Silverstein Files Appeal Briefs Establishing Its Right to Recover from World Trade Center Insurers on a Two Occurrence Basis.Business Editors NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jan. 7, 2003 Silverstein Properties Inc. today stated that it, along with the Port Authority and other insureds, has filed two briefs with the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit is one of the thirteen United States Courts of Appeals. It has appellate jurisdiction over the district courts in the following districts:
If there are two occurrences, Silverstein and its co-insureds will be able to recover up to $6.7 billion for use in rebuilding; if there is one occurrence, recovery would be limited to $3.55 billion, an amount substantially less than the anticipated cost of rebuilding the World Trade Center site. The first brief asks the Second Circuit to rule that under a policy form issued by the lead insurer An individual or company who, through a contractual agreement, undertakes to compensate specified losses, liability, or damages incurred by another individual. An insurer is frequently an insurance company and is also known as an underwriter. of the complex, Travelers Indemnity Recompense for loss, damage, or injuries; restitution or reimbursement. An indemnity contract arises when one individual takes on the obligation to pay for any loss or damage that has been or might be incurred by another individual. , that leaves the term "occurrence" undefined, the events of September 11 constitute two occurrences as a matter of law. The brief establishes that in determining the number of occurrences, controlling and long-established New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of precedent provides that a court must look to the immediate, efficient, physical cause of the loss, and not to some indirect or remote cause of causes. Under this test, the events of September 11 -- in which two separate planes struck two separate buildings at two separate times, starting two separate fires that led to two separate collapses -- constitute two occurrences. Among the precedents cited in the brief is a federal appellate court A court having jurisdiction to review decisions of a trial-level or other lower court. An unsuccessful party in a lawsuit must file an appeal with an appellate court in order to have the decision reviewed. decision in which Travelers successfully argued that four separate court house fires set by a single arsonist with a hatred Hatred Haughtiness (See ARROGANCE.) Ahab, Captain main character whose monomania is an expression of hatred. [Am. Lit.: Moby Dick] basil flower flower representing hatred of the other sex. for the judiciary judiciary Branch of government in which judicial power is vested. The principal work of any judiciary is the adjudication of disputes or controversies. Regulations govern what parties are allowed before a judicial assembly, or court, what evidence will be admitted, what should be treated as four separate occurrences, even though all four fires Four Fires is a novel written by Bryce Courtenay. It tells the story of the Maloney family, living in country Victoria in the 1940's. It is based on a Victorian town called Yankalillee, which is in the Wangaratta - Wodonga Area. were set as part of a single plot and even though two of the four fires were set 6 minutes apart in court houses across the street from each other. Because Travelers was an excess insurer of the damaged court houses and several of the fires caused damages in an amount below the point at which Travelers would have to pay, it was in Travelers' interest to argue that each fire was a separate occurrence. Accordingly, Travelers argued that: -- The undefined term "occurrence" is "unambiguous" and there were four occurrences as a matter of law. -- Whether there was a "Common Scheme or Plan" or common "motivation" was "Irrelevant." -- Each fire was required to be deemed a separate "occurrence" as a matter of law because "one fire did not cause any of the other fires, and each fire was set at separate times." In a ruling that, ironically i·ron·ic also i·ron·i·cal adj. 1. Characterized by or constituting irony. 2. Given to the use of irony. See Synonyms at sarcastic. 3. , was issued on September 11, 2001, the federal appellate court hearing that case sided with Travelers, and ruled that the four fires should be treated as four separate occurrences. Howard J. Rubenstein, a spokesman for Mr. Silverstein, stated: "Travelers cannot change the meaning of the word 'occurrence' depending on what is best for its balance sheet. If four separate court house fires started by a single arsonist counts as four separate occurrences as a matter of law, then the two separate fires started in two separate buildings as a result of two separate airplane airplane, aeroplane, or aircraft, heavier-than-air vehicle, mechanically driven and fitted with fixed wings that support it in flight through the dynamic action of the air. crashes count as two occurrences as a matter of law as well, whether or not those fires were the result of a single terrorist plot." In the second brief, Silverstein establishes that the district court hearing the insurance dispute erred in ruling that three of the insurers of the Twin Towers -- Hartford, Royal and St. Paul St. Paul as a missionary he fearlessly confronts the “perils of waters, of robbers, in the city, in the wilderness.” [N.T.: II Cor. 11:26] See : Bravery -- had signed onto a particular "WilProp" form that contained a unique definition of the term "occurrence" and that under that definition, recovery was limited to a single "occurrence." The brief shows that the insurers were told before they agreed to bind coverage for the Twin Towers that the WilProp form would not be used on the program and had been replaced with the Travelers form at Travelers' insistence. It also shows that in ruling that these three insurers had bound to the superseded WilProp form, the district court erroneously er·ro·ne·ous adj. Containing or derived from error; mistaken: erroneous conclusions. [Middle English, from Latin err failed to credit a mountain of evidence establishing that these three insurers intended and agreed to follow the form negotiated by Travelers as the lead carrier. The brief also points out that the ruling by the district court judge hearing the case, Judge John S. Martin, Jr., in favor of upon the side of; favorable to; for the advantage of. See also: favor Hartford, Royal and St. Paul was inconsistent with a subsequent December 19 ruling by Judge Martin that three other insurers -- Federal Insurance, a unit of Chubb; Lexington, a unit of AIG AIG addressee indicator group (US DoD) AIG American International Group, Inc AiG Answers in Genesis (religious group in defense of Scripture) AIG Artificial Intelligence Group AIG Australian Industry Group ; and Zurich American -- could not take advantage of the WilProp form because they had been told prior to binding that the WilProp form was not going to be applicable. Federal, Lexington and Zurich represent approximately 8.5% of the entire coverage of the World Trade Center buildings leased by Silverstein affiliates from the Port Authority, committing to a total of $305 million of the $3.55 billion "per occurrence" in coverage. In contrast, the three insurers that successfully argued at the district court level that their exposure should be limited to a single occurrence represent only approximately 3% of the total coverage. The briefs were filed jointly by the Port Authority, Silverstein and other insureds. The Second Circuit previously granted Silverstein's motion for expedited treatment of the appeals, and has scheduled a hearing on the appeals for the week of March 24, 2003. |
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