In the Matter of the Liquidation of The Home Insurance Company , 166 N.H. 84 ( 2014 )


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    THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    ___________________________
    Merrimack
    No. 2012-623
    IN THE MATTER OF THE LIQUIDATION OF
    THE HOME INSURANCE COMPANY
    Argued: October 16, 2013
    Opinion Issued: February 13, 2014
    Orr & Reno, P.A., of Concord (Lisa Snow Wade on the brief and orally),
    and Crowell & Moring LLP, of New York, New York, and Washington, D.C.
    (Harry P. Cohen and Ellen M. Farrell on the brief), for the appellant.
    Michael A. Delaney, attorney general (J. Christopher Marshall, attorney,
    on the brief), and Rackemann, Sawyer & Brewster P.C., of Boston,
    Massachusetts (J. David Leslie and Eric A. Smith on the brief, and Mr. Leslie
    orally), for the respondent.
    LYNN, J. The appellant, Century Indemnity Company (CIC), appeals an
    order of the Superior Court (Smukler, J.) granting the motion of the
    respondent, Roger A. Sevigny, Commissioner of Insurance of the State of New
    Hampshire, as Liquidator (the Liquidator) of the Home Insurance Company
    (Home) for an award of statutory prejudgment interest on certain monies owed
    to Home by CIC. We affirm.
    I
    This is the fifth opinion we have issued in connection with the liquidation
    of Home. See In the Matter of Liquidation of Home Ins. Co., 
    154 N.H. 472
    (2006) (Home I); In the Matter of Liquidation of Home Ins. Co., 
    157 N.H. 543
    (2008) (Home II); In the Matter of Liquidation of Home Ins. Co., 
    158 N.H. 396
    (2009) (Home III); In the Matter of Liquidation of Home Ins. Co., 
    158 N.H. 677
    (2009) (Home IV). The following facts either are drawn from our prior opinions
    or are supported by the record in the instant appeal.
    Home is an insurance company, organized under the laws of New
    Hampshire, which was declared insolvent and placed in liquidation in 2003.
    Home 
    II, 157 N.H. at 544
    . The Liquidator is vested with title to and charged
    with administering and collecting Home’s assets for distribution to Home’s
    creditors. Home 
    I, 154 N.H. at 475
    . CIC is an insurance company organized
    under the laws of Pennsylvania. Home 
    II, 157 N.H. at 544
    -45. CIC and Home
    have a set of co-insurance and reinsurance relationships, which are fully
    described in our opinions in Home II and Home IV. See Home 
    IV, 158 N.H. at 679-80
    ; Home 
    II, 157 N.H. at 544
    -46. In one aspect of the parties’ relationship,
    CIC reinsures Home with respect to certain contracts between Home and other
    insurers. Home 
    II, 157 N.H. at 545
    . CIC and Home are also co-insurers of
    certain companies, including Pacific Energy Company (PECO), meaning that
    both CIC and Home are primary insurers of PECO. Home 
    IV, 158 N.H. at 680
    .
    A number of documents govern aspects of the relationship between CIC
    and Home, and we deal with three here. The first, the Restated and Revised
    Order Establishing Procedures Regarding Claims Filed with the Home
    Insurance Company in Liquidation (Claims Procedures Order) applies generally
    to claims made against Home pursuant to the Insurers Rehabilitation and
    Liquidation Act, RSA chapter 402-C (2006 & Supp. 2013); its purpose is to
    achieve uniformity and provide procedures for the presentation, processing,
    determination, and classification of claims against Home. It became effective
    on January 19, 2005, and is a restated and revised version of an order
    originally entered in the Home liquidation on December 19, 2003. It applies to
    all “Claimants” in the Home liquidation, defining that term as “any
    policyholder, reinsured, reinsurer, general creditor, third-party, or guaranty
    association that has filed a Proof of Claim.” The second document, the “Claims
    Protocol,” is a letter agreement between CIC and Home that governs the
    handling by CIC, as reinsurer of Home, of a certain subset of claims against
    Home (the AFIA Liabilities) by certain entities in the United Kingdom (the AFIA
    Cedents) in connection with the American Foreign Insurance Association. See
    Home 
    I, 154 N.H. at 474-75
    (explaining the reinsurance relationship between
    CIC and Home with respect to the AFIA Liabilities). Of particular relevance
    here, Section 3 of the Claims Protocol provides that CIC shall make certain
    remittances to Home with respect to the AFIA Liabilities net of setoff as
    2
    permitted by New Hampshire law, and will provide monthly reports as to those
    remittances and setoffs. The third document, the Joint Report, is another
    agreement between CIC and Home, and addresses contribution/subrogation
    claims filed by CIC in the Home liquidation under four particular Proofs of
    Claim. It sets forth the initial steps to be taken by the two parties after CIC
    asserts such a claim, including CIC’s asserted PECO claim.
    This appeal flows directly from the facts at issue in Home IV. In that
    appeal, we held that an asserted $8 million setoff claim by CIC, which had
    been waived and then reacquired by CIC in a pair of settlement agreements
    with PECO, was impermissible under New Hampshire law. 
    Id. at 680,
    684. We
    also explicitly declined, without prejudice, to decide the issue now before us:
    whether Home’s estate was entitled to prejudgment interest on the payments
    CIC wrongfully withheld based upon setoff. 
    Id. at 684.
    We denied CIC’s motion for reconsideration in the Home IV appeal on
    June 10, 2009. After remand, the Liquidator filed a motion in superior court
    on June 29, 2009, for interest on amounts withheld by CIC based upon
    improper setoff, to which CIC objected on July 14, 2009. On August 3, 2009,
    CIC removed the PECO setoff from its monthly statement to Home and paid the
    previously withheld $8 million to the Liquidator. The trial court entered an
    order granting the motion on August 3, 2012, finding that Home was entitled to
    prejudgment statutory interest under RSA 524:1-a (2007) accruing from
    October 12, 2007, the date of the Liquidator’s letter notifying CIC of his
    determination to disallow the PECO setoff. This appeal followed.
    II
    On appeal, CIC argues that the trial court erred in granting Home
    prejudgment interest pursuant to RSA 524:1-a, and that, in the alternative, it
    erred in determining the correct accrual date. We disagree with both
    arguments.
    This appeal requires us to interpret statutes as well as the contracts
    between the parties. “The interpretation of a statute is a question of law, which
    we review de novo.” Home 
    IV, 158 N.H. at 681
    . “We are the final arbiters of
    the legislature’s intent as expressed in the words of the statute considered as a
    whole.” 
    Id. “We first
    examine the language of the statute, and, where possible,
    ascribe the plain and ordinary meanings to the words used.” 
    Id. “Our goal
    is
    to apply statutes in light of the legislature’s intent in enacting them, and in
    light of the policy sought to be advanced by the entire statutory scheme.” 
    Id. “The interpretation
    of a contract is a question of law, which we review de
    novo.” Home 
    II, 157 N.H. at 546
    . “When interpreting a written agreement, we
    give the language used by the parties its reasonable meaning, considering the
    3
    circumstances and the context in which the agreement was negotiated, and
    reading the document as a whole.” 
    Id. “Absent ambiguity,
    the parties’ intent
    will be determined from the plain meaning of the language used in the
    contract.” 
    Id. CIC first
    asserts that the trial court erred in granting the Liquidator’s
    motion for interest. It makes two arguments as to why RSA 524:1-a should not
    apply: (1) this was not an “action on a debt or account stated” as required by
    the statute; and (2) the agreements between CIC and Home create a
    comprehensive protocol that does not allow for an award of interest on a
    disputed setoff claim.
    CIC first argues that the underlying proceeding was not an “action on a
    debt or account stated,” and thus RSA 524:1-a does not apply. In its order, the
    trial court found that “there is a distinction between an action for setoff and an
    action on a debt or account,” and CIC argues that the trial court erred when it
    found that “the nature of this case is not one for setoff,” but is “more akin to a
    debt claim or contract dispute.”
    Here, the trial court granted the Liquidator’s motion based upon RSA
    524:1-a. We have previously indicated that “legislative history suggests that
    RSA 524:1-a and :1-b were intended to provide the same protection to
    prevailing parties.” Nault v. N & L Dev. Co., 
    146 N.H. 35
    , 39 (2001). All
    statutes dealing with the same subject-matter are to be considered in
    interpreting any one of them. 
    Id. at 38.
    “Where reasonably possible, statutes
    should be construed as consistent with each other.” 
    Id. “When interpreting
    two statutes which deal with a similar subject matter, we will construe them so
    that they do not contradict each other, and so that they will lead to reasonable
    results and effectuate the legislative purpose of the statute.” 
    Id. “Ordinarily, upon
    a verdict for damages and upon motion of a party,
    interest is to be awarded as a part of all judgments.” State v. Peter Salvucci
    Inc., 
    111 N.H. 259
    , 262 (1971). RSA 524:1-a provides: “In the absence of a
    demand prior to the institution of suit, in any action on a debt or account
    stated or where liquidated damages are sought, interest shall commence to run
    from the time of the institution of suit.” RSA 524:1-a. RSA 524:1-b further
    provides:
    In all other civil proceedings at law or in equity in which a verdict
    is rendered or a finding is made for pecuniary damages to any
    party, whether for personal injuries, for wrongful death, for
    consequential damages, for damage to property, business or
    reputation, for any other type of loss for which damages are
    recognized, there shall be added . . . to the amount of damages
    4
    interest thereon from the date of the writ or the filing of the
    petition to the date of judgment . . . .
    RSA 524:1-b (2007).
    The purpose of the legislature in enacting RSA 524:1-a and :1-b in 1957
    was “to clarify and simplify the existing law and to make plain that in all cases
    where the trial court awarded money to the party entitled to be compensated,
    interest at the legal rate is to be added to the award.” N.H.S. Jour. 478-79
    (1963) (statement of Sen. Samuel Green). Indeed, the legislature amended RSA
    524:1-b in 1963 in response to our holding in Chagnon v. Union-Leader Co.,
    
    104 N.H. 472
    (1963), in which we held that certain kinds of libel actions did
    not entitle parties to prejudgment interest under the statute. See Hanchett v.
    Brezner Tanning Co., 
    107 N.H. 236
    , 241 (1966); N.H.S. Jour. 479-80 (1963).
    In doing so, it made clear its intent that prejudgment interest be awarded in
    such cases. See 
    Hanchett, 107 N.H. at 241
    ; N.H.S. Jour. 479-80 (1963).
    The functional difference, then, between sections 1-a and 1-b is that they
    apply to different kinds of judgments. Section 1-a applies to actions “on a debt
    or account stated or where liquidated damages are sought.” Section 1-b refers
    back to section 1-a, providing that it applies to “all other civil proceedings at
    law or in equity in which a verdict is rendered or a finding is made for
    pecuniary damages to any party,” whether for one of the listed categories of
    damages or for “any other type of loss for which damages are recognized.”
    Stated more simply, section 1-a applies to certain actions for payment of a
    fixed sum, whereas section 1-b applies to all other actions for damages.
    Additional clauses in each statute support this distinction. Section 1-a
    contains a clause making its provisions “inapplicable where the party to be
    charged pays the money into court.” Such a mechanism could only be sensibly
    applied where the amount at issue is a liquidated sum. Section 1-b permits
    the addition of interest even if such interest would bring the judgment amount
    beyond the maximum liability imposed by law, a concern arising mainly in
    actions in which the amount of damages to be awarded is uncertain at the
    start of the case.
    Thus, the import of the language “any action on a debt or account stated
    or where liquidated damages are sought” in section 1-a is that the statute
    applies in actions for a fixed sum. Returning to CIC’s argument, we find no
    meaningful distinction between an action on this disputed setoff and an “action
    on a debt or account stated” under RSA 524:1-a. In this case, the dispute was
    whether CIC could withhold payment of a fixed debt of $8 million under a
    claimed setoff. Here, the procedural posture of the case as that of a disputed
    claim in the Home liquidation, rather than a lawsuit to collect on a debt, is of
    no consequence in terms of the interest statute.
    5
    CIC cites two cases distinguishing between setoff and an action on a
    debt. See Koken v. Legion Ins. Co., 
    900 A.2d 418
    , 429 (Pa. Commw. Ct. 2006)
    (“Setoff is not an action, and an action on a debt is not the equivalent of
    setoff.”); Long Beach Trust Co. v. Warshaw, 
    190 N.E. 659
    , 660 (N.Y. 1934)
    (“[T]he right to sue on a debt and the right to use the debt as an offset are not
    equivalent.”). However, these cases made that distinction in a context that is
    inapposite to the question at issue here. Both Koken and Long Beach Trust
    involved the construction of statutes that would have precluded the bringing of
    an “action” — in both cases, a counterclaim — but would not have precluded
    the assertion of a setoff. See 
    Koken, 900 A.2d at 429
    (holding that allowing
    bank to assert quasi-contract claim as setoff would violate state’s insurance
    insolvency law); Long Beach 
    Trust, 190 N.E. at 660
    (holding that defendant
    could assert setoff where failure to file a claim pursuant to Banking Law
    statute barred counterclaim). For the purposes of our interest statute, we find
    no significance in this distinction, and hold that RSA 524:1-a applies in this
    case.
    We turn next to CIC’s second argument, that the agreements between the
    parties were “comprehensive” and did not provide for interest on disputed
    setoffs. The parties agree that their agreements are silent as to the issue of
    interest. However, the parties disagree on how to interpret that silence. CIC
    asserts that the agreements form a “comprehensive” protocol between the
    parties and that the absence of language addressing interest demonstrates the
    parties’ intent that interest not be awarded on a disallowed setoff. Thus,
    according to CIC, the trial court impermissibly rewrote the parties’ agreements
    by imposing prejudgment interest under RSA 524:1-a. We disagree.
    “The laws which subsist at the time and place of the making of a
    contract, and where it is to be performed, enter into and form a part of it, as if
    they were expressly referred to or incorporated in its terms.” Stankiewicz v.
    City of Manchester, 
    156 N.H. 587
    , 590 (2007) (quotation omitted). To be sure,
    where the parties’ contract includes a provision for interest, we have applied it,
    our interest statutes notwithstanding. See Tulley v. Sheldon, 
    159 N.H. 269
    ,
    274 (2009) (holding that plaintiffs were entitled to contractual 1.5%
    prejudgment interest rate rather than statutory rate); Lassonde v. Stanton, 
    157 N.H. 582
    , 594 (2008) (holding that plaintiffs were entitled to at least 15%
    statutory interest where contract provided for 15-18% finance charge per
    annum on unpaid balances); Mast Rd. Grain & Bldg. Mat’s Co. v. Piet, 
    126 N.H. 194
    , 197 (1985) (interpreting contractual clause providing for debtor to
    pay “all accrued finance charges to date” as providing that 24% finance charge
    applied only up to date of demand, after which statutory interest rate applied
    under RSA 524:1-a).
    But these cases do not support the proposition that where an agreement
    is silent as to interest, no interest accrues. To the contrary, that is exactly the
    6
    circumstance where the default rule established by RSA 524:1-a applies most
    clearly. John A. Cookson Co. v. N.H. Ball Bearings, 
    147 N.H. 352
    , 361-62
    (2001) (holding that arbitrator could include interest in award where parties’
    arbitration agreement was silent on issue of interest); Albee v. Wolfeboro
    Railroad Co., 
    126 N.H. 176
    , 181 (1985) (holding that statutory interest rate
    applied on amount owed after terms of interest called for by note had expired).
    The very purpose of adding interest to an award or judgment, including under
    RSA 524:1-a and :1-b, is to recognize the time value of money by compensating
    a creditor for the delay between when money is due and when it is paid. See
    John A. Cookson Co., 147 N.H at 362 (stating that “money has a ‘use value’”
    and that interest as a component of damages compensates the prevailing party
    for lost use of its money). Thus, unless an agreement specifically provides to
    the contrary, RSA 524:1-a applies.
    Here, the parties entered into two agreements, the Joint Report and the
    Claims Protocol, and abided by a third applicable document, the Claims
    Procedure Order. None of these documents provides for a different interest rate
    on disputed amounts than the statutory rate. Further, nothing in the
    agreements supports CIC’s claim that the agreements, as a whole, are
    “comprehensive” in nature. To the contrary, the agreements between CIC and
    Home demonstrate the parties’ intent to reserve their rights as to matters not
    addressed. For example, Paragraph 3.3 of the Claims Protocol contains two
    reservations of rights: the first in which the Liquidator “fully reserve[d] all
    rights in relation to any offset asserted”; and the second in which CIC reserved
    its rights “in respect of any payments made, including as to amount and as to
    the obligation of CIC to make the same.” Paragraph 7 of the Joint Report
    further provides that “CIC and the Liquidator reserve all rights as against each
    other.” In addition, the Joint Report provides that with respect to any fully or
    partially disallowed claim, the parties will jointly seek an order from the Referee
    that the matter be deemed a disputed claim proceeding and “treated as such
    under the RSA and the Claims Procedures Order” (emphasis added), showing a
    clear intent that New Hampshire statutory law be applied where the
    agreements are silent.
    To interpret the parties’ silence on the issue of interest as evincing an
    intent that there be none would require us to write into the contract a term
    that the parties did not include. Had the parties intended that the interest
    statute not apply, they could have included a clause in one of the agreements
    stating as much. By the plain meaning of the language used in the
    agreements, then, CIC’s argument that they are “comprehensive” fails.
    III
    In its alternative argument, CIC claims that the trial court erred in ruling
    that prejudgment interest should accrue from the date of the Liquidator’s
    7
    October 12, 2007 letter. CIC claims that: (1) the October 12, 2007 letter did
    not constitute a “demand” under RSA 524:1-a; and (2) under the Claims
    Protocol, CIC was not obligated to pay Home until the resolution of the
    proceedings related to the PECO setoff. We again disagree.
    Pursuant to Paragraph 3.3 of the Claims Protocol, CIC first asserted the
    PECO setoff in its July 2007 statement, which was sent to the Liquidator on
    August 29, 2007. CIC withheld $8 million of payments in its remittances
    under its July, August, and September 2007 statements based upon the PECO
    setoff. On October 12, 2007, pursuant to the Joint Report, the Liquidator
    advised CIC of his determination to disallow CIC’s asserted PECO setoff and
    that he was prepared to jointly request that the Referee deem the asserted
    PECO setoff a disputed claim proceeding. The parties submitted this request to
    the Referee on October 18, 2007.
    CIC first argues that the Liquidator’s October 12, 2007 letter could not
    be a demand pursuant to RSA 524:1-a because the letter makes no request for
    interest. “It is undisputed that under RSA 524:1-a, interest shall accrue from
    the earlier of either the demand for payment or the institution of suit.” Lago &
    Sons Dairy, Inc. v. H.P. Hood, Inc., 
    892 F. Supp. 325
    , 346-47 (D.N.H. 1995).
    Under the statute, the “demand” need be for payment, not for interest as CIC
    suggests. See J & M Lumber and Const. Co. v. Smyjunas, 
    161 N.H. 714
    , 729
    (2011) (analyzing whether interest ran from date plaintiff initiated lawsuit or
    date of alleged “demand for payment”); Lipski v. Polonsky, 
    122 N.H. 528
    , 530
    (1982) (holding that interest accrued from date of demand of repayment on
    promissory note).
    Turning to the Liquidator’s October 12, 2007 letter, the unredacted
    portions that are in the record do not explicitly demand payment. They do
    inform CIC that the Liquidator was disallowing the PECO claim and was
    prepared to jointly seek an order from the Referee deeming the claimed setoff a
    disputed claim proceeding. However, the import of disallowing the asserted
    PECO claim was that the Liquidator would seek to recover the monies so
    withheld, the equivalent of a demand for payment. We thus hold that the
    October 12, 2007 letter constitutes a “demand” under RSA 524:1-a, and that
    the trial court correctly determined that interest should accrue from this date.
    CIC argues further that, under Paragraph 3.3 of the Claims Protocol, it
    was not obligated to pay Home until the resolution of the proceedings related to
    the PECO setoff. In full, Paragraph 3.3 states:
    Within thirty (30) business days after the end of each month, CIC
    shall (a) provide [Home] with a statement showing (i) all amounts
    payable by CIC to [Home] pursuant to [certain paragraphs of the
    Claims Protocol] for the preceding month; (ii) the amount of funds
    8
    paid by CIC with respect to such payables; and (iii) any amounts
    claimed in offset in accordance with paragraph 3.4 against
    amounts due to [Home], together with sufficient detail and an
    explanation as to the basis for the asserted offset; and (b) subject
    to the proviso to this paragraph, effect a wire transfer to such
    account as may, from time to time, be designated by the Liquidator
    for the balance. CIC agrees and acknowledges that the Liquidator
    fully reserves all rights in relation to any offset asserted. CIC
    reserves (and the Liquidator acknowledges that CIC so reserves) all
    rights in respect of any payments made, including as to amount
    and as to the obligation of CIC to make the same; PROVIDED
    THAT, where the Claimant has submitted a request for Review or
    an Objection in respect of a Claim disputing the quantum of the
    Claim or elements of it, CIC shall make remittance in respect of
    any portions of the Claim allowed in full or agreed between CIC
    and the Claimant. CIC shall not be obliged to make remittance in
    respect of the disputed amount unless and until the relevant
    proceedings settle the disputed amount or it is negotiated and
    agreed between the claimant and CIC with the concurrence of the
    Liquidator, in which event remittance will be made in such amount
    within thirty (30) business days after the month next following
    such settlement or agreement.
    CIC relies on the second sentence of the proviso to Section 3.3, claiming
    that it has no obligation to remit payment on a disputed claim “unless and
    until the relevant proceedings settle the disputed amount or it is negotiated
    and agreed between the claimant and CIC with the concurrence of the
    Liquidator.” Thus, CIC claims its obligation to remit payment of the monies
    withheld pursuant to the disputed PECO setoff was not triggered until we
    denied CIC’s motion for reconsideration on June 10, 2009, and payment was
    therefore not due until July 30, 2009, “thirty . . . business days after the
    month next following such settlement or agreement.” As a result, CIC contends
    that interest could not begin to accrue until then, four days before it paid the
    $8 million to Home on August 3, 2009.
    The Liquidator counters, and we agree, that CIC fails to read the Claims
    Protocol in context. “When interpreting a written agreement, we give the
    language used by the parties its reasonable meaning, considering the
    circumstances and the context in which the agreement was negotiated, and
    reading the document as a whole.” Home 
    II, 157 N.H. at 546
    (emphasis added)
    (quotation omitted). CIC’s strained construction of a single sentence ignores
    other language in Section 3.3 as well as the other sections of the Claims
    Protocol that make it clear that the proviso does not apply in this case.
    9
    The Claims Protocol defines the terms “Claimant” and “Claim,” and
    incorporates the definitions of “Request for Review” and “Objection” provided in
    the Claims Procedures Order by reference, as these terms are used in the first
    sentence of the proviso to Section 3.3. “Claim” is defined as “an inward
    reinsurance claim against [Home] in respect of an AFIA Liability presented in” a
    proof of claim filed in the Home liquidation, where “AFIA Liability” is defined in
    a separate agreement. A “Claimant” is “a person submitting a Claim in the
    [Home] liquidation.” “Request for Review” is defined as a request by a Claimant
    “that the Liquidator reconsider a Notice of Determination.” And finally, the
    Claims Procedures Order provides that an “Objection” to a Notice of
    Determination may be filed with the Superior Court for Merrimack County.
    Applying these definitions in Section 3.3, we conclude that this section defines
    CIC’s payment obligations when the Liquidator challenges an inward insurance
    claim filed by an AFIA Cedent, not a claim by CIC itself. That is clearly not the
    situation at hand, in which the claim at issue was filed by CIC under one of its
    own proofs of claim as a co-insurer with Home, rather than by an AFIA Cedent
    as to an AFIA Liability under which CIC is a reinsurer of Home. Because we
    reject CIC’s reading of the proviso to Section 3.3, its argument fails.
    In sum, we affirm the trial court judgment as to both its granting of the
    Liquidator’s motion and the date from which prejudgment interest accrued.
    Because of our holding, we need not reach the Liquidator’s unjust enrichment
    claim.
    Affirmed.
    DALIANIS, C.J., and HICKS, J., concurred.
    10