Chief Judge LIPPMAN.
At issue is the sufficiency and extraterritorial reach of plaintiff's claim under New York State's antitrust statute, commonly known as the Donnelly Act (General Business Law § 340 et seq.).
Plaintiff is a New York branch of a German reinsurance corporation. Defendants (hereinafter collectively referred to as Equitas) are London, England based entities engaged in the business of providing retrocessionary reinsurance. Retrocessionary reinsurers, or retrocessionaires as they are known, write coverage for risks ceded to them by reinsurers, in this transactional context referred to as "cedents."
According to the complaint, this action arises from practices employed in connection with the handling of claims made under retrocessional reinsurance treaties providing what is known as "non-life" coverage. Among the risks insured under this heading are those of environmental, catastrophic and asbestos related origin. Liabilities under policies insuring such risks typically are of the "long tail" variety; they may surface long after the policy period and it is clear in retrospect that underwriters did not accurately appreciate the magnitude of "non-life" risks or the unusual persistence of the liability they would engender.
Over the years, Lloyd's of London, an insurance marketplace composed of numerous competing insurance syndicates, themselves composed of individual underwriting participants (natural persons referred to as Names), issued, through its syndicates substantial non-life retrocessional coverage. By the early 1990s, it became evident that the liabilities arising under this coverage were mounting at an alarming rate and would soon outstrip the syndicates' reserves.
The syndicates individually proved unable to respond to this impending crisis, in significant part because in competing with each other for prospective business it was their practice to pay retrocessionary claims without haggling and without imposing onerous administrative burdens on their cedents. It was thus proposed that, since individual action by the syndicates to limit
It was pursuant to the R&R plan that Equitas was created in 1996 to reinsure the otherwise uninsurable non-life retrocessionary obligations of the Lloyd's syndicates. And, in accordance with a Reinsurance and Runoff Contract (RROC), the Names reinsured with Equitas their risks under the Lloyd's syndicates' pre-1993 non-life retrocessionary treaties. The consideration for this coverage was comprised of some £14.7 billion in assets (premiums paid for the subject coverage) held by the syndicates and significant additional contributions by the Names individually, and by Lloyd's and its functionaries. Although subsequent to these transfers and until 2009
Plaintiff reinsurer purchased coverage for some of its non-life risks from Lloyd's retrocessionaires. The risks ceded by it to
On a CPLR 3211 motion preceding the one now before us, the tortious interference claim was dismissed, upon the ground then urged by Equitas that the wrongful conduct attributed by plaintiff to it had not been performed by it as a stranger to the contracts said to have been interfered with, but in its capacity as the claims handling agent of the contractually bound Names (20 Misc.3d 1115[A], 2008 NY Slip Op 51362[U], *8 [2008]). The motion court, however, sustained plaintiff's Donnelly Act claim finding, as is here relevant, that plaintiff had adequately alleged in the claim's support a geographical market for retrocessional non-life insurance limited to the Lloyd's marketplace. The court nonetheless granted plaintiff's request to amend its complaint to allege that the relevant market was global.
The resulting second amended complaint, the pleading now at issue, alleges in support of the Donnelly Act claim that prior to the R&R plan and the consequent creation of Equitas, retrocessional non-life claims handling with respect to pre-1993 Lloyd's coverage was performed by the individual Lloyd's syndicates which, because they competed with each other for new business and were thus anxious to curry favor with potential cedents, were disposed to settle claims expeditiously and fairly. Following the R&R plan and the centralizing of all decision making respecting the handling of the subject category of claims in Equitas pursuant to the RROC, there ceased to be any competitive
After the filing of the second amended complaint, Equitas again moved to dismiss pursuant to CPLR 3211. In deciding this motion, Supreme Court focused upon the circumstance that the complaint, while nominally alleging that the pertinent geographical market for the particular species of coverage at issue was global, actually seemed to continue to rely upon the existence of a cognizable submarket confined to the Lloyd's marketplace. Given the new allegations that there was a worldwide market for retrocessional non-life coverage, and the absence of any allegation that the coverage available in the Lloyd's marketplace could not be acquired elsewhere on competitive terms, the court concluded that Lloyd's was not a viable
On plaintiff's appeal from the subsequently entered judgment dismissing the complaint,
The Appellate Division granted Equitas leave to appeal, certifying to this Court the question of whether its order reversing the order of Supreme Court was properly made. We now reverse.
For present purposes, we assume, without deciding, that a conspiracy is alleged. In favor of that assumption we note that, although the complaint contains allegations that Equitas acted independently of the syndicates in discharging its claims management function and was a legally and financially autonomous entity, it also alleges in substance that the collective assumption of the claims management function previously performed by the syndicates individually was Equitas's raison d'être under the RROC and that Equitas from its inception and at all relevant subsequent times acted, if not as an agent in the traditional sense, at least as a preprogrammed instrumentality of the Names. Indeed, it will be recalled that in obtaining the dismissal of plaintiff's tortious interference claim Equitas itself represented that it was the claims agent of the Names, and, according to the complaint the allegations of which we must at this juncture accept as true, Equitas had no other purpose but that of fixing and capping the Names' liability under the subject pre-1993 coverage. Although there are situations in which a fully integrated entity that takes over and consolidates economic functions formerly performed competitively will be deemed sufficiently autonomous in its subsequent operations to preclude their characterization as conspiratorial within the meaning of the antitrust laws (see e.g. Texaco Inc. v Dagher, 547 U.S. 1 [2006]), the pertinent inquiry in determining whether there is concerted or unilateral activity is one of substance and not form (American Needle, Inc. v National Football League, 560 US ___, ___, 130 S.Ct. 2201, 2211-2212 [2010]); what is important is how the parties to the alleged anticompetitive conduct actually operate (560 US at ___, 130 S Ct at 2209). Here, there is discernible from the pleading a perhaps colorable claim that Equitas was engaged in concerted activity when it exercised
The substantive problem with this action is rather that although a worldwide market is nominally alleged, as is evidently essential since it is clear that the retrocessional non-life product is available globally and that there is no distinct legally cognizable submarket,
Ordinarily, a Donnelly or Sherman Act plaintiff, to survive a motion to dismiss in a rule of reason case, such as this one,
The allegations in paragraph 36 of the complaint do not singly or in combination allege market power as that term of art is defined in the antitrust lexicon. Lloyd's may, as plaintiff alleges, be the single most significant vendor of retrocessional non-life coverage; it may set the benchmark for the terms of such coverage and its quotes may be viewed as essential by reinsurers and reinsurance brokers; there may in addition be lines of retrocessional coverage with respect to which price competition with Lloyd's is considered more significant than competition in the world market. None of this, however, would justify the inference that Lloyd's could at will generally engage in "run-off" type claims management behavior and retain its business in a global market. Plaintiff was perhaps injured by an anticompetitive restraint in the Lloyd's market, but that is not a circumstance from which it is possible to conclude that there was some broader anticompetitive effect, or even a capacity to produce such an effect, in the relevant world market. It is market-wide effect that is crucial to an antitrust claim under the Sherman Act or Donnelly Act (see CDC Tech., 186 F3d at 80-81), not the existence of otherwise compensable individual injury. Plaintiff is evidently pursuing contract claims against Lloyd's underwriters in arbitration based on the same claims handling practices presently alleged. The question here is whether plaintiff may, premised on such allegations of localized individual harm, seek an award of treble damages for an antitrust violation. Inasmuch as it is the market-wide nature of the harm that would justify any such award, the answer, we believe, must be no.
Even if this pleading deficiency could be cured—and we perceive no reason to suppose that the formidable hurdle of
The complaint alleges, essentially, that a German reinsurer through its New York branch purchased retrocessional coverage in a London marketplace and consequently sustained economic injury when retrocessional claims management services were by agreement within that London marketplace consolidated so as to eliminate competition over their delivery. Injury so inflicted, attributable primarily to foreign, government approved transactions having no particular New York orientation and occasioning injury here only by reason of the circumstance that plaintiff's purchasing branch happens to be situated here, is not redressable under New York State's antitrust statute. That this is so is demonstrable when the Donnelly Act is considered in the context of federal antitrust law.
Assuming that the extraterritorial reach of the Donnelly Act is as extensive as that of its federal counterpart, the Sherman Act—an assumption that we do not ultimately embrace—it seems fairly clear that the Sherman Act would not reach a competitive restraint, imposed by participants in a British marketplace, that only incidently affected commerce in this country.
The Sherman Act's extraterritorial reach is limited under the Foreign Trade Antitrust Improvements Act (FTAIA) of 1982 (15 USC § 6a), which provides that the Sherman Act "shall not apply to conduct involving [non-import] trade or commerce ... with foreign nations." The only ground for excepting to this general rule of inapplicability where imports are not involved
It is not an answer to this analysis to observe, as plaintiff does, that under the McCarran-Ferguson Act (15 USC § 1011 et seq.) regulation of the "business of insurance" is committed to the states (15 USC § 1012 [b]). What is at issue here is not in the main the regulation of the "business of insurance," a matter within the special competence and jurisdictional reach of domestic state regulators, but the address of a purported foreign conspiracy to restrain trade, a matter to be dealt with, if at all, under the significantly distinct antitrust rubric (see Group Life & Health Ins. Co. v Royal Drug Co., 440 U.S. 205, 210-211 [1979]). The question now before us—as to the extraterritorial reach of our state antitrust law—is, then, not one as to which the McCarran-Ferguson Act commitment is relevant. What is
Nonetheless, we do not ultimately ground our determination that the Donnelly Act does not reach the presently claimed conspiracy upon the FTAIA. Even if the Sherman Act could reach the purported conspiracy, it would not follow that the Donnelly Act should be viewed as coextensive. For a Donnelly Act claim to reach a purely extraterritorial conspiracy, there would, we think, have to be a very close nexus between the conspiracy and injury to competition in this state. That additional element is not discernible from the pleadings before us. It would be a very great, and we think unwarranted, supposition that the authors of the Donnelly Act intended to allow, on a predicate such as the one here alleged, the sort of highly intrusive international projection of state regulatory power now proposed.
Having said this, it should be emphasized that our decision should not be understood as placing some new limitation on the reach of the Donnelly Act. This is simply a rare instance in which a state antitrust action has tested the outer jurisdictional limits not only of state but federal antitrust law.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs, the judgment of Supreme Court reinstated and the certified question answered in the negative.
SMITH, J. (concurring).
I agree with the result reached by the majority, and with most of the reasoning in the majority opinion. My only reservation is about the majority's analysis (which, as it acknowledges, is not essential to its decision) of whether the allegations in the complaint would state a claim under the federal antitrust laws. The implications of the Foreign Trade Antitrust Improvements Act of 1982 (15 USC § 6a) for this case (and for many other cases) are, to me at least, far less than clear. I would prefer to express no opinion about them, and simply to rely on the state law grounds explained at page 736 of the majority opinion (and on the similar reasoning contained in
Order reversed, etc.