AIG Can Continue Trade Secret Theft Allegations Against Dellwood

About a year into the litigation between American International Group and startup Dellwood Insurance Group, a federal judge will allow much of AIG’s lawsuit to proceed against its newest potential competitor in the excess and surplus market.
Judge Evelyn Padin in U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey ruled AIG can amend its complaint and go ahead with allegations of misappropriation of trade secrets and unfair competition by Dellwood.
Padin dismissed with prejudice AIG’s allegations of tortious interference, aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty, and computer fraud abuse.
AIG has alleged Connolly emailed himself information related to AIG’s E&S business plans, pricing, and strategy.
Padin said courts within the district “routinely find that the types of information alleged to have been taken by Connolly to Dellwood constitute trade secrets.” She further ruled the information alleged to have been taken has independent economic value.
Connolly as well as former AIG executives Michael Price and Kean Driscoll were originally named in a lawsuit filed against Dellwood in April 2024 – about a month after New Jersey-based Dellwood was launched. Price was AIG’s CEO of North America General Insurance before leaving the company at the end of June 2023. Driscoll was AIG’s global chief underwriting officer of General Insurance. Driscoll and Connolly left AIG in March 2024.
Price and Driscoll are now CEO and CUO, respectively, of Dellwood.
AIG later dropped the three executives from the lawsuit, but continued its claims against Dellwood, which then filed a motion to dismiss the case based on the res judicata doctrine. Dellwood asserted the lawsuit couldn’t go on because AIG’s allegations against it included similar allegations against the individual executives who had been dropped from the case.
However, Padin in this latest ruling said the doctrine is almost always applied to subsequent lawsuits based on a final judgement from an earlier suit.
“To the extent there are situations where res judicata may apply within the same case, this is not one of them,” Padin said. The use of the doctrine, she continued, is not for “a game of ‘gotcha’ for parties to try and escape claims based on voluntary dismissals of other defendants.”
The case is American International Group Inc. v. Dellwood Insurance Group, U.S. District Court, District of New Jersey, No. 24-04456.
- Trump’s Auto Tariffs to Cover Hundreds of Billions of Dollars of Vehicle, Parts Imports
- Florida’s Universal P&C Overstated Claims to Cat Fund, Must Pay $4M Fine, AG Says
- Verisk Buy of Nasdaq Subsidiary Gains Access to Hundreds of Catastrophe Models
- Iowa Man Who Falsified Rolex Watch Claim Sentenced to 10 Years in Prison