Stryker Corp. v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co.

by
TIG issued a $25 million excess policy to Stryker, a manufacturer of medical devices. Coverage attached above the underlying (XL) umbrella policy, with a limit of $15 million. Stryker sued XL, seeking defense and indemnification for claims related to replacement knees (first suit). Pfizer then sued Stryker, seeking indemnification with respect to claims based on Uni-Knees; the companies had an asset purchase agreement. The court ruled in favor of Pfizer. When XL denied coverage, Stryker sued both insurers. In 2008, the district court held that XL was liable for all of Stryker's liabilities with respect to both suits and also granted declaratory judgment against TIG. XL settled directly with Pfizer, and obtained a ruling that this satisfied its obligations. TIG moved to remove the declaratory judgment ruling, arguing that the ruling that XL was responsible with respect to both suits made it impossible to subject TIG to liability. The district court denied this motion. The Sixth Circuit affirmed that the case is not moot, noting that the claims may exhaust the XL policy; reversed a ruling that TIG is precluded from raising coverage defenses on remand, noting that TIG was not a party to the first suit; and remanded. View "Stryker Corp. v. Nat'l Union Fire Ins. Co." on Justia Law