Columbia National v. Reroof America, Inc ( 2003 )


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  •                                                                               F I L E D
    United States Court of Appeals
    Tenth Circuit
    FEB 25 2003
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    TENTH CIRCUIT                          PATRICK FISHER
    Clerk
    COLUMBIA NATIONAL
    INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    No. 01-5184
    v.                                                   (D.C. No. 99-CV-877-K)
    (N.D. Oklahoma)
    REROOF AMERICA, INC., an
    Oklahoma corporation,
    Defendant - Appellee.
    ORDER AND JUDGMENT*
    Before O’BRIEN, Circuit Judge, McWILLIAMS, Senior Circuit Judge, and BRORBY,
    Senior Circuit Judge.
    This appeal concerns the duty of Columbia National Insurance Company
    (“Columbia”) to defend its insured, Reroof America, Inc. (“Reroof”), when DM Hotels of
    Denver (“DM”) sued Reroof claiming it suffered damages because Reroof had
    improperly designed and installed a new roof on a hotel owned by DM.
    Columbia, a Nebraska corporation with its principal place of business in Missouri,
    *
    This order and judgment is not binding precedent, except under the doctrines of
    law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. The court generally disfavors the
    citation of orders and judgments; nevertheless, an order and judgment may be cited under
    the terms and conditions of 10th Cir. R. 36.3.
    issued a Commercial General Liability Insurance policy to Reroof, an Oklahoma
    corporation with its principal place of business in Oklahoma, for the policy period of
    February 21, 1998, to February 21, 1999. The policy provided, inter alia, that Columbia
    would pay Reroof for all monies that Reroof became legally obligated to pay as damages
    because of “property damage” caused by an “occurrence,” and that Columbia “will have
    the right and duty to defend any ‘suit’ seeking those damages.”
    On August 4, 1997, Reroof contracted with DM to design and install a metal roof
    for a Holiday Inn located in Denver, Colorado. On January 13, 1999, DM filed suit in a
    state court in Colorado against Reroof and alleged that it had suffered an unspecified
    amount of damage, which would be established at trial, caused by Reroof’s failure to
    properly design and install the roof. Reroof advised Columbia of the action brought
    against it by DM, and on February 18, 1999, Columbia wrote Reroof that it was
    “providing a defense at this time, while reserving our right to a determination of any and
    all coverage issues.” On April 19, 1999, an attorney retained by Columbia wrote Reroof a
    more detailed letter which stated, in part, that “Columbia has preliminarily assumed
    defense on the assumption that discovery could establish that there has been physical
    injury to some Holiday Inn property other than the new roof by reason of that roof.” In
    that same letter, the author thereof also stated that “Columbia is of the opinion that there
    is no coverage under the policy for the claims asserted by the plaintiff and that
    developments in the lawsuit will conclusively establish that the obligation to defend and
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    the obligation to indemnify are precluded. . . .”1 Thereafter, counsel for Reroof on
    August 17, 1999, responded by letter and asked Columbia to pay its expenses for separate
    counsel “because counsel retained by Columbia would face an irreconcilable conflict
    between the obligation to represent Reroof and loyalty to Columbia.” On October 11,
    1999, in a letter to Reroof, counsel for Columbia wrote “[w]e can now state conclusively
    that there is no coverage.” On November 23, 1999, Columbia withdrew its appearance
    for Reroof in the action against the latter in the Colorado proceeding, having by that time
    filed an action on October 18, 1999, against Reroof for declaratory judgment in the
    United States District Court for the Northern District of Oklahoma. When Columbia
    withdrew its representation of Reroof, it apparently relied primarily on the allegations in
    DM’s complaint and the so-called KLP Report, produced by DM’s engineers during
    discovery.
    By its Second Amended Complaint in its declaratory judgment action, Columbia,
    pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2201 and Fed. R. Civ. P. 57, requested a declaration that the
    policy issued Reroof “did not provide coverage or a duty to defend defendant, Reroof
    America, Inc., against the claims filed against it by DM Hotels of Denver” and for “such
    additional and other declaratory relief as shall be found to be appropriate under the
    1
    In the April 19, 1999, letter the author also stated “it is uncertain from the
    allegations whether plaintiff complains of ‘property damage’ within the meaning of the
    policy” and “[w]hether the ‘new roof’ is damaged, or whether the new roof has caused
    damage to the underlying roof, other parts of the building, or other property is not stated.”
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    circumstances in prosecuting the action.” Jurisdiction was based on 28 U.S.C. § 1332.
    By answer filed on November 8, 2000, Reroof requested judgment in its favor and against
    Columbia, and asked that the district court find that “Columbia has a duty to defend and
    indemnify Reroof in connection with the DM Suit and that Columbia is estopped from
    denying coverage to Reroof in connection with the DM Suit.”
    On June 9, 2000, Columbia filed a motion for summary judgment, which motion
    was denied on November 6, 2000. On February 9, 2001, Reroof filed a motion for
    summary judgment, which was denied on February 21, 2001. In that order the district
    court noted that the case had been previously set for trial in March, 2001, and that the
    “deadlines under the Scheduling Order for amended pleadings and dispositive motions
    have long since passed.” Accordingly, the district court denied Reroof’s motion for
    summary judgment as being “untimely” and, at the same time, struck Reroof’s
    counterclaim as also being “untimely filed.” (Reroof’s counterclaim is apparently not in
    the record on appeal.)
    After a trial to the court, sitting without a jury, commenced on March 20, 2001,
    and after each party had submitted proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, the
    district court on September 19, 2001, made its findings and conclusions, and entered
    judgment that Columbia’s decision to withdraw from Reroof’s defense in the Colorado
    proceeding “was not justified, and [that] Columbia was, and continues to be, obligated to
    defend Reroof in the DM Lawsuit.”
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    The central issue in this appeal is whether Columbia had a duty to defend Reroof
    in the action brought against the latter by DM in the Colorado court. However, in the
    brief filed by Columbia in this court, there appears to be some suggestion that this is not
    an appeal from a “final judgment” and that the appeal should, therefore, be dismissed and
    the case remanded to the district court with directions that it hear, and determine, the
    coverage and indemnification issue. 28 U.S.C. § 1291. In this regard, Columbia, at least
    initially, asked the district court for not only a declaratory judgment that it had no duty to
    defend but also requested a declaration that “the policy does not provide coverage” and
    asked for indemnification from Reroof. Reroof, in its answer to Columbia’s Second
    Amended Complaint, also asked the district court to find that Columbia had a “duty to
    defend” and “indemnify” it. Since the district court did not rule on the coverage request,
    there is, as indicated, the “suggestion” that the district court’s judgment is not a “final”
    judgment, and is, therefore, non-appealable, a final judgment being one that disposes of
    all claims raised in the district court. Servants of the Paraclete v. Does, 
    204 F.3d 1005
    ,
    1008 (10th Cir. 2000).
    We conclude from the record before us, that we are here concerned with a “final”
    judgment. Immediately before trial commenced, counsel for Columbia orally moved to
    withdraw any request for a determination that the policy issued Reroof did not “cover”
    the damages sought by DM in the Colorado proceeding, counsel apparently being of the
    view that the “coverage” issue could not be raised until the “underlying action” was
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    concluded, which at that time had not been concluded. A counterclaim asserted by
    Reroof was also struck because it was untimely. All things considered, we agree with
    counsel for both Columbia and Reroof in this Court, each of whom was trial counsel, that
    the issue of policy coverage and indemnification was, by time of trial, at least, not an
    issue before the district court and whether there was policy coverage or whether either
    party was entitled to indemnification from the other, was not in the case at the time of the
    judgment.
    The parties agree that a duty to defend may exist even though it may be later
    determined that there was, in fact, no policy coverage. This being a diversity case, the
    substantive law of Oklahoma applies. Blackhawk-Central City Sanitation Dist. v.
    American Guar. and Liab. Ins. Co., 
    214 F.3d 1183
    , 1188 (10th Cir. 2000). In First Bank
    of Turley v. Fidelity and Deposit Ins. Co. of Maryland, 
    928 P.2d 298
    , 303 (Okla. 1996),
    the Supreme Court of Oklahoma held that an insurer had the duty to defend its insured
    “whenever it ascertains the presence of facts that give rise to the potential of liability
    under the policy.”2 (Emphasis in original). See also Midland Mortgage Co. v. United
    States Fid. & Guar. Co., 
    301 F.3d 1277
    (10th Cir. 2002); IDG, Inc. v. Continental Cas.
    Co., 
    275 F.3d 916
    (10th Cir. 2001) . In Midland, we quoted the above language from
    Turley with approval, and also said, inter alia, “[a]ny doubts [about a duty to defend] are
    In footnote 14 in First Bank of Turley, p. 304, “potential liability” was defined as
    2
    “possibility of a recovery under the policy; there need not be a probability of recovery.”
    (Emphasis in the original).
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    resolved in favor of the insured.” Midland at 1280. In IDG, we said “[i]f a policy term is
    ambiguous - i.e., where it is susceptible to two or more different meanings - ‘it will be
    construed against the insurer’.” IDG at 921, n. 2. The district court in the instant case
    concluded that, under the allegations in DM’s complaint filed in the Colorado proceeding
    and the other information available to Columbia, there was “potential coverage” under the
    policy here involved, and hence a duty on Columbia to defend. The record supports such
    holding. That the allegations in DM’s complaint indicated a “possibility of a recovery”
    under the policy is evidenced, inter alia, by the fact that Columbia initially defended
    Reroof in that action, reserving a right to deny policy coverage. In our view, the KLP
    report, later produced by DM’s engineers, did not negate that “possibility.”
    Columbia asserts that, even if it had an initial duty to defend, such duty does not
    continue ad infinitum, and that it was later justified in withdrawing its defense of Reroof.
    In its order, the district court, citing Blackhawk, stated that, while an insured need only
    show the “potential” for liability in order to establish an insurer’s duty to defend, the
    insurer, to escape its duty to defend, must show that the underlying claim “cannot fall
    within policy coverage” (emphasis added). Blackhawk involved Colorado law, but the
    district court in the instant case stated it was not persuaded that, in this respect, Oklahoma
    law differed from Colorado. The record supports the district court’s holding that
    Columbia had not shown that the underlying claim “cannot . . . fall within policy
    coverage.”
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    On March 19, 2001, DM filed in the underlying action in Colorado against Reroof
    a “supplemental disclosure” concerning its damages. It claimed therein that as “a
    consequence of installing the new roof, Holiday Inn’s old roof was irreparably damaged,”
    because nails were drilled into the old roof damaging the old roof and the parapet wall.
    The supplemental disclosure further stated “as a result of the new roof, Holiday Inn
    incurred property damage to approximately 37 fan motors” and that as a result of “the
    heat and odor” caused by a lack of roof ventilation, Holiday Inn lost rental income from
    263 rooms.
    On the morning the trial of the instant case commenced, March 20, 2001, Reroof
    asked that a prior pretrial order be amended and that the supplemental disclosure of DM
    in the Colorado proceeding be admitted into evidence in the trial of this case. The district
    court allowed such, but first asked Columbia if it desired a postponement of the trial to
    allow it time to study the new disclosure. Columbia declined that offer. Instead, it asked
    that its prayer for relief be simply amended to show that it had no duty to defend until that
    time, i.e., the date the trial commenced, March 20, 2001.3 We should note here that, after
    3
    The duty to defend arose when Reroof tendered the defense of the action against it
    by DM in the Colorado court to Columbia. At that time, Columbia apparently conceded
    its duty to defend by entering its appearance on behalf of Reroof, reserving its right to
    contest coverage. When Columbia eight months later withdrew its appearance for Reroof
    in the Colorado proceeding after determining to its satisfaction that there was no policy
    coverage, it did so at its own peril. We agree with the district court that “Columbia’s
    decision to withdraw from Reroof’s defense was not justified and Columbia was, and
    continued to be, obligated to defend Reroof in the DM lawsuit.” As previously indicated,
    Columbia had not shown that there “cannot” be policy coverage. The “potential” was still
    (continued...)
    -8-
    the district court entered its judgment in the instant case, Columbia reentered its
    appearance in the Colorado proceeding and later settled DM’s claim against Reroof for
    approximately $500,000.
    In connection with the foregoing, Columbia argues in this appeal that the district
    court erred in considering the supplemental disclosure made by DM in the Colorado
    proceeding the day prior to the commencement of trial of the instant case. Under the
    above described circumstances, we find no error. There was no abuse of discretion,
    which is our standard of review of the grant, or denial, of a motion to amend a pretrial
    order. Koch v. Koch Indus., Inc., 
    203 F.3d 1202
    , 1222 (10th Cir. 2000). In Davey v.
    Lockheed Martin Corp., 
    301 F.3d 1204
    (10th Cir. 2002) we held that the denial of a
    motion to amend a pretrial order made three days before the commencement of trial was
    an abuse of discretion, and noted that any possible prejudice or surprise could have been
    easily removed by a continuance. Here, Columbia declined the district court’s offer to
    continue or stay the trial.
    Judgment affirmed.
    Entered for the Court
    Robert H. McWilliams
    Senior Circuit Judge
    3
    (...continued)
    present.
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