AXIS Reinsurance Co. v. Northrop Grumman, No. 19-55135 (9th Cir. 2020)
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The Ninth Circuit reversed the district court's grant of summary judgment to AXIS in an action seeking reimbursement of an insurance payment that it made, as a secondary excess insurer, to Northrop. AXIS argued that underlying insurers paid an uncovered claim arising from Northrop's settlement of alleged Employment Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) violations, thereby "improperly eroding" their policies' liability limits and prematurely triggering AXIS's excess coverage.
The panel held that, consistent with the limited caselaw and secondary sources that have addressed excess insurer claims of "improper erosion," "improper exhaustion," "wrongful exhaustion," and similar challenges to the payment decisions of underlying insurers, an excess insurer may not challenge those decisions in order to argue that the underlying liability limits were not (or should not have been) exhausted absent a showing of fraud or bad faith, or the specific reservation of such a right in its contract with the insured.
In this case, the panel held that no reasonable insured in Northrop's position would understand that it might have to justify its underlying insurers' payment decisions as a prerequisite to obtaining excess coverage from AXIS. The district court misapplied the panel's unpublished decision in Shy v. Insurance Company of the State of Pennsylvania, 528 F. App'x 752 (9th Cir. 2013), ignored the weight of authority rejecting "improper erosion" as a valid basis for denying coverage, and misconstrued the "covered loss" provision in AXIS's excess policy as a reservation of the right to second-guess other insurers' payments. Accordingly, the panel remanded for further proceedings.
Court Description: Diversity/Insurance. The panel reversed the district court’s summary judgment in favor of plaintiff, AXIS Reinsurance, and remanded, in AXIS’s action seeking reimbursement of an insurance payment that it made, as a secondary excess insurer, to Northrop Grumman Corporation. AXIS argued that Northrop’s underlying insurers paid an uncovered claim arising from Northrop’s settlement of alleged ERISA violations, thereby “improperly eroding” their policies’ liability limits and prematurely triggering AXIS’s excess coverage. The district court agreed and held that AXIS was entitled to seek reimbursement of the payment amount from Northrop against a later, valid claim. The panel held that, consistent with the limited caselaw and secondary sources that have addressed excess insurer claims of “improper erosion,” “improper exhaustion,” “wrongful exhaustion,” and similar challenges to the payment decisions of underlying insurers, an excess insurer may not challenge those decisions in order to argue that the underlying liability limits were not (or should not have been) exhausted absent a showing of fraud or bad faith, or the specific reservation of such a right in its contract with the insured. AXIS REINSURANCE V. NORTHRUP GRUMMAN 3 The panel concluded that no reasonable insured in Northrop’s position would understand that it might have to justify its underlying insurers’ payment decisions as a prerequisite to obtaining excess coverage from AXIS. Therefore, consistent with the general rule favoring the objectively reasonable expectations of the insured, the panel reversed the district court’s summary judgment order and remanded for further proceedings consistent with its opinion.
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