Subrogation, once you determine that the insurer can bring the claim, at least in claims involving property loss or damage to businesses, is really an exercise in commercial litigation. Whoever the insured could sue to recover for the loss it suffered, the insurance carrier also could sue; whoever the insured could not sue, the insurer also could not sue.
A good example of this is a subrogation claim I had that involved a theft of a few hundred thousand dollars of merchandise from a clothing warehouse. The thieves, who never were caught, were ingenious. They broke into the warehouse and jerry-rigged a conveyor system so that it brought the clothes right to the loading dock door. Once there, the thieves loaded the clothes into a waiting truck and drove off. The whole operation took approximately 2 hours; not bad for a night’s work.
The warehouse, which had its own policy of property insurance, made a claim to recover for the value of the clothes, which its insurer paid because theft was a covered cause of loss under the policy. The insurance company then wanted to try to recover the money it paid the insured, from the parties responsible for the loss.
There was nothing that barred the insurance company from bringing a subrogation claim. The loss clearly was covered under the warehouse’s own policy of insurance, which protected against losses caused by theft; the insurance company had to pay, it did not make a voluntary payment. The thieves were never found, so they could not be sued. The warehouse, however, had a central station alarm, and there was nothing in the alarm contract that barred a subrogation claim. There was a big obstacle, however, preventing the warehouse from recovering from the alarm company even if the alarm company’s actions had caused the loss; and, if the warehouse could not recover, neither could the warehouse’s insurer in subrogation. The alarm contract contained an exculpatory clause absolving the alarm company from liability for its own negligence. Unless the alarm company’s actions amounted to more than ordinary negligence, there would be no recovery against it.
One way to overcome an exculpatory clause in a contract which absolves a party from liability for its own negligence, is to prove gross negligence. Gross negligence is the failure to use even slight care, or conduct that is so careless as to show complete disregard for the rights and safety of others; it smacks of intentional wrongdoing. At least in New York, a party cannot absolve itself from liability for its own gross negligence and, most often, whether a party’s actions amount to gross negligence is an issue of fact to be tried by a jury rather than determined on a motion for summary judgement. See Sommer v. Fed. Signal Corp., 79 N.Y.2d 540, 554, 593 N.E.2d 1365, 1370-71 (1992).
The insured, its representatives, and I worked as a team to obtain evidence that the alarm company was grossly negligent in how it responded to the alarms at the warehouse. The court said this was enough to defeat the alarm company’s motion for summary judgement. We’ll show how this was done, in our next article.