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1 Insurance Allocation Strategies 2013 October 28-29, 2013 final

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Page 1: Allocation oct2013 Continuous Progressive Losses

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Insurance Allocation Strategies 2013

October 28-29, 2013

final

Page 2: Allocation oct2013 Continuous Progressive Losses

Recent Trends in Allocation of Continuous or Progressive Losses

 Insurance Allocation Strategies 2013HB Litigation Conferences

October 28-29, 2013

Los Angeles, California

Paul A. Zevnik

Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP 

Max H. SternDuane Morris LLP

Philip R. Watters, P ERimkus Consulting Group, Inc.

Page 3: Allocation oct2013 Continuous Progressive Losses

Max H. SternDuane Morris LLP

The Speakers

Paul ZevnikMorgan Lewis LLP

Philip R. Watters, P.E.Rimkus Consulting Group

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Case Studies In Allocation For Continuous Injury/Damage Liabilities Goulds v. Travelers

(Los Angeles Superior Court)

Plant Insulation Co. v. Fireman’s Fund (San Francisco Superior Court)

State of California v. Continental(California Supreme Court)

Lennar v. Markel(Texas Supreme Court)

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Goulds v. Travelers

Asbestos bodily injury Excess insurance coverage New York law Pro rata allocation

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Goulds v. Travelers Allocation Issues

Pro rata allocation: what does it mean when dealing with language and insurer differences?

Impact of allocation method employed by underlying insurer to exhaust policies

Allocation to insured for so-called “uninsured” or “under-insured” periods◦ Post-1985 asbestos coverage◦ Pre-1955 asbestos coverage◦ So-called “under-insured” periods at excess level prior to 1963

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Goulds Insurance Program

Pro Rata Allocation Hypothetical (Slide 3 - interactive)

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Hypothetical Pro Rata Allocation/Exhaustion ModelDate of First Exposure "DOFE”

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10POLICYYEAR

Loss Two - $400,000

Loss Three - $900,000

Loss Four - $1,000,000

Loss Five - $700,000

$500,000 Primary

Loss One - $600,000

Triggers Umbrella Coverage

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Hypothetical Pro Rata Allocation/Exhaustion ModelDate of First Exposure "DOFE”

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10POLICYYEAR

Loss Two - $400,000

Loss Three - $900,000

Loss Four - $1,000,000

Loss Five - $700,000

$500,000 Primary

Loss One - $600,000

NONAGGREGATED

Triggers Umbrella Coverage

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Allocation To Insured For So-Called “Uninsured” Or “Under-insured” PeriodsInsurers argued for allocation to Goulds for so-called uninsured and under-insured periods. Post-1985 asbestos coverage. Pre-1955 asbestos coverage. (Greenman v. Yuba Power Products) “Under-insured”

periods at excess level prior to 1963.

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Plant v. Fireman’s Fund

Asbestos bodily injury Primary, umbrella and excess insurance coverage California law Continuous trigger Policyholder selection/equitable contribution “Operations” coverage

◦ Wallace & Gale Double anchor trigger Cancer trigger

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Plant v. Fireman’s Fund Allocation Issues

“Operations” coverage◦ Wallace & Gale

Double anchor trigger Cancer trigger

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Known General Liability Coverage Issued To Plant Insulation Company/Plant Asbestos Company

1978

1977

1979

1980

1982

1981

1983

1984

1985

1967

1968

1969

1970

1971

1972

1973

1974

1975

1976

0.5MM -

$15MM -

0.25MM -

- 0.5MM

- 5MM

- $15MM

- 10MM

- 0.25MM

1986

1961

1962

1963

1964

1965

1966

5MM -

10MM -

1MM -

2MM -

3MM -

OneBeacon OneBeacon OneBeacon OneBeacon OneBeacon

American Home614-1047

OneBeacon OneBeacon OneBeacon

ISOP410-4478

ISOP4173-5420

Fireman’s FundLC 2389305

SompoJapan

USF&G USF&G

Granite

State

6180-6900

1952

1954

1955

1956

1957

1958

1959

1953

1960

0.5MM -

0.3MM -

1961

1952-1961

$1MM -

RoyalIndem.

FundMXP

457-25-57

Unavailable

Unavailable

Unavailable

Unavailable

Ins. Co. ofthe WestUC 363062

Mt. McKinleyGMX00183

ACE Fire

MFC DO612527A

ACE P&C

UL 851337

Unavailable

UnitedNational

SMP 12132

UnavailableGranite

State

6181-5654

Transport

TEL900340

Unavailable

Fireman’s Fund/American Auto

Mt. McKinley

OneBeacon

USF&G

Royal Indemnity

Transport Insurance

Insurance Company of the West

United National

AIG (Granite State; ISOP; American Home)

Sompo Japan

ACE (ACE Fire and ACE P/C)

Unavailable Coverage

Unavailable

Industrial Indemnity/U.S. Fire

Safety National

Safety National

Unavailable

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Operations Coverage

Aggregate limit applies only to claims falling within the “products hazard” or the “completed operations hazard.”Aggregate limit does not apply to “operations” claims that do not fall within the definitions of these two hazards.

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Operations Coverage -- Definitions

◦“’Products Hazard’ includes bodily injury and property damage arising out of the Named Insured’s products or reliance upon a representation or warranty made at any time with respect thereto, but only if the ‘bodily injury or property damage occurs away from premises owned by or rented to the Named Insured and after physical possession of such products has been relinquished to others.’”

◦ “‘Completed Operations Hazard’ includes bodily injury and property damage arising out of operations or reliance upon a representation or warranty made at any time with respect thereto, but only if the bodily injury or property damage occurs after such operations have been completed or abandoned and occurs away from premises owned by or rented to the named insured.”

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“Operations” Coverage – California Court of Appeal

◦ “A manufacturer or service provider can incur liability both while work is in progress and after completion. Claims for injuries arising while an activity is in progress fall within ‘non-products’ or ‘operations’ coverage. Claims for injuries arising once the product has been completed and sent to market fall within ‘products’ or ‘completed operations’ coverage. The coverages are complementary and not overlapping. Products coverage takes over where operations coverage leaves off.”

Employers Reinsurance Co. v. Superior Court (Thorpe), 161 Cal. App. 4th 906, 911 fn. 2 (2008)

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Plant Applied Wallace & Gale385 F.3d 820 (4th Cir. 2004) Plant Court applied a Wallace & Gale approach, which

provides that non-aggregated coverage is limited to policies in effect at the time of exposure to asbestos during “operations.” ◦ “If a claimant’s initial exposure occurred while Wallace & Gale was

still conducting operations, policies in effect at that time will not be subject to any aggregate limit. If, however, initial exposure is shown to have occurred after operations were concluded or if exposure that began during operations continued after operations were complete, then the aggregate limits of any policy that came into effect after operations were complete will apply. Where a given claimant falls within this framework will have to be considered on a case-by-case basis.”

In Re Wallace & Gale, 385 F.3d at 833

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Insurers Argued For A “Double Anchor” Trigger Certain insurers argued that both exposure to asbestos

and resulting bodily injury must occur during the policy period for coverage to apply.

Operative policy provisions:

◦ “Policy period, Territory: This policy applies only to accidents or occurrences which take place during the policy period.”

◦ “Occurrence” means “an accident or continuous or repeated exposure to conditions that results in bodily injury during the policy period.”

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Plant Rejected A “Double Anchor” Trigger

“[T]his Court concludes that the normal trigger of coverage under California law applies to the policies here at issue. In other words, coverage under those policies is triggered solely by injury during the policy period. The injury-causing event need not occur during the policy period to trigger coverage.”

Plant, Final Statement of Decision on the Phase III Issues, April 8, 2013, at p. 30.

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Insurers Argued For A “Cancer” Trigger

Certain insurers argued that coverage for asbestos-related cancers would only be provided under policies issued within a few years of diagnosis.

The impact of certain insurers’ trigger approach would eliminate coverage for most asbestos claims.

Based on a thorough review of medical scientific evidence, the Court rejected a separate trigger for asbestos-related cancers, and instead applied the traditional California continuous trigger of coverage.

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Plant Rejected A “Cancer” Trigger

“In sum, although Armstrong was decided in 1987, this Court finds that the factual findings of Armstrong regarding the timing of injury due to inhalation of asbestos have been confirmed and augmented by subsequent developments in the medical and scientific fields. Specifically, as in Armstrong and as previously noted, the Court finds that in those who develop asbestos-related disease, the disease process begins soon after inhalation of asbestos fibers. The injurious process begins at initial exposure, continues after cessation of exposure and throughout an individual’s life.”

Plant, Final Statement of Decision on the Phase III Issues, April 8, 2013, at p. 43.

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State of California v. Continental Ins. Co.55 Cal.4th 186 (2012) Environmental damage. Primary, umbrella and excess insurance coverage. California law. Continuous trigger. Rejected pro rata allocation. All-sums-with-stacking adopted.

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State of California Allocation Issues

Insurers argued for a “pro rata” allocation approach to coverage for continuous and progressive environmental property damage.

Insurers also argued for “anti-stacking” of policy limits, which would limit coverage to one policy period.

Supreme Court rejected “pro rata” allocation and confirmed California’s “continuous” trigger and an “all-sums-with-stacking” approach.

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State of California Holding – Continuous Trigger of Coverage

“We therefore conclude that the policies at issue obligate the insurers to pay all sums for property damage attributable to the Stringfellow site, up to their policy limits, if applicable, as long as some of the continuous property damage occurred while each policy was “on the loss.” The coverage extends to the entirety of the ensuing damage or injury (Montrose, supra, 10 Cal.4th at p. 686, 42 Cal.Rptr.2d 324, 913 P.2d 878), and best reflects the insurers’ indemnity obligation under the respective policies, the insured’s expectations, and the true character of the damages that flow from a long-tail injury.”

State of California, 55 Cal.4th at 200.

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State of California Holding – All-Sums-With-Stacking

“An all-sums-with-stacking rule has numerous advantages. It resolves the question of insurance coverage as equitably as possible, given the immeasurable aspects of a long-tail injury. It also comports with the parties’ reasonable expectations, in that the insurer reasonably expects to pay for property damage occurring during a long-tail loss it covered, but only up to its policy limits, while the insured reasonably expects indemnification for the time periods in which it purchased insurance coverage. All-sums-with-stacking coverage allocation ascertains each insurer’s liability with a comparatively uncomplicated calculation that looks at the long-tail injury as a whole rather than artificially breaking it into distinct periods of injury.”

State of California, 55 Cal.4th at 201

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Policy language limiting obligation to pay to damage “during the policy period.”

Anti-stacking language – what language overcomes SOC?

Effect of case when property damage partially or entirely divisible

Choice of law / application in other jurisdictions

Application to other types of (non-environmental, non-property damage) cases

State of California -Application / Open Issues

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Construction defect allowing water damage. One umbrella insurer; all other insurance had settled. Texas law. Continuous trigger. Rejected pro rata allocation.

Lennar Corp. v. Markel Amer. Ins. Co. 2013 Tex. LEXIS 597 (Tex. August 23, 2013)

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Lennar received homeowner complaints regarding EIFS causing water damage. Lennar notified insurers of plans to remediate homes after it had commenced remediation efforts, but insurers refused to participate, instead opting to respond to any individual homeowner claims. Lennar proceeded to replace EIFS in all homes. In the ensuing coverage dispute, Lennar ultimately settled with all insurers, except for Markel.

Lennar v. Markel – Factual Background

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Markel: Pro-Rata - only responsible for its share of remediation expenses associated with the “property damage” occurring during its policy period.

  Lennar: All Sums – Markel is responsible for all of the loss from all years in which

“property damage occurred. The policy does not require it to prove a specific amount of damage during the policy period to each house and it is practically impossible to do so.

Court’s Holding: All sums where “property damage” began before or during the policy period and continued until it was repaired. Markel is obligated to pay the total amount of Lennar’s loss.

  Relied on Amer. Physicians Ins. Exch. v. Garcia, 876 S.W.2d 8442 (Tex. 1994), and stated allocation discussion in Garcia was not dicta.

Markel must first pay then can reallocate the loss among insurers according to their respective subrogation rights. .

Lennar v. Markel - Allocation Arguments and Court’s Holding:

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Garcia held:

If a single occurrence triggers more than one policy, covering different policy periods, then different limits may have applied at different times. In such a case, the insured's indemnity limit should be whatever limit applied at the single point in time during the coverage periods of the triggered policies when the insured's limit was highest. The insured is generally in the best position to identify the policy or policies that would maximize coverage. Once the applicable limit is identified, all insurers whose policies are triggered must allocate funding of the indemnity limit among themselves according to their subrogation rights.

Lennar v. MarkelAllocation Arguments and Court’s Holding:

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 What are the “respective subrogation rights” in this type of scenario?

When other insurers settled with the insured, how is the last to settle insurer able to reallocate indemnity with previously settled insurers?

Lennar v. Markel – Questions Left Unanswered

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Max H. Stern Duane Morris LLP (415) 957-3129 [email protected]

Paul Zevnik Morgan Lewis LLP (213) 612-2501 [email protected]

Philip R. Watters, P.E. Rimkus Consulting Group (713) 621-3550 [email protected]

Speaker Contact Info

Page 33: Allocation oct2013 Continuous Progressive Losses

Demonstrate contributions are distinguishable

Hazardous waste amounts Hazardous waste toxicity Parties involvement in waste generation…… Degree of care Cooperation with government

Before “Global Warming” 2006

Before “The Internet” 1983The “Gore Factors” 1980Environmental Allocations

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Relative fault of the parties Property use during ownership State of mind of the parties Who benefited from disposal Parties ability to pay Weighted site attribute modeling Monte Carlo statistical method

Beyond the “Gore Factors”

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Regulatory changes◦Clean-up standards◦Allowed remediation technologies◦Vapor intrusion

Chemicals of concern◦Newly identified at site◦Detection limits◦Nanotechnology

Changing Fact-Based Allocations

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Construction Defect AllocationClaimant’s Perspective

Claimed Damages 1,2,3,4,5...

Product Defects A,B,... Product Defects Q,R,… Product Defects X,Y,…

$$$ Replace or Repair Everything $$$

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Construction Defect AllocationInsured and Insurer Perspective

Investigate Damage

Product Defect Maintenance Issue

No Damage Unrelated Damage

Resultant Damage $

$ Resultant Damage $

Replace Product $ Resultant Damage $

s s s

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Questions