General Star v. Universal Fabricators, Inc. ( 2009 )


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  •      07-4443-cv
    General Star v. Universal Fabricators, Inc., et al.
    1                         UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    2                             FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
    3                                August Term, 2008
    4    (Argued:     September 3, 2008             Decided: November 5, 2009
    5                          Amended: December 28, 2009)
    6
    7                              Docket No. 07-4443-cv
    8                     -------------------------------------
    9                     GENERAL STAR NATIONAL INSURANCE CO.,
    10             Defendant-Cross-Defendant-Cross-Claimant-Appellant,
    11                                       - v -
    12    UNIVERSAL FABRICATORS, INC., MUTUAL MARINE OFFICE INC., NEW YORK
    13                  MARINE AND GENERAL INSURANCE COMPANY,
    14         Defendants-Cross-Defendants-Cross-Claimants-Appellees,
    15                 AMERICAN ALTERNATIVE INSURANCE CORPORATION,
    16                 Defendant-Cross-Defendant-Counter-Claimant,
    17     NATIONAL UNION FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF LOUISIANA, A1 MARINE
    18    ADJUSTERS, INC., NAVIGATORS INSURANCE SERVICES OF TEXAS, INC.,
    19                 MARINE OFFICE OF AMERICA CORPORATION,
    20                       Plaintiffs-Counter-Defendants.
    21                   -------------------------------------
    22   Before:     SACK and KATZMANN, Circuit Judges, and RAKOFF, District
    23               Judge.*
    24               Appeal from a judgment of the United States District
    25   Court for the Southern District of New York (Shira A. Scheindlin,
    26   Judge).    The district court granted summary judgment against the
    27   appellant, General Star National Insurance Co., ruling that it
    *
    The Honorable Jed S. Rakoff, United States District Judge
    for the Southern District of New York, sitting by designation.
    1    was bound by the terms of an excess insurance policy it had
    2    issued to contribute to the satisfaction of a state-court
    3    judgment of liability in a personal injury action against two
    4    entities for whom the insured had been a contractor at the time
    5    of the injury.   We conclude that the district court erred in
    6    deciding that the state-court judgment established legal
    7    liability against the insured.    We therefore vacate the judgment
    8    and remand for the district court to consider in the first
    9    instance whether liability was established in some other manner
    10   such that an "ultimate net loss" for which General Star was
    11   liable pursuant to General Star's insurance policy arose.
    12             Vacated and remanded.
    13                             CHRISTOPHER BRADLEY, Marshall, Conway,
    14                             Wright & Bradley, P.C. (Michael S.
    15                             Gollub, Kenneth Mauro, Mauro, Goldberg &
    16                             Lilling LLP, of counsel), New York, NY,
    17                             for Defendant-Cross-Defendant-Cross-
    18                             Claimant-Appellant.
    19                             PATRICK W. BROPHY, McMahon, Martine &
    20                             Gallagher, LLP, Brooklyn, NY, for
    21                             Defendants-Cross-Defendants-Cross-
    22                             Claimants-Appellees.
    23   SACK, Circuit Judge:
    24             Defendant-Cross-Defendant-Cross-Claimant-Appellant
    25   General Star National Insurance Co. ("General Star") appeals from
    26   a memorandum opinion and order dated September 14, 2007, by the
    27   United States District Court for the Southern District of New
    28   York (Shira A. Scheindlin, Judge) granting summary judgment for
    29   Defendants-Cross-Defendants-Cross-Claimants-Appellees, the New
    30   York Marine and General Insurance Company and Mutual Marine
    2
    1    Office, Inc. (together, "Mutual Marine").   The question presented
    2    on appeal is whether General Star, an excess insurer, is required
    3    to reimburse Mutual Marine for the amount Mutual Marine paid
    4    above its policy limit to cover a portion of a state-court
    5    personal injury judgment.
    6              In answering this question in the affirmative, the
    7    district court concluded that a state-court judgment against the
    8    owner of and stevedore at the ship terminal where the personal
    9    injury occurred -- the City of New York (the "City") and the
    10   International Terminal Operating Company ("ITO"), respectively --
    11   constituted an adjudication of liability against General Star's
    12   insured, Universal Fabricators, Inc. ("UFI"), a contractor doing
    13   work at the time and place of the injury.   UFI was insured by
    14   both Mutual Marine for the first million dollars of loss, and
    15   General Star for four million dollars above that amount, under
    16   General Star National Insurance Company umbrella policy No.
    17   NUG-332963C ("GenStar Policy").   Because under the terms of the
    18   GenStar Policy, an "adjudication" that established an amount that
    19   the insured was legally obligated to pay constituted an "ultimate
    20   net loss," which required General Star to reimburse its insured,
    21   the district court decided that General Star was obligated to pay
    22   Mutual Marine for the amount it had paid above its primary
    23   insurance policy limit.
    24             We conclude that the district court erred in deciding
    25   that General Star's insured was liable for the amount at issue as
    26   a result of the state court personal injury judgment.   Because
    3
    1    neither the district court nor the parties addressed in substance
    2    the issue of whether General Star's insured was legally liable
    3    for some other reason, we vacate the judgment of the district
    4    court and remand with instructions for the court to resolve this
    5    issue and decide whether a trial with respect thereto is
    6    warranted.
    7                                  BACKGROUND
    8              The New York City Passenger Ship Terminal (the
    9    "Terminal") is owned by the City and operated in part by ITO.    In
    10   1999, ITO retained UFI to perform repair work at the Terminal.
    11   The contract between ITO and UFI contained a rider which
    12   provided, among other things, that UFI would (a) procure general
    13   liability insurance coverage in the amount of five million
    14   dollars per occurrence, with the insurance policy naming ITO and
    15   the City as additional insureds, and (b) "indemnify, defend and
    16   hold harmless" ITO and the City from and against all claims
    17   arising from any negligent act or omission by UFI that was
    18   related to the repair work.    As required by the rider, UFI
    19   purchased a primary general liability insurance policy in the
    20   amount of one million dollars from Mutual Marine and a secondary
    21   excess policy in the amount of four million dollars from General
    22   Star.
    23             The GenStar Policy provided that General Star would pay
    24   for "ultimate net loss in excess of the retained limit because of
    25   bodily injury or property damage to which the policy applies."
    4
    1    It also stated that: "Ultimate net loss means the total amount of
    2    damages for which the Insured is legally liable.   Ultimate net
    3    loss may be established by adjudication, arbitration or a
    4    compromise settlement to which [General Star] ha[s] previously
    5    agreed in writing."
    6              On February 26, 1999, Ronald Ernish, a UFI employee
    7    performing repair work at the Terminal, was seriously injured
    8    when he fell from a makeshift scaffold or ladder that collapsed
    9    under his weight.   Ernish and his wife brought suit in Supreme
    10   Court, New York County, not against UFI, Mr. Ernish's employer --
    11   perhaps because they would have been confined to a workers'
    12   compensation claim had they sought to recover from UFI1 -- but
    13   against ITO and the City (the "Ernish lawsuit").   ITO and the
    14   City then filed a third-party complaint against UFI seeking
    15   indemnification (the "third-party action").
    16             General Star was informed of the Ernish lawsuit and the
    17   third-party action against UFI.   After concluding that it was
    18   unlikely UFI would be exposed beyond Mutual Marine's million-
    19   dollar policy limit, General Star decided to allow Mutual Marine,
    1
    See 
    N.Y. Workers' Compensation Law §§ 11
    , 29; see also,
    e.g., Fung v. Japan Airlines Co., Ltd., 
    9 N.Y.3d 351
    , 357, 
    880 N.E.2d 845
     (2007) ("Workers' Compensation Law §§ 11 and 29(6)
    restrict an employee from suing his or her employer . . . for an
    accidental injury sustained in the course of employment.");
    Pereira v. St. Joseph's Cemetery, 
    54 A.D.3d 835
    , 837, 
    864 N.Y.S.2d 491
     (2d Dep't 2008) ("[A]llegations that the employer
    exposed the employee to a substantial risk of injury have been
    held insufficient to circumvent the exclusivity of the remedy
    provided by the Workers' Compensation Law.") (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    5
    1    UFI's primary insurer, to defend UFI in the third-party action,
    2    and so informed Mutual Marine in two notes dated May 25 and June
    3    1, 2000, respectively.   With regard to its conclusion that UFI
    4    was unlikely to be exposed beyond Mutual Marine's million-dollar
    5    policy limit, General Star instructed Mutual Marine in the first
    6    note that "[s]hould future developments lead you to believe
    7    otherwise, please notify us immediately."
    8              Before trial began in the Ernish lawsuit against ITO
    9    and the City, Mutual Marine's attorneys executed a settlement
    10   agreement (the "First Agreement") with both ITO and the City,
    11   purportedly on behalf of UFI, settling the third-party claim ITO
    12   and the City had asserted against UFI.    The First Agreement
    13   provided that ITO and the City would discontinue their third-
    14   party claim against UFI, and that ITO and the City would pay
    15   twenty-five percent and UFI would pay seventy-five percent of
    16   whatever amount was ultimately awarded to Ernish against ITO and
    17   the City in the Ernish lawsuit.
    18             It is not disputed that Mutual Marine knew of and
    19   participated in the First Agreement.   General Star, however,
    20   neither knew of nor participated in it.    And according to UFI and
    21   General Star, Mutual Marine's counsel entered into the First
    22   Agreement on UFI's behalf without UFI's consent.
    23             The state trial court directed a verdict in the Ernish
    24   lawsuit in favor of the plaintiffs against ITO and the City on
    25   liability pursuant to 
    N.Y. Labor Law § 240
    , which provides that
    26   "[a]ll contractors and owners and their agents . . . shall cause
    6
    1    to be furnished or erected . . . scaffolding . . . which shall be
    2    so constructed, placed and operated as to give proper protection
    3    to a person so employed" in repairing a building or structure,
    4    among other things.   
    N.Y. Labor Law § 240
    ; see also Ernish v.
    5    City of N.Y., 
    2 A.D.3d 256
    , 257, 
    768 N.Y.S.2d 325
     (1st Dep't
    6    2003).   A jury, left to decide the amount of damages, returned an
    7    award of three million dollars against ITO and the City.    The
    8    amount apparently came as something of a surprise to the parties
    9    and their insurers.   On appeal to the Appellate Division, the
    10   directed verdict was affirmed but the judgment was reduced to
    11   $2,175,000 plus interest -- still an amount substantially
    12   exceeding the parties' and insurers' initial expectations.    
    Id.
    13              ITO and the City were insured by the National Union
    14   Fire Insurance Company of Louisiana, A1 Marine Adjusters, Inc.,
    15   the Marine Office of America Corporation, and Navigators
    16   Insurance Services of Texas, Inc. (collectively "National
    17   Union").   National Union initially paid Ernish twenty-five
    18   percent of the judgment to satisfy the obligation of ITO and the
    19   City -- the defendants in the Ernish lawsuit -- under the First
    20   Agreement.   Mutual Marine, in turn, satisfied -- up to its policy
    21   limit of one million dollars plus interest -- part of UFI's
    22   three-quarters share of the judgment against ITO and the City
    23   under the First Agreement.   $650,584.19 of UFI's three-quarters
    24   share under the First Agreement remained unpaid.   The parties
    25   looked to General Star to pay that amount under its excess
    26   policy, but General Star declined, arguing that neither it nor
    7
    1    UFI was bound by the First Agreement, and that it therefore had
    2    no liability for payment of any of UFI's 75% share of the
    3    judgment, which share had been decided upon in the First
    4    Agreement.    See, e.g., Letter from General Star to Mutual Marine,
    5    at 1 (June 19, 2002) ("What remains clear and indisputable -- in
    6    fact Mutual Marine does not even argue to the contrary -- is that
    7    neither General Star nor Universal Fabricators ever authorized
    8    Mutual Marine to execute the so-called [First Agreement] on their
    9    behalf.").
    10             Because the judgment was entered against ITO and the
    11   City, their insurer, National Union, then paid the remainder of
    12   the judgment.   National Union thereupon commenced an action for a
    13   declaratory judgment against UFI, Mutual Marine, and General Star
    14   to the effect that National Union was due reimbursement for the
    15   money it paid in excess of the twenty-five percent share of the
    16   Ernish judgment that was apportioned to ITO and the City under
    17   the First Agreement.   General Star removed the action, which was
    18   originally filed in New York County Supreme Court, to the United
    19   States District Court for the Southern District of New York on
    20   the basis of diversity of citizenship.
    21             After the case was removed, Mutual Marine, UFI, and
    22   National Union, entered into two additional settlement
    23   agreements.   Mutual Marine and UFI entered into a "Settlement and
    24   Cooperation Agreement" (the "Second Agreement"), under which
    25   Mutual Marine agreed to indemnify and defend UFI in National
    26   Union's declaratory judgment action.   In exchange, UFI agreed
    8
    1    that "to the extent [Mutual Marine] pays any judgment or verdict
    2    against UFI in the [National Union] Litigation, or pays any
    3    settlement of any claim against UFI in the Litigation or for any
    4    further liability under the [First Agreement], [Mutual Marine]
    5    shall be subrogated to any and all rights of UFI, and/or be
    6    assigned such rights by UFI, including any right to pursue claims
    7    against GenStar for amounts paid and for attorneys fees and
    8    costs . . . ."   Second Agreement, ¶ 4.
    9              Then Mutual Marine and National Union entered into a
    10   "Settlement and Cooperation Agreement" (the "Third Agreement"),
    11   under which Mutual Marine paid National Union $700,000 for the
    12   amount National Union had paid to satisfy UFI's obligation to ITO
    13   and the City under the First Agreement, and National Union
    14   dismissed its suit against UFI and Mutual Marine, assigning the
    15   rights it had asserted against General Star in that lawsuit to
    16   Mutual Marine.
    17             Following the Second and Third Agreements, then, UFI
    18   has been indemnified and National Union has been paid in full.
    19   Neither of those parties has an interest in the present appeal.
    20   Mutual Marine maintains its suit against General Star for the
    21   excess over its one-million-dollar policy limit that it paid to
    22   National Union following the Third Agreement to cover UFI's
    23   alleged obligation under the First Agreement.
    24             Mutual Marine, as directed by the district court, filed
    25   a motion for summary judgment against General Star on the limited
    26   issue of whether General Star was directly obligated under the
    9
    1    First Agreement to pay the remainder of UFI's seventy-five
    2    percent share.   In an opinion and order entered July 18, 2007,
    3    the district court denied summary judgment, finding that General
    4    Star was not obligated to contribute to UFI's three-fourths share
    5    directly pursuant to the First Agreement.    Nat'l Union Fire Ins.
    6    Co. of La. v. Universal Fabricators, Inc., No. 05 Civ. 3418, 2007
    7   
    WL 2059840
    , at *5, 
    2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 51925
    , at *22-23
    8    (S.D.N.Y. July 18, 2007) ("Nat'l Union I").    The court concluded
    9    that because General Star was not aware of, did not take part in,
    10   and was not a party to the First Agreement, it was not directly
    11   bound by its terms.   
    Id.
       The opinion explicitly refrained from
    12   addressing whether General Star was obligated under the terms of
    13   the GenStar Policy itself to pay the amount in dispute, and
    14   invited General Star to move for summary judgment on that issue.
    15   Nat'l Union I, 
    2007 WL 2059840
     at *6, 
    2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 51925
    16   at *26-27 ("The present motion for summary judgment was made on
    17   the limited issue of whether GenStar was bound under the terms of
    18   the First Agreement . . . .   As a result, this Opinion does not
    19   address the remaining issue of whether GenStar is bound to pay
    20   under the terms of its excess insurance policy.    GenStar may move
    21   for summary judgment on this issue.").
    22             General Star did just that.    But in a memorandum
    23   opinion and order entered September 14, 2007, the district court
    24   denied General Star's motion and, instead, entered summary
    25   judgment for Mutual Marine.   The court found that although
    26   General Star was not directly bound by the First Agreement, it
    10
    1    was nonetheless obligated to reimburse Mutual Marine under the
    2    terms of the GenStar Policy.    Nat'l Union Fire Ins. Co. of La. v.
    3    Universal Fabricators, Inc., No. 05 Civ. 3418, 
    2007 WL 2701990
    ,
    4    at *2-3, 
    2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 68100
    , at *5-11 (S.D.N.Y. Sept.
    5    14, 2007) ("Nat'l Union II").
    6              The district court noted that the GenStar Policy
    7    provided that General Star would pay in the event of a judgment
    8    in excess of Mutual Marine's policy limit for "ultimate net
    9    loss," which, the policy stated, "'may be established by
    10   adjudication, arbitration or a compromise settlement to which
    11   [General Star] ha[s] previously agreed in writing.'"    Nat'l Union
    12   II, 
    2007 WL 2701990
     at *1, 
    2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 68100
     at *2
    13   (quoting GenStar Policy at ¶ 23).     The court found that UFI had
    14   agreed to "indemnify, defend and hold harmless ITO and the City,"
    15   
    2007 WL 2701990
     at *2, 
    2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 68100
     at *5, and
    16   concluded that the directed verdict by the New York Supreme Court
    17   against ITO and the City was "[u]nder any definition of the
    18   term, . . . an 'adjudication' of liability as to ITO and the City
    19   (and ultimately, of UFI if and when called upon to indemnify ITO
    20   and the City)," 
    2007 WL 2701990
     at *2, 
    2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21
       68100 at *6.
    22             The district court decided that because the
    23   Ernish judgment was an adjudication with respect to ITO and the
    24   City, who were named in the GenStar Policy as additional
    25   insureds, and because in the district court's view the Ernish
    26   judgment was also an adjudication with respect to UFI, General
    11
    1    Star was liable to pay the excess over Mutual Marine's policy
    2    limit under the terms of the GenStar Policy, which provided that
    3    an "adjudication" establishing "ultimate net loss" was a covered
    4    loss.   
    2007 WL 2701990
     at *2, 
    2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 68100
     at *6.
    5              Summary judgment was entered for Mutual Marine.
    6    General Star appeals.
    7                                DISCUSSION
    8              The judgment in favor of Ernish has been satisfied.
    9    The question on appeal is whether Mutual Marine must bear the
    10   full cost -- including a significant amount that exceeds its
    11   million-dollar policy limit -- that it paid to National Union to
    12   cover the share of the Ernish judgment UFI allegedly owed under
    13   the terms of the First Agreement, or whether General Star is
    14   obligated to reimburse Mutual Marine for that excess.   The
    15   district court found the latter, that General Star was obligated
    16   to reimburse Mutual Marine based on the judgment against ITO and
    17   the City, both because ITO and the City were additional insureds
    18   under the GenStar Policy and because the district court
    19   considered the judgment effectively also to be an adjudication
    20   against UFI, General Star's primary insured.   We conclude that
    21   the district court erred in holding General Star obligated to
    22   reimburse Mutual Marine on either of these grounds.   Because
    23   there remains a question, substantially unaddressed in the
    24   district court, as to whether General Star may be obligated to
    25   reimburse Mutual Marine on other grounds, i.e., whether liability
    12
    1    was established against UFI by means other than the judgment
    2    against ITO and the City that would obligate General Star to pay
    3    -- we vacate the summary judgment and remand the cause for
    4    further proceedings.
    5                I. Standard of Review and Applicable Substantive Law
    6                "We review a district court's grant of summary judgment
    7    de novo, construing the evidence in the light most favorable to
    8    the non-moving party and drawing all reasonable inferences in its
    9    favor."    Allianz Ins. Co. v. Lerner, 
    416 F.3d 109
    , 113 (2d Cir.
    10   2005).    Summary judgment "should be rendered if the pleadings,
    11   the discovery and disclosure materials on file, and any
    12   affidavits show that there is no genuine issue as to any material
    13   fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of
    14   law."    Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c); see also Roe v. City of Waterbury,
    15   
    542 F.3d 31
    , 35 (2d Cir. 2008) (quoting Rule 56(c)).    An issue of
    16   fact is genuine if "the evidence is such that a reasonable jury
    17   could return a verdict for the nonmoving party."    Roe, 
    542 F.3d 18
       at 35 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).    A fact is
    19   "material" if it "might affect the outcome of the suit under the
    20   governing law."    
    Id.
     (citation and internal quotation marks
    21   omitted).
    22               Federal jurisdiction over this case is based on
    23   diversity of citizenship.    In the absence of any contractual
    24   obligation of the parties to the contrary, we therefore apply the
    13
    1    substantive law of the forum state, New York. See, e.g., Omega
    2    Eng'g, Inc. v. Omega, S.A., 
    432 F.3d 437
    , 443 (2d Cir. 2005).
    3              II.    Liability under the First Agreement Alone
    4              The district court correctly decided that General Star
    5    was not directly obligated to reimburse Mutual Marine under the
    6    First Agreement, which settled the third-party action brought by
    7    ITO and the City against UFI.1   See Nat'l Union I, 
    2007 WL 2059840
    8    at *6, 
    2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 51925
     at *26.    As the district court
    9    pointed out, under New York law, a settlement agreement "'is not
    10   binding upon a party unless it is in a writing subscribed by him
    11   or his attorney . . . .'"    
    2007 WL 2059840
     at *5, 2007 U.S. Dist.
    
    12 LEXIS 51925
     at *18-19 (quoting New York Civil Practice Laws and
    13   Rules § 2104).    Because the First Agreement was not subscribed to
    14   by General Star or its attorney or other agent, General Star is
    15   not directly bound by its terms.    See, e.g., Bonnette v. Long
    16   Island College Hosp., 
    3 N.Y.3d 281
    , 286, 
    819 N.E.2d 206
    , 208-09,
    17   
    785 N.Y.S.2d 738
    , 740-01 (2004).
    18             III.    Liability under the GenStar Policy
    19             The harder question is whether General Star is bound by
    20   the terms of its own policy with UFI to reimburse Mutual Marine.
    21   Under the terms of the GenStar policy, General Star was obligated
    1
    As explained below, this finding is distinct from the
    question of whether General Star may be indirectly obligated by
    the First Agreement to reimburse Mutual Marine. Such would be
    the case if the First Agreement established UFI's liability.
    That question was not addressed in substance by the district
    court.
    14
    1    to pay its insured for "ultimate net loss" in excess of the
    2    primary insurer's limit.   According to the policy:
    3              Ultimate net loss means the total amount of
    4              damages for which the Insured is legally
    5              liable. Ultimate net loss may be established
    6              by adjudication, arbitration or a compromise
    7              settlement to which we have previously agreed
    8              in writing.
    9    GenStar Policy at ¶ 23.
    10             While General Star appears to have assumed that under
    11   Paragraph 23, the legal liability binding an insured could only be
    12   established by an adjudication, arbitration, or compromise
    13   settlement to which General Star agreed,2 that is not what the
    14   provision says.   It defines "ultimate net loss" as "the total
    15   amount of damages for which the Insured is legally liable."   It
    16   then provides that "ultimate net loss," thus defined as an
    17   "amount," may be established by "adjudication, arbitration or a
    18   compromise settlement to which [General Star] ha[s] previously
    19   agreed in writing."   In other words, as Mutual Marine appears to
    20   acknowledge,3 it is the amount of damages for which the insured is
    21   legally liable that "may be established by adjudication,
    22   arbitration or a compromise settlement to which [General Star]
    2
    See, e.g., Appellant's Reply Br. 4 ("[F]or coverage to
    exist in the first instance, there must be damages for which UFI
    became legally liable because of 'an adjudication, arbitration or
    compromise settlement to which General Star previously agreed in
    writing." (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted,
    emphasis added)).
    3
    See Appellee's Br. 28 ("[N]othing in the GenStar policy
    requires a final adjudication to be entered as a judgment against
    the insured; only that adjudication (or arbitration or approved
    settlement) establish the amount.") (emphasis added).
    15
    1    ha[s] previously agreed in writing," not the legal liability
    2    itself.   The establishment of liability is the predicate to the
    3    applicability of the provision rather than being governed by it.4
    4               The preliminary issue that must be addressed on this
    5    appeal, then, is whether General Star's insured was legally liable
    6    for any amount, which liability would trigger the provision
    7    concerning the establishment of the amount of such liability.     In
    8    other words, only if General Star's insured was legally liable
    9    does the question arise as to whether the amount of that liability
    10   was established in a manner consonant with the terms of the
    11   GenStar Policy.
    12   A.   Establishment of Liability by the Ernish Lawsuit Alone.
    13              The district court decided that the Ernish lawsuit,
    14   which resulted in the $2,175,000 judgment of liability against ITO
    15   and the City, was an adjudication of liability as to both ITO and
    16   the City and, "ultimately," as to UFI "if and when called upon to
    17   indemnify ITO and the City."   Nat'l Union II, 
    2007 WL 2701990
     at
    4
    Indeed, General Star's interpretation of Paragraph 23 to
    mean that the legal liability binding an insured, in addition to
    the amount of damages for which the insured is liable, can only
    be established by an adjudication, arbitration, or General Star-
    approved settlement, would render extraneous several other
    provisions in the GenStar Policy. For example, Section V,
    Paragraph 5(d) of the policy provides that "[n]o insureds will,
    except at their own cost, . . . assume any obligation . . .
    without our consent." That injunction would be redundant if the
    very definition of Ultimate Net Loss, set forth in Paragraph 23,
    limited the universe of ways to establish UFI's liability to
    adjudication, arbitration, and General Star-approved settlements.
    See also GenStar Policy Section I, Coverage B, ¶ 2(a)(4)
    (providing limited exclusion from coverage for liability assumed
    by the insured in a contract or agreement).
    16
    1    *2, 
    2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 68100
     at *6.    The district court
    2    concluded that General Star was obligated to reimburse Mutual
    3    Marine based on each of these alleged adjudications of liability.
    4              1.    Adjudication as to ITO and the City.
    5              The district court was obviously correct in finding that
    6    the Ernish lawsuit was an adjudication of liability as to ITO and
    7    the City, against whom the judgment was entered.    It does not
    8    follow, however, that General Star is obligated to reimburse
    9    Mutual Marine on the basis of that adjudication.
    10             Mutual Marine brought this lawsuit against General Star
    11   based on UFI's rights, to which it had succeeded, not those of ITO
    12   and the City.    Only the seventy-five percent share ostensibly
    13   apportioned to UFI in the First Agreement has ever been at issue
    14   in the litigation against General Star, and not the twenty-five
    15   percent share apportioned to ITO and the City.    Indeed, three of
    16   the five cross-claims filed by Mutual Marine against General Star
    17   are based explicitly on rights belonging to UFI.    See Am. Ans. to
    18   Sec. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 32-64.
    19             The fourth cross-claim includes mention of rights
    20   allegedly belonging to ITO and the City and their insurer,
    21   National Union, against General Star.    See Am. Ans. to Sec. Am.
    22   Compl. ¶¶ 143-57.    But in its motion papers before the district
    23   court, Mutual Marine explicitly disavowed the notion that it was
    24   basing a claim against General Star on claims belonging to ITO and
    17
    1    the City.5      To the extent that the fourth cross-claim mentions any
    2    rights of ITO and the City or their insurer against General Star,
    3    it does so as background for its assertion that the First
    4    Agreement -- which the district court has already correctly found
    5    not to bind General Star directly -- was beneficial to General
    6    Star.       See generally Am. Ans. to Sec. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 143-157; see,
    7    e.g., Am. Ans. to Sec. Am. Compl. ¶ 146 ("By virtue of the added
    8    Insured status of New York City and ITO . . . the [First
    9    Agreement] . . . reduced by 25% the possibility that any judgment
    10   would pierce [General Star's] excess umbrella layer of
    11   coverage.").      Indeed, Mutual Marine's motion papers refer
    12   throughout to UFI, not ITO and the City, as the "insured."
    13                  Finally, the fifth cross-claim asserts a nebulous
    14   "independent right" against General Star allegedly belonging to
    15   Mutual Marine.       Am. Ans. to Sec. Am. Compl. ¶ 159.   It is not
    16   alleged to have ever belonged to ITO or the City.
    17                  Thus Mutual Marine's position throughout this litigation
    18   has been that General Star is liable to it based on "its insuring
    19   agreement with its insured UFI [which] obligated it to pay the
    20   sums UFI became obligated to pay as a result of an unquestionably
    5
    See Mem. of Law in Opp'n to Mot. for Summ. J. at 20,
    Nat'l Union Fire Ins. Co. of La. v. Universal Fabricators, Inc.,
    et al., No. 05 Civ. 3418 (SAS) (S.D.N.Y. Aug. 29, 2007) (Doc. No.
    61) ("[General Star argues] that Mutual Marine acquired no rights
    against [General Star] from ITO's subrogated carriers. [That
    argument] can be put aside because it is concededly correct,
    since those carriers, as subrogees of the City and ITO, never had
    any rights against [General Star], only against UFI."); see
    also 
    id. at 8
     ("Essentially . . . Mutual Marine's rights vis-a-
    vis [General Star] are those obtained through common law
    subrogation from their insured, UFI.").
    18
    1    covered loss."    Mem. of Law in Opp'n to Mot. for Summ. J. at 11.
    2    That continues to be Mutual Marine's position on appeal.    See
    3    Appellee's Br. 35 (describing Mutual Marine as seeking
    4    reimbursement for "satisfy[ing] [the] judgment . . . entered
    5    against UFI Fabricators, Inc."); 
    id. at 39
     ("Mutual Marine
    6    properly showed the District Court that there was no question of
    7    fact but that General Star breached its duties to UFI and that
    8    Mutual Marine acquired UFI's right to recover for that breach by
    9    [General Star].").
    10             Mutual Marine is not pursuing any rights that may or may
    11   not have belonged to ITO and the City (or their insurers) based on
    12   their status as additional insureds.     It is therefore immaterial
    13   for purposes of this lawsuit whether General Star has ever owed
    14   ITO and the City anything as additional named insureds under the
    15   GenStar Policy.   That is not the claim that was made.   The
    16   material question is whether there was an adjudication of
    17   liability against UFI, for which General Star would be obligated
    18   under the GenStar Policy to reimburse UFI.
    19             Since Mutual Marine does not assert rights in the place
    20   of ITO and the City against General Star, General Star is not
    21   liable to Mutual Marine on the basis of any direct obligation
    22   General Star may have had to ITO and the City arising out of the
    23   adjudication in the Ernish lawsuit against them.
    24             2.   Adjudication as to UFI.
    25             The district court also concluded that the judgment
    26   against ITO and the City in the Ernish lawsuit "was an
    19
    1    'adjudication' of liability . . . ultimately[] of UFI if and when
    2    called upon to indemnify ITO and the City."       Nat'l Union II, 2007
    
    3 WL 2701990
     at *2, 
    2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 68100
     at *6 (parentheses
    4    omitted).     We disagree.
    5                 Following Ernish's filing of the suit against ITO and
    6    the City -- as noted, he did not bring suit against UFI, his
    7    employer -- ITO and the City filed a third-party action impleading
    8    UFI.   They claimed that they were entitled to, inter alia,
    9    contractual indemnity, common law indemnity, and "added insured"
    10   status.     But before this third-party action was litigated to a
    11   conclusion, ITO and the City reached a settlement with UFI,
    12   purportedly executed on its behalf by Mutual Marine -- the First
    13   Agreement -- disposing of the third-party action and dismissing
    14   all claims against UFI with prejudice.6
    15                By the time the Ernish suit was decided, then, UFI was
    16   no longer party to it.       When the state trial court directed a
    17   verdict of liability against the defendants, ITO and the City, and
    18   the jury thereafter awarded damages of $3 million (reduced on
    19   appeal to $2,175,000), judgment was not entered against non-party
    20   UFI.
    6
    The First Agreement provided:
    [A]ll claims between UFI and ITO/City in
    connection with the [Ernish] Lawsuit,
    including third-party claims, indemnity
    claims, contribution claims, counter-claims
    and cross-claims, shall be released and
    voluntarily discontinued with
    prejudice . . . .
    First Agreement at p. 2.
    20
    1              The district court thought it "puzzling" that General
    2    Star would complain about the First Agreement because, in the
    3    court's view, absent the First Agreement, General Star would have
    4    been obligated to pay one-hundred percent of the Ernish judgment
    5    in excess of Mutual Marine's policy.   Nat'l Union II, 
    2007 WL 6
        2701990 at *2, 
    2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 68100
     at *7.   In the Ernish
    7    litigation, ITO and the City were held strictly liable for
    8    Ernish's injuries under New York's scaffolding law.   See N.Y.
    9    Labor Law § 240(1);7 Ernish, 
    2 A.D.3d at 256-58
    , 
    768 N.Y.S.2d at
    10   325-26.   Liability pursuant to this statute is "not predicated on
    11   fault: it is imputed to the owner or contractor by statute and
    12   attaches irrespective of whether due care was exercised and
    13   without reference to principles of negligence."   Brown v. Two
    14   Exch. Plaza Partners, 
    76 N.Y.2d 172
    , 179, 
    556 N.E.2d 430
    , 433, 556
    
    15 N.Y.S.2d 991
    , 994 (1990) (internal citation omitted).   While
    16   strict liability attaches under section 240(1), "[i]t is well
    17   settled that an owner or general contractor who is held strictly
    7
    All contractors and owners and their
    agents, . . . who contract for but do not
    direct or control the work, in the erection,
    demolition, repairing, altering, painting,
    cleaning or pointing of a building or
    structure shall furnish or erect, or cause to
    be furnished or erected for the performance
    of such labor, scaffolding, hoists, stays,
    ladders, slings, hangers, blocks, pulleys,
    braces, irons, ropes, and other devices which
    shall be so constructed, placed and operated
    as to give proper protection to a person so
    employed.
    
    N.Y. Labor Law § 240
    (1).
    21
    1    liable under Labor Law § 240(1) is entitled to full
    2    indemnification from the party actually responsible for the
    3    incident."   Frank v. Meadowlakes Dev. Corp., 
    6 N.Y.3d 687
    , 691,
    4    
    849 N.E.2d 938
    , 940, 
    816 N.Y.S.2d 715
     (2006) (internal quotation
    5    marks and citation omitted).   Thus, if UFI was "actually
    6    responsible" for Ernish's injuries, it could have become liable to
    7    indemnify ITO and the City for the judgment against them.
    8              But that outcome was uncertain.   A party seeking either
    9    contractual or common law indemnity must "establish that it was
    10   free from any negligence and was held liable solely by virtue of
    11   the statutory liability."   Correia v. Prof'l Data Mgmt., Inc., 259
    
    12 A.D.2d 60
    , 65, 
    693 N.Y.S.2d 596
    , 600 (1st Dep't 1999); see also
    13   Brown, 
    76 N.Y.2d at 180-81
    , 556 N.E.2d at 545, 556 N.Y.S.2d at 995
    14   (explaining that New York law "prohibit[s] indemnity agreements in
    15   which owners or contractors [seek] to pass along the risks for
    16   their own negligent actions to other contractors or
    17   subcontractors, even if the accident was caused only in part by
    18   the owner's or contractor's negligence." (emphasis in original)).
    19   Therefore if UFI could prove that ITO or the City were negligent
    20   in connection with the incident that caused Ernish's injuries, UFI
    21   would not have been obligated to indemnify ITO and the City for
    22   their losses.8
    8
    Indeed, the district court acknowledged General Star's
    argument that this uncertainty regarding ITO and the City's
    ability to establish UFI's liability motivated the decision to
    settle the third-party action. Nat'l Union II, 
    2007 WL 2701990
    at *2, 
    2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 68100
     at *7.
    22
    1              The district court found, nonetheless, and Mutual Marine
    2    urges on appeal, that there was no evidence in the record of
    3    negligence on the part of ITO or the City and that UFI therefore
    4    would have had to indemnify them.     Nat'l Union II, 
    2007 WL 2701990
    5    at *2, 
    2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 78100
     at *7.    But the district court
    6    was in no position to make that finding at the summary judgment
    7    stage, as a matter of law.   The question of any such negligence
    8    was not before the district court and there was therefore no basis
    9    for a belief that the record before the district court contained
    10   all possible evidence of such negligence.    Put another way, the
    11   district court was making a finding in a lawsuit that was not
    12   before it –- a hypothetical third-party action by ITO and the City
    13   against UFI that was litigated to the finish.
    14             Thus the Ernish adjudication was not tantamount to an
    15   adjudication of "legal liability" on the part of the relevant
    16   "insured" in this case, UFI.   And without an establishment of
    17   legal liability, "ultimate net loss" could not be established
    18   either.
    19   B. Establishment of Liability Pursuant to the First Agreement.
    20             Although the Ernish adjudication did not establish the
    21   legal liability of UFI for Ernish's judgment, the First Agreement
    22   itself may have.   If it was properly executed by Mutual Marine on
    23   behalf of UFI and rendered UFI liable for three-quarters of the
    24   judgment against ITO and the City, then the Ernish adjudication
    25   would have determined not liability, but the amount for which UFI
    26   was legally liable, thereby constituting an "ultimate net loss"
    23
    1    for which General Star was liable under its policy.9   In other
    2    words, it is possible that the First Agreement, which preceded the
    3    Ernish adjudication, provided that UFI was 75% liable for the
    4    underlying accident at issue in the adjudication, and the
    5    adjudication itself then determined the amount for which UFI was
    6    legally liable.
    7               At first blush, using the First Agreement to establish
    8    the legal liability of UFI would appear to violate the condition
    9    in the GenStar Policy that "[n]o insureds will, except at their
    10   own cost, voluntarily make a payment, assume any obligation, or
    11   incur any expense without our consent," GenStar Policy, Section V,
    12   ¶ 5(d).   But as Mutual Marine argues and General Star appears to
    13   concede, General Star never issued a disclaimer to that effect, as
    14   it was required to do under 
    N.Y. Ins. Law § 3420
    (d)(2).10
    9
    The possibility that the First Agreement established the
    legal liability of UFI and thereby indirectly bound General Star
    to pay an ultimate net loss determined by the Ernish adjudication
    is not to be confused with the argument originally proposed by
    Mutual Marine and rejected by the district court in its July 18,
    2007, opinion and order that General Star, a non-signatory to the
    First Agreement, was directly bound by the First Agreement to
    contribute to the three-fourths share of the Ernish judgment
    ostensibly apportioned to UFI by the First Agreement. The
    district court's rejection of that argument was correct for the
    reasons set forth above.
    10
    
    N.Y. Ins. Law § 3420
    (d)(2) provides:
    If under a liability policy issued or
    delivered in this state, an insurer shall
    disclaim liability or deny coverage for death
    or bodily injury arising out of a motor
    vehicle accident or any other type of
    accident occurring within this state, it
    shall give written notice as soon as is
    reasonably possible of such disclaimer of
    liability or denial of coverage to the
    24
    1    See Reyes v. Diamond State Ins. Co., 
    35 A.D.3d 830
    , 831, 827
    
    2 N.Y.S.2d 263
     (2d Dep't 2006) ("An insurer must give written notice
    3    of a disclaimer of coverage as soon as is reasonably possible
    4    [pursuant to 
    N.Y. Ins. Law § 3420
    ] after it first learns of the
    5    accident or of grounds for disclaimer of liability or denial of
    6    coverage.   This rule applies not only to an insurer's disclaimer
    7    of primary insurance coverage, but to a disclaimer of excess
    8    coverage as well.") (internal quotation marks and citations
    9    omitted); see also Mann v. Gulf Ins. Co., 
    3 A.D.3d 554
    , 556, 771
    
    10 N.Y.S.2d 176
     (2d Dep't 2004).
    11               General Star argues that it was not required to disclaim
    12   coverage because "[d]isclaimer pursuant to Insurance Law section
    13   3420(d) is unnecessary when a claim falls outside the scope of the
    14   policy's coverage portion."    See Appellant's Reply Br. 3 (quoting
    15   Worcester Ins. Co. v. Bettenhauser, 
    95 N.Y.2d 185
    , 188, 712
    
    16 N.Y.S.2d 433
    , 435, 
    734 N.E.2d 745
     (2000) (internal quotation marks
    17   and alterations omitted)).    But it bases this argument on the
    18   notion that Section VI, Paragraph 23 of the GenStar Policy limited
    19   the ways UFI's legal liability, rather than simply the amount of
    20   such liability, could be established, see Appellant's Reply Br. 3-
    21   4, a notion that is incorrect.    As we have explained, it did not.
    22   General Star does not argue that Paragraph 5(d) alone would take
    23   the First Agreement "outside the scope of the policy's coverage
    24   portion" such that disclaimer would be unnecessary, and such an
    insured and the injured person or any other
    claimant.
    
    Id.
    25
    1    argument would fail because Paragraph 5(d) is a self-proclaimed
    2    "policy condition" that is plainly in the nature of an exclusion,
    3    for which disclaimer is required, and is not part of the "coverage
    4    portion" of the GenStar Policy.   See Columbia Cas. Co. v. Nat'l
    5    Emergency Servs., Inc., 
    282 A.D.2d 346
    , 347, 
    723 N.Y.S.2d 473
     (1st
    6    Dep't 2001) ("It is settled that failure by the insurer to give
    7    written notice of disclaimer based on an exclusion or failure to
    8    comply with a policy condition as soon as is reasonably possible
    9    renders the disclaimer ineffective.") (emphasis added, internal
    10   citation omitted); cf. Zappone v. Home Ins. Co., 
    55 N.Y.2d 131
    ,
    11   134-35, 
    447 N.Y.S.2d 911
    , 
    432 N.E.2d 783
     (1982) (concluding that
    12   insurer did not have to disclaim coverage for accident involving
    13   automobile that was not the subject of the insurance policies in
    14   question).
    15             Therefore Section V, Paragraph 5(d) of the GenStar
    16   Policy does not foreclose the possibility that the First Agreement
    17   established UFI's liability and thereby, in conjunction with the
    18   Ernish litigation, obligated General Star to reimburse Mutual
    19   Marine for the excess Mutual Marine paid over its policy limit to
    20   cover UFI's share of the judgment.
    21             General Star also argues, however, that it was not
    22   required to issue a disclaimer because "UFI[] disavowed any
    23   obligation under the first settlement agreement.     As such [sic],
    24   this agreement could not create any obligation to disclaim
    25   coverage to UFI or Mutual Marine."     Appellant's Reply Br. 6
    26   (emphasis in original, internal citations omitted).     In letters
    26
    1    sent to Mutual Marine prior to litigation in this matter, UFI
    2    represented that it had never authorized Mutual Marine to execute
    3    the First Agreement on its behalf.    The letters, also sent on
    4    behalf of General Star, state that it "remains clear and
    5    indisputable -- in fact Mutual Marine does not even argue to the
    6    contrary -- [] that neither General Star nor [UFI] ever authorized
    7    Mutual Marine to execute the so-called [First Agreement] on their
    8    behalf," Jun. 19, 2002 Letter at 1, and "neither General Star nor
    9    principals of [UFI] ever gave permission or express authorization
    10   for Mutual Marine to execute th[e] [First Agreement] on their
    11   behalf."   Letter from General Star and UFI to Mutual Marine, at 1
    12   (May 10, 2002).   Handwritten notes allegedly written by Mutual
    13   Marine's Loss Secretary prior to the execution of the Second
    14   Agreement regarding National Union's action against Mutual Marine,
    15   General Star, and UFI, indicate, moreover, that Mutual Marine was
    16   concerned about the availability to General Star of an argument
    17   that UFI never consented to the First Agreement.    According to the
    18   notes, "[there is] [n]o way [UFI] will be left without insurance
    19   so it[']s MMO [Mutual Marine] v. Gen[eral] Star.    If Gen[eral]
    20   Star get[s] [UFI] on its side, [its] position will be that [Mutual
    21   Marine] took upon itself to incur exposure past its limit -
    22   without properly advising [UFI]."     Paul Smith Handwritten Notes,
    23   May 2, 2005, Declaration of Natasha Van Der Griendt in Opp. to
    24   Mot. for Summ. J., Ex. M, Nat'l Union Fire Ins. Co. of La. v.
    25   Universal Fabricators, Inc., No. 05 Civ. 3418 (SAS) (S.D.N.Y. Apr.
    26   27, 2007) (Doc. No. 42).
    27
    1              Plainly, if UFI was never bound by the First Agreement,
    2    that agreement could establish no legal liability on the part of
    3    UFI for which General Star would be liable under the GenStar
    4    Policy.   In that case, there would also be no need for General
    5    Star to have disclaimed.   See Zappone, 
    55 N.Y.2d at 138-39
    , 447
    6    N.Y.S.2d at 911 ("[T]he Legislature in using the words 'denial of
    7    coverage' did not intend to require notice when there never was
    8    any insurance in effect, and intended by that phrase to cover only
    9    situations in which a policy of insurance that would otherwise
    10   cover the particular accident is claimed not to cover it because
    11   of an exclusion in the policy."); cf. Matter of Arbitration
    12   Between State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. (Merrill), 
    192 A.D.2d 824
    ,
    13   825, 
    596 N.Y.S.2d 554
    , 555 (3d Dep't 1993) ("It is true that an
    14   insurance company is not subject to the timely disclaimer
    15   provisions contained in [N.Y.] Insurance Law § 3420(d) where no
    16   coverage existed under the policy.").
    17             Because it granted summary judgment on the grounds of
    18   the Ernish adjudication alone, the district court appears not to
    19   have decided whether the First Agreement established the legal
    20   liability of UFI and thereby obligated General Star to reimburse
    21   Mutual Marine in this action in an amount determined by the
    22   outcome of the Ernish adjudication.   Inasmuch as the answer to
    23   this question depends on the factual question of whether UFI was
    28
    1    ever bound by the First Agreement, we think it is a question best
    2    left to the district court to answer in the first instance.11
    3    C.   Remaining Arguments
    4               We have considered General Star's other arguments on
    5    this issue and find them to be without merit.
    6               IV. Mutual Marine as a "Volunteer"
    7
    8               General Star argues, as it did before the district
    9    court, that it was entitled to summary judgment because Mutual
    10   Marine was acting as a "volunteer" when it agreed to indemnify and
    11   defend UFI, pursuant to the Second Agreement, and when it paid
    12   National Union the $700,000 at issue, pursuant to the Third
    13   Agreement.   If the payment was indeed voluntary, then General Star
    14   has no obligation to reimburse Mutual Marine for it.   See Merch.
    15   Mut. Ins. Group v. Travelers Ins. Co., 
    24 A.D.3d 1179
    , 1180, 806
    
    16 N.Y.S.2d 813
     (4th Dep't 2005) ("[W]hen an insurer who is not
    11
    In finding that General Star was not entitled to
    summary judgment on the ground that Mutual Marine was acting as a
    volunteer when it paid an amount in excess of its million-dollar
    policy limit, the district court referred in passing to UFI's
    status as "the party to the First Agreement who owed the
    remainder of the seventy-five percent apportionment of the
    judgment . . . ." Nat'l Union II, 
    2007 WL 2701990
     at *3, 
    2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 68100
     at *10. Because the district court had
    already found that UFI owed the remainder of the seventy-five
    percent because in the view of the district court the Ernish
    adjudication was "ultimately" an adjudication of UFI's liability,
    and because the district court did not analyze the contested
    issue of whether UFI was bound by the First Agreement, we do not
    understand the district court's passing reference to UFI as a
    "party" to the First Agreement, in a context outside the issue of
    determining UFI's liability, to constitute a finding of fact that
    UFI was bound by the First Agreement. We express no opinion as
    to whether UFI was bound by the First Agreement and, as indicated
    in the text, we leave that finding to the district court on
    remand.
    29
    1    acting under a mistake of material fact or law assumes the defense
    2    and indemnification of an insured when there is no obligation to
    3    do so, that insurer becomes 'a volunteer with no right to recover
    4    the monies it paid on behalf of the insured.'" (quoting Nat'l
    5    Union Fire Ins. Co. v. Ranger Ins. Co., 
    190 A.D.2d 395
    , 397, 599
    6   
    N.Y.S.2d 347
     (4th Dep't 1993)) (internal alterations omitted).
    7    However, when Mutual Marine agreed to indemnify UFI, it did not do
    8    so without compensation.   It received in return whatever rights
    9    UFI had against General Star.
    10              General Star relies on the familiar proposition that "an
    11   assignor 'could only assign a right that it legally possessed' and
    12   an assignee's rights are no greater than those of the assignor."
    13   Appellant's Br. 40 (quoting Case v. Filmtrucks, 
    118 A.D.2d 749
    ,
    14   752, 
    500 N.Y.S.2d 141
     (2d Dep't 1986); citing Int'l Ribbon Mills,
    15   Ltd. v. Arjan Ribbons, Inc., 
    36 N.Y.2d 121
    , 126, 
    365 N.Y.S.2d 808
    16   (1975)).   The district court found that UFI did have a claim
    17   against General Star to assign to Mutual Marine, and therefore
    18   Mutual Marine was not acting as a volunteer when it paid in excess
    19   of its policy limit.   However, the district court had already
    20   determined that the Ernish adjudication was ultimately an
    21   adjudication against UFI for which General Star was obligated to
    22   pay, a determination with which we disagree.
    23              Although the Ernish adjudication in itself did not
    24   establish an "ultimate net loss" with respect to UFI such that UFI
    25   had a claim against General Star that it could assign to Mutual
    26   Marine, it may have done so if the legal liability of UFI was
    30
    1    established under the First Agreement or otherwise.    Because we
    2    leave it for the district court on remand to determine in the
    3    first instance whether the legal liability of UFI was established
    4    in any way other than by the Ernish judgment alone, the district
    5    court may also resolve on remand the related factual question of
    6    whether Mutual Marine was acting as a volunteer when it paid an
    7    amount in excess of its policy limit.
    8               V.   Mutual Marine's Pleading
    9                    of a Claim Based on UFI's Rights
    10              General Star also appears to argue that Mutual Marine
    11   failed adequately to plead a cross-claim based on rights of UFI
    12   that it had obtained by subrogation or assignment.    But as
    13   discussed above, Mutual Marine's motion papers before the district
    14   court made explicit that it was asserting UFI's rights in this
    15   lawsuit.   In any event, Mutual Marine sought leave to re-plead its
    16   cross-claims, see Mem. of Law in Opp'n to Summ. J. at 21, Nat'l
    17   Union Fire Ins. Co. of La. v. UFI Fabricators, Inc., No. 05 Civ.
    18   3418 (SAS) (S.D.N.Y. Aug. 29, 2007) (Doc. No. 61), a request the
    19   district court did not reach because it granted summary judgment
    20   in favor of Mutual Marine.    On remand, the district court may
    21   consider that request in the first instance if the court deems it
    22   necessary or advisable to do so.
    23                                 CONCLUSION
    24              For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the district
    25   court's grant of summary judgment, and remand the cause with
    26   instructions for the court to decide, inter alia, whether UFI was
    31
    1   legally liable to Ernish such as to give rise to a liability on
    2   the part of General Star.
    32
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 07-4443

Filed Date: 12/28/2009

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/21/2014

Authorities (20)

Ernish v. City of New York , 768 N.Y.S.2d 325 ( 2003 )

Case v. Filmtrucks, Inc. , 500 N.Y.S.2d 141 ( 1986 )

National Union Fire Insurance v. Ranger Insurance , 599 N.Y.S.2d 347 ( 1993 )

Frank v. Meadowlakes Development Corp. , 6 N.Y.3d 687 ( 2006 )

Columbia Casualty Co. v. National Emergency Services, Inc. , 723 N.Y.S.2d 473 ( 2001 )

Pereira v. St. Joseph's Cemetery , 864 N.Y.S.2d 491 ( 2008 )

Reyes v. Diamond State Insurance , 827 N.Y.S.2d 263 ( 2006 )

Mann v. Gulf Insurance , 771 N.Y.S.2d 176 ( 2004 )

Merchants Mutual Insurance Group v. Travelers Insurance , 806 N.Y.S.2d 813 ( 2005 )

In re the Arbitration between State Farm Mutual Automobile ... , 596 N.Y.S.2d 554 ( 1993 )

Fung v. Japan Airlines Co. , 9 N.Y.3d 351 ( 2007 )

Correia v. Professional Data Management, Inc. , 693 N.Y.S.2d 596 ( 1999 )

Omega Engineering, Inc. v. Omega, S.A., Docket No. 04-5084-... , 432 F.3d 437 ( 2005 )

Bonnette v. Long Island College Hospital , 3 N.Y.3d 281 ( 2004 )

allianz-insurance-company-as-subrogee-of-mercedes-benz-credit-corporation , 416 F.3d 109 ( 2005 )

In re General Assignment for the Benefit of Creditors of ... , 365 N.Y.S.2d 808 ( 1975 )

Zappone v. Home Insurance , 55 N.Y.2d 131 ( 1982 )

Brown v. Two Exchange Plaza Partners , 556 N.Y.S.2d 991 ( 1990 )

Worcester Insurance v. Bettenhauser , 95 N.Y.2d 185 ( 2000 )

Roe v. City of Waterbury , 542 F.3d 31 ( 2008 )

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