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Insurance

The Tricky Business of Transferring Insurance Rights in Corporate Transactions

Charles Edwards

Charles P. Edwards

Partner
Insurance Recovery and Counseling Group Co-Chair, Litigation Department Vice-Chair

Insurance rights for transferred assets or liabilities frequently are handled in one of two ways in a corporate transaction: either they are not mentioned at all, or the parties purport to transfer them without insurer consent. This is largely because insurer consent would be impractical, if not impossible, to obtain—even if one assumes it would ever be given. In either case, the rights to insurance may or may not transfer under the law governing the transaction. 

Insurance policies typically contain clauses prohibiting assignment of the policy, or any rights under the policy, without the insurer’s consent. A majority of jurisdictions hold that the prohibition does not apply to “post-loss” transfers – i.e., assignments of rights to insurance for losses that have already occurred at the time of the assignment – or to transactions that are mergers or de facto mergers. But, a recent case out of South Carolina shows how tricky these rules can be. 

The case, PCS Nitrogen, Inc. v. Cont’l Cas. Co., involved a business (PCS Nitrogen) that was found liable for environmental contamination based on its predecessor’s assumption of that liability in a 1986 transaction. PCS Nitrogen, in turn, sued various insurers of its predecessor entities arguing that it acquired the insurance rights to this liability through the same series of transactions. Despite one court holding that it had acquired the liability, the court in the insurance case held that PCS Nitrogen did not acquire the insurance rights for that liability.

As is often the case, the transactions by which PCS Nitrogen acquired the liability, but ultimately not the insurance for that liability, were complicated and occurred over a number of years. They look something like this:

PCS Flow Chart 

The 1986 transaction between Old CNC and New CNC included an “Assignment of Insurance Benefits” that purported to transfer all of Old CNC’s “rights, proceeds and other benefits to and under all of [Old CNC’s] insurance policies … to the extent the same may be transferred and assigned.” The parties did not obtain insurer consent to the assignment, however, and the insurers denied coverage for PCS Nitrogen based on the consent requirements in the policies.

PCS Nitrogen argued that it acquired the insurance rights of Old CNC under the agreement and the majority rule that “post-loss” transfers of insurance rights are valid and enforceable notwithstanding an insurance policy prohibition on such transfers without the insurer’s consent. That argument should have carried the day; the loss had occurred before the 1986 transaction, it was transferred to New CNC as a liability in the 1986 transaction, and the insurance rights to that liability should have transferred in that transaction and in the subsequent mergers under the majority rule. That was certainly what the parties intended.

Unfortunately for PCS Nitrogen, the court didn’t view the “loss” as the environmental contamination. Instead, the court looked to another provision of the insurance policies stating that Old CNC was not entitled to coverage “until the amount of the insured’s obligation to pay shall have been finally determined by judgment against the insured after actual trial or by written agreement of the insured, the claimant and the company.” Relying on this language, the court held: “Because no actions were filed against Old CNC prior to the asset sale with New CNC, the loss insured against – as defined in the terms of these particular policies – had not yet occurred, and thus, no vested claims [to the insurance] existed.”

While purporting to follow the majority rule, the court’s holding in PCS Nitrogen represents a minority view of the majority rule. Most courts have held that the “loss” for an allowable “post-loss” transfer without insurer consent is the event triggering the insured’s liability – here, the environmental contamination. This rule makes sense for a number of reasons: 

  • If a liability is transferrable, the insurance available for that liability also should be transferrable
  • If the rule were otherwise, insurers would receive a windfall by avoiding liability for a loss they would otherwise be required to cover but for the transfer
  • The transfer did not increase the insurer’s obligation to cover the liability
  • A rule disallowing such transfers would stifle otherwise desirable corporate transactions for fear of losing insurance coverage for transferred assets and liabilities

Businesses wanting to transfer liabilities or assets and the corresponding insurance rights for those liabilities or assets should pay particular attention to the law governing their transaction. While insurance rights are often viewed as the tail and not the dog in any particular transaction, these rights can be valuable where the liabilities are substantial, or where the cost of defending against those liabilities is substantial.


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