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When is a Renewal a Renewal?

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A recent case decided by the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit addressed the deceptively simple issue of whether a renewal is a renewal. Indian Harbor Ins. Co. v. F&M Equip., No. 14-1897, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 17901 (3rd Cir. Oct. 15, 2015). You know the situation; a three-year policy is about to expire and the insurer provides new terms and conditions for another three-year term. Is that a renewal, or a cancellation and offer of a new contract?On a table the pen, the calculator, the contract, the dairy

 

The situation in Indian Harbor was much more interesting and complex. Here, the insurance policy provided that the insurance company would offer the policyholder a renewal when the current policy term expired. At the end of the policy term — an unusual 10-year policy term — the carrier offered a renewal, but one that was for only a year, had a much smaller premium and eliminated coverage for a specific location. A dispute arose over whether the “renewal” was a true renewal and whether the “renewal” offer breached the existing insurance contract’s promise of a renewal.

The law in most states addresses the change in terms and conditions in the context of cancellation or termination of an insurance policy. The laws and regulations often provide that a change of material terms and conditions without proper notice is not effective and that the policy will renew on the basis of the existing terms and conditions. But if proper notice is given, a change material terms and conditions may be offered in the context of a new contract. In this case, however, the specific terms of the policy provided that the insurer had to offer a renewal and provided in an endorsement a limited set of 5 reasons why the insurer may refuse to offer a renewal. None of those reasons appeared in this case.

Litigation arose over whether the offered terms met the renewal promise in the contract. Motions for summary judgment were filed. The motion court held that the insurer had given adequate notice of its intent to change the policy and denied the policyholder’s motion for summary judgment. The Third Circuit reversed.

In reversing, the Third Circuit focused on the language of the insurance policy. Now, this language was pretty unique in promising a renewal offering and limiting the ability of the insurer to cancel the coverage. The court was tasked in determining what the parties’ meant when they agreed that the insurer would not “refuse to offer a renewal extension of coverage.” The arguments were polar opposites. The policyholder contended that the insurer had to offer the same or substantially similar terms to the original contract. The insurer argued that the renewal need only be any offer of


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