13‐3619‐cv; 13‐3782‐cv
In re September 11 Litigation
1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
3
4 August Term 2014
5
6 (Argued: January 14, 2015 Decided: September 17, 2015)
7
8 Nos. 13‐3619‐cv, 13‐3782‐cv
9
10 ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
11
12 IN RE SEPTEMBER 11 LITIGATION:
13
14 WORLD TRADE CENTER PROPERTIES LLC, 1 WORLD TRADE CENTER L.L.C., 3 WORLD
15 TRADE CENTER L.L.C., 7 WORLD TRADE CENTER COMPANY, L.P.
16
17 Plaintiffs‐Appellants,
18
19 WORLD TRADE FARMERS MARKET, INC., ADEM ARICI, LAUREN PETERS, OMER IPEK,
20 MAYORE ESTATES, L.L.C., 80 LAFAYETTE ASSOCIATES, L.L.C., SERKO & SIMON, LLP,
21 CERTAIN UNDERWRITERS AT LLOYD’S COMPRISING SYNDICATES NO.
22 33,1003,2003,1208,1243,0376, GREAT LAKES REINSURANCE (UK) PLC, BARCLEY
23 DWYER CO., INC., KAROON CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, INC., N.S. WINDOWS, LLC,
24 TOWER COMPUTER SERVICES, INC., WALL STREET REALTY CAPITAL, INC., MVN
25 ASSOCIATES, INC., MARSHA VAN NAME, FLOYD VAN NAME, DANIEL D’AQUILA,
26 KOUDIS INTERNATIONAL, INC., AMERICAN ALTERNATIVE INSURANCE
27 CORPORATION, THE PRINCETON EXCESS & SURPLUS LINES INSURANCE COMPANY,
28 CERTAIN UNDERWRITERS AT LLOYD’S LONDON AS MEMBERS OF SYNDICATES
29 NUMBERED 1212, 1241, 79, 506, AND 2791, QBE INTERNATIONAL INSURANCE LTD.,
30 INDUSTRIAL RISK INSURERS, ALLIANZ GLOBAL RISKS US INSURANCE COMPANY,
31 ALLIANZ INSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA, ALLIANZ SUISSE VERSICHERUNGS‐
32 GESELLSCHAFT, ALLIANZ VERSICHERUNGS‐AKTIENGESELLSCHAFT, ASSURANCES
33 GENERALES DE FRANCE, ASSURANCES GENERALES DE FRANCI IART, FIREMAN’S
34 FUND INSURANCE COMPANY, WOBURN INSURANCE, LTD., GREATER NEW YORK
1
1 MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, INSURANCE COMPANY OF GREATER NEW YORK,
2 MUNICH‐AMERICAN RISK PARTNERS, UNDERWRITERS AT LLOYD’S, SUBSCRIBING TO
3 SYNDICATE NO. 1225, AS SUBROGEES OF SILVERSTEIN PROPERTIES, INC., AMERICAN
4 RE‐INSURANCE COMPANY, AXA ART INSURANCE CORPORATION, AXA CESSIONS,
5 AXA CORPORATE SOLUTIONS ASSURANCE, AXA CORPORATE SOLUTIONS SERVICES
6 UK, LTD., AXA CORPORATE SOLUTIONS ASSURANCE CANADIAN BRANCH, AXA RE,
7 AXA RE MADEIRA BRANCH, AXA RE ASIA PACIFIC PTE. LTD., AXA REINSURANCE
8 UK, PLC, AXA VERISCHERUNG AG, AXA CORPORATE SOLUTIONS, COMPAGNIE
9 GENERALE DE REASSURANCE DE MONTE CARLO, SPS REASSURANCE, AEGIS
10 INSURANCE SERVICES, INC., LIBERTY INSURANCE UNDERWRITERS, INC., NATIONAL
11 UNION INSURANCE COMPANY OF PITTSBURGH, NUCLEAR ELECTRIC INSURANCE
12 LIMITED, CERTAIN UNDERWRITERS AT LLOYDS, (SYNDICATES 1225 AND 1511), AS
13 SUBROGOR OF CONSOLIDATED EDISON COMPANY OF NEW YORK, INC., MUENCHENER
14 RUECKVERSICHERUNGS‐GESELLSCHAFT, MUNICH REINSURANCE COMPANY UK
15 GENERAL BRANCH, AXA CORPORATE SOLUTIONS ASSURANCE UK BRANCH, AXA
16 CORPORATE SOLUTIONS REINSURANCE COMPANY, AXA GLOBAL RISKS UK, LTD.,
17 AXA RE CANADIAN BRANCH, CO2E.COM, LLC, CANTOR FITZGERALD & CO.,
18 CANTOR FITZGERALD ASSOCIATES, L.P., CANTOR FITZGERALD BROKERAGE, L.P.,
19 CANTOR FITZGERALD EUROPE, CANTOR FITZGERALD INTERNATIONAL, CANTOR
20 FITZGERALD PARTNERS, CANTOR FITZGERALD SECURITIES, CANTOR FITZGERALD
21 L.P., CANTOR INDEX LIMITED, ESPEED, INC., TRADESPARK, L.P., ESPEED
22 GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, INC., ESPEED SECURITIES, INC., CONSOLIDATED EDISON
23 COMPANY OF NEW YORK, INC., 2 WORLD TRADE CENTER LLC, 4 WORLD TRADE
24 CENTER LLC, MARY BAVIS, MICHAEL KEATING, GARY MICHAEL LOW,
25
26 Plaintiffs,
27
28 ‐v.‐
29
30 AMERICAN AIRLINES, INC., AMR CORPORATION, UNITED AIRLINES, INC., UAL
31 CORPORATION, MASSACHUSETTS PORT AUTHORITY, CONTINENTAL AIRLINES, INC.,
32 COLGAN AIR, INC., US AIRWAYS GROUP, INC., HUNTLEIGH USA CORPORATION,
33 GLOBE AVIATION SERVICES CORPORATION, BURNS INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
34 SERVICES CORPORATION, BURNS INTERNATIONAL SERVICES CORPORATION,
35 PINKERTON’S INC., SECURITAS A.B., US AIRWAYS, INC.,
36
2
1 Defendants‐Appellees,
2
3 EMERY ROTH & PARTNERS L.L.C., EMERY ROTH & SONS, P.C., GLOBE AIRPORT
4 SECURITY SERVICES, INC., HUNTLEIGH USA CORPORATION, LESLIE E. ROBERTSON
5 ASSOCIATES, R.L.L.P., MINORU YAMASAKI ASSOCIATES, INC., SKILLING WARD
6 MAGNUSSON BARKSHIRE INC., TISHMAN REALTY & CONSTRUCTION COMPANY,
7 COLGAN AIRWAYS CORPORATION, SILVERSTEIN PROPERTIES, INC., 7 WORLD TRADE
8 COMPANY, L.P., CITIGROUP INC., CITIGROUP GLOBAL MARKETS HOLDINGS INC.,
9 SALOMON SMITH BARNEY HOLDING, INC., SALOMON INC., SWANKE HAYDEN
10 CONNELL ARCHITECTS, AMBASSADOR CONSTRUCTION CO., INC., COSENTINI
11 ASSOCIATES INC., CANTOR SEINUK GROUP, P.C., H.O. PENN MACHINERY CO., INC.,
12 KABACK ENTERPRISES, PREFERRED UTILITIES MANUFACTURING CORP., ELECTRIC
13 POWER SYSTEMS, INC., AMERICAN POWER TECHNOLOGIES, INC., G.C. ENGINEERING
14 & ASSOCIATES, P.C., TISHMAN CONSTRUCTION CORPORATION, FIRECOM INC.,
15 GRACE CONSTRUCTION PRODUCTS, FIBERLOCK TECHNOLOGIES, INC., ROSEWACH
16 TANK CO., INC., ALL FIRE SYSTEMS, INC., SYSKA HENNESSY GROUP, INC., SKIDMORE
17 OWINGS AND MERRILL, L.L.P., FLACK & KURTZ, INC., ABCO PEERLESS SPRINKLER
18 CORPORATION, AMEC, PLC, OFFICE OF IRWIN G. CANTOR, P.C., SECURITY SERVICES,
19 INC., CENTRIFUGAL ASSOCIATES, INC., RIGGS BANK, N.A., A WHOLY OWNED
20 SUBSIDIARY OF RIGGS NATIONAL CORPORATION, RIGGS NATIONAL CORPORATION,
21 IRWIN G. CANTOR, P.C., JOHNSON CONTROLS WORLD SERVICES, INC., TISHMAN
22 CONSTRUCTION CORPORATION OF NEW YORK, TISHMAN INTERIORS CORPORATION,
23 DELTA AIRLINES, INC., MIDWAY AIRLINES CORPORATION, ICTS INTERNATIONAL,
24 N.V., THE BOEING COMPANY,
25
26 Defendants.
27
28 ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
29
30 Before: CABRANES, STRAUB, and LIVINGSTON, Circuit Judges.
31
32 Plaintiffs‐Appellants (“Plaintiffs”), the lessees of 1, 2, 4, 5, and 7 World
33 Trade Center, appeal from a series of orders of the United States District Court
34 for the Southern District of New York (Hellerstein, J.), which culminated in the
35 district court dismissing their case against Defendants‐Appellees (“Defendants”)
36 for negligently maintaining airport security checkpoints on the morning of
3
1 September 11, 2001. In brief, the district court determined that Plaintiffs’
2 insurance proceeds exceeded their maximum possible tort recovery and that,
3 because New York Civil Practice Law and Rules (“CPLR”) § 4545 requires
4 offsetting collateral recoveries against corresponding tort damages, Plaintiffs
5 could not receive a damages award even if they succeeded in proving liability.
6 The district court also held that United Airlines, Inc. and United Continental
7 Holdings, Inc. (collectively, “United”), owed no duty of care to the owner of 7
8 World Trade Center. We conclude that the district court correctly decided that
9 Plaintiffs are entitled only to damages for the diminution in value of their
10 leasehold interests, rather than the cost of rebuilding the leased buildings, and
11 that they may not recover additional damages for retenanting the buildings,
12 paying mortgage carrying costs, hiring attorneys for litigation against their
13 insurers, insurance‐claim preparation expenses, or lost tenant improvements. In
14 addition, we agree with the district court that, pursuant to CPLR § 4545,
15 Plaintiffs’ insurance recoveries correspond to, and therefore must offset,
16 damages for the diminution in value of their leasehold interests. Finally, we also
17 agree that United owed no duty of care to the owner of 7 World Trade Center.
18 Nonetheless, the district court erred in two respects. First, the court used an
19 incorrect valuation methodology when calculating the value by which Plaintiffs’
20 leasehold interests declined. Second, it wrongly awarded prejudgment interest
21 at the federal funds rate, rather than New York’s statutory prejudgment interest
22 rate. On that issue, we also conclude that the district court should calculate
23 interest on the final tort award. Accordingly, we AFFIRM the district court’s
24 order dismissing the claims brought by 7 World Trade Company against United.
25 We also AFFIRM the district court’s judgment insofar as it properly applied the
26 “lesser of two principle” to limit Plaintiffs’ damages, properly denied Plaintiffs’
27 claims to consequential damages, and properly applied CPLR § 4545, but we
28 VACATE the judgment in part and REMAND with instructions to assess the lost
29 market value of Plaintiffs’ leasehold interest and, if necessary, to recalculate the
30 award of prejudgment interest in a manner consistent with this opinion.
31
32 Judge STRAUB concurs in part and dissents in part in a separate opinion.
33
34 FOR PLAINTIFFS‐APPELLANTS: SETH P. WAXMAN, Randolph D. Moss,
35 Joshua M. Salzman, Wilmer Cutler
4
1 Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP, Washington,
2 D.C.
3
4 Richard A. Williamson, Jason T. Cohen,
5 Megan P. Davis, Cathi Baglin, Flemming
6 Zulack Williamson Zauderer LLP, New
7 York, N.Y.
8
9 Michael Gottesman, Carleen M. Zubrzycki,
10 Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr
11 LLP, New York, N.Y.
12
13 FOR DEFENDANTS‐APPELLEES: ROGER E. PODESTA, Maura K. Monaghan,
14 Erica S. Weisgerber, Johanna N.
15 Skrzypczyk, Debevoise & Plimpton LLP,
16 New York, N.Y.
17
18 Desmond T. Barry Jr., Condon & Forsyth
19 LLP, New York, N.Y.
20
21 DEBRA ANN LIVINGSTON, Circuit Judge:
22 This case concerns the tremendous property damage caused by the
23 terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. Just months before the attacks, in April
24 2001, World Trade Center Properties LLC and affiliated companies (“WTCP”)1
25 obtained 99‐year leases for 1, 2, 4, and 5 World Trade Center (the “Main Site
26 Buildings”) from the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey (“Port
The affiliated companies that are also Appellants in this case are 1 World Trade Center
1
L.L.C. and 3 World Trade Center L.L.C.
5
1 Authority”). A separate corporation, 7 World Trade Company, L.P. (“7WTCo.”),
2 held a long‐term lease for 7 World Trade Center, which stood adjacent to the
3 Main Site Buildings. The terrorist attacks destroyed all five of the buildings
4 (collectively, the “Leased Buildings”), leaving WTCP and 7WTCo. (“Plaintiffs”)
5 saddled with significant losses. In March 2005, Plaintiffs brought suit in the
6 United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Hellerstein,
7 J.) against a group of airlines and security contractors (“Defendants”),2 seeking to
8 recover for these losses. They alleged that, because the Defendants were
9 negligent in overseeing airport security systems, the terrorists were able to hijack
10 American Airlines Flight 11 and United Airlines Flight 175 and to fly those
11 planes into the Twin Towers.
12 After a series of summary judgment decisions and a limited bench trial,
13 Judge Hellerstein, who has presided over these matters with exemplary care and
14 thoughtfulness, entered judgment for Defendants. The court decided that, if
15 Plaintiffs could prove liability, they would be entitled to compensation for the
2 Defendants are American Airlines, Inc.; AMR Corporation; United Airlines, Inc.; UAL
Corporation; Massachusetts Port Authority; Continental Airlines, Inc.; Colgan Air, Inc.;
US Airways Group, Inc.; Huntleigh USA Corporation; Globe Aviation Services
Corporation; Burns International Security Services Corporation; Burn International
Services Corporation; Pinkerton’s Inc.; Securitas A.B.; and US Airways, Inc.
6
1 amount of value that their leasehold interests lost due to the attacks, but not for
2 reconstruction costs or other claimed consequential damages related to the cost
3 of retenanting the Leased Buildings, replacing tenant property, hiring attorneys,
4 and paying mortgage carrying costs. The court then found that the value of
5 WTCP’s leasehold interests declined by, at most, $2.805 billion, while the value of
6 7WTCo’s interests fell by $737 million. Both Plaintiffs, however, received
7 insurance payments for their property damage that exceeded those figures and
8 compensated Plaintiffs for the same economic loss as the potential tort award.
9 Because New York Civil Practice Law and Rules § 4545 (“CPLR”) requires courts
10 to reduce damage awards to reflect corresponding insurance payments, the
11 district court concluded that, even if Plaintiffs could prove liability, they could
12 not receive a damages award, and that judgment for Defendants was therefore
13 appropriate. Separately, the district court dismissed 7WTCo.’s claims against
14 United Airlines, Inc. and its parent company, United Continental Holdings, Inc.
15 (collectively, “United”), on the grounds that the airline had no connection to
16 American Airlines Flight 11, which destroyed 7 World Trade Center.
17 On appeal, we agree with the district court’s conclusion that Plaintiffs are
18 entitled to compensation only for the amount of value that their leasehold
7
1 interests lost due to the terrorist attacks, that they cannot recover their claimed
2 consequential damages, and that, pursuant to CPLR § 4545, their insurance
3 recoveries correspond to, and offset, their potential tort award. We also agree
4 that United had no duty to supervise the security checkpoints or detect the
5 hijackers who boarded American Airlines Flight 11.
6 However, the district court erred in two respects. First, the court used an
7 incorrect methodology when calculating the value by which Plaintiffs’ leasehold
8 interests declined. Second, it wrongly decided that prejudgment interest accrues
9 at the federal funds rate on the diminution in value of Plaintiffs’ leasehold
10 estates. Instead, the court should have calculated prejudgment interest using
11 New York’s statutory prejudgment interest rate, and assessed that interest based
12 on the final damages award. We therefore vacate in part the district court’s entry
13 of judgment for Defendants — insofar as it miscalculated the diminution in the
14 value of Plaintiffs’ leasehold interest and improperly assessed the prejudgment
15 interest by using the federal funds rate — and remand with instructions as to
16 further proceedings. On remand, the district court should reexamine the
17 diminution in value of Plaintiffs’ leasehold interests in accordance with the
18 guidance provided in this opinion and, if appropriate, calculate interest based on
8
1 any resulting award (after accounting for the offset of Plaintiffs’ insurance
2 recoveries) using New York’s statutory prejudgment interest rate.
3
4 BACKGROUND
5 A. Factual Background
6 1. The World Trade Center Leases
7 In 1962, New York and New Jersey enacted legislation authorizing the Port
8 Authority3 to construct an “interurban railway” between the two States and a
9 “facility of commerce” to accommodate “the exchange and buying, selling and
10 transportation of commodities and other property in world trade and
11 commerce.” N.Y. Unconsol. Law § 6601(6)‐(8); see N.J. Stat. § 32:1‐35.50‐32:1‐
12 35.68. From that legislative command sprung the World Trade Center complex,
13 which upon completion in 1973 “consisted of a 16‐acre public site with a street
3 The Port Authority is a joint venture between the States of New York and New Jersey
that was established by an interstate compact in 1921 and authorized by Congress
under Article I, Section 10 of the United States Constitution. Jointly controlled by the
governors of New York and New Jersey, the Port Authority manages significant
portions of the regional transportation infrastructure within the two States, including
bridges, tunnels, airports, and seaports. See Governance, PORT AUTHORITY OF NEW YORK
AND NEW JERSEY, http://www.panynj.gov/corporate‐information/governance.html (last
visited July 15, 2015); see also GROVER STARLING, MANAGING THE PUBLIC SECTOR 123
(2010); CAROLINE N. BROUN, MICHAEL L. BUENGER, MICHAEL H. MCCABE, RICHARD L.
MASTERS, THE EVOLVING USE AND THE CHANGING ROLE OF INTERSTATE COMPACTS: A
PRACTITIONERʹS GUIDE 368 (2006).
9
1 level plaza, a street level and underground shopping mall, a transportation
2 terminal for the New York‐New Jersey PATH trains, a subway hub offering
3 direct access to several [New York City] subway lines, and six [office] buildings,
4 including the ‘Twin Towers’ and the first hotel to open in downtown Manhattan
5 since 1836.” J.A. 548. Five of those buildings — 1, 2, 4, 5, and 7 World Trade
6 Center — provided approximately 12 million square feet of office space. In all,
7 the complex reshaped the City’s skyline and the economy of lower Manhattan.
8 After construction, the Port Authority acted as a landlord for the office
9 space in 1, 2, 4, and 5 World Trade Center, the Main Site Buildings. During that
10 time, it studied the possibility of transferring its role as landlord to a private
11 entity and investigated “comparisons of the World Trade Center with similar
12 private sector operations.” J.A. 377. On January 25, 1996, the Port Authority
13 went further, hiring J.P. Morgan & Co., Cushman & Wakefield, and Douglas
14 Elliman Realty Investors to test the “market reaction” to “three specific options
15 for maximizing the value of the World Trade Center to the Port Authority and to
16 the people of the region”: selling the property, leasing the property, or
17 relinquishing operational control of the property through an asset management
10
1 agreement. J.A. 377. Those tests convinced the Port Authority to lease portions
2 of the Main Site Buildings to private operators.
3 The Port Authority began the leasing process by sending a worldwide
4 “request for interest” and then asking 30 of the responding companies for
5 preliminary proposals. The requests generated eight submissions, which the
6 Port Authority narrowed to a “short‐list” of four finalists: Boston Properties, Inc.;
7 Brookfield Financial Properties; Silverstein Properties, Inc. (later, “WTCP”) and
8 Westfield America, Inc.; and Vornado Realty Trust. J.A. 377. These entities were
9 allowed to perform due diligence before submitting bids.
10 On February 22, 2001, the Port Authority entered into an exclusive
11 negotiating period with Vornado Realty Trust for a 99‐year lease on all of the
12 Main Site Buildings. “The value to the Port Authority of Vornado Realty Trust’s
13 proposed net lease transaction, on a present value basis,” was estimated by the
14 Port Authority to be approximately $3.253 billion. J.A. 377. When the
15 negotiations fell apart, the Port Authority turned to the second‐highest bidder,
16 WTCP. The parties signed an “Agreement to Enter Lease” on April 26, 2001 and,
17 on July 16, 2001, WTCP signed 99‐year leases for the Main Site Buildings.
11
1 Under the terms of those leases, WTCP obtained the right to manage and
2 sublease approximately ten million square feet of office space, much of which
3 was already occupied by tenants.4 In exchange, it agreed to make an upfront
4 payment of $491.3 million and to pay three forms of rent: basic rent, which
5 increases gradually over the 99‐year lease term; additional, fixed rent for the first
6 30 years of the lease; and a percentage of WTCP’s gross revenue from operating
7 the premises. It also undertook non‐rent obligations, the most significant of
8 which was the promise that, in the event that the Main Site Buildings were
9 destroyed or damaged, WTCP would “rebuild, restore, repair and replace [them]
10 . . . to the extent feasible, prudent and commercially reasonable.” J.A. 461. In
11 addition, it promised to pay for maintenance, operational costs, and tax
12 equivalents, and to purchase sizable insurance policies. WTCP announced the
13 acquisition in a brochure to investors, identifying the present value of the overall
14 “purchase price” to be $2.844 billion.5 J.A. 524.
4 WTCP’s partner, Westfield America, Inc., took control of the retail mall at the World
Trade Center complex. Because Westfield America is not an appellant, this opinion will
not address portions of the lease agreement that pertain to the retail mall.
5 The brochure also notes that the lease for the retail mall cost $395 million, amounting
to an overall purchase price of $3.239 billion. This figure is similar to the Port
Authority’s evaluation of the proposal, which valued WTCP and Westfield America’s
bid at $3.211 billion in present‐value terms.
12
1 Unlike the Main Site Buildings, 7 World Trade Center was privately
2 managed and operated even before its construction. In 1980, the Port Authority
3 hired 7WTCo. to design, erect, and equip an office building adjacent to the Main
4 Site of the World Trade Center complex. 7WTCo. completed the project, which
5 came to be known as 7 World Trade Center, in 1987, at which point it signed a
6 99‐year lease with the Port Authority to manage the property. Like WTCP,
7 7WTCo. agreed to pay rent, tax equivalents, and operational expenses, to
8 purchase insurance, and to “rebuild, restore, repair and replace” the building “at
9 its sole cost and expense” in the event of its destruction. J.A. 943‐49.
10 2. The Destruction of the Leased Buildings
11 On the morning of September 11, 2001, Mohamed Atta, “[t]he operational
12 leader of the 9/11 conspiracy,” J.A. 373, and an accomplice passed through
13 airport security in Portland, Maine, and took US Airways/Colgan Flight 5930 to
14 Boston Logan International Airport. J.A. 359. Upon arriving at Logan, they
15 joined three co‐conspirators and passed through a security checkpoint run by
16 American Airlines before boarding American Airlines Flight 11. Five other
17 terrorists began their attack in Boston, entering the boarding area through a
18 United Airlines security checkpoint at Logan Airport and then boarding United
13
1 Airlines Flight 175. The first group hijacked Flight 11 and crashed the plane into
2 1 World Trade Center. Soon after, the second group used Flight 175 to destroy 2
3 World Trade Center. By the late afternoon, falling debris and fires had destroyed
4 the other Main Site Buildings and 7 World Trade Center, and had damaged large
5 portions of lower Manhattan.
6 The September 11th attacks were a financial catastrophe for Plaintiffs.
7 According to WTCP and 7WTCo., their leases required them to continue paying
8 rent to the Port Authority notwithstanding the lack of income from tenants, and
9 to reconstruct the Leased Buildings. Plaintiffs also claim that the attacks forced
10 them to bear additional expenses, including the cost of pursuing insurance
11 claims, replacing tenant improvements, retenanting the buildings, and paying
12 mortgage carrying costs.
13 To guard against these types of losses, WTCP and 7WTCo. had obtained
14 extensive insurance policies on their leasehold interests, which insured them for
15 damage caused by terrorist attacks. WTCP’s policy involved over two dozen
16 insurers and insured the company “for business interruption (lost [rental
17 payments]) and the replacement costs of the buildings if damaged or destroyed,
18 up to $3.5468 billion per [covered] occurrence.” S.P.A. 79. 7WTCo. obtained a
14
1 similar, but smaller, policy from Industrial Risk Insurers (“IRI”), which covered
2 business interruption losses and rebuilding costs up to $860 million per covered
3 occurrence. S.P.A. 79. The replacement cost coverage was designed to protect
4 Plaintiffs against physical damage to their property — and did not require that
5 they actually repair or rebuild the Leased Buildings in order to receive insurance
6 payments — while the business interruption coverage was intended to
7 indemnify Plaintiffs for any loss of income that occurred while the leased
8 buildings were damaged or destroyed.
9 Both Plaintiffs filed insurance claims shortly after the September 11th
10 attacks. WTCP submitted proofs of loss seeking $8.531 billion from its insurers.
11 These proofs of loss allocated roughly $7.183 billion to replacement costs for the
12 Main Site Buildings and $1.348 billion to business interruption losses. WTCP
13 also identified damages “other than destruction of real property and business
14 interruption,” but never quantified those claims. J.A. 1010. While three insurers
15 paid their portion of the claims promptly, the rest argued that the September
16 11th attacks were one “occurrence” under their policies, so WTCP’s recovery
15
1 could not exceed $3.5468 billion.6 WTCP sued the recalcitrant insurers in the
2 United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, see SR Int’l
3 Bus. Ins. Co. v. World Trade Ctr. Props., LLC, 467 F.3d 107 (2d Cir. 2006), and the
4 parties ultimately settled, with the insurers agreeing to pay WTCP
5 approximately $4.1 billion. The settlement involved a general release of all of
6 WTCP’s claims against the insurers and did not allocate the settlement proceeds
7 among WTCP’s claimed losses.
8 Separately, 7WTCo. submitted proofs of loss seeking $1.497 billion from
9 IRI, with roughly $1.053 billion allocated to replacement costs, $442 million for
10 business interruption, and $2 million for personal property. Like WTCP’s claims,
11 7WTCo.’s submission exceeded its $860 million per‐occurrence policy limit, and
12 IRI initially balked at paying the entire claim. 7WTCo. filed suit, and IRI
13 eventually agreed to pay approximately $831 million in exchange for a general
14 release of all claims. Once again, the settlement did not allocate the proceeds of
15 the payment between 7WTCo.’s claimed losses.
16
6 Even if the attacks constituted two “occurrences,” WTCP’s replacement cost and
business interruption claims exceeded its maximum possible insurance recovery, which
is known as a “policy limits loss.” J.A. 987.
16
1 B. Procedural History
2 In 2004, Plaintiffs sued a group of airlines and airport security contractors
3 in the district court, claiming that their negligent maintenance of airport security
4 checkpoints in Boston and Portland allowed the terrorists to board and hijack the
5 planes that destroyed the Leased Buildings. Plaintiffs’ claims arise under the Air
6 Transportation Safety and System Stabilization Act of 2001 (“ATSSSA”), Pub. L.
7 No. 107‐42, 115 Stat. 230 (codified as amended at 49 U.S.C. § 40101), which
8 creates an exclusive “Federal cause of action for damages arising out of the
9 hijacking and subsequent crashes of American Airlines flights 11 and 77, and
10 United Airlines flights 93 and 185, on September 11, 2001.” ATSSSA § 408(b)(1).
11 Under the Act, “[t]he substantive law for decision in any such suit shall be
12 derived from the law, including choice of law principles, of the State in which the
13 crash occurred unless such law is inconsistent with or preempted by Federal
14 law.” Id. § 408(b)(2). The parties agree that, in this case, the substantive law is
15 derived from the law of New York. Appellants’ Br. at 41; Appellees’ Br. at 82.
16 After extensive discovery, Defendants moved for summary judgment on
17 WTCP’s claims. They focused on damages, rather than the merits of the
18 negligence claim, arguing that: (1) WTCP is entitled to compensation for the
17
1 amount of value that their leasehold interests lost due to the attacks, and not for
2 replacement costs or other consequential damages; (2) the diminution in the fair
3 market value of the Main Site Leases was $2.805 billion — the present value of
4 the rent that WTCP agreed to pay for those leases; and (3) that, pursuant to CPLR
5 § 4545, any tort award WTCP could receive must be reduced by the amount of its
6 insurance recovery.
7 WTCP countered that using the lost market value of its leasehold interests
8 to calculate damages results in insufficient compensation, that the decline in the
9 value of its leaseholds exceeded $2.805 billion, and that CPLR § 4545 does not
10 require an offset for its insurance recoveries. In support, it offered declarations
11 from expert witnesses. Sheldon Gottlieb, an expert in real estate appraisal,
12 testified that the market value of WTCP’s leaseholds does not reflect the
13 immense public benefits that the World Trade Center complex provided. He
14 added that, in any event, $2.805 billion is simply the amount of rent that WTCP
15 agreed to pay, which is not equivalent to the decline in the value of the WTCP’s
16 leasehold interests because it ignores the profits WTCP expected to earn, the
17 value of non‐rent obligations that WTCP assumed, and the post‐attack costs that
18 WTCP was forced to bear, which resulted in the leases having a negative value
18
1 after September 11, 2001. Professor Kerry D. Vandell, an expert in real estate
2 finance, echoed Gottlieb’s opinion that $2.805 billion is the amount of rent that
3 WTCP agreed to pay, not the amount by which the value of its leasehold interest
4 declined. Vandell explained that ascertaining the correct change in value
5 requires comparing the value of WTCP’s leasehold interests before and after the
6 attacks.
7 On December 11, 2008, the district court granted Defendants’ motion in
8 part and denied it in part. The court noted that New York follows the “lesser of
9 two” rule, under which “a plaintiff whose property has been injured may recover
10 the lesser of the diminution of the property’s market value or its replacement
11 cost.” S.P.A. 10. It then concluded that the diminution in market value is the
12 appropriate measure of compensation, rejecting the arguments that, because of
13 the public purpose of the Main Site Buildings and WTCP’s contractual obligation
14 to rebuild, replacement costs are the proper measure of damages. The court,
15 however, refused to conclude that the value of WTCP’s leasehold interest
16 declined by $2.805 billion. Although WTCP agreed to pay that sum to obtain the
17 leases in April 2001, “market values can fluctuate rapidly” and “the value of
18 property privately owned and managed by an experienced real estate developer
19
1 may enjoy a different market value than property owned and managed by a
2 governmental bureaucracy.” S.P.A. 21. As a result, the court temporarily denied
3 summary judgment to provide WTCP an opportunity to show that the value of
4 the Main Site Leases changed between April and September 2001. The court also
5 concluded that there was insufficient evidence to decide the CPLR § 4545 issue,
6 and therefore denied summary judgment without prejudice.
7 In response to the summary judgment decision, WTCP submitted an
8 additional declaration from Professor Vandell. In this declaration, Vandell
9 reiterated that the diminution in the value of WTCP’s leasehold should be
10 calculated by measuring the “difference between the fair market value of [its]
11 interests immediately before and immediately after” September 11, 2001. J.A.
12 632. Fair market value is the amount “an investor or third party would be
13 willing to pay for an assignment of” the Main Site Leases, and can be calculated
14 by comparing the present value of the expected revenues and expenses
15 associated with owning those leases. Id. Because expected costs can equal or
16 exceed expected revenues, the value of a leasehold interest can be zero or
17 negative. Vandell then evaluated the diminution in market value of WTCP’s
18 leasehold interest, concluding that the leasehold had a market value of $1.459
20
1 billion immediately before the attacks and negative $5.333 billion immediately
2 afterwards. His calculations included WTCP’s expected profits from operating
3 the Main Site Buildings and the costs associated with reconstruction. In all, the
4 diminution in market value added up to $6.792 billion.
5 The district court considered these arguments and, on April 30, 2009,
6 rejected them. The court characterized WTCP’s submission as an attempt to
7 correct perceived errors in the original summary judgment decision and viewed
8 the argument that the Main Site Leases had negative value after the attacks as a
9 new attempt to recover reconstruction costs. It therefore decided that any
10 recovery by WTCP against Defendants for the Main Site Leases “shall not exceed
11 $2.805 billion.” S.P.A. 30. Several months later, on September 30, 2009, the
12 district court also granted Defendants summary judgment on WTCP’s claims for
13 the cost of retenanting the Main Site Buildings, replacing tenant improvements,
14 and paying attorneys’ fees during the insurance litigation, thereby capping
15 WTCP’s possible damages at $2.805 billion.
16 The 7WTCo. litigation followed a similar path. First, United moved for
17 summary judgment on the grounds that it was not responsible for the security
18 checkpoints that the terrorists used before hijacking American Airlines Flight 11,
21
1 which destroyed 7WTCo. The remaining Defendants then filed a separate
2 summary judgment motion, arguing that 7WTCo. can recover only the
3 diminution in value of its leasehold interest and that, pursuant to CPLR § 4545,
4 its damages award must be reduced by the amount of its insurance recovery.
5 On November 21, 2012, the district court granted summary judgment to
6 United, concluding that there was no evidence that it had a “connection to Flight
7 11 or its hijackers,” S.P.A. 56, and therefore that it “did not owe 7WTCo. a duty
8 of care,” S.P.A. 58. The court resolved the second summary judgment motion in
9 an order issued on December 5, 2012. As in WTCP’s case, the district court
10 concluded that 7WTCo. is entitled to compensation for the amount of value that
11 their leasehold interests lost due to the attacks, but not for reconstruction costs or
12 other claimed consequential damages. For 7WTCo., that diminution in value
13 was, at most, $737 million, a figure that the district court drew from Vandell’s
14 assessment of the pre‐attack value of 7WTCo.’s leasehold interest.7 Also as in
15 WTCP’s case, the district court rejected 7WTCo.’s claims to recover for the cost of
16 retenanting the building, lost tenant improvements, attorneys’ fees incurred
7 Vandell’s report for 7WTCo. argued that the pre‐attack value of its leasehold interest
was $737 million and that the post‐attack value was negative $222 million. Once again,
the post‐attack leasehold valuation included the cost of reconstructing the destroyed
building.
22
1 during litigation with IRI, and mortgage carrying costs.8 Finally, the district
2 court denied summary judgment to the Defendants on the argument that
3 7WTCo.’s potential tort award must be reduced by its insurance recovery.
4 After establishing WTCP’s and 7WTCo.’s maximum recoverable damages,
5 the district court chose to conduct a bench trial to determine whether, under
6 CPLR § 4545, any tort award Plaintiffs receive would need to be reduced by the
7 value of their insurance recoveries. Over the course of a five‐day trial held in
8 July 2013, the district court heard testimony about the proper way to allocate the
9 insurance recoveries between the different types of insurance claims Plaintiffs
10 submitted, and heard the opinions of two economists — Professor Steven Shavell
11 for the Plaintiffs and Professor Daniel Fischel for the Defendants — about
12 whether a potential tort award would compensate Plaintiffs for the same type of
13 losses that their insurance recoveries remedied.
14 In an order issued from the bench and then supplemented by a written
15 opinion, the district court ruled for the Defendants. It concluded that, after
16 accounting for fees and insurance premiums, WTCP recovered $4.044 billion
17 from its insurers and 7WTCo. recovered $829 million. These payments
8 The district court granted 7WTCo.’s claims to recover lost personal property, but the
company settled these claims with Defendants before this appeal.
23
1 compensated Plaintiffs for the cost of replacing the leased buildings and “for
2 business interruption, i.e., the cost of rental payments that sub‐lessees . . . failed
3 to pay . . . as a result of the buildings’ destruction.” S.P.A. 81. The court then
4 determined that these categories of insurance recovery “correspond[] completely
5 to Plaintiffs’ potential tort recoveries related to the lost value of their leaseholds,
6 and that the insurance recoveries should be set off against such potential tort
7 recoveries, reducing them to zero.” S.P.A. 86. Accordingly, the district court
8 entered judgment for Defendants.
9 DISCUSSION
10 On appeal, Plaintiffs contend that the district court erred at each step in the
11 series of orders that culminated in its decision to dismiss their claims. We review
12 the district court’s grants of summary judgment and its legal conclusions de novo,
13 construing all facts in favor of the nonmoving party. Shakhnes v. Berlin, 689 F.3d
14 244, 250 (2d Cir. 2012). As for the bench trial, we review the district court’s
15 findings of facts for clear error, and its conclusions of law de novo. CARCO
16 GROUP, Inc. v. Maconachy, 718 F.3d 72, 79 (2d Cir. 2013) (per curiam).
17
18
24
1 A. Damages
2 Our analysis begins with the calculation of Plaintiffs’ maximum
3 recoverable damages. After a series of summary judgment decisions, the district
4 court determined that, if WTCP and 7WTCo. could prove that Defendants are
5 liable for the destruction of the World Trade Center Complex, the companies
6 could recover, at most, $2.805 billion and $737 million, respectively. In arriving
7 at this decision, the district court concluded that Plaintiffs are entitled only to the
8 amount of value that their leasehold interests lost due to the attacks, not
9 reconstruction costs, and that Plaintiffs cannot recover for the costs associated
10 with retenanting the Leased Buildings, lost tenant improvements, paying
11 mortgage carrying costs, or hiring attorneys for the litigation against the insurers.
12 We agree with these conclusions, and therefore affirm in substantial part the
13 orders in which the district court announced them.9 The district court, however,
14 relied on an incorrect method of measuring the market value of leasehold estates.
15 Accordingly, we vacate the portions of the August 30, 2009 and December 5, 2012
16 orders establishing the diminution in value of Plaintiffs’ leasehold interests, and
9 The district court limited Plaintiffs’ recoveries to diminution in market value in its
December 11, 2008, and December 5, 2012 orders. It denied their claims for tenanting,
mortgage carrying costs, and attorneys’ fees in orders issued on September 30, 2009,
and December 5, 2012.
25
1 remand to the district court to reassess these calculations in light of the guidance
2 in this opinion.
3 1. Reconstruction Costs
4 Under New York law, which provides the substantive law governing
5 Plaintiffs’ ATSSSA claims, “an award of damages to a person injured by the
6 negligence of another” is designed “to restore the injured party, to the extent
7 possible, to the position that would have been occupied had the wrong not
8 occurred.” McDougald v. Garber, 73 N.Y.2d 246, 253‐54 (1989). When negligence
9 results in the permanent destruction of real property, damages can “place the
10 wronged victim in the same position as it was prior to the wrongdoing,” 36 N.Y.
11 Jur. 2d Damages § 6, in one of two ways. One possibility is to award the plaintiff
12 “the difference between the value of the land before the injury and its value after
13 the injury . . . sometimes called the ‘diminution‐in‐value rule.’” 36 N.Y. Jur. 2d
14 Damages § 75; see also Fisher v. Qualico Contracting Corp., 98 N.Y.2d 534, 539 (2002).
15 The other is to award “the cost of restoration,” Scribner v. Summers, 138 F.3d 471,
16 472 (2d Cir. 1998) (per curiam), plus the “reasonable worth” of the property’s use
17 while the plaintiff “is deprived of” the property, 36 N.Y. Jur. 2d Damages § 113.
26
1 While these two measures of damages — the decline in market value and
2 the cost of restoration — compensate a plaintiff for the same injury, they can
3 produce awards of different sizes. As a result, the New York Court of Appeals
4 has instructed that, in general, “the proper measure of damages for permanent
5 injury to real property is the lesser of the decline in market value and the cost of
6 restoration.” Jenkins v. Etlinger, 55 N.Y.2d 35, 39 (1982); see also Hartshorn v.
7 Chaddock, 135 N.Y. 116, 122 (1892). This “lesser of two” principle reflects the
8 judgment that, in most cases, both measures of damages are capable of
9 “affording full compensation” for lost property — as the Court of Appeals put it,
10 they are “two sides of the same coin.” Fisher, 98 N.Y.2d at 540. Quite simply,
11 when property is damaged, the value of owning that property falls. The value
12 can be returned to the owner by paying an amount of money equivalent to the
13 loss in value or by providing funds to restore the property to its original state.
14 Id.; see also Dobbs, Law of Remedies § 5.2(3) at 722 (2d ed. 1993) (“The reason for
15 using diminished value as a ceiling on repair costs is clear; diminished value
16 represents the full amount of economic loss of a landowner . . . .”). Allowing the
17 plaintiff to recover the higher measure of damages, then, would force the
18 defendant to bear a greater cost than is necessary to rectify the harm it caused.
27
1 In its December 11, 2008 and December 5, 2012 orders, the district court
2 concluded that this “lesser of two” principle limits Plaintiffs’ recoverable
3 damages to the diminution in market value of their leasehold interests and
4 prevents them from recovering reconstruction costs. We agree.10
5 New York courts have applied the “lesser of two” principle across a broad
6 spectrum of possessory interests, including fee simple interests in both
7 residential and commercial property. See, e.g., Fisher, 98 N.Y.2d at 536
8 (residential property); Hartshorn, 135 N.Y. at 122 (farm); Prashant Enters. Inc. v.
9 New York, 650 N.Y.S.2d 473, 476 (3d Dep’t 1996) (motel); see also Scribner, 138 F.3d
10 at 472 (family business and rental property). The compensatory principles that
11 animate these decisions apply no differently in the context of leasehold interests
12 like those of the Plaintiffs in the Leased Buildings. A commercial lease entitles
13 the lessee to use all or part of a property for a specified period of time, in
14 exchange for rent and other consideration. This interest is distinct from the
15 original fee simple interest and the lessor’s leased fee estate, and has its own
Plaintiffs characterize the district court’s decision as concluding that Defendants’
10
purported negligence was not the proximate cause of Plaintiffs’ obligation to rebuild.
We need not, and do not, address whether this is a proper characterization of the
district court’s decision. Instead, our conclusion that the “lesser of two” rule limits
Plaintiffs’ damages to the diminution in market value of their leasehold interests
renders the proximate cause issue irrelevant to resolving this case.
28
1 market value — namely, the amount that a buyer would be willing to pay for the
2 right to assume the lessee’s rights and obligations. See Great Atl. & Pac. Tea Co. v.
3 New York, 22 N.Y.2d 75, 84 (1968); Appraisal Inst., The Appraisal of Real Estate 83
4 (12th ed. 2001). If a portion of the property covered by the leasehold interest is
5 destroyed or damaged, the value of the leasehold interest falls because the
6 bundle of rights to which the owner of that interest is entitled becomes less
7 valuable. See, e.g., James R. MacCrate, The Valuation of Leasehold Interests, Real
8 Estate Appraisal and Valuation Issues (June 2, 2010),
9 https://realestatevaluation.wordpress.com/2010/06/02/the‐valuation‐of‐leasehold‐
10 interests/; Jeffrey D. Fisher & Robert S. Martin, Income Property Appraisal 189
11 (1991). An award can therefore place the lessee in the “same position as it was
12 prior to the wrongdoing,” 36 N.Y. Jur. 2d Damages § 6, either by providing the
13 monetary equivalent of the lost value or by presenting the plaintiff with
14 sufficient funds to repair the damages and weather the reconstruction period,
15 thereby restoring the original value of the rights under the lease. Cf. Great Atl. &
16 Pac. Tea Co., 22 N.Y.2d at 84 (“The damages to which a lessee is entitled are
17 generally the value of the leasehold.”).
29
1 Of course, leasehold interests involve a different set of rights and
2 obligations than fee simple ownership. But these are differences of degree, not of
3 kind. For instance, a lessee, unlike a fee simple owner, often has an obligation to
4 pay rent that continues even after the property covered by the lease is destroyed.
5 In fact, both WTCP and 7WTCo.’s leases contain such a covenant. This
6 continuing obligation, however, means only that the value of the leasehold
7 interest after the destructive event must take into account the lessee’s obligation
8 to make future rental payments. Professor Vandell, Plaintiffs’ expert on
9 damages, agrees, and attributes a negative market value to Plaintiffs’ leases after
10 the attacks to account for the obligation to pay rent. This method of calculating
11 diminution in market value differs from the calculation that a court would
12 perform in the context of fee simple ownership, but that does not alter the
13 principle that diminution in value, properly ascertained, can adequately
14 compensate a commercial lessee.
15 WTCP and 7WTCo. counter that their leases also differ from fee simple
16 ownership because they are obligated to reconstruct the Leased Buildings.11 That
11 Defendants challenge Plaintiffs’ characterization of the requirement to rebuild the
Leased Buildings. Appellees’ Br. at 55‐62. Their argument centers on the clause in the
lease that requires Plaintiffs to “rebuild, restore, repair, and replace” the Buildings, but
only “to the extent feasible, prudent and commercially reasonable.” Id. at 56. Because
30
1 obligation does not, however, entitle them to the reconstruction cost measure of
2 damages. Although property owners are often “not legally obligated” to
3 reconstruct damaged property, “economic circumstances often force them to do
4 so”; “[w]hen a home is condemned, for example, its owner must find another
5 place to live.” United States v. 50 Acres of Land, 469 U.S. 24, 34 (1984).
6 Nonetheless, New York courts have not considered a plaintiff’s decision to repair
7 property, standing alone, to be a sufficient justification for awarding replacement
8 costs that exceed diminution in market value. See, e.g., Fisher, 98 N.Y.2d at 534‐40
9 (limiting plaintiffs’ recovery to diminution in market value notwithstanding fact
10 that plaintiff had already rebuilt property); cf. Application of City of N.Y., 680
11 N.Y.S.2d 533, 535‐36 (1st Dep’t 1998) (noting that, in the takings context,
12 replacing condemned property is not sufficient to justify compensation in excess
13 of market value). Compensatory damages, after all, “serve to make good, so far
14 as it is possible to do so in dollars and cents, the harm done by a wrongdoer,”
15 which is, at most, what the plaintiff lost, not what the plaintiff later purchased,
16 even if they were required to do so. Lopez v. Adams, 895 N.Y.S.2d 532, 538 (3d
17 Dep’t 2010); see Dobbs, supra § 5.2(3) at 722. Replacing a property may cost more
we conclude that the purported covenant to rebuild does not alter Plaintiffs’ potential
tort recoveries, we need not decide whether this lease provision constitutes an
unconditional obligation to rebuild.
31
1 than the pre‐destruction value, “but the new [property] itself will be more
2 valuable and last longer.” 50 Acres of Land, 469 U.S. at 34 n.21 (quoting United
3 States v. 564.54 Acres of Land, 441 U.S. 506, 518 (1979) (White, J., concurring)).
4 Plaintiffs’ covenants to rebuild the Leased Buildings, then, may require
5 them to devote funds to reconstruction, but do not alter the measure of their
6 potential tort recoveries. Just as a landowner may have a strong economic
7 interest in rebuilding property, a lessor and lessee may wish to ensure that the
8 leased property is rebuilt in the event of destruction. Covenants to repair
9 accomplish that goal by allocating the risk of loss between the two parties. They
10 do not, however, magnify the value of the damage from the property destruction
11 or put the party who has assumed the obligation to rebuild in any worse position
12 than a landowner who, for economic reasons, is forced to rebuild in the absence
13 of a contract. As a result, WTCP and 7WTCo., and similarly situated lessees,
14 should not receive a higher measure of damages than the landowner could have
15 recovered without the contract simply because dividing the interest in land
16 required agreeing, in advance, on how to handle possible damage to the
17 property. Cf. 50 Acres of Land, 469 U.S. at 34‐35 (concluding that, in the context of
18 just compensation, a plaintiff’s “legal obligation” to replace a condemned facility
32
1 does not justify a different measure of damages than a party without such an
2 obligation would receive). To hold otherwise would be inconsistent with New
3 York courts’ reluctance to consider landowners’ decisions to rebuild when
4 selecting the measure of damages, see Fisher, 98 N.Y.2d at 534‐40, and the general
5 principle that, when property is destroyed or condemned, a lessee is entitled to
6 no more for that loss than the unencumbered value of the fee interest, see Great
7 Atl. & Pac. Tea Co., 22 N.Y.2d at 84.
8 As an alternative, WTCP and 7WTCo. argue that, in this particular case,
9 diminution of value is an inadequate measure of damages because it does not
10 account for the property’s “unique public benefit” — namely, the promotion of
11 economic development in lower Manhattan and northern New Jersey — or its
12 “iconic status.” Appellants’ Br. at 61‐65. In support, they rely on the testimony
13 of their expert witnesses, and contend that a jury should have considered their
14 entitlement to replacement costs. Cf. Jenkins, 55 N.Y.2d at 39 (requiring
15 defendant to prove that the lesser measure of damages “will sufficiently
16 compensate for the loss”).
17 We find these arguments unpersuasive. We recognize that, in the context
18 of just compensation for takings, New York courts have noted that, although
33
1 ordinarily “the fair equivalent of the actual loss sustained” by a property’s owner
2 is the property’s market value, some property “is of a kind seldom traded, [such
3 that] it lacks a ‘market price’” and therefore must be compensated for according
4 to its replacement cost. Matter of Rochester Urban Renewal Agency, 45 N.Y.2d 1, 8‐9
5 (1978). But this class of “specialty” property is narrow; “reproduction cost
6 should be utilized only in those limited instances in which no other method of
7 valuation will yield a legally and economically realistic value for the property.”
8 Great Atl. & Pac. Tea Co. v. Kiernan, 42 N.Y.2d 236, 242 (1977). Accordingly, New
9 York courts have awarded replacement costs only when the property at issue is
10 “specially built” for a “specific purpose” and a “special use,” there is “no market
11 for the type of property . . . and no sales of property for such use,” and the
12 property’s use is “economically feasible and reasonably expected to be replaced.”
13 Application of City of N.Y., 680 N.Y.S.2d at 535‐36 (quoting Matter of Cnty. of
14 Nassau, 349 N.Y.S.2d 422, 427 (2d Dep’t 1973)); see Matter of Saratoga Harness
15 Racing v. Williams, 91 N.Y.2d 639, 645‐46 (1998). “Churches, hospitals,
16 clubhouses and like structures . . . commonly fall within this category” because
17 the building “may be regarded by the organization that owns and utilizes it as
18 worth everything it cost to construct and more, yet it may not be ‘marketable’
34
1 because no similar group would have sufficient need for the property to be
2 willing to purchase it.” Rochester Urban Renewal Agency, 45 N.Y.2d at 9.
3 In light of this standard, there is no genuine dispute of material fact about
4 whether diminution in market value is an adequate measure of damages. At the
5 start, 7WTCo. has presented no evidence that 7 World Trade Center is
6 sufficiently unique, or served such a significant public purpose, to warrant a
7 recovery in excess of lost market value. In fact, Professor Kerry Vandell, the only
8 expert to submit a report about the property, calculated the change in market
9 value to 7WTCo.’s leasehold interest by comparing the expected income streams
10 before and after the September 11th attacks.
11 As for WTCP, Defendants’ submissions conclusively establish that the
12 company’s interest in the Main Site Buildings was not “specialty” property for
13 which reproduction cost is the only appropriate measure of damages. WTCP’s
14 property interest consists of 99‐year leases to five commercial office buildings,
15 with the reversionary interest held by the Port Authority. Far from there being
16 “no market for [this] type of property,” Saratoga Harness Racing, 91 N.Y.2d at 645,
17 WTCP procured its leasehold interests through what Charles Gargano from the
18 Port Authority called a “worldwide . . . competitive bidding process,” J.A. 594.
35
1 Michael Levy, from WTCP, agreed that the bidding was “extensive” and
2 “competitive” because the buildings were “trophy” properties. J.A. 598‐99.
3 After obtaining the leases, moreover, WTCP operated its Leased Buildings as a
4 landlord, subleasing portions of the property to commercial tenants. This was
5 not a “special use.” Application of City of N.Y., 680 N.Y.S.2d at 535‐36; see also
6 Heidorf v. Town of Northumberland, 985 F. Supp. 250, 262 n.6 (N.D.N.Y. 1997)
7 (distinguishing between a building’s historic “status” and the uniqueness of the
8 “use” to which it is put). Quite to the contrary, WTCP’s leases required the
9 company to “operate and maintain” the properties as “office building[s] . . . in a
10 manner generally consistent with other office buildings located within the
11 Borough of Manhattan,” and included a list of comparable buildings in the area.
12 J.A. 414.12
12 Even if, as Plaintiffs claim, no buildings are precisely comparable to the Main Site
Buildings, it does not mean that the leases for those buildings lacked a market value.
Assessing comparable leases is only one way to value a leasehold interest, and other
methods — most notably the capitalization of income approach — are equally valid.
See Allied Corp. v. Town of Camillus, 80 N.Y.2d 351, 356 (1992) (“[E]vidence of comparable
sales is generally the preferred measure of a property’s value . . . , but where there is
insufficient relevant data, value may be determined by other methods.”); Gordon v.
Town of Esopus, 745 N.Y.S.2d 334, 335 (3d Dep’t 2002) (accepting an “income valuation
method” when the property was “income producing” and “unique to the extent that no
comparable properties exist”); see also Saratoga Harness Racing, 91 N.Y.2d at 643. Indeed,
“even when alternative theories must be used” courts have shied away from using a
“reproduction cost” methodology except for the narrow class of “properties deemed
‘specialties.’” Allied Corp., 80 N.Y.2d at 356‐57.
36
1 Nor is WTCP’s claim for replacement costs supported by the World Trade
2 Center Complex’s public purpose. WTCP’s experts attest to the “public
3 purpose” that the World Trade Center Complex serves, noting that it
4 reinvigorated the economic life of lower Manhattan and Northern New Jersey.
5 But WTCP did not lease the entire World Trade Center Complex; its leasehold
6 interest encompassed only the office space in the Main Site Buildings. As
7 Sheldon Gottlieb, WTCP’s appraisal expert, explained: “[t]he Port Authority
8 never leased the non‐commercial, public purpose, and public benefit part of the
9 properties or their operation to WTCP.” J.A. 565 n.4. More fundamentally, in
10 evaluating just compensation, the Supreme Court has refused to compensate
11 private plaintiffs for the community value of their properties. See 564.54 Acres of
12 Land, 441 U.S. at 516. The Court’s rationale readily applies in the context of tort
13 damages. “The community benefit” a property confers “might provide an
14 indication of the public’s loss,” but compensatory damages seek to ensure that
15 the “owner” of the property is “made whole.” Id. WTCP “did not hold” its
16 leasehold interests “as the public’s trustee and thus is not entitled to be
17 indemnified for the public’s loss.” Id.; see N.Y. Unconsol. Law § 6610 (entrusting
37
1 the Port Authority with “undertaking . . . [t]he effectuation of the world trade
2 center”).13
3 Critically, our conclusion that WTCP and 7WTCo. are not entitled to
4 replacement costs by no means minimizes the importance of the World Trade
5 Center Complex to New York and New Jersey or the country’s interest in seeing
6 the site rebuilt. Compensatory damages are not designed, and courts
7 adjudicating civil claims are not well suited, to heal a region’s and a nation’s
8 wounds. Rather, we simply conclude, agreeing with the district court, that
9 Plaintiffs’ leases for the office space at 1, 2, 4, 5, and 7 World Trade Center can be
10 valued according to market metrics, and that Plaintiffs can therefore be
11 compensated by the diminution in the market value of those leasehold interests.
12 Plaintiffs (assuming liability is established) are entitled to compensation for the
13 amount of value that their leasehold interests lost due to the attacks, but not to
14 reconstruction costs.
15
16
Although Defendants devote a significant portion of their briefing to the argument
13
that the Port Authority’s decision to issue 99‐year leases “privatized” the Leased
Buildings, we fail to see how this label alters the damages analysis.
38
1 2. Consequential Damages
2 In addition to reconstruction costs, WTCP and 7WTCo. also seek
3 consequential damages. Specifically, Plaintiffs argue that they are entitled to
4 recover for the cost of retenanting the Leased Buildings, hiring attorneys during
5 litigation with their insurers, paying mortgage carrying costs, and losing tenant
6 improvements. The district court denied these claims for consequential damages
7 in orders issued on September 30, 2009 and December 5, 2012. We agree, and
8 address each decision in turn.
9 The decision to deny damages for retenanting costs and lost tenant
10 improvements flows naturally from the conclusion that diminution in market
11 value, rather than replacement cost, is the correct measure of damages. Before
12 the terrorist attacks, the Leased Buildings were fully tenanted. The difference in
13 value of Plaintiffs’ leasehold interest before and after September 11, 2001, then,
14 includes the loss of those tenants and any improvements they made to the
15 premises. Put differently, the diminution‐in‐value measure of damages already
16 compensates Plaintiffs for the fact that they lost tenanted buildings complete
17 with tenant improvements. Viewed in this light, Plaintiffs’ claims for the cost of
18 retenanting the Leased Buildings and replacing tenant improvements are
39
1 nothing more than attempts to recover the cost of restoring the Leased Buildings
2 to the state in which they existed before the attack — the “reconstruction cost”
3 measure of damages for these elements of the leasehold interests. Awarding
4 these costs would therefore compensate Plaintiffs a second time for the same
5 loss. See Fisher, 98 N.Y.2d at 540 (noting that “replacement cost and diminution
6 in market value are simply two sides of the same coin”). Such a double recovery
7 would be “wholly inappropriate” under compensatory damages principles.
8 Dobbs, supra, § 5.12(2) at 832 (“It would not be appropriate to award both
9 replacement costs and diminished value of the land, since each of these measures
10 of damage is an attempt to compensate for the same loss . . . .”).
11 The other consequential damages claims — for mortgage carrying costs
12 and attorneys’ fees — fail on causation grounds. Regarding the former, WTCP
13 and 7WTCo. undertook the obligation to pay mortgage carrying costs before the
14 September 11th attacks; Defendants’ alleged negligence neither caused Plaintiffs
15 to bear those expenses, nor increased the price. See 103 N.Y. Jur. 2d Torts § 10.
16 As to the latter, New York courts allow plaintiffs to recover “the reasonable
17 value of attorneys’ fees and other expenses” when, “through the wrongful act of
18 his present adversary, [the plaintiff was] involved in earlier litigation with a third
40
1 person in bringing or defending an action to protect his interests.” Coopers &
2 Lybrand v. Levitt, 384 N.Y.S.2d 804, 807 (1st Dep’t 1976). “Such expenses,”
3 however, must be “the natural and necessary consequences of the defendant’s
4 acts,” id., such as when an attorney’s malpractice exposes the client to liability,
5 see Cent. Trust Co. v. Goldman, 417 N.Y.S.2d 359 (4th Dep’t 1979). Defendants’
6 alleged negligence lacks this requisite connection. Even assuming, arguendo, that
7 Defendants could have reasonably foreseen that their failure to adequately
8 monitor airport security checkpoints could lead to a hijacking and that the
9 hijackers would use the planes to destroy buildings, Plaintiffs’ attorneys’ fees
10 would still not have been the natural and necessary consequence of Defendants’
11 negligence. That causal chain requires three further steps: first, Plaintiffs filing
12 insurance claims; second, the insurers refusing to pay; and third, Plaintiffs filing
13 suit. This series of events is too attenuated to support a claim for attorneys’ fees.
14 See Martinez v. Lazaroff, 48 N.Y.2d 819, 820 (1979) (concluding, as a matter of law,
15 that defendant was not a “proximate or legal cause of the injuries suffered”
16 because the “causal connection . . . was attenuated”); see also Apollo Steel Corp. v.
17 Melco Cranes, Inc., 609 N.Y.S.2d 121 (4th Dep’t 1994). The district court was
41
1 therefore correct to deny Plaintiffs’ claims for consequential damages and to limit
2 their recovery to the diminution in value of their leasehold interests.
3 3. Calculation of Diminution in Market Value
4 Having concluded that Plaintiffs’ compensable damages are limited to the
5 diminution in the market value of their leasehold interests, we turn now to the
6 issue of calculating that change in value. In summary judgment decisions issued
7 on August 30, 2009 and December 5, 2012, the district court decided that the
8 diminution in the value of WTCP and 7WTCo.’s leasehold interests was, at most,
9 $2.805 billion and $737 million, respectively. The first figure derives from the
10 present value of the rental payments that WTCP promised to make over the 99‐
11 year lifetime of its leases, and the second is culled from Professor Vandell’s
12 evaluation of the pre‐attack value of 7WTCo.’s leasehold interest. We conclude
13 that this process for calculating damages misapprehends valuation in the context
14 of leasehold interests. Accordingly, we remand so that the district court can
15 reassess Plaintiffs’ maximum possible recoveries.
16 As the district court recognized, an asset’s “market value is the price at
17 which [it] would change hands between a willing buyer and a willing seller,
18 neither being under any compulsion to buy or sell and both having reasonable
42
1 knowledge of relevant facts.” United States v. Cartwright, 411 U.S. 546, 551 (1973);
2 see also Appraisal of Real Estate, supra, at 22. The diminution of an asset’s value,
3 then, is calculated by comparing the market value of the asset before and after a
4 particular event. But critically, although the terrorist attacks destroyed the
5 Leased Buildings, the relevant assets being valued in this case are Plaintiffs’
6 leasehold interests. In short, when the Port Authority issued leases to WTCP and
7 7WTCo., it split the interests in the Leased Buildings into a “leased fee estate,”
8 which the Port Authority retained, and “leasehold estate[s]” held by Plaintiffs.
9 See William B. Brueggeman & Jeffrey D. Fisher, Real Estate Finance and Investments
10 5‐6 (14th ed. 2011). Each estate is a distinct asset with its own market value, and
11 it is the diminution in the value of that estate that is the measure of the owner’s
12 loss. See id.; see also Great Atl. & Pac. Tea Co., 22 N.Y.2d at 84.
13 The market value of a leasehold estate is the price at which the lease —
14 rather than the physical property in the estate — would change hands between a
15 willing buyer and a willing seller in a competitive market. Put differently, a
16 leasehold interest is worth what a buyer in a competitive market would be
17 willing to pay in order to assume both the rights and the obligations associated
18 with the lease. This value can be measured in at least two ways: through a “sales
43
1 comparison approach,” which involves “comparing properties similar to the
2 subject property,” Appraisal of Real Estate, supra, at 417, or an “income
3 capitalization approach,” which requires analyzing expected costs and revenues
4 from the property to generate an assessment of future income, and
5 “capitaliz[ing] the income into an indication of present value,” id. at 471; see also
6 id. at 83; W.O.R.C. Realty Corp. v. Bd. of Assessors, 951 N.Y.S.2d 36, 47‐48 (2d Dep’t
7 2012) (discussing both methods of valuation in the context of income‐producing
8 property). Notably, because a leasehold interest entails expenditures (such as the
9 obligation to pay rent), it can have either a positive or a negative market value.
10 An example — using, for simplicity’s sake, the “sales comparison
11 approach” — illustrates the point.14 Suppose a lessee rents a building for
12 $500/month, and the market rate for renting a comparable property is
13 $600/month. In such a scenario, the lessee’s interest has a positive market value
14 because a buyer should be willing to pay up to $100/month to assume the lease.
15 See James R. MacCrate, The Valuation of Leasehold Interests, Real Estate Appraisal
Plaintiffs’ expert, Professor Vandell, employed the income capitalization approach
14
when calculating the extent to which the value of Plaintiffs’ leasehold interests changed
because of the attacks. While this is an accepted method for valuing leasehold interests,
we conclude that Vandell’s calculations inappropriately included costs associated with
replacing the leased buildings. Because the district court may revisit valuations using
the income capitalization approach on remand, we explain our reasoning infra.
44
1 and Valuation Issues (June 2, 2010),https://realestatevaluation.
2 wordpress.com/2010/06/02/the‐valuation‐of‐leasehold‐interests/ (“A positive
3 leasehold is created when the market rent is greater than the contract rent.”).
4 Now suppose the market rental rate for comparable spaces was $400/month —
5 or, more relevantly for this case, that the lessee’s property suffered damage that
6 made it comparable to spaces renting for $400/month. Under those
7 circumstances, no buyer would be willing to pay to assume the $500/month lease
8 when she could rent a comparable property for $400/month. Instead, the lessee
9 would need to pay buyers to entice them to assume the lease’s obligations, thus
10 leading to a negative market value for the leasehold interest. See Appraisal of
11 Real Estate, supra, at 83.
12 As Plaintiffs’ experts explained, the district court’s evaluation of the
13 leasehold interests did not follow traditional principles of valuation and
14 incorrectly assumed that a leasehold interest cannot have negative value.
15 Determining the diminution in value of Plaintiffs’ leasehold estates requires
16 calculating the difference between the pre‐ and post‐attack market values of
17 those interests. For WTCP, the district court concluded that the pre‐attack value
18 of the leasehold interest was $2.805 billion and that the post‐attack value was $0.
45
1 Neither figure is correct. Opposing summary judgment, WTCP’s expert Sheldon
2 Gottlieb explained that $2.805 billion “reflects only the net present value . . . of
3 rental payments that WTCP committed to make to the Port Authority,” and not
4 the pre‐attack value of the leasehold interest. J.A. 559. We agree. WTCP’s rental
5 payments created the leasehold interest, but do not necessarily reflect the amount
6 that a buyer in the open market would have paid to assume WTCP’s rights and
7 obligations under the leases — the relevant inquiry when assessing the market
8 value of a leasehold estate. Similarly, $0 is an incorrect post‐attack valuation.
9 Although WTCP could expect to receive $0 in rent from the destroyed buildings,
10 that figure fails to account for the company’s obligation to, at a minimum,
11 continue paying rent. Thus, as Gottlieb explained in opposition to summary
12 judgment and Vandell reiterated, WTCP’s leasehold interests had a negative
13 value after the attacks, and the diminution‐in‐value calculation must incorporate
14 that negative market value. See J.A. 569 (Gottlieb noting that the leasehold
15 interest had a “negative value” after the attacks); J.A. 624 (Vandell discussing
16 “negative fair market value”).
17 The district court took a different approach when evaluating damages for
18 7WTCo. Plaintiffs’ expert, Professor Vandell, assessed the value of 7WTCo.’s
46
1 leasehold interest using the income capitalization approach and determined that,
2 immediately before September 11, 2001, it was worth $737 million. The district
3 court adopted this figure as the pre‐attack market value. But rather than
4 assessing the post‐attack value under a similar approach, the court again
5 declared the post‐attack leasehold value to be $0, leading to total losses of $737
6 million. Again, $0 reflects the rent that 7WTCo. could expect to receive for its
7 destroyed building, but misstates the post‐attack value of the leasehold interest
8 because, at a minimum, it fails to account for the continued obligation to pay
9 rent.
10 Thus, for both WTCP and 7WTCo., the district court calculated the decline
11 in value of their leasehold interests in a manner that is inconsistent with the
12 established practice for valuing leasehold estates. Because this error potentially
13 led to incorrect diminution‐in‐value calculations, we remand for the district court
14 to reassess Plaintiffs’ maximum recoverable damages.
15 Nonetheless, our conclusion that the district court incorrectly assessed the
16 diminution in value of Plaintiffs’ leasehold interests should not be confused with
17 an endorsement of Plaintiffs’ damages claims nor taken to mean that Plaintiffs
18 are necessarily entitled to a trial on damages or to a damages recovery. As to the
47
1 flaws in Plaintiffs’ appraisal of damages, the district court was correct to observe
2 that both WTCP and 7WTCo. ignored its denial of reconstruction costs in their
3 diminution‐in‐value calculations. In his reports on damages, Professor Vandell
4 calculated the pre‐ and post‐attack values of Plaintiffs’ leasehold interests by
5 estimating the expected income and expenses associated with those interests —
6 in other words, by using the “income capitalization approach.” As Plaintiffs
7 acknowledge in their brief on appeal, Professor Vandell’s assessments include, as
8 part of the post‐attack valuations, reconstruction costs, tenant improvement
9 allowances, leasing commissions, and projected capital expenditures — all of
10 which are costs associated with replacing the Leased Buildings. See Appellants’
11 Br. at 69 n.44. To be consistent with the denial of reconstruction costs, the post‐
12 attack leasehold value should reflect only those continuing obligations that are
13 unrelated to reconstruction, such as rental payments. In other words, the post‐
14 attack valuation should operate under the hypothetical that the Leased Buildings
15 were not rebuilt.15
15 We note that Professor Vandell’s post‐attack valuation also included the value of
expected rental income and operating expenses after reconstruction. Because these cash
flows assume that Plaintiffs reconstructed the Leased Buildings, the district court likely
should exclude them from the post‐attack valuation.
48
1 It is also significant that WTCP signed its lease agreements shortly before
2 the terrorist attacks. The district court was correct to observe that market value
3 often reflects expected profits. Indeed, both this Court and New York courts
4 agree that “[m]arket value damages are ‘based on future profits as estimated by
5 potential buyers who form the ‘market,’ and ‘reflect the buyer’s discount for the
6 fact that the profits would be postponed and . . . uncertain.’” Schonfeld v. Hilliard,
7 218 F.3d 164, 176 (2d Cir. 2000) (quoting 1 Dobbs, supra, § 3.3(7)); see Sandoro v.
8 Harlem‐Genesee Mkt. & Nursery, Inc., 482 N.Y.S.2d 165, 167 (3d Dep’t 1984).
9 When there is “a recent sale price for the subject asset, negotiated by parties at
10 arm’s length,” that price may be the “best evidence” of the asset’s “market
11 value,” taking into account expected profits. Schonfeld, 218 F.3d at 178 (internal
12 quotation marks omitted); see W.T. Grant Co. v. Srogi, 52 N.Y.2d 496, 511 (1981).
13 As a result, WTCP is incorrect to state that it was “entitled to a reasonable
14 rate of return” above the rent it agreed to pay. Appellants’ Br. at 72. Purchasing
15 a commercial leasehold interest, like any other business venture, entails risk. The
16 fact that WTCP agreed to pay $2.805 billion in rent just months before the attack
17 may be evidence that the pre‐attack value of its leasehold interest was $0. That
18 is, if WTCP was the highest bidder in a competitive market for the Leased
49
1 Buildings, no other buyer would have been willing to pay WTCP to assume the
2 leasehold interest. See Schonfeld, 218 F.3d at 176; J.A. 632 (“[F]air market value
3 represents the amount an investor . . . would be willing to pay for an assignment
4 of the Net Leases . . . .”). On the other hand, WTCP contends that the pre‐attack
5 value of its leasehold interest was $1.459 billion, relying in part on “increases in
6 market rents and net operating income levels that were reasonably expected
7 when management of the space . . . was transferred . . . to an experienced
8 manager such as WTCP.” J.A. 633. The district court recognized that the market
9 value of the leaseholds may have changed between April 2001, when WTCP
10 acquired the Main Site Leases, and September 2001, immediately prior to the
11 destruction of the properties, and it provided WTCP an opportunity to raise a
12 material issue of fact as to whether this had occurred. We leave it to the district
13 court to decide, in the first instance, whether there is a genuine dispute of
14 material fact about whether WTCP’s pre‐attack leasehold interests had positive
15 value, using the principles outlined here. But it is emphatically not the case that
16 Plaintiffs are entitled to damages that reflect a guaranteed profit on their leases.
17 In sum, our decision is a narrow one. We agree with the district court’s
18 decision that Plaintiffs can recover only for the diminution in the value of their
50
1 leasehold interests, and are not entitled to reconstruction costs or the claimed
2 consequential damages. Nonetheless, we conclude that, as Plaintiffs’ experts
3 opined in their reports, the district court’s evaluation of WTCP and 7WTCo.’s
4 losses departed from established methods of valuing leasehold estates.
5 Accordingly, we remand as to the August 30, 2004 and December 5, 2012 orders
6 establishing the diminution in value of Plaintiffs’ leasehold interests. On
7 remand, the district court should reassess the diminution in value of those
8 leasehold estates by considering their pre‐ and post‐attack market values, with
9 the post‐attack values measured as if the Leased Buildings were not
10 reconstructed. The district court is free to decide, in the first instance, whether
11 additional discovery is needed before another set of summary judgment motions
12 or a trial on the issue of damages.16
13
The district court could allow additional discovery or conduct a limited trial on
16
damages, but may find such steps unnecessary. For instance, if the court concludes, on
the existing record, that the pre‐attack value of WTCP’s leasehold interests was $0, it
may be able to calculate their post‐attack value from Vandell’s report (or perhaps to
determine that such a specific calculation is unnecessary because the calculation could
not result in an award greater than the Plaintiff’s insurance recovery). To ensure that
the post‐attack value does not include costs and revenues associated with
reconstruction, the court in referring to Vandell’s report would need to exclude
“[r]ebuilding [c]osts,” J.A. 640, and “[p]rojected [r]evenues,” J.A. 643, and include only
those “[p]rojected [c]osts,” J.A. 644‐45, that WTCP would have incurred had the Main
Site Buildings not been rebuilt.
51
1 B. Collateral Offset
2 Because we agree with the district court that WTCP and 7WTCo. can
3 recover only for the diminution in value of their leasehold interests, we must
4 address the second pillar of the decision below: the conclusion that Plaintiffs’
5 insurance recoveries should reduce the amount of their potential tort award. “In
6 most jurisdictions[,] the damages recoverable for a wrong are not diminished by
7 the fact that the party injured has been wholly or partly indemnified for his loss
8 by insurance.” Healy v. Rennert, 9 N.Y.2d 202, 206 (1961). But New York has
9 chosen to override this “collateral source rule” by statute. See Oden v. Chemung
10 Cnty. Indus. Dev. Agency, 87 N.Y.2d 81, 85‐86 (1995). Pursuant to CPLR § 4545, if
11 a court finds that any “cost or expense” from an “injury to property” will be, or
12 has been, “replaced or indemnified from any collateral source,” such as
13 insurance, the court “shall reduce the amount of the award” for that injury by an
14 amount equal to the collateral reimbursement. Id. § 4545(c). This provision is
15 designed to assure that plaintiffs do not receive “duplicative recoveries” for the
16 same type of loss. Fisher, 98 N.Y.2d at 538. As a result, a defendant must show,
17 by clear and convincing evidence, that “the collateral source payment represents
18 reimbursement for a particular category of loss that corresponds to a category of
52
1 loss for which damages were awarded.” Oden, 87 N.Y.2d at 84; see also Johnson v.
2 N.Y.C. Transit Auth., 929 N.Y.S.2d 215, 220 (1st Dep’t 2011).
3 Here, the district court conducted a bench trial to identify the specific
4 losses for which Plaintiffs’ insurance proceeds reimbursed them, and to
5 determine whether those reimbursements correspond to the same category of
6 loss as their potential tort recovery. After five days of testimony, on August 1,
7 2013 the court found that nearly all of WTCP and 7WTCo.’s insurance proceeds
8 reimbursed them for the costs of reconstructing the Leased Buildings and for
9 “business interruption,” i.e., lost revenue while the Buildings were being
10 rebuilt.17 S.P.A. 81. It then concluded that both these insurance proceeds and the
11 potential tort awards for lost leasehold value provide reimbursement for the
12 same category of loss, and therefore reduced the potential tort awards by the
13 value of the insurance recoveries.18 We conclude that the district court did not
The district court allocated $1.8 million of 7WTCo.’s insurance recoveries to lost
17
personal property. 7WTCo. and Defendants have reached a settlement regarding the
company’s claims for lost personal property, making this portion of the insurance
recoveries irrelevant for the purposes of this appeal.
Before offsetting insurance recoveries against the potential tort award, the district
18
court deducted the amount Plaintiffs spent on claims‐preparation expenses from the
total insurance recovery. This decision was not error. CPLR § 4545 directs courts to
reduce awards by the amount of collateral recoveries “minus an amount equal to”
certain past premium payments and the ongoing “cost to the plaintiff of maintaining
such benefits.” When an insurance policy requires the insured to investigate their own
53
1 err, much less clearly err, in allocating Plaintiffs’ insurance recoveries to
2 replacement costs and business interruption losses, and agree with its conclusion
3 that these reimbursements correspond to the same loss as the potential tort
4 award.
5 We begin, however, on a procedural note. No doubt due to the large size
6 of the insurance recoveries, the district court opted to conduct a bench trial on
7 the collateral offset issue before a trial on liability and damages. Decisions to
8 bifurcate trials, like this one, are authorized by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
9 42(b) and are typically well within the discretion of district courts. See Amato v.
10 City of Saratoga Springs, 170 F.3d 311, 316 (2d Cir. 1999). But Plaintiffs contend
11 that the timing of the collateral offset trial was inappropriate in this case because
12 CPLR § 4545 “makes clear that a ‘correspondence’ hearing should not occur until
13 after the jury has reached a verdict” on liability and damages. Appellants’ Br.
14 at 86.
15 Plaintiffs’ argument misapprehends the role of New York law under the
16 ATSSSA. The ATSSSA creates a federal cause of action for damages arising out
17 of the September 11, 2001 attacks, and incorporates state law as the “substantive
claims and submit proofs of loss, those expenditures may be counted as costs of
“maintaining [the insurance] benefits.”
54
1 law for decision in any such suit.” ATSSSA § 408(2) (emphasis added). Federal
2 law controls procedure, and the order in which issues are decided is
3 quintessentially procedural — it “governs only the manner and the means by
4 which the litigants’ rights are enforced,” not “the rules of decision by which the
5 court will adjudicate those rights.” Shady Grove Orthopedic Assocs. v. Allstate Ins.
6 Co., 559 U.S. 393, 407 (2010) (internal quotation marks and brackets omitted). Of
7 course, there may be situations in which deciding the collateral offset issue
8 before a damages trial is impossible, particularly if there are multiple types of
9 loss for which the jury could compensate the plaintiff. See Shue v. Red Creek Cent.
10 Sch. Dist., 697 N.Y.S.2d 437, 439 (4th Dep’t 1999) (reversing a collateral offset
11 decision because the jury had not allocated damages to the different losses). But
12 this is not such a case. Here, the district court could predict, with complete
13 certainty, the element of loss for which a jury would award damage because
14 WTCP and 7WTCo. can recover only for the diminution in the market value of
15 their leasehold interests. See Oden, 87 N.Y.2d at 89 (“The problem of matching up
16 a collateral source to an item of loss is simply a matter of proof and factual
17 analysis.”). The district court therefore had a firm legal basis for trying the
18 collateral offset issue first, and did not abuse its discretion in doing so.
55
1 Turning to the substance of the district court’s decision, Plaintiffs raise two
2 primary challenges. First, they argue that it was error to allocate their insurance
3 recoveries to replacement costs and business interruption losses. Second, they
4 contend that, even if it was possible to allocate their collateral recoveries to
5 replacement costs and business interruption losses, those reimbursements do not
6 correspond to the potential tort recovery for the lost market value of their
7 leasehold interests. Neither argument is persuasive.
8 The district court did not err by allocating the insurance recoveries to
9 replacement costs and business interruption. The court found, and Plaintiffs’
10 experts agreed, that WTCP and 7WTCo. obtained two categories of insurance
11 coverage: “replacement cost” coverage, which covers damages to the buildings,
12 tenant improvements, personal property, and equipment, J.A. 1227; and
13 “business interruption” coverage, which reimburses for “loss of revenues or
14 rental values . . . from the date of the loss until” the buildings are restored, J.A.
15 1165. See S.P.A. 79. The district court also found that, when WTCP and 7WTCo.
16 submitted proofs of loss after the terrorist attacks, those submissions attached a
17 dollar value only to the costs of replacing the Leased Buildings and to business
18 interruption losses. Plaintiffs concede this point as well, admitting that these
56
1 losses, by themselves, exceeded the value of the insurance policies. Appellants’
2 Br. at 24‐26.
3 Nonetheless, Plaintiffs contend that, because they received their insurance
4 reimbursements in the form of “global settlement[s]” reached after litigation with
5 the insurers, Appellants’ Br. at 88, the district court should not have allocated
6 their insurance proceeds to replacement costs and business interruption losses.
7 In particular, they note that the settlements released “all claims” against insurers,
8 which they contend could include the value of “extracontractual claims for bad
9 faith” that they raised during the litigation. Appellants’ Br. at 88‐89. The district
10 court rejected this argument, and the record supports that decision. Defendants’
11 insurance expert, Michael Beach, explained that settlements are common in the
12 insurance industry even when disputes do not go to litigation, and that
13 settlements typically contain a general release to ensure that there will be “no
14 further claims paid in relation to the insurance event.” J.A. 1175. To determine
15 what the settlement paid the insured for, one needs to “rely upon the underlying
16 documents” submitted, which did not, in his opinion, “suggest that the insurers
17 paid on anything other than” the replacement cost and business interruption
18 claims. Id. Indeed, Plaintiffs’ own insurance expert also did not allocate any
57
1 money to “extra‐contractual claims” when evaluating WTCP and 7WTCo.’s
2 insurance recoveries, J.A. 1234, and the district court found that “[t]he recovery
3 against nearly every insurer was at, or near, the policy limits,” S.P.A. 90‐91. On
4 these facts, it was not error to allocate Plaintiffs’ insurance proceeds to the only
5 two categories of coverage they obtained: replacement cost coverage and
6 business interruption coverage.19
7 Plaintiffs’ second argument — that replacement costs and business
8 interruption losses do not correspond to the same category of loss as the
9 diminution in the market value of Plaintiffs’ leasehold interests — fares no better.
10 Our analysis begins, and in large part ends, with the New York Court of Appeals
11 decision in Fisher v. Qualico Contracting Corp., 98 N.Y.2d at 534. In that case, the
12 defendant negligently destroyed the plaintiffs’ residence in a construction
13 accident. The plaintiffs received insurance payments to cover “the actual
19 Plaintiffs note that, in Shue v. Red Creek Central School District, 697 N.Y.S.2d 437 (4th
Dep’t 1999), and Boshnakov v. Board of Education of Town of Eden, 716 N.Y.S.2d 520 (4th
Dep’t 2000), courts refused to find correspondence when juries issued verdicts that did
not assign damages to “each element of loss.” Shue, 697 N.Y.S.2d at 439. Unitemized
jury verdicts are not analogous to Plaintiffs’ insurance recoveries. Quite simply, in the
context of a trial, the defendant has an opportunity to request an itemized verdict and,
if it fails to do so, it becomes impossible to recreate the jury’s decisionmaking. Here,
however, the district court could ascertain the allocation of the settlements from the
record of expert testimony about industry practice and the circumstances surrounding
the insurance claims.
58
1 necessary cost of replacing the home” and, after a lawsuit, won damages
2 equivalent to the “market value diminution” of their property. Id. at 536‐37.
3 Before entering judgment, however, the trial court offset the insurance recoveries
4 against the tort award. The Court of Appeals affirmed. Characterizing the harm
5 that the plaintiffs suffered as “real property losses,” the Court noted that such
6 losses “may be measured” by the lesser of “the cost of restoring the land to its
7 former condition” or “the diminution in the market value of the whole
8 property.” Id. at 539. It then rejected the argument that “cost of restoration and
9 diminution in market value represent two different categories of loss,”
10 explaining that these are “simply two sides of the same coin”: “[e]ach is a proper
11 way to measure lost property value, the lower of the two figures affording full
12 compensation to the owner.” Id. at 539‐40. Thus, because both measures of
13 damages “correspond[] to [the] property loss,” they can and should be offset
14 against one another. Id.
15 The district court concluded that the logic of Fisher applies in this case, and
16 that Plaintiffs’ insurance proceeds and potential tort recovery both compensate
17 for the same loss. S.P.A. 88‐90. We agree. At trial, Defendants’ expert, Professor
18 Daniel Fischel, explained that, as in Fisher, the relevant category of loss in this
59
1 case is the “loss relating to destruction of property.” J.A. 1199. Both diminution
2 in market value (the potential tort recovery) and the combination of replacement
3 costs and business interruption compensation (the insurance recovery) reimburse
4 Plaintiffs for this same type of injury.
5 The market value of income‐producing properties like WTCP and
6 7WTCo.’s leasehold interests, according to Fischel, is “the present value of the
7 profits that [a buyer] expects to get from [those] asset[s].” J.A. 1200. When the
8 property is damaged or destroyed, the property owner loses all, or some, of those
9 expected profits. And because the property’s market value simply reflects the
10 present value of expected profits, the property’s value falls accordingly. Thus, an
11 award measured by the diminution in the property’s market value compensates
12 for the damage to the property by replacing the “present value of . . . [the] lost
13 profit stream.” J.A. 1200.
14 The combination of replacement cost and business interruption
15 compensation accomplish this same goal of replacing the property owner’s lost
16 profits. Replacement costs allow Plaintiffs to repair the Leased Buildings,
17 thereby restoring the revenue stream from those properties. J.A. 1199. Business
18 interruption compensation then fills the “gap in time between . . . the date of the
60
1 destruction of the property and the time that the property is rebuilt,” J.A. 1200,
2 by substituting for the rental income lost during the rebuilding period. See J.A.
3 1205; Scribner, 138 F.3d at 472 (noting that replacement costs include the
4 “reduction of the rental or usable value of the property during the pendency of
5 the injury” (internal quotation marks omitted)). In other words, replacement
6 costs “restore [Plaintiffs’] income stream as a result of the building[s] being
7 completed,” and business interruption coverage compensates “for their loss of
8 revenues . . . from the date of the loss until those buildings were restored,” J.A.
9 1165, combining to produce a recovery that has precisely the same effect as an
10 award based on the diminution in the leasehold’s value. Thus, although
11 “replacement cost” and “business interruption cost” may be distinct categories
12 when it comes to insurance coverage, they nonetheless rectify the same “category
13 of loss” when it comes to tort recovery: namely, loss from the destruction of
14 property.20 See Fisher, 98 N.Y.2d at 540.
20 Perhaps recognizing the shortcomings in their legal position, Plaintiffs reiterate that
their actual rebuilding expenses exceeded both the diminution in value of their
leasehold interests and their insurance recoveries. This is simply an attempt to relitigate
an issue we decided earlier in this opinion — whether WTCP and 7WTCo. are entitled
to recover reconstruction costs — and is not relevant to whether Plaintiffs’ insurance
recoveries correspond to the same category of loss as diminution in market value.
61
1 To summarize, we agree with the district court’s decision to allocate
2 Plaintiffs’ insurance recoveries to replacement costs and business interruption
3 losses, and with its conclusion that those insurance reimbursements correspond
4 to the same category of loss as Plaintiffs’ potential tort recoveries. It was
5 therefore necessary, under CPLR § 4545, to reduce Plaintiffs’ tort damages by the
6 amount of their insurance recoveries. Nonetheless, because we set aside the
7 district court’s orders calculating WTCP and 7WTCo.’s maximum recoverable
8 damages, we must also vacate the portion of the August 1, 2013 order that
9 reduces those damages to zero and enters judgment for Defendants. The district
10 court should return to the offset issue after reassessing the extent to which the
11 value of Plaintiffs’ leasehold interests declined due to the attacks.21
12 C. Prejudgment Interest
13 Plaintiffs’ last argument regarding damages focuses on the award of
14 prejudgment interest. In actions for property damage, New York law provides
15 that prejudgment “[i]nterest shall be recovered upon [the] sum awarded,” CPLR
WTCP’s argument that it must be able to recover separately for its $491.3 million
21
upfront payment to the Port Authority is unavailing. Tort damages compensate
Plaintiffs for the loss in value of their leasehold interests, not for particular payments
that they made to obtain those interests. There is no separate category of damages for
that initial payment to obtain the leasehold interests.
62
1 § 5001, “at a rate of [9%] per annum,” id. § 5004. These provisions “impose[] an
2 affirmative mandate on trial courts,” and leave “no discretion not to award
3 prejudgment interest under New York law.” Gussack Realty Co. v. Xerox Corp.,
4 224 F.3d 85, 93 (2d Cir. 2000) (per curiam). Pursuant to federal law, by contrast,
5 “Congress has enacted a statute governing the award of postjudgment interest,”
6 but “there is no comparable legislation regarding prejudgment interest.” City of
7 Milwaukee v. Cement Div., Nat’l Gypsum Co., 515 U.S. 189, 194 (1995). The issue of
8 prejudgment interest is therefore “governed by traditional judge‐made
9 principles” and is typically left to the discretion of district courts. Id.; see also SEC
10 v. Contorinis, 743 F.3d 296, 307‐08 (2d Cir. 2014). On appeal, WTCP and 7WTCo.
11 contend that the district court erred by crafting an interest award under federal
12 principles rather than applying New York’s statutory rate.
13 We conclude that, under the ATSSSA, New York law determines the rate
14 at which prejudgment interest accrues. As discussed earlier, the ATSSSA creates
15 a federal cause of action for damages and directs that “[t]he substantive law for
16 decision in any such suit shall be derived from the law” of the state in which the
17 injury occurred — in this case, New York. ATSSSA § 408(b)(2). This command
18 to look to New York law includes the State’s law of damages, see Virgilio v. City of
63
1 New York, 407 F.3d 105, 116 (2d Cir. 2005), and we have long held that “[t]he
2 awarding of prejudgment interest is considered” part of New York’s
3 “substantive law,” Schwimmer v. Allstate Ins. Co., 176 F.3d 648, 650 (2d Cir. 1999).
4 Accordingly, it is the New York statutes, and not federal judge‐made principles,
5 that determine prejudgment interest awards under the ATSSSA.
6 Defendants respond that state substantive law does not apply under the
7 ATSSSA when “such law is inconsistent with or preempted by Federal law.”
8 ATSSSA § 408(b)(2). But New York’s prejudgment interest statutes create no
9 such inconsistency. Federal prejudgment interest law is a matter of judicial
10 discretion and, like other federal common law doctrines, must give way when a
11 Congressional statute dictates a particular measure of damages. See Gen. Motors
12 Corp. v. Devex Corp., 461 U.S. 648, 651‐53 (1983) (concluding that reference to
13 “interest” in statute overrode longstanding common law doctrine of
14 prejudgment interest). Defendants, too, rely on this principle — otherwise they
15 could not argue that CPLR § 4545 replaces the federal common law rule against
16 reducing damages by the amount of collateral recoveries. See Appellants’ Br. at
17 87; see also Blake v. Del. & Hudson Ry. Co., 484 F.2d 204, 205‐06 (2d Cir. 1973).
18 Moreover, when Congress has adopted state substantive law in other federal
64
1 statutes and did not wish to make state prejudgment interest available, it has
2 explicitly said so. See United States v. Kwai Fun Wong, 135 S. Ct. 1625, 1639 (2015)
3 (noting that, under the Federal Tort Claims Act, Congress explicitly prevented
4 recovery of prejudgment interest). The ATSSSA contains no such limitation.
5 Nor does state prejudgment interest conflict with the purpose of the
6 ATSSSA. As we explained in In re September 11 Property Damage Litigation, 650
7 F.3d 145 (2d Cir. 2011), Congress enacted the ATSSSA in part to “preserve the
8 continued viability of the United States air transportation system from
9 potentially ruinous tort liability.” Id. at 152. It accomplished this goal by
10 capping the extent of the airlines’ liability, not by limiting plaintiffs’ tort
11 recoveries. Cf. id. at 152‐53 (concluding that the ATSSSA did not create a
12 “limited fund” for recovery or restrict the manner in which plaintiffs could settle
13 claims). We therefore agree with WTCP and 7WTCo. that New York’s
14 prejudgment interest statutes, and not federal common law, governs the rate of
15 their prejudgment interest award.
16 This decision does not, however, end our analysis of prejudgment interest.
17 As Defendants observe, awarding interest also requires determining the base
18 amount from which that interest is calculated. On that issue, we conclude that
65
1 the district court should calculate interest on the final tort award, and not the
2 diminution in the value of Plaintiffs’ leasehold interests; in other words, the
3 district court should perform the insurance setoff before calculating the
4 prejudgment interest. CPLR § 5001 requires that interest be “recovered upon a
5 sum awarded.” See Mfr.’s & Traders Trust Co. v. Reliance Ins. Co., 8 N.Y.3d 583, 588‐
6 89 (2007). As the Court of Appeals has explained, this recovery “is intended to
7 indemnify successful plaintiffs for the nonpayment of what is due to them, and is
8 not meant to punish defendants for delaying the final resolution of the
9 litigation.” Love v. State, 78 N.Y.2d 540, 544 (1991) (emphasis added) (internal
10 citation and quotation marks omitted). CPLR § 4545 plays an important role in
11 determining what amount a plaintiff is due by requiring courts to “reduce the
12 amount of the award” to reflect collateral setoffs. Plaintiffs do not receive, nor
13 were they ever entitled, to the amount before the setoff. See CPLR § 4545
14 (requiring setoff even when the collateral reimbursement has not yet been made).
15 It therefore makes little sense to have Defendants indemnify Plaintiffs — by way
16 of prejudgment interest payments — for an amount that Defendants never owed.
17 Accordingly, the district court erred at the September 27, 2012 hearing in
18 setting the prejudgment interest rate and in its August 1, 2013 order calculating
66
1 interest based on the diminution in value of Plaintiffs’ leasehold interests. On
2 remand, we direct the district court to calculate prejudgment interest on the
3 amount of the final award using the New York statutory rate. In other words, the
4 district court should reassess the lost value of Plaintiffs’ leasehold estates, reduce
5 that amount by the collateral setoff, and only then calculate prejudgment interest
6 based on the resulting award (if any) at the New York rate, running from the
7 date of the attacks.
8 D. United’s Duty as to Flight 11
9 Finally, the district court dismissed 7WTCo.’s claims against United
10 Continental Holdings, Inc. and United Airlines, Inc. (collectively, “United”), after
11 concluding that United had no “connection to Flight 11 or its hijackers,” S.P.A.
12 56, and therefore “did not owe 7WTCo a duty of care,” S.P.A. 58. We agree with
13 the district court’s well‐reasoned decision on this score, and therefore affirm its
14 dismissal of 7WTCo.’s claims against United.
15 On the morning of September 11, 2001, two terrorists entered Portland
16 International Jetport (“PWM”) in Portland, Maine, with plans to take US
17 Airways/Colgan Flight 5930 to Boston. They received tickets at the US Airways
18 counter and then passed through PWM’s security checkpoint before boarding the
67
1 plane. Because PWM had only one such checkpoint, the airlines flying out of the
2 terminal — including United — had signed a “Shared Responsibility
3 Agreement,” under which Delta Air Lines assumed “responsibility for the
4 overall operation of the passenger security screening checkpoint,” including the
5 training of employees and conducting of employee background checks. J.A. 357.
6 This agreement was United’s only connection to US Airways/Colgan Flight 5930.
7 After arriving at Boston’s Logan Airport, the hijackers obtained boarding
8 passes for American Airlines Flight 11 at the American Airlines desk in Terminal
9 A. They then entered a second security screening checkpoint — this one
10 operated by Globe Aviation Services under a contract with American Airlines —
11 before boarding Flight 11. Three other hijackers arrived at Logan Airport by car
12 and followed the same route to the plane. United’s gates and security
13 checkpoints were located in a different terminal than those of American Airlines,
14 and United had no responsibility for ticketing or security along the terrorists’
15 route to Flight 11. Once on board the flight, the terrorists hijacked the plane and
16 crashed it into 1 World Trade Center. “As 1 World Trade Center collapsed, it
17 spewed debris, some of which pierced the façade of 7 World Trade Center . . . ,
18 causing fires and, eventually,” the building’s collapse. S.P.A. 48.
68
1 On these facts, the district court correctly concluded that United had no
2 connection to Flight 11 or its hijackers and therefore owed no duty to 7WTCo.
3 Under New York law, the scope of a tortfeasor’s duty “is, in the first instance, a
4 legal issue for the court to resolve.” Waters v. N.Y.C. Hous. Auth., 69 N.Y.2d 225,
5 229 (1987). This analysis is fundamentally about “apportioning risks and
6 allocating the burden of loss,” id., and it is the “responsibility of courts . . . to
7 limit the legal consequences of wrongs to a controllable degree and to protect
8 against crushing exposure to liability,” Strauss v. Belle Realty Co., 65 N.Y.2d 399,
9 402 (1985) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). To that end, New
10 York courts “have been cautious . . . in extending liability to defendants for their
11 failure to control the conduct of others” by limiting such liability to situations in
12 which “the defendant’s relationship with either the tortfeasor or the plaintiff
13 places the defendant in the best position to protect against the risk of harm.”
14 Hamilton v. Beretta U.S.A. Corp., 96 N.Y.2d 222, 232‐33 (2001). This cautious
15 approach is necessary to guard against “the specter of limitless liability” and to
16 constrain the class of possible plaintiffs. Id. at 233.
17 We applied these principles in the context of airline security in Stanford v.
18 Kuwait Airways Corp., 89 F.3d 117 (2d Cir. 1996). In that case, four terrorists
69
1 purchased “interline tickets” that allowed them to board Middle East Airlines
2 (“MEA”) Flight 426 in Beirut and then transfer, without a new ticket or second
3 baggage check, to a Kuwait Airways flight in Dubai. Id. at 120. MEA employees
4 sold the tickets, checked the terrorists’ visas and passports, took their bags, and
5 were generally “the first line of defense” in Beirut Airport’s notoriously lax
6 security system. Id. The terrorists then boarded Flight 426, and transferred
7 directly to their Kuwait Airways flight in Dubai, which they hijacked. Id. at 121.
8 After the hijacking, they tortured three American passengers, who later brought
9 suit against, inter alia, MEA. In what we deemed a “close call,” this Court
10 concluded that MEA owed a duty of care to the plaintiffs. Id. at 127. To reach
11 that result, the panel relied on the fact that, because the terrorists checked in at
12 MEA’s ticketing desk and the airline knew about the poor security at Beirut
13 airport, it was well situated to implement additional screening measures. Id. at
14 124. Moreover, MEA’s duty extended to the Kuwait Airways flight because
15 MEA knew that, under the interline ticketing program, passengers would not
16 need to pass through a second round of screening before boarding the next flight.
17 Id.
70
1 Here, by contrast, United was never in a position to serve as “the first line
2 of defense” for Flight 11. In Portland, US Airways controlled ticketing for Flight
3 5930 and Delta Airlines had responsibility for the airport security checkpoint.
4 United was a party to the Shared Responsibility Agreement regarding the
5 checkpoint, but that title is a misnomer: the Agreement transferred operational
6 control over the checkpoint from United (and other airlines) to Delta alone.
7 Moreover, unlike in Stanford, there was no interline ticketing program to connect
8 security in Portland to security in Boston. Instead, the September 11th hijackers
9 had to go through an entirely separate set of controls at Logan before boarding
10 Flight 11. United had no connection to those controls and, indeed, was not even
11 located in the same terminal. Thus, unlike in Stanford, “both logic and public
12 policy weigh heavily” against a duty to 7WTCo. under these circumstances.
13 Waters, 69 N.Y.2d at 230. United had “no control over either the acts of the
14 primary wrongdoer or the conditions” of the ticketing and security checkpoints
15 the terrorists used. Id. Nor would the goal of increasing safety “materially be
16 advanced” by expanding liability to defendants in United’s situation: each airline
17 already has ample incentive, both because of tort liability and federal
18 regulations, to police the ticketing desks and security checkpoints that they
71
1 actually operate. Id. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s decision to
2 dismiss 7WTCo.’s claims against United.
3 CONCLUSION
4 To summarize:
5
6 (1) Under the “lesser of two” principle (and assuming that
7 Defendants’ liability can be established), Plaintiffs are entitled to
8 recover an amount equal to the diminution in value of their
9 leasehold interests, but not the cost of rebuilding the Leased
10 Buildings.
11
12 (2) The district court properly concluded that Plaintiffs may not
13 recover for retenanting the Leased Buildings, hiring attorneys
14 during litigation with their insurers, paying mortgage carrying costs,
15 and losing tenant improvements. It was also correct to reduce the
16 amount of Plaintiffs’ insurance recoveries by the cost of preparing
17 insurance claims, rather than treating those expenses as a separate
18 category of damages.
19
20 (3) The district court applied an incorrect valuation methodology
21 when determining that the value of WTCP and 7WTCo.’s leasehold
22 interests fell by, at most, $2.805 billion and $737 million,
23 respectively. We therefore remand for reconsideration of this
24 valuation.
25
26 (4) Because the ATSSSA creates a federal cause of action and
27 incorporates only state substantive law, the district court did not err
28 by conducting a collateral offset hearing pursuant to CPLR § 4545
29 before a trial on liability or damages. Moreover, the district court’s
30 finding that Plaintiffs’ insurance recoveries reimbursed them for the
31 costs of reconstructing the Leased Buildings and for business
32 interruption was not clearly erroneous, and we agree with its
72
1 decision that those reimbursements correspond to the same category
2 of loss as the diminution in value of their leasehold interests.
3
4 (5) Prejudgment interest should be calculated using New York’s
5 statutory rate and based on the amount of the award after the
6 collateral offset, rather than the diminution in value of Plaintiffs’
7 leasehold interests.
8
9 (6) The district court correctly dismissed 7WTCo.’s claims against
10 United after concluding that United owed no duty of care regarding
11 Flight 11.
12
13 On remand, the district court may, consistent with the guidance in this opinion,
14 determine the diminution in value of Plaintiffs’ leasehold interests on the
15 evidence already submitted, after allowing additional fact‐gathering, or through
16 a trial on damages. It should then offset Plaintiffs’ insurance proceeds against
17 those hypothetical tort recoveries, and calculate prejudgment interest, if
18 necessary, based on the remainder.
19 Accordingly, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court dismissing
20 7WTCo.’s claims against United. As described above, we also AFFIRM the
21 district court’s judgment insofar as it properly applied the “lesser of two”
22 principle to limit Plaintiffs’ damages, properly denied Plaintiffs’ claims for
23 consequential damages, and properly applied CPLR § 4545. Finally, we
24 VACATE the judgment in part and REMAND with instructions to assess the lost
73
1 market value of Plaintiffs’ leasehold interests and, if necessary, to recalculate the
2 award of prejudgment interest in a manner consistent with this opinion.
74
IN RE SEPT. 11 LITIG.
1 STRAUB, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part:
2 I concur with the majority in some respects; specifically, in its: (i) denial of
3 the plaintiffs‐appellants’ (“Plaintiffs”) claims for consequential damages;
4 (ii) affirmance of the District Court’s findings of correspondence under N.Y.
5 C.P.L.R. 4545; (iii) determination of the proper prejudgment interest to be
6 applied; and (iv) affirmance of the dismissal of certain claims against United
7 Airlines regarding Flight 11.
8 But for the reasons that follow, I respectfully dissent from the majority’s
9 decision limiting Plaintiffs’ potential tort recovery as a matter of law. That
10 determination raises complex, important, and novel questions of New York law
11 that are best addressed by certification for decision by the New York Court of
12 Appeals.
13 In this case, stated basically, Plaintiffs leased public property—buildings in
14 the World Trade Center—in return for rental payments and various other
15 obligations, including, they contend, an assurance to the property’s government
16 owner to repair any damage to the property during the leases’ term. After the
‐1‐
IN RE SEPT. 11 LITIG.
1 property was tragically destroyed, Plaintiffs suffered catastrophic economic
2 losses: they assert that not only must they continue to make rental payments on
3 their leases, but they must also pay for the World Trade Center’s rebuilding.
4 Plaintiffs sued the defendants‐appellants (“Defendants”) for compensation for
5 these losses, alleging that Defendants’ negligence led to the World Trade
6 Center’s destruction.
7 The majority permits Plaintiffs some recovery—mostly for the reduction in
8 rental value of their leases—but it categorically prohibits Plaintiffs from
9 obtaining compensation from Defendants for the substantial costs of rebuilding
10 the World Trade Center.1 In so doing, the majority decides two novel questions
11 of New York law that, in my view, should instead be addressed in the first
12 instance by the New York Court of Appeals.
13 Each of the two questions, if decided in Plaintiffs’ favor, could allow some
14 recovery for rebuilding costs. The first novel question of New York law is
1 Contrary to the majority’s suggestion, see Maj. Op. at 31, Plaintiffs seek compensation only for
the amounts necessary to rebuild the World Trade Center as it was before September 11, 2001,
see Brief for Plaintiffs at 14, 52 n.36; Reply Brief for Plaintiffs at 13.
‐2‐
IN RE SEPT. 11 LITIG.
1 whether Plaintiffs can recover for the diminution in value of their leases caused
2 by the leases’ obligation to rebuild. The majority excludes consideration of this
3 loss as a matter of law, but New York’s highest court might reasonably instead
4 consider it a jury question of proximate cause. The second novel question of
5 New York law is whether Plaintiffs can alternatively recover for their rebuilding
6 costs based on the World Trade Center’s public value. Again, the majority rejects
7 this basis for recovery as a matter of law, but where Plaintiffs were obligated to
8 repair damage to state property and have claimed that doing so is merited by the
9 property’s public value, New York’s highest court could justifiably find that
10 equity warrants compensation from the tortfeasor that caused the property’s
11 damage.
12 New York’s courts have not addressed these questions (or anything close
13 to them), and I do not believe that we can confidently predict how the New York
14 Court of Appeals would resolve them. At the least, and as I explain below, I
15 have considerable doubt that New York’s highest court would follow the
16 majority’s reasoning.
‐3‐
IN RE SEPT. 11 LITIG.
1 I. Issue One: The Obligation to Rebuild
2 As the majority explains, damage to property can be remedied either by
3 paying for the property’s lost value or by paying for the property’s restoration.
4 Maj. Op. at 26. Because either can place the victim in the same position as before
5 the wrong occurred, see id., New York’s courts generally award the lesser of the
6 two. This “lesser of two” principle affords full compensation while encouraging
7 mitigation of loss. See Hartshorn v. Chaddock, 135 N.Y. 116, 122 (1892); see also
8 Fisher v. Qualico Contracting Corp., 98 N.Y.2d 534, 539 (2002) (stating that the
9 principle provides a plaintiff with “no more than is reasonably necessary to
10 remedy fully the injury while avoiding uneconomical efforts” (internal quotation
11 marks omitted)).
12 Applying the “lesser of two” rule to this case, the majority reasons that
13 Plaintiffs are entitled to the lesser of the diminution in value of their leases
14 caused by the property’s damage and the amount necessary to repair the
15 property. Maj. Op. at 29. The leases’ purported obligation to rebuild, however,
16 complicates this analysis. It causes the diminution in value of Plaintiffs’ leases
‐4‐
IN RE SEPT. 11 LITIG.
1 (the first measure of compensation) to be significantly impacted by the cost of
2 restoration (the second measure).
3 A proper calculation of a lease’s value must take into account all of its
4 provisions. E.g., Irv‐Ceil Realty Corp. v. State, 43 A.D.2d 775, 775–76 (3d Dep’t
5 1973). As the majority itself states, a lease’s value is “the amount that a buyer
6 would be willing to pay for the right to assume the lessee’s rights and obligations.”
7 Maj. Op. at 28 (emphasis added). The obligation to rebuild would have
8 obviously discouraged any potential purchaser of Plaintiffs’ leases after
9 September 11, 2001. Yet the majority instructs the District Court to ignore it
10 when calculating the leases’ diminution in value—in the majority’s own words,
11 to award compensatory damages based on a “hypothetical” rather than reality.
12 See id. at 47–48, 51 n.15. The majority does not challenge Plaintiffs’ assertion that
13 they were actually damaged by the obligation to rebuild. Instead, the majority
14 reasons that Plaintiffs “should not receive a higher measure of damages” simply
15 because they contractually agreed in advance to repair the property in the event
16 of damage. Id. at 32.
‐5‐
IN RE SEPT. 11 LITIG.
1 New York’s highest court might easily disagree with the majority’s
2 conclusion. The majority’s reasoning runs contrary to the basic principle—
3 expressed in the “lesser of two” rule—that tort damages aim to restore the
4 injured plaintiff to the position that would have been occupied had the harm not
5 occurred. See McDougald v. Garber, 73 N.Y.2d 246, 253–54 (1989). Although the
6 “lesser of two” rule is one of mitigation, see Hartshorn, 135 N.Y. at 122, and thus
7 the majority emphasizes that a plaintiff’s post‐tort choice to repair property, on
8 its own, does not justify awarding replacement costs in excess of market value,
9 see Maj. Op. at 31, that is not this case. Plaintiffs could not have mitigated the
10 reduction in value of their leases caused by the contractual obligation to rebuild.
11 New York has a long history of permitting tort damages based on contractual
12 losses. E.g., Steitz v. Gifford, 280 N.Y. 15, 18–22 (1939) (holding defendant
13 responsible for reduced revenue on crop sold by plaintiff farmer after
14 defendant’s negligent driving incapacitated plaintiff, causing a delay in crop’s
15 sale). And in at least one case, a New York court has allowed a tort victim to
16 seek damages greater than the value of destroyed property based on the terms of
17 a lease agreement. See Plouffe v. Rogers, 144 A.D.2d 218, 219–20 (3d Dep’t 1988)
‐6‐
IN RE SEPT. 11 LITIG.
1 (permitting damage claim for early termination charges on an automobile’s lease
2 after negligently caused crash). Hence, there is considerable reason to think that
3 the New York Court of Appeals would, rather than preclude consideration of
4 Plaintiffs’ obligation to rebuild as a matter of law, instead permit a jury to
5 consider whether the obligation fits within the scope of proximate cause.
6 II. Issue Two: The World Trade Center’s Public Value
7 Even if Plaintiffs’ purported obligation to rebuild were ignored in
8 calculating the diminution in value of their leases—as the majority holds—
9 Plaintiffs might alternatively merit compensation for rebuilding based on the
10 World Trade Center’s public value. Plaintiffs, supported by a trio of experts and
11 an amicus brief on behalf of the State of New York, assert that the World Trade
12 Center is worth more to the public (and thus to its government owner) than both
13 what it cost to build and what it would be worth to a potential private
14 purchaser—in other words, that the World Trade Center’s public value is greater
15 than both its replacement cost and its market value. Accepting this
16 uncontroverted claim as true—as we must in assessing Defendants’ motion for
17 summary judgment—Plaintiffs’ rebuilding obligation serves the public interest
‐7‐
IN RE SEPT. 11 LITIG.
1 and is economically beneficial. The majority nonetheless determines that the
2 New York Court of Appeals would preclude consideration of the World Trade
3 Center’s public value in determining Plaintiffs’ compensation. I cannot reach the
4 same conclusion with any degree of confidence.
5 The World Trade Center was built for the public benefit, see N.Y.
6 Unconsol. Law §§ 6601(9), 6610; Courtesy Sandwich Shop, Inc. v. Port of N.Y. Auth.,
7 12 N.Y.2d 379, 388–89, appeal dismissed, 375 U.S. 78 (1963), and the Port Authority
8 retains ownership of the World Trade Center pursuant to the site’s authorizing
9 legislation, see N.Y. Unconsol. Law § 6603. The decision to lease portions of the
10 World Trade Center to Plaintiffs was intended to “maximiz[e] the value of the
11 World Trade Center to the Port Authority and to the people of the region,” Joint
12 App’x at 377 (Mins. of the Port Auth. Bd. of Comm’rs, Apr. 26, 2001), and New
13 York courts have recognized the public purpose of projects involving leases of
14 public property to private parties, e.g., Murphy v. Erie County, 28 N.Y.2d 80, 87
15 (1971).
16 Although the New York Court of Appeals has not addressed the valuation
17 of tortiously damaged public property, it would be consistent with New York’s
‐8‐
IN RE SEPT. 11 LITIG.
1 basic principles of tort law to consider the World Trade Center’s public value in
2 determining the damages a tortfeasor owes for its destruction. As noted above,
3 the purpose of tort recovery under New York law is “to have the wrongdoer
4 make the victim whole.” Ross v. Louise Wise Servs., Inc., 8 N.Y.3d 478, 489 (2007).
5 Even though an owner of damaged property can typically be made whole by
6 compensation for the property’s diminution in market value, market value may
7 provide inadequate compensation for damage to property built and owned by
8 the government; such property might have a utility to the public—particularly a
9 site‐specific utility—that exceeds the property’s commercial worth.
10 Hence, whereas the “lesser of two” rule compares a property’s market
11 value to its replacement cost for determining full compensation to an owner of
12 private property, full compensation to a government owner of public property
13 might require consideration of the property’s public value—essentially, the
14 “lesser of two” of public value and replacement cost. For example, a tree in a
15 public park might cost $5,000 to plant, have a value to the public in its location of
16 $10,000, and yet increase the park’s market value by only $300. If the tree were
17 negligently cut down, replanting would not constitute waste, and the
‐9‐
IN RE SEPT. 11 LITIG.
1 government would be made whole by compensation of $5,000, not $300.2 This is
2 the calculus that Plaintiffs’ experts assert applies to the World Trade Center: that
3 its market value is less than its replacement cost, which, in turn, is less than its
4 value to the public.
5 These considerations could lead the New York Court of Appeals to
6 conclude that the tortious destruction of property built and owned by the
7 government merits a compensatory award of replacement costs where the
8 property’s value to the public exceeds its costs of restoration, regardless of its
9 market value. Indeed, in different contexts, New York courts permit
10 compensation based on replacement cost—in excess of lost market value—where
11 market value provides an inadequate measure of loss. E.g., Lake v. Dye, 232 N.Y.
12 209, 214 (1921) (household goods); cf. Matter of Rochester Urban Renewal Agency
2 A variation of this hypothetical is included in Professor Dobbs’s treatise on remedies. See 1
Dan B. Dobbs, Law of Remedies § 1.9, at 46–47 (2d ed. 1993). In Professor Dobbs’s version, the
tree is on privately‐owned land. Although paying for the tree’s replacement “is not inefficient”
and “may add to efficiency in providing appropriate deterrence,” Professor Dobbs cautions
against measuring the defendant’s liability by the public’s loss where the property is privately
owned. Id. at 46. “The answer is different,” writes Professor Dobbs, “when it comes to public
resources” in which the public has a right that may be pursued by the government. Id. at 47.
‐10‐
IN RE SEPT. 11 LITIG.
1 (Patchen Post), 45 N.Y.2d 1, 8–9 (1978) (compensation for government taking of
2 “specialty” property, which might be worth to its owner “everything it cost to
3 construct and more” yet lacks a buyer “willing to purchase it even at its
4 reproduction value”).
5 Under the majority’s reasoning, however, Defendants are responsible for
6 much less: simply the reduction in value of Plaintiffs’ leases without
7 consideration of the substantial costs of rebuilding. Defendants might
8 conceivably be liable to the World Trade Center’s government owner for
9 rebuilding costs, except that the Port Authority can receive assistance with
10 rebuilding from Plaintiffs pursuant to their rebuilding obligation, which “served
11 to protect the extensive public investment in the [World Trade Center].” Brief for
12 Amicus Curiae State of New York (“N.Y. Amicus Br.”) at 21. The Port Authority
13 is “not presently seeking damages” from Defendants “so long as” Plaintiffs
14 “continue[] to comply” with their contractual obligations. Joint App’x at 589
15 (Decl. of Keith E. Harris, Chief of the Commercial Litig. Div. of the Port
16 Authority, Aug. 11, 2008). The result is a windfall for Defendants, as they must
‐11‐
IN RE SEPT. 11 LITIG.
1 pay for much less than the full scope of damage caused by their alleged tort,
2 while Plaintiffs may be compelled to fund the World Trade Center’s rebuilding.
3 I am not convinced that the New York Court of Appeals would accept this
4 result. It has, for many years, applied equitable principles to permit recovery
5 against a wrongdoer by a party that was “compelled to pay the damages which
6 the wrongdoer should have paid.” Dunn v. Uvalde Asphalt Paving Co., 175 N.Y.
7 214, 217 (1903). The equitable doctrine of subrogation, for instance, in the context
8 of insurance, “entitles an insurer to ‘stand in the shoes’ of its insured to seek
9 indemnification from third parties whose wrongdoing has caused a loss for
10 which the insurer is bound to reimburse.” N. Star Reinsurance Corp. v. Cont’l Ins.
11 Co., 82 N.Y.2d 281, 294 (1993). The New York Court of Appeals has explained, in
12 reasoning that could easily apply here, that subrogation “allocates responsibility
13 for the loss to the person who in equity and good conscience ought to pay it, in
14 the interest of avoiding absolution of a wrongdoer from liability simply because
15 the insured had the foresight to procure insurance coverage.” Id.; see also
16 Teichman by Teichman v. Cmty. Hosp. of W. Suffolk, 87 N.Y.2d 514, 521 (1996)
17 (stating that the “right of subrogation” was “formulated to prevent unjust
‐12‐
IN RE SEPT. 11 LITIG.
1 enrichment” and “is based upon principles of equity and natural justice”
2 (internal quotation marks omitted)); Pittsburgh‐Westmoreland Coal Co. v. Kerr, 220
3 N.Y. 137, 140 (1917) (“The doctrine of subrogation is a device to promote
4 justice.”). The New York Court of Appeals has repeatedly emphasized that the
5 equitable principles of subrogation should be applied broadly where warranted.
6 E.g., 3105 Grand Corp. v. City of New York, 288 N.Y. 178, 182 (1942) (subrogation
7 “is a highly favored remedy” and “courts are inclined to extend rather than
8 restrict its application”); Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corp. v. Hooker
9 Electrochemical Co., 240 N.Y. 37, 47 (1925) (asserting that the “principle of
10 subrogation ought to be liberally applied for the protection of those who are its
11 natural beneficiaries”).
12 The majority asserts that Plaintiffs cannot recover for the public’s loss
13 because they did not serve as the public’s “trustee,” Maj. Op. at 37, but the
14 majority does not address the possibility that Plaintiffs may nonetheless warrant
15 compensation based on a rebuilding obligation that “served to protect” the
16 public’s investment. N.Y. Amicus Br. at 21. Instead, the majority cites United
17 States v. 564.54 Acres of Land, 441 U.S. 506 (1979), to note that the Supreme Court
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IN RE SEPT. 11 LITIG.
1 has, in determining “just compensation” for purposes of the Takings Clause,
2 refused to compensate private plaintiffs for the community value of their
3 properties. See Maj. Op. at 37. Yet 564.54 Acres of Land is hardly instructive in
4 predicting how New York’s highest court would resolve the issues presented
5 here. It addressed the power of eminent domain (and thus discussed the
6 constitutional limits of “just compensation,” not what a tortfeasor ought to pay),
7 it has not once been cited by a published decision of New York’s courts, and,
8 unlike here, it involved a private entity that was “under no legal or factual
9 obligation to replace” the taken property or compensate the public for its
10 reconstruction, 441 U.S. at 515. Contrary to the majority’s point, moreover, the
11 New York Court of Appeals has explicitly considered public value in
12 determining just compensation for a government taking of private property. See
13 Matter of Port Auth. Trans‐Hudson Corp. (Hudson Rapid Tubes Corp.), 20 N.Y.2d 457,
14 465, 468–70 (1967) (holding that private owner of rail lines and tunnels taken by
15 Port Authority was entitled to more than property’s market value, which was
16 scrap, because property formed “an essential part of an essential public facility”),
17 cert. denied, 390 U.S. 1002 (1968).
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IN RE SEPT. 11 LITIG.
1 * * *
2 New York’s courts have not addressed the issues discussed above, and I
3 do not believe that we can confidently predict how the New York Court of
4 Appeals would resolve them. The issues are complex, their resolution requires
5 significant public policy choices, and their import to New York State is evident—
6 significant enough, in fact, to warrant the submission of an unsolicited amicus
7 brief on its behalf in this case. Leases frequently include an obligation to rebuild,
8 and New York’s amicus brief explains that “[m]any public projects are
9 implemented through long‐term leases to private parties.” N.Y. Amicus Br. at 3.
10 The State emphasizes its “strong interest in avoiding misclassification of public
11 property as merely private in nature, and in preventing the mistaken
12 construction of New York law to provide an incentive for private parties to
13 abandon their contractual rebuilding and restoration obligations to public
14 entities.” Id. at 35.
15 Certification can delay resolution of a specific case, but as the Supreme
16 Court has noted, “[i]t does, of course, in the long run save time, energy, and
17 resources and helps build a cooperative judicial federalism.” Lehman Bros. v.
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IN RE SEPT. 11 LITIG.
1 Schein, 416 U.S. 386, 391 (1974). Deciding an undetermined question of state law
2 rather than certifying the question to the state’s highest court impedes the
3 development of state law and exposes litigants to the risk that our conjectures on
4 state law are wrong. E.g., Solomon R. Guggenheim Found. v. Lubell, 77 N.Y.2d 311,
5 318 (1991) (rejecting our holding on an open question of New York law after we
6 declined to certify). The New York Court of Appeals has underscored “the great
7 value in New York’s certification procedure” and affirmed that certification
8 “facilitat[es] the orderly development and fair application of the law and
9 prevent[s] the need for speculation.” Tunick v. Safir, 94 N.Y.2d 709, 711–12 (2000).
10 The New York Court of Appeals might decline to answer our certified questions,
11 although it does so rarely. See id. at 712. But by declining to certify at all, we
12 deny it the opportunity to resolve, in the first instance, novel questions of state
13 law rife with public policy implications.
14 The State of New York’s amicus brief in this case explicitly requests, in the
15 alternative, that we certify this case to the New York Court of Appeals. N.Y.
16 Amicus Br. at 36 n.11. I would grant that request, as I find that the issues of New
17 York law raised here are best addressed by certification. See N.Y. Comp. Codes
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IN RE SEPT. 11 LITIG.
1 R. & Regs. tit. 22, § 500.27(a); 2d Cir. Local R. 27.2; see also In re Santiago‐
2 Monteverde, 747 F.3d 153, 158 (2d Cir. 2014) (stating general requirements for
3 certification).
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