Eaton Corporation v. Westport Insurance Corporation
Filing
229
ORDER signed by Judge Lynn Adelman on 6/10/19 granting 122 Motion for Partial Summary Judgment; granting 129 Motion to Seal Document and granting 140 Motion to Seal Document. (cc: all counsel) (jad)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN
EATON CORPORATION,
Plaintiff,
v.
WESTPORT INSURANCE COMPANY,
et al.
Defendants,
Case No. 15-C-1157
AIU INSURANCE COMPANY, et al.,
Third-Party Plaintiffs
v.
ALLSTATE INSURANCE CO., et al.
Third-Party Defendants.
______________________________________________________________________
DECISION AND ORDER
Eaton Corporation seeks a declaration of its rights under insurance policies that,
according to Eaton, cover asbestos claims relating to products sold by Cutler-Hammer,
Inc., and by Eaton in the continuation of Cutler-Hammer’s business. Before me now is
Eaton’s motion for partial summary judgment against defendants AIU Insurance
Company, Granite State Insurance Company, New Hampshire Insurance Company,
and North River Insurance Company. (References to “the defendants” in this opinion
mean these four insurers.) Eaton’s motion focuses on three issues: (1) whether
Wisconsin law, rather than Ohio law, applies to the defendants’ policies; (2) whether the
“continuous trigger” theory applies to the defendants’ policies; and (3) whether the “all
sums” method for allocating coverage among triggered policies applies to the
defendants’ policies.
I. BACKGROUND
Cutler-Hammer, Inc., was a Wisconsin company that had its headquarters in
Milwaukee from 1899 to 1979. On March 30, 1979, Cutler-Hammer merged into Eaton,
with Eaton being the surviving entity. Since before the time of the merger, Eaton has
been headquartered in Ohio.
From the early 1920s until the late 1970s or early 1980s, Cutler-Hammer’s
business included the sale of products with asbestos-containing components. These
products were manufactured at plants located in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and Bowling
Green, Kentucky. Many personal-injury suits have been filed against Cutler-Hammer
and Eaton alleging injuries caused by exposure to the asbestos in these products. Most
of the products at issue were manufactured by Cutler-Hammer before 1979, and over
99% of the personal-injury claims allege that the injured party was exposed to asbestos
before 1979.
Prior to the 1979 merger, defendants AIU Insurance Company, Granite State
Insurance Company, and New Hampshire Insurance Company issued liability insurance
policies to Cutler-Hammer. These policies were procured by a broker in Wisconsin and
were issued to Cutler-Hammer in Wisconsin. After the 1979 merger, defendant North
River Insurance Company issued liability policies to Eaton. North River’s policies were
procured by a broker in Ohio and issued to Eaton in Ohio.
The defendants’ policies are excess policies, by which I mean that they provide
coverage only after the limits of underlying policies have been exhausted. The
defendants’ policies incorporate the terms and conditions of their respective underlying
policies, and thus the policy terms and conditions relevant to Eaton’s motion appear in
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the underlying policies. Although the relevant terms are not the same in every
underlying policy, the parties do not contend that differences in policy language matter
to the outcome of Eaton’s motion. For this reason, I will take representative language
from a single policy and assume that the same result would obtain under the language
of the other policies. The representative policy language, which appears in a policy
issued by Harbor Insurance Company (which is one of the policies that underlies
Granite State Insurance Company’s excess policy), appears below:
The Company hereby agrees . . . to indemnify the Insured for all sums
which the Insured shall be obligated to pay by reason of the liability . . .
imposed upon the Insured by law . . . for damages on account of . . .
Personal Injuries . . . caused by or arising out of each occurrence
happening anywhere in the world during the policy period.
....
The term “Personal Injuries” . . . means . . . bodily injury, sickness,
disease, disability or shock, including death arising therefrom, or, if arising
out of the foregoing, mental anguish and mental injury . . . .
ECF No. 120-4 at 4.
In this suit, Eaton claims that it has exhausted the limits of the underlying policies
and that the defendants must now provide coverage to Eaton in the asbestos personalinjury cases. To prove that this is so, Eaton will eventually have to prove which asbestos
claims fall within the scope of the defendants’ policies (and the underlying policies to
which they are excess). In other words, Eaton will have to prove which asbestos claims
“trigger” the policies. Generally, a covered injury that occurs during the policy period will
trigger a policy. However, in cases involving ongoing exposure to a harmful substance,
such as asbestos cases, the exact date of the injury is often uncertain, and the harm
potentially accrues over several policy periods. In asbestos cases, for example, a
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person may have been exposed to the insured’s asbestos over a period of many years,
and a diagnosable disease might not manifest itself until decades after exposure. Many
different liability insurance policies may have been in force during the years between
first exposure and manifestation. The issue of “trigger” asks which of these policies
should be deemed to cover the eventual asbestos claim. To deal with this issue, courts
have adopted four different theories. See, e.g., Society Ins. v. Town of Franklin, 233
Wis. 2d 207, 214 (Ct. App. 2000). Only two of these theories are relevant to Eaton’s
motion: (1) the “continuous trigger” theory, which provides that a claim triggers all
policies in force from the time of the claimant’s first exposure to asbestos through the
time of manifestation of the claimant’s disease; and (2) the “injury in fact” theory, which
provides that the only policy triggered is the one in force at the time when the effects of
the claimant’s exposure resulted in an actual and compensable injury. See id.
A second issue—allocation of coverage—addresses how to allocate coverage to
a triggered policy when a claimed injury does not occur entirely within the policy period.
Again, this problem arises because asbestos injuries develop over long periods of time.
The harm occurs over many years, including years in which the triggered policy was not
in force. Allocation asks whether, once a policy is triggered, the insurer must pay for all
damage caused by the claim even though the injury occurred partly within and partly
outside the coverage period. Courts have generally taken one of two approaches to this
issue. One approach is to allocate damages to the insurer pro rata based on the
number of years its policy was in force. The other approach is the “all sums” approach,
under which the insurer must pay for all damages resulting from an injury (up to the
policy limit) so long as the injury triggered the policy.
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Wisconsin has adopted both the “continuous trigger” theory and the “all sums”
allocation method. See Plastics Eng’g Co. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 315 Wis.2d 556,
583–85 (2009). Eaton contends that Wisconsin law applies to the defendants’ policies
and that therefore I should find that they are subject to both the continuous-trigger
theory and the all-sums allocation method. The defendants, however, contend that their
policies are governed by Ohio law. Like Wisconsin, Ohio has adopted the all-sums
allocation method. See Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 769
N.E.2d 835, 840 (Ohio 2002). But no Ohio appellate court has adopted a theory of
“trigger” for asbestos cases or other cases involving injuries that potentially accrue over
time. The defendants contend that, if called upon to decide the question, the Ohio
Supreme Court would adopt the injury-in-fact theory.
Although both Wisconsin and Ohio have adopted the all-sums allocation method,
the defendants contend that Eaton has waived its right to use that allocation method by
entering into a settlement with other insurance companies in which it allocated losses
for asbestos claims pro rata. One of the defendants’ codefendants, Westport Insurance
Corporation, raised this same argument in response to Eaton’s prior motion for
summary judgment, in which Eaton sought to establish that the all-sums allocation
method applied to Westport’s policy. In deciding the prior motion, I concluded that Eaton
had not waived its right to use the all-sums allocation method. See ECF No. 118. The
defendants ask me to reconsider that conclusion and find that the pro rata allocation
method applies to their policies.
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II. DISCUSSION
Summary judgment is required where “there is no genuine dispute as to any
material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P.
56(a). When considering a motion for summary judgment, I view the evidence in the
light most favorable to the non-moving party and must grant the motion if no reasonable
juror could find for that party. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248, 255
(1986).
As noted, the parties dispute whether Wisconsin or Ohio law applies to the
defendants’ policies. As a district court sitting in diversity, I must apply the choice-of-law
rules of the state in which I sit. See, e.g., NewSpin Sports, LLC v. Arrow Elecs., Inc.,
910 F.3d 293, 300 (7th Cir. 2018). Thus, I apply Wisconsin’s choice-of-law rules to
determine which state’s law governs the policies.
In Wisconsin, as in most jurisdictions, a preliminary question in any choice-of-law
analysis is whether the case presents an actual conflict of laws—that is, whether the law
of the two states are different. See Waranka v. Wadena Ins. Co., 353 Wis. 2d 619, 636
(2014); Sharp ex rel. Gordon v. Case Corp., 227 Wis. 2d 1, 10–11 (1999). If the laws of
the two states are the same, then the analysis stops and the court applies forum law.
Sharp, 227 Wis. 2d at 11.
As noted above, both the Wisconsin Supreme Court and the Ohio Supreme
Court have adopted the all-sums allocation method. Thus, the laws of the two states are
the same as to allocation. But while the Wisconsin Supreme Court has adopted the
continuous-trigger theory, the issue of trigger has not been decided by any Ohio
appellate court. The defendants argue that, if the Ohio Supreme Court were to adopt a
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trigger theory today, it would choose the injury-in-fact theory. The defendants base this
argument on Ohio’s general principles of insurance-contract interpretation. See Br. in
Opp. at 13, ECF No. 137-1. But Ohio’s general principles of insurance-contract
interpretation are exactly the same as Wisconsin’s. Indeed, every principle of Ohio
insurance law cited by the defendants can be found in cases decided by the Wisconsin
Supreme Court. The defendants cite an Ohio case stating that an insurance policy is a
contract, that its interpretation presents a question of law, and that the terms of the
contract must be given their plain and ordinary meaning. See Sharonville v. Am.
Employers Ins. Co., 846 N.E.2d 833 (Ohio 2006). Wisconsin cases also state this. See,
e.g., Danbeck v. American Family Mut. Ins. Co., 245 Wis. 2d 186, 193 (2001) (“[t]he
interpretation of an insurance contract is a question of law”; “[t]he words of an insurance
policy are given their common and ordinary meaning”). The defendants also cite an
Ohio case stating that if the policy language is clear and unambiguous, the court may
not resort to construction of that language. See Hybud Equip. Corp. v. Sphere Drake
Ins. Co., Ltd., 597 N.E.2d 1096, 1102 (1992). Again, Wisconsin cases are in accord.
See Danbeck, 245 Wis. 2d at 193 (“Where the language of the policy is plain and
unambiguous, we enforce it as written, without resort to rules of construction or
principles in case law.”).
Because Ohio and Wisconsin use the same general principles of contract
interpretation, the defendants cannot use those principles to show that Ohio and
Wisconsin would adopt different trigger theories. If anything, the defendants’ argument
suggests that the Ohio Supreme Court would apply the continuous-trigger theory to the
defendants’ policies. In Plastics Engineering, the Wisconsin Supreme Court interpreted
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policy language that was in all material respects identical to the language of the
defendants’ policies, see 315 Wis. 2d at 564, and found that such language
incorporated the continuous-trigger theory, id. at 583. Thus, if nothing more than the
plain meaning of the policy language determines the applicable trigger theory, then the
Ohio Supreme Court should agree with the Wisconsin Supreme Court and apply the
continuous-trigger theory to the defendants’ policies.
In reality, of course, a court’s choice of trigger theory is based on factors other
than the policy language. The relevant language in a commercial general liability policy
does not clearly state how to measure when an injury occurs in an asbestos case. See
Keene Corp. v. Ins. Co. of N. Am., 667 F.2d 1034, 1043 (D.C. Cir. 1981) (“In the context
of asbestos-related disease, the terms ‘bodily injury,’ ‘sickness’ and ‘disease,’ standing
alone, simply lack the precision necessary to identify a point in the development of a
disease at which coverage is triggered.”). Thus, when selecting trigger theories, courts
consider factors such as equity, ease of administration, and the general purposes of
liability insurance. See id. at 1041 (interpreting policy “in a manner that is equitable and
administratively feasible and that is consistent with insurance principles, insurance law,
and the terms of the contracts themselves”).
Because a court’s choice of trigger theory is based on factors other than the
policy language, I cannot predict which trigger theory the Ohio Supreme Court would
choose without knowing what other factors that court would consider and how it would
weigh them. The defendants cite no Ohio appellate cases shedding light on these
matters. Thus, I can do no more than guess at whether the Ohio Supreme Court would
adopt a different trigger theory than the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
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All of this raises the question: when the forum state’s law on a matter is settled
and the other state’s law is uncertain, is there an actual conflict between the laws of the
states on that matter? Eaton argues that there is no conflict in this circumstance, citing
the Supreme Court of Illinois’ decision in Bridgeview Health Care Center v. State Farm
Fire & Casualty Co., 10 N.E.3d 902 (Ill. 2014). In that case, the underlying legal
question was whether a claim based on sending unsolicited faxes in violation of the
Telephone Consumer Protection Act triggered coverage under a comprehensive
general liability policy, and the parties disputed whether the law of Illinois or the law of
Indiana applied. At the time of the decision, the Illinois courts had squarely addressed
the legal question and concluded that a claim based on unsolicited faxes is covered. Id.
at 904. However, no Indiana state court had addressed the question. Id. at 905. The
Illinois Supreme Court concluded that, under this circumstance, the laws of Illinois and
Indiana did not conflict and that therefore a choice-of-law determination was not
required. Id. at 905–09.
In the course of its reasoning, the court rejected the suggestion that “when the
law of another jurisdiction is uncertain, courts should undertake a choice-of-law analysis
to determine which state’s law applies.” Id. at 908. Citing law from the Supreme Court of
the United States, the Illinois Supreme Court reasoned that “‘there can be no injury’ in
applying the local forum’s law if that law is not in actual conflict with the law of another
jurisdiction.” Id. at 909 (citing Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Shutts, 472 U.S. 797, 816
(1985)). The Illinois Supreme Court also noted that finding a conflict based on the mere
potential that the other state would decide the matter differently than the forum state in
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the future made little sense, as “[t]here is always a ‘potential’ for differences to arise on
state-law questions, even on matters that have previously been addressed.” Id.
Bridgeview is an Illinois case, and as noted, I must apply the choice-of-law rules
of Wisconsin. But, for two reasons, I believe that the Wisconsin Supreme Court would
agree with Bridgeview and conclude that there is no conflict of law when the forum state
has decided the legal question but the other state has not. First, Bridgeview is well
reasoned, in that it recognizes that applying well-settled forum law does no injury to the
other state when that state’s law is unknown. Indeed, one of the purposes of doing
choice of law is to apply the policy of the state that has the greatest interest in the
controversy. See In re Knippel’s Estate, 7 Wis. 2d 335, 333–34 (1959) (recognizing that
“grouping of contacts” theory of choice of law has merit because it “gives to the place
having the most interest in the problem paramount control over the legal issues arising
out of a particular factual context, thus allowing the forum to apply the policy of the
jurisdiction most intimately concerned with the outcome of [the] particular litigation.”). A
forum court cannot implement the other state’s policy choice if that state has not yet
made such a choice on the matter at hand. Thus, even if the other state has a greater
interest in the controversy, it would make little sense for the forum court to create a
conflict of law by guessing that the other state would decide the matter differently than
the forum state has. Doing so would serve no interest of the other state.
Second, Wisconsin’s choice-of-law rules recognize that when the law of another
jurisdiction is unknown, the court applies forum law. In Wilcox v. Wilcox, the Wisconsin
Supreme Court recognized that “where the foreign law is unknown, it is presumed to be
the same as Wisconsin.” 26 Wis. 2d 617, 622 n.3 (1965). This statement appeared in a
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discussion about the difficulty of proving a foreign country’s law, but there is no reason
to think that the underlying principle would not apply when the non-forum jurisdiction
has not decided the legal question at hand. In both instances, the forum court does not
know what the other jurisdiction would do, so it presumes that it would do the same
thing as the forum.
Another Wisconsin case, Humana Medical Corp. v. Peyer, recognizes that when
neither the forum state nor the other state has decided the legal question, then there is
no conflict and the court applies forum law. 155 Wis. 2d 714, 718 (1990). This case
strongly suggests that the Wisconsin Supreme Court would likewise find no conflict
when the forum has decided the question but the other state has not. By applying forum
law when neither state has decided the question, the court implicitly recognizes that a
court should not try to predict how another state would answer a legal question before
deciding that there is no conflict. Instead, under the approach of Humana, the forum
court establishes forum law and then presumes that the other state would establish the
same law. Obviously, the same reasoning should apply when forum’s law is clear but
the other state’s law is not. In both scenarios, the forum court does not try to predict
how the other state would answer the legal question and instead presumes that its law
is the same as the forum’s. The only difference between Humana and the present case
is that, here, the forum’s law is already established. But this is not a difference that
should require the forum court to predict how the other state would answer the legal
question.
For these reasons, I conclude that, under Wisconsin’s choice-of-law rules, there
is no conflict of law when the forum state’s law is clearly established but the other
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state’s law is uncertain. In that circumstance, a Wisconsin court applies Wisconsin law.
Thus, the defendants’ policies are subject to the Wisconsin Supreme Court’s decision in
Plastics Engineering, under which both the continuous-trigger theory and the all-sums
allocation method apply to a liability policy that covers asbestos-related injuries.
The remaining issue is whether Eaton has waived its right to use the all-sums
allocation method by settling with certain non-defendant insurers and allocating losses
among them pro rata. As noted, I previously addressed this argument in the context of
Westport Insurance Company’s opposition to Eaton’s prior motion for summary
judgment. See ECF No. 118. The present defendants write that they “join, adopt, and
incorporate Westport’s [waiver] argument.” Br. in Opp. at 21, ECF No. 137-1. They do
not offer any new argument on the issue of waiver, other than to urge me to give
deference to a decision of an Ohio district court on the meaning of Ohio law. The
decision is GenCorp, Inc., v. AIU insurance Company, 297 F. Supp. 2d 995 (N.D. Ohio
2003). In my prior order, I did not find that GenCorp was wrongly decided. Instead, I
found that it was distinguishable. See ECF No. 118 at 10–12. The defendants do not
argue that I made a mistake in finding GenCorp distinguishable. Thus, even if GenCorp
correctly states Ohio law (and even if Ohio law applied to the waiver issue), it would not
be instructive here. Accordingly, I reject the defendants’ waiver argument for the same
reasons I gave in my order on Eaton’s motion for summary judgment against Westport.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated, IT IS ORDERED that Eaton’s motion for partial summary
judgment against AIU Insurance Company, Granite State Insurance Company, New
Hampshire Insurance Company, and North River Insurance Company (ECF No. 122) is
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GRANTED. The court declares that (1) a “continuous” trigger of coverage applies such
that each Cutler-Hammer Claim “triggers” each policy on the risk from the time of the
claimant’s first alleged exposure to asbestos through the time of manifestation of the
claimant’s disease, and (2) each policy triggered by a Cutler-Hammer Claim is
independently liable in full for all sums arising from the Claim, subject to the policy’s
limits of liability.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the parties’ motions to restrict certain materials
to the parties (ECF Nos. 129 & 140) are GRANTED. The materials relate to testimony
by expert witnesses that did not bear on the outcome this motion, and which I did not
even consider. Therefore, regardless of whether there is good cause to seal the
materials, they may remain sealed. See City of Greenville, Ill. v. Syngenta Crop
Protection, LLC, 764 F.3d 695, 698 (7th Cir. 2014) (the public has no right of access to
documents that “cannot conceivably aid the understanding of judicial decisionmaking”).
Dated at Milwaukee, Wisconsin, this 10th day of June, 2019.
s/Lynn Adelman
LYNN ADELMAN
District Judge
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