Heckart v. A-1 Self Storage ( 2015 )


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  • Filed 12/30/15
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SAMUEL HECKART,                                   D066831
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    v.                                        (Super. Ct. No. 37-2013-00042315-
    CU-BT-CTL)
    A-1 SELF STORAGE, INC. et al.,
    Defendants and Respondents.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, John
    Meyer, Judge. Affirmed.
    Finkelstein & Krinsk and William R. Restis, for Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton and John T. Brooks, for Defendants and
    Respondents for A-1 Self-Storage, Caster Group, Caster Properties, Inc. and Caster
    Family Enterprises, Inc.
    Wilson, Elser, Moskowitz, Edelman & Dicker, John R. Clifford and David J.
    Aveni, for Defendant and Respondent Deans & Homer.
    In this case, we conclude an addendum to a storage unit rental agreement, which
    modified the agreement's allocation of liability for damage or loss to stored property, was
    not "insurance" subject to regulation under Article 16.3 of the Insurance Code concerning
    self-service storage agents. Rather, the addendum was dependent on the rental agreement
    whose principal object was the rental of storage space. Thus, the storage facility that
    offered the addendum did not engage in the unlicensed sale of insurance.
    Samuel Heckart brought this action against A-1 Self Storage, Inc. (A-1), Caster
    Properties, Inc., Caster Family Enterprises, Inc., Caster Group LP (Caster Group), and
    Deans & Homer (together, Defendants) for violations of the Unfair Competition Law
    (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17200 et seq. (the UCL)), violations of the Consumers Legal
    Remedies Act (Civ. Code, § 1750 et seq. (the CLRA)), negligent misrepresentation, and
    civil conspiracy. Heckart alleged A-1's sale of a Customer Goods Protection Plan (the
    Protection Plan) in connection with its rental of storage space constituted unlicensed sale
    of insurance. The trial court sustained Defendants' demurrer to Heckart's first amended
    complaint without leave to amend, concluding the Protection Plan was not insurance.
    Heckart appeals, contending his allegations are sufficient to state the asserted causes of
    action because the Protection Plan is insurance that must comply with the Insurance
    Code. We find his arguments unavailing and affirm.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A-1 operates storage facilities in California. Caster Properties, Inc., Caster Family
    Enterprises, Inc., and Caster Group have ownership, operation or management interests in
    A-1.
    In June 2012, Heckart rented a storage unit from A-1. He signed A-1's standard
    rental agreement (the Rental Agreement), which set out the basic terms of the rental. The
    Rental Agreement provided:
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    "11. INDEMNITY: Tenant(s) does hereby Indemnify and hold
    harmless Landlord from any loss by reason of injury or damage to
    person or property, from whatever cause, all or in part connected
    with the condition or use of the premises. . . .
    "12. INSURANCE: Tenant, at Tenant's expense, shall maintain a
    policy of fire, extended coverage endorsement, burglary, vandalism
    and malicious mischief insurance for the actual cash value of stored
    property. Insurance on Tenant's property is a material condition of
    this agreement and is for the benefit of both Tenant and Landlord.
    Failure to carry the required Insurance is a breach of this agreement
    and Tenant assumes all risk of loss to store property that would be
    covered by such Insurance.
    "[¶] . . . [¶]
    "19. CUSTOMER GOODS PROTECTION PLAN: If Tenant(s)
    elects to participate in [the Protection Plan], those provisions in this
    rental agreement concerning landlord's liability which are modified
    by [the Protection Plan] are considered never to have been in effect."
    The Protection Plan reiterated terms of the Rental Agreement, including that the
    tenant assumed the sole risk of loss or damage to stored property, A-1 was not liable for
    loss or damage to stored property, and the tenant must insure his or her stored property.
    The Protection Plan stated, however, that for an additional payment of $10 per month, A-
    1 would retain liability for loss of or damage to the tenant's stored property up to $2,500
    for losses caused by fire, explosion, smoke, theft, vandalism, malicious mischief, roof
    leaf, water damage, vandalism, or collapse of the building where the property was stored.
    The Protection Plan went on to state that, if elected, "[t]his limited acceptance of liability
    is a modification to the waiver of liability in paragraph eleven (11) of the rental
    agreement that it forms a part of. It satisfies the insurance requirement stated in
    paragraph twelve (12)."
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    The form Protection Plan required the tenant to either initial to accept or decline
    participation in the plan. Heckart declined participation by initialing that option, which
    provided: "No, I decline participation in the . . . Protection Plan. I am currently covered
    by an insurance plan that covers my belongings in the storage facility. I understand that I
    need to provide the policy information in writing to the facility Owner within 30 days or I
    will automatically be enrolled in the . . . Protection Plan until I do provide such
    information to the Owner." Heckart "inadvertently" purchased the Protection Plan and
    was enrolled in it, presumably because he failed to provide proof of insurance within 30
    days.
    Deans & Homer is an insurance underwriter, agent and broker licensed to sell
    insurance by the California Department of Insurance (DOI). Deans & Homer provided
    A-1 with the template for the Protection Plan agreement and forms, policies, and
    procedures needed to implement the Protection Plan. It also sold A-1 a Storage
    Operator's Contract Liability Policy (Storage Liability Policy) that covered A-1's
    Protection Plan losses. For a premium of $0.74 per month for each Protection Plan
    participant, Deans & Homer assumed liability for all of A-1's Protection Plan losses over
    $250,000 per year. Deans & Homer also retained the right to adjust Protection Plan
    claims directly with plan participants.
    In April 2013, Heckart, on behalf of himself and other similarly situated California
    residents, sued A-1 and Caster Group for violations of the UCL and CLRA. He alleged
    A-1 and Caster Group engaged in unfair, unlawful and deceptive sale of unlicensed
    4
    insurance in conjunction with the rental of storage units. A-1 and Caster Group demurred
    to the complaint. The trial court sustained the demurrer with leave to amend.
    Heckart amended his complaint, adding Deans & Homer and the other Caster
    entities as defendants. He alleged causes of action for violations of the UCL and CLRA,
    negligent misrepresentation, and civil conspiracy. Heckart's allegations were premised
    on the notion that A-1's Protection Plan was an unlicensed and illegal insurance policy.
    Heckart alleged the Protection Plan's automatic enrollment after 30 days if the tenant did
    not provide proof of insurance was deceptive to a reasonable consumer, causing class
    members to be "enrolled in an illegal insurance plan that is not properly disclosed as
    such, is sold in an illegal and misleading manner, and costs more but provides less
    coverage than other self-storage insurance," including a policy offered by Deans &
    Homer.
    Defendants demurred to Heckart's amended complaint, arguing it failed because
    the Protection Plan did not transform the Rental Agreement into insurance. Rather, the
    Protection Plan was tangential to the principal object of the transaction between Heckart
    and A-1, which was rental of storage space. The trial court sustained the demurrer
    without leave to amend, concluding the principal object of the transaction between
    Heckart and A-1 was rental of a storage unit, not the sale of insurance. Thus, each cause
    of action failed because the Protection Plan was not a contract of insurance.
    In conjunction with the order sustaining Defendants' demurrer to the amended
    complaint, the trial court granted Defendants' request for judicial notice of multiple
    documents, including a letter from Deans & Homer to the DOI and two letters from the
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    DOI to Deans & Homer. Deans & Homer's letter to the DOI requested an opinion on
    whether a program structured like the Protection Plan would be subject to regulation as
    insurance. The DOI's 2003 response letter opined that the DOI "did not believe that such
    contracts between landlords and tenants are insurance contracts for purposes of statutory
    regulation. The primary purpose of the contract is rental of the premises. The parties
    appear to be allocating the risk by contractual agreement. For an additional amount of
    rent, the risk of damage for a particular risk shifts from the lessee to the lessor." In a
    2008 letter, the DOI confirmed the opinion it expressed in its 2003 letter.
    DISCUSSION
    I. General Legal Principles
    A. Insurance Principles
    "Insurance is a contract whereby one undertakes to indemnify another against
    loss, damage, or liability arising from a contingent or unknown event." (Ins. Code, § 22;
    undesignated statutory references are to this code.) "Thus, insurance necessarily involves
    two elements: (1) a risk of loss to which one party is subject and a shifting of that risk to
    another party; and (2) distribution of risk among similarly situated persons."
    (Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. State Bd. of Equalization (1982) 
    32 Cal. 3d 649
    , 654
    (Metropolitan Life).) However, "the mere fact that a contract contains these two elements
    does not necessarily mean that the agreement constitutes an insurance contract for
    purposes of statutory regulation. [¶] 'A statute designed to regulate the business of
    insurance . . . is not intended to apply to all organizations having some element of risk
    assumption or distribution in their operations. The question of whether an arrangement is
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    one of insurance may turn, not on whether a risk is involved or assumed, but on whether
    that or something else to which it is related in the particular plan is its principal object
    and purpose." (Truta v. Avis Rent A Car System, Inc. (1987) 
    193 Cal. App. 3d 802
    , 812
    (Truta).)
    In 2004, California added Article 16.3 to the Insurance Code, which regulates self-
    service storage agents. (Added by Stats. 2004, ch. 428 (A.B. 2520), § 3.) Under that
    statutory scheme, "[n]o self-service storage facility, or franchisee of a self-storage
    facility, shall offer or sell insurance unless it has complied with the requirements of
    [Article 16.3] and has been issued a license by the commissioner as provided in [that]
    article." (§ 1758.7, subd. (a).) Licensed self storage facilities or their franchisees may
    offer or sell "hazard insurance coverage to renters for the loss of, or damage to, tangible
    property in storage or in transit during the rental period" "in connection with, and
    incidental to, self-service storage rental agreements." (§§ 1758.7, subd. (b), 1758.75,
    subd. (d).)
    The licensee must provide prospective renters with written materials that
    summarize the material terms and conditions of coverage, describe the process of filing a
    claim, disclose information on price, benefits, exclusions, conditions, or other limitations,
    and provide specified information about the licensee and the availability of the DOI's
    consumer hotline. (§ 1758.76, subd. (a).) Additionally, the self-service storage agent
    must disclose that the purchase by the renter of insurance is not required to rent storage
    space, that the insurance policies offered by the self-service storage agent may duplicate
    the renter's homeowner's insurance or other coverage, and the self-storage facility is not
    7
    qualified or authorized to evaluate the renter's existing coverage. (§ 1758.76, subd. (b).)
    The insurance offered or sold by a self-storage facility must be "provided under an
    individual, a group, or a master policy issued to the self-service storage agent by an
    insurer authorized to write [that] type[] of insurance." (§ 1758.76, subd. (d).) The
    Insurance Code does not prevent a storage facility from including a provision in its rental
    agreement "requiring the renter to provide insurance on his or her property in the storage
    unit." (§ 1758.76, subd. (b)(1).)
    B. Standard of Review
    " ' "On appeal from an order of dismissal after an order sustaining a demurrer, our
    standard of review is de novo, i.e., we exercise our independent judgment about whether
    the complaint states a cause of action as a matter of law." ' " (Los Altos El Granada
    Investors v. City of Capitola (2006) 
    139 Cal. App. 4th 629
    , 650.) "A judgment of
    dismissal after a demurrer has been sustained without leave to amend will be affirmed if
    proper on any grounds stated in the demurrer, whether or not the court acted on that
    ground." (Carman v. Alvord (1982) 
    31 Cal. 3d 318
    , 324.) In reviewing the complaint,
    "we must assume the truth of all facts properly pleaded by the plaintiffs, as well as those
    that are judicially noticeable." (Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn. v. City of La Habra
    (2001) 
    25 Cal. 4th 809
    , 814.)
    "To the extent issues of statutory interpretation are raised, we apply the rules of
    statutory construction and exercise our independent judgment as to whether the complaint
    states a cause of action. [Citation.] Our first task in construing a statute is to ascertain
    the Legislature's intent in order to carry out the purpose of the law. If the statutory
    8
    language is clear and unambiguous, no judicial construction is required. If the statute is
    ambiguous, the words must be construed in context in light of the statutory purpose."
    (Doe v. Doe 1 (2012) 
    208 Cal. App. 4th 1185
    , 1188-1189.)
    II. Analysis
    A. The Protection Plan Is Not Insurance
    Heckart argues the trial court erred in ruling the Protection Plan is not insurance
    subject to regulation under the Insurance Code. Based on the premise that the Protection
    Plan is insurance, Heckart contends he properly stated causes of action for violation of
    the UCL, negligent misrepresentation, and civil conspiracy. We reject Heckart's
    arguments.
    In general, insurance requires shifting one party's risk of loss to another party and
    distributing that risk among similarly situated persons. (Metropolitan 
    Life, supra
    , 32
    Cal.3d at p. 654.) However, not all contracts satisfying these two elements constitute
    insurance. We must look to the "principal object and purpose of the transaction" to
    determine whether it is a contract of insurance. 
    (Truta, supra
    , 193 Cal.App.3d at p. 814.)
    Thus, we consider whether the Protection Plan's principal object was risk shifting and
    distribution.
    In Truta, the class plaintiffs challenged a provision in a standard car rental contract
    providing that for a fee, the rental company would agree to bear the cost of any damage
    to the vehicle. 
    (Truta, supra
    , 193 Cal.App.3d at p. 807.) Plaintiffs argued that this
    provision converted the transaction into one of insurance and thus the defendants were
    required to comply with insurance statutes. (Id. at pp. 807-808, 812.) Rejecting this
    9
    argument, the Truta court reasoned that the "principal object and purpose of the
    transaction" and "the element which gives the transaction its distinctive character" was
    the rental of an automobile, and not this incidental benefit offered to consumers. (Id. at
    p. 814.)
    We find Truta on point and persuasive. The Protection Plan in this case was an
    addendum to and dependent upon the Rental Agreement. Without the Rental Agreement,
    the Protection Plan would not exist and would have no purpose. Thus, we must look at
    the Rental Agreement and Protection Plan as a whole. Looking at the entire transaction
    between the parties, the principal object or "distinctive character" was the rental of
    storage space.
    The Rental Agreement allocated the risk of property damage and loss to the tenant.
    Tenants were free to choose that option. Alternatively, for an additional fee of $10 per
    month, tenants could choose to enter into the Protection Plan, which allocated risk to A-1.
    If the tenant chose to participate in the Protection Plan, it modified paragraphs 11 and 12
    of the Rental Agreement, which concerned indemnity and the tenant's obligation to
    maintain insurance on his or her stored property. Just as the parties were free to contract
    to allocate risk to the tenant, they were also free to allocate risk to A-1. Allowing parties
    to shift the risk of property damage does not turn an agreement, whose primary objective
    is storage rental into insurance.
    Additionally, we note that contrary to Heckart's argument, the Storage Liability
    Policy between A-1 and Deans & Homer does not suggest the Protection Plan is
    insurance. Heckart contends A-1 collected unlawful commissions from Deans & Homer
    10
    because A-1 charged tenants $10 per month and paid Deans & Homer $0.74 per
    Protection Plan participant, which amounted to A-1 earning over $8 million in
    "commissions" from Deans & Homer during the class period. Nothing in the Protection
    Plan or Storage Liability Policy indicates that Deans & Homer paid A-1 commissions.
    Rather, the Storage Liability Policy was an insurance policy that A-1 purchased from
    Deans & Homer to cover the losses it would have to pay participants under the Protection
    Plan. A-1 was not required to purchase the Storage Liability Policy from Deans &
    Homer as a condition of offering tenants the Protection Plan option to the Rental
    Agreement. Instead, A-1 was free to accept responsibility for loss or damage to the
    property of Protection Plan participants. The Storage Liability Policy simply provided a
    way for A-1 to limit its exposure.
    Heckart further argues A-1 violated the Insurance Code in regard to training its
    employees (§ 1758.72) and providing tenants with written disclosures about filing claims,
    duplication of coverage, employees' abilities to evaluate a tenant's existing coverage, and
    that purchase of the Protection Plan was not required to rent storage space (§ 1758.76).
    Heckart's argument fails because it puts the cart before the horse. The requirements of
    Article 16.3 of the Insurance Code only apply if the Protection Plan is insurance. This is
    clear from the statutory language. For example, section 1758.7 provides that a self-
    service storage facility shall not "offer or sell insurance unless it has complied with the
    requirements of [Article 16.3]." (§ 1758.7, subd. (a), italics added.) Similarly, a self
    storage facility "shall not sell insurance pursuant to [Article 16.3]" unless it provides
    required written materials and disclosures. (§ 1758.76, italics added.) Thus, the
    11
    requirements of Article 16.3 only come into play if the self storage facility is selling
    insurance.
    "We also give deference to the [DOI's] interpretation of the Insurance Code."
    
    (Truta, supra
    , 193 Cal.App.3d at p. 814.) Deans & Homer requested an opinion from the
    DOI as to whether a program structured substantially similar to the Protection Plan
    constituted insurance. In 2003, the DOI opined that such programs were not insurance
    for purposes of statutory regulation because the primary purpose of the contract was real
    property rental. In 2008, which was after the enactment of Article 16.3 of the Insurance
    Code, the DOI confirmed its 2003 opinion.
    Heckart claims the DOI's opinion is not entitled to deference because Deans &
    Homer did not accurately describe the Protection Plan program to the DOI. First, he
    claims Deans & Homer failed to disclose that self-storage facilities would pay claims.
    Contrary to Heckart's argument, Deans & Homer's letter makes clear that the property
    owner "would retain or assume liability for various types of risks" and "[a]ny
    commitment to retain risk made to the tenant would be made by the owner only." Based
    on this language, Deans & Homer disclosed that property owners, such as storage
    facilities, would pay claims to tenants.
    Heckart also argues Deans & Homer failed to disclose a "pass through of risk"
    under the Storage Liability Policy between Deans & Homer and A-1. However, Deans &
    Homer accurately disclosed to the DOI that the program "would not be a transaction
    between the tenant and any insurer or even a pass through of risk from the tenant to the
    insurer." We do not find anything misleading in this representation. As we previously
    12
    discussed, the Storage Liability Policy was simply an insurance policy that A-1
    purchased to cover its potential losses and was not required as a condition of offering
    tenants the option to enroll in the Protection Plan. Moreover, Deans & Homer disclosed
    to the DOI that property owners had the option of purchasing coverage from Deans &
    Homer.
    It is clear from the DOI's opinion letters that it does not believe that the Insurance
    Code regulates programs such as the Protection Plan. "We have long recognized that
    considerable weight should be accorded to an executive department's construction of a
    statutory scheme it is entrusted to administer, and the principle of deference to
    administrative interpretations." (Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense
    Council, Inc. (1984) 
    467 U.S. 837
    , 844, fn. omitted.) Based on our analysis of the
    Protection Plan and statutory scheme upon which Heckart relies, we see no reason to
    depart from the DOI's opinion in that regard.
    Based on the foregoing, we conclude the Protection Plan is not insurance subject
    to regulation under the Insurance Code.
    B. Heckart's Claims
    1. UCL, Negligent Misrepresentation, and Civil Conspiracy
    Heckart's UCL, negligent misrepresentation, and civil conspiracy causes of action
    were all premised on his allegation that the Protection Plan is insurance. Specifically, his
    UCL claim alleged Defendants' sale of unlicensed and illegal insurance and failure to
    comply with the Insurance Code constituted unfair and unlawful business practices
    within the meaning of the UCL. Similarly, in his negligent misrepresentation cause of
    13
    action, Heckart alleged Defendants misrepresented that the Protection Plan is not a
    contract of insurance. Lastly, in his civil conspiracy claim, Heckart alleged Defendants
    conspired to sell the Protection Plan in a manner calculated to avoid regulation under the
    Insurance Code.
    Because the UCL, negligent misrepresentation, and civil conspiracy causes of
    action are all dependant on the allegation that the Protection Plan is insurance and we
    have concluded it is not, the trial court properly sustained Defendants' demurrer as to
    those causes of action.
    2. CLRA
    In his first amended complaint, Heckart alleged Defendants violated the CLRA by
    failing to represent the Protection Plan is insurance, representing that purchase of the
    Protection Plan is required, and imposing an unconscionable contract on class members
    by requiring enrollment in an illegal insurance policy. On appeal, Heckart recognizes
    that the CLRA does not apply to insurance contracts, but argues his CLRA cause of
    action should survive because the CLRA applies to misrepresentations about the
    Protection Plan contained in the Rental Agreement. We reject Heckart's argument.
    The CLRA prohibits unfair or deceptive acts that "result[ ] in the sale or lease of
    goods or services to any consumer . . . ." (Civ. Code, § 1770.) The CLRA defines
    "[s]ervices" as "work, labor, and services for other than a commercial or business use,
    including services furnished in connection with the sale or repair of goods." (Civ. Code,
    § 1761, subd. (b).) Insurance does not constitute a "service" for purposes of the CLRA.
    (Fairbanks v. Superior Court (2009) 
    46 Cal. 4th 56
    , 62-63 (Fairbanks).) The CLRA must
    14
    "be liberally construed and applied to promote its underlying purposes, which are to
    protect consumers against unfair and deceptive business practices and to provide efficient
    and economical procedures to secure such protection." (Civ. Code, § 1760.)
    In order to prove his CLRA cause of action as he framed it in his first amended
    complaint, Heckart would need to establish that the Protection Plan was insurance. Even
    if he could prove that, which he cannot, a transaction involving the sale of insurance is
    exempt from the CLRA. 
    (Fairbanks, supra
    , 46 Cal.4th at pp. 62-63.) Recognizing this
    hurdle, Heckart contends the CLRA applies to the Rental Agreement because storage
    rental is a "service" within the meaning of the CLRA.
    The CLRA applies to the "sale or lease of goods or services." (Civ. Code,
    § 1770.) In this case, the Rental Agreement was for the lease of real property, which is
    not a "good" or "service." (See McKell v. Washington Mutual, Inc. (2006) 
    142 Cal. App. 4th 1457
    , 1465-1467, 1488 [the CLRA does not apply to a transaction resulting
    in the sale of real property].) Heckart contends the Rental Agreement is for "services"
    because it "requires A-1 to provide both security and availability services." The fact that
    A-1 agreed to provide "security and availability" services was ancillary to the main
    purpose of the Rental Agreement, which was lease of storage space, and does not
    transform the agreement into one for the sale or lease of "services" within the meaning of
    the CLRA.
    Based on the foregoing, Heckart failed to allege facts sufficient to properly state a
    CLRA claim.
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    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. Respondents are entitled to their costs on appeal.
    McINTYRE, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    NARES, Acting P. J.
    McDONALD, J.
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