LYNN ADELMAN, District Judge.
This action arises out of the collapse of an office building in Paris, France. Right Management, a subsidiary of Manpower, Inc., leased office space in the building at the time of the collapse, and Manpower seeks insurance coverage from the Insurance Company of the State of Pennsylvania ("ISOP") for the losses Right Management sustained. In the present opinion, I address an issue involving the interplay between ISOP's policy and a policy issued by another insurance company, AIG-Europe, which is not a party to this case.
ISOP's policy is a "difference in conditions" ("DIC") policy, which is a kind of policy that United States companies often purchase when they have operations in foreign countries. Typically, a company will purchase local policies from insurers in each of the countries in which it operates and then a DIC policy from a United States insurer. The purpose of the DIC policy is to make sure that the company has coverage at all of its foreign locations that is at least as broad as the coverage provided by a typical United States property policy. See LeRoy Utschig, International Difference in Conditions, Rough Notes, Jan. 2000, at 60, 60. When a loss
Following the collapse, Right Management filed a claim with AIG-Europe for over Q8 million. The claim involved property losses and business-interruption losses. AIG-Europe determined that coverage under the local policy was limited to "lack of access" coverage, to which a $250,000 sublimit applied. Manpower then sought to recover the rest of its claim from ISOP under the DIC policy, which had a policy limit of $15 million. ISOP determined that coverage under the DIC policy was limited to "civil authorities" coverage, to which a $500,000 sublimit applied. ISOP thus paid Manpower $250,000 (the difference between coverage under the DIC policy and the AIG-Europe policy) and then closed its file.
Manpower believed that under the DIC policy it was entitled to coverage up to the full policy limits. It thus filed the present action against ISOP. After the litigation had been underway for some time, the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment on the issue of whether the $500,000 sublimit applied. I determined that it did not, and that therefore Manpower was entitled to coverage up to the full policy limits.
After I made this ruling, ISOP began to call attention to the AIG-Europe policy, arguing that Manpower could not establish its right to payment under the DIC policy until Right Management exhausted coverage under the local policy. Until ISOP raised this issue, Manpower had not filed suit against AIG-Europe over its handling of the claim. However, once ISOP took this position, Manpower caused Right Management to add AIG-Europe as a party to a lawsuit pending in France involving various disputes relating to the collapse of the office building. That lawsuit is ongoing, and as far as I know no end is in sight. ISOP's position is that until the French court establishes AIG-Europe's obligations under the local policy, Manpower cannot show that there is a difference in conditions between the local policy and the ISOP policy that would trigger DIC coverage. ISOP asks that this case be stayed pending resolution of the French proceedings.
To resolve this issue, I turn to the policy language, which provides in relevant part as follows:
(ISOP Policy § 26.)
I conclude that the policy language does not support either party's position. The policy requires Manpower to show that a difference in conditions exists, and to do that Manpower must compare the local policy to the DIC policy and show that the DIC policy is broader than the local policy. Whether the DIC policy is in fact broader is a question of law that can be resolved by this court. It does not matter that AIG-Europe initially denied the majority of the claim, or that ISOP initially agreed with AIG-Europe's interpretation of the local policy. The insurers' own interpretations of the relevant policies are not dispositive.
Manpower points to language in the difference-in-conditions provision stating that the DIC policy "does not insure against perils as defined and insured under primary insurance to the extent of recovery thereunder." Manpower argues that the "to the extent of recovery" language means that DIC coverage is available so long as the insured has not actually received payments under the local policy,
Accordingly, Manpower cannot recover against ISOP until it establishes that ISOP's policy is broader than AIG-Europe's. It can do this either by asking that I compare the two policies and decide whether ISOP's is broader, or by establishing the extent of coverage available under the AIG-Europe policy through the litigation in France.
For the reasons stated,