Plaintiffs, five Lloyd’s of London underwriters, filed suit in Ohio federal court seeking a declaration that an alleged reinsurance agreement between them and defendant Stonebridge Casualty Insurance Company’s predecessor in interest was invalid because plaintiffs had no knowledge of it. Plaintiffs’ Ohio action was filed after Stonebridge had successfully moved in Florida federal court to compel arbitration of disputes arising under the agreement. Stonebridge moved to have the Ohio action transferred to Florida or dismissed. In response, plaintiffs argued that the Florida court lacked jurisdiction due to the presence of an Ohio forum selection clause in the reinsurance agreement. The court found that this clause did not strip the Florida court of its diversity jurisdiction. The court chastised plaintiffs for attempting to rely on a forum selection clause in a contract that they had not even acknowledge existed. The Ohio court similarly rejected plaintiffs’ argument that venue was improper in Florida, given that many of the relevant negotiations occurred in Florida, and key witnesses and documents were located in Florida. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s, London v. Stonebridge Casualty Insurance Co., Case No. 2:12-cv-160 (USDC S.D. Ohio Dec. 12, 2012).
This post written by Ben Seessel.
See our disclaimer.