ALVIN K. HELLERSTEIN, District Judge.
On July 16, 2001, plaintiffs World Trade Center Properties, LLC and affiliated companies (collectively "WTCP") purchased 99-year leases to four World Trade Center buildings, Towers One, Two, Four, and Five, from the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, Inc., the owner of the properties. Plaintiffs paid $2.805 billion. Two months later, the terrorist air crashes of September 11 caused the Twin Towers (Towers One and Two) to become raging infernos and collapse. And their collapse caused Towers Four and Five (and Tower Seven) to collapse. WTCP sued United Airlines, American Airlines, and others (collectively, the "Aviation Defendants" or "Defendants"), alleging that but for the Aviation Defendants' negligence, the terrorists could not have boarded and hijacked the aircraft and flown them into the Twin Towers.
WTCP also recovered $4.091 billion from insurance.
Defendants' motion is denied. The overlap between WTCP's insurance recovery and its potential tort recovery presents issues of fact requiring trial.
The issue presented by this motion follows from my earlier opinions in this matter. In December 2008 I limited WTCP's recovery to the lesser of fair market value or replacement cost. In re September 11th Litig., 590 F.Supp.2d 535 (S.D.N.Y.2008). In a follow-up order, after separate briefing and argument, I fixed the limit of tort recovery at $2.805 billion. The price paid for the leases, I found, was equivalent to their fair market value on September 11, 2001. In re September 11 Litig., 2009 WL 1181057, 21 MC 101 (April 30, 2009, S.D.N.Y.). The Aviation Defendants then moved for collateral setoff, and I denied the motion as premature. In re September 11th Litig., 21 MC 101, Doc. No. 945 (Sep. 30, 2009, S.D.N.Y.). I assume familiarity with this background.
By the terms of its leases, WTCP covenanted, in the event of damage or destruction to the leasehold, to "rebuild, restore, repair and replace" the premises to the extent "feasible, prudent and commercially reasonable." See, e.g., Agreement of Lease: One World Trade Center, § 15.1.
Additionally, to ensure that WTCP would be able to continue to make its lease payments to the Port Authority in the event that a building was "out of operation," WTCP agreed also to insure against "Loss of Revenue/Business Interruption" in such amounts as "reasonably required by the Port Authority," to cover a three-year period of no building operation. Id. § 14.1.2.
Upon signing the 99-year leases, WTCP procured twelve-layer, multiple-company insurance coverage aggregating $3,546,800,000 "per occurrence." The coverage, defined by different insurance forms and binders, included Property Damage and Business Interruption coverage, as required by the leases. The Property Damage coverage insured the "interest of the Insured in all property of every kind and description owned or used ...." The Business Interruption insurance covered lost revenues resulting from the "necessary interruption or reduction of business operations ... caused by loss, damage, or destruction ...."
After the Towers collapsed, WTCP filed Preliminary Proofs of Partial Loss ("PPOPLs"), of approximately $8 billion dollars.
In its lawsuit. WTCP alleged that it suffered damages of $8.4 billion, the estimated cost of replacing the Towers, and sought recovery against the Aviation Defendants for their negligence. The Aviation Defendants denied that they were negligent and denied that they could be liable beyond the fair market value of the leasehold. On Defendants' motion for summary judgment, I held that a tort recovery was limited to the lesser of fair market value or replacement cost, and ruled that the loss in market value of WTCP's 99-year leasehold, valued as of September 11, 2001, was the most that it could recover. In re September 11th Litig., 590 F.Supp.2d at 536 ruled that WTCP could not recover in tort, in a suit for negligence, the damages flowing from its contractual obligations to "rebuild, restore, repair and replace" the Trade Center
After further submissions by the parties, I determined the value of WTCP's destroyed leasehold on September 11, 2001 to be $2.805 billion — the price WTCP agreed to pay the Port Authority for the leasehold only a few months earlier. In re September 11 Litig., 21 MC 101(AKH), 2009 WL 1181057 at *4 (S.D.N.Y. Apr. 30, 2009), I rejected WTCP's argument that its leasehold, measured by its value as burdened by its covenant to rebuild the Trade Center, had taken on a negative value. Id. at *3.
Defendants now argue that since WTCP recovered $4.091 billion from insurance, it cannot recover the lesser amount of $2.805 billion, the fair market value of its destroyed leasehold.
New York's C.P.L.R. Section 4545 is known as a "collateral source law." Essentially, it provides that if a plaintiff has been compensated for economic loss by some "collateral source," such as insurance, the plaintiff cannot recover compensation again in a tort lawsuit against a defendant. The statute provides:
N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 4545(c) (2008).
Importantly, Section 4545(c) does not provide for a reduction in damages based on any and all of the plaintiffs collateral recoveries. Rather, "reduction is authorized only when the collateral source payment represents reimbursement for a particular category of loss that corresponds to a category of loss for which damages were awarded." Oden v. Chemung
By reason of the events of 9/11, WTCP lost its revenue stream, until the leasehold property could be restored. However, pursuant to its lease, it was obligated to continue to pay rents to the Port Authority. The lease required WTCP to procure Property Damage insurance to facilitate the rebuilding of the towers should they be damaged or destroyed, and Business Interruption insurance to facilitate WTCP's ability to continue to pay rent should its anticipated revenues be disrupted. Agreement of Lease: One World Trade Center, § 14.1.1, § 14.1.2. The anticipated expenses of procuring such insurance are subsumed in a real estate developer's calculation of a leasehold's anticipated net income and, hence, the price it is willing to pay for the property. Thus, the fair market value of the WTCP leasehold, as of September 11, 2001, reflected all these revenue and expense ingredients, These factors may enter into the calculation of fair market value that ready, willing, and able buyers and sellers are willing to pay and to receive. 1 would assume that the price paid by WTCP, and accepted by the Port Authority — $2.805 billion — and the competitive bids that preceded the agreement, reflected all the ingredients of anticipated revenue and expense,
WTCP settled its litigation against its insurers for $4.091 billion, a little more than half its PPOPL total of approximately $8 billion, WTCP's claim mainly fell into two categories: Property Damage insurance to defray the cost of rebuilding the leased properties, and Business Interruption insurance to compensate for WTCP's lost revenue stream and to defray the burden of WTCP's continuing obligation to pay rent to the Port Authority. The proportions of each category to the whole were 84.2 to 15.8, respectively,
As stated by the New York Court of Appeals in Oden, "reduction [of damages] is authorized only when the collateral source payment represents reimbursement for a particular category of loss that corresponds to a category of loss for which damages were awarded." 87 N.Y.2d at 84, 637 N.Y.S.2d 670, 661 N.E.2d 142, And correspondence must be proved to a "reasonable certainty." Turnbull, 133 F.3d at 188. The Aviation Defendants argue that both aspects of WTCP's insurance recovery — Property Damage and Business Interruption — should correspond to WTCP's tort loss of the value of its leasehold, thereby subsuming all of WTCP's tort claims. But that is not clear. The proof of the experts, seeking to relate, or not to relate, a gross insurance recovery to various amounts of damage, raises many questions of correspondence. WTCP suffered different categories of loss on the morning of September 11, and the issue of correspondence between them and WTCP's insurance recoveries presents issues of complexity and nuance that will require a trial to clarify.
Defendants' motion to credit insurance recoveries against potential tort recoveries is denied. The issue is not suitable for summary disposition on the record presented. The clerk shall terminate the motions (08 Civ. 3719, Doc. No. 153; 08 Civ. 3722, Doc. No. 169).
SO ORDERED.