Motors Liquidation Co. DIP Lenders Trust v. Allstate Insurance Co. ( 2018 )


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  •            IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    MOTORS LIQUIDATION                        §
    COMPANY DIP LENDERS TRUST,                §     No. 381, 2017
    §
    Plaintiff Below,                    §     Court Below: Superior Court
    Appellant,                          §     of the State of Delaware
    §
    v.                                  §     CA No. N11C-12-022
    §     CCLD
    ALLSTATE INSURANCE                        §
    COMPANY, et al.,                          §
    §
    Defendants Below,                   §
    Appellees.                          §
    Submitted: May 2, 2018
    Decided: July 10, 2018
    Before STRINE, Chief Justice; VALIHURA, and VAUGHN, Justices.
    ORDER
    Upon consideration of the parties’ briefs, oral argument, and the record on
    appeal, it appears that:
    1.     This is an insurance coverage case involving excess general liability
    policies purchased by General Motors for policy periods spanning from the late
    1960’s to the mid-1980’s.      In 2009, General Motors underwent a bankruptcy
    reorganization, and as a result of that proceeding the rights to any proceeds from the
    policies were assigned to the Appellant, Motors Liquidation Company DIP Lenders
    Trust (“the Trust”). The Appellees are 14 insurance companies that sold the excess
    policies to General Motors.       The issue is whether the excess policies provide
    coverage for asbestos-related and environmental claims asserted against General
    Motors. In three opinions, the Superior Court determined that they do not and
    granted summary judgment to the Appellees. We have concluded that the judgment
    of the Superior Court should be affirmed for the reasons given by it in those opinions.
    2.   For more than 50 years, General Motors purchased comprehensive
    products liability insurance from Royal Insurance Company (“Royal”). Policies
    issued through 1971 were “occurrence-based,” meaning the coverage responded to
    injuries arising from incidents occurring within the time at risk. The parties then
    negotiated Endorsement 15, which shifted policies issued after 1971 to “claims-
    made” insurance which covered occurrences reported during the policy period.
    Royal is not a party to this litigation.
    3. The excess policies involved here are ones that towered above the Royal
    policies.   General Motors continuously bought layers of excess coverage that
    towered over the Royal policies during the time-frame relevant to this case. These
    excess policies were issued by different carriers, covering different time frames, in
    different amounts, and with different attachment points.        The pre-1972 excess
    policies “follow-form” by adopting the terms of the underlying Royal policy. It
    appears that some of the post-1971 excess policies follow form to the underlying
    Royal policies, but some contain other triggering language, such as occurrence-
    2
    based language, and some contain other language which differs from the Royal
    policies.
    4.    In 1977, General Motors received the first of what would become
    thousands of claims from plaintiffs alleging they had sustained personal injury from
    exposure to General Motors automotive products containing asbestos. In the years
    that followed, more than 40,000 such claims were filed against General Motors.
    5. From 1977 until 1993, when the Royal insurance program was terminated,
    almost 2,000 asbestos suits were filed against General Motors and tendered to Royal
    for handling.   Royal handled these claims on a claims-made basis. It registered
    these claims only to the year in which the claim was received and paid each claim
    off the Royal policy for that year. Asbestos claims made during the period of Royal
    coverage are not the subject of this action. In the early 2000’s, asbestos claims
    against General Motors increased dramatically. In 2004, General Motors tendered
    to Royal, for defense and indemnity, 60 CDs of asbestos claims. All of those claims
    were made after the Royal policy periods had expired. None were ever submitted
    to General Motors or Royal during any policy year. They are the claims for which
    coverage is sought in this action. Royal denied coverage and on January 26, 2005
    filed a declaratory judgment action in the Superior Court in Delaware to determine
    whether it had any obligation to General Motors under either the pre-1972 policies
    or the post-1971 policies for asbestos-related and environmental claims. Later that
    3
    same day General Motors filed a declaratory judgment action in Michigan to
    determine Royal’s obligations under the pre-1972 policies. In the Michigan action,
    General Motors did not seek any determination regarding the post-1971 policies.
    General Motors moved for dismissal or stay of the Delaware action. The action in
    Delaware was not dismissed but it was stayed in favor of the Michigan action. The
    Michigan action proceeded, and in 2008 General Motors and Royal entered into a
    settlement. The settlement released all of Royal’s general liability policies, both
    the pre-1972 policies and the post-1971 policies, from any further liability. None
    of the excess general liability carriers were parties to either the Michigan or
    Delaware actions, and none were involved in the 2008 settlement.
    6. As mentioned, in 2009 General Motors entered bankruptcy. During the
    bankruptcy, General Motors was renamed Motors Liquidation Corp. On December
    1, 2011 Motors Liquidation Corp. filed this action. Shortly after the action was
    filed, Motors Liquidation Corp. assigned its rights to proceeds under its pre-1986
    excess general liability policies to the Trust, as required by the bankruptcy plan of
    reorganization.
    7. The first Superior Court opinion in the case, dated December 31, 2013,
    was issued in response to two motions for partial summary judgment filed by the
    4
    Trust.1 In those motions the Trust argued that all asbestos-related claims were a
    single occurrence and “all sums” allocation should apply to the pre-1972 policies.
    In the policies, the pertinent provision relied upon by General Motors provided that
    the insurance company agreed:
    To pay on behalf of the Insured all sums which the Insured shall be
    obligated to pay by reasons of the liability
    (i) Imposed upon the Insured by law arising out of an event or
    a continuous or repeated exposure to conditions which result in
    Personal Injury or Property Damage as defined in the
    Underlying Insurance . . . which occurs during the period of this
    Insurance.2
    8. The Insurers argued that allocation should be pro rata. With regard to
    occurrence, the Insurers argued that the course of dealing between General Motors
    and Royal and latent ambiguity in the policies affected the interpretation of the
    policy language, and they should be permitted to conduct discovery.
    9. The Superior Court denied both motions for summary judgment. It
    concluded that in order to determine whether “all sums” or “pro rata” allocation
    applied, it must first determine whether Michigan law or Delaware law applied.
    The court reasoned that choice of law was not the subject of the motions, had not
    been fully briefed, and any decision on choice of law was premature. As to
    1
    Motors Liquidation Co., DIP Lenders Trust v. Allianz Ins. Co., 
    2013 WL 7095859
    (Del. Super.
    Dec. 31, 2013).
    2
    App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A592–593.
    5
    occurrence, the court concluded that discovery should be permitted to proceed. The
    court did, however, decide that if Michigan law applied, allocation would be pro rata
    under the law of that state.
    10. The second Superior Court opinion, dated November 25, 2015, was
    issued in response to a defendants’ motion for summary judgment, a cross-motion
    for summary judgment filed by the Trust, and a motion filed by defendant Munich
    Reinsurance America, Inc. for an order declaring that the Trust was judicially
    estopped from asserting claims against the post-1971 excess policies.3 The 2015
    opinion addressed only the post-1971 policies. The Court found that the asbestos-
    related claims at issue were not covered under any of the post-1971 Royal claims-
    made policies because none of the claims were reported to either General Motors or
    Royal during any post-1971 policy period. It then reasoned that claims not covered
    under the Royal post-1971 policies were not covered under the post-1971 excess
    policies. Munich Reinsurance America’s estoppel motion was granted for reasons
    which will be discussed hereinafter. The effect of the 2015 opinion was to grant
    summary judgment to all of the post-1971 insurers.
    11. The third Superior Court opinion, dated June 19, 2017, dealt with seven
    motions of various types, but most especially a defense motion calling for pro rata
    3
    Motors Liquidation Co. DIP Lenders Trust v. Allianz Ins. Co., 
    2015 WL 10376123
    (Del. Super.
    Nov. 25, 2015).
    6
    allocation under Michigan law. policies.4 The court ruled that pro rata allocation
    applied, thus granting the defendants’ motion on that point. The effect of this ruling
    was to grant summary judgment to all of the pre-1972 excess insurers.                       The
    combined effect of the 2015 opinion and the 2017 opinion was to grant summary
    judgment for all defendants.
    12. AThis Court reviews de novo the Superior Court=s grant or denial of
    summary judgment >to determine whether, viewing the facts in the light most
    favorable to the nonmoving party, the moving party has demonstrated that there are
    no material issues of fact in dispute and that the moving party is entitled to judgment
    as a matter of law.=@5
    13. The Trust makes five claims of error on appeal. The first is that the
    Superior Court erred in finding that under Michigan law pro rata allocation, not all
    sums, applies to the pre-1972 excess policies. In its 2013 opinion, the Superior
    Court analyzed this issue as follows:
    Arco Industries Corp. v. American Motorists Insurance Co., the
    current precedent in Michigan, rejected “all sums” allocation in favor
    of “time on the risk” proration where continuous property damage
    was covered by successive insurance policies. After discussing and
    comparing five allocation methods, Arco held, “we must reject any
    method of allocation that would require . . . coverage on a joint and
    several or ‘all sums’ basis, since that method would require
    4
    Motors Liquidation Co. DIP Lenders Trust v. Allianz Ins. Co., 
    2017 WL 2495417
    (Del. Super.
    June 19, 2017).
    5
    Brown v. United Water Del., Inc., 
    3 A.3d 272
    , 275 (Del. 2010) (quoting Estate of Rae v. Murphy,
    
    956 A.2d 1266
    , 1269-70 (Del. 2008)).
    7
    [indemnification] for damage occurring outside the policy period.”
    Arco was affirmed by the Michigan Supreme Court. Moreover, a
    federal court applying Michigan law also held that the Michigan
    Supreme Court would adopt pro rata “time on the risk.” Stryker
    Corp. v. National Union Fire Insurance Co. of Pittsburgh,
    Pennsylvania conducted a thorough analysis of lower court
    decisions, policy language, and earlier Supreme Court rulings.
    Stryker relied on the Michigan Supreme Court’s prior approval of pro
    rata “time on the risk” allocation’s simplicity and predictability,
    especially as paired with an injury-in-fact trigger. The court found,
    “the Michigan Supreme Court would adopt the pro rata ‘time on the
    risk’ method of allocation applied in Arco.”
    Plaintiff alleges there is no true conflict, because another Michigan
    appellate decision, Dow Corning Co. v. Continental Casualty
    Company, Inc., applied “all sums” allocation. That was after
    distinguishing Arco by relying heavily on policy language explicitly
    extending coverage outside the policy period. But, Dow Corning is
    an unpublished decision, and in Michigan “an unpublished opinion
    of the Court of Appeals is of no precedential value.” Further, the
    Michigan Supreme Court affirmed Arco after Dow Corning was
    decided.6
    The Court followed similar reasoning when it ruled in its 2017 opinion that under
    Michigan law allocation is pro rata.7 We agree with the Superior Court’ analysis as
    forth in its 2013 and 2017 opinions. While Michigan will apply all sums allocation
    where there is policy language leading to that result, as in Dow, it applies pro rata
    allocation to policy language like that contained in the policies involved in this case.
    6
    Motors Liquidation Co., DIP Lenders Trust v. Allianz Ins. Co., 
    2013 WL 7095859
    , at *3 (Del.
    Super. Dec. 31, 2013) (citing and quoting Arco Indus. Corp. v. Am. Motorists Ins., Co., 
    594 N.W.2d 61
    (Mich. Ct. App. Oct. 9, 1998), aff’d, 
    617 N.W.2d 330
    (Mich. 2000); Stryker Corp. v.
    Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, PA, 
    2005 WL 1610663
    (W.D. Mich. July 1, 2005); Dow
    Corning Corp. v. Cont’l Cas. Co., Inc., 
    1999 WL 33435067
    (Mich. Ct. App. Oct. 12, 1999)).
    7
    Motors, 
    2017 WL 2495417
    , at *18–20.
    8
    14. The Trust next contends that the Superior Court erred in finding that the
    Trust was judicially estopped by General Motors’ prior statements in litigation
    against the underlying insurer, Royal, as to the operation of the post-1971 Royal
    coverage. It argues that no court adopted or relied on these statements by General
    Motors, and there can be no judicial estoppel.
    15. In its opinion granting a stay in the 2005 litigation, the Superior Court
    noted that General Motors represented to the court that “it does not seek insurance
    coverage from Royal for the post-1971 policies and will not do so in any forum with
    respect to the asbestos-related and environmental claims at issue in [the Delaware]
    and the Michigan litigations.”8 In its 2015 opinion, the Superior Court elaborated
    on this representation:
    In 2005, GM and Royal sued each other over pre-1972 coverage, with
    GM filing in Michigan and Royal filing here. To bolster its forum
    choice, GM assured both the courts here and in Michigan that GM
    would never make an asbestos claim under its post-1971 policies, the
    ones underlying the excess policies here. Moreover, the record in both
    cases is replete with GM’s admissions that its post-1971 coverage was
    “claims made.”         Specifically, for example, GM’s counsel
    unequivocally assured this court:
    [W]ith respect to the [post-1971] years of coverage, there is no
    justiciable issue here. These are claims made policies. We
    are not submitting claims under them, and I don’t know how
    much clearer we can say that.
    8
    Royal Indem. Co. v. General Motors Corp., 
    2005 WL 1952933
    , at *10 (Del. Super. July 26,
    2005).
    9
    GM similarly assured the court in Michigan concerning the post-1971
    policies:
    General Motors has informed [Royal] that [GM is] not claiming
    and will not claim under those remaining twenty years. They
    don’t believe us, but we submit that we are judicially bound; we
    would be estopped to contend otherwise.9
    Judicial estoppel applies when a litigant’s position “contradicts another position that
    the litigant previously took and that the Court was successfully induced to adopt in
    a judicial ruling.”10 The Trust argues that the representations made in the 2005
    litigation were not accepted by the Superior Court as a basis for its ruling, as General
    Motors could add the post-1971claims by counterclaim in the Michigan action.
    However, the representations were a part of the argument made by General Motors
    that persuaded, or induced, the Superior Court to grant a stay. General Motors itself
    admitted that it would be estopped. Under these circumstances, a finding of judicial
    estoppel was warranted. The estoppel established that the Trust was estopped from
    denying that the post-1971 Royal policies were claims-made and that claims made
    in separate policy periods were separate occurrences. The ruling estopped the Trust
    from arguing that any of the claims at issue in this case triggered coverage under the
    post-1971 Royal policies.
    9
    Motors Liquidation Co. DIP Lenders Trust v. Allianz Ins. Co., 
    2015 WL 10376123
    , at *3 (Del.
    Super. Nov. 25, 2015). Actually, the Delaware action involved the post-2971 policies as well.
    10
    Motorola Inc. v. Amkor Tech, Inc., 
    958 A.2d 852
    , 859–860 (Del. 2008) (quoting Siegman v.
    Palomar Med. Techs., Inc., 
    1998 WL 409352
    , at *3 (Del. Ch. Jul. 13, 1998)).
    10
    16. The Trust’s third argument is that the Superior Court erred in holding
    that the judicial estoppel which it held prevented the underlying Royal policies from
    being triggered also negated coverage under the post-1971 excess insurance policies.
    In addressing this argument, it should first be noted that judicial estoppel was not
    the sole reason that the Superior Court found that the post-1971 Royal policies were
    claims-made and that each claim was a separate occurrence. The Superior Court
    also determined that Endorsement 15 was intended by the parties to convert the
    Royal policies from occurrence-based to claims-made. Specifically, it found that
    “under the policies’ clear, negotiated language, the Royal policies are claims-
    made.”11 In a 2016 order denying reargument of its 2015 opinion, it stated that
    Endorsement 15 “unambiguously converted the primary coverage from occurrence-
    based to claims-made coverage, as old-GM and Royal intended.” 12                  General
    Motors’ conduct was consistent with these findings. The asbestos-related claims
    after the first in 1977 were never aggregated by it with other asbestos-related claims.
    General Motors treated each claim as a separate occurrence, tied to the year it was
    reported. The Superior Court reasoned that since the post-1971 Royal policies were
    claims made and none of the claims involved in this case were made against either
    11
    
    Id. 12 Motors
    Liquidation Co. DIP Lenders Trust v. Allianz Ins. Co., 
    2016 WL 825473
    , at *3 (Del.
    Super. Mar. 2, 2016).
    11
    General Motors or Royal during a post-1971 policy period, none of the claims were
    covered under those policies. The Superior Court then considered the nature of the
    excess policies. It noted that the policies were generally structured and sold as
    excess insurance. It took notice of the fact the policies were captioned as excess
    policies and repeatedly referred to underlying insurance.13 Specifically, with regard
    to Aetna policies for which Travelers Casualty and Surety Company is now
    responsible, it analyzed a net loss provision contained in those policies. Under the
    net loss provision, the excess insurance was obligated to pay only sums “which
    would be covered by the terms of the controlling underlying insurance [i.e. the
    primary policy], if written without any limit of liability.”14 Ultimately the Superior
    Court concluded that the excess policies were not required to respond to claims
    which did not trigger coverage under the primary policies. We agree for the reasons
    given by the Superior Court.
    17.    The Trust’s next argument is that the Superior Court erred by
    disregarding the express triggering language found in a number of the post-1971
    excess policies, as well as policy language requiring that those excess policies own
    provisions control over language in the underlying Royal policies. This argument
    13
    
    Id. 14 Motors,
    2015 WL 10376123
    , at *4. The 2015 opinion states that all of the excess policies
    contained this same net loss provision. The Trust argues that this is not true. However, no
    express language has been identified which would require an excess policy to respond to claims
    excluded from coverage under the primary policies.
    12
    is based upon the occurrence-based language and other language found in some of
    the post-1971 excess policies.
    18.     This issue was also addressed in the Superior Court’s 2015 opinion. In
    the opening paragraph of its 2015 opinion, the Superior Court stated that the “focus
    now is on the . . . disharmony between the primary and excess policies’ triggers of
    coverage.” 15 Specifically, the disharmony was between the primary’s “narrow,
    claims-made trigger” and the excess policies “broader, occurrence-based language.
    The question here is whether the excess policies have been triggered.”16
    19.        The Superior Court then engaged in a careful and thorough analysis of
    the issue.        It reasoned that the occurrence-based language must give way to
    language in the policies having the effect of providing that the excess policies are
    not obligated to respond to claims not triggered under the primary policy, stating
    that “barring exceptional circumstances or policy language not present here, higher
    level excess insurance policies do not respond if the primary . . . policies have not
    been triggered.”17 We agree there any policy language requiring excess policies to
    respond to claims not triggered under the primary insurance should be clear and
    unambiguous, and none is present here.
    15
    
    Id. at *1.
    16
    
    Id. 17 Id.
    at *4.
    13
    20.    The Trust’s fifth and final argument is that the Superior Court erred in
    holding that the first claim in General Motors’ asbestos products liability occurrence,
    reported to General Motors during the 1977 policy year, did not trigger coverage for
    the full asbestos product liability occurrence under those excess policies that
    incorporate a trigger of “occurrences which are reported” during the policy period.
    This argument is premised on all of the asbestos-related claims being a single
    occurrence. It must fail for the same reason the previous argument fails, which is
    that claims which are excluded from coverage under the post-1971 Royal policies
    are not covered by the excess policies.
    21. Appellees OneBeacon Insurance Company and Continental Casualty
    Company filed a cross-appeal. Since we are affirming the judgment of the Superior
    Court, we need not address the cross-appeal.
    NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS ORDERED that the judgment of the Superior
    Court is AFFIRMED.
    BY THE COURT:
    /s/ James T. Vaughn, Jr.
    Justice
    14
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 381, 2017

Judges: Vaughn, J.

Filed Date: 7/10/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/10/2018