Adir International, LLC v. Starr Indemnity & Liability Co ( 2021 )


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  •                 FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    ADIR INTERNATIONAL, LLC, DBA             No. 19-56320
    Curacao, FKA La Curacao, a
    Delaware Limited Liability                 D.C. No.
    Company; RON AZARKMAN, an               2:19-cv-04352-
    individual,                                 R-PLA
    Plaintiffs-Counter-Defendants-
    Appellants,
    OPINION
    v.
    STARR INDEMNITY AND LIABILITY
    COMPANY, a Texas Corporation,
    Defendant-Counter-Claimant-
    Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Central District of California
    Gary Klausner, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted December 11, 2020
    Pasadena, California
    Filed April 15, 2021
    2       ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY
    Before: N. Randy Smith and Kenneth K. Lee, Circuit
    Judges, and Matthew F. Kennelly, * District Judge.
    Opinion by Judge Lee
    SUMMARY **
    California Insurance Law
    The panel affirmed the district court’s summary
    judgment in favor of Starr Indemnity and Liability Company
    in a diversity insurance-coverage action.
    California’s Attorney General sued Adir International,
    LLC for violating state consumer protection laws. After
    initially agreeing to provide coverage, Adir’s insurer, Starr
    Indemnity, said it would no longer pay for Adir’s defense
    pursuant to California Insurance Code § 533.5(b), which
    forbids insurer coverage in certain consumer protection
    cases brought by the state.
    The panel held 
    Cal. Ins. Code § 533.5
    (b) did not facially
    violate the due process right of insurance holders to fund and
    retain the counsel of their choice in the civil context. The
    panel also rejected Adir’s statutory argument that section
    533.5 applied to actions involving only monetary relief. The
    panel further held that under the plain text of the statute, it
    *
    The Honorable Matthew F. Kennelly, sitting by designation from
    the Northern District of Illinois.
    **
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It
    has been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY         3
    applied to actions that seek injunctive relief along with
    monetary relief.
    Because Starr Indemnity had no duty to defend nor to
    indemnify, the panel affirmed the district court’s
    determination that Starr Indemnity was entitled to
    reimbursement of defense costs under the explicit language
    of the insurance policy.
    COUNSEL
    Joseph S. Klapach (argued), Klapach & Klapach P.C.,
    Sherman Oaks, California, for Plaintiffs-Counter-
    Defendants-Appellees.
    Kevin F. Kieffer (argued) and Ryan C. Tuley, Troutman
    Sanders LLP, Irvine, California, for Defendant-Counter-
    Claimant-Appellee.
    David L. Abney, Ahwatukee Legal Office P.C., Phoenix,
    Arizona, for Amicus Curiae United Policyholders.
    Xavier Becerra, Attorney General; Nicklas A. Akers, Senior
    Assistant Attorney General; Michele Van Gelderen,
    Supervising Deputy Attorney General; Michael Reynolds
    and Rachel A. Foodman, Deputy Attorneys General; Office
    of the Attorney General, San Francisco, California; for
    Amicus Curiae State of California.
    4      ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY
    OPINION
    LEE, Circuit Judge:
    This case raises the question of whether a party has a due
    process right to retain and fund counsel through insurance
    proceeds.     California’s Attorney General sued Adir
    International for violating state consumer protection laws.
    To defend itself, Adir asked its insurance carrier to pay its
    legal fees. The insurer agreed, but the Attorney General
    warned that California Insurance Code § 533.5(b) forbids it
    from providing coverage in certain consumer protection
    cases brought by the state. The insurer reversed itself and
    said it would no longer pay for Adir’s legal defense. Adir
    challenged the law’s constitutionality, arguing that the state
    unfairly stripped it of insurance defense coverage based on
    unproven allegations in the complaint.
    We affirm the district court’s dismissal of Adir’s
    challenge. California Insurance Code § 533.5(b) — which
    nullifies an insurance company’s duty to defend — does not
    facially violate a party’s due process right to retain counsel.
    In civil cases, courts have recognized a denial of due process
    only if the government actively thwarts a party from
    obtaining a lawyer or prevents it from communicating with
    counsel. Adir has made no such allegation. While it cannot
    tap into its insurance coverage, Adir has managed to obtain
    and communicate with counsel. We also reject Adir’s
    statutory argument that section 533.5 applies to actions
    involving only monetary relief. Under the plain text of the
    statute, it applies to actions that seek injunctive relief along
    with monetary relief.
    ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY                        5
    BACKGROUND
    I. Factual Background
    Adir operates a retail chain called Curacao with stores in
    California, Nevada, and Arizona. In 2017, the California
    Attorney General sued Adir and its Chief Executive Officer,
    Ron Azarkman, 1 for unfair and misleading business tactics
    that allegedly exploit Curacao’s mainly low-income,
    Spanish-speaking customer base. The complaint alleged
    violations of California’s Unfair Competition Law (UCL)
    and False Advertising Law (FAL), and sought restitution,
    civil penalties, costs of suit, and other equitable relief.
    Relevant for this appeal, the complaint sought injunctive
    relief permanently enjoining Adir from making any false or
    misleading statements in violation of the FAL and engaging
    in unfair competition in violation of the UCL.
    Meanwhile, Adir had bought an insurance policy from
    Starr Indemnity. The policy provided that Starr would
    defend and indemnify Adir and its executives for losses
    arising from certain claims alleging wrongful acts. When
    the California Attorney General sued, Adir tendered the
    complaint to Starr and asked it to defend Adir against the
    lawsuit. Starr acknowledged that it would defend the action
    under a reservation of rights, and then became actively
    involved in the defense of that action.
    This all halted in March 2019 when Starr received a
    written warning from the California Attorney General’s
    Office. In the letter, the Attorney General’s Office explained
    that Starr violated California Insurance Code § 533.5. (Adir
    1
    Technically, both Adir and Azarkman are appellants, but this
    Opinion will refer to both appellants as “Adir” for the sake of simplicity.
    6      ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY
    also apparently received a copy of the same letter.) Section
    533.5 provides:
    (a) No policy of insurance shall provide, or
    be construed to provide, any coverage or
    indemnity for the payment of any fine,
    penalty, or restitution in any criminal action
    or proceeding or in any action or proceeding
    brought pursuant to [the UCL or FAL] by the
    Attorney General . . . notwithstanding
    whether the exclusion or exception regarding
    this type of coverage or indemnity is
    expressly stated in the policy.
    (b) No policy of insurance shall provide, or
    be construed to provide, any duty to defend,
    as defined in subdivision (c), any claim in any
    criminal action or proceeding or in any action
    or proceeding brought pursuant to [the UCL
    or FAL] in which the recovery of a fine,
    penalty, or restitution is sought by the
    Attorney General . . . notwithstanding
    whether the exclusion or exception regarding
    the duty to defend this type of claim is
    expressly stated in the policy.
    (c) For the purpose of this section, “duty to
    defend” means the insurer’s right or
    obligation to investigate, contest, defend,
    control the defense of, compromise, settle,
    negotiate the compromise or settlement of, or
    indemnify for the cost of any aspect of
    defending any claim in any criminal action or
    proceeding or in any action or proceeding
    brought pursuant to [the UCL or FAL] in
    ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY            7
    which the insured expects or contends that
    (1) the insurer is liable or is potentially liable
    to make any payment on behalf of the insured
    or (2) the insurer will provide a defense for a
    claim even though the insurer is precluded by
    law from indemnifying that claim.
    (d) Any provision in a policy of insurance
    which is in violation of subdivision (a) or (b)
    is contrary to public policy and void.
    
    Cal. Ins. Code § 533.5
    .
    A few weeks after receiving the letter from the Attorney
    General’s Office, Starr informed Adir that it would “stop
    making any payments for defense costs” and reserved “its
    rights to seek reimbursement of all amounts paid to date.”
    II. Procedural Background
    After several rounds of correspondence about whether
    section 533.5 applied, Adir sued Starr in state court, and
    Starr removed to federal court under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    . In
    August 2019, Starr filed a motion for summary judgment,
    while Adir cross-moved for partial summary judgment.
    In September 2019, the district court granted Starr’s
    motion for summary judgment and denied Adir’s motion for
    partial summary judgment. The district court did not address
    Adir’s constitutional challenge to the statute’s defense
    prohibition, and instead focused on the statutory
    construction issue. Addressing first the duty to defend, the
    district court explained that subsection (b) — the defense
    provision — “clearly and explicitly establishes that there
    was no potential for coverage and, consequently, no duty to
    defend in the underlying action.” Specifically, the district
    8      ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY
    court noted that subsection (b) “unambiguously precludes an
    insurer’s duty to defend not only a UCL or FAL claim for
    the recovery of a fine, penalty, or restitution, but also any
    claim brought pursuant to the UCL or FAL in an action in
    which the Attorney General or another state prosecuting
    authority seeks such fine, penalty, or restitution.”
    As for the duty to indemnify under subsection (a), the
    district court held that because “there is no duty to defend,
    there can be no duty to indemnify.” The district court also
    noted that subsection (a) “explicitly precludes
    indemnification for any fine, penalty, or restitution in any
    action brought under the UCL or FAL by the Attorney
    General or another state prosecuting authority.” Finally, the
    district court held that Starr was entitled to reimbursement
    of defense costs because the insurance policy itself explicitly
    provided for a right to reimbursement. Later that month, the
    district court amended the final judgment to specify that Adir
    owed Starr over $2 million in restitution. This appeal
    followed.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary
    judgment. Baker v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 
    143 F.3d 1260
    ,
    1263 (9th Cir. 1998). The court “must determine, viewing
    the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving
    party, whether there are any genuine issues of material fact
    and whether the district court correctly applied the relevant
    substantive law.” 
    Id.
     Similarly, we review de novo a
    challenge to the constitutionality of a statute. Gray v. First
    Winthrop Corp., 
    989 F.2d 1564
    , 1567 (9th Cir. 1993). The
    same applies to the district court’s interpretation of a state
    statute. Wetzel v. Lou Ehlers Cadillac Grp. Long Term
    Disability Ins. Program, 
    222 F.3d 643
    , 646 (9th Cir. 2000).
    ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY            9
    ANALYSIS
    On appeal, Adir challenges both the indemnification and
    the defense provisions of California Insurance Code § 533.5.
    (As a reminder, subsection (a) is the indemnity provision,
    while subsection (b) is the defense provision). Adir
    challenges subsection (b) on the basis that it violates an
    insurance holder’s due process right to retain and fund the
    counsel of its choice. Adir also asserts statutory challenges
    to both subsection (a) and subsection (b), arguing that the
    district court went beyond the bounds of the statute by
    interpreting both subsections to prohibit coverage of the
    injunctive relief (rather than monetary relief) portion of the
    underlying action. To Adir’s way of thinking, the provisions
    cover only “fines, penalties, and restitution” and thus do not
    apply to injunctive relief. Finally, Adir challenges the
    district court’s ruling on Starr’s right to reimbursement. We
    affirm the grant of summary judgment for Starr.
    I. California Insurance Code § 533.5(b) does not
    facially violate the due process right of insurance
    holders to fund and retain the counsel of their choice
    in the civil context.
    Adir challenges the constitutionality of California
    Insurance Code § 533.5(b), which bars insurance companies
    from paying legal defense fees for certain consumer
    protection lawsuits brought by the state. Adir argues that it
    violates the Due Process Clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth
    Amendments because it interferes with an insured’s ability
    to fund and retain the counsel of its choice. As Adir points
    out, California has stacked the deck against defendants
    facing these lawsuits filed by the state: Although the
    Attorney General has yet to prove any of the allegations in
    his lawsuit, he has invoked the power of the state to deny
    insurance coverage that Adir paid for to defend itself.
    10       ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY
    In the civil context, courts have limited the reach of the
    Due Process Clause to cases in which the government has
    actively prevented hiring or communicating with counsel.
    Adir has not alleged such impingements by the state. There
    is also no allegation that Adir cannot afford competent
    counsel absent coverage under the policy. We thus reject
    Adir’s facial constitutional challenge to California Insurance
    Code § 533.5(b). 2
    A. Courts have recognized a very limited due process
    right to retain and fund counsel in the civil
    context.
    To start, this court has long held that there is “no
    constitutional right to counsel in a civil case.” United States
    v. 30.64 Acres of Land, More or Less, Situated in Klickitat
    Cty., Washington, 
    795 F.2d 796
    , 801 (9th Cir. 1986)
    (cleaned up). Unlike in criminal cases that implicate the
    Sixth Amendment right to counsel, civil litigants who cannot
    afford counsel are not constitutionally guaranteed the
    appointment of a lawyer.
    Adir, though, correctly points out that courts have
    generally acknowledged a civil litigant’s Fifth Amendment
    due process right to retain and fund the counsel of their
    choice. See Potashnick v. Port City Const. Co., 
    609 F.2d 1101
    , 1117 (5th Cir. 1980) (explaining that “the right to
    retain counsel in civil litigation is implicit in the concept of
    fifth amendment due process”). “If in any case, civil or
    criminal, a state or federal court were arbitrarily to refuse to
    2
    The district court did not address Adir’s constitutional arguments,
    even though Adir raised it in its briefing. We can affirm the district
    court’s ruling on any ground in the record. Atel Fin. Corp. v. Quaker
    Coal Co., 
    321 F.3d 924
    , 926 (9th Cir. 2003) (per curiam).
    ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY               11
    hear a party by counsel, employed by and appearing for him,
    it reasonably may not be doubted that such a refusal would
    be a denial of a hearing, and, therefore, of due process in the
    constitutional sense.” Powell v. Alabama, 
    287 U.S. 45
    , 68
    (1932). Put another way, “there is no right of subsidized
    access” in civil cases like there is in the Sixth Amendment
    context, but if a civil litigant “hires a lawyer,” then certain
    protections kick in. Guajardo-Palma v. Martinson, 
    622 F.3d 801
    , 803 (7th Cir. 2010) (cleaned up).
    So, what are the contours of a civil litigant’s due process
    right to retain counsel? For one, a court “may not refuse to
    accept filings” from a civil litigant’s retained lawyer. 
    Id.
     In
    addition, the right to retain counsel might be violated if a trial
    court prohibits a civil litigant from communicating with his
    or her retained counsel during breaks and recesses during a
    trial. Potashnick, 609 F.2d at 1119. A civil litigant also
    probably cannot be denied the opportunity to consult with
    retained counsel about settlement terms. Mosley v. St. Louis
    Sw. Ry., 
    634 F.2d 942
    , 946 (5th Cir. 1981). And one sister
    circuit held that a trial court erred in refusing to give a civil
    litigant extra time to retain new counsel after the original
    counsel withdrew before trial. Anderson v. Sheppard,
    
    856 F.2d 741
    , 748 (6th Cir. 1988).
    Beyond that, though, courts have construed the due
    process right to retain counsel very narrowly. For example,
    our court has suggested that the right to retain counsel does
    not require the release of frozen assets so that a civil
    defendant can hire an attorney or otherwise defend his claim.
    See CFTC v. Noble Metals Int’l, Inc., 
    67 F.3d 766
    , 775 (9th
    Cir. 1995). “A district court may . . . forbid or limit payment
    of attorney fees out of frozen assets.” 
    Id.
     (recognizing,
    however, that a district court must still exercise
    “discretion”).
    12     ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY
    Other circuits have similarly refused to adopt an
    expansive reading of the due process right to retain counsel.
    The Third Circuit, for instance, has held that the right
    appears to go “no further than preventing arbitrary dismissal
    of a chosen attorney.” Kentucky W. Virginia Gas Co. v.
    Pennsylvania Pub. Util. Comm’n, 
    837 F.2d 600
    , 618 (3d Cir.
    1988) (cleaned up). Along those lines, the First Circuit has
    suggested that as long as a trial court does not affirmatively
    prevent a civil litigant from retaining counsel, no
    constitutional violation occurs, even if the civil litigant still
    cannot hire a lawyer. Gray v. New England Tel. & Tel. Co.,
    
    792 F.2d 251
    , 257 (1st Cir. 1986) (no violation of due
    process right where court postponed trial to give civil litigant
    time to retain counsel, but litigant was unable to do so).
    In sum, the due process right to retain counsel in civil
    cases appears to apply only in extreme scenarios where the
    government substantially interferes with a party’s ability to
    communicate with his or her lawyer or actively prevents a
    party who is willing and able to obtain counsel from doing
    so. This narrow scope of the due process right to retain
    counsel — as opposed to the much more robust Sixth
    Amendment right to counsel — finds support in the original
    public meaning of the term “due process.” As the Supreme
    Court long ago explained, the Fifth Amendment Due Process
    Clause is rooted in the Magna Carta. Murray’s Lessee v.
    Hoboken Land & Improvement Co., 
    59 U.S. 272
    , 276
    (1856). See also Edward J. Eberle, Procedural Due Process:
    The Original Understanding, 
    4 Const. Comment. 339
    (1987). At the time of the Fifth Amendment’s ratification,
    the framers construed “due process of law” to mean the same
    thing as “the law of the land,” which was traditionally
    understood to impose a “restraint on the legislative as well
    ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY                      13
    as on the executive and judicial powers of the government.” 3
    Murray’s Lessee, 
    59 U.S. at 276
    . See also Daniels v.
    Williams, 
    474 U.S. 327
    , 331–32 (1986) (discussing the
    “traditional and common-sense notion that the Due Process
    Clause, like its forebear in the Magna Carta, was ‘intended
    to secure the individual from the arbitrary exercise of the
    powers of government.’” (cleaned up)).
    Meanwhile, the Supreme Court has characterized “the
    law of the land” as “a law which hears before it condemns.”
    Powell, 
    287 U.S. at 68
     (cleaned up). That makes sense
    because “[t]he fundamental requisite of due process of law
    is the opportunity to be heard.” Grannis v. Ordean, 
    234 U.S. 385
    , 394 (1914). This is where the right to counsel comes
    into play. “Historically and in practice, [a hearing] has
    always included the right to the aid of counsel when desired
    and provided by the party asserting the right.” Powell,
    
    287 U.S. at 68
     (emphasis added). 4 Thus, due process
    historically did not establish a broad or unfettered right to
    counsel in civil cases, but rather provided limited protection
    3
    The Magna Carta provides that: “No freeman shall be taken, or
    imprisoned, or be disseized of his freehold, or liberties, or free customs,
    or be outlawed, or exiled, or any otherwise destroyed; nor will we not
    pass upon him, nor condemn him, but by lawful judgment of his peers or
    by the law of the land.” See 1 Edward Coke, The Second Part of the
    Institutes of the Laws of England 45 (1797).
    4
    Indeed, as the Potashnick court noted, the English system had long
    “recognized the right to retain civil counsel,” and it was only because the
    English practice was to deny representation to felony defendants that the
    framers “specifically provided for a right to retain counsel in criminal
    prosecutions” by way of the Sixth Amendment. Potashnick, 609 F.2d
    at 1117 (cleaned up). See also Powell, 
    287 U.S. at 60
     (“Originally, in
    England, a person charged with treason or felony was denied the aid of
    counsel . . . . At the same time parties in civil cases and persons accused
    of misdemeanors were entitled to the full assistance of counsel.”).
    14     ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY
    against the government preventing a party from being heard
    in court. And as a practical matter, that means due process
    bars the government from actively preventing a party from
    obtaining counsel or communicating with his or her lawyer
    in civil cases.
    B. The limited right to retain counsel does not
    include the indirect right to fund and retain
    counsel through an insurance policy.
    With this framework in mind, the question then
    becomes: Is there any way to fit Adir’s proposed right —
    which really boils down to an indirect right to fund and retain
    the counsel through an insurance contract — into the
    existing due process right? We see no reason to enlarge the
    limited due process right to retain counsel to include a
    constitutional right to use insurance proceeds to pay for legal
    fees. While Adir complains that California Insurance Code
    § 533.5(b) is unfair, the statute does not actively prevent
    Adir from obtaining counsel or communicating with its
    lawyers.
    Adir relies heavily on United States v. Stein, 
    541 F.3d 130
     (2d Cir. 2008) and Luis v. United States, 
    136 S. Ct. 1083
    (2016). In Stein, the Second Circuit held that prosecutors
    violated the criminal defendants’ Sixth Amendment right to
    counsel — which encompasses a “right to use wholly
    legitimate funds to hire the attorney of his choice” — when
    they pressured the defendants’ lawyers to stop paying their
    legal fees. Stein, 
    541 F.3d at 155
     (cleaned up). Similarly, in
    Luis, the Supreme Court articulated that “the pretrial
    restraint of legitimate, untainted assets needed to retain
    counsel of choice violates the Sixth Amendment.” Luis,
    
    136 S. Ct. at 1088
    .
    ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY                  15
    But Stein and Luis were both criminal cases interpreting
    the Sixth Amendment right to counsel. Adir, for its part,
    argues that the Sixth Amendment at least offers “guidance”
    for the scope of a civil litigant’s due process right to counsel.
    But “guidance” does not mean that the two rights are
    equivalent. The Sixth Amendment’s explicit guarantee of
    counsel in criminal cases is broader than the judicially
    constructed right under the Due Process Clause. And for
    good reason: While a civil lawsuit may implicate large sums
    of money or restrictions on business practices, a criminal
    case may lead to the loss of liberty or life. See Potashnick,
    609 F.2d at 1118 (stating that “an analogy can be drawn
    between the criminal and civil litigants’ respective rights to
    counsel” but also emphasizing that “[a] criminal defendant
    faced with a potential loss of his personal liberty has much
    more at stake than a civil litigant asserting or contesting a
    claim for damages, and for this reason the law affords greater
    protection to the criminal defendant's rights”).
    At the end of the day, California’s law only makes it
    harder, though not necessarily impossible, for a civil litigant
    to retain the counsel of their choice. Adir has not alleged
    that the government actively thwarted it from obtaining
    counsel, or that the law precluded it from communicating
    with counsel. Indeed, Adir appears to have obtained an able
    and competent counsel — without the use of insurance
    proceeds — for this appeal. 5 We thus rule that California
    5
    Adir stated at oral argument that it was bringing both a facial
    challenge and an as-applied challenge. But the briefing appears to set
    forth a facial challenge only because Adir has not alleged how the law
    has impaired its ability to retain counsel. We thus need not address
    whether Adir can raise an as-applied challenge.
    16      ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY
    Insurance Code § 533.5(b) does not impinge on a due
    process right to retain counsel.
    II. California Insurance Code § 533.5(b) prohibits a
    duty to defend in an underlying action even if the
    attorney general seeks injunctive relief.
    We next address Adir’s statutory challenge to California
    Insurance Code § 533.5(b). Adir argues that the statutory
    language bars defense coverage for actions seeking damages
    only and does not extend to claims seeking injunctive relief.
    It maintains that district court adopted a too-broad
    interpretation in ruling that the statute prohibits Starr from
    defending the injunctive relief portion of the underlying
    action. We reject Adir’s strained reading of subsection (b).
    A. The text of subsection (b) forecloses a duty to
    defend for actions in which monetary relief is
    sought, even if injunctive relief is also sought.
    We start, as we must, with the statutory text. Mt. Hawley
    Ins. Co. v. Lopez, 
    156 Cal. Rptr. 3d 771
    , 779 (Ct. App. 2013).
    Section 533.5(b) states that there can be no “duty to defend
    . . . any claim . . . in any action or proceeding brought
    pursuant to [the UCL or FAL] in which the recovery of a
    fine, penalty, or restitution is sought by the Attorney General
    . . . .” 
    Cal. Ins. Code § 533.5
    (b). To begin, the parties
    appear to agree that the phrase “duty to defend” attaches to
    “any claim.” The key question posed here is whether “any
    claim” encompasses (1) claims that only seek monetary
    relief or (2) all claims that seek monetary relief, even if it
    also demands injunctive relief.
    Adir argues the former, contending that “any claim” only
    encompasses claims for monetary relief alone. To arrive at
    that conclusion, Adir necessarily makes two unwarranted
    ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY                   17
    assumptions about the text of the statute. First, Adir assumes
    that the phrase “in which the recovery of a fine, penalty, or
    restitution is sought” must be read to mean “in which only
    the recovery of a fine, penalty, or restitution is sought.”
    Second, Adir assumes that “any claim” can be bifurcated
    into a claim for monetary relief and a claim for injunctive
    relief. We disagree with both assumptions.
    1. The phrase “any claim . . . in which the
    recovery of a fine, penalty, or restitution is
    sought” is not limited to claims in which only
    monetary relief is sought.
    To start, there are plenty of textual clues that the phrase
    “any claim . . . in which the recovery of a fine, penalty, or
    restitution is sought” does not mean the same thing as the
    phrase “any claim . . . in which only the recovery of a fine,
    penalty, or restitution is sought.” Most obviously, the word
    “only” is absent from this section of the statute. Adir’s
    interpretation would require the court to impermissibly read
    that extra word into the statute. See Lamie v. U.S. Trustee,
    
    540 U.S. 526
    , 538 (2004) (declining to “read an absent word
    into the statute”). Along those same lines, the phrase “in
    which” merely communicates that the claim seeks monetary
    relief, but beyond that, “in which” does not at all imply that
    only monetary relief is sought. As Starr points out, Adir’s
    interpretation essentially replaces “in which the recovery of
    a fine, penalty, or restitution is sought” with the more
    restrictive modifier “for the recovery of a fine, penalty, or
    restitution.” That reading goes against the plain text of the
    statute. 6
    6
    Additionally, the phrase “in which the recovery of a fine, penalty,
    or restitution is sought,” also modifies “any criminal action or
    18      ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY
    2. A “claim” cannot be bifurcated into a “claim”
    for monetary relief and a “claim” for
    injunctive relief for insurance defense
    purposes.
    Adir reads “claim” to mean “relief” or “remedy” to
    contrive a UCL or FAL “claim” for monetary relief as
    distinct from a UCL or FAL “claim” for injunctive relief.
    But Adir does not offer any authority for that reading of the
    word “claim.” Nor does Adir’s reading make sense given
    the statute’s inclusion of the phrase “in any action or
    proceeding,” which seems to refer to the entire lawsuit as a
    whole. If “action or proceeding” refers to the entire lawsuit,
    then it would follow that the word “claim” refers to the
    individual causes of action within the lawsuit, which, in this
    case, would be the UCL claim and the FAL claim. With that
    framework in mind, the statute’s reference to “duty to defend
    . . . any claim” seems to most naturally refer to coverage (or
    not) for particular causes of action within a larger “action or
    proceeding.”
    Further supporting this conclusion is the definition of
    “duty to defend,” which precludes an insurer from
    “indemnify[ing] for the cost of any aspect of defending any
    claim . . . in any action or proceeding brought pursuant the
    [UCL or FAL].” 
    Cal. Ins. Code § 533.5
    (b), (c) (emphases
    added). Subsection (c) makes it clear that an insurer is
    proceeding.” Mt. Hawley, 156 Cal. Rptr. 3d at 794. Thus, an
    interpretation limiting a claim to monetary relief would create an absurd
    result. Jarman v. HCR ManorCare, Inc., 
    471 P.3d 1001
    , 1004 (Cal.
    2020) (“If the language is clear, courts must generally follow its plain
    meaning unless a literal interpretation would result in absurd
    consequences the Legislature did not intend.”).
    ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY             19
    precluded from defending any action brought under the UCL
    or FAL regardless of the relief sought.
    But even so, Adir argues for bifurcating the UCL or FAL
    claim into monetary and injunctive relief components. Adir
    cites Broughton v. Cigna Healthplans of California,
    
    988 P.2d 67
     (Cal. 1999) for the proposition that the
    injunctive relief “claim” can be severed from the broader
    UCL or FAL claim. But Broughton’s holding is much more
    limited than Adir makes it out to be. In that case, the
    California Supreme Court explained that it was “concerned
    not with distinct arbitrable and inarbitrable claims, but with
    arbitrable and inarbitrable remedies derived from the same
    statutory claim.” Broughton, 
    21 Cal. 4th at 1088
     (emphases
    added). The court then concluded that the damages action
    should be sent to arbitration, while the injunctive relief
    action could proceed in a judicial forum, citing “the strong
    policy in both federal and state law for arbitrating private
    disputes, and given the inherent unsuitability of arbitration
    as a means of resolving plaintiffs’ action for injunctive relief
    under the CLRA.” 
    Id.
    There is nothing in Broughton’s reasoning to suggest that
    UCL and FAL claims should likewise be bifurcated by
    remedy for insurability purposes. Unlike in the arbitration
    context, the “strong policy” in this case arguably cuts the
    other way — that is, against insurability for UCL and FAL
    claims. And even if the UCL or FAL claim could somehow
    be severed into the injunctive relief and the monetary relief
    components to determine insurability, the text does not
    support doing so here; the statute refers only to “any claim,”
    rather than “the portion of any claim.”
    Further, the statutory framework does not support a
    bifurcation of injunctive relief and civil penalties.
    Government officials may “seek redress through the
    20      ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY
    bringing of civil law enforcement cases seeking equitable
    relief and civil penalties” for violations of the UCL and FAL.
    Mt. Hawley, 156 Cal. Rptr. 3d at 794; see also 
    Cal. Bus. & Professions Code § 17206
    . Equitable remedies (injunctive
    relief, restitution, and civil penalties) are the only remedies
    available under California Business and Professions Code
    §§ 17200–17210. See Nationwide Biweekly Admin., Inc. v.
    Superior Ct. of Alameda Cty., 
    462 P.3d 461
    , 469 (Cal. 2020);
    see also In re Tobacco II Cases, 
    207 P.3d 20
    , 29 (Cal. 2009)
    (“To achieve its goal of deterring unfair business practices
    in an expeditious manner, the Legislature limited the scope
    of the remedies available under the UCL” to “equitable”
    damages such as “injunctive relief and restitution.”). “The
    primary form of relief available under the UCL to protect
    consumers from unfair business practices is an injunction.”
    McGill v. Citibank, N.A., 9 
    393 P.3d 85
    , 89 (Cal. 2017)
    (cleaned up).
    In light of the statutory framework as a whole, it would
    be illogical to conclude that the legislature intended to carve
    out an exception to allow for the defense for the primary
    form of equitable relief (injunctions) but not the others (fine,
    restitution, or civil penalty). See Los Angeles Cty. Metro.
    Transportation Auth. v. Alameda Produce Mkt., LLC,
    
    264 P.3d 579
    , 583 (Cal. 2011) (“We must harmonize the
    statute’s various parts by considering it in the context of the
    statutory framework as a whole.”).
    B. Our interpretation of subsection (b) does not
    render the duty to defend narrower than the duty
    to indemnify.
    Alternatively, Adir urges the court to interpret
    subsection (b) with an eye toward subsection (a), which
    prohibits “coverage or indemnity for the payment of any
    fine, penalty, or restitution . . . in any action or proceeding
    ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY                    21
    brought pursuant to [the UCL or FAL].” 
    Cal. Ins. Code § 533.5
    (a). The relationship between the two provisions
    matters, Adir reminds us, because it is “well settled” under
    California law that “the duty to defend is broader than the
    duty to indemnify.” Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's of
    London v. Superior Court, 
    16 P.3d 94
    , 103 (Cal. 2001). Adir
    asserts that because subsection (a) does not bar indemnity
    for the payment of injunctive relief costs, then it would make
    no sense to read subsection (b) to prohibit defense coverage
    in the same context. That would improperly render the duty
    to indemnify broader than the duty to defend.
    We disagree. The insurance policy does not cover the
    costs of injunctive relief in the first place. Nor do there
    appear to be any real costs 7 associated with the injunctive
    relief sought here.
    The text of the policy defines “claim” to encompass a
    “written demand for monetary, non-monetary, or injunctive
    relief.” But “claim” is not the same thing as “coverage.” We
    know this because the policy also states that the insurer shall
    pay “the Loss arising from a Claim . . . .” The word “Loss”
    is in turn defined to include “damages” but to exclude “any
    amounts paid or incurred in complying with a judgment or
    settlement for non-monetary or injunctive relief, but solely
    as respects the Company.” This indicates no coverage for
    the costs of injunctive relief under the policy. To be fair, this
    could still leave open the possibility of coverage for any
    costs that Azarkman incurs in his individual capacity in
    complying with the injunctive relief in this case. But it is not
    clear what costs those would be, given the injunctive relief
    being requested by the Attorney General.
    7
    Any defense costs would be precluded under section 533.5(c).
    22     ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY
    Even if the insurance policy did cover the costs of
    complying with injunctive relief, the injunctive relief sought
    does not appear to impose any monetary costs. The
    California Attorney General appears to seek only (1) an
    order permanently enjoining Adir and its agents “from
    making any false or misleading statements in violation of”
    the FAL, and (2) an order enjoining Adir and its agents from
    engaging in unfair competition in violation of the UCL. Adir
    does not articulate how it will incur monetary costs to
    comply with an order to make truthful representations.
    Thus, it is unnecessary to resolve on appeal whether
    subsection (a) prohibits Starr from indemnifying the costs of
    injunctive relief in the underlying action here. The insurance
    policy itself makes clear that the answer is no. We are also
    not persuaded that there even are any actual monetary costs
    attached to the injunctive relief sought in this case. So we
    leave the interpretation of subsection (a) for another day.
    In any event, given (1) the premise in California law that
    the duty to defend is always broader than the duty to
    indemnify and (2) because there is no duty to defend any
    criminal or civil proceeding under the UCL or FAL
    (including this action), there would be no reason to suggest
    a duty to indemnify in this action under subsection (a) of the
    statute.
    Lastly, because indemnity for restitution and indemnity
    for an injunction are both equitable relief, there is no reason
    for this court to construe the statute differently for one type
    of equitable relief. As the California Court of Appeal held,
    When the law requires a wrongdoer to
    disgorge money or property acquired through
    a violation of the law, to permit the
    wrongdoer to transfer the cost of
    ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY            23
    disgorgement to an insurer would eliminate
    the incentive for obeying the law. Otherwise,
    the wrongdoer would retain the proceeds of
    his illegal acts, merely shifting his loss to an
    insurer.
    Bank of the W. v. Superior Ct., 
    833 P.2d 545
     (Cal. 1992).
    * * * *
    To sum up, the plain meaning of the statutory text of
    California Insurance Code § 533.5(b) forecloses defense
    coverage for any claim in an UCL or FAL action in which
    the state seeks monetary relief. Here, the state seeks (among
    other things) monetary relief against Adir under the UCL
    and FAL. The statute thus bars defense coverage for Adir.
    III.   The text of the insurance policy explicitly
    provides for a right to reimbursement of defense
    costs.
    Finally, Adir challenges the district court’s ruling that
    Starr has a right to the reimbursement of the defense costs
    advanced in the underlying action. Unfortunately for Adir,
    the insurance contract appears to contain an express
    reservation of rights: “In the event and to the extent that the
    Insureds shall not be entitled to payment of such Loss under
    the terms and conditions of this policy, such payments by the
    Insurer shall be repaid to the Insurer by the Insureds . . . .”
    And the word “Loss” in turn includes defense costs.
    Because it turns out that there is no duty to defend nor to
    indemnify, we affirm the district court’s determination that
    Starr is entitled to reimbursement under the explicit language
    of the insurance policy.
    24     ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY
    Adir makes several arguments in response, but none of
    them can overcome this express contractual language. For
    instance, Adir relies on Buss, but that case only says that an
    implied right of reimbursement must be explicitly reserved.
    Buss, 939 P.2d at 776 n.13. Buss does not apply when there
    is already an express in-policy right to reimbursement; the
    express language controls. Adir also argues that Starr,
    “acting under a reservation of rights,” is entitled to
    reimbursement only if it “prophylactically financed the
    defense of claims as to which it owed no duty of defense.”
    But all that requires is that an insurer continue to finance a
    defense while acting under a reservation of rights. See
    Scottsdale Ins. Co. v. MV Transp., 
    115 P.3d 460
    , 470 (Cal.
    2005) (“The insurer should be free, in an abundance of
    caution, to afford the insured a defense under a reservation
    of rights, with the understanding that reimbursement is
    available if it is later established, as a matter of law, that no
    duty to defend ever arose.”). There does not seem to be any
    requirement, as Adir suggests, that the insurer do anything
    extra on top of acting under a reservation of rights. Indeed,
    the whole idea seems to be to incentivize insurers to be
    generous with the duty to defend. 
    Id.
    Lastly, Adir’s estoppel argument also fails. The standard
    here is whether Adir reasonably relied on Starr’s conduct to
    Adir’s detriment. Chase v. Blue Cross of California, 
    50 Cal. Rptr. 2d 178
    , 188 (Ct. App. 1996). But “failure to retain
    separate counsel does not by itself show any detriment.”
    State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Jioras, 
    29 Cal. Rptr. 2d 840
    ,
    845 (Ct. App. 1994). More importantly, Adir does not
    explain how its reliance could have been reasonable given
    the insurance policy’s express reservation of rights, not to
    mention the fact that Starr signaled its doubts about coverage
    from the very beginning, when it at first denied coverage in
    November 2017, before agreeing to provide coverage under
    ADIR INT’L V. STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY          25
    a reservation of rights. Thus, we affirm the district court’s
    ruling that Starr is entitled to a reimbursement of defense
    costs.
    CONCLUSION
    The district court’s order granting summary judgment
    for Starr is AFFIRMED.