A court dismissed reinsurer Assurecare Corp.’s counterclaim for fraud and unjust enrichment against reinsured Arrowood Indemnity Company for drawing on Assurecare’s letter of credit for the allegedly improper purpose of collecting a disputed reinsurance claim. After engaging in a choice of law analysis, the court found that Assurecare’s fraud claim, which Assurecare sought to replace with a claim that Arrowood tortiously interfered with Assurecare’s relationship with the bank that issued the letter of credit, failed because no effect on the banking relationship was alleged. Assurecare’s unjust enrichment counterclaim failed because an enforceable contract (the Assurecare-Arrowood reinsurance agreement) existed between the parties. The court rejected Assurecare’s argument that Arrowood’s conduct related exclusively to the letter of credit, holding that the reinsurance agreement governed “the conditions under which Arrowood could draw on the Letter of Credit.” Arrowood Indemnity Co. v. Assurecare Corp., Case No. 11-5206 (USDC N.D. Ill. Dec. 15, 2011).
This post written by Michael Wolgin.
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