Dominion Energy, Inc. et al v. Zurich American Ins Co
Filing
72
RULING granting in part to the extent provided in the foregoing discussion. The parties are directed to file with this court a notice upon the final disposition of the Boyle case by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts.and denying in part WITHOUT PREJUDICE as to the issue of Zurichs liability for defense costs paid by Dominion before April 1, 2011, re 56 Motion for Summary Judgment. Signed by Judge Janet C. Hall on 3/3/2015. (Malone, P.)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF CONNECTICUT
DOMINION ENERGY, INC. et al.,
Plaintiffs,
CIVIL ACTION NO.
3:13-CV-156 (JCH)
v.
ZURICH AMERICAN INS. CO.,
Defendant.
MARCH 3, 2015
RULING RE: PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT ON
ZURICH’S LIABILITY FOR: (I) “PRE-TENDER” COSTS; (II) PREJUDGMENT
INTEREST; AND (III) FEES INCURRED TO ESTABLISH THE EXISTENCE AND
EXTENT OF ZURICH’S DUTY TO DEFEND (Doc. No. 56)
Plaintiffs Dominion Energy Inc., Dominion Generation Corporation, Dominion
Technical Solutions, Inc., and Dominion Resources, Inc. (collectively, “Dominion”)
brought this action against defendant Zurich American Insurance Company (“Zurich”) to
establish Zurich’s duty to defend Dominion in ongoing litigation in Massachusetts (“the
Massachusetts Action”). Having established Zurich’s ongoing duty to defend, see
Ruling Re: Defendant’s Motion to Transfer (Doc. No. 24) and Plaintiffs’ Motion for Partial
Summary Judgment (Doc. No. 31) (“October 2013 Ruling”) (Doc. No. 42), Dominion
now seeks partial summary judgment on three issues, to wit, Zurich’s liability for:
litigation costs (including fees) that Dominion incurred before April 1, 2011, when it
requested that Zurich defend it in the Massachusetts Action, interest on any award of
costs of litigation the Massachusetts Action (both before and after April 1, 2011), and
the costs (including fees) of the present action. See Plaintiffs’ Motion for Partial
Summary Judgment on Zurich’s Liability for: (i) “Pre-Tender” Costs; (ii) Prejudgment
1
Interest; and (iii) Fees Incurred to Establish the Existence and Extent of Zurich’s Duty to
Defend (Doc. No. 56). The Motion is granted in part and denied in part.
I.
FACTS1
Dominion owns and runs power generation facilities including the Salem Harbor
Generating Station in Salem, Massachusetts (“the Salem Station”). JSF ¶¶ 3, 15.
Alstom Power, Inc., (“Alstom”) performs inspections of facilities including the Salem
Station. Id. ¶ 15. Risk Enterprise Management, Limited (“REM”) is a third-party
administrator of claims for Alstom. Id. ¶ 29. Zurich is an insurer. Id. ¶ 7.
On February 1, 2005, Dominion and Alstom entered into an agreement (“the
Alliance Agreement”) providing, inter alia, that, Alstom would obtain and maintain
general commercial liability insurance coverage as to certain inspections that it would
perform for Dominion, and it would name Dominion as an additional insured under said
insurance. Id. ¶¶ 3–5, 14. The Alliance Agreement further provides that Alstom will “at
Dominion’s sole option, defend Dominion . . . against” lawsuits. JSF ¶ 6; RA at 145.
Alstom’s corporate parent purchased from Zurich a commercial liability insurance
policy with a coverage period of April 1, 2007 to April 1, 2008 (“the Zurich Policy” or “the
Policy”). JSF ¶¶ 7, 11. Although the Zurich Policy does not explicitly name Dominion
as an insured, a term in the Policy provides indirectly for Dominion’s coverage because
it states that entities in addition to Alstom are automatically insured if Alstom has agreed
1
The court derives the following from a set of facts and documents as to whose authority the
parties have stipulated, see Joint Statement of Facts (“JSF”) (Doc. No. 57); Stipulated Record Appendix
(“RA”) (Doc. No. 34); while “resolv[ing] all ambiguities and draw[ing] all inferences against the moving
party,” Garcia v. Hartford Police Dep’t, 706 F.3d 120, 127 (2d Cir. 2013).
2
to name them as an insured with respect to services Alstom has performed for them.
Id. ¶¶ 12–14.
The Zurich Policy provides, inter alia, that the insured “must see to it that we are
notified as soon as practicable of an ‘occurrence’ or an offense which may result in a
claim,” and, similarly, that “you must . . . [n]otify us as soon as practicable” “[i]f a claim is
made or a ‘suit’ is brought against any Insured.” JSF ¶ 28 (quoting § IV.2 of the Zurich
Policy). The Policy further provides that the insured “must . . . [c]ooperate with us in the
investigation or settlement of the claim or defense against the ‘suit.’” Id. (The parties
do not provide any stipulation to the effect that the Zurich Policy requires any formal
demand for defense before Zurich becomes obligated to defend an insured.)
In early April 2007, in an inspection pursuant to the Alliance Agreement, Service
Engineer Dennis Nygaard of Alstom inspected Boiler Number 3 at the Salem Station.
Id. ¶ 21. On November 6 of the same year, a steam explosion of Boiler Number 3
caused the deaths of three individuals (“the decedents”) and allegedly injured two more.
Id. ¶ 22.
On December 10, 2007, REM sent, and Zurich received, a notice that the steam
explosion had occurred at a Dominion power generation facility, that Dominion was a
client of Alstom, that this event “could potentially involve” the Zurich Policy, and that “we
are providing provisional notice of this matter to Zurich . . . [and] respectfully
request[ing] all available insurance coverage issued by Zurich to Alstom . . . including
but not limited to defense and indemnity.” Id. ¶¶ 29–30; REM Notice (Doc. No. 57-1) at
1. (The parties do not stipulate to any facts about any response or failure to respond to
this notice by Zurich.)
3
On May 5, 2009, the decedents’ estates and others instituted the Massachusetts
Action against Dominion, Alstom, Nygaard, and others. JSF ¶ 25. The summons in the
suit was dated July 1, 2009. Id. ¶ 31. Zurich received notice of the action on July 9,
2009. Id.
On April 1, 2011, while discovery was ongoing in the Massachusetts Action,
Dominion requested that Zurich provide a defense in the Massachusetts Action to
Zurich. Id. ¶ 32.2
On December 1, 2011, Zurich responded to Dominion “that it could have no
defense-related obligation to Dominion under the Zurich Policy before a determination
of the relative fault, if any, of Dominion and Alstom in the Massachusetts Action.” Id. ¶
34. Zurich never subsequently agreed to furnish Dominion with a defense or to
reimburse Dominion for any of its costs of defense in the Massachusetts Action. Id. ¶
35.
On February 1, 2013, Dominion instituted the present action against Zurich. See
Complaint (Doc. No. 1). Zurich moved to change the venue of the action to the United
States District Court for the District of Massachusetts, contending, inter alia, that such
transfer was warranted on the basis that Massachusetts law applied and that a
Massachusetts federal court would more easily be able to apply Massachusetts law.
See Defendant Zurich American Insurance Company’s Motion for Transfer of Venue
Under 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a) (Doc. No. 24); Defendant’s Memorandum in Support of Its
2
In the JSF, the parties stipulate that “Dominion requested that Zurich provide it with a defense in
the Massachusetts Action, i.e., it ‘tendered’ the defense of the Massachusetts Action to Zurich, on April 1,
2011.” JSF ¶ 32. The parties do not cite documentary evidence of the request (e.g., a letter). The court
will not describe the April 1, 2011 request for defense using the term “tender” because the use of this
term suggests a legal conclusion rather than a state of facts and the legal question of when “tender”
occurred is one of the central legal issues that the parties presently contest.
4
Motion for Transfer of Venue Under 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a) (Doc. No. 25). On June 14,
2013, Dominion filed a Motion for Summary Judgment as to Zurich’s duty to defend.
See Plaintiffs’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on the Duty to Defend (Doc. No.
31). Without resolving the question of which state’s law applies generally in the action,
the court declined to transfer the action and granted the Motion for Partial Summary
Judgment. See October 2013 Ruling.
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Granting a motion for summary judgment is proper only if “there is no genuine
issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
O’Hara v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co., 642 F.3d 110, 116 (2d Cir. 2011). Thus, the court’s
role in deciding such a motion “is to determine whether genuine issues of material fact
exist for trial, not to make findings of fact.” Id. In making this determination, the court
“must resolve all ambiguities and draw all inferences against the moving party.” Garcia
v. Hartford Police Dep’t, 706 F.3d 120, 127 (2d Cir. 2013).
The moving party bears the burden of establishing the absence of genuine
issues of material fact. Zalaski v. City of Bridgeport Police Dep’t, 613 F.3d 336, 340 (2d
Cir. 2010). If the moving party meets that burden, the party opposing the motion will
only prevail if it sets forth “specific facts” that demonstrate the existence of “a genuine
issue for trial.” Wright v. Goord, 554 F.3d 255, 266 (2d Cir. 2009) (quoting Fed. R. Civ.
P. 56(e)).
For summary judgment purposes, a genuine issue exists where the evidence is
such that a reasonable jury could decide in the non-moving party’s favor. See Rivera v.
Rochester Genesee Reg’l Transp. Auth., 702 F.3d 685, 693 (2d Cir. 2012); see also
5
Rojas v. Roman Catholic Diocese of Rochester, 660 F.3d 98, 104 (2d Cir. 2011) (citing
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 252 (1986)) (stating that the non-moving
party must point to more than a mere “scintilla” of evidence in its favor). Mere
conclusory statements or allegations are not sufficient to defeat a summary judgment
motion. Davis v. N.Y., 316 F.3d 93, 100 (2d Cir. 2002).
III.
DISCUSSION
A.
Costs of defense paid by Dominion before the April 1, 2011 request for
defense
Dominion moves for summary judgment as to Zurich’s liability for the litigation
costs that Dominion paid to defend against the Massachusetts Action preceding April 1,
2011, when Dominion requested that Zurich defend it in the Massachusetts Action.
1.
Conflict-of-laws determination
The parties dispute which state’s law governs the issues in the pending Motion.
Whether the court applies the law of Massachusetts or Connecticut (these being the two
states whose laws the parties argue apply here) will result in several substantially
different conclusions as to each major issue in this Ruling. Accordingly, before
resolving the question of liability for defense costs paid by Dominion before the request
for defense or any other substantive legal issue, the court must first determine what law
applies in this case.
This court applies Connecticut conflict-of-law rules because, in determining the
governing law in a diversity case, a district court is to apply the conflict-of-law rules
applicable to the state in whose territory it sits. See Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg.
Co., 313 U.S. 487, 496 (1941).
6
a.
The “special presumption” of section 193 of the Restatement
With respect to conflict-of-law determinations in insurance contract suits, the
Connecticut Supreme Court has held that “the . . . special presumption [of section 193
of the Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws], rather than the . . . general
presumption [of section 188, regarding contract actions generally], should apply in
cases involving liability insurance policies that cover immovable risks located in more
than one state.” Reichhold Chems., Inc. v. Hartford Accident & Indem. Co., 243 Conn.
401, 416 (1997).
The “general” presumption of section 188 as to conflict-of-law determinations for
any contract dispute is that, “[i]f the place of negotiating the contract and the place of
performance are in the same state, the local law of this state will usually be applied
. . . .” Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 188.
As for section 193, there is some ambiguity as to what precisely the rule is that
Reichhold endorsed. Looking to one part of the Reichhold opinion, Dominion argues
that the proper rule is that the presumptively-applicable state law is that of the actual
location of the immovable insured risk relevant to the litigation. See Reichhold, 243
Conn. at 411–12 (referring several times to a “presumption in favor of application . . . of
the law of the jurisdiction that is the principal location of the insured risk” without
referring to the parties’ understanding of where the location was to be). Of course, as
neither party contests, the relevant insured risk, the Salem Station, is immovable and
7
located in Massachusetts.3 If the proper inquiry is as to the actual principal location,
then the proper presumption would be that Massachusetts law applies.
Looking to parts of the Reichhold opinion in which the Court quotes verbatim
from and/or states without exception that it was “adopt[ing]” the Restatement, Zurich
argues that the presumptively-applicable state law is that of the location where the
parties understood the immovable insured risk was to be. See, e.g., id. at 414. The
words of the Restatement itself provide that the state law which presumptively applies is
that “which the parties understood was to be the . . . location of the insured
risk.” Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 193 (emphasis added). Zurich
argues, assuming this reading is correct, that because the parties did not understand
the relevant immovable insured risk to be anywhere in particular when the contract was
executed, section 193’s presumption does not apply. It goes on to argue that a different
rule applies and that the proper inquiry requires the conclusion that Connecticut law
controls the merits of the issues presently before the court.
It is unnecessary for the court to resolve this apparent ambiguity in Reichhold.
Even assuming that Zurich’s rule is the correct one, Zurich’s application of the rule is
incorrect: even under Zurich’s reading of Reichhold, the only proper conclusion from the
undisputed facts in this case is that, although the Policy does not explicitly mention an
3
Because Zurich has not argued that the insured risk should be construed as anything other than
the Salem Station (and even appears to proceed on the assumption that the Salem Station is the relevant
risk), the court finds that Zurich has abandoned any argument to the contrary and summarily adopts the
(quite reasonable) legal conclusion apparently proposed by Dominion that the Salem Station is the
relevant risk—or, at the very least, that the relevant risk is immovable and is located in Massachusetts.
See Jackson v. Fed. Express, 766 F.3d 189, 198 (2d Cir. 2014); Plaintiffs’ Memorandum in Support of
Their Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on Zurich’s Liability for: (i) “Pre-tender” Costs; (ii)
Prejudgment Interest; and (iii) Fees Incurred to Establish the Existence and Extent of Zurich’s Duty to
Defend (“Pls.’ Mem.”) (Doc. No. 58) at 14–15.
8
insured risk in Massachusetts, the parties must be deemed to have been aware that the
relevant immovable risk at issue in this case was to be located in Massachusetts by
extension from the terms of the Policy and other documents referred to and already
executed at the time of the Policy’s issuance.
As Zurich itself asserts, the Policy “expressly covered Alstom’s operations
nationwide.” Memorandum of Zurich American Insurance Company in Opposition to the
Plaintiffs’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (“Opp.”) (Doc. No. 59) at 8; RA at 88,
103. At the time of the agreement, April 2007, Alstom had already agreed (on February
1, 2005) to name Zurich as an additional insured on a policy that it would obtain for
liability for insurance. The Zurich Policy stated in an “automatic additional insured”
section that Dominion would be covered by extension from this fact. As a consequence,
for the purpose of applying this rule, Zurich, which explicitly understood that immovable
insured risks were to be located at locations “nationwide” (a geographical area covering
Massachusetts), can only be deemed to have understood that some insured risks might
be located in Massachusetts. Zurich cannot now claim lack of knowledge that an
insured risk was located in Massachusetts on the basis of its failing to inquire as to the
actual location of every insured risk associated with the automatic additional insureds
covered under the Policy, especially not when the immovable insured risk covered by
the terms of the Policy was established even prior to the Policy’s execution.
Nor, the court briefly notes, is the fact that the Policy covered a number of risks
nationwide a bar to the application of Massachusetts law for immovable risks in
Massachusetts (and likewise, mutatis mutandis, for immovable risks in other states).
Reichhold holds, in square opposition to Zurich’s suggestion, see Opp. at 10–11, that a
9
policy’s coverage of immovable risks in more than one state does not affect the
application of section 193’s special presumption with respect to lawsuits arising out of
any given risk: if the law to be applied with respect to each is different in different cases,
so be it. See Reichhold, 243 Conn. at 417 (citing Restatement (Second) of Conflict of
Laws § 193 cmt. f).
Accordingly, the court concludes that, under Connecticut law, section 193’s
special presumption applies to establish Massachusetts as the state whose law
presumptively applies to this action.
b.
No opposition to the special presumption
Because Zurich makes no argument that “some other state [besides
Massachusetts] has a more significant relationship under the principles stated in § 6 [of
the Restatement] to the transaction and the parties” so as to defeat section 193’s
special presumption, and the court itself discerns no basis for upsetting this
presumption, see Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 193, the court concludes
that this special presumption is sufficient to establish Massachusetts law as applicable.
c.
Massachusetts law applicable to the remainder of the Ruling
Although the analysis of the proper choice of state law with respect to one issue
in a case “does not preclude the application of the law of a[nother] state . . . to other
issues in the case . . . [where there is] apparent similarity of concerns with respect to the
[multiple sets of] issues . . . , a principled explanation would be required to justify
[applying a] different [state’s law].” Reichhold Chems., Inc. v. Hartford Accident &
Indem. Co., 252 Conn. 774, 783–84 (2000). Here, the court discerns no reason why the
same choice-of-law analysis should not apply to all issues presently before the court,
10
each of which relates to the same set of contracts and arises out of the same event (the
explosion), which gave rise to the same underlying litigation. Nor do the parties present
any reason. Accordingly, the court applies Massachusetts law throughout this Ruling.
2.
Merits determination as to liability for payments before April 1, 2011
Having determined that Massachusetts law applies, the court returns to the
question of liability for litigation costs incurred prior to Dominion’s April 1, 2011 request
for defense.
Dominion argues that, because Zurich was on notice that a defense would likely
be necessary, when the explosion occurred, and ultimately was necessary, when the
suit was filed, and because Zurich suffered no prejudice by Dominion’s failure to provide
a defense request at an earlier date, Dominion is entitled to pursue even those costs
from prior to its request. Zurich argues that it is liable only for those costs arising after
its December 1, 2011 refusal of Dominion’s request for defense.
Dominion relies on the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court’s (SJC) Sarnafil
decision. See Sarnafil, Inc. v. Peerless Ins. Co., 418 Mass. 295 (1994).
Zurich
contends that the best reading of controlling law, including Sarnafil, is that, if an insured
has not yet requested a defense, an insurer is not liable for the litigation costs that the
insured incurs.
At oral argument, the court inquired of the parties as to a Massachusetts case,
not cited by either party in any of the papers associated with the present Motion, that
appears closely analogous to the one at bar: Boyle v. Zurich Amer. Ins. Co., No.
MICV2011-02244, 2014 WL 4082302, 32 Mass. L. Rptr. 352 (Mass. Super. Ct. June
23, 2014). In Boyle, the Massachusetts Superior Court relied on Sarnafil to conclude
11
that the correct rule under Massachusetts law is that “mere knowledge that an insured
has been sued . . . trigger[s] an insurer’s duty to defend[, even where] actual notice
[comes] from a third party . . . .” Id. at *11.
Counsel for Zurich represented to the court at oral argument (and the court has
confirmed) that Boyle is presently on appeal to the SJC, which exercised its power to
hear the case on direct review from the Superior Court’s ruling. See Boyle v. Zurich
Amer. Ins. Co., No. SJC-11791, No. 2014-P-1399, No. DAR-22873 (Mass.); Mass. R.
App. P. 11(a) (providing that direct appellate review may be granted by the SJC for,
inter alia, “questions of first impression or novel questions of law which should be
submitted for final determination to the Supreme Judicial Court” and “questions of such
public interest that justice requires a final determination by the full Supreme Judicial
Court”). The case is already briefed by both parties. Counsel for Zurich represented at
oral argument that the case is set for argument in April 2015. The SJC has also
requested amicus briefs, and at least one has been filed so far. The issue in the case,
as stated by the SJC, is
[w]hether the notice that is required to be given by an insured to its insurer under
the terms of a policy (of a pending lawsuit against the insured) in order to trigger
the insurer's duty to defend, must come directly from the insured in compliance
with the terms of the policy, as opposed to from some other source, in order to
give rise to the insurer's obligation; whether an insured's failure to give any kind
of notice under the policy precludes coverage, as the insurer contends, or, as the
judge ruled, only precludes coverage when the absence of such notice actually
prejudices the insurer.
Boyle, No. SJC-11791 (Doc. No. 3; Announcement) (Dec. 29, 2014).
As a general rule, “the difficulties of ascertaining what the state courts may
hereafter determine the state law to be do not in themselves afford a sufficient ground
for a federal court to decline to exercise its jurisdiction to decide a case which is
12
properly brought to it for decision.” Meredith v. City of Winter Haven, 320 U.S. 228, 234
(1943). Nonetheless, several factors warrant this court’s conclusion that a delay of
decision of the present issue is appropriate here. The SJC’s decision in Boyle is quite
likely to dispose of the present issue in its entirety. Moreover, the SJC has apparently
decided that the issue is an important one, even if it does not appear to be “intimately
involved with [the] sovereign prerogative” of Massachusetts. Louisiana Power & Light
Co. v. City of Thibodaux, 360 U.S. 25, 28 (1959). And state proceedings are not merely
ongoing before a state trial court; instead, a final decision from the highest court in
Massachusetts appears to be imminent. Awaiting decision by the SJC may result in
substantially more effective use of resources by both the judiciary and the parties
because it will substantially reduce the likelihood of relitigation of this issue in this case,
whether before this court or before the Court of Appeals. See In re President and
Fellows of Harvard College, 149 F.2d 69, 72–73 (1st Cir. 1945) (endorsing stay under
hypothetical situation in which suit between different parties on potentially controlling
issue were pending before both the state supreme court and a federal district court and,
“if the plaintiff . . . should obtain a verdict and judgment [in the federal district court], and
appeal therefrom were taken to the Circuit Court of Appeals, that court would be obliged
to reverse the judgment if, while such appeal were pending, the supreme court of the
state should hand down [a contrary] decision”). Finally, of key importance is that this
court is “merely stay[ing] adjudication of the federal action pending the resolution of an
issue in state court, [not] dismiss[ing] the federal action altogether.” Quackenbush v.
Allstate, 517 U.S. 706, 721 (1996) (emphasizing importance of district judge’s choice to
stay the proceedings in Thibodaux rather than dismissing the case outright).
13
The court thus denies summary judgment on this issue, without prejudice to the
parties’ moving for summary judgment anew on a reasonable briefing schedule after the
final disposition of Boyle by the SJC.
B.
Interest on award of costs of defense in Massachusetts Action
Dominion argues that, assuming Massachusetts law applies, it is entitled to 12%
per annum interest on any award of costs of defense in the Massachusetts Action,
calculated as of the later of the date of request (April 1, 2011) or the date that costs
actually became due. Zurich concedes that Massachusetts law requires a 12% interest
award, but argues that the interest should be calculated from the later of the date of its
refusal to provide a defense, which it proposes is December 1, 2011, or the date that
Dominion actually paid its costs, and that, further, as a matter of “convenience,” Opp. at
29, the court should allow the legal fiction that all payments in any given year occurred
on December 31 of that year.4
Under Massachusetts law, a party obtaining damages in a contract action is
entitled as a matter of right to “interest . . . at the rate of twelve per cent per annum.”
Mass. Gen. L., c. 231, § 6C. See Pls.’ Mem. at 29–30; Opp. at 28–29. In a suit to
recover defense costs under an insurance contract such as this one, interest is to be
calculated from (1) the earliest determinable date of wrongful withholding, or (2) the
date that the expense was actually paid—whichever of these two is later.
4
Although there appeared to be some question as to whether the applicable policy limits have
been reached, Zurich stipulates that, under the governing terms of the Zurich Policy, it is liable for
prejudgment interest (should such an award be appropriate) without regard to the Policy limits; likewise
as to fees of prosecuting the present action, see Part III.C infra. See Joint Statement Regarding Effect of
Exhaustion Of Policy Limits on Dominion’s Claim for Interest and Attorneys’ Fees (Doc. No. 65) (citing
Mass. Gen. L. c. 231, §6C; Hanover Ins. Co. v. Golden, 436 Mass. 584, 585, 588–89 (2002).
Accordingly, there does not appear to be any question that any of the disputes in the present motion are
moot.
14
1.
No earlier than the wrongful withholding began
The first question, then, is the date of wrongful withholding. See Mass. Gen. L. c.
231, § 6C (providing that prejudgment interest shall be added to certain money
judgments as calculated “from the date of the breach or demand[, or, i]f the date of the
breach or demand is not established, . . . from the date of the commencement of the
action . . . .”). The court refers to the dates of breach, demand, and commencement of
suit to determine the wrongful withholding date in effectuation of the policy that
“[i]nterest is awarded by law so that a person wrongfully deprived of the use of money
should be made whole for his loss.” Perkins School for Blind v. Rate Setting
Commission, 383 Mass. 825, 835 (1981).
Of course, “there can be no improper detention of money until payment is due.”
Id. at 831. Sometimes a party to a contract need not demand payment for money to
become due; other times, a party might demand money before it is due. In both such
cases, it would be inappropriate to inquire when “demand” occurred; a court would
instead look simply to the due date. Where, as here, an insured demands performance
due immediately from an insurer as a matter of contractual right, the proper inquiry is as
to the date of demand. Cf. id. at 836 (determining that interest was to be calculated
from a date later than the demand only because the plaintiff did not actually have a legal
right to payment until the Massachusetts government, through its agency, determined
that a later adjustment in the rate of reimbursement would apply retroactively).
The court notes that in Sterilite Corp. v. Continental Cas. Co., the SJC stated that
“the defendant was in breach of its duty to defend Sterilite on [the date that it refused to
defend].” 397 Mass. 837, 841 (1986). One might incorrectly draw the conclusion that
15
the inverse was also meant to be true: that a defendant insurer is not in breach of its
duty to defend until it refuses to defend. However, Sterilite does not so hold, nor is such
a conclusion necessarily implied or rightly inferred from in the decision. Indeed, the
present question was not even raised in that case: apparently, the party raising this
issue (and causing this statement’s appearance in the opinion) only argued that an even
later date might have been applicable—not an earlier date (which, of course, the
demand date was).5 Finally, for the reasons already stated, reading Sterilite as Zurich
suggests would be inconsistent with the principles of wrongful withholding and the
consequent concern with withholding money beyond its due date that motivate section
6C of chapter 231 of the Massachusetts General Laws, as the SJC has explained in
decisions both prior and subsequent to Sterilite. See Bank v. Thermo Elemental Inc.
451 Mass. 638, 662 (2008); Perkins, 383 Mass. at 835–36 (both describing wrongful
withholding as the relevant issue).
Thus, Zurich’s suggestion that interest should be charged from no earlier than
December 1, 2011, the date that it responded to Dominion’s defense request “that it
could have no defense-related obligation to Dominion under the Zurich Policy before a
determination of the relative fault, if any, of Dominion and Alstom in the Massachusetts
Action,” JSF ¶ 34, is without justification. This result would inappropriately encourage
delay on the part of an insurance company receiving a request for defense. How long
would be long enough to deem a nonresponse as a denial? Indeed, it might even
5
The trial court had apparently used the date of the insurer’s refusal to defend as the date from
which the entire interest award ran—even for payments not made until a later time. Sterilite, 397 Mass. at
838. The insurer appealed in part on the grounds that calculating interest to run from later dates was
appropriate where the insured made the relevant payments at such later dates. Id. at 841; see also Part
III.B.2 infra. The insured did not cross-appeal (as apparently it might have) to argue that a date earlier
than the date of refusal might have been appropriate.
16
inspire insurance companies not to respond at all. See Sarnafil, Inc. v. Peerless Ins.
Co., 418 Mass. 295, 304–05 (1994). Notably, it is not even clear from the parties’
description of the response that Zurich provided on December 1, 2011, that it intended
to deny coverage outright, given the somewhat equivocal nature of its denial. The
insurer is the expert as to determining liability; it is obligated to take action once a
sufficient request is made. See id.
Although Dominion contends that Zurich was obligated to defend it before
Dominion made the April 1, 2011 request for defense, see Part III.A.2 supra, Dominion
(apparently inconsistently) only claims entitlement to pre-judgment interest running from
its April 1, 2011 request for defense. Of course, Zurich does not object to Dominion’s
taking this position and thus seeking a smaller award of interest than it might.
Accordingly, for any chargeable costs paid by Dominion on or before April 1, 2011,
Zurich will be liable for interest running from April 1, 2011.
2.
Between the first wrongful withholding date and the date of
payment, the later of the two
“[W]hen expenses incurred as a result of a contract breach are not paid [i.e.,
advanced,] by a plaintiff until after [the demand or] the breach has occurred, the interest
is calculated not from the date of the breach or even the date the action was
commenced . . . , but from the date or dates on which the plaintiff made such
payments.” Thermo Elemental, 451 Mass. at 662–63 (emphasis added). In other
words, as of the date of wrongful withholding, see Part III.B.1 supra, interest begins to
run for post-breach/post-demand defense costs as they are paid—as if the plaintiff were
making seriatim demands of the defendant to reimburse it simultaneously with each
new payment. See Sterilite Corp. v. Continental Cas. Co., 397 Mass. 837, 841–42
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(1986). Thus, for all of Dominion’s applicable costs paid after April 1, 2011, interest is to
be calculated not from April 1, 2011, but from the date those fees were paid.
3.
Convenience and the legal fiction of December 31 payments
Zurich argues that, under the general rubric of calculation from the date of
payment, interest in this case should actually be calculated from December 31 of the
year that Dominion made the relevant payment. However, this approach might bestow
an unnecessary and thus an inappropriate windfall on Zurich. See Thermo Elemental,
451 Mass. at 662 (describing purpose of “award of prejudgment interest” as making “a
person wrongfully deprived of the use of money . . . whole for his loss”). To this extent,
it would be impermissible.
In Thermo Elemental the SJC did not reverse a trial court’s decision to calculate
interest from the last day of the year in which expenses were paid. See id. at 917–18.
However, that case presented a complex fact scenario, with a third party making
payments on behalf of the plaintiff-insured, apparently with significant delays,
irrespective of the reimbursements later sought in litigation. The trial court in that case
apparently drew the fictive conclusion that all payments were made on the last day of
the year rather than directly in the middle of the year (which would otherwise be the
fairest approximation) in order to adjust for delays common to the entire history of
payment in that case. Moreover, the trial court’s determination in that case was based
on limited evidence presented at trial, whereas here the parties do not present the court
with a mess of information, let alone incomplete information, and ask the court to sort it
all out. Under the circumstances of Thermo Elemental, the “approximation employed by
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the judge” was appropriate, but that decision does not preclude a more precise
determination where feasible. Id. at 918.
In this case, the court has been presented with no actual schedule of costs and
corresponding interest calculations, so it is without sufficient facts to adjudicate this
matter on summary judgment. Accordingly, the court concludes that, as a general rule,
Zurich is liable to Dominion for interest on applicable costs calculated from the date that
Dominion actually paid such costs, but reserves judgment on whether it will be
necessary or not to make any kind of estimation in awarding interest as the Thermo
Elemental Court did.
C.
Costs of the present action
Dominion argues that it is entitled to the costs (including legal fees) of
prosecuting the present action not just to establish Zurich’s ongoing obligation to defend
Dominion, but also to establish Zurich’s liability to Dominion for costs of defense
previously advanced by Dominion. Zurich argues that Dominion is not so entitled
(1) because it is an additional insured rather than simply an insured, did not pay
premiums, and thus is not within the scope of the rule providing for recovery of such
costs; (2) insofar as it seeks fees for anything beyond the question of Zurich’s defense
obligation.
1.
Award for an additional insured
“[A]n insured is entitled to the reasonable attorney's fees and expenses incurred
in successfully establishing the insurer’s duty to defend under the policy” irrespective of
“whether an insurer contests an insured’s claim in good or bad faith” because the
ultimate goal is to secure for the insured “the benefit of his bargain.” Rubenstein v.
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Royal Ins. Co. of America, 429 Mass. 355, 359–60 (1999). Giving Rubenstein a
hypertextualist reading, Zurich argues that because Dominion is an “additional insured”
rather than an “insured”—because it did not “‘pa[y] premiums to’” or “‘purchase[ ] . . .
insurance [directly] from’” Zurich, id. at 360—it falls outside this rule.
The correct rule is to the contrary, however: that Dominion is an additional
insured does not preclude it from obtaining fees for this action to establish Zurich’s duty
to defend. Zurich’s proposal runs counter to the rule under Massachusetts law that, in
relation to the insurer, an additional insured stands in the shoes of the party that
provided for it to be named as such in the policy, irrespective of whether the additional
insured provided valuable consideration for such coverage or even had any expectation
of coverage. See Crompton v. Lumbermens Mut. Cas. Co., 333 Mass. 160, 162–65
(1955). Even assuming that the payment of premiums or purchase of a policy were the
decisive factor, presumably Dominion did provide valuable consideration for this
insurance coverage to Alstom, the original insured, as part of its bargain for a broader
array of services from Alstom. Just as denying Alstom attorney’s fees in an analogous
action would “deny [it] the benefit of [its] bargain,” Rubenstein, 429 Mass. at 360, so too
would denying Dominion fees here deny Dominion the benefit of its bargain—a bargain
for insurance, even if not directly with Zurich.
2.
Scope of award available
Whenever an insured “establishe[s] that the [insurer] violated its duty to defend
them in the [underlying] action, [the insured is] entitled to an award of the reasonable
attorney’s fees and expenses incurred in the declaratory judgment action.” Rubenstein,
429 Mass. at 360; see also id. at 358 (“An insured is entitled to attorney’s fees . . .
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whenever the insured establishes that the insurer violated its duty to defend.”). Under
this rule, Dominion is entitled to its reasonable costs in this action to the extent that it
prevails.
Zurich contends that, while Dominion may be entitled to reasonable fees related
to its pursuit of the court’s October 2013 Ruling establishing Zurich’s ongoing duty to
defend, Dominion is not entitled to fees beyond that Ruling (such as those related to the
present Motion). Zurich relies on Global Investors for this argument, but it overreads
that case. See Global Investors Agent Corp. v. Nat’l Fire Ins. Co. of Hartford, 76 Mass.
App. Ct. 812 (2010). In that case, the insureds first successfully litigated the existence
and scope of the insurer’s duty to defend and then unsuccessfully sought consequential
and punitive damages ancillary to the insurer’s failure to defend. See id. at 813–14
(noting allegations of “breach of contract[,] breach of the covenant of good faith and fair
dealing,” and “unfair and deceptive practices in violation of G.L. c. 93A and G.L. c.
176D”). The Massachusetts Appeals Court affirmed the decision to deny the insureds
any attorney’s fees award beyond what was necessary to establish the duty to defend.
However, the court’s basis for denying the award was not entirely clear. The court may
have deemed an award inappropriate because the insureds’ later pursuits were largely
unsuccessful. Or, it could be that the court deemed these pursuits to be largely
irrelevant to the existence and scope of the duty to defend. In any event, this court
does not read that case to preclude a fee award in this case, in which Dominion simply
seeks to establish the scope of an insurer’s liability for the costs of defense in an
underlying action. Accordingly, to the extent that it actually prevails, Dominion is
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entitled to seek an award of reasonable costs (including fees) in this action beyond the
October 2013 Ruling.
IV.
CONCLUSION
The Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Doc. No. 56) is DENIED IN PART
WITHOUT PREJUDICE as to the issue of Zurich’s liability for defense costs paid by
Dominion before April 1, 2011, and is otherwise GRANTED to the extent provided in the
foregoing discussion. The parties are directed to file with this court a notice upon the
final disposition of the Boyle case by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts.
SO ORDERED.
Signed at New Haven, Connecticut this 3rd day of March 2015.
/s/ Janet C. Hall
Janet C. Hall
United States District Judge
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