Illinois Federal Court Transfers “Late Notice” Reinsurance Dispute To Pennsylvania

Carlton Fields
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R&Q Reinsurance Company issued a facultative reinsurance certificate to St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company, which reinsured a policy issued by St. Paul to Walter E. Campbell, Co. The broker who placed the certificate was located in Chicago, as were the R&Q employees who executed the contract. St. Paul was located in Minnesota at the time the certificate was negotiated and entered into.

The certificate provided that St. Paul was to “promptly” advise R&Q of “any occurrence and any subsequent developments pertaining thereto” which, in St. Paul’s opinion, might implicate the reinsurance coverage afforded by the certificate. After St. Paul defended and indemnified Campbell in several asbestos personal injury lawsuits arising under the reinsured policy, it sent R&Q its first notice of loss and demanded payment under the certificate. The notice of loss was sent via the broker’s Hartford, Connecticut office. R&Q subsequently brought suit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois seeking a declaration that it was not obligated to indemnify St. Paul under the certificate because it failed to provide prompt notice of the subject loss. St. Paul then filed a parallel suit against R&Q in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania seeking coverage under the certificate, and moved to transfer the Illinois case to the latter forum. At the time the competing actions were filed, R&Q was a Pennsylvania corporation and St. Paul was a Connecticut corporation.

The parties did not dispute that venue was proper in both Illinois and Pennsylvania, but disagreed as to whether the transfer of the Illinois action to Pennsylvania served the convenience of the parties and the interests of justice. Analyzing these factors and others, the court granted St. Paul’s motion to transfer the case to Pennsylvania, because: (a) the bulk of the events material to St. Paul’s alleged late notice and R&Q’s purported breach of the certificate occurred in areas “much closer to Pennsylvania than Illinois, with some of the material events occurring in Pennsylvania”; (b) R&Q is based in Pennsylvania and St. Paul’s residence is closer to that forum than to Illinois; (c) the parties witnesses, and potential non-party witnesses, are located either in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania or closer to it than to the Northern District of Illinois; (d) the dispute was “more likely” to be resolved sooner in Pennsylvania than Illinois, given the relative speed by which cases in each forum typically reach trial or are disposed of prior to trial; (e) Illinois law was “unlikely” to govern the dispute; and (f) Illinois’ interest in the action is “weak relative to that of Pennsylvania”. R&Q Reinsurance Co. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., No. 15-cv-7784 (USDC N.D. Ill. Mar. 30, 2016).

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