One of the more intriguing articles about reinsurance recently has been one which suggests that North Korea may be engaged in massive reinsurance claim fraud to generate hard currency for its ailing economy. All insurance in North Korea is written through one state-owned company, which reinsures the risks through Lloyds and non-Lloyds reinsurance companies. It is suspected that North Korea has been submitting bogus claims and claims with phony documentation, encompassing losses aggregating as much as $150 million. The closed nature of the society prevents reinsurers or claims agents from investigating the losses. This is interesting reading at Foxnews.com (until they archive the link).
Arbitration / Court Decisions
Courts continue strict approach to confirmation of arbitration awards
Two recent opinions continued the trend of courts confirming arbitration awards over a variety of objections:
- In Kuest v. Citigroup Global Markets, Inc., (USDC W.D. Wash. Nov. 14, 2006), an NASD arbitration award was confirmed over contentions that it was irrational and exhibited a manifest disregard of law. The Court found that the Petition to Vacate the award merely complained about evidence rulings by the Arbitration Panel and its weighing of the evidence.
- In Millenium Validation Services, Inc. v. Thompson, (USDC D. Del. Nov. 3, 2006), an arbitration award relating to a shareholder agreement was confirmed, rejecting five grounds proposed for the vacation of the award: (1) the arbitrator exceeded his authority by rejecting the “binding valuation” of the objector's accountant; (2) the award contained “evident material miscalculation of figures;” (3) the arbitrator refused to consider pertinent evidence, amounting to a manifest disregard of law; (4) the arbitrator refused to consider an alleged breach of a contractual provision; and (5) the arbitrator exceeded his authority with respect to attorneys' fees and costs.
These opinions are further examples of courts viewing such complaints as nothing more than impermissible re-argument of the merits of the arbitration under different guises.
Court remands matter to arbitrators for clarification of award
Parties to a reinsurance arrangement arbitrated their disputes, and a question later arose as to whether the conduct of one of the parties was in compliance with the terms of the award entered by the arbitration panel. Finding that the arbitration award was ambiguous, a District Court remanded the dispute to the arbitration panel for clarification of the award, so that the Court could appropriately enforce the award. Security Ins. Co. of Hartford v. Trustmark Ins. Co., Case No. 03-1000 (USDC D. Ct. Nov. 13, 2006).
Summary judgment denied against parent of reinsured
Guy Carpenter provided reinsurance intermediary and placement services for General Fire & Casualty. When a dispute arose as to those services, General Fire and its parent holding company sued Guy Carpenter. Guy Carpenter moved for summary judgment as to the claims of the parent, contending that it did not have a relationship with the parent. The USDC for Idaho denied the motion, finding that disputed issues of material fact existed with respect to such claims. General Fire & Casualty Co. v. Guy Carpenter & Co., Case No. 05-251 (USDC Idaho Nov. 7, 2006).
UK Court denies claim over implementation of EEC Insurance Directive
The UK Commercial Court, Queen's Bench Division, has entered an extensive opinion (with an accompanying Appendix), denying claims asserted by various Names against Her Majesty's Treasury, which alleged that the Names had suffered losses at Lloyd's due to the government’s failure appropriately to implement an EEC Insurance Directive (Directive 73/239/EEC). The Names contended that as a result of the failures in the implementation process, the “true IBNR” for US asbestos-related risks were not disclosed, resulting in the Names participating in the reinsurance of such risks, when they would not have done so had they known the “true IBNR” for such risks. Poole v. Her Majesty’s Treasury, [2006] EWHC 2731 (Comm.) (Nov. 8, 2006). The Court denied the claims on two bases: (1) the Insurance Directive did not grant any relevant rights to the Names; and (2) the claims were time barred.