance Focus® by email, visit our Subscription page.
© 2008–2025 Carlton Fields, P.A. · Carlton Fields practices law in California as Carlton Fields, LLP · Disclaimers and Conditions of Use

Reinsurance Focus® is a registered service mark of Carlton Fields. All Rights Reserved.

Please send comments and questions to the Reinsurance Focus Administrators

Carlton Fields publications should not be construed as legal advice on any specific facts or circumstances. The contents are intended for general information and educational purposes only, and should not be relied on as if it were advice about a particular fact situation. The distribution of this publication is not intended to create, and receipt of it does not constitute, an attorney-client relationship with Carlton Fields. This publication may not be quoted or referred to in any other publication or proceeding without the prior written consent of the firm, to be given or withheld at our discretion. To request reprint permission for any of our publications, please contact us. The views set forth herein are the personal views of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the firm. This site may contain hypertext links to information created and maintained by other entities. Carlton Fields does not control or guarantee the accuracy or completeness of this outside information, nor is the inclusion of a link to be intended as an endorsement of those outside sites. This site may be considered attorney advertising in some jurisdictions.