Fireman's
Fund Ins. Co. v. Sizzler USA Real Property, Inc. (2008) 169 Cal.App.4th 415, -- Cal.Rptr.3d --
[No.
B201536. Second Dist., Div. Eight. Dec. 18, 2008.]
FIREMAN'S
FUND INSURANCE COMPANY, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. SIZZLER USA REAL PROPERTY, INC., Defendant and Respondent.
HEROICO
ANGELO AGUILUZ, Plaintiff, v. SKY SUSHI et al., Defendants.
(Superior
Court of Los Angeles County, Nos. BC334988, BC283969, Lee Smalley Edmon, Judge.)
(Opinion
by Cooper, P. J., with Rubin, J., and Bigelow, J., concurring.)
COUNSEL
Jerome
M. Jackson for Plaintiff and Appellant.
Anderson,
McPharlin & Connor and D. Damon Willens for Defendant and Respondent. [169 Cal.App.4th 416]
OPINION
COOPER,
P. J.-
Plaintiff,
Fireman's Fund Insurance Company, appeals from a judgment in favor of defendant, Sizzler USA Real Property,
Inc., following a court trial of plaintiff's complaint for subrogation, by which plaintiff sought to recover
amounts it paid to indemnify its insured, Santa Monica Collection LLP (SMC), in a premises liability case. The
ultimate question presented is whether a subrogation waiver in the leases between SMC and defendant barred
plaintiff's claim. The trial court held that it did. We agree, and affirm the judgment.
FACTS
SMC
owns a shopping center located at Fairfax Avenue and Santa Monica Boulevard, in West Hollywood. Defendant is a
tenant of space in the center, entitled also to nonexclusive use of its parking area. Defendant and SMC are
successor parties to two effectively identical leases (covering adjacent units), originally entered into between
the organizers of SMC and a related "Sizzler" corporation, which prepared the leases.
The
leases each contain the following provisions regarding liability. Under paragraph 17, "LIABILITY INSURANCE,"
defendant as tenant is obligated to maintain liability insurance, for claims against it for bodily injury and
property damage occurring about the leased premises, "with a minimum combined single limit of" $1 million.
"Tenant shall have Landlord named as an additional insured on each policy." Paragraph 19, "INDEMNITY," provides
that "Tenant will indemnify and save Landlord harmless from any loss, cost or expense . . . and from any
liability . . . on account of any damage to person or property occurring upon or about the Premises . . .
arising out of any failure of Tenant to perform and comply in any respect with any of the requirements and
provisions of this Lease." Finally, paragraph 20, "RELEASE AND WAIVER OF SUBROGATION," provides: "The parties
release each other and their respective authorized representatives from any claims for damage to any person or
property of either Landlord or Tenant . . . about the Premises that are caused by or result from risks insured
against under any insurance policies carried by the parties . . . ." Second, "The parties further agree that
neither party shall be liable to the other for any damage caused by fire or any of the risks insured against
under any insurance policy and each party shall cause each insurance policy obtained by it to provide that the
insurance company waives all right of recovery by way of subrogation against either party in connection with any
covered damage." [169 Cal.App.4th 418]
In
addition, paragraph 13 gave defendant tenant the right to assign or sublet, "provided, however, that Tenant
shall remain liable for . . . the performance of all the obligations of Tenant" under the leases. In August
1993, defendant did sublease the premises, to a nightclub known as Sky Sushi.
On
September 13, 2002, Heroico Aguiluz, a patron at Sky Sushi, was attacked and stabbed, in the premises parking
area, by several men who had first accosted and threatened him inside the club. Sky Sushi security guards had
escorted the assailants out, at which point they told Aguiluz they would "shank" him. The guards later escorted
Aguiluz and his girlfriend downstairs to the valet parking stand in the parking area, but they did nothing to
protect Aguiluz, although they had given him the impression they would.
Aguiluz
commenced suit on account of his injuries. His first amended complaint named SMC, among others, as a defendant.
SMC sought indemnification (and defense) from defendant. Defendant directed SMC to defendant's insurance, with
Federal Insurance Company (Federal). The applicable policy, however, provided only $750,000 coverage, after a
self-insured retention of $250,000. Moreover, SMC had not been named as an additional insured on the policy.
SMC
turned the case over to plaintiff, its own liability insurer. Plaintiff tendered the defense to Federal, which
initially declined because SMC was not an additional insured, and because the claim allegedly did not arise from
nonperformance of the lease by defendant, as required by the lease's indemnity provision. Subsequently, after
considering a policy provision that treated lessors as insureds, Federal informed plaintiff it would defend SMC,
under reservation of rights, after its defense and settlement costs exceeded $250,000. Federal later took the
position that defense costs did not count toward that retained amount.
Plaintiff
proceeded to defend SMC, and settled Aguiluz's suit. Plaintiff expended $300,000 in settlement and $84,101 for
defense costs. Plaintiff then commenced this action, to recover what it had paid, and also attorney fees under a
provision of the leases allowing them to the prevailing party in an action to enforce the leases or recover
damages by reason of a default under them.
At
trial, in addition to the facts stated above, plaintiff showed that in March 2003 the West Hollywood Planning
Commission had found Sky Sushi's operation to be a nuisance and that its conditional use permit had been [169
Cal.App.4th 419] fraudulently obtained. These findings were based on sheriff's department reports -- not
admitted at trial for their truth -- that Sky Sushi's security guards were not licensed as required; some had
ignored crimes committed in their presence; and there had been numerous criminal incidents at the club or
outside it. Sky Sushi had appealed the revocation of its permit to the city council, which in June 2003
affirmed, again finding that the club's operation had created a nuisance, for much the same reasons as the
planning commission had cited.
In
opposition to defendant's contention that subrogation was barred by the subrogation waiver in paragraph 19 of
the leases, plaintiff asserted that (1) defendant's failure to obtain liability insurance fully covering SMC for
$1 million constituted both nonperformance of a condition precedent to the subrogation waiver and a failure of
consideration for it. Plaintiff also argued that defendant, through Sky Sushi's conduct, had violated two other
lease obligations, proscribing nuisance on the premises and requiring acquisition of certain permits. Those
violations had given rise to the Aguiluz litigation, and defendant had been responsible under the lease to
indemnify SMC for the case. Defendant's failure to perform also excused the subrogation waiver.
The
court ruled for defendant. In its statement of decision, the court held that the subrogation waiver operated, as
part of a mutual release, so long as the risk was covered by insurance, whether the tenant's or (as here)
landlord's insurance. The waiver applied to insured risks, whereas the leases' indemnity provision applied to
uninsured liabilities. Moreover, the consideration supporting the subrogation waiver was the same as covered the
other provisions of the leases, namely the parties' promises "and other good and valuable consideration," as the
leases recited. The statement of decision did not directly opine about plaintiff's claims of lease violations
regarding permits and nuisance, although in its tentative decision the court had stated that, even assuming such
breaches had occurred, they would not constitute a failure of consideration for the waiver. The judgment awarded
defendant $76,722 in attorney fees.
DISCUSSION
[1]
Waivers of subrogation, like the one defendant asserted in this case, are not unfamiliar in California. (See
Davlar Corp. v. Superior Court (1997)
53 Cal.App.4th 1121,
1125 (Davlar) [directing summary judgment by reason of such a waiver]). As here, they often appear together
with or on account of waivers or releases of rights between contracting parties, with respect to claims covered by
insurance. [169 Cal.App.4th 420] (See id. at p. 1124, fn.1; Lloyd's Underwriters v. Craig &
Rush, Inc. (1994)
26 Cal.App.4th 1194 (Lloyd's)
[waiver of rights for damages covered by insurance barred insurer's subrogation suit].)
Claiming
entitlement to subrogation against defendant notwithstanding the release and subrogation waiver contained in
paragraph 20 of the leases, plaintiff asserts essentially the same contentions as it did below. Primary among
these is that defendant's failure to obtain the full amount of insurance required by paragraph 17 of the leases
precludes enforcement of the subrogation waiver, for several contractual reasons. fn.
1 Plaintiff relies heavily on the New York decision in Liberty Mutual Insurance Company v.
Perfect Knowledge, Inc. (2002) 299 A.D.2d 524 [752 N.Y.S.2d 677] (Liberty Mutual).
In
Liberty Mutual, a tenant's contractor caused a fire that damaged the building. The landlord's insurer
paid $1 million for losses the landlord suffered. The insurer then sued the tenant, in subrogation, for
negligence and breach of contract. The trial court granted the insurer partial summary judgment, striking the
tenant's affirmative defense of a subrogation waiver in the lease, and denied the tenant's motion for summary
judgment based on that waiver. After first noting that subrogation waivers "are generally valid and enforceable"
(299 A.D.2d at p. 526), the Appellate Division affirmed. The tenant had breached three provisions of the lease
requiring insurance, by obtaining only two-thirds the required amount of liability coverage, failing to list the
landlord as an insured, and hiring a contractor who did not have liability insurance. The court explained its
holding as follows: "Waiver of subrogation provisions exist as part and parcel of a risk allocation agreement
whereby liability is shifted to the insurance carriers of the parties to the agreement. [Citations] Such an
agreement is necessarily premised on the procurement of insurance by the parties. Here, however, [tenant]
breached certain provisions of the lease with respect to the procurement of insurance . . . . Without the
procurement of insurance, the shifting envisioned under the agreement could not take place, and the agreement
was frustrated. Therefore, [tenant] is not entitled to enforcement of the waiver provisions in the lease."
(Liberty Mutual, supra, 299 A.D.2d at p. 526.) [169 Cal.App.4th 421]
Liberty
Mutual does
not sustain plaintiff's effort to render inapplicable the present subrogation waiver. First, the opinion neither
quotes nor summarizes the waiver and other relevant provisions of the lease there, the relationship among which
is assumed. Second, the decision's rationale -- that the plaintiff's failure to perform insurance requirements
prevented the shifting of risk to insurance that underlies a subrogation waiver -- is incongruent with the
leases in the present case, which plainly provide that liability and subrogation will be waived as to all risks
covered by "any insurance policies carried by the parties." (Leases, ¶ 20, italics added; cf. Lloyd's,
supra, 26 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1196-1198 [subrogation waiver applicable where loss covered by insurance
other than that required by contract]). Thus, plaintiff's insistence that the waiver here was premised on
defendant's procurement of full insurance is inconsistent with the intent of the parties, as reflected by the
leases' terms. (See Civ. Code, §§ 1638, 1638, 1639, 1642, 1644.)
[2]
Plaintiff next argues that defendant's procurement of full insurance was a condition precedent to operation of
the subrogation waiver. This argument is based entirely on Liberty Mutual's statement that agreements to
waive subrogation are "necessarily premised on the procurement of insurance . . . ." (299 A.D.2d at p. 526.) But
here there was such insurance (plaintiff's), and that was sufficient to engage the written waiver. And there was
no indication in the leases that defendant's insurance obligation was a condition precedent to the mutual
waivers. "The rule is that provisions of a contract will not be construed as conditions precedent in the absence
of language plainly requiring such construction. [Citations.]" (Rubin v. Fuchs (1969)
1 Cal.3d 50,
53.) fn.
2
Plaintiff
also asserts that defendant's failure to carry a full $1 million of insurance constituted a failure of
consideration for the subrogation waiver. The underlying premise, that defendant's insurance was the particular
consideration for the waiver, has no basis. The consideration for the leases, including all of their covenants,
comprised the mutual promises of the parties, as a whole. (1 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (10th ed. 2005)
Contracts, § 212, p. 247.) A partial breach of defendant's insurance obligation would not constitute a failure
of consideration for the entire leases, the actual meaning of the concept.
Plaintiff
finally contends that the subrogation waiver should not be enforced because to do so would defeat the parties'
intent and expectations that defendant be responsible, and indemnify SMC, for Sky Sushi's nuisance and its
consequences. Plaintiff's argument is based on the leases' provision that if [169 Cal.App.4th 422]
defendant sublet the premises, it would yet remain liable for performance of its lease obligations. Plaintiff
argues that defendant breached two such obligations, that Aguiluz's damages arose from those breaches, and that
under the leases' indemnity provision plaintiff should have indemnified SMC for those damages.
There
are several flaws in this contention. First, as a matter of law defendant did not breach the lease obligation
that defendant obtain, within 30 days of the leases' effective date, all permits necessary to operate
defendant's business. Plaintiff's contention that defendant violated this provision, because Sky Sushi obtained
its own conditional use permit fraudulently, is meritless. The lease provision concerned plaintiff's own permits
at the outset of the leases, not the permits of and for a subsequent subtenant.
The
second lease obligation that plaintiff advances directly concerns nuisance. It appears paragraph 16 of the
leases, entitled "REPAIRS AND MAINTENANCE," which commences, "Tenant shall . . . keep and maintain the Premises
in a clean, sanitary order and in good condition and repair during the term of this Lease . . . . Tenant may not
cause or permit waste or nuisance in or about the Premises. . . . " Plaintiff's theory is that this provision
obligated defendant not to tolerate the nuisance that West Hollywood found Sky Sushi to be conducting. Defendant
responds that the context of the nuisance provision -- a paragraph concerning maintenance of the premises --
establishes that it concerns the physical condition of the premises, not activities or dynamic operation by a
subtenant. Moreover, the municipal findings of nuisance were made six and ten months, respectively, after the
attack on Aguiluz.
[3]
But even assuming arguendo that Aguiluz's claim against SMC arose out of a breach by defendant of the nuisance
provision of the leases, enforcement of the subrogation waiver neither contravened nor was barred by the leases'
indemnity provision. As we observed at the outset, the subrogation waiver provision was part of a mutual release
of claims and damages that were covered by insurance, as Aguiluz's were. The indemnity paragraph provided a
coordinate allocation, between the parties, of responsibility for liabilities and losses that were not covered
by insurance. (Accord, Davlar, supra, 53 Cal.App.4th at p. 1125.) "The existence of both clauses in the
same contract confirms . . . that they serve different purposes and are not inconsistent." (Ibid.)
Enforcement of the subrogation waiver in this case did not contradict, but followed, the intentions of the
parties. [169 Cal.App.4th 423]
DISPOSITION
The
judgment is affirmed. Defendant shall recover costs and reasonable attorney fees on appeal, the amount to be
determined by the trial court.
Rubin,
J. , and Bigelow, J., concurred.
FN 1. Plaintiff
occasionally refers also to defendant's failure to name SMC as an additional insured on the policy. This alleged
breach, however, was largely technical and inconsequential, inasmuch as Federal's policy did cover SMC, as
defendant's landlord. We therefore do not further consider the additional insured question. Our analysis of its
significance would in any event be the same as concerns the coverage deficiency.
FN 2. In
at least one other place, the leases provide explicitly for a condition precedent.
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