With long-tail liability claims — where bodily injury or property damage can be assigned to many different insurance policies across many years — disputes may arise among insurers that provide coverage for the same loss. With as many as dozens of eligible insurers providing coverage in some cases, and certain jurisdictions that assign the full loss to one year of insurance, how can responding insurers share the costs with other triggered insurers? The answer is the idea of contribution – multiple insurers equitably sharing a loss.
For contribution to be relevant, a few things must be true:
Under these conditions, the insurer(s) who paid more than their equitable share can file a contribution claim against the insurer(s) who did not. Their goal is to recover an amount equal to the difference between what they paid and what their calculated equitable share of the payment should have been.
So, how is an insurer’s equitable share of the total loss calculated? Usually, one of two main methods is used:
Consider the following example:
A company pays $100,000 to settle a personal injury claim. Under a continuous trigger, there are three insurers that are eligible to reimburse the company for these damages: all have a one-year policy while Insurer A has limits of $500,000, Insurer B has limits of $300,000, and Insurer C has limits of $200,000. Collectively, the total limits of the three policies are $1,000,000.
The method used to calculate the equitable share can depend on the state and jurisdiction of the claim but more than anything else, it depends on the specific policy language.
An example of policy language that would support a Contribution by Limits approach is:
An example of policy language that would support a Contribution by Equal Shares approach is:
A key consideration when modeling contribution claims is ascertaining which policies and insurers are available to contribute. As always, the jurisdiction and its prior rulings matter greatly; some factors that may eliminate the right of contribution are exhaustion of limits by other claims, settled and/or released coverage, and insolvency, to name a few. Calculating potential contribution claims can be challenging given that there is no easy answer when working with mass tort losses across many insurance towers.
Contribution claims highlight the complex relationship among insurers who find themselves covering the same liability. The terms of the equitable split of costs require an understanding of policy language, jurisdictional precedent, and the circumstances of the payments. Ultimately, the concept of contribution promotes early involvement by all insurers, encourages settlement among insurers and policyholders, and helps lead to fair outcomes for all parties involved.
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Since joining KCIC in 2018, Luca has gained experience managing litigation claims data, forecasting future asbestos filing trends, and assisting clients with corporate restructuring. He enjoys using his technical skills to manage complex datasets and come up with creative solutions to help KCIC clients solve the unique problems they face. Luca has also led multiple projects to create complex insurance allocations utilizing several different methodologies.
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