The Continental Insurance Co. v. Daikin Applied Americas Inc., No. 20-1689 (8th Cir. 2021)
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The Eighth Circuit reversed the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Continental and vacated the district court's declaration regarding the scope of Continental's duty to defend in nearly one hundred underlying lawsuits in which Daikin Applied is a defendant. Continental filed suit seeking a declaratory judgment that it has a duty to defend only those underlying asbestos-related suits expressly alleging in some manner that the named Subsequent Entity has been sued on account of McQuay-Perfex's liabilities, which is not true of any of the underlying lawsuits in dispute. Daikin Applied counterclaimed for a declaratory judgment to the effect that Continental owed it a duty to defend in all of the underlying lawsuits in dispute, arguing that the naming of a Subsequent Entity as a defendant was, by itself, sufficient to trigger Continental's duty to defend.
The court concluded that the district court misapplied Minnesota law in its declaration regarding the scope of Continental's duty to defend by declaring that Continental's duty to defend arises only where an underlying suit alleges liability arising out of the predecessor's actions or where Daikin has been sued as successor to McQuay-Perfex. The court explained that by failing to declare the "arguably" standard applicable here, the district court erroneously heightened Daikin Applied's burden to trigger Continental's duty to defend. In this case, Daikin Applied need only show that the underlying complaints arguably allege McQuay-Perfex liabilities. The court also found that Daikin Applied's position requires too little to trigger Continental's duty to defend under Minnesota law. Because of its declaration, the court concluded that the district court did not analyze each underlying lawsuit to determine whether the complaint named a Subsequent Entity arguably on account of McQuay-Perfex's liabilities in light of the allegations therein or, if not, whether extrinsic facts proffered by Daikin Applied and known to Continental about that case clearly establish this. Accordingly, the court remanded for the district court to conduct this analysis in the first instance.
Court Description: [Gruender, Author, with Erickson and Kobes, Circuit Judges] Civil case - Insurance. In action to determine Continental's duty to defend Daikin in more than 100 personal injury suits arising from exposure to asbestos- contaminated products sold by Daikin's predecessor, the district court misapplied Minnesota law in declaring that Continental's duty to defend arises only where an underlying suit alleges liability arising out of the predecessor's actions or where Daikin has been sued as successor to the predecessor; the complaint need not specifically allege facts that make the duty to defend obvious; it is enough that the allegations make it "arguable" that an insured liability is at issue; because of its use of the wrong standard, the district court did not analyze each underlying lawsuit to determine whether the complaint named a subsequent entity arguably on account of the predecessor's liability in light of the allegation or, if not, whether extrinsic facts proffered by Daikan and known to Continental about that case clearly establish this; remanded for further proceedings.
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