In this consolidated appeal, Defendant-Appellant-Cross-Appellee OneBeacon American Insurance Company ("OneBeacon") appeals from two judgments entered pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b) in favor of Plaintiff-Counter-Defendant-Appellee-Cross-Appellant Olin Corporation ("Olin") in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Griesa, J.), awarding Olin over $80 million in indemnification costs. OneBeacon appeals the district court's denials of its motions for summary judgment and the district court's ruling adopting particular special verdict interrogatories. Olin cross-appeals from a grant of summary judgment in favor of OneBeacon on Olin's bad faith claim brought pursuant Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 93A, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A, § 2(a) ("Chapter 93A").
Olin, a large chemical manufacturing company, brought this coverage action against its insurers, including OneBeacon, seeking indemnification for environmental contamination at Olin manufacturing sites throughout the United States. This case requires us to resolve, among other issues, the proper method for allocating loss at each site when damage continues across a number of years and to decide whether OneBeacon may reduce the limits of its liability by those of any other prior insurance policies within the same layer of coverage.
For the reasons set forth below, the judgments of the district court are
This appeal presents yet another round in a protracted insurance-coverage dispute between the Olin Corporation ("Olin") and its insurers, including OneBeacon American Insurance Company ("OneBeacon"),
The McIntosh site is an Alabama property that was added to the National Priority
The Fields Brooks site is located in Ohio and houses a plant that once produced the chemical "TDI." Property damage at Fields Brook began in 1964 due to the discharge of contaminated wastewater into a brook running through the property, which in turn contaminated the brook's sediments.
The Augusta site holds a Georgia chloralkali plant that produced chlorine and caustic soda. The operations at this site led to the continuous mercury contamination of the surrounding groundwater and the ecosystem around the plant's intake canal. The parties stipulated that Olin incurred $13,754,618.69 in costs for the groundwater contamination and an additional $2,964,074.78 for cleanup of the intake canal through December 31, 2014.
The Rochester site housed a plant that produced specialty organic chemicals. Operations resulted in the continuous and repeated exposure of groundwater to chemical contaminants. The parties stipulated that Olin incurred $16,418,746.53 in relevant costs at this site through December 31, 2014.
The BROS site involves a New Jersey property where Olin stored spent sulfuric acid between 1968 and 1974.
Beginning in 1984, Olin sent formal notices to OneBeacon and its other insurers identifying government orders requiring investigation and cleanup at various Olin sites, including Fields Brook, Augusta, and McIntosh. In 1986, Olin sent OneBeacon and other insurers a supplemental notice of claims concerning additional sites, including the BROS and Rochester sites. The notices detailed Olin's damages at each site and described Olin's remediation measures. The notices also invited insurers, including OneBeacon, to investigate Olin's claims. Olin regularly supplemented these notices with updated information about damages, costs, and remedial measures at each site. Between February 1984 and January 1992, Olin sent OneBeacon
According to Olin, OneBeacon never responded. It was not until Olin amended its complaint in 1993, adding coverage claims against OneBeacon for the five sites, that OneBeacon acknowledged receipt of Olin's claims notices. In its answer to this complaint, OneBeacon asserted various defenses denying coverage. Discovery later requested by Olin revealed that OneBeacon had neglected to conduct any investigation into Olin's coverage claims. Discovery also exposed that OneBeacon lacked factual support for numerous affirmative defenses and had delegated its claims handling responsibilities to one of its reinsurers. Last, through discovery in a related case, Olin learned that OneBeacon imposed "dollar targets" on its claims adjusters and would seek to litigate, rather than pay, claims because it was "cheaper" to do so.
OneBeacon issued Olin three excess umbrella insurance policies for the period of 1970 through 1972. Because the OneBeacon policies are "excess" policies, each policy provides coverage only where the underlying insurance policies have been "exhausted" or have had their limits per occurrence paid out. The OneBeacon policies "attach" at various points above an underlying "primary" commercial general liability policy issued by the Insurance Company of North America ("INA"), which covered the first $300,000 of loss attributable to property damage at the manufacturing sites. The first OneBeacon policy attaches at $300,000 and has a per occurrence limit of $1 million. The next OneBeacon policy attaches at $1.3 million and has a $4 million per occurrence limit. Finally, the third OneBeacon policy attaches at $5.3 million and provides $15 million in coverage. In short, OneBeacon's policies provide up to $20 million in coverage, in excess of $300,000, per occurrence. Effective January 1, 1971, OneBeacon's three excess policies included a pollution exclusion.
The OneBeacon policies provide coverage for "all sums which the Insured shall be obligated to pay by reason of the liability... imposed upon the Insured by law... for damages, direct or consequential and expenses ... on account of ... Property Damage ... caused by or arising out of each occurrence...."
Condition C specifically provides:
App'x at 2138. The first paragraph constitutes the prior insurance provision and the second is the continuing coverage clause.
Finally, the "loss payable" provision (Condition J) governs when the OneBeacon policies are triggered. "Liability under this Policy with respect to any occurrence shall not attach unless and until the Insured, or the Insured's Underlying Insurer, shall have paid the amount of the Underlying Limits on account of such occurrence." App'x at 2140. In other words, under Condition J, the OneBeacon excess policies will not attach until the $300,000 primary INA layer is exhausted.
Each of the OneBeacon policies at issue is preceded in time by prior insurance in the same layer of coverage (the "Prior Excess Policies"). The Prior Excess Policies include policies issued by certain underwriters at Lloyd's, London (the "London Market Insurers"). The first two layers of the OneBeacon policies, for example, are preceded in the same layer by excess policies issued by the London Market Insurers dating from the 1950s through 1969. The Prior Excess Policies provide substantially the same coverage as that provided by the OneBeacon policies for the sites at issue. Like the OneBeacon policies, the Prior Excess Policies generally provide coverage for all sums Olin becomes legally obligated to pay for property damage during the policy period caused by an occurrence
There have been a number of related appeals concerning Olin's environmental insurance claims stemming from other contaminated sites, which implicated other insurers and policies. Several of those decisions set the stage for this appeal. First, in Olin Corp. v. Insurance Co. of North America ("Olin I"), 221 F.3d 307 (2d Cir. 2000), we addressed Olin's claim for coverage from its primary insurer (INA) for soil and groundwater contamination that occurred over a 35-year period at a pesticide manufacturing plant in North Carolina. There, we determined that the appropriate method for "allocating" responsibility for "on-going and progressive injury that spans many years" is to do so "pro rata." Id. at 322-24. Under this pro rata method, the total property damage is divided into equal annual shares for each year in which such damage took place. This annual share is then treated as the total property damage attributable to that occurrence for that year, and the insurer providing coverage for that year is responsible for indemnifying an insured only to the extent of its contractual liability for such deemed property damage.
In Olin Corp. v. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's London ("Olin II"), 468 F.3d 120 (2d Cir. 2006), we decided a claim seeking coverage from an excess insurer for soil and groundwater contamination resulting from operations at a chemical manufacturing plant in upstate New York. The principal issue on appeal was how to identify the policies triggered as a result of the continuing environmental harm. In rejecting Olin's proposed model, we concluded that "property damage occurs as long as contamination continues to increase or
Last, in Olin Corp. v. American Home Assurance Co. ("Olin III"), 704 F.3d 89 (2d Cir. 2012), we addressed the application of a similar prior insurance provision to that implicated here. Olin III concerned Olin's coverage-claim against American Home Assurance Company ("American Home") for its Morgan Hill, California manufacturing site, which had become contaminated as a result of Olin's discharge of chemicals into soil and groundwater over a period of 31 years. 704 F.3d at 93. At issue were two consecutive American Home excess policies covering periods from 1966 through 1968 and 1969 through 1971, attaching at $30.3 million. Both policies included a provision identical in all material ways to the version of Condition C included in the OneBeacon policies implicated here. Id. at 94.
We concluded that while our prior decisions require the pro rata allocation of damages in cases involving long-tail claims, the continuing coverage clause of Condition C must still be given effect. Id. at 101. Accordingly, we held that, pursuant to the continuing coverage clause, American Home would still be liable for damage continuing after the termination of its policy. Id. at 102. At the same time, however, we also held that the prior insurance provision reduced the per occurrence limit on American Home's later-issued policy by the amount paid out under American Home's prior policy (at the same level of excess coverage), to the extent that both policies were triggered by the same loss. Id. at 104. We explained that this approach was consistent with "Condition C's apparent purpose of sweeping a continuing loss into the earliest triggered policy, with that policy then fully indemnifying the insured for that loss." Id. However, bound by our earlier decision in Olin I, we also held that the pro rata approach, rather than the all sums (or joint and several liability) approach, continued to govern the allocation of loss across a damage period. Id. at 102-03. Condition C obligated an insurer "to indemnify Olin up to the limits of its policies for all property damage caused by the [environmental contamination] that occurred during and after the termination of each policy." Id. at 101-02 (emphasis added). But "Condition C alone [could not] trigger joint and several liability in lieu of the pro rata allocation methodology employed in Olin I...." Id. at 103.
Applying these principles, we held that the language of the prior insurance provision reduced the $1 million limit of the American Home policy covering the period from 1969 through 1971 by the $1 million limit of the prior American Home policy, at the same level of coverage, spanning the period from 1966 through 1968, such that the total per occurrence coverage offered by American Home remained at $1 million. Id. at 105. Because both of the policies at issue in Olin III were issued by the same insurer — American Home — we did not have to resolve the question we are called upon to resolve in this appeal: how a prior insurance provision applies when the prior
On April 3, 2013, OneBeacon moved for partial summary judgment with respect to the prior insurance provision of Condition C contained in the OneBeacon policies. Because each of the OneBeacon policies is preceded in the same layer of coverage by the Prior Excess Policies, OneBeacon sought a ruling that the prior insurance provision requires that the occurrence limits of the OneBeacon policies be reduced by the occurrence limits of any prior policy in the same layer of coverage triggered by the same occurrence, irrespective of which insurer issued the earlier policy or policies.
The district court summarily denied OneBeacon's motion at oral argument, ruling from the bench:
Special App'x at 2 (emphasis added). The court reasoned that:
Id.
The district court also denied OneBeacon's motion for partial summary judgment on Olin's McIntosh claim. OneBeacon argued that — because of a February 21, 2006 stipulation of dismissal with prejudice — the McIntosh claim must be dismissed. In 2006, prior to an earlier trial against other insurers relating to Olin's request for indemnification in remediating the environmental damage at the McIntosh OU1 site, the parties entered into a stipulation dismissing certain claims as against OneBeacon. The stipulation, which was endorsed by the district court, stated: "Plaintiff, Olin Corporation, by its undersigned counsel, hereby stipulates to the voluntary dismissal, with prejudice, of any claims concerning [OneBeacon] relating to the McIntosh, Alabama site." App'x at 742. The district court denied OneBeacon's motion, concluding that this stipulation related only to the OU1 portion of the McIntosh site. The court noted that:
Special App'x at 4.
In October of 2013, the parties proceeded to trial on the McIntosh OU2, Fields
After trial, Olin sought discovery on its Chapter 93A claim but faced resistance from OneBeacon.
In the year following trial, the parties calculated the total damages owed by OneBeacon. On January 6, 2015, OneBeacon moved for partial summary judgment regarding prejudgment interest. OneBeacon asserted that, because Olin did not make a "definite claim" for coverage (as required by its policies) until after the jury verdict, Olin was not entitled to any prejudgment interest. The district court rejected OneBeacon's argument because it found that Olin had sent numerous notice letters to OneBeacon identifying its claims beginning in the 1980s and that OneBeacon failed to investigate such claims, instead choosing litigation. As a result, the district court concluded that OneBeacon was required to compensate Olin with prejudgment interest running separately with respect to each indemnifiable expense from each of
Finally, in the spring of 2015, the district court entered two Rule 54(b) judgments in favor of Olin, one for the BROS site and another for the remaining four sites. Each judgment determined the total damages owed by OneBeacon based on the parties' stipulations concerning the total loss incurred at each site, the jury's findings and parties' stipulations concerning how that loss was to be allocated across years of property damage, and the continuing-coverage approach employed by this Court in Olin III. In particular, the district court, following Olin III, concluded that Olin could seek indemnification under OneBeacon's 1970 policy not only for property damage allocated to that year, but also — because of the continuing coverage clause — for property damage arising from the same occurrence allocated to subsequent years. Applying this approach, the Rule 54(b) judgments, including prejudgment interest totaling $42,691,481.75 for the four trial sites and $3,385,691.45 for the BROS site, resulted in a total judgment entered in Olin's favor of $87,187,173.63.
OneBeacon subsequently filed post-judgment motions pursuant to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 50, 59, and 60 with respect to both Rule 54(b) judgments, raising the same issues raised on appeal. The district court denied the motions. OneBeacon appeals from both final judgments, and Olin cross-appeals the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of OneBeacon on Olin's Chapter 93A claim.
Between when judgment was first entered in this case and oral argument, the New York Court of Appeals issued its decision in In re Viking Pump, Inc., 27 N.Y.3d 244, 52 N.E.3d 1144 (2016). Because this decision is dispositive with respect to certain issues presented on this appeal, and highly instructive with respect to others, we briefly summarize it here.
In Viking Pump, the Court of Appeals began by reiterating its general approach to the interpretation of the provisions of an insurance contract. As the Court of Appeals explained, "[w]e emphasized in Consolidated Edison [Co. v. Allstate Ins. Co., 98 N.Y.2d 208, 746 N.Y.S.2d 622, 774 N.E.2d 687, 693 (2002), the first Court of Appeals decision to interpret a contract as requiring pro rata allocation], and have reiterated thereafter, that in determining a dispute over insurance coverage, courts first look to the language of the policy." Viking Pump, 33 N.Y.S.3d 118, 52 N.E.3d at 1151 (alterations and internal quotation marks omitted). Thus, in pre-Viking Pump decisions upholding the propriety of pro rata allocation of losses spanning policy years, "[w]e did not adopt a strict rule mandating either pro rata or all sums allocation because insurance contracts, like other agreements, should be enforced as written, and parties to an insurance arrangement may generally contract as they wish and the courts will enforce their agreements without passing on the substance of them." Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). In sum, when confronted, in the context of a given insurance contract, with the question whether losses associated with "long-tail" claims are properly distributed pro rata across all policy years during which the harm was continuing or whether an "all sums" approach is more appropriate, courts are to use ordinary tools of contractual interpretation to resolve the issue. See id.
The Court of Appeals then went on to explain why, in its view, the insurance contracts before it — each of which included
The Court of Appeals then turned to the related question of "whether horizontal or vertical exhaustion applies under the relevant policies." Id., 33 N.Y.S.3d 118, 52 N.E.3d at 1156. Under the horizontal exhaustion approach, an insured is required to "exhaust all triggered primary and umbrella excess layers before tapping into any of the additional excess insurance policies," while under vertical exhaustion "the [i]nsured[] [can] access each excess policy once the immediately underlying policies' limits are depleted, even if other lower-level policies during different policy periods remain unexhausted." Id. In resolving this question, the Court of Appeals explained that the language of policies containing Condition C militated in favor of vertical exhaustion because "vertical exhaustion is more consistent ... with th[e] language tying attachment of the excess policies specifically to identified policies that span the same policy period" and because "vertical exhaustion is conceptually consistent with an all sums allocation, permitting the [i]nsured to seek coverage through the layers of insurance available for a specific year." Id. Thus, the Court of Appeals held that an insured could pursue insurers whose policies contained a prior insurance provision for indemnification irrespective of whether policies covering other years over the course of the loss period potentially were triggered by the same occurrence.
Finally, it is worth noting the ways in which the approach adopted by the Court of Appeals requires some modification of the approach we, bound by our earlier interpretations of New York law, took in Olin III (which guided the district court's judgment here). In Olin III, we held that, under the contracts at issue,
At the outset, we must determine whether Olin's primary policies have been exhausted so as to trigger OneBeacon's excess policies. OneBeacon encourages us to adopt a "hybrid" allocation/exhaustion scheme, contending that, because the underlying INA policies do not contain Condition C, we must use pro rata allocation to determine whether the underlying primary policies have been exhausted (and thus whether OneBeacon's policies have attached). Only then, it argues, once OneBeacon's policies have attached, does all sums allocation apply to OneBeacon's excess policies. In other words, OneBeacon submits that we should apply horizontal exhaustion to the INA primary layers and vertical exhaustion to its policies. Under this "hybrid" approach, OneBeacon asserts that the underlying INA primary policies have not been exhausted, and therefore OneBeacon's $300,000 attachment point has not been met. Because OneBeacon's policies call for all sums allocation, and the New York Court of Appeals' decision in Viking Pump dictates vertical exhaustion where the all sums approach is the proper method for allocation, we conclude that Olin's underlying policies have been exhausted and OneBeacon's policies have attached.
As explained above, Viking Pump identifies the proper method for determining exhaustion in cases, such as this one, where the excess policy at issue contains a provision like Condition C. The Court of Appeals specifically held that, for policies incorporating a prior insurance provision (and by extension all sums allocation), vertical exhaustion is the appropriate method for determining the attachment of excess policies. Id., 33 N.Y.S.3d 118, 52 N.E.3d at 1156-58. Viking Pump explains that "vertical exhaustion is conceptually consistent with an all sums allocation, permitting the [i]nsured to seek coverage through the layers of insurance available for a specific year." Id., 33 N.Y.S.3d 118, 52 N.E.3d at 1156. The concept of vertical exhaustion "allow[s] the [i]nsureds to access each excess policy once the immediately underlying policies' limits are depleted, even if other lower-level policies during different policy periods remain unexhausted." Id. Horizontal exhaustion, by contrast, requires that lower-level policies throughout the continuing damage period be exhausted before excess policies are triggered.
The Court of Appeals reasoned that "vertical exhaustion is more consistent than horizontal exhaustion" with the particular policy language where the "attachment of the excess policies" is tied "specifically to identified [primary] policies that span the same policy period." Id. This is precisely how OneBeacon's policies operate here, as the loss payable provision merely requires that the underlying primary polices
By demanding vertical exhaustion for policies contemplating all sums allocation, Viking Pump explicitly determined that an insured in Olin's position does not need to exhaust primary policies outside the policy year to reach the excess layer for its chosen policy year. Thus, Viking Pump dictates that we reject OneBeacon's position that the pro rata approach applies to determine whether the underlying INA primary policies have been exhausted. Rather, an insured may simply tap a particular tower of its insurance program triggered by an occurrence and proceed up the tower upon depletion of the policies within each layer of coverage (just as Olin seeks to do here). We therefore conclude that, because it is not disputed that the damages at each site far exceed OneBeacon's attachment point of $300,000 when apportioned to a single policy year, OneBeacon's policies have been triggered.
We now turn to the effect of the McIntosh stipulation, if any, on OneBeacon's liability for Olin's claims for indemnification arising from cleanup costs at the OU2 McIntosh site. OneBeacon argues that the district court erred in denying its summary judgment motion related to the McIntosh OU2 site because the February 21, 2006 stipulation unambiguously dismissed all claims related to the "McIntosh, Alabama site," which included both operable units. Although the stipulation refers broadly to the "McIntosh, Alabama site," because — considered within the context of the 2006 trial — such a term could reasonably be interpreted as referring only to OU1, we affirm the district court's denial of summary judgment.
Here, while the agreement specifically provided that Olin "stipulates to the voluntary dismissal, with prejudice, of any claims concerning [OneBeacon] relating to the McIntosh, Alabama site," App'x at 742 (emphasis added), circumstances clearly indicate that the stipulation was not designed to cover both OU1 and OU2. Indeed, the parties entered into the stipulation at the start of the 2006 trial, which concerned liability related only to OU1. By 2006, the EPA had determined an environmental remedy for only OU1. Because its total costs for OU1 were known, Olin proceeded to trial on that unit first. In fact, cleanup at OU2 was still ongoing in 2006, and since the full remedy for that site was not yet ascertainable, Olin held off in pursuing its indemnification claims for loss arising from that unit of the McIntosh site. In Olin's 2006 pretrial correspondence with the London Market Insurers, moreover, Olin clarified that it sought to recover costs associated specifically with remediation for OU1. Olin's pretrial disclosures also repeatedly defined the term "McIntosh" as the "McIntosh, Alabama site which is the subject of the February 21, 2006 trial." App'x at 723, 726. Additionally, Olin agreed to the stipulation with OneBeacon only because it expected full indemnification from the London Market Insurers through its recovery at trial. See id. at 740, 870 (Olin's counsel notifying excess insurers, including OneBeacon, that its "excess insurance carriers, other than LMI ... are not likely to be implicated in the upcoming McIntosh [t]rial.").
The district court's conclusion that Olin could not have intended to release OneBeacon from liability for OU2 at the time of the 2006 trial for OU1 was thus proper.
OneBeacon also argues that a new trial is warranted because the district court "committed legal error by adopting a special verdict form premised on an incorrect interpretation of the OneBeacon Policies." Appellant's Br. at 66. We review for abuse of discretion a district court's formulation of special verdict questions. See Vichare v. AMBAC Inc., 106 F.3d 457, 465 (2d Cir. 1996). A jury interrogatory is erroneous when it "mislead[s] or confuse[s] the jury, or if [it] inaccurately frame[s] the issues to be resolved by the jury." Id.
The district court posed the following interrogatory to the jury: "By the time of the policy period of 1970, did Olin expect or intend the property damage that it was obligated to remediate? If your answer ... is no, proceed to the further questions. If your answer ... is yes, proceed no further...." See, e.g., App'x at 1824. The jury answered in the negative as to each site. OneBeacon contends that this "interrogatory was clearly erroneous because the jury was not permitted to return a verdict finding that property damage after 1970 was expected or intended by Olin." Appellant's Br. at 68 (emphasis added). So the argument goes: because of the faulty jury instruction, OneBeacon may have been required to indemnify against expected or intended property damage, contrary to policy language dictating that OneBeacon is responsible to indemnify Olin only for unexpected or unintended property damage. OneBeacon claims that the district court should have instead asked the jury whether "Olin expect[ed] or intend[ed] property damage that it was obligated to remediate[,]" and if "Yes," "by what date[.]" Appellant's Br. at 65.
OneBeacon's policies require indemnification where there has been "an accident or a happening or event or a continuous or repeated exposure to conditions which unexpectedly and unintentionally result in... property damage ... during the policy period." App'x at 2134 (emphasis added). The policies at issue, upon consideration of the pollution exclusion effective January 1, 1971, cover the period from January 1, 1970 through December 31, 1970. We understand the district court's interrogatory as asking whether Olin expected or intended any property damage within the policy period beginning in 1970. This conforms to the language of OneBeacon's policy defining an occurrence as an unexpected or unintended event happening during the period in which the policies provide coverage. Under the language of the policy, whether Olin later expected or intended the property damage that was ongoing is irrelevant. Indeed, the continuing coverage clause — which states that OneBeacon must continue to provide coverage "in the event that ... property damage arising out of an occurrence covered hereunder is continuing at the time of the termination" of the policy — contains no language suggesting that such continuing property damage must remain "unexpected" or "unintentional." Id. at 2138. Because the court's interrogatory asking the jury whether Olin expected or intended property damage by 1970 correctly framed the issue of liability, under the terms of the OneBeacon policies there was no error in the district court's instruction. The district court's ruling as to the special verdict form is affirmed.
In sum, under Viking Pump, Olin may "collect its total liability under any policy in effect during the periods that the damage occurred, up to the policy limits." 33 N.Y.S.3d 118,
OneBeacon next asserts that the judgments of the district court should be vacated because the court failed to give effect to the prior insurance provision of OneBeacon's policies, thereby reducing the limits of its policies by those of any prior policies covering the same loss. We agree. Where an occurrence spans multiple policy years, the plain language of the prior insurance provision requires the reduction of the occurrence limit of a OneBeacon policy by amounts due under any prior excess insurance policy on account of a loss covered by a prior insurance policy in the same layer of coverage as the relevant OneBeacon policy, when that prior insurance policy is triggered by the same occurrence for which the insured presently seeks indemnification. See Olin III, 704 F.3d at 104 (concluding that prior insurance provision of excess insurance policies reduced insurer's liability to the extent that a prior insurance policy at the same level of coverage indemnified for a loss that was also covered by insurer's excess policies). This prevents an insured from stacking, or cumulating, coverage — that is, where an insured that has suffered a long-term or continuous loss triggering coverage across more than one policy period attempts to add together the maximum limits of all successive policies that have been in place during the period of the loss. See Viking Pump, 33 N.Y.S.3d 118, 52 N.E.3d at 1152; Steven Plitt et al., Couch on Insurance § 169:5 (3d ed.) (West 2017).
Our decision in Olin III, though not dispositive, is instructive, as we did not directly address the question before us here: whether a prior insurance provision applies to any other excess policy issued within the same layer, and not just a prior policy issued by the same insurer. See Olin III, 704 F.3d at 105 n.21. Moreover, as we explain, resolution of this inquiry is intertwined with the question of the proper mode of allocation of damages for a multi-year loss.
We turn first to principles of contract interpretation to inform our analysis. Under New York law, insurance policies are interpreted according to general rules of contract interpretation. See, e.g., World Trade Ctr. Props., L.L.C. v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 345 F.3d 154, 183-84 (2d Cir. 2003), abrogated on other grounds by Wachovia Bank v. Schmidt, 546 U.S. 303, 126 S.Ct. 941, 163 L.Ed.2d 797 (2006). Two such rules are particularly relevant here. First, the "words and phrases [in a contract] should be given their plain meaning, and the contract should be construed so as to give full meaning and effect to all of its provisions." LaSalle Bank Nat'l
Second, contract terms are ambiguous if they are "capable of more than one meaning when viewed objectively by a reasonably intelligent person who has examined the context of the entire integrated agreement and who is cognizant of the customs, practices, usages and terminology as generally understood in the particular trade or business." Nowak v. Ironworkers Local 6 Pension Fund, 81 F.3d 1182, 1192 (2d Cir. 1996). When a provision in an insurance contract is ambiguous, a court may consider extrinsic evidence to ascertain the parties' intent at the formation of the contract. JA Apparel Corp. v. Abboud, 568 F.3d 390, 397 (2d Cir. 2009). If the extrinsic evidence fails to establish the parties' intent, courts may apply other rules of contract interpretation, including New York's insurance-specific version of the rule of contra proferentem, according to which ambiguity should be resolved in favor of the insured. See Haber v. St. Paul Guardian Ins. Co., 137 F.3d 691, 697-98 (2d Cir. 1998). Ambiguity is absent where the contract's language provides "a definite and precise meaning, unattended by danger of misconception in the purport of the contract itself, and concerning which there is no reasonable basis for a difference of opinion." Hunt Ltd. v. Lifschultz Fast Freight, Inc., 889 F.2d 1274, 1277 (2d Cir. 1989) (alteration omitted). With these principles in mind, we hold that the prior insurance provision of Condition C is unambiguous and that the district court erred when it concluded that the prior insurance provision did not apply to reduce the limits of OneBeacon's liability.
To begin with, we conclude that the language of the prior insurance provision, on its face, applies to "any other excess policy," and is not limited to prior policies issued by the same insurer. Indeed, there is no language in Condition C that might imply that the prior insurance provision is limited in application to any other excess policy issued only by the same provider. Rather, the general language of the prior insurance provision suggests that the clause is designed to apply whenever both earlier and later polices cover the same loss, just as the focus of noncumulation clauses is whether more than one policy provides coverage for identical loss within the same layer, unaffected by the identity of the insurer.
This construction is consistent, moreover, with the design of noncumulation clauses. As noted above, noncumulation clauses were developed to prevent "stacking" by an insured. "Such clauses originated during the shift from `accident-based' to `occurrence-based' liability policies in the 1960s and 1970s, and were purportedly designed to prevent any attempt by policyholders to recover under a subsequent policy — based on the broader definition of occurrence — for a loss that had already been covered by the prior `accident-based' policy." Viking Pump, 33 N.Y.S.3d 118, 52 N.E.3d at 1152. And, the New York Court of Appeals has "enforced non-cumulation clauses in accordance with their plain language, despite the limiting impact that such clauses may have on an insured's recovery (and, by extension, that of an injured plaintiff)." Id. (citing Nesmith v Allstate Ins. Co., 24 N.Y.3d 520, 25 N.E.3d 924 (2014); Hiraldo v Allstate Ins. Co., 5 N.Y.3d 508, 806 N.Y.S.2d 451, 840 N.E.2d 563 (2005)). Therefore, based on the policy language at issue and the recent decision
Our conclusion finds further support in our analysis of a similar prior insurance provision at issue in Olin III, in which we "conclude[ed] that the prior insurance provision reduces American Home's liability only to the extent that a prior insurance policy at the same level of coverage ... indemnifies for a loss that is also covered by an American Home policy." 704 F.3d at 104 (emphasis added). We also determined that, because we must interpret Condition C in a way that gives effect to both the continuing coverage clause and prior insurance provision, "to the extent the continuing coverage [clause] expands an insurer's liability, it does so subject to the limitations of the prior insurance provision." Id. at 104 n.20.
While the insurer in Olin III (American Home) issued both the policy under which Olin sought indemnification and the prior policy within the same layer of coverage, after Viking Pump it is clear that the critical factor is whether the loss covered by a policy dictating all sums is also covered by another policy in the same coverage layer, which itself has already provided indemnification to the insured for the loss. Although Viking Pump did not directly decide the issue we are required to resolve here, its analysis of the interplay between prior insurance provisions and allocation leads directly to our holding. Under an "all sums" or a "joint and several" method for allocation, an insured is permitted "to collect its total liability under any policy in effect during the periods that the damage occurred, up to the policy limits." Viking Pump, 27 N.Y.3d 244, 52 N.E.3d at 1149 (alteration and internal quotation marks omitted). It is then the insurer's burden to "seek contribution from the insurers that issued the other triggered policies." Id. 33 N.Y.S.3d 118, 52 N.E.3d at 1150. In contrast, under the pro rata scheme for allocation, "an insurer's liability is limited to sums incurred by the insured during the policy period; in other words, each insurance policy is allocated a `pro rata' share of the total loss representing the portion of the loss that occurred during the policy period." Id.
As Olin argues, application of the all sums method means that it may attribute the full amount of its loss to a single policy year and demand coverage from a single insurer up to the insurer's policy limits (OneBeacon in this case). Yet, this same principle also limits Olin's ability to tap multiple insurers for the same loss. Just as the all sums allocation method allows Olin to seek recovery from any insurer of its choosing up to the limits of the relevant policy, by the same token, it also requires reducing the limits of liability on the OneBeacon policy at issue by amounts paid under any prior insurance policy at the same level of coverage that did, in fact, provide coverage to Olin for the same loss. See Stonewall Ins. Co. v. E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., 996 A.2d 1254, 1260 (Del. 2010) (examining substantially similar language in light of the all sums approach and concluding that "interpreting the non-cumulation clause to limit how much [an insured] may seek from the selected tower of insurance by subtracting any amounts received by or payable to [the insured] from prior excess insurers [] is the only proper interpretation"). To conclude otherwise would be to strip the prior insurance provision of its bargained-for effect, as evinced by its plain language, and permit Olin to recover multiple times for a single loss by pursuing multiple insurers within the same layer of coverage. See id. (concluding that reading noncumulation clause "as ambiguous and in isolation would dishonor
Finally, however, we reject out-of-hand OneBeacon's argument that since Olin could recover from prior insurers whose policies provide coverage for loss at these sites and who sit in the same layer of coverage as OneBeacon, Olin may not recover under the OneBeacon policies. This argument turns on a misreading of Condition C. As explained earlier, Condition C permits an insured to pursue indemnification from any insurer whose policy was triggered (under the framework described above) as a result of continuing property damage. The prior insurance provision works in conjunction with the overarching approach dictated by Condition C to prevent the insured from stacking policies once it has already obtained indemnification for that specific loss from another policy in the relevant coverage layer. See Id., 33 N.Y.S.3d 118, 52 N.E.3d at 1149 (explaining that the all sums approach permits an insured to recover from "any policy in effect during the periods that damage occurred" (internal quotation marks omitted)).
Determining the meaning of the prior insurance provision does not resolve our inquiry. We must now determine the effect of Olin's settlements with its prior insurers — the London Market Insurers — on OneBeacon's obligations. This presents a difficult question, since Olin recovered from the London Market Insurers in settlement of its claims for indemnification, and the record is devoid of any information about these settlements.
OneBeacon contends that the district court should be instructed that "amounts due include amounts due under policies issued by insurers that settled prior to the conclusion of this appeal." Appellant's Br. at 63 (internal quotation marks omitted). In response, Olin claims that its settlements with the London Market Insurers do not constitute "amounts due" under those policies because "not one of those other insurers was ever adjudged liable to Olin or admitted liability ... [and] even if settlement dollars could be considered amounts due ... there is nothing in the record showing what amounts (if any) were due...." Appellee's Br. at 66, 68 (internal quotation marks omitted).
While we agree with OneBeacon that its limits of liability should be reduced by amounts paid to settle claims with respect to the five manufacturing sites at issue here, there is no basis in the record from which we might calculate that amount. Indeed, if, as Olin suggests, Olin entered into a global settlement with the London Market Insurers releasing claims under those policies as to all sites potentially at issue — and not just those that were the subject of adjudication at trial in this matter — there is no easy way to determine the amount of this settlement that is properly associated with claims arising from the five manufacturing sites that are the focus of this appeal. In fact, we have previously recognized the difficulties that arise when trying to set off an insured's recovery against prior settlements. See, e.g., E.R. Squibb & Sons, Inc. v. Lloyd's & Cos., 241 F.3d 154, 172 n.10 (2d Cir. 2001) (per curiam) (suggesting that the amounts paid in prior settlements had not exceeded aggregate policy limits); see also id. at 184 n.1 (Jacobs, J., dissenting) (questioning whether the district court's order required "the excess insurers to pay indemnity in respect of claims that have already been indemnified in full").
As just explained, Condition C permits an insured to pursue full recovery from any insurer in its program whose policy covers the relevant loss and contains Condition C irrespective of whether the insurer's policy was issued at the beginning, in the middle, or towards the end of the continuing occurrence. To use the terminology we adopted in Olin III, Condition C permits an insured to "sweep[]" loss — under Viking Pump, from both before and after the policy year — into a triggered policy and to seek full indemnification from that policy for its covered loss. Olin III, 704 F.3d at 104; Viking Pump, 33 N.Y.S.3d 118, 52 N.E.3d at 1155-56. In other words, like the joint and several liability that serves as a model for the all sums approach, once the insured has demonstrated the scope of its insurer's indemnification obligation, Condition C shifts the burden to the insurer "to seek contribution from the insurers that issued the other triggered policies." Viking Pump, 33 N.Y.S.3d 118, 52 N.E.3d at 1149-50. Thus, under Condition C, the insurer offering coverage for the selected policy year is generally required to demonstrate the existence of valid claims against other available policies and to pursue claims under them.
The prior insurance provision, however, also offers some contractual protection for the insurer. This provision allows the insurer to offset its indemnification obligations by amounts already paid to cover the loss by another insurer in the same coverage tier. See App'x at 2138 (permitting the insurer to reduce the limit of liability on the policy if any covered loss was already "covered in whole or in part under any other excess policy" at the same level of coverage). But it would generally be the burden of the insurer to prove its entitlement under this contractual provision. See Facet Indus., Inc. v. Wright, 62 N.Y.2d 769, 477 N.Y.S.2d 316, 465 N.E.2d 1252, 1254 (1984) (explaining that the burden of proving that a loss falls within a contractual exclusion is on the insurer); Lindenbaum v. Royco Prop. Corp., 165 A.D.2d 254, 258, 567 N.Y.S.2d 218 (1st Dep't 1991) ("The party burdened by the duty ... usually has the burden of proving the discharge of his duty by the occurrence of a condition subsequent."). If, after appropriate discovery, OneBeacon is able to do so, then the limits of liability on the policies it issued to Olin should be reduced accordingly. With these principles in mind, we remand to the district court for further proceedings on this issue.
OneBeacon also challenges the district court's calculation of prejudgment interest. It argues that the district court's award of prejudgment interest should be vacated because Olin failed to provide a sufficient "definite claim" for loss for which OneBeacon might be found liable, as required by OneBeacon's policies. In light of our conclusion that all sums allocation applies — altering the total sum of damages attributable to a given policy period — it is necessary to remand to the district court so it may recalculate the amount of prejudgment interest.
The district court concluded that Olin is entitled to prejudgment interest pursuant to N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 5001(b). Section 5001(b) "permits a party that prevailed in a breach of contract action to obtain prejudgment interest." NML Capital v. Republic of
In an insurance-coverage dispute, the application of § 5001(b) requires that prejudgment interest be calculated from the date the insurer becomes obligated to indemnify the insured. Cf. NML Capital, 928 N.Y.S.2d 666, 952 N.E.2d at 488 (explaining that "interest on a sum awarded as a result of a breach of contract is computed from the earliest date that the claim accrued"). An insurer breaches its coverage obligation where it fails to comply with its insured's demand for indemnity. See Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Home Ins. Co., 882 F.Supp. 1328, 1353 (S.D.N.Y. 1995) ("[T]he accrual of Aetna's cause of action can be identified as maturing when Home failed to comply with Aetna's demand that it indemnify Aetna for payments made in connection with its settlement with Robins."). Courts are afforded "wide discretion in determining a reasonable date from which to award pre-judgment interest." Conway v. Icahn & Co., Inc., 16 F.3d 504, 512 (2d Cir. 1994).
Here, the parties dispute whether the fifteen notices that Olin sent OneBeacon regarding its claims for coverage, beginning in 1984, constitute a "definite claim" such that OneBeacon's refusal to comply with its coverage obligations triggered § 5001(b). OneBeacon contends that, because its policies require that Olin make a "definite claim for any loss for which [One-Beacon] may be liable under the Policy," App'x at 2140, Olin was obligated to provide OneBeacon with a "sum certain" for a particular loss as a condition to coverage. Appellant's Reply Br. at 40. But OneBeacon's interpretation both reads words into, and out of, the policy.
Although the policy does not offer a precise definition for a "definite claim," it does make clear that any such claim needs to be certain only to the extent that it provided OneBeacon with an amount of loss for which OneBeacon "may be liable under the Policy." App'x at 2140 (emphasis added). The contract does not require Olin to submit a "definite claim" along with a "sum certain" of such claim, but rather a definite claim along with a description of the insurer's potential liability with respect to that claim. Because we read a contract so as to "give effect to the plain meaning of the words," we reject OneBeacon's contrary reading. Int'l Klafter Co. v. Cont'l Cas. Co., 869 F.2d 96, 99 (2d Cir. 1989).
Thus, because Olin furnished numerous documents and updates to OneBeacon concerning its losses and descriptions as to its expenditures at each site, we agree with the district court's determination that prejudgment interest should be calculated as of the dates when Olin incurred various remediation costs. In any event, it is worth noting that it has been OneBeacon's position all along that it has no obligation to indemnify Olin. It has denied coverage for over twenty years. Having been found liable for coverage to Olin, OneBeacon cannot now benefit from its tactical decision to deny its contractual obligation to indemnify Olin for covered losses by avoiding liability for interest. It is not the intention of § 5001(b) that an insurer could deny coverage for years in the face of reasonable demands and then, once it is adjudicated liable, avoid paying any prejudgment interest. As a result, remand on this point is necessary only for the reasons noted by Olin: to allow the district court an opportunity to adjust Olin's prejudgment interest award in light of our holding regarding all sums allocation.
Olin cross-appeals the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor
Applying Massachusetts' discovery rule, we agree with OneBeacon that summary judgment in its favor on Olin's Chapter 93A claim is proper because Olin's Chapter 93A claim is barred by the applicable statute of limitations.
As OneBeacon points out, Olin's complaint alleged, as part of the factual basis for Olin's Chapter 93A claim, that "Commercial Union [OneBeacon's predecessor]... wholly ignored Olin's repeated notifications of claims provided from and after 1984 in respect of certain of Olin's Claims." App'x at 1030. The complaint further alleged that "Commercial Union has failed and refused to affirm or deny coverage in respect of Olin's Claims for an unreasonable period of time — and in many cases, has never affirmed or denied coverage in respect of certain of Olin's Claims." App'x at 1030. In other words, according to its own allegations, since Olin knew that OneBeacon never responded directly to its notices and never affirmed or denied the coverage responsibilities these notices sought to invoke, Olin actually knew or, at the very least, should have known of the factual predicates for its Chapter 93A claim at some point either in the 1980s or the early 1990s. See Patsos v. First Albany Corp., 433 Mass. 323, 741 N.E.2d 841, 846-47 (2001) (explaining that, under the discovery rule, a cause of action accrues when a plaintiff "knew, or in the exercise of reasonable diligence should have known, of the factual basis for a cause of action").
For the foregoing reasons, the judgments of the district court are