Skip Navigation Links.
Collapse IRMI OnlineIRMI Online
Expand How To Use IRMI OnlineHow To Use IRMI Online
My Paid Publications
Expand What's NewWhat's New
Expand DashboardsDashboards
Collapse Commercial Liability InformationCommercial Liability Information
Collapse Free Commercial Liability CommentaryFree Commercial Liability Commentary
Expand Additional Insured IssuesAdditional Insured Issues
Expand EnvironmentalEnvironmental
Collapse Liability InsuranceLiability Insurance
Changing Definition of "Occurrence" in CGL Cases (January 2012)
Is an Occurrence the Bodily Injury or Property Damage? (December 2011)
Additional Insured Status—Automatic or Wet Blanket? (October 2011)
Legal Separation—The Severability Test in the CGL (June 2011)
Do CGL Policies Cover "Rip and Tear" Expenses? (March 2011)
The Increasingly Complex CGL Policy (January 2011)
Pay Me Back! Reimbursement of Defense Costs in the CGL (October 2010)
"Arising Out of": How Strong Is the Connection? (August 2010)
The Recall Expense Exclusion—When Your Ship Does Not Come In (July 2010)
Invisible Ink: The Duty To Defend When There Is No Duty To Defend (May 2010)
The Impaired Property Exclusion (April 2010)
Top 10 Problems with Follow-Form Coverage (March 2010)
Lowered Expectation: How Courts Treat Expected Injury Exclusions (February 2010)
A High-Level View of the CGL Policy (January 2010)
The Duty To Defend: The Four(ish) Corners Rule (November 2009)
OCP Liability versus Additional Insured Coverage (October 2009)
What Satisfies the Self-Insured Retention? (August 2009)
Contractual Confusion—Assuming the Liability of Others (July 2009)
The Persistence of Indemnity (May 2009)
Other Insurance and the CGL Policy (April 2009)
CGL Insurance and the Question of Intent (February 2009)
Trigger Theories and the CGL (December 2008)
Care, Custody, or Control Exclusion in the CGL (October 2008)
Coverage Trigger: Getting It Right for the Right Reason (October 2008)
The Future Is Now: When Eventual Indemnity Obligations become Present Defense Obligations (August 2008)
CGL Insurance 2007 Edition—A Summary of Changes (June 2008)
Variations on a Theme: When the Cause Theory Determines the Number of Occurrences (May 2008)
CGL Exclusion for Expected or Intended Injury (March 2008)
The Burden To Allocate: Mine, Yours, or Ours? (February 2008)
Liquor Liability Exclusion in the CGL (January 2008)
Insurance Law and Exclusion (m) (November 2007)
Allocating Losses under a 1973 CGL (September 2007)
When Workers Aren't Employees (September 2007)
In Defense of Insured Contracts (July 2007)
More Allocation Theories: Exhaustion (July 2007)
No Harm, No Coverage—Personal and Advertising Injury Liability Coverage in the CGL (Part 1) (January 2007)
No Harm, No Coverage—Personal and Advertising Injury Liability Coverage in the CGL (Part 2) (April 2007)
Cover Me: The Subcontractor Exception to the Your [Completed] Work Exclusion (April 2007)
The Scope of "Ongoing Operations" Additional Insured Endorsements: Broader than Expected (February 2007)
When Does Liability Coverage Exist for Mental Anguish without Bodily Injury? (November 2006)
The Hazards of Products and Completed Operations (October 2006)
Pre-Tender Defense Costs: Who Pays? (July 2006)
Are Products Advertisements That Give Rise to Advertising Injury Coverage? (April 2006)
Additional Insured Endorsements—A Potential Minefield (Part 1) (January 2006)
Additional Insured Endorsements—A Potential Minefield (Part 2) (February 2006)
Additional Insured Endorsements—A Potential Minefield (Part 3) (March 2006)
Allocation of Damages for Ongoing Losses over Multiple Policies (January 2006)
Auto versus Mobile Equipment in the 2004 CGL—An Update (October 2005)
The Scope of the Prior Publication Exclusion: Now You See It, Now You Don't (October 2005)
Faulty Work and the CGL (July 2005)
Insurers: Can You Get Your Defense Dollars Back? (July 2005)
CGL—Fire Legal (April 2005)
CGL—Covered Locations (December 2004)
A Summary of December 2004 ISO CGL Policy Changes (October 2004)
How the Limits Apply in the CGL (July 2004)
Additional Insured Changes in the CGL (May 2004)
The 2004 ISO CGL Policy (April 2004)
Some Common Coverage Misconceptions of the CGL Policy (January 2004)
Known Injury or Damage (October 2003)
When Is an Insured Not an Insured? (June 2003)
The CGL Pollution Exclusion (March 2003)
Auto versus Mobile Equipment in the CGL (December 2002)
Duty to Defend in the CGL Policy (August 2002)
Contractual Liability and the CGL Policy (May 2002)
Insurance Litigation Review: 2001 (April 2002)
The 2001 ISO CGL Revision (January 2002)
What Does "Separation of Insureds" Mean (Part 1) (June 2001)
What Does "Separation of Insureds" Mean (Part 2) (August 2002)
Insurance Coverage Disputes and Society's Problems (May 2001)
Coordinating Persons Insured in Primary and Excess Liability Policies (February 2001)
Gun Violence and the CGL Policy (February 2001)
Spoliation of Evidence: The Next Frontier for Insurance Coverage Battles (January 2001)
Who Wants To Be an Insured? (December 2000)
When a Breach of Contract Constitutes an Accident (July 2000)
When Negligent Conduct Does Not Constitute an Accident (March 2000)
The 1999 CGL Insuring Agreement: ISO's "Montrose Endorsement" (March 2000)
Additionally Insured or Held Harmful? (March 2000)
Expand Commercial Property InformationCommercial Property Information
Expand Commercial Auto InformationCommercial Auto Information
Expand D&O, PL, E&O, EPLI InformationD&O, PL, E&O, EPLI Information
Expand Workers Compensation InformationWorkers Compensation Information
Classifications and Cross-References
Expand Risk Mgt. and Multiline InformationRisk Mgt. and Multiline Information
Expand Risk Finance InformationRisk Finance Information
Expand Construction InformationConstruction Information
Expand Personal Lines InformationPersonal Lines Information
Expand Claims, Caselaw, LegalClaims, Caselaw, Legal
Expand Insurance IndustryInsurance Industry
Expand Glossary of Insurance & Risk Management TermsGlossary of Insurance & Risk Management Terms
Expand SearchSearch
Terms of Use
Privacy Statement
System Requirements
Support

Allocation of Damages for Ongoing Losses over Multiple Policies: Who Pays and How Much?

January 2006

Allocation issues arise when the loss is ongoing and indivisible and implicates multiple policies and multiple policy periods. These issues arise in both bodily injury and property damage claims (latent property damage, asbestosis, environmental contamination, etc.).

by R. Steven Rawls and Rebecca Appelbaum
Butler Pappas Weihmuller Katz Craig, LLP

Allocation requires courts to decide "which policies, to what extent, and in which sequence, are applicable to the damages at issue." Mayor and City Council of Baltimore v. Utica Mutual Ins. Co., 802 A.2d 1070, 1100 (Md. Ct. App. 2002).

Coverage Trigger

Allocating damages for ongoing losses over multiple policies can vary significantly in different jurisdictions. The first step is determining which trigger of coverage theory the court will apply. Courts do not uniformly choose and apply the possible trigger theories, nor do they uniformly apply allocation methods. See, e.g., Trizec Properties, Inc. v. Biltmore Constr. Co. Inc., 767 F.2d 810 (11th Cir. 1985) (rejecting manifestation and adopting injury-in-fact in Florida); contra Auto Owners Ins. Co. v. Travelers Cas. & Sur. Co., 227 F.Supp.2d 1248 (M.D. Fla. 2002) (adopting manifestation in Florida).

"Trigger" is a term of art meaning the event that activates coverage under the policy. SeeHoechst Celanese Corp. v. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's London, 673 A.2d 164, 166, n.2 (De. 1996). Determining the applicable trigger is the first step in the allocation analysis because the "choice of trigger theory is related to the method a court will choose to allocate damages between insurers." Northern States Power Co. v. Fidelity & Cas. Co. of N.Y., 523 N.W.2d 657, 662 (Minn. 1994).

There are four generally used trigger of coverage theories:

  1. Exposure (coverage is triggered when the first injury-causing conditions occur);

  2. Manifestation (coverage is triggered when the personal injury or property damage becomes known, or is discovered by, the property owner or victim);

  3. Continuous (progressive indivisible injury or damage occurs continuously from the time of exposure or installation until the time of discovery); and

  4. Injury-in-fact (coverage is triggered when the personal injury or property damage underlying the claim actually occurs).

See e.g., In re Celotex Corp., 196 B.R. 973, 1000 n.187 (Bankr. M.D. Fla. 1996); GenCorp, Inc. v. AIU Ins. Co., 104 F.Supp.2d 740, 745 (N.D. Oh. 2000).

Allocation Methods

Insurance Company of North America v. Forty-Eight Insulations, Inc., 633 F.2d 1212 (6th Cir. 1980), and Keene Corporation v. Insurance Company of North America, 667 F.2d 1034 (D.C. Cir. 1981), generated the two most common allocation methods for determining indemnity responsibility in ongoing damage situations which trigger multiple policies.

All-Sums Approach

In Keene, the court applied the continuous trigger theory to a long latency occupational disease case (asbestos). The Keene allocation method, often called the "joint and several" or "all-sums" approach, held that the "insurers' liability to the plaintiff was joint and several, such that the plaintiff was entitled to select one of the triggered policies and collect the full amount of indemnification from that policy. Once the plaintiff has been compensated, the insurers were responsible for allocating the loss among themselves." Keene at 1049-50. Under the Keene approach, the insured is entitled to choose, at its discretion, which policy is required to respond to the full liability "subject only to the provisions in the policy that govern the allocation of liability when more than one policy covers an injury." Id.

Under the joint and several allocation approach, "the problem of indivisible injury is resolved simply by collapsing the continuous injury into one year. Joint-and-several allocation effectively allows a policyholder to simply select one triggered year and exhaust the coverage provided during that period in satisfaction of its claim ... requiring the insurers to sue each other for contribution." Spaulding Composites Co., Inc. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 819 A.2d 410, 416 (N.J. 2003) (citations omitted). The rationale behind this approach is that each policy promises indemnification to the insured for "all sums" for which the insured is legally obligated to pay as damages. Further, this method comports with the insured's reasonable expectations in purchasing insurance: "that it was covered for all future liability, except liability for injuries of which [the insured] could have been aware prior to its purchase of insurance." Keene at 1044.

Pro Rata and Proration to the Insured

Forty-Eight Insulations finds that the more appropriate method of allocation is pro rata time on the risk. Pro rata allocation places emphasis not on the "all-sums" language but rather on the fact that the policies provide "indemnification for liability incurred as a result of an accident or occurrence during the policy period, not outside that period." Utica at 1104 (internal citations omitted)(emphasis supplied). Here, "[e]ach insurer is liable for that period of time it was on the risk compared to the entire period during which damages occurred." Id. (citations omitted).

The pro rata time on the risk approach raises an additional issue of whether the insured has any responsibility for that portion of time when it was, effectively, uninsured. In explaining proration to the insured, the Forty-Eight Insulations court explained that "[a]n insurer contracts to pay the entire cost of defending a claim which has arisen within the policy period. The insurer has not contracted to pay defense costs for occurrences which took place outside the policy period. Where the distinction can be readily made, the insured must pay its fair share for the defense of the noncovered risk." Forty-Eight Insulations at 1224-5.

Allocating to the insured requires a consideration of both time on the risk and "the degree of risk assumed. When periods of no insurance reflect a decision by an actor to assume or retain a risk, as opposed to periods when coverage for a risk is not available, to expect the risk-bearer to share in the allocation is reasonable." Stonewall Ins. Co. v. Asbestos Claims Management Corp., 73 F.3d 1178, 1203 (2nd Cir. 1995), modified on other grounds, 85 F.3d 49 (2nd Cir. 1996) (citations omitted). Such assignment to the insured is inappropriate where coverage was unavailable, but choosing not to purchase coverage for a particular risk does not render it "unavailable." See id. and Owens-Illinois, Inc. v. United Ins. Co., 650 A.2d 974, 995 (N.J. 1994).

Courts allowing proration to the insured have done so to require an insured "to accept a proportionate share of a risk that it elected to assume, either by declining to purchase available insurance or by purchasing what turned out to be an insufficient amount of insurance." Stonewall at 1204. Thus, prior to the availability of coverage for a particular risk or where coverage for a particular risk could no longer be obtained, proration is inappropriate. See, e.g., Keene, Owens-Illinois, and Stonewall, supra. However, in Security, infra, the court determined that proration to the insured was appropriate for periods during which it was uninsured or has "lost or destroyed its policies."

Security: Allocating Defense Costs to the Insured

Security Insurance Company of Hartford v. Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Co., 826 A.2d 107 (Conn. 2003), focuses solely on the issue of the proper allocation of defense costs in cases involving long latency loss claims that implicate multiple policies. The underlying claims in Security were for bodily injury resulting from plaintiffs' employment with certain construction firms which required them to contact asbestos products. The underlying complaint did not allege a date on which the plaintiffs' injuries occurred. However, the parties agreed that the insured was potentially liable to the plaintiffs for bodily injury during the period from March 16, 1951, through May 1, 1996.

The insured sought a defense from numerous insurers that provided coverage during the 1951 through 1996 period. However, the insured either lost or destroyed the policies issued between 1951 and 1959 and those between 1961 and 1968. One of the insurers, Security, filed a complaint seeking a declaratory judgment requiring the insured to assume an equitable portion of the defense costs for the underlying asbestos action. Security's motion for summary judgment on that issue was denied. Security then filed an amended complaint seeking a declaration that the insured was obligated to assume an equitable share of the cost of its defense proportionate to the lost policy period. After a bench trial, the court found that the insured "is responsible to contribute an equitable share of the costs of defense for years in which no insurer was identified or for which [the insured] lost or destroyed the policies and the alleged insurer has refused coverage." Security at 113.

The trial court first determined that the underlying asbestos litigation involved a continuous trigger situation "such that all asbestos related injury policies issued during the extended exposure period have been triggered for coverage and all companies that issued such policies are responsible for defense costs related to the Bridgeport asbestos litigation." Id. at 113-4. The court then reviewed the law in the Second Circuit and determined that the pro rata allocation method had been adopted and the insured was responsible for its pro rata share of defense costs.

The court used the following allocation method: the denominator is the number of months, beginning on the date the insured came into existence—March 1951, through April 1, 1985—the time when asbestos-related injury insurance was no longer available. This was a period of 408.5 months. The numerator is the total number of months for which the insured was essentially self-insured: by reason of the loss or destruction of earlier policies and a buy-back settlement. The total time being 177.5 months, or 43.45 percent of the denominator. SeeSecurity at 114, n.13.

The insured appealed, arguing that the trial court applied an improper method of allocation and should have followed Keene and applied the joint and several method. The court noted that the primary difference between the two methods is that "under the pro rata method, the insured is liable for costs attributable to losses occurring during periods when it was uninsured, while under the joint and several method, all costs are allocated among insurers." Security at 117.

The court first rejected the argument that proration of defense costs to the insured violates the insurer's duty to defend. The considerations requiring the insurer to undertake a complete defense "do not apply where defense costs can be readily apportioned. ... The insurer has not contracted to pay defense costs for occurrences which took place outside the policy period. Where the distinction can be readily made, the insured must pay its fair share for the defense of the noncovered risk." Id. at 123 (citations omitted). In "long latency loss claims that implicate multiple insurance policies, there is a reasonable means of prorating the costs of defense, i.e., time on the risk." Id.

The court then countered all of the insured's remaining arguments by recognizing that reimbursement of defense costs has been permitted where an insurer defends a mixed action which includes claims not even potentially covered by the policy. SeeBuss v. Superior Court, 939 P.2d 766 (Cal. 1997). The court rejects the decisions of those states which have not adopted equitable contribution as applying joint and several allocation and finds that indivisible duty to defend does not extend to periods of self-insurance.

Finally, the insured argued, that on these facts, where it allegedly purchased insurance but lost the policies, it would be inequitable to require the insured to pay a portion of the defense costs. However, the trial court specifically concluded that the insured was the party that could have prevented the loss or destruction of the insurance policies. Therefore, the court found "that the pro rata method of allocation is equitable under the circumstances of this case not only because [the insured], in effect, chose to forgo insurance, but also because Security never contracted to pay for defense costs arising outside of its policy period." Security at 126. The court continued, explaining that to require Security to pay defense costs arising outside the policy period would result in a windfall to, and unjustly enrich, the insured.

Alternative Approaches to Allocation

Although all sums and pro rata time on the risk are the most common allocation methods, courts have also applied a "pro rata by limits" allocation method, and New Jersey has adopted proration on the basis of policy limits, multiplied by years of coverage. Pro rata by limits "effectively makes those insurers with higher limits liable for damages incurred outside their policy period" because their percentage of responsibility is not determined by the risk assumed but by the number of available indemnity dollars. Northern States at 662.

Applying "pro-ration by years and limits," the Supreme Court of New Jersey explained that "any allocation should be in proportion to the degree of risks transferred or retained during the years of exposure" and thus "allocated the losses among the carriers on the basis of the extent of the risk assumed, i.e., proration on the basis of policy limits, multiplied by years of coverage." Spaulding at 415. Explaining this method differently, the court states that "a given insurer's liability is determined by comparing its particular exposure to the total amount of exposure assumed by all carriers of the triggered policies. This comparison yields a percentage that is then applied to the amount of loss the policyholder sustained." Id. at 416-7. This method requires the insured to pay its share of "both defense and indemnification on account of years in which it was uninsured, self-insured, or its coverage was exhausted or bankrupt." Id.

Conclusion

The method of allocation chosen by the court depends on the trigger theory applicable to the ongoing loss. Some courts have found particular allocation methods incompatible with particular trigger theories. Courts that apply the joint and several method of allocation generally do so based on the insured's reasonable expectations that it would not be responsible for unknown losses. Courts that apply the pro rata time on the risk method do so based on the insuring agreement's requirement that the loss must occur during the policy period. Courts applying the pro rata time on the risk method often find it equitable to assign a percentage of responsibility for indemnity and defense costs to the insured for that portion of time when the insured chose to be uninsured. However, there is no uniform application of either trigger theories or allocation concepts. Courts are often guided in this area by equitable considerations and the underlying facts in determining allocation of damages issues.


Contributing author Rebecca C. Appelbaum is an associate practicing in the area of third party coverage at the firm of Butler Pappas Weihmuller Katz Craig, LLP.


Opinions expressed in Expert Commentary articles are those of the author and are not necessarily held by the author's employer or IRMI. Expert Commentary articles and other IRMI Online content do not purport to provide legal, accounting, or other professional advice or opinion. If such advice is needed, consult with your attorney, accountant, or other qualified adviser.

Advertisements
    
 
© 2000-2012 International Risk Management Institute, Inc. (IRMI). All rights reserved.