Marquez
Knolls Property Owners Assn., Inc. v. Executive Risk Indemnity, Inc. (2007)153 Cal.App.4th 228, 62 Cal.Rptr.3d
510
[No.
B186943. Second Dist., Div. Eight. July 12, 2007.]
MARQUEZ
KNOLLS PROPERTY OWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC., Plaintiff and Appellant, v. EXECUTIVE RISK INDEMNITY, INC., et al.,
Defendants and Respondents, MICHAEL SUTTON et al., Defendants, Cross-complainants and Appellants, v. EXECUTIVE
RISK INDEMNITY, INC., et al., Cross-defendants and Respondents.
(Superior
Court of Los Angeles County, No. BC317883, Haley J. Fromholz, Judge.)
(Opinion
by Boland, J., with Cooper, P. J., and Flier, J. concurring.)
COUNSEL
Law
Offices of Rosario Perry, Rosario Perry and Jacqueline M. Fabe for Plaintiff and Appellant Marquez Knolls
Property Owners Association, Inc.
Gilbert,
Kelly, Crowley & Jennett, Timothy W. Kenna and Jeanne S. Kuo for Defendants, Cross-complainants and
Appellants M.D. Sutton Insurance Agency, Inc. and Michael Sutton.
Inglis,
Ledbetter & Gower, Richard G. Ritchie, Richard S. Gower and Gregory J. Bramlage for Defendant,
Cross-defendant and Respondent Executive Risk Indemnity, Inc. [153 Cal.App.4th 230]
OPINION
BOLAND,
J.-
SUMMARY
An
endorsement in a liability insurance policy issued to a non-profit property owners association excluded coverage
of claims for wrongful acts based on the design or construction of any structure. We conclude the exclusion did
not preclude coverage of a lawsuit brought by a member against the association asserting claims of fraud and
breach of duty. The member's claims were not based on the association's involvement in the design or
construction of a structure, but instead were based on the association's conduct in opining on a dispute that
arose between the member and another homeowner after the member constructed a structure blocking the view of the
other homeowner. Accordingly, the exclusion from coverage did not apply, and the trial court erred in ordering
summary judgment for the insurer.
FACTUAL
AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Marquez
Knolls Property Owners Association, Inc. is a non-profit corporation whose members own or reside in homes in the
Marquez Knolls area of Pacific Palisades. Membership is voluntary, and all owners and residents are entitled to
be members, subject to an annual dues payment. The purpose of the Association is "to promote and encourage the
preservation of the beauty and healthful environment of the residential subdivisions located in the Marquez
Knolls area . . . by informative, educational, mediative, and other lawful activities for the benefit of
residents of the community." As of November 1, 2004, 277 out of 1182 eligible property owners were Association
members. The main activity of the Association is to mediate disputes between its members over the covenants,
conditions and restrictions (CC&Rs) on their properties. The CC&Rs include a restriction on the erection
of structures that obstruct the view from other lots.
Executive
Risk Indemnity, Inc. (insurer) issued the Association a policy of insurance for the period July 11, 2002 to July
11, 2003, specifically a "Not-for-Profit Organization Directors, Officers and Trustees Liability Insurance
Policy" (the policy). The Association's application for the policy stated, in response to a request for a brief
description of the Association's operations, that its "[p]rimary function is [to] encourage compliance with
CC&R restrictions in deeds of members of the association, for the benefit of the community." The policy
applied to claims made during the policy period, and the insurer agreed to pay on behalf of the insured "Loss
from Claims first made [153 Cal.App.4th 231] against [the Association] during the Policy Period for its
Wrongful Acts." A "Wrongful Act" was defined to include any "actual or alleged error, omission, misstatement,
misleading statement or breach of duty" by the Association.
Among
several endorsements to the policy was an exclusion (the "development/construction exclusion") that provided as
follows:
"Endorsement
No. 5 Development/Construction Exclusion
[¶]
. . . [¶] In consideration of the premium charged, no coverage will be available under this Policy for Claims
for Wrongful Acts based on, arising out of, directly or indirectly resulting from, in consequence of, or in any
way involving:
(1)
The development, planning or landscaping of any real property (including any landscaping design, site planning
and soil, water, environmental or other testing with respect to any such development, planning or landscaping);
(2)
The exercise of any development rights with respect to any real property;
(3)
Any actual or alleged violation of any federal, state, local or common law rule, law, regulation or ordinance
respecting the environment or environmental conservation, in connection with any development, planning or
landscaping of real property; or
(4)
The design, construction, renovation or rehabilitation of any building, structure or other improvement on any
real property."
On
June 10, 2003, during the policy period, Association members Nicholas and Yasuko Valery sued the Association,
asserting claims of fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, breach of duty to act in good faith, and other claims. The
Valerys' complaint alleged as follows:
In
2001, the Valerys remodeled their property, replacing an attached covered patio area with an enclosed structure.
In February 2002, Nicholas Valery contacted the Association for assistance with a dispute raised by a
neighboring homeowner, Joan Robertson, who claimed that the Valerys' construction obstructed views from her
property. The Association told the Valerys it provided informal, non-partisan assistance in bringing neighbors
together to settle their differences, but did not tell the Valerys it would take [153 Cal.App.4th 232]
sides in the dispute or issue a formal determination that could or would be subject to a claim of judicial
deference. The Valerys thereupon provided information for the Association's use in the dispute resolution
process, openly discussing all aspects of the dispute. The Association suggested the Valerys try to settle with
Robertson and offer her monetary compensation. After a meeting with the Association in April 2002, the Valerys
did not seek further assistance from the Association, but continued settlement discussions with Robertson.
Thereafter,
the Association informed Robertson she should formally apply to the Association so that it could issue a written
determination on her dispute with the Valerys. The Association told Robertson its written determination would
support Robertson's position and would demand remedial action by the Valerys; the written determination would
and/or could be subject to a claim of judicial deference; the Association would provide assistance in a lawsuit
filed by Robertson, and would assist Robertson in finding counsel.
On
July 9, 2002, the Association issued a formal determination. Among other things, the determination stated that
the Valerys' replacement structure violated paragraph 11 of the CC&Rs; called for removal of the structure;
and "mandate[d] reinstatement of views alleged to have existed before [the Valerys'] purchase of the
[property]." fn.
1
Robertson
then sued the Valerys, alleging they were bound to comply with the Association's determination and the remedial
action dictated by the determination, which was subject to judicial deference. The Association voluntarily
provided declarations and documents to Robertson in support of her lawsuit against the Valerys, while denying
similar information to the Valerys unless compelled by subpoena.
The
Valerys' replacement structure did not violate paragraph 11 of the CC&Rs; the Association had no authority
under the CC&Rs to issue determinations, which are not entitled to judicial deference; any power the
Association had under the CC&Rs expired in 1980; and the Association exercised its alleged powers
arbitrarily and capriciously, allowing certain homes and owners (the forming members of the Association)
unlimited ability to build and expand while severely restricting construction at other homes (of newly arriving
homeowners).
After
the Association tendered the defense of the Valerys' action to Executive Risk, the insurer refused to provide a
defense or to indemnify the Association for [153 Cal.App.4th 233] any damages that might be awarded in
the Valery lawsuit, asserting that coverage was excluded under the development/construction exclusion.
The
Association then filed this lawsuit against the insurer and its broker, Michael Sutton and the M.D. Sutton
Insurance Agency (Sutton), asserting causes of action for breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of
good faith and fair dealing, and declaratory relief (against the insurer), and for negligence and declaratory
relief against Sutton. Sutton cross-complained against the insurer and others.
The
insurer moved for summary judgment, asserting that because of the development/construction exclusion, no
coverage existed under the policy. The trial court granted the motion, concluding the language of the exclusion
was "not ambiguous":
"[T]he
language of the definition of 'wrongful act' and of the exclusion is very broad. The exclusion prohibits
coverage for claims of wrongful acts (defined to include any error, omission or breach of duty by [the
Association] . . .) 'in any way involving . . . improvement on any real property.' Here, [the Association] seeks
coverage for claims that it committed a wrongful act -- fraudulently, negligently and in breach of duty,
attempting to coerce the Valerys to alter the renovations to their house, among others."
Judgment
was entered in the insurer's favor and against the Association, and appeals were filed by both the Association
and Sutton.
DISCUSSION
We
respectfully disagree with the trial court's conclusion that the development/construction exclusion in the
policy precludes coverage of the Valerys' claims against the Association. While the court's interpretation of
the exclusion may appear plausible, further analysis demonstrates the interpretation is mistaken. As will appear
in more detail post, the exclusion of claims for wrongful acts based on or arising out the "design,
construction, renovation or rehabilitation of any . . . structure or other improvement" necessarily refers to
the insured's "design, construction, renovation or rehabilitation" of a structure, not someone else's.
Any other interpretation of the exclusion would be contrary to principles of contract interpretation requiring
language to be construed in the context of the policy as a whole and the circumstances of the case; would result
in a policy that is almost entirely illusory; has no support in the cases on which the insurer relies; and would
defy common sense.
[1]
The relevant legal principles are well known. The interpretation of an exclusionary clause is an issue of law
subject to this court's independent determination. While coverage clauses are interpreted broadly, exclusionary
[153 Cal.App.4th 234] clauses are construed narrowly against the insurer. (State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins.
Co. v. Partridge (1973)
10 Cal.3d 94,
101-102.) "[A]ny exception to the performance of the basic underlying obligation must be so stated as clearly to
apprise the insured of its effect." (Gray v. Zurich Insurance Co. (1966)
65 Cal.2d 263,
269, fn. omitted (Gray).) Insurance policy terms "will be given the 'objectively reasonable' meaning a lay
person would ascribe to them," and "the context in which a term appears is critical." (Century Transit
Systems, Inc. v. American Empire Surplus Lines Ins. Co. (1996)
42 Cal.App.4th 121,
126 (Century Transit).) While "reliance on common understanding of language is bedrock," the requirements of
reasonableness and context are "[e]qually important . . . ." (Bay Cities Paving & Grading, Inc. v. Lawyers'
Mutual Ins. Co. (1993)
5 Cal.4th 854,
867.)
The
fundamental error in the trial court's analysis of the policy language is that it omits the requirement of a
connection between the risks the policy insures against -- or excludes -- and the insured. The trial court
concluded the Valerys' claim against the Association arose from the construction of an improvement. But the
Valerys constructed the improvement, not the Association. The Valerys' claims that the Association acted
fraudulently and in breach of its fiduciary duty did not arise out of or result from or involve the
Association's "design, construction, renovation or rehabilitation" of a structure. The Association had
nothing to do with designing or constructing or renovating or rehabilitating any structure. Its only wrongful
acts -- as the Valerys' complaint clearly demonstrates -- were entirely confined to its issuance of a written
determination and its related activities in connection with a dispute between two of its members. Of course, the
dispute between the members (the Valerys and Robertson) was based on and arose from the structure the Valerys
constructed on their property. But the Valerys' claim against the Association arises from the Association's
conduct, not from the Valerys' conduct. Likewise, the Association's insurance coverage is for its own wrongful
acts, and any exclusion from that coverage must necessarily be addressed to the Association's wrongful acts, not
to the wrongful acts of a third party. The Valerys' claims arise from the Association's improper conduct in
resolving a dispute between its members, and such claims are clearly covered by the policy.
While
the lack of connection between the excluded risk and the insured is more than sufficient to support the
conclusion that the exclusion does not apply, other principles of contract interpretation confirm the point.
Most importantly, terms of an insurance policy must be read in context. (Century Transit, supra, 42
Cal.App.4th at p. 126 ["the context in which a term appears is critical"].) The very title of the
endorsement -- "Development/Construction [153 Cal.App.4th 235] Exclusion" -- shows that it addresses
activities by the insured in the development and construction of real property. All of the excluded activities
(see pages 3-4, ante) relate to development and construction, and obviously apply to activity by the
Association, not by someone else. If any doubt on this point is harbored, one might look at the third of the
four exclusions in the endorsement. It excludes claims for wrongful acts involving "[a]ny actual or alleged
violation of any federal, state, local or common law rule, law, regulation or ordinance respecting the
environment . . . in connection with any development, planning or landscaping of real property . . . ." It
cannot be open to doubt that, to be excluded, a claim must arise from the Association's violation of law, not
from some other person's violation. The same is necessarily true of the other excluded activities.
Our
interpretation is likewise consonant with other principles applicable to exclusionary clauses, which are
required to be construed narrowly. The language of the development/construction exclusion could scarcely have
apprised the Association that its activities in resolving disputes among members -- virtually the sole purpose
of its existence -- would be excluded from coverage. (See Gray, supra, 65 Cal.2d at p. 269 [an exception
to the insurer's performance of the basic underlying obligation must clearly apprise the insured of its
effect].) Insurance policy terms "will be given the 'objectively reasonable' meaning a lay person would ascribe
to them." (Century Transit, supra, 42 Cal.App.4th at p. 126.) Neither layman nor lawyer can read the
development/construction exclusion and be apprised that it not only excludes the Association's involvement in
"design, construction, renovation or rehabilitation" of a structure, but also excludes the Association's
involvement in resolving disputes among its members over a member's "design, construction, renovation or
rehabilitation" of a structure. The latter reading cannot have been within the contemplation of either the
insured or the insurer, and indeed would have made the insurance contract virtually meaningless.
[2]
The insurer insists that we need not consider the "'objectively reasonable expectations of the insured'"
because, under California law, "[i]f contractual language is clear and explicit, it governs." (Bank of the
West v. Superior Court (1992)
2 Cal.4th 1254,
1265, 1264, citing Civ. Code, § 1638 [the language of a contract governs its interpretation "if the language is
clear and explicit, and does not involve an absurdity"].) The development/construction exclusion, however, by no
means "clear[ly] and explicit[ly]" excludes a claim "based on" or "involving" the construction of a structure or
other improvement by someone other than the insured. The language is, at worst, ambiguous, in that it does not
expressly state that the exclusion applies only to conduct by the insured in the construction of any structure, as
opposed to conduct by anyone else. But, read in context as we must do, the exclusion is susceptible of only one
meaning, [153 Cal.App.4th 236] as any other meaning would eliminate a necessary connection between the
insured and the risk that is excluded from the policy.
[3]
Finally, the insurer points out that under California law, the term "arising out of" is broadly interpreted, and
cites several cases to this effect. (See, e.g., Acceptance Ins. Co. v. Syufy Enterprises (1999)
69 Cal.App.4th 321,
323, 328 [when policy grants coverage for liability "arising out of" the named insured's work, the additional
insured is covered without regard to whether injury was caused by the named insured or the additional insured;
injury to a contractor's employee caused by the additional insured's negligent maintenance of a hatch providing
access to the work site "arose out of" the work the employee was performing at the site]; Continental Cas. Co.
v. City of Richmond (9th Cir. 1985) 763 F.2d 1076, 1080-1081 (Continental Casualty) [clause excluding
claims arising from assault or battery precluded coverage of civil rights claims against the City of Richmond by
heirs of Willie Drumgoole, a black man who was beaten and choked to death by Richmond police while in custody; the
discrimination claim "need bear only an incidental relationship to the injury" to Drumgoole to come within the
exclusionary clause]; Hartford Accident & Indem. Co. v. Civil Service Employees Ins. Co. (1973)
33 Cal.App.3d 26,
32-33 (Hartford) [automobile policy insuring against liability for bodily injury arising out of the use of
the automobile covered injuries to a passenger who was bitten by the insured's dog while the dog was trying to get
out of the automobile].) We do not disagree, either with the cases or the principle that the term "arising out of"
is interpreted "more broadly than 'caused by' to include the notion of 'incident to or having connection with.'"
(Continental Casualty, supra, 763 F.2d at p. 1080, citing Hartford, supra, 33 Cal.App.3d at pp.
32-33.) However, none of these cases, involving widely varying circumstances and types of insurance, suggest that
we may dispense with a connection between the excluded risk (here, any claim for wrongful acts arising from the
construction of a structure) and the insured (the Association). [4] The Valerys' claim against the Association
arises from the Association's adverse determination of a dispute between two homeowners, not from the Valerys'
construction of the structure that generated the dispute. The development/construction exclusion in the
Association's policy does not apply, and the trial court erred in concluding otherwise.
fn. 2 [153
Cal.App.4th 237]
DISPOSITION
The
judgment is reversed with directions to enter an order denying the motion for summary judgment. The Appellants
are to recover their costs on appeal.
Cooper,
P. J., and Flier, J. concurred.
FN 1. Paragraph
11 of the CC&Rs provides in part: "[N]or shall any tree, shrub or other landscaping be planted or any
structures erected that may at present or in the future obstruct the view from any other lot . . . ."
FN 2. The
Association also argues on appeal that the trial court erred in denying its motion for leave to file an amended
complaint containing two new causes of action, one for unfair claims practices under Insurance Code section 790.03
and one for breach of contract. The trial court concluded (1) no private civil cause of action against an insurer
for bad faith is available under Insurance Code section 790 et seq., and (2) the proposed new cause of action for
breach of contract asserted the same primary right that was adjudicated in the court's summary judgment order. In
light of our reversal of the trial court's summary judgment ruling, eliminating one of the bases for the court's
denial of the motion to amend the complaint, the trial court must necessarily reconsider its ruling. Accordingly,
this court need not address either the insurer's motion to strike portions of the Association's brief addressing
the denial of leave to amend or the requests for judicial notice by both parties relating to the insurer's motion
to strike.
|