IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
NORTHROP GRUMMAN )
INNOVATION SYSTEMS, INC., )
Plaintiff, )
)
v. )
)
ZURICH AMERICAN INSURANCE )
COMPANY, CERTAIN UNDERWRITERS )
AT LLOYDS OF LONDON, ) C.A. No. N18C-09-210
CONTINETAL CASUALTY INSURANCE ) PRW CCLD
COMPANY, CAROLINA CASUALTY )
INSURANCE COMPANY, TRAVELERS )
CASUALTY AND SURETY COMPANY )
OF AMERICA, NATIONAL UNION FIRE )
COMPANY OF PITTSBURGH, PA, U.S. )
SPECIALTY INSURANCE COMPANY, )
TWIN CITY FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, )
ALLIED WORLD ASSURANCE )
COMPANY, STARR INDEMNITY & )
LIABILITY COMPANY, XL SPECIALTY )
INSURANCE COMPANY, BERKLEY )
INSURANCE COMPANY, QBE )
INSURANCE CORPORATION, )
Defendants. )
Submitted: February 23, 2021
Decided: March 1, 2021
Upon Defendant Alliant Insurers’ Application for
Certification of an Interlocutory Appeal
DENIED
ORDER
This 1st day of March, 2021, upon consideration of Defendants National
Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pa., U.S. Specialty Insurance
Company, Twin City Fire Insurance Company, Allied World National Assurance
Company, Travelers Causality and Surety Company of America, and Starr
Indemnity and Liability Company’s (collectively, the “Alliant Insurers”) application
under Rule 42 of the Supreme Court for an order certifying an appeal from an
interlocutory order of this Court, dated February 2, 2021, it appears to the Court that:
(1) This is an insurance coverage dispute in which Northrop1 contends its
insurers wrongfully denied it coverage for settlement and defense expenses it
incurred in the Knurr Litigation. On February 2, 2021, the Court issued a
memorandum opinion and order (the “Order”)2 addressing seven then-pending
dueling and cross-dispositive motions that revolved primarily around the question
of whether coverage for the 14(a) and 10(b) Claims brought in the Knurr Litigation
was available under any or all of three Policies.
(2) Relevant here, the Order granted Northrop’s summary judgment
motion, and denied the Alliant Insurers’ summary judgment motions in part, holding
1
Unless otherwise noted, each capitalized term herein has the meaning given it in the Court’s
February 2, 2021 memorandum opinion and order.
2
D.I. 727; see generally Northrop Grumman Innovation Sys., Inc. v. Zurich Am. Ins. Co., 2021
WL 347015 (Del. Super. Ct. Feb. 2, 2021). Citations to the Order track the web-published version.
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that coverage for the 14(a) Claim lied with the Alliant Policies. In doing so, the
Order declined to resolve issues concerning the Alliant Insurers’ liability for certain
defense costs, allocation of damages among those Insurers and the Orbital Sciences
and OATK Insurers, and attachment of excess layers in the Alliant Policies. These
issues, along with many others not pertinent to the Alliant Insurers but left open in
the active litigation between Northrop and the Orbital Sciences and OATK Insurers,
have been submitted for trial.
(3) The Alliant Insurers request the Court’s certification of the entire Order
as it relates to them. The Court, though, may certify an application in part only
where appropriate.3 And the Court must clarify what is certifiable, especially where,
as here, the ask in the application is imprecise.4 Based on the Alliant Insurers’
substantive arguments on the Rule 42(b)(iii) factors, the sole question properly
distilled (or clearly articulated) for appeal is whether the Order correctly construed
the Bump Up Exclusion in finding that the Exclusion did not bar coverage for the
3
See In re Port of Wilmington Gantry Crane Litig., 2020 WL 5757344, at *2 & n.16 (Del. Super.
Ct. Sept. 28, 2020), appeal refused, 241 A.3d 221 (Del. 2020).
4
Gantry Crane, 2020 WL 5757344, at *2 n.16 (“It is important that this Court distill and clarify
the issue or issues posed in a certification request, because a trial court may certify an order for
appeal in whole or in part, and the Supreme Court may review it the same way.”); see, e.g., Dow
Chem. Corp. v. Blanco, 67 A.3d 392, 394 (Del. 2013) (“The Defendants applied for an
interlocutory appeal of the Superior Court’s opinion under Supreme Court Rule 42. The Superior
Court granted the application for an interlocutory appeal presenting one narrow question . . . [t]he
Superior Court denied certification of the Defendants’ remaining questions for interlocutory
appeal. . . . Our inquiry is limited to the question certified.”).
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14(a) Claim.5 Specifically: whether, contrary to the Order’s reading, a federal proxy
fraud lawsuit really is a “Claim” that “alleges” “inadequate consideration” given for
the “acquisition of all or substantial all the ownership interests or assets of an entity,”
the settlement of which “represent[s]” an “effective increase” of that consideration.
(4) Supreme Court Rule 42 governs interlocutory appeals from this Court’s
orders.6 Certification is not an appropriate vehicle for re-litigating unsuccessful
arguments preserved for, and naturally amenable to, direct appeal. The Rule thus
cautions this Court not to certify interlocutory review often.7 And so the Court will
assess the Alliant Insurers’ application under Rule 42’s “rigorous” standards.8
(5) Under Rule 42, the Court must: (a) determine whether the Order
“decide[d] a substantial issue of material importance that merits appellate review
5
The Alliant Insurers suggest the Order’s finding that they failed to meet their summary
judgment burdens to show some fees were not “jointly incurred” Defense Costs as a matter of law
should be certified. But, abiding by summary judgment’s genuine issue standard, the Order did
not decide any Defense Costs liability. It simply found these fees presented fact questions based
on the same definition of “incurred” the Alliant Insurers adopted in their briefs. See National
Union’s Reply Brief at 16 (citing Scion Breckenridge Managing Member, LLC v. ASB Allegiance
Real Est. Fund, 68 A.3d 665, 684 (Del. 2013)) (D.I. 680). As a result, this issue wasn’t decided
on the merits and therefore does not advance past Rule 42(b)(i)’s prefatory query. See Sprint
Nextel Corp. v. iPCS, Inc., 2008 WL 2861717, at *1 (Del. Ch. July 22, 2008) (observing that an
issue is not substantial if not decided on the merits); infra nn.14-17 & accompanying text.
6
Gantry Crane, 2020 WL 5757344, at *1 (citing DiSabatino Bros., Inc. v. Wortman, 453 A.2d
102, 103 (Del. 1982)).
7
Del. Supr. Ct. R. 42(b)(ii).
8
Gantry Crane, 2020 WL 5757344, at *1 (citing TowerHill Wealth Mgmt., LLC v. Bander Fam.
P’ship, L.P., 2008 WL 4615865, at *2 (Del. Ch. Oct. 9, 2008)).
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before a final judgment;”9 (b) engage up to eight factors listed in Rule
42(b)(iii);10 (c) mind the most efficient and prudent schedule for resolving the case;
and (d) identify whether and why the likely benefits of interlocutory review
outweigh the probable costs, such that interlocutory review best serves the interests
of justice.11 “If the balance is uncertain,” the Court is instructed to refuse
certification.12 That is because “[a]pplications for . . . interlocutory appeal . . . are
9
Del. Supr. Ct. R. 42(b)(i).
10
(A) The interlocutory order involves a question of law resolved for the first time in this State;
(B) The decisions of the trial courts are conflicting upon the question of law;
(C) The question of law relates to the constitutionality, construction, or application of a statute
of this State, which has not been, but should be, settled by this Court in advance of an
appeal from a final order;
(D) The interlocutory order has sustained the controverted jurisdiction of the trial court;
(E) The interlocutory order has reversed or set aside a prior decision of the trial court, a jury,
or an administrative agency from which an appeal was taken to the trial court which had
decided a significant issue and a review of the interlocutory order may terminate the
litigation, substantially reduce further litigation, or otherwise serve considerations of
justice;
(F) The interlocutory order has vacated or opened a judgment of the trial court;
(G) Review of the interlocutory order may terminate the litigation; or
(H) Review of the interlocutory order may serve considerations of justice.
Del. Supr. Ct. R. 42(b)(iii).
11
Del. Supr. Ct. R. 42(b). Those “probable costs” are informed, in part, by Rule 42(b)(ii), i.e.,
that interlocutory appeals “disrupt the normal procession of litigation, cause delay, and can
threaten to exhaust scarce party and judicial resources.” Del. Supr. Ct. R. 42(b)(ii).
12
Del. Supr. Ct. R. 42(b).
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granted only in extraordinary or exceptional circumstances.”13
(6) Whether an order decided a substantial issue of material importance is
a gatekeeping inquiry. Indeed, absent a substantial issue of material importance, a
Rule 42 applicant never gets out of the blocks.14 An issue is substantial when it goes
to “a main question of law [that] relates to the merits of the case, and not to collateral
matters.”15 Too, the interlocutory order must establish a legal right to be
appealable.16 A legal right is discernable when “one of the parties’ rights has been
enhanced or diminished as a result of the order.”17
(7) The Court agrees with the Alliant Insurers that deciding their Policies
cover the 14(a) Claim implicates a central, merits-based issue. Though merely one
bit of a stage in which twelve parties raised multifarious challenges across seven
13
Gantry Crane, 2020 WL 5757344, at *1 (citations omitted).
14
See, e.g., Traditions, L.P. v. Harmon, 2020 WL 1646784, at *1 (Del. Apr. 2, 2020).
15
Sprint, 2008 WL 2861717, at *1.
16
Pepsico, Inc. v. Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. of Asbury Park, 261 A.2d 520, 521 (Del. 1969) (“[A]s
to the appealability of interlocutory orders . . . to be appealable, there must have been the
determination of a substantial issue and the establishment of a legal right.” (citation omitted));
accord Castaldo v. Pittsburgh-Des Moines Steel Co., Inc., 301 A.2d 87, 87 (Del. 1973) (“The oft-
repeated test of the appealability of an interlocutory order is that it must determine a substantial
issue and establish a legal right.”).
17
In re Cogent, Inc. S’holder Litig., 2010 WL 4146179, at *1 (Del. Ch. Oct. 15, 2010) (internal
quotation marks omitted).
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fully-briefed and opposed motions, the Order does afford Northrop a legal right to
coverage, and consequently, imposes on the Alliant Insurers a legal duty to pay.
(8) But that’s not enough to warrant interlocutory appeal. The substantial
issue of material importance resolved must—in the case-specific environment in
which it arose—necessitate “appellate review before a final judgment.”18 Contract
interpretation, no matter the stakes, generally is not the kind of undertaking worthy
of midstream intervention by our high court.19 And where, as here, a party’s
application, when reduced, simply transmits an objection to the interpretive outcome
at which a court arrives, direct appeal is the abler device.20 Insurance policies are
contracts, regardless of their textual complexity and the breadth of coverage sought
or obtained thereunder. Comparatively, then, the Alliant Insurers’ request starts at
18
Del. Supr. Ct. R. 42(b)(i) (emphasis added).
19
See, e.g., Thomas v. Headlands Tech Principal Holdings, L.P., 2020 WL 6112302, at *2 (Del.
Super. Ct. Oct. 16, 2020) (“As a general matter, issues of contract interpretation are not worthy of
interlocutory appeal.” (citing REJV5 A WH Orlando, LLC v. A WH Orlando Member, LLC, 2018
WL 1109650, at *3 (Del. Ch. Feb. 28, 2018) (internal quotation marks and brackets omitted)),
appeal refused, 2018 WL 1466880 (Del. Mar. 26, 2018)), appeal refused, 2020 WL 6538824 (Del.
Nov. 6, 2020); Rite Aid Corp. v. Ace Am. Ins. Co., 2020 WL 6058294, at *2 (Del. Super. Ct. Oct.
13, 2020) (same); Steadfast Ins. Co. v. DBi Servs., LLC, 2019 WL 3337127, at *1 (Del. Super. Ct.
July 25, 2019) (same), appeal refused, 2019 WL 3453239 (Del. July 31, 2019); accord Lexington
Ins. Co. v. Almah LLC, 2016 WL 3621125 (Del. June 28, 2016) (refusing interlocutory appeal of
decision on cross-motions for summary judgment that turned on policy interpretation); Robino-
Bay Ct. Plaza, LLC v. W. Willow-Bay Ct., LLC, 2007 WL 4463593 (Del. Dec. 21, 2007).
20
See Rite Aid, 2020 WL 6058294, at *2 (denying certification where application “in form and
in essence” was based on disagreement with the Court’s interpretation and application of insurance
law to the subject policies); accord Legion Partners Asset Mgmt., LLC v. Underwriters at Lloyds
London, 2020 WL 6875211, at *3 (Del. Super. Ct. Nov. 23, 2020), appeal refused, 2020 WL
7055842 (Del. Dec. 2, 2020).
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a disadvantage and should be deemed of lesser immediate import. Nevertheless, the
Court will assume that the Alliant Insurers’ application crosses Rule 42(b)(i)’s
threshold and examine Rule 42(b)(iii)(A), (G) and (H)—the factors they insist
support exceptional and extraordinary action here.
(9) Under Rule 42(b)(iii)(A)—the “issue of first impression” factor—the
Alliant Insurers charge the Order with rendering two novel judgments: (i) holding,
for the first time in Delaware, that the Bump Up Exclusion does not exclude claims
like the 14(a) Claim; and (ii) concluding, for the first time in Delaware, that a merger
and an acquisition of substantially all an entity’s ownership are independent
transactions. These assertions both misunderstand what qualifies as an issue of first
impression and mischaracterize the Order’s scope and reasoning.
(10) As to the Bump Up Exclusion: the mere tackling of an unencountered
insurance policy exclusion does not make a court’s interpretation thereof a novel
decisional enterprise.21 When a court uses well-settled interpretive tools derived
from equally well-settled law, application of those rules and principles to a “new”
21
See Rite Aid, 2020 WL 6058294, at *2 (“While the Court agrees that there are no . . . Delaware
reported decisions interpreting the specific policy language at issue . . . this does not create a
‘substantial issue of material importance’ out of mere contract dispute.” (citation omitted)); accord
McKnight v. USAA Cas. Ins. Co., 2005 WL 1175941, at *1 (Del. May 16, 2005) (affirming denial
of certification even though “the particular exclusion at issue ha[d] not previously been interpreted
in Delaware” because the court “applied well-established principles of contract interpretation”).
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contractual term does not wade that court into waters previously-uncharted.22
Indeed, the Order read the Exclusion’s plain language by invoking established
insurance law and contract analysis utilized in all coverage disputes. Accordingly,
it is of no moment for certification purposes that the Court happened to be the first
in this state to construe the Exclusion.
(11) On the transactional distinction: there are several problems with the
Alliant Insurers’ contentions. As an initial matter, the Alliant Insurers never claimed
the difference between a merger and a substantially-all-interest acquisition was
unsettled or even significant.23 Indeed, at argument, the Alliant Insurers emphasized
that the Exclusion applied no matter how the transaction was structured or
22
See McKnight, 2005 WL 1175941, at *1 (Supreme Court refused interlocutory appeal where
this Court had refused certification finding an application of well-settled contract principles “does
not involve a matter of first impression”); Rite Aid, 2020 WL 6058294, at *3 (“Just because there
are no Delaware . . . cases addressing this specific factual situation does not mean that [the order]
involves questions of law resolved for the first time in Delaware”); see also Legion, 2020 WL
6875211, at *3 (“[T]he coverage question involved application of unambiguous policy language
to the pleadings in the underlying litigation,” which does not imply an issue of first impression.);
Realogy Holdings Corp. v. SIRVA Worldwide, 2020 WL 4559519, at *11 (Del. Ch. Aug. 7, 2020)
(denying certification because “straightforward interpretations of contractual terms” do not
involve “a question of law resolved for the first time in Delaware”); Alcoa World Alumina LLC v.
Glencore Ltd., 2016 WL 3659424, at *2 (Del. Super. Ct. Mar. 10, 2016) (denying certification
“[e]ven though the Court could not find another Delaware decision with the same fact pattern”
because “the Court applied already accepted rules of law to the facts”), aff’d sub nom., Glencore
Ltd. v. St. Croix Alumina, LLC, 2016 WL 6575167 (Del. Nov. 4, 2016).
23
Legion, 2020 WL 6875211, at *3 (rejecting argument under Rule 42(b)(iii)(A) where “[n]one
of the parties argued in their summary judgment briefing that the case involved issues of first
impression, and [the] Court did not so find”).
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denominated.24 That aside, the transactions are not the same. As the Court
explained—Delaware statutory and common law distinguish the two, and so did the
underlying proxy solicitation documents.25 Additionally, the Order was not trading
in corporate law. The Alliant Insurers drafted the unambiguous terms “acquisition”
and “substantially all the ownership interests” without defining them. So, the
Court—dealing with contract law—looked to ordinary meaning to supplement
technical meaning. Both confirmed a “merger” is different in form and substance.
Most important, the distinction was not crucial. To be sure, the Order offered four
alternative, dispositive reasons why the Exclusion didn’t apply.26 And, for the sake
of completeness, the Order credited the Alliant Insurers’ theory that the transaction
was an acquisition, only to find other elements unsatisfied.27
(12) Even with all this, the Alliant Insurers seize on the Order’s references
to appraisal remedies and append to their application an order accepting consolidated
certification of Solera Holdings, Inc. v. XL Specialty Ins. Co.28 But Solera doesn’t
24
Or. Arg. Tr., Jan 7, 2021, at 114 (“[Alliant Insurers’ counsel:] The bump up provision applies
regardless of whether we label the transaction as a merger or an acquisition.”) (D.I. 722).
25
See Northrop, 2021 WL 347015, at *21 & nn.210-12, 214.
26
See id. at *20-22.
27
See id. at *21 (“Still, even with the [Alliant] Insurers’ insertion [of a transactional maneuver
which would have made the transaction an acquisition under the Exclusion], the Exclusion
wouldn’t apply.”).
28
2019 WL 4733431 (Del. Super. Ct. Sept. 26, 2019) (granting certification), rev’d sub nom., In
re Solera Ins. Coverage Appeals, 240 A.3d 1121 (Del. 2020).
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help. Solera involved a coverage provision and the question of whether an appraisal
action counted as a “Securities Claim.” Here, the Order construed an exclusion—
not a securities claim coverage definition—and discussed appraisal remedies in the
limited context of distinguishing a California decision about appraisals; a decision
on which the Alliant Insurers relied.29 So, despite any rhetorical results the Alliant
Insurers seek to achieve by analogizing the Order to Solera, the Court didn’t rule
here on appraisals or determine that the Bump Up Exclusion only captured appraisal
lawsuits.
(13) At bottom, the Order did not “decide” any corporate law issue, let alone
an unprecedented one ripe for immediate appeal.30 That the Alliant Insurers disagree
with the Order or think it contradicted Delaware law is not ground on which to rest
a certification of immediate appeal.31 Accordingly, Rule 42(b)(iii)(A) does not
support their application.
29
See Northrop, 2021 WL 347015, at *20, *22.
30
See Legion, 2020 WL 6875211, at *3 (rejecting insurer’s claim that the subject order
disregarded relevant corporate law and observing “[t]he ‘issues of first impression’ that [the
insurer] describes in its [a]pplication are only [its] mischaracterization of the Court’s holdings”).
31
See id. (Disagreement with the Court’s interpretation of policy language and use of an
insurance framework “does not meet the standard for interlocutory review. Otherwise,
interlocutory review would be appropriate in every case in which the Court committed legal error.”
(citation omitted)); Renco Grp., Inc. v. MacAndrews AMG Holdings LLC, 2015 WL 1830476, at
*2 & n.3 (Del. Ch. Apr. 20, 2015) (limiting certification to claims that were not based on contract
interpretation because “The Court’s contract interpretation, even if wrong, would not seem to
warrant interlocutory appeal.”), appeal refused, 2015 WL 2019387 (Del. Apr. 30, 2015).
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(14) Under Rule 42(b)(iii)(G)—the “litigation termination” factor—the
Alliant Insurers stress that, if the Exclusion were interpreted in their favor, they
would be dismissed from the case and spared of further expense. This factor, though,
is about the litigation as a whole—not one group of parties.32 Even if the Supreme
Court reversed the Order, the litigation still would proceed with half the litigants:
Northrop, the Orbital Sciences Insurers, and the OATK Insurers. Indeed, most of
the issues surrounding the 14(a) Claim’s coverage now involve the Orbital Sciences
Insurers, against whom Northrop did not move at all. In contrast, the issues
remaining for the Alliant Insurers are minimal. Freezing this lawsuit completely so
the Alliant Insurers can pursue a unidimensional contract-interpretation appeal is
neither administratively sound nor remotely fair to the other six, equally-invested
parties.33 Accordingly, Rule 42(b)(iii)(G) does not support the Alliant Insurers’
application.
32
See Energy Transfer Equity, L.P. v. Twin City Fire Ins. Co., 2020 WL 6112299, at *4 (Del.
Super. Ct. Oct. 16, 2020) (rejecting argument under Rule 42(b)(iii)(G) because successful appeal
would not “terminate the litigation in its entirety” and “other defendants remain[ed] in the” case
(emphasis in original)), appeal refused, 2020 WL 7861340 (Del. Dec. 31, 2020); see also Rite Aid,
2020 WL 6058294, at *4 (rejecting argument under Rule 42(b)(iii)(G) even though an insurer
would have been dismissed from the case because none of the other factors supported
certification).
33
Cf. Del. Supr. Ct. R. 42(b)(iii) (directing this Court to consider factors through lens of “its own
assessment of the most efficient and just schedule to resolve the case” so as to preserve “the
interests of justice”); see Gantry Crane, 2020 WL 5757344, at *4 (“[T]he potential further delays
and increased costs to all parties in this . . . action outweigh the potential limited benefit to” the
applicant.).
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(15) Last, under Rule 42(b)(iii)(H)—the “considerations of justice” factor—
the Alliant Insurers rehash their dismissal arguments, blame COVID-19, and incant
the amount in controversy. But these “considerations” cut both ways. This case has
been litigated vigorously for over two years. It has generated thousands of
documents; introduced dozens of witnesses; spawned motions to compel, to
continue, to dismiss, for judgment on the pleadings, and for summary judgment;
instigated several discovery conflicts; drawn up seven (usually-contested) case-
management proposals; and required a lengthy hearing to corral the parties’
divergent and inconsistent positions into one (hopefully) logical Order. And it is
now nearing final trial-readiness. Northrop, the Orbital Sciences Insurers, the
OATK Insurers, and their constituents, have as much to complain about cost-,
time-, and pandemic-conditions-wise as the Alliant Insurers and their constituents
do.
(16) Interlocutory review would compound these burdens further. Indeed, a
halt for appeal here would just cause “disruption of the normal process of litigation,
delay, and exhaustion of scarce party and judicial resources (especially in the midst
of the ongoing pandemic).”34 Put differently, the Alliant Insurers’ application would
produce piecemeal litigation over intricate issues seemingly-refined by the Order
34
Ferrellgas Partners, L.P. v. Zurich Am. Ins. Co., 2020 WL 5579335, at *2 (Del. Super. Ct.
Sept. 17, 2020) (citing Del. Supr. Ct. R. 42(b)), appeal refused sub nom., Beazley Ins. Co., Inc. v.
Ferrellgas Partners L.P., 2020 WL 5998163 (Del. Oct. 9, 2020).
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and further tax, not promote, judicial economy.35 That being so, “[t]he most efficient
way to resolve this [two-plus]-year-old case is to . . . prepare for and conduct trial,
as opposed to potentially stalling the litigation [and] diverting resources away from
it” by certifying “a narrow issue involving only” the Alliant Insurers.36 That sizeable
damages loom doesn’t vary this far more just course.37 Accordingly, Rule
42(b)(iii)(H) does not support these insurers’ application.
(17) After examining the Rule 42(b)(iii) factors, the Court must advance the
benefits outweighing the hardship interlocutory review might occasion.38 Taking all
the factors together, coupled with the Court’s own discretionary assessment of what
is best for the orderly distribution of justice in this case,39 there are no measurable
35
See REJV5, 2018 WL 1109650, at *2 (“The litigation is active and ongoing and the parties
show no signs of easing off the gas pedal. What [the applicant] now proposes is a piecemeal
approach to the litigation that will not advance the interests of justice but will increase costs and
burdens.” (citation omitted)); Krahmer v. Christie’s Inc., 2006 WL 4782303, at *1 (Del. Ch. June
15, 2006) (“Certification would likely result in the piecemeal appeal of factually and legally related
issues and would be contrary to the interest of justice and the orderly procession of matters before
this court.”).
36
Gantry Crane, 2020 WL 5757344, at *4; see Legion, 2020 WL 6875211, at *4 (“[A]ny
incremental benefit afforded [the applicant] by immediate review would not outweigh the
imposition on the parties and the justice system.”).
37
Rite Aid, 2020 WL 6058294, at *2-3 (“The Court must use the same approach for each request
for certification and not elevate one over the other because of the amount in controversy. . . .” The
amount in controversy does not “satisf[y] the considerations of justice standard” because the Court
“considers each issue before it despite the dollar amount owed.” (internal quotation marks
omitted)).
38
Del. Supr. Ct. R. 42(b)(iii).
39
Id. R. 42(b)(ii)-(iii).
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pros to certification. In the totality of these circumstances, an interpretation of one
insurance policy exclusion that one cohort of many insurers dislikes plainly does not
warrant the extraordinary treatment contemplated by Rule 42’s demanding
strictures.40 If the Order truly is wrong, then it will be rectified on direct appeal from
a final judgment.41 But pause for immediate appeal now would merely elevate the
routine to the rare.42
NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the Alliant
Insurers’ Application for Certification of Interlocutory Appeal is DENIED.
_________________________
Paul R. Wallace, Judge
Original to Prothonotary
cc: All counsel via File & Serve
40
See Gantry Crane, 2020 WL 5757344, at *4 (“[I]mmediate review of [an] isolated facet” in a
case that is unexceptional fails to meet Rule 42’s “strict standard for certification.” (citing DBi
Servs., 2019 WL 3337127, at *1) (internal quotation marks omitted)).
41
See Walton v. Cole, 2020 WL 5743282, at *2 (Del. Sept. 25, 2020) (refusing certification and
observing that “if the Superior Court erred in its application of the law to the facts of this case,
then that error can be remedied on appeal from a final judgment”); Ferrellgas, 2020 WL 5579335,
at *4 (observing that the insurer’s failure to obtain interlocutory review “will not bar it from
seeking review . . . on appeal from [a] final order, judgment or decree” (citing Del. Supr. Ct. R.
42(f))).
42
But see Del. Supr. Ct. R. 42(b)(ii) (“Interlocutory appeals should be exceptional, not
routine[.]”).
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