NOTICE: All slip opinions and orders are subject to formal
revision and are superseded by the advance sheets and bound
volumes of the Official Reports. If you find a typographical
error or other formal error, please notify the Reporter of
Decisions, Supreme Judicial Court, John Adams Courthouse, 1
Pemberton Square, Suite 2500, Boston, MA, 02108-1750; (617) 557-
1030; SJCReporter@sjc.state.ma.us
16-P-203 Appeals Court
ONEBEACON AMERICA INSURANCE COMPANY vs. CELANESE CORPORATION.
No. 16-P-203.
Suffolk. November 18, 2016. - October 16, 2017.
Present: Trainor, Meade, & Hanlon, JJ.
Insurance, Defense of proceedings against insured, Insurer's
obligation to defend. Contract, Insurance. Conflict of
Interest. Practice, Civil, Summary judgment, Attorney's
fees.
Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on
March 2, 2010.
The case was heard by Christine M. Roach, J., on motions
for summary judgment, and an award of attorney's fees was
entered by her.
Kevin J. O'Connor (Kara A. Loridas also present) for the
plaintiff.
Michael John Miguel for the defendant.
TRAINOR, J. This appeal arises from a series of cross
motions for summary judgment. The plaintiff, OneBeacon America
Insurance Company (OneBeacon), appeals from so much of the final
judgment as awarded reasonable and necessary defense costs to
2
its insured, Celanese Corporation (Celanese), that Celanese
incurred from April 13, 2009, through May 27, 2011.1 On May 27,
2011, a judge of the Superior Court determined that OneBeacon
was entitled to take control of Celanese's defense as of April
13, 2009 (see note 1, supra). The issue on appeal is whether
that determination precludes Celanese from receiving any
reimbursement for defense of the underlying claims during the
period of time when the question of control over the defense was
being litigated. OneBeacon argues that it is not liable for any
defense costs incurred by Celanese during that period of time
because OneBeacon offered to defend Celanese without a
reservation of rights. Celanese, on cross appeal, contends that
the judge committed an abuse of discretion by not awarding the
full amount of defense costs that Celanese requested. We vacate
so much of the judgment that held OneBeacon liable for
Celanese's defense costs for the period of time at issue, and
therefore do not reach the issues raised in Celanese's cross
appeal.
Background. The following undisputed facts are taken from
the summary judgment record. See Augat, Inc. v. Liberty Mut.
1
On April 13 Celanese elected to revert to defense under
OneBeacon's general policies. The parties then engaged in
litigation to determine, inter alia, whether, upon its offer to
defend Celanese without a reservation of rights, OneBeacon was
also entitled to take control of the defense of underlying
claims against Celanese.
3
Ins. Co., 410 Mass. 117, 120 (1991) ("The standard of review of
a grant of summary judgment is whether, viewing the evidence in
the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, all material
facts have been established and the moving party is entitled to
a judgment as a matter of law").
Over the years, Celanese has been subject to numerous legal
actions involving claims of bodily injury from asbestos and
chemicals allegedly contained in Celanese's products or
facilities. In an effort to seek coverage under its insurance
policies in April, 2009, Celanese sent a letter to OneBeacon
stating that it was terminating the parties' then-existing
defense cost-sharing agreements2 and demanding that OneBeacon
instead defend the ongoing asbestos and chemical product injury
claims under its original general liability policies.3
OneBeacon's general policies provided:
"DEFENSE, SETTLEMENT, SUPPLEMENTARY PAYMENTS. As respects
the insurance afforded by the terms of this policy
[OneBeacon] shall:
"A. defend any suit against [Celanese] alleging
bodily injury or property damage, even if such suit is
2
These agreements superseded the defense cost provisions of
OneBeacon's general policies and provided that OneBeacon would
pay a specified percentage of Celanese's defense costs for
certain specified claims. Celanese terminated these agreements
as a result of prior litigation with OneBeacon concerning the
agreements. That litigation commenced in 2006, and was tried to
a jury in 2009. See note 6, infra.
3
The termination letter was dated February 11, 2009, with
the withdrawal effective April 14, 2009.
4
groundless, false or fraudulent; but [OneBeacon] may make
such investigation, negotiation and settlement of any claim
or suit as it deems expedient;
"B. pay in addition to the applicable policy limits
of liability:
"(1) all expenses incurred by [OneBeacon]."4
In response to Celanese's letter, OneBeacon agreed to
defend Celanese against the underlying asbestos and chemical
product injury claims without a reservation of rights. To this
effect, OneBeacon offered to waive any issues of coverage5 and to
indemnify Celanese from any settlements or judgments up to its
full liability limits. However, OneBeacon also sought to assume
full control of Celanese's defense of these claims.
In response, Celanese refused to cede its control of the
defense or replace the counsel it had employed for the past
fourteen years with the representation selected by OneBeacon.
4
The general policies also provided that Celanese had a
duty of assistance and cooperation with OneBeacon:
"Assistance and Cooperation of the Insured. The insured
shall cooperate with [OneBeacon] and, upon [OneBeacon's]
request, shall attend hearings and trials and shall assist
in effecting settlements, securing and giving evidence,
obtaining the attendance of witnesses and in the conduct of
suits. The insured shall not, except at his [sic] own
cost, voluntarily make any payment, assume any obligation
or incur any expenses other than for such immediate medical
and surgical relief to others as shall be necessary at time
of accident."
5
OneBeacon stated that it would defend Celanese in all
pending cases that potentially alleged exposure during the
policy periods of 1965-1971.
5
Celanese alleged that because a "demonstrated conflict of
interest" existed, it was not required to yield control of its
defense.6
OneBeacon replied by advising Celanese that, as Celanese's
insurer, it did not consent to Celanese's retention of
independent counsel and was not contractually obligated to
compensate Celanese for such defense costs.
In March, 2010, OneBeacon filed an action for declaratory
relief.7 A judge entered an order in May, 2011,8 ruling on the
6
Celanese's letter provided three reasons for which a
conflict of interest existed and therefore for refusing to allow
OneBeacon to control the defense: (1) a jury verdict in the
2009 litigation between the parties found OneBeacon and Resolute
Management, Inc. - New England Division (OneBeacon's third-party
administrator) liable to Celanese under G. L. c. 93A, thus
demonstrating those entities' conflict of interest in
representing Celanese; (2) OneBeacon's proposal would result in
multiple defense firms handling the same cases, where some
claims alleged exposures during periods of time not covered by
the OneBeacon policies, thus creating a wasteful duplication of
effort; and (3) since some of the underlying cases fell outside
of OneBeacon's defense obligation, it did not have the right to
control the defense. However, on appeal, it appears that
Celanese has withdrawn its second and third arguments alleging a
conflict of interest.
As further evidence of OneBeacon's conflict of interest,
Celanese argued that, in testimony at the 2009 trial, OneBeacon
had "publicly disparaged Celanese for its defense strategy"
(which was designed to protect Celanese's reputation). Celanese
argued that its "interests" would be impaired by OneBeacon's
strategy of "limit[ing] its [own] financial exposure by settling
cases at fair value before incurring significant defense costs,"
irrespective of the merits of the cases.
7
OneBeacon sought declarations that: (1) under its
policies, OneBeacon had the right to control the defense of
6
parties' cross motions for summary judgment, and declaring that
OneBeacon had the right to control the defense of Celanese's
underlying claims as a result of its offer to defend without a
reservation of rights.9 The parties then filed further cross
motions for summary judgment on the issues underlying this
appeal, particularly whether OneBeacon was liable to Celanese
for the defense costs Celanese incurred during the period of
April 13, 2009, (when Celanese elected to revert to defense
under OneBeacon's general policies) through May 27, 2011 (when
the judge ruled that OneBeacon had the right to control
Celanese and select counsel as a result of its offer to defend
without a reservation of rights; (2) Celanese breached its
contractual obligations under the policies by refusing to cede
control; and (3) to the extent that OneBeacon's duties were not
extinguished by Celanese's actions, OneBeacon's liability is
limited to its pro rata share of the cost to defend and
indemnify Celanese with respect to the underlying actions. In
response, Celanese claimed that OneBeacon breached its
contractual obligations by insisting on controlling Celanese's
defense and failing to pay the defense costs Celanese incurred;
breached its duty of good faith and fair dealing; and committed
unfair and deceptive business practices in violation of G. L.
c. 93A. Celanese also sought a declaratory judgment that, "due
to a conflict," it had the right to control its own defense in
the underlying actions and that OneBeacon was required to pay
all defense costs necessary to carry out that defense.
8
This order was a part of a series of orders, resulting
from several cross motions for summary judgment brought by the
parties.
9
In making this ruling, the judge also found that Celanese
did not breach its contractual duties to OneBeacon by refusing
to cede control of its defense.
7
Celanese's defense.10 On the further cross motions, the judge
ruled that OneBeacon was liable for reasonable and necessary
defense costs incurred by Celanese during this period of time as
part of OneBeacon's duty to defend.11 The judge further referred
the issue of the amount of reasonable and necessary legal fees
to a special master, and ultimately awarded Celanese
$2,435,921.49 in attorney's fees, plus prejudgment interest from
May 27, 2011, to May 31, 2013.12
Discussion. Whether OneBeacon is liable for the defense
costs incurred by Celanese is dependent on our answer to four
questions: (1) Does OneBeacon have the right to control
Celanese's defense if OneBeacon has offered to defend without a
reservation of rights? (2) Does Celanese have the right to
refuse OneBeacon's control of the defense if a sufficient
conflict of interest exists? (3) Does a sufficient conflict of
interest exist? and (4) Is OneBeacon liable for defense costs
where Celanese has refused OneBeacon's control of the defense?
10
The parties represented to the judge, at a hearing on
November 3, 2011, that they had entered into an agreement with
respect to defense costs going forward from the date of the May
27, 2011, order.
11
The judge stated in her order, "By making the offer it
did to defend, OneBeacon was not excused from further (and full)
performance of this duty."
12
The judge's award was based on her adoption of the
special master's report in full.
8
1. Insurer's defense without a reservation of rights.
Massachusetts courts have not explicitly commented on an
insurer's rights in seeking to defend an insured without a
reservation of rights. However, such rights are logically
inferred from Massachusetts case law that discusses the rights
and limitations of an insurer's defense under a reservation of
rights.
In Massachusetts, "[w]hen an insurer seeks to defend its
insured under a reservation of rights, and the insured is
unwilling that the insurer do so, the insured may require the
insurer either to relinquish its reservation of rights or
relinquish its defense of the insured and reimburse the insured
for its defense costs" (emphasis added). Herbert A. Sullivan,
Inc. v. Utica Mut. Ins. Co., 439 Mass. 387, 406-407 (2003). In
other words, "an insurer may [not] reserve its rights to
disclaim liability in a case and at the same time insist on
retaining control of its defen[s]e." Three Sons, Inc. v.
Phoenix Ins. Co., 357 Mass. 271, 276 (1970) (quotation omitted).
Thus, when an insurer offers to defend the insured without a
reservation of rights, it may retain control of that defense.
See id. at 276-277; Sullivan, supra. See also Mount Vernon Fire
Ins. Co. v. VisionAid, Inc., 91 F. Supp. 3d 66, 73 (D. Mass.
2015) (VisionAid) ("[The insured] admits, however, that [the
insurer] has already withdrawn its reservation. Accordingly,
9
[the insurer] has no obligation to relinquish its defense of
[the insured] or to permit [the insured] to utilize independent
counsel at its expense"); 1 Windt, Insurance Claims & Disputes
§ 4.25, at 225 (6th ed. 2013) (Windt) (A duty to defend
provision "not only obligate[s] the insurance company to provide
a defense, but also give[s] it the right to control the
insured's defense").
Here, OneBeacon offered to defend Celanese against the
remaining asbestos and chemical product injury claims without a
reservation of rights. To this effect, OneBeacon offered to
waive any issues of coverage and to indemnify Celanese from any
settlements or judgments up to its full liability limits. In
offering to defend Celanese without a reservation of rights,
OneBeacon has the right to control Celanese's defense of those
claims. See Three Sons, 357 Mass. at 276-277; Sullivan, 439
Mass. at 406-407. This right to control Celanese's defense
includes the authority to choose the counsel who will defend the
claims and to make other decisions related to control of the
defense that would traditionally be vested in the insured, as a
named party in the case. See Sullivan, supra at 407; Northern
County Mut. Ins. Co. v. Davalos, 140 S.W.3d 685, 688 (Tex.
2004).
2. Insured's right to justifiably refuse insurer's control
of defense when a sufficient conflict of interest exists. While
10
OneBeacon has a right to control Celanese's defense as a result
of its offer to defend without a reservation of rights, such
right is not absolute.13 See Magoun v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
346 Mass. 677, 684 (1964) ("Nevertheless, the insurer's
discretion under the covenant to defend is not unlimited");
Davalos, 140 S.W.3d at 688 ("Under certain circumstances,
however, an insurer may not insist upon its contractual right to
control the defense"). See also Windt, supra at §§ 4:20, 4:25
(recognizing circumstances where insured may justifiably refuse
insurer's control of defense). Massachusetts courts have
recognized that an insured may rightfully refuse the insurer's
control of the defense when a conflict of interest arises. See
J. D'Amico, Inc. v. Boston, 345 Mass. 218, 227 (1962); Magoun,
346 Mass. at 685 (recognizing a "possible divergence of
interests" between the insurer and the insured). See also
VisionAid, 91 F. Supp. 3d at 73, citing Sullivan, 439 Mass. at
406-407 ("Absent a conflict of interest, in order to entitle an
insured to independent counsel at the insurer's expense, an
insured must demonstrate that the insurer is defending it under
a reservation of rights"). However, Massachusetts courts have
13
Some authorities, however, have stated that there can be
no conflict of interest when an insurer offers to defend without
a reservation of rights. See, e.g., Federal Ins. Co. v. MBL,
Inc., 219 Cal. App. 4th 29, 45 (2013) ("Without an express
reservation of a right under the policy, there can be no
conflict of interest based on the application of that exclusion
or policy term during the pendency of the action").
11
not yet addressed the question of what circumstances would
create a conflict of interest sufficient to justify an insured's
refusal of an insurer's control of the defense when the insurer
has offered to defend without a reservation of rights.14
Other authorities have shed light on this issue.
Circumstances in which a conflict of interest may arise between
an insured and an insurer, other than a dispute over the scope
of coverage,15 include: "(1) when the defense tendered is not a
14
Indeed, the United States Court of Appeals for the First
Circuit certified a similar question to the Supreme Judicial
Court in 2016. See Mount Vernon Fire Ins. Co. v. VisionAid,
Inc., 825 F.3d 67, 72 (1st Cir. 2016) ("Assuming the existence
of a duty to prosecute the insured's counterclaim[s] [as a part
of the insurer's agreement to defend without a reservation of
rights], in the event it is determined that an insurer has an
interest in devaluing or otherwise impairing such
counterclaim[s], does a conflict of interest arise that entitles
the insured to control and/or appoint independent counsel to
control the entire proceeding, including both the defense of any
covered claims and the prosecution of the subject
counterclaim[s]?"). However, because of the Supreme Judicial
Court's responses to other certified questions in the case, that
question was not reached. See Mount Vernon Fire Ins. Co. v.
VisionAid, Inc., 477 Mass. 343, 347-348 (2017).
15
Massachusetts has "adopted a per se rule that where an
insurance company reserves the right to deny coverage for a
particular claim, then a conflict of interest between the
insurance company and insured exists." Twin City Fire Ins. Co.
v. Ben Arnold-Sunbelt Bev. Co. of S.C., LP, 433 F.3d 365, 370
(4th Cir. 2005). See Sullivan, 439 Mass. at 406-407. Under
this per se rule, "the insured may require the insurer either to
relinquish its reservation of rights or relinquish its defense
of the insured and reimburse the insured for its defense costs."
Id. at 407. We are faced with different circumstances here,
where OneBeacon has offered to defend Celanese without a
reservation of rights and does not deny that the claims against
Celanese are covered under OneBeacon's general policies.
12
complete defense under circumstances in which it should have
been, (2) when the attorney hired by the carrier acts
unethically and, at the insurer's direction, advances the
insurer's interests at the expense of the insured's, (3) when
the defense would not, under the governing law, satisfy the
insurer's duty to defend, and (4) when, though the defense is
otherwise proper, the insurer attempts to obtain some type of
concession from the insured before it will defend." Davalos,
140 S.W.3d at 689 (quotation omitted). See Windt, supra at
§ 4:25, at 226-228 (recognizing these circumstances as types of
conflicts of interest). Another type of conflict of interest
arises "if the defense provided by the counsel selected by the
insurer was materially inadequate." Id. at § 4:25, at 228. An
insured may justifiably refuse an insurer's control of the
defense if one of these conflicts of interest exists. In such a
circumstance, the insured is entitled to coverage of the costs
it incurs by hiring its own counsel to defend the claims against
it. See Davalos, supra. See also Windt, supra at § 4:25, at
225-228.
3. Has Celanese demonstrated that a sufficient conflict of
interest exists? Celanese suggests that the third type of
conflict of interest listed above exists in this case -- that
OneBeacon's defense would not satisfy its duty to defend under
13
governing law. Celanese offers several reasons to support its
argument.
Celanese first argues that OneBeacon's defense did not
satisfy its duty to defend because it made a "conditional offer
[that] required Celanese to terminate . . . counsel [that had
been representing Celanese] in these types of chemical cases for
the past fourteen years." Despite Celanese's contentions,
OneBeacon's offer did not demand the type of extra-contractual
conditions that courts have recognized as resulting in a
conflict of interest. See Motorists Mut. Ins. Co. v. Trainor,
33 Ohio St. 2d 41, 47-48 (1973); Davalos, 140 S.W.3d at 689.
Instead, OneBeacon offered to defend Celanese without a
reservation of rights and notified Celanese that it would choose
the attorney that would conduct that defense. This is the type
of authority that is inherent in the insurer's control of the
defense as a part of its duty to defend. See Sullivan, 439
Mass. at 407 ("The policy language not only obligated [the
insurer] to defend [the insured], but also, by extension, gave
it the right to choose defense counsel"). See also Davalos,
supra at 688 ("The right to conduct the defense includes the
authority to select the attorney who will defend the claim and
to make other decisions that would normally be vested in the
insured as the named party in the case").
14
Celanese also argues that a conflict of interest existed
because OneBeacon had demonstrated, through a 2009 jury verdict
and trial testimony, that it would put its own interests before
Celanese's interests in controlling the defense. Celanese urges
that the 2009 jury verdict supports its contentions because the
jury found OneBeacon and OneBeacon's third-party administrator
liable for unfair and deceptive practices under G. L. c. 93A, in
relation to the parties' prior cost-sharing agreement. However,
as the judge noted, the violations under G. L. c. 93A found by
the jury in the 2009 verdict involved "a very finite issue
[concerning] only . . . delayed payments on certain claims."
Despite Celanese's contentions, these findings by the jury do
not concern the manner in which OneBeacon would conduct its
defense and certainly do not "'create[] the inescapable
conclusion' that OneBeacon cannot fairly evaluate and defend the
underlying claims on their merits." Moreover, any such nexus to
a potential conflict of interest is further attenuated where
Celanese had terminated the cost-sharing agreement that
OneBeacon was found in breach of by the 2009 verdict, and
instead, requested that OneBeacon provide a defense against the
underlying asbestos and chemical product injury claims under its
general policies.
As to the trial testimony complained of by Celanese, the
judge reasoned that the record contained no evidence suggesting
15
that "OneBeacon has a policy of exhausting liability limits
rapidly to avoid paying defense costs."16 While the statements
made by OneBeacon at the 2009 trial did acknowledge the
possibility that the amount of indemnity resulting from the
defense of the case may exceed the insured's policy limit, this
concern does not create a conflict of interest to justify
Celanese's refusal of OneBeacon's control of Celanese's defense.
"A conflict of interest does not exist with regard to the
conduct of the [insurer's] defense simply because the insured
and the insurer have a different view as to the insured's
potential liability. The parties still have a common interest
in defense counsel providing a vigorous defense." Windt, supra
at § 4:20, at 205. See Davalos, 140 S.W.3d at 690 ("[An
insurer's] lawyer owes unqualified loyalty to the insured . . .
[and] must at all times protect the interests of the insured if
those interests would be compromised by the insurer's
16
The judge reasoned:
"'[T]he volume of defense billings in the absence of any
tendered indemnity,' is a perfectly legitimate and rational
consideration for an insurer in the overall scheme of
investigating and assessing a set of risks presented under
a policy. The further statement[,] 'We're entitled to
apply indemnity responsible dollars in a way that exhausts
our limits' is also on its face a truism. It does not
follow from this testimony, and I cannot infer on the
record before me, that as a result of this truism
OneBeacon's approach to these claims would necessarily be
rapidly to exhaust the limits of liability, regardless of
the merits of the claim."
16
instructions" [quotation omitted]). Indeed, "[t]o mitigate the
danger . . . that the insurer will favor its own interest to the
exclusion of the insured's, good faith requires that it make the
decision (whether to settle a claim within the limits of the
policy or to try the case) as it would if no policy limit were
applicable to the claim." Murach v. Massachusetts Bonding &
Ins. Co., 339 Mass. 184, 187 (1959). Finally, Celanese argues
that a sufficient conflict of interest exists to justify its
refusal of OneBeacon's control of the defense without a
reservation of rights, because the parties have disparate
viewpoints as to how the defense should be conducted.
Particularly, Celanese emphasizes its right to protect its
reputation in the ongoing asbestos and chemical product
litigation.
Celanese argues that a conflict of interest exists because
of the parties' dispute "as to the appropriate way to conduct
[the] defense of the underlying claims." The judge summarized
the parties' approach to Celanese's defense as follows:
"Celanese understandably places a high priority on its
reputation, and seeks publicly to defend and to rebut
any and all claims that its products or premises
contain carcinogenic or other poisonous material.
OneBeacon's business view is, equally unsurprisingly,
a more pragmatic one. OneBeacon's focus is on
reducing the volume and cost of pending cases wherever
possible, by seeking out reasonable settlements and
17
thus incurring and applying indemnity payments towards
the policy limits, not solely defense payments."17
These opposing tactics of defense, however, do not give rise to
a sufficient conflict of interest under our law to justify
Celanese's refusal of OneBeacon's control of the defense.
"As with any contract, in interpreting an insurance policy,
we begin with the plain language of the policy." Mount Vernon
Fire Ins. Co. v. VisionAid, Inc., 477 Mass. 343, 348 (2017).
OneBeacon's general policies explicitly provide that OneBeacon
will "defend any suit against [Celanese] alleging bodily injury
or property damage, even if such suit is groundless, false or
fraudulent; but [OneBeacon] may make such investigation,
negotiation and settlement of any claim or suit as it deems
expedient." Accordingly, "[Celanese] and [OneBeacon] entered
into a contractual agreement that [required Celanese to] pay a
certain amount of money to insure against a particular risk."
Id. at 349. Here, that risk solely concerned claims of "bodily
17
Celanese summarizes its preferred approach as follows:
"Celanese's former assistant general counsel testified
regarding Celanese's defense strategy, whereby Celanese
would 'defend cases where [the company does not] believe
that [its] products hurt somebody [and] defend them to the
max, [but] if somebody got hurt by one of our products,
then [the company's] strategy would change . . . to try to
compensate that particular plaintiff . . . .' This valid
strategy [was to] admit[] liability where appropriate, but
otherwise vigorously defend[] baseless claims [to] protect
Celanese's safety reputation."
18
injury or property damage" against Celanese, and nothing more.
See ibid. Protecting Celanese's reputation was not something
that OneBeacon was required to insure or defend. See Golchin v.
Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 466 Mass. 156, 159-160 (2013) ("We
interpret the words of the standard policy in light of their
plain meaning, . . . giving full effect to the document as a
whole[,] . . . consider[ing] what an objectively reasonable
insured, reading the relevant policy language, would expect to
be covered . . . [and] interpret[ing] the provision of the
standard policy in a manner consistent with the statutory and
regulatory scheme that governs such policies" [quotation
omitted]).
Moreover, our courts have addressed several safeguards
available to an insured for protection against unreasonable
settlements by an insurer that exceed the insured's policy
limits. For example, an insured can sue an insurer for breach
of its duty to defend if an insurer fails to settle the
underlying suit for the policy limit and a reasonable insurer
would have done so in such circumstances. See Boyle v. Zurich
Am. Ins. Co., 472 Mass. 649, 659 (2015) ("[The insurer]
committed a breach of th[e] duty [to defend] by failing to
settle the suit for the policy limit, an endeavor that, the
judge found, any reasonable insurer would have undertaken").
Further, an insurer's decision whether to settle or try the case
19
is measured by good faith. See Murach, 339 Mass. at 187; Home
Indem. Ins. Co. v. Merchants Distribs., Inc., 396 Mass. 103, 105
(1985) ("We have upheld a settlement by an insurance company
where the amount paid was fully recoverable from the insured
. . . . We said in that context that the insurer's judgment was
final unless the insured showed fraud, negligence, or an absence
of good faith in the making of the settlement" [quotation
omitted]). See also Aetna Cas. & Surety Co. v. Sullivan, 33
Mass. App. Ct. 154, 157-158 (1992) ("For example, [under the
policy language,] in the case of multiple claims against an
insured, good faith settlement with one claimant, or payment of
all or part of a judgment favoring one claimant . . . would have
the effect of discharging the insurer from defending additional
claims beyond the policy limits. . . . The insurer, having
exhausted the policy limits and provided a defense, the insured
could not reasonably expect more" [emphasis omitted]). These
protections mitigate, if not alleviate, any conflict of interest
that Celanese argues is present in this case. The insurance
policies allow OneBeacon to seek out settlements instead of
defending Celanese's reputation by trying each case and denying
Celanese's liability. Here, significantly, Celanese did not
obtain insurance for the defense of its reputation.
20
Since Celanese has not demonstrated that a sufficient
conflict of interest exists, it unjustifiably refused
OneBeacon's offer to defend without a reservation of rights.
4. Insured's refusal of insurer's control of defense.
Despite finding that Celanese had failed to demonstrate that a
sufficient conflict of interest existed, the judge concluded
that OneBeacon was liable to pay for the defense costs that
Celanese incurred from April 13, 2009, when it refused
OneBeacon's control of the defense and hired its own counsel,
through May 27, 2011, when the judge ruled against Celanese on
this point. This conclusion is contrary to authority commenting
on an insured's unjustified refusal of an insurer's right to
control the defense when defending without a reservation of
rights.
Here, Celanese rejected OneBeacon's offer to defend without
a reservation of rights and conducted its own defense because it
believed that its own attorney would provide a better defense.
That was Celanese's right. However, absent a sufficient
conflict of interest on the part of OneBeacon, Celanese lost its
right to obtain reimbursement for defense costs when it refused
to accept OneBeacon's defense, offered without a reservation of
rights. See VisionAid, 91 F. Supp. 3d at 73; Davalos, 140
S.W.3d at 690 ("But having rejected the insurer's defense
without a sufficient conflict, [the insured] lost his right to
21
recover the costs of that defense").18 See also Finley v. Home
Ins. Co., 90 Haw. 25, 35 (1998) ("If the insured chooses to
conduct its own defense, the insured is responsible for all
attorneys' fees related thereto. . . . A contrary holding would
effectively nullify our determination that the insurer, even in
a reservation of rights situation, retains the contractual right
to select the counsel whom it will pay to defend the insured");
Windt, supra at § 4:1A, at 54 ("An insurer should not have to
pay for the attorney fees incurred by the insured after the
insured has wrongfully rejected the defense tendered by the
insurer").
Therefore, OneBeacon satisfied its duty to defend by
offering to defend Celanese without a reservation of rights. As
a result of Celanese's unjustified refusal of OneBeacon's
18
Celanese argues that it is entitled to recover defense
costs for this interim period because the verdict on the c. 93A
claim in the 2009 trial (see note 6, supra) gave Celanese a good
faith basis to believe that a sufficient conflict of interest
existed. However, Celanese has not cited persuasive authority
to support its position. Indeed, even the case that Celanese
relies on affirms that an insured will be unable to recover
defense costs absent a sufficient conflict of interest. See
Partain v. Mid-Continent Specialty Ins. Servs., Inc., U.S. Dist.
Ct., No. H-10-2580, slip op. (S.D. Tex. Feb. 15, 2012), citing
Davalos, 140 S.W.3d at 690 ("[I]f an insured rejects an
insurer's defense without sufficient conflict, it loses its
right to recover the costs of that defense -- the one that it
elects to use in the underlying suit. Here, for example, if
[the insureds] elect to proceed in the underlying suit using
their own counsel to defend them, they will be unable recover
the costs of that defense, as the Court has concluded there was
not a sufficient conflict of interest").
22
control of that defense, OneBeacon is not liable for the
attorney's fees that Celanese incurred in conducting its own
defense.
Conclusion. So much of the judgment that awarded Celanese
defense costs for the period April 13, 2009, through May 27,
2011, and prejudgment interest is vacated, and the judgment
shall be modified to declare that OneBeacon has no duty to
reimburse Celanese for defense costs that Celanese incurred
during that period of time. As so modified, the judgment is
affirmed.
So ordered.