Acting as Rehabilitator of Centaur Insurance Company, the Director of the Illinois Department of Insurance, Michael McRaith, brought suit against two reinsurers, seeking a declaration that they are obligated to reimburse Centaur for portions of a $32 million settlement it agreed to in resolving underlying asbestos litigation. The reinsurers had removed the case to federal court, but McRaith sought a remand based on the doctrines of McCarran-Ferguson reverse preemption and Burford abstention. The court denied the motion to remand under both theories, finding that none of the McCarran-Ferguson reverse preemption criteria had been met, as the state law issues pertaining to the rehabilitation proceedings did not specifically relate to the business of insurance, and there was not a clear conflict with federal law vis-à-vis state insurance solvency rehabilitation procedure. Burford abstention was also inappropriate because the dispute pertained less to the “complex [state] regulations pertaining to insolvent insurers” than to a simple breach of contract dispute between the parties under certain reinsurance certificates. McRaith v. American Re-Insurance Co., No. 09-C-4027 (USDC N.D. Ill. Feb. 17, 2010).
This post written by John Pitblado.