A quarterly summary and brief analysis of significant decisions issued by the Massachusetts Superior Court Business Litigation Session. A service of O’Connor, Carnathan and Mack LLC.
 

August 2004
 

Volume 1
Number 1
Page 1

 

Summarizing opinions from April 1, 2004 through
June. 30, 2004


Excess Insurance Coverage Is Not Rendered Primary by an Other Insurance Clause in Another Policy that Provides Only Pro Rata Coverage
 


 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 


 

 



 

     

F  E  A  T  U  R  E  D     D  E  C  I  S  I  O  N  :

Massachusetts Port Authority v. Ace Property & Casualty Ins. Co., 2004
Mass. Super. LEXIS 166
(May 4, 2004, 03-3954 BLS) (Van Gestel, J.).

     

In Massport, Judge Van Gestel decided cross motions for summary judgment in the “morass created by the existence of overlapping insurance and ’other insurance’ clauses.” Id. at *13. A passenger unloading her luggage at Logan Airport was struck by a car and suffered catastrophic injuries. The plaintiffs’ claims against Massport were premised at least in part on the allegation that the construction at the Airport had narrowed the passenger arrival and pick-up area and made it unsafe. Massport sought coverage from both a contractor’s liability policy and a general airport owner’s liability policy.

The issuer of the general liability policy assumed the costs of defense, but asserted that it offered excess coverage only, and that the contractor policy was primary. The contractor policy declined to assume the defense, and asserted that it was at most liable for its rateable share of any liability. Judge Van Gestel agreed with the issuer of the contractor policy that under the terms of the policy, it had the option but not the obligation to undertake the defense of the action.

The more interesting aspect of the decision is Judge Van Gestel’s analysis of the effect of the conflict between the two “other insurance” clauses. At a fundamental level, because the liability issues had not yet been resolved, it was impossible to say whether either or both insurers would be obligated to indemnify Massport, because the contractor policy

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

would apply only if the plaintiffs prevailed in their contention that the construction at the airport contributed to causing the injuries.

Judge Van Gestel nevertheless decided the issue in order to offer guidance to the parties in time to be meaningful:

“This Court . . . sees a real need to sort out this issue, if possible, because one of the ways in which [the underlying case] may be resolved against Massport is by pre-trial settlement. In order to facilitate such settlement, the parties need to know as much as they can about which carrier will be obligated to pay the first dollar of liability coverage.”

Id. at *12. On the merits, Judge Van Gestel concluded that in a conflict between an other insurance clause that states it will pay only a pro rata share of any liability when there is other insurance, and a clause that states the insurance provides only excess coverage, the excess coverage clause prevails.

“[W]hile the Ace USA Policy is clearly excess, if the ultimate result of the Bussell Action is grounded upon something not covered by the OCIP Policy, there will be nothing for Ace USA to be in excess of. Whether there is overlapping coverage remains to be seen.”

Id. at *15. The contractor policy thus might not apply at all, depending on the resolution of the underlying case, but if it did, then the contractor insurer would be responsible for the first dollar of coverage.


 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
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