St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company v. AmerisourceBergen Drug Corporation and Bellco Drug Corporation v. Ace American Insurance Company and Ace Property and Casualty Insurance Company
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA
September 2021 Term FILED
_______________ November 15, 2021
released at 3:00 p.m.
EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK
No. 21-0036 SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
OF WEST VIRGINIA
_______________
ST. PAUL FIRE AND MARINE INSURANCE COMPANY,
Defendant Below, Petitioner
v.
AMERISOURCEBERGEN DRUG CORPORATION, and
BELLCO DRUG CORPORATION,
Plaintiffs Below, Respondents
v.
ACE AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY and
ACE PROPERTY AND CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY,
Defendants Below, Intervenor-Petitioners
________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Circuit Court of Boone County
The Honorable William S. Thompson, Judge
Civil Action No. CC-03-2017-C-36
AFFIRMED, IN PART, REVERSED, IN PART,
AND REMANDED
________________________________________________________
Submitted: September 29, 2021
Filed: November 15, 2021
Thomas E. Scarr, Esq. Charles S. Piccirillo, Esq.
Lee Murray Hall, Esq., Todd A. Mount, Esq.
Sarah A. Walling, Esq. Shaffer & Shaffer PLLC
Jenkins Fenstermaker, PLLC Madison, West Virginia
Huntington, West Virginia Courtney C.T. Horrigan, Esq.,
Andrew T. Frankel, Esq., Pro Hac Vice Pro Hac Vice
Bryce L. Friedman, Esq., Pro Hac Vice Kim M. Watterson, Esq., Pro Hac Vice
Matthew C. Penny, Esq., Pro Hac Vice Reed Smith LLP
Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
New York, New York Counsel for the Respondents
Counsel for the Petitioner AmerisourceBergen Drug Corporation
St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance and Bellco Drug Corporation
Company
J. Zak Ritchie, Esq.
Hissam Forman Donovan Ritchie
PLLC
Charleston, West Virginia
Counsel for the Intervenor-Petitioners
Ace American Insurance Company and
Ace Property and Casualty Insurance
Company
JUSTICE HUTCHISON delivered the Opinion of the Court.
SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
1. “West Virginia Constitution, article VIII, section 3, which grants this
Court appellate jurisdiction of civil cases in equity, includes a grant of jurisdiction to hear
appeals from interlocutory orders by circuit courts relating to preliminary and temporary
injunctive relief.” Syl. pt. 2, State ex rel. McGraw v. Telecheck Servs., Inc., 213 W. Va.
438, 582 S.E.2d 885 (2003).
2. “The granting or refusal of an injunction, whether mandatory or
preventive, calls for the exercise of sound judicial discretion in view of all the
circumstances of the particular case; regard being had to the nature of the controversy, the
object for which the injunction is being sought, and the comparative hardship or
convenience to the respective parties involved in the award or denial of the writ.” Syl. pt.
4, State v. Baker, 112 W. Va. 263, 164 S.E. 154 (1932).
3. “In reviewing the exceptions to the findings of fact and conclusions
of law supporting the granting of a temporary or preliminary injunction, we will apply a
three-pronged deferential standard of review. We review the final order granting the
temporary injunction and the ultimate disposition under an abuse of discretion standard,
West v. National Mines Corp., 168 W.Va. 578, 590, 285 S.E.2d 670, 678 (1981), we review
the circuit court’s underlying factual findings under a clearly erroneous standard, and we
review questions of law de novo. Syllabus Point 4, Burgess v. Porterfield, 196 W.Va. 178,
i
469 S.E.2d 114 (1996).” Syl. pt. 1, State By & Through McGraw v. Imperial Mktg., 196
W. Va. 346, 472 S.E.2d 792 (1996).
4. “When the jurisdiction of a court is asserted over a cause of action, it
embraces everything in the case and every question arising which can be determined in it;
and, until thus exhausted, or in some way relinquished, the jurisdiction is exclusive and
cannot be encroached upon by any other tribunal.” Syl. pt. 1, State v. Fredlock, 52 W. Va.
232, 43 S.E. 153 (1903).
5. “A court having jurisdiction in personam, may require the defendant
to do, or refrain from doing, beyond its territorial jurisdiction, anything which it has power
to require him to do or omit within the limits of its territory.” Syl. pt. 2, State v. Fredlock,
52 W. Va. 232, 43 S.E. 153 (1903).
6. An anti-suit injunction is an order barring parties to an action in this
state from instituting or prosecuting substantially similar litigation in another state.
Whether the foreign state action is substantially similar involves assessing (1) the similarity
of the parties; (2) the similarity of the issues; and (3) the capacity of the action in this state
to dispose of the foreign state action.
7. The principle of comity requires that a circuit court enter an anti-suit
injunction cautiously and with restraint.
ii
8. An anti-suit injunction is an exceptional remedy but is appropriate
when equity compels the circuit court: (1) to address a threat to the court’s jurisdiction; (2)
to prevent the evasion of an important public policy; (3) to prevent a multiplicity of suits
that result in delay, inconvenience, expense, inconsistency, or will be a “race to judgment”;
or (4) to protect a party from vexatious, inequitable or harassing litigation.
iii
HUTCHISON, Justice:
Over the last two decades, the United States has experienced an epidemic of
overdose deaths involving prescription and illicit opioid medications. Governments,
businesses and individuals have sued the pharmaceutical distributors that sold prescription
opioid medicines and “seek to recover billions in governmental and economic costs
allegedly incurred in providing a wide array of public services in response to the influx of
opioids into their communities such as increased expenses for first responders, autopsies,
morgues, drug rehabilitation, foster care, and drug-related criminal activity.” 1 In response,
the pharmaceutical distributors have filed suits against their liability insurers seeking to
recover, from the insurance policies they purchased over the years, their defense expenses
as well as indemnification for settlements.
In this appeal from the Circuit Court of Boone County, we consider the
powers of a circuit court to manage a lawsuit by a pharmaceutical distributor against the
insurance companies which provided it with liability insurance. Specifically, the circuit
court entered an “anti-suit injunction” prohibiting the insurance companies sued in West
Virginia from pursuing parallel litigation against the distributor in California. As set forth
below, we affirm the circuit court’s power to enter an order precluding a party to a West
Virginia lawsuit from instituting or prosecuting collateral litigation in a sister state.
1
Rite Aid Corp. v. ACE Am. Ins. Co., 2020 WL 5640817, at *2 (Del. Super.
Ct., Sept. 22, 2020).
1
However, because an anti-suit injunction must be narrowly tailored to protect the court’s
authority while respecting the sister state court, we reverse the circuit court’s injunction
order and remand the case to permit the circuit court to reconsider the breadth of its order.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
Plaintiff AmerisourceBergen Drug Corporation (“ABDC”) is a wholesale
distributor of prescription opioid medication in West Virginia and across the United
States. 2 In 2012, the West Virginia Attorney General filed a lawsuit seeking to hold ABDC
liable for the prescription opioid epidemic in West Virginia. After the Attorney General
reached settlements in the suit in late 2016, a host of state agencies, counties, cities,
hospitals, individuals, and others named ABDC as a defendant in as many as 165 similar
prescription opioid lawsuits in West Virginia courts. See generally, State ex rel.
AmerisourceBergen Drug Corp. v. Moats, 859 S.E.2d 374, 378 (W. Va. 2021) (discussing
the more than eighty opioid lawsuits pending before the West Virginia Mass Litigation
Panel). Nationwide, thousands of comparable lawsuits are pending in state and federal
courts.
The instant case derives from ABDC’s efforts to establish that these
prescription opioid lawsuits, nationwide and in West Virginia, are covered under primary,
2
Plaintiff Bellco Drug Corporation also distributes pharmaceutical opioids.
Bellco has been a subsidiary of ABDC since October 2007, and it conducts all of its
operations through ABDC. We therefore refer to both plaintiffs jointly as “ABDC.”
2
umbrella, and excess commercial general liability policies purchased by ABDC (or its
predecessors or affiliates). On March 17, 2017, ABDC filed a complaint in the Circuit
Court of Boone County, West Virginia, against five insurance companies seeking to
establish coverage under sixteen policies issued between 2006 and 2013. 3 ABDC
subsequently amended its complaint to refine its claims. The complaints generally alleged
that the West Virginia opioid lawsuits raised claims within the scope of policy coverage
but that the insurance companies had breached the sixteen insurance contracts when they
refused to provide defense costs or liability coverage to ABDC. 4
The circuit court case is styled AmerisourceBergen Drug Corporation v.
3
Ace American Insurance Company, Civil Action No. 17-C-36.
4
The record reflects that the defendant insurance companies refused to
provide coverage or a defense because ABDC was sued, not by people who had consumed
opioid medications, but by government agencies. ABDC could not identify by name any
specific person for whom the government agency had incurred losses in connection with a
bodily injury, physical harm, sickness or disease, and also could not identify each person’s
particular bodily injury. Hence, the insurance companies argued ABDC had failed to allege
the occurrence of a “bodily injury” sufficient to trigger indemnification or a defense.
Significantly, the record also reflects that the Attorney General’s 2012
lawsuit included as a defendant another pharmaceutical distributor, H.D. Smith, L.L.C.,
which thereafter sought indemnification and a defense to the Attorney General’s suit from
its liability insurer. However, the insurer refused coverage for reasons similar to those
given to ABDC, prompting a lawsuit by H.D. Smith. On July 19, 2016, the United States
Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit ruled against the insurer and found no policy
requirement that H.D. Smith identify the people harmed or their specific injuries in order
to obtain coverage. The court ruled that because the Attorney General’s lawsuit alleged
losses to government agencies “because of” or “resulting from” bodily injuries, despite
those injuries occurring to unknown citizens, the pharmaceutical company was entitled to
a defense under the insurance policy. See Cincinnati Ins. Co. v. H.D. Smith, L.L.C., 829
F.3d 771, 774 (7th Cir. 2016). Nine days after the Seventh Circuit’s decision, on July 28,
2016, ABDC made demands for indemnification and defense upon the defendant insurers,
Continued . . .
3
ABDC’s insurance coverage lawsuit specifically sought a declaratory
judgment from the circuit court construing primary, umbrella and excess comprehensive
general liability policies issued by defendant St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company
(“St. Paul”) and by defendants Ace American Insurance Company and Ace Property and
Casualty Insurance Company (“Ace American”). 5 ABDC requested an order requiring the
defendants “to pay for the past, present and future defense costs and liability in connection
with prescription opioid lawsuits filed against [ABDC] in this state[.]”
Over the next three-and-a-half years, ABDC and the insurer-defendants
participated in extensive discovery. At one point, ABDC produced over ten million pages
of documents in response to requests made by the insurer-defendants (because the
defendants had sought all documents ever produced by ABDC in all federal and state
prescription opioid lawsuits nationwide). After the resolution of numerous discovery
disputes by the circuit court, defendant St. Paul filed a motion for summary judgment
demands that formed the basis for the instant case. See also, Giant Eagle, Inc. v. Am.
Guarantee & Liab. Ins. Co., 499 F. Supp. 3d 147 (W.D. Pa. 2020) (opioid lawsuit by county
alleged bodily injuries sufficient to trigger duty to defend); Cincinnati Ins. Co. v. H.D.
Smith Wholesale Drug Co., 410 F. Supp. 3d 920 (C.D. Ill. 2019) (finding insurer had a duty
to indemnify pharmaceutical distributor for the entire amount of its settlement with the
State of West Virginia); Acuity v. Masters Pharm., Inc., 2020 WL 3446652 (Ohio App.
2020) (finding insurer had duty to defend opioid distributor in lawsuits); Rite Aid Corp. v.
ACE Am. Ins. Co., 2020 WL 5640817 (Del. Super. Ct. Sept. 22, 2020) (same); Cincinnati
Ins. Co. v. Discount Drug Mart, Inc., 2020 WL 6706791, at *10 (Ohio Com. Pl., Sep. 09,
2020) (same).
5
ABDC’s complaint also named as defendants American Guarantee &
Liability Insurance Company and Endurance American Insurance Company.
4
contending that, as a matter of law, the West Virginia opioid lawsuits did not properly
allege damages arising from a “bodily injury” covered by a St. Paul policy. The parties
briefed the motion. In early 2020, the circuit court heard argument on St. Paul’s summary
judgment motion but requested further briefing. Moreover, in an order dated September
28, 2020, the circuit court resolved the last outstanding discovery dispute between the
parties.
Then, on November 5, 2020, St. Paul filed a competing insurance coverage
action in California state court against ABDC and its corporate subsidiaries and affiliates. 6
In the California complaint, St. Paul alleged that ABDC has been “named in more than 80
lawsuits originally filed in California state and federal court and hundreds more in other
states seeking to hold them responsible for contributing to the opioid crisis in the United
States (the ‘Opioid Lawsuits’).” (Emphasis added.) St. Paul noted that while several
opioid lawsuits nationwide had settled, even after those settlements are concluded,
there will be hundreds of pending Opioid Lawsuits brought by
individuals, companies or governmental entities seeking to
hold [ABDC and its affiliates] liable for their role in the opioid
crisis, and for which [ABDC and its affiliates] have sought
6
See Complaint, St. Paul Fire and Marine Ins. Co., et al. v.
AmerisourceBergen Corporation, et al., No. 30-2020-01168930-CU-IC-CXC (Super. Ct.
of Orange Cty, Cal., Nov. 5, 2020). The California complaint recites that, in 2001,
AmeriSource Health Corporation merged with Bergen Brunswig Corporation (then based
in Orange County, California) to form AmerisourceBergen Corporation. The California
complaint thereafter refers to ABDC and its various subsidiaries and affiliates as the
“Bergen Brunswig Affiliates,” despite Bergen Brunswig ceasing to exist as an independent
corporate entity in 2001. For the sake of clarity, we continue to refer to mentions of
AmerisourceBergen in the California complaint as “ABDC.”
5
insurance coverage from the St. Paul Insurers . . . among others
(‘Remaining Suits’).
St. Paul’s California complaint alleged that St. Paul issued various insurance policies to
ABDC, but sought a declaratory judgment that St. Paul had no duty to defend or indemnify
ABDC in any opioid lawsuit filed against ABDC nationwide. Alternatively, St. Paul’s
complaint named as defendants seventy insurance companies (including companies such
as ACE American) “who, on information and belief, issued insurance policies to [ABDC]
Affiliates covering periods between 1995 and 2018[.]” The complaint asked the California
court to issue a declaratory judgment that, if St. Paul had some obligation to provide
coverage for any opioid lawsuit, established the scope and amount of coverage required to
be provided by each insurance company to ABDC.
On November 19, 2020, ABDC filed a motion with the West Virginia circuit
court seeking an “anti-suit injunction.” At the beginning of its motion, ABDC sought
injunctive relief solely against St. Paul, asking the circuit court to enjoin St. Paul “from
pursuing collateral declaratory judgment litigation in California or elsewhere against
ABDC regarding the disputes currently pending” before the West Virginia court.
However, ABDC’s final request for relief was substantially broader. At the end of its
motion, ABDC asked the circuit court to “enjoin St. Paul, and all other parties to this
lawsuit” from proceeding with the California lawsuit or from “instituting any further
collateral lawsuits regarding the issues pending” before the circuit court. (Emphasis
added.)
6
St. Paul contended that no injunction was necessary because the California
complaint exempted the West Virginia lawsuit. St. Paul cited to footnote 11 on page 17 of
its California complaint which reads:
In 2017, [ABDC] settled an opioid-related lawsuit brought
against it by the Attorney General of West Virginia. Coverage
for that settlement and cases brought by certain West Virginia
governmental entities against [ABDC] and its affiliates is the
subject of litigation pending in West Virginia, styled
AmerisourceBergen Drug Corp., et al. v. ACE American
Insurance Co., et al., No. 17-C-36 (W. V. Cir. Ct., Boone Cty.),
and is not intended to be the subject of this action.
In response to St. Paul’s footnote, ABDC argued that the broad language of the California
complaint necessarily subsumed and addressed the coverage questions pending in West
Virginia. Further, ABDC argued that the California footnote did not say St. Paul carved
out the West Virginia cases, rather, it said St. Paul “intended to” carve them out of the
California action.
In the interim, the circuit court made progress toward resolving the West
Virginia insurance coverage lawsuit. On November 23, 2020, after months of
supplemental briefing, the circuit court entered an order denying St. Paul’s motion for
summary judgment. The circuit court ruled in favor of ABDC and found that “insurance
coverage is available under the general liability insurance coverage section of the St. Paul
Policy for lawsuits by government entities seeking damages for injuries suffered by their
citizens.”
7
In an order dated January 7, 2021, the circuit court granted ABDC’s motion
for an anti-suit injunction and prevented all of the parties from pursuing collateral insurance
litigation involving ABDC, in California or elsewhere. After reviewing the record, the
circuit court determined that the California action involved the same parties as the West
Virginia action (including ABDC, St. Paul, and ACE American), and involved the same
policy language contained in the sixteen insurance policies at issue in West Virginia. The
circuit court found:
Whatever differences exist between this action and St. Paul’s
California Coverage Action, at a minimum, St. Paul is asking
the California court to issue declarations governing the parties
already before this Court, interpreting the exact same insurance
policy language already before this Court, regarding the same
type of cases already before this Court, and regarding the same
cases on which this Court permitted the Insurer Defendants to
take discovery, raising the identical coverage issues already
pending before this Court, including coverage issues on which
this Court has already issued rulings.
Additionally, the circuit court examined St. Paul’s “carve-out” footnote stating that the
prescription opioid lawsuits before the circuit court were “not intended to be the subject
of” the California action. The circuit court said it was “unpersuaded that this carve-out
creates a meaningful distinction between these disputes[] or would meaningfully protect
the jurisdiction of [the circuit court] and the orderly resolution of this dispute.” The circuit
court then concluded by ruling that “[a]ll parties are hereby enjoined from instituting or
prosecuting any collateral litigation or other proceeding against one another relating to
insurance coverage for the prescription opioid lawsuits against . . . ABDC, or any other
affiliated entity.”
8
Defendant St. Paul now appeals the circuit court’s January 7, 2021,
injunction order. Defendant Ace American subsequently filed a motion to intervene and
join St. Paul in appealing the circuit court’s order, a motion this Court granted.
II. Standard of Review
A circuit court entering an injunction is guided by the following discretionary
standard:
The granting or refusal of an injunction . . . calls for the
exercise of sound judicial discretion in view of all the
circumstances of the particular case; regard being had to the
nature of the controversy, the object for which the injunction is
being sought, and the comparative hardship or convenience to
the respective parties involved in the award or denial of the
writ.
Syl. pt. 4, State v. Baker, 112 W. Va. 263, 164 S.E. 154 (1932). Hence, we apply the
following deferential standards to our review of an order granting injunctive relief:
In reviewing the exceptions to the findings of fact and
conclusions of law supporting the granting of . . . [an]
injunction, we will apply a three-pronged deferential standard
of review. We review the final order granting the . . . injunction
and the ultimate disposition under an abuse of discretion
standard, we review the circuit court’s underlying factual
findings under a clearly erroneous standard, and we review
questions of law de novo.
Syl. pt. 1, State By & Through McGraw v. Imperial Mktg., 196 W. Va. 346, 472 S.E.2d
792 (1996) (citations omitted).
With these guidelines in mind, we examine the circuit court’s order.
9
III. Discussion
St. Paul and Ace American contend that the circuit court erred in issuing an
anti-suit injunction precluding the prosecution of the California action. They assert that
the West Virginia and California actions are not “parallel proceedings” because there is no
overlap between the claims at issue in the West Virginia action and the claims in the
California action. Hence, St. Paul and Ace American contend that ABDC has failed to
show any irreparable harm, sufficient to support an injunction, from the California action.
To fully assess the parties’ positions, we begin by considering the power of
a circuit court to issue an anti-suit injunction. “An anti-suit injunction is a legal order
barring litigants from instituting or prosecuting the same or a similar action in another
state.” John Ray Phillips, III, A Proposed Solution to the Puzzle of Anti-suit Injunctions,
69 U. Chi. L. Rev. 2007, 2009 (2002). “Typically, a court may issue an injunction to enjoin
only those acts occurring within that court’s territorial jurisdiction.” Kessel v. Leavitt, 204
W. Va. 95, 150, 511 S.E.2d 720, 775 (1998). However, a well-recognized exception exists
that permits circuit courts to enjoin acts outside of their territorial jurisdiction. West
Virginia Code § 53-5-4 (1923) provides:
Every judge of a circuit court shall have general
jurisdiction in awarding injunctions, whether the judgment or
proceeding enjoined be in or out of his circuit, or the party
against whose proceeding the injunction be asked reside in or
out of the same.
10
West Virginia Code § 53-5-4 enables a circuit court to enjoin the parties to
an action from pursuing substantially similar litigation in another court that threatens the
circuit court’s ability to resolve the action. Stated simply, there is no question that West
Virginia courts are empowered to issue injunctions to prevent parties from going forward
with parallel or duplicative litigation in a sister state. In the context of anti-suit injunctions,
the terms “parallel,” “duplicative,” or “substantially similar” litigation involve a three-part
test “that assesses (1) the similarity of the parties; (2) the similarity of the issues; and (3)
the capacity of one action to dispose of the action to be enjoined.” Maslowski v. Prospect
Funding Partners LLC, 890 N.W.2d 756, 767 (Minn. Ct. App. 2017).
We discussed the long-standing equitable power to issue anti-suit injunctions
in State v. Fredlock, 52 W. Va. 232, 43 S.E. 153 (1903), finding that when a circuit court
asserts jurisdiction over a cause of action, the court’s jurisdiction embraces “every question
arising which could be determined” in the case and “could not be trenched upon by any
other tribunal.” State v. Fredlock, 52 W. Va. at 240, 43 S.E. 153, 156 (1903) (quoting
French v. Hay, 89 U.S. 250, 253 (1874)). We therefore held, in Syllabus Point 1 of
Fredlock, that
[w]hen the jurisdiction of a court is asserted over a cause of
action, it embraces everything in the case and every question
arising which can be determined in it; and, until thus
exhausted, or in some way relinquished, the jurisdiction is
exclusive and cannot be encroached upon by any other
tribunal.
52 W. Va. at 232, 43 S.E. at 153.
11
When, however, the parties before the circuit court initiate parallel litigation
in another court, or otherwise ask another court to act in a manner that invades or
encroaches upon the circuit court’s ability to resolve a pending cause of action or
controversy, this Court determined that a circuit court is authorized by West Virginia Code
§ 53-5-4 and by principles of equity to enter an injunction designed to “uphold, maintain
and protect a jurisdiction which attaches upon grounds wholly independent of the
injunction.” Id. at 239, 43 S.E. at 156. In other words, a circuit court may enjoin a party
from pursuing a parallel case in the courts of another state. 7 This Court concluded, in
Syllabus Point 2 of Fredlock, that
[a] court having jurisdiction in personam, may require the
defendant to do, or refrain from doing, beyond its territorial
jurisdiction, anything which it has power to require him to do
or omit within the limits of its territory.
52 W. Va. at 233, 43 S.E. at 153. Stated differently, “a court has a duty, as well as power,
to protect its jurisdiction over a controversy in order to decree complete and final justice
7
As for a party’s attempt to pursue substantially similar litigation in another
West Virginia circuit court, Rule 42(b) of the West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure
provide circuit courts with the appropriate remedy:
When two or more actions arising out of the same
transaction or occurrence are pending before different courts
or before a court and a magistrate, the court in which the first
such action was commenced shall order all the actions
transferred to it or any other court in which any such action is
pending. The court to which the actions are transferred may
order a joint hearing or trial of any or all of the matters in issue
in any of the actions; it may order all the actions consolidated;
and it may make such other orders concerning proceedings
therein as may tend to avoid unnecessary costs or delay.
12
between the parties and may issue an injunction for that purpose[.]” James v. Grand Trunk
W. R. Co., 152 N.E.2d 858, 865 (Ill. 1958).
To be clear, an anti-suit injunction applies only to the parties before the
circuit court, not to the other court or other judge presiding over the parallel case.
The injunction is directed, not to the court, but to the litigant
parties, and in no manner denies the jurisdiction of the legal
tribunal. It merely seeks to control the person to whom it is
addressed, and to prevent him from using the process of courts
of law where it would be against conscience to allow him to
proceed. It is granted on the ground that an unfair use is being
made of the legal forum, which, from circumstances of which
equity alone can take cognizance, should be restrained, lest an
injury be committed, wholly remediless at law.
52 W. Va. at 247-48, 43 S.E. at 159 (cleaned up). See also, W. Va. R. Civ. Pro. Rule 65(d)
(“Every order granting an injunction . . . is binding only upon the parties to the action, their
officers, agents, servants, employees, and attorneys, and upon those persons in active
concert or participation with them who receive actual notice of the order by personal
service or otherwise.”); Kurtis A. Kemper, Propriety Under Circumstances of State Court
Injunction Against Nonmatrimonial Action in Court of Sister State, 20 A.L.R.6th 211
(2006) (“It is clearly within the equitable powers of a state court to restrain a person over
whom it has jurisdiction from instituting or proceeding with an action in a sister state’s
court. The exercise of such power does not direct or control a sister state’s court but
operates in personam upon a party over whom the court has jurisdiction.”). Circuit courts
have the power to enjoin parties from pursuing parallel litigation “in sister state courts
13
under the common law doctrine of comity; and . . . in foreign countries.” James P. George,
Parallel Litigation, 51 Baylor L. Rev. 769, 781 (1999).
When entering an injunction precluding parties from pursing parallel
litigation in a sister state, circuit courts are guided by two concepts: comity and equity.
Comity compels a court to act cautiously and with restraint. Stated broadly,
when considering whether to issue an anti-suit injunction, “[t]he principle of comity
requires that courts exercise the power to enjoin foreign suits sparingly and only in very
special circumstances where a clear equity is presented requiring the interposition of the
court to prevent manifest wrong and an irreparable miscarriage of justice.” 42 Am. Jur. 2d
Injunctions § 186 (2021). Comity is a flexible, court-created doctrine of deference by one
court toward another designed to promote “legal harmony and uniformity among the co-
equal states.” Pasquale v. Ohio Power Co., 187 W. Va. 292, 300, 418 S.E.2d 738, 746
(1992). As one court noted
comity is not a constitutional requirement to give full faith and
credit to the law of a sister state, but it is a rule of convenience
and courtesy. The doctrine of judicial comity represents a
willingness to grant a privilege, not as a matter of right, but out
of deference and good will.
Cloverleaf Enterprises, Inc. v. Centaur Rosecroft, LLC, 815 N.E.2d 513, 519 (Ind. Ct. App.
2004) (citations omitted). See also Hawsey v. Louisiana Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 934 S.W.2d
723, 726 (Tex. App. 1996) (“Comity is a principle under which the courts of one state give
effect to the laws of another state . . . not as a rule of law, but rather out of deference or
respect.”). Courts apply principles of comity “to foster cooperation, promote harmony,
14
and build goodwill.” Trillium USA, Inc. v. Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs of Broward Cty., Fla., 37
P.3d 1093, 1098 (Utah 2001). “Courts sometimes use the term ‘comity’ as a shorthand
term to explain why a forum court is deferring to the law or rulings of another jurisdiction.”
Russell v. Bush & Burchett, Inc., 210 W. Va. 699, 703 n.4, 559 S.E.2d 36, 40 n.4 (2001). 8
In addition to comity, circuit courts weighing whether to issue an anti-suit
injunction are guided by fundamental principles of equity. Our review of the law reveals
that state courts have granted anti-suit injunctions after identifying equitable concerns
8
One treatise suggests that considerations of comity might impel a circuit
court, through the parties, to encourage
the sister state’s court to address concerns such as the
duplication of parties and issues, the expense and effort of
simultaneous litigation in two courts, and the potential for
inconsistent judgments by means of a motion to stay or dismiss
the proceedings based on forum non conveniens considerations
or other grounds.
Kurtis A. Kemper, Propriety Under Circumstances of State Court Injunction Against
Nonmatrimonial Action in Court of Sister State, 20 A.L.R.6th 211, § 2 (2006). However,
another commentator noted
Traditionally, interstate recognition of antisuit injunctions is
said to be a matter of “comity,” defined as “the nonmandatory
acceptance by one jurisdiction of the law of another.” In
practice, comity has never been a weighty, let alone
dispositive, consideration for courts. As Justice Story wrote, it
as an “imperfect obligation, like that of beneficence, humanity,
and charity.” Not surprisingly, then, when considering
whether to recognize antisuit injunctions, courts pay homage
to comity but seldom invoke it as the sole ground for their
decision.
Phillips, A Proposed Solution to the Puzzle of Antisuit Injunctions, 69 U. Chi. L. Rev. at
2015-16 (footnotes omitted).
15
about interference with the court’s jurisdiction,9 duplicative suits, 10 and vexatious
litigation. 11 Additionally, state courts have issued anti-suit injunctions when a foreign-state
lawsuit would circumvent the enforcement of the state’s public policy. 12 The Texas
Supreme Court has distilled the cases into the following guide:
9
See, e.g., Staton v. Russell, 565 S.E.2d 103, 109 (N.C. App., 2002)
(permitting anti-suit injunction because “appellants’ continued prosecution of the Florida
action threatened our trial court’s jurisdiction over issues that affect the rights of parties
not represented in the Florida action.”); Medtronic, Inc. v. Advanced Bionics Corp., 630
N.W.2d 438, 449–50 (Minn. Ct. App. 2001) (“When a party acts ‘in a calculated and
systematic manner . . . to deprive the [Minnesota] court of its jurisdiction,’ issuing an
injunction to stop the action in another jurisdiction is appropriate.”)
10
See, e.g., Forum Ins. Co. v. Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., 929 S.W.2d 114,
120 (Tex. App. 1996) (“‘[C]lear equity’ favors all parties seeking a completion and finality
to their dispute in a single proceeding without the vexation of potentially multiplicitous or
harassing litigation.”); Glitsch, Inc. v. Harbert Const. Co., a Div. of Harbert Int’l, 628 So.
2d 401, 403 (Ala. 1993) (upholding anti-suit injunction by Alabama trial court precluding
prosecution of parallel action in Texas, because “the actions are substantially the same and
because of the hardship to the parties to litigate in two forums, with the possibility of
inconsistent results[.]”); Cajun Electric Power Coop., Inc. v. Triton Coal Co., 590 So.2d
813, 816-18 (La. App. 1991) (an anti-suit injunction should issue where “[t]he two suits
are clearly duplicative, and permitting both suits to continue only thwarts the legitimate
effort to avoid a multiplicity of lawsuits for the benefit of both the litigants and the
courts.”).
11
See, e.g., Am. Int’l Specialty Lines Ins. Co. v. Triton Energy Ltd., 52 S.W.3d
337, 342 (Tex. App. 2001) (Texas trial court granted anti-suit injunction, finding insurer’s
later-filed suit in California was “vexatious and harassing,” because rather than “submitting
to the jurisdiction of the Texas court and abiding by its decision . . . [the insurer] filed suit
in California and proceeded to race to judgment there.”); Wallace Butts Ins. Agency, Inc.
v. Runge, 314 S.E.2d 293, 297 (N.C. App. 1984) (trial judge correctly entered restraining
order so that defendant would not be “forced to defend two lawsuits in separate states
involving the same subject matter resulting in vexation, harassment, annoyance and great
expense.”).
See, e.g., Maslowski v. Prospect Funding Partners LLC, 890 N.W.2d 756,
12
769 (Minn. Ct. App. 2017) (“[E]quity supports an anti-suit injunction when a party
Continued . . .
16
An anti-suit injunction is appropriate in four instances: 1) to
address a threat to the court’s jurisdiction; 2) to prevent the
evasion of important public policy; 3) to prevent a multiplicity
of suits; or 4) to protect a party from vexatious or harassing
litigation.
Golden Rule Ins. Co. v. Harper, 925 S.W.2d 649, 651 (Tex. 1996). Similarly, the
Restatement (Fourth) of Foreign Relations Law proffers an equitable guide for anti-suit
injunctions to preclude parallel litigation in other countries, and says:
A court in the United States may enjoin persons subject
to its jurisdiction from pursuing parallel foreign proceedings.
An antisuit injunction is an exceptional remedy and is
appropriate only if the foreign proceeding threatens the court's
jurisdiction, frustrates an important public policy of the forum,
is vexatious or inequitable, or would result in delay,
inconvenience, expense, inconsistency, or a race to judgment.
Restatement (Fourth) of Foreign Relations Law § 425 (2018).
After consideration of these authorities, we hold that an anti-suit injunction
is an order barring parties to an action in this state from instituting or prosecuting
substantially similar litigation in another state. Whether the foreign state action is
substantially similar involves assessing (1) the similarity of the parties; (2) the similarity
of the issues; and (3) the capacity of the action in this state to dispose of the foreign state
action.
attempts to evade the effects of Minnesota law[.]”); AutoNation, Inc. v. Hatfield, 186
S.W.3d 576, 581 (Tex. App. 2005) (anti-suit injunction was proper because litigation in
foreign state would “likely apply a legal standard contrary to the public policy of this state”
and “Texas public policy may be thwarted[.]”).
17
We further hold that the principle of comity requires that a circuit court enter
an anti-suit injunction cautiously and with restraint. An anti-suit injunction is an
exceptional remedy but is appropriate when equity compels the circuit court: (1) to address
a threat to the court’s jurisdiction; (2) to prevent the evasion of an important public policy;
(3) to prevent a multiplicity of suits that result in delay, inconvenience, expense,
inconsistency, or will be a “race to judgment”; or (4) to protect a party from vexatious,
inequitable or harassing litigation.
With these standards in mind, we now examine the circuit court’s order. St.
Paul offers an interpretation of the record which posits that the circuit court erred because
no “parallel proceedings” have been filed in California. The common refrain of St. Paul’s
brief is a contention that the West Virginia lawsuit “concerns only 50 specific lawsuits that
were filed in West Virginia and one St. Paul insurance policy” issued in 2006 to ABDC’s
parent company, AmerisourceBergen Corporation. St. Paul also says that
the California Action concerns questions regarding insurance
coverage for more than 3,500 underlying opioid-related
lawsuits filed against [ABDC and its affiliates] in California
and elsewhere---expressly excluding the 50 underlying suits at
issue in this case---under a multitude of policies dating from
the mid-1990s that were issued by the 75 insurance companies
that are named parties in the California Action.
Using its own construal of the facts, St. Paul insists that “there is no overlap between the
underlying claims at issue in the California Action and this case,” and, thus, the circuit
court erred in finding any prejudice or harm to ABDC by the California coverage action.
Moreover, St. Paul claims that the circuit court “interfere[d] with and assert[ed] control
18
over litigation in a court in another state more than 2,000 miles away,” and that the court’s
order “reflects a stunning disregard for fundamental principles of comity and sovereignty
between the courts of different states.”
We have reviewed the record and the circuit court’s order, and we reject the
interpretation of the facts asserted by St. Paul. The record reflects a substantially different
factual picture than that painted by St. Paul in its brief. It is true that ABDC’s complaint
and amended complaint initially identified fifty specific opioid-related lawsuits in West
Virginia. Nevertheless, ABDC also said in its 2017 amended complaint that “[a]dditional
counties, towns, and cities in West Virginia have publicly announced that they intend to
file prescription opioid lawsuits” and that ABDC “reserve[d] the right to include additional
lawsuits in this civil action.” The record shows that, in the three-and-a-half year course of
discovery, ABDC informed St. Paul of 165 specific opioid-related lawsuits in West
Virginia for which ABDC sought defense or indemnity costs from St. Paul.
Moreover, we find no error in the circuit court’s conclusion that St. Paul
instituted competing, parallel litigation in California. First, both the West Virginia action
and the California action involve, not merely similar parties, but identical parties. Every
single one of the plaintiffs and defendants in the West Virginia action are parties in the
California action. 13 That St. Paul chose to include dozens of additional parties in the
ABDC and its subsidiary, Bellco Drug Corporation, are the plaintiffs in the
13
West Virginia action; the California action was filed against ABDC, Bellco Drug
Corporation, and other corporate affiliates of ABDC. St. Paul is one of five defendants in
Continued . . .
19
California action does not negate the circuit court’s finding that all of the parties in the
West Virginia action are parties to the California action. Second, the competing cases
involve similar issues: the West Virginia case seeks to interpret sixteen specific insurance
policies in effect between 2006 and 2013; the California case seeks to interpret those same
policies, as well as seemingly every other insurance policy issued to ABDC and its
affiliates between 1995 and 2018. Third, the circuit court could fairly conclude that the
resolution of the West Virginia action would dispose of a portion of the California action,
certainly as to the interpretation of the sixteen insurance policies identified in the West
Virginia complaint, and possibly as to other policies at issue in California that contain
language comparable to that in dispute in West Virginia. Hence, we find no error in the
circuit court’s conclusion that St. Paul initiated substantially similar litigation in California
which overlapped and competed with the issues pending in West Virginia.
The next question we must address is whether, in light of principles of comity
and equity, the circuit court abused its discretion in entering the injunction. As a general
matter, the circuit court found that it was uniquely situated because it was the first court in
the nation to oversee a prescription opioid lawsuit brought by a government entity (the
Attorney General in 2012) against a pharmaceutical distributor, and it was one of the first
the West Virginia action and is the lead plaintiff in the California action. The other four
defendants in the West Virginia action (Ace American Insurance Company; Ace Property
and Casualty Insurance Company; American Guarantee & Liability Insurance Company;
and Endurance American Insurance Company) are named defendants in the California
action.
20
to bring such a case to a final resolution. Because of the extent of the opioid epidemic in
West Virginia, the courts of this state have a compelling interest in determining whether
the policies at issue in ABDC’s West Virginia suit provide coverage for the underlying
claims brought by West Virginia entities, without competing rulings from a foreign court.
The circuit court found its ability to successfully resolve the West Virginia
suit was threatened by St. Paul’s California action. The circuit court had expended
substantial resources overseeing litigation for three-and-a-half years and gained a unique
understanding of the parties and issues. Additionally, at the request of the parties early in
the case, the circuit court had entered a “stay order” focusing discovery and litigation on
insurance coverage for the Attorney General’s now-completed 2012 lawsuit, and otherwise
staying the examination of coverage for all other West Virginia cases. In part, the stay
order was the result of St. Paul telling the circuit court that the underlying allegations
against ABDC in the Attorney General’s lawsuit were materially identical in all other suits,
in West Virginia and nationwide. St. Paul’s California action violated the terms and spirit
of the circuit court’s stay order and was effectively a means of litigating the coverage
questions stayed by the circuit court.
The circuit court also determined that St. Paul’s California action created a
multiplicity of suits that would, by design, complicate the West Virginia coverage issues
and would inevitably result in unnecessary and improper delays. The circuit court noted
that St. Paul filed the California action three-and-a-half years after the West Virginia action
was filed, “without making any effort to join in [the West Virginia] action any of the parties
21
or insurance policies it now claims are essential to the resolution of this dispute.” 14
Additionally, St. Paul filed suit in California “despite the fact that none of the eighty-three
parties . . . are headquartered in California and only one of the eighty-three parties is
incorporated in California ([and] that party has its principal place of business in Texas).”
The circuit court fairly concluded that St. Paul’s parallel suit in California was filed for
improper purposes, namely forum shopping and the disruption of the orderly resolution of
the West Virginia suit.
On this record, we find no error by the circuit court in its decision to enter an
anti-suit injunction. The circuit court’s order demonstrates the existence of exceptional
circumstances, and the court did not abuse its discretion in finding equity compelled an
order. Like the circuit court, we too are unpersuaded by St. Paul’s “carve-out” footnote in
its California complaint claiming some portion of the West Virginia action “is not intended
to be” the subject of the California action. The broad language of the California complaint
clearly subsumes and seeks rulings on the exact issues that are to be decided (or have
already been decided) in West Virginia. Hence, an injunction was needed to prevent a
threat to the court’s jurisdiction and ability to resolve the West Virginia coverage suit, and
to prevent a multiplicity of suits filed with the intent of causing delay, expense and
inconsistent judgments.
14
We note that, in three-and-a-half years of litigation, ABDC also did not
seek to expand the scope of its West Virginia action and join any of the parties or insurance
policies exclusively at issue in the California action.
22
That said, having reviewed the terms of the circuit court’s order, we do find
an abuse of discretion in its breadth and focus. Ace American’s argument to this Court
notes that the circuit court’s order only enjoined ABDC and the five insurers who were
parties to the West Virginia action from further litigation; it did nothing to enjoin the
dozens of other parties to the California action who issued countless other policies to
ABDC and its affiliates. Ace American points out that many of the California-only parties
have proceeded to file cross-claims, counter-claims, and discovery requests in response to
St. Paul’s complaint, but the circuit court’s order precludes ABDC and the five insurers
who are parties to the West Virginia action from effectively responding. 15
As we noted earlier, the anti-suit injunction order enjoins all parties to the
West Virginia action from instituting or prosecuting any legal proceeding concerning
ABDC’s insurance coverage. 16 Our concern is that ABDC’s West Virginia complaint is
limited in scope and seeks a declaratory judgment concerning only sixteen insurance
policies issued by five insurance companies. As ABDC’s complaint is cast, it asks the
circuit court for a judgment regarding whether those sixteen policies provide coverage for
15
Ace American contends that the circuit court’s injunction violated the
bedrock principle that “equity never does a useless thing.” Kennewig Co. v. Moore, 49 W.
Va. 323, 325, 38 S.E. 558, 558 (1901). We do not think the circuit court’s error was
“useless,” as Ace American claims; rather, as we discuss in the text, we find the order’s
conclusion was, seemingly, overbroad.
16
As a reminder, the circuit court’s order provides: “All parties are hereby
enjoined from instituting or prosecuting any collateral litigation or other proceeding against
one another relating to coverage for the prescription opioid lawsuits against . . . ABDC, or
any other affiliated entity.”
23
the growing number of West Virginia-based opioid lawsuits. The circuit court was within
its rights to protect its jurisdiction to resolve the dispute as presented by ABDC.
However, as it is written, the circuit court’s order impairs the parties’ ability
to litigate, against each other or with third parties, over policies separate from the sixteen
policies identified by ABDC. Stated simply, the order is unclear as to why the circuit court
precluded the litigation of any issues between the parties, if those issues were unrelated to
the interpretation of the sixteen insurance policies at issue in the West Virginia action.
Moreover, by preventing any litigation activity between the parties, the circuit court’s order
effectively precluded the parties from pursuing some agreed-upon resolution of the
California action, or a resolution from the California court such as a stay or a dismissal.
We understand that the circuit court’s judgment interpreting the policies at
issue will become precedent for future cases in sister states, but we do not yet see that as a
compelling reason to prevent the parties from litigating comparable questions of coverage
for opioid lawsuits, regarding different policies, in other forums. As it is written, the circuit
court’s order does not make clear why questions pertaining to policies other than the
sixteen policies identified by ABDC cannot be the subject of litigation in our sister states.
Principles of comity require a court to act with restraint and to respect the idea that the
courts of our sister states will likewise act with fairness and restraint. In this instance,
despite the circuit court’s conclusion that St. Paul had questionable motives in filing its
California action, we find that the circuit court’s order should have clearly and finely
24
tailored a connection between the relief sought in ABDC’s West Virginia action and the
prohibition of the parties’ actions in California.
Accordingly, we find the circuit court’s order to be overbroad and, as
currently drafted, to constitute an abuse of the court’s discretion. The order must therefore
be reversed, and the case remanded for reconsideration.
IV. Conclusion
Upon our review of the law and the record, we find the circuit court clearly
had the authority to enter an anti-suit injunction. Hence, we affirm the circuit court’s
decision to enter an injunction. However, an anti-suit injunction is an exceptional remedy
and must be narrowly tailored to address the equitable circumstances presented. As the
circuit court’s order is drafted, we find it to be overbroad and, therefore, an abuse of
discretion. Thus, we must therefore reverse the circuit court’s January 7, 2021, order, and
remand the case for clarification of the order or such other proceedings as are necessary.
Affirmed, in part, reversed, in part, and remanded.
25