American Safety Indemnity Co. v. Admiral Insurance ( 2013 )


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  • Filed 9/27/13
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    AMERICAN SAFETY INDEMNITY                          D061587
    COMPANY,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    (Super. Ct. No. 37-2010-00092157-
    v.                                         CU-IC-CTL)
    ADMIRAL INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Richard
    E.L. Strauss, Judge. Affirmed.
    Law Offices of Martin N. Buchanan, Martin N. Buchanan; Walsh McKean
    Furcolo and James T. Derfler for Defendant and Appellant.
    Blau & Associates, David S. Blau and Ron L. Nelson for Plaintiff and
    Respondent.
    In this case, we once again apply the well-established principle that any limitation
    on the coverage provided by a liability insurance policy must be express and consistent
    with the reasonable expectations of the insured.
    Here, the subject commercial general liability policy has a provision labeled "Self-
    insured Retention (SIR)" that clearly makes the insured liable for the first $250,000 in
    damages payable to any third party claimant. The policy also makes it clear the insured's
    payment of defense costs count toward meeting the insured's SIR obligations.
    However, the SIR clause we are asked to consider does not expressly make
    payment of the SIR a condition of the insurer's broader obligation to provide a defense
    when an arguably covered claim is tendered. Rather, the SIR clause expressly applies
    only as a limitation on the insurer's duty to indemnify the insured for covered damages
    for which the insured is found liable. Given the language of the policy, an insured could
    quite reasonably interpret it as providing a defense to arguably covered claims as soon as
    such claims are tendered and before any SIR has been paid. Thus, like the trial court, we
    find the defendant insurer in this equitable subrogation action had a duty to defend its
    insureds when large soil subsidence claims were made against them and without regard to
    the SIR provisions in their policies.
    We recognize other liability insurance policies contain SIR clauses that expressly
    and unambiguously make payment of a SIR obligation a condition of any obligation
    under the policy, including any duty to defend. We also recognize those SIR provisions
    have been enforced according to their terms. The policy in dispute here, however, does
    not contain such an express condition on the defendant insurer's duty to defend.
    Because the defendant insurer had a duty to defend its insureds, principles of
    equitable subrogation required that it reimburse the defense costs another insurer,
    2
    plaintiff herein, paid on behalf of the defendant's insureds in the course of the underlying
    subsidence litigation. Although the plaintiff insurer made the payments notwithstanding
    the fact the insureds were not covered under any policy the plaintiff issued, the
    circumstances under which the plaintiff made the payments did not impair the plaintiffs'
    right to equitable subrogation.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A. Fessler Lawsuit & ASIC I
    This case and a related appeal we decided in 2009, American Safety Indemnity
    Company v. Admiral Insurance Company (Dec. 4, 2009, D053564) (nonpub. opn.) (ASIC
    I), grow out of the same underlying subsidence litigation and involve the same insureds
    and their insurers. We briefly summarized the underlying litigation in ASIC I:
    "Between the late 1990's and 2002, Zephyr Newhall, LP, and its partner Zephyr
    Partners, LLC (collectively Zephyr), worked with developer D.R. Horton, Inc. [Los
    Angeles Holding Company; hereafter Holding], to build housing on a tract of land in
    Santa Clarita which Zephyr owned. [Holding] hired Ebensteiner Co. (Ebensteiner) to
    grade the tract pursuant to plans created by Leighton and Associates, Inc. (Leighton), a
    geological engineering firm. As part of their grading contract, Ebensteiner agreed to
    indemnify [Holding] against liability for any loss attributable to Ebensteiner's breach of
    duty even if [Holding's] conduct also contributed to the loss.
    "The grading began in February 2002, but was not without incident. On or about
    March 11, 2002, a backcut slope failure occurred as a direct result of the grading, creating
    3
    a 140- by 100-foot landslide and tension cracks that visibly extended to within 50 feet of
    existing upslope homes. Another similar backcut slope failure, resulting in a 70- by 200-
    foot slide, occurred April 4, 2002.
    "On or about April 15, 2002, several adjacent homeowners noticed physical
    damage to their property caused by the slides. On January 23, 2003, the homeowners
    sued [Holding], Ebensteiner, Zephyr and Leighton, among others (hereafter Fessler
    lawsuit). [¶] . . . [¶]
    "At the time of the work, [Holding] was insured by defendant and respondent
    Admiral Insurance Company (Admiral), while Ebensteiner was insured by plaintiff and
    appellant American Safety Indemnity Co (ASIC). The respective policies limited
    coverage to $1 million per occurrence. The Admiral policy contained a provision which
    designated it 'excess' over the ASIC coverage; the ASIC policy contained a similar excess
    insurance disclaimer for those instances where the ASIC policy was not primary. The
    ASIC policy also covered [Holding] as an 'additional insured.'
    "[Holding] tendered its defense of the Fessler claims to ASIC, which initially
    declined the tender. [Holding] then filed a bad-faith lawsuit against ASIC. On May 6,
    2004, [Holding] and ASIC settled the bad-faith lawsuit. Under the terms of the
    settlement, ASIC agreed to pay [Holding's] defense costs and to not thereafter dispute its
    duty to defend [Holding].
    "The Fessler lawsuit itself was settled on October 1, 2007. Ebensteiner agreed to
    pay the Fessler plaintiffs $2.52 million, [Holding] agreed to pay plaintiffs $1.75 million,
    4
    and Leighton agreed to pay plaintiffs $630,000, for a total sum of $4.9 million. Pursuant
    to the agreement, [Holding] and Ebensteiner dismissed with prejudice their cross-claims
    against one another, with the exception of claims either of their insurers had against the
    other's insurer. ASIC and Admiral each contributed their respective policy limits of $1
    million to the settlement.
    "While the Fessler lawsuit was pending, ASIC asked Admiral to contribute to the
    defense costs ASIC incurred on behalf of [Holding]. Admiral refused and ASIC filed [a
    declaratory relief action]. ASIC alleged Admiral was obligated to reimburse ASIC a pro
    rata share of the $2 million ASIC spent on [Holding's] defense. As we have indicated,
    ASIC and Admiral filed cross-motions for summary judgment.
    "Among other matters, in opposing Admiral's motion, ASIC relied on expert and
    percipient witness deposition testimony that had been developed in the Fessler lawsuit.
    In particular, ASIC relied on two experts retained by the Fessler plaintiffs who concluded
    the slope failure was caused by defects in Leighton's grading plans and not by any
    deficiency in the grading performed by Ebensteiner. ASIC also relied on a geologist
    employed by Leighton who testified that, as far as he knew, Ebensteiner [ASIC's named
    insured] performed the grading according to Leighton's plans." (ASIC I, supra, D053564
    [at pp 3-6].)
    In ASIC I, Admiral argued the broad indemnity clause in the Ebensteiner grading
    subcontract protected both Holding and Admiral from any indemnity claim by
    Ebensteiner or ASIC. In ASIC I, we held that although the indemnity clause might
    5
    provide a complete defense to the claims ASIC was making, it would only do so upon a
    showing Ebensteiner was negligent. We found that the record did not establish
    Ebensteiner's negligence as a matter of law and reversed the summary judgment entered
    in Admiral's favor.
    B. ASIC II
    In addition to Holding, the Fessler plaintiffs also sued two Holding related entities,
    D.R. Horton, Inc. and D.R. Horton, Inc.—Los Angeles (collectively the Horton entities).
    The Horton entities had no contractual relationship with Ebensteiner, and Ebensteiner
    owed them no duty of indemnity; moreover, the Horton entities were not additional
    insureds on Ebensteiner's ASIC policy.
    The Horton entities were named insureds under the Admiral policy.
    Following Holding's bad faith lawsuit, ASIC paid the cost of not only Holding's
    defense in the Fessler lawsuit but also the cost of defending the Horton entities. All three
    entities were represented by the same law firm, which did not segregate its billings
    between the three. ASIC paid a total of $2,237,068.73 in defense costs on behalf of
    Holding and the two Horton entities.
    After the Fessler litigation was settled, ASIC brought this separate declaratory
    relief action (ASIC II) against Admiral in which it sought reimbursement for the cost of
    defending the Horton entities. ASIC alleged substantive causes of action for subrogation,
    indemnity and contribution.
    By way of an order granting ASIC's motion for summary adjudication, the trial
    6
    court determined that, as a matter of law, Admiral owed the Horton entities a duty to
    defend them in the Fessler action. In particular, the trial court determined that under the
    terms of the Admiral policy, although the SIR provision required that the Horton entities
    pay the first $250,000 in any damages recovered by a third party, Admiral's duty to
    defend the Horton entities was independent of the policy's SIR provisions.
    At a later bench trial, ASIC presented a witness who testified to the defense costs
    paid by ASIC on behalf of Holding and the two Horton entities, and to statements made
    by representatives of the Horton entities that caused ASIC to conclude the Horton entities
    had no insurance coverage for the Fessler claims. ASIC also presented evidence that
    showed its settlement of the earlier Holding bad faith action did not include any
    provisions with respect to defense of the Horton entities.
    Admiral did not present any witnesses.
    In its statement of decision, the trial court determined ASIC paid defense costs on
    behalf of the Horton Entities, which were in fact Admiral's obligation, and was therefore
    entitled to subrogation for those costs. The trial court rejected Admiral's contention
    ASIC had acted as volunteer or had otherwise waived its right to reimbursement from
    Admiral. The trial court awarded ASIC a total of $1.9 million in reimbursement of the
    defenses costs it had paid and interest.
    Admiral filed a timely notice of appeal.
    7
    DISCUSSION
    I
    "In the case of insurance, subrogation takes the form of an insurer's right to be put
    in the position of the insured in order to pursue recovery from third parties legally
    responsible to the insured for a loss which the insurer has both insured and paid.
    [Citations.] '"As now applied [the doctrine of equitable subrogation] is broad enough to
    include every instance in which one person, not acting as a mere volunteer or intruder,
    pays a debt for which another is primarily liable, and which in equity and good
    conscience should have been discharged by the latter." [Citations.]' [Citation.]"
    (Fireman's Fund Ins. Co. v. Maryland Casualty Co. (1998) 
    65 Cal.App.4th 1279
    , 1291–
    1292 (Fireman's Fund).)
    "The essential elements of an insurer's cause of action for equitable subrogation
    are as follows: (a) the insured suffered a loss for which the defendant is liable, either as
    the wrongdoer whose act or omission caused the loss or because the defendant is legally
    responsible to the insured for the loss caused by the wrongdoer; (b) the claimed loss was
    one for which the insurer was not primarily liable; (c) the insurer has compensated the
    insured in whole or in part for the same loss for which the defendant is primarily liable;
    (d) the insurer has paid the claim of its insured to protect its own interest and not as a
    volunteer; (e) the insured has an existing, assignable cause of action against the defendant
    which the insured could have asserted for its own benefit had it not been compensated for
    its loss by the insurer; (f) the insurer has suffered damages caused by the act or omission
    8
    upon which the liability of the defendant depends; (g) justice requires that the loss be
    entirely shifted from the insurer to the defendant, whose equitable position is inferior to
    that of the insurer; and (h) the insurer's damages are in a liquidated sum, generally the
    amount paid to the insured. [Citations.]" (Fireman's Fund, supra, 65 Cal.App.4th at p.
    1292.)
    "The right of subrogation is purely derivative. An insurer entitled to subrogation
    is in the same position as an assignee of the insured's claim, and succeeds only to the
    rights of the insured. The subrogated insurer is said to '"stand in the shoes"' of its
    insured, because it has no greater rights than the insured and is subject to the same
    defenses assertable against the insured. Thus, an insurer cannot acquire by subrogation
    anything to which the insured has no rights, and may claim no rights which the insured
    does not have. [Citations.]" (Fireman's Fund, supra, 65 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1292–1293.)
    II
    In its principal argument on appeal, Admiral contends it owed the Horton entities
    no duty of defense and, hence, ASIC was not entitled to any subrogation because,
    contrary to the trial court's determination, the SIR provision in Admiral's policy applied
    not only to its duty to indemnify but also to its duty to defend.
    We agree with the trial court. The SIR was not a condition of Admiral's duty to
    defend.
    A. Admiral's Policy
    The insuring clause in Admiral's policy states: "We will pay those sums that the
    9
    insured becomes legally obligated to pay as damages because of 'bodily injury' or
    'property damage' to which this insurance applies. We will have the right and duty to
    defend the insured against any 'suit' seeking those damages. However, we will have no
    duty to defend the insured against any 'suit' seeking damages for 'bodily injury' or
    'property damage' to which this insurance does not apply. . . ." (Italics added.)
    The Admiral policy contains the following definitions:
    "17. 'Property damage' means:
    "a. Physical injury to tangible property, including all resulting loss of use of that
    property. All such loss of use shall be deemed to occur at the time of the physical injury
    that caused it; or
    "b. Loss of use of tangible property that is not physically injured. All such loss of
    use shall be deemed to occur at the time of the 'occurrence' that caused it.
    "18. 'Suit' means a civil proceeding in which damages because of 'bodily injury,'
    'property damage' or 'personal and advertising injury' to which this insurance applies are
    alleged. . . ."
    Admiral's duties are limited by an SIR endorsement to its policy, which provides
    in part:
    "1. Our total liability for all damages will not exceed the limits of liability as
    stated in the Declarations and will apply in excess of the insured's self-insured retention
    (the 'Retained Limit'). 'Retained Limit' is the amount shown below, which you are
    obligated to pay, and only includes damages otherwise payable under this policy.
    10
    "If the 'Retained Limit' is subject to an annual aggregate, the aggregate amount
    shall be payable by the insured even if the policy is terminated prior to the expiration.
    "'Retained Limit': [¶] . . . [¶] $ 250,000 __________          Per Occurrence-Other than
    Products and Completed
    Operations
    $ 250,000 __________           Per Occurrence-Products
    and Completed Operations
    "2. Expenses incurred under the SUPPLEMENTAL PAYMENTS-COVERAGES
    A AND B provisions of this policy are:
    "[X] Included in the 'Retained Limit,' [¶] . . . [¶]
    "4. We have the right in all cases, at our expense, to assume charge of the defense
    and/or settlement of any claim wherein your liability is reasonably expected to exceed the
    Self-Insured Retention and, upon written request from us, you will tender such portion of
    the Self-Insured Retention as we may deem necessary to complete the settlement of such
    claim."
    The policy Admiral provided the Horton entities is written on a "Commercial
    General Liability" form. The face of the policy identifies it as providing primary
    coverage to its insureds. The policy makes Admiral's coverage excess only when other
    coverage is available to its insureds by way of other insurance acquired by the insureds or
    when the insureds are named as additional insured on another party's policy.
    Significantly, when such other insurance is available and Admiral becomes an excess
    11
    insurer, the policy states: "[W]e will have no duty under Coverages A or B to defend the
    insured against any 'suit' if any other insurer has a duty to defend the insured against that
    'suit'. If no other insurer defends, we will undertake to do so, but we will be entitled to
    the insured's rights against all those other insurers."
    B. Interpretation of SIR Endorsements
    The court in Legacy Vulcan Corp. v. Superior Court (2010) 
    185 Cal.App.4th 677
    (Legacy Vulcan) interpreted a policy that, like the Admiral policy, contained an SIR
    endorsement. In Legacy Vulcan, the court held the SIR provisions only applied to the
    insurer's duty to indemnify its insured for damages, not its duty to defend.
    Importantly, like the commercial general liability coverage Admiral provided to
    the Horton entities, the policy the court considered in Legacy Vulcan provided primary
    coverage rather than excess coverage. (Legacy Vulcan, supra, 185 Cal.App.4th at pp.
    695-696.) The distinct roles played by primary and excess carriers are important. As the
    court in Signal Companies, Inc. v. Harbor Ins. Co. (1980) 
    27 Cal.3d 359
     explained, a
    primary insurer typically charges a greater premium than an excess insurer, because the
    primary insurer will normally bear the cost of providing the insured with a defense.
    When a settlement or judgment exceeds the limits of the primary insurer's policy limits,
    the excess insurer will be required to contribute to the settlement or judgment but,
    typically, because a judgment or settlement ends the lawsuit, the excess carrier will not
    pay any of the insured's defense costs. (Id. at p. 365.)
    The court in Legacy Vulcan recognized that, given the different roles primary and
    12
    excess insurers play, there is a presumption an excess carrier has no obligation to pay
    defense costs until the underlying primary insurance has been exhausted or there is
    express policy language that imposes an earlier defense obligation on the excess carrier.
    (Legacy Vulcan, supra, 185 Cal.App.4th at p. 695.) However, the court in Legacy Vulcan
    held that in the case of a primary policy with an SIR provision, the presumption with
    respect to defense costs, which operates in favor of an excess carrier, has no application:
    "One of the reasons for this rule is that the defense obligation falls on the primary insurer,
    whose greater premium reflects that risk. [Citation.] '[I]t is unnecessary to impose an
    immediate duty to defend on the excess carrier to afford the insured that to which it is
    entitled, namely, the full protection of a defense on its behalf.' [Citation.] Another
    reason for the rule is that, absent policy language to the contrary, the insured could have
    no reasonable expectation that an excess insurer would provide a defense before the
    primary insurance is exhausted. [Citation.]
    "These reasons, however, do not justify extending the rule that an excess insurer
    has no duty to defend unless the underlying primary insurance is exhausted to insurers
    who provide primary umbrella coverage with a self-insured retention, absent clear policy
    language so providing. So-called "self-insurance" is no insurance and affords the insured
    no protection at all. [Citation.] To require the exhaustion of a self-insured retention
    before an insurer will have a duty to defend would not ensure that the defense obligation
    rests on the insurer receiving premiums for that risk, but instead would result in no
    insurer providing a defense prior to exhaustion. Moreover, in the absence of clear policy
    13
    language so providing, to require the exhaustion of a self-insured retention before an
    insurer will have a duty to defend would be contrary to the reasonable expectations of the
    insured to be provided an immediate defense in connection with its primary coverage. If,
    under the terms of the policy, the insured would have a reasonable expectation that the
    insurer would provide a defense, any limitation on the insurer's defense obligation must
    be conspicuous, plain and clear. [Citations.]" (Legacy Vulcan, supra, 185 Cal.App.4th at
    pp. 695-696, fn. omitted.)
    Because the policy it was considering did not expressly relieve the insurer of its
    duty to defend before the SIR was satisfied, the court in Legacy Vulcan held the insurer
    was obligated under its insuring clause to provide a defense when the underlying claim
    was tendered to it. (Legacy Vulcan, supra, 185 Cal.App.4th at p. 697.)
    Contrary to Admiral's argument, we believe Legacy Vulcan was correctly decided.
    First, we note it is consistent with the general guidance the Supreme Court provided with
    respect to self-insurance in Aerojet-General Corp. v. Transport Indemnity Co. (1997) 
    17 Cal.4th 38
    , 75 (Aerojet). In Aerojet, the court held that an insured was not required to
    contribute defense costs attributable to periods during which it was effectively uninsured:
    "In a strict sense, 'self-insurance' is a 'misnomer.' [Citations.] '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.) '[S]elf-insurance . . . is
    equivalent to no insurance . . . .' [Citation.] As such, it is 'repugnant to the [very] concept
    of insurance . . . .' [Citation.] If insurance requires an undertaking by one to indemnify
    14
    another, it cannot be satisfied by a self-contradictory undertaking by one to indemnify
    oneself." (Id. at p. 72, fn. 20.)
    The holding in Legacy Vulcan is also consistent with other cases that have
    analyzed particular SIR endorsements. In Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Imperial Casualty
    & Indemnity Co. (2000) 
    81 Cal.App.4th 356
     (Montgomery Ward), insurers argued that
    although the retained limits provisions of their respective policies did not specifically
    refer to defense costs, the retained limits requirements should have been interpreted as
    underlying insurance within the meaning of separate provisions that made the policies
    excess to other available insurance. In rejecting this argument, the court stated: "[A]ll of
    the policies make it clear there is a difference between underlying insurance and retained
    limits, and the Insurers understood this difference when they entered into these contracts.
    The Insurers now ask us to relieve them of this clear contractual obligation, and instead to
    deem retained limits in other potentially applicable policies to be primary insurance. To
    do so, we would have to find Montgomery Ward's SIR's in all of its policies constitute
    'other collectible insurance with any other insurer' . . . or 'specific valid and Collectible
    Underlying Insurances'. . . , as to which the Insurers' policies are excess. This we will not
    do. We are offered no public policy or other compelling reason to engraft new meaning
    on plain language, and accordingly 'we may not rewrite what [the insurers] themselves
    wrote.' [Citation.]" (Id. at p. 367, fns. omitted.)
    As the court in Montgomery Ward also noted, the cases that have required
    satisfaction of a retained limit as a condition of an insurer's duty to defend were, in fact,
    15
    not primary policies but in excess policies or involved express policy language that made
    both the duty to indemnify and the duty to defend subject to an SIR. (Montgomery Ward,
    supra, 81 Cal.App.4th at pp. 367-368; see, e.g., Nabisco, Inc. v. Transport Indemnity Co.
    (1983) 
    143 Cal.App.3d 831
    , 835 [policy language provided that insurance was excess to
    SIR]; General Star Indemnity Co. v. Superior Court (1996) 
    47 Cal.App.4th 1586
    , 1592
    [same]; City of Oxnard v. Twin City Fire Ins. Co. (1995) 
    37 Cal.App.4th 1072
    , 1077-
    1078 [same].) "The significant point is that these cases, like all other insurance cases,
    look first to the terms of the policy. [Citation.]" (Montgomery Ward, supra, at p. 368.)
    C. Analysis
    Contrary to Admiral's argument, its policy does not expressly and unambiguously
    make its duty to defend the Horton entities subject to the SIR. Rather, the SIR
    endorsement expressly provides the contrary: "'Retained Limit' is the amount shown
    below, which you are obligated to pay, and only includes damages otherwise payable
    under this policy." In light of this unambiguous limitation on the scope of the SIR, it is
    not surprising that there is no other provision of the SIR that nonetheless extends the
    scope of the SIR to include the costs of defense.
    Were there any doubt as to the scope of Admiral's SIR, we need only look to the
    policy's provisions with respect to other insurance. As in Montgomery Ward, the
    Admiral policy expressly provides that where a claim is covered by other insurance, the
    Admiral policy is excess and Admiral has no duty to defend. The absence of such an
    express extension of the scope of the SIR leads us, and would lead any reasonable
    16
    insured, to conclude that, consistent with the express terms of the SIR, the SIR only
    applies to damages.
    In sum, the trial court did not err in determining the Horton entities were not
    required to satisfy the SIR as a condition of obtaining a defense from Admiral.
    III
    Admiral argues that even if it owed the Horton entities a duty to defend, ASIC
    either waived its right to subrogation or acted as a volunteer. Like the trial court, we
    reject these defenses as well.
    A. Settlement with Holding
    The trial court found ASIC's settlement of Holding's bad faith suit against it did
    not bar ASIC's later effort to obtain subrogation for defense costs it paid on behalf of the
    other Horton entities. The record supports the trial court's finding that by way of the
    settlement ASIC only agreed to provide defense costs to Holding and that it did not by
    way of the settlement forego its right to recoup those defense costs from other parties. In
    particular, nothing in the agreement itself or in the circumstances giving rise to it support
    Admiral's contention the defense costs ASIC paid were paid as "damages" for any act of
    bad faith on ASIC's part and therefore outside the scope of expenses that were rightfully
    Admiral's obligation.
    We reject Admiral's reliance on United Services Automobile Association v. Alaska
    Insurance Company (2001) 
    94 Cal.App.4th 638
    , 646 (USAA). There, the excess carrier,
    USAA, sought subrogation against the primary insurer, New Hampshire, for damages
    17
    USAA paid the insured, Mrs. Thomas, in her bad faith action against USAA. New
    Hampshire in fact provided the insured with a defense and settled with the underlying
    personal injury claimaint within New Hampshire's policy limits. (Id. at p. 647.) Given
    these circumstances, we concluded USAA had no subrogation claim against New
    Hampshire for the USAA's own bad faith in failing to provide Mrs. Thomas with a
    timely defense. (Ibid.) We stated: "Because USAA, under the theory of equitable
    subrogation, stands in Mrs. Thomas's shoes and is entitled to recover from New
    Hampshire only what Mrs. Thomas could have recovered from New Hampshire, USAA's
    equitable subrogation claim rests on the untenable premise that Mrs. Thomas could have
    recovered compensation from New Hampshire for USAA's alleged wrongful denial of
    coverage." (Ibid.)
    In ASIC's subrogation action, it stands in the shoes of the Horton entities. The
    Horton entities never made any bad faith claim against ASIC because there was no theory
    upon which ASIC owed the Horton entities any duty of defense: the Horton entities were
    not named insureds under the ASIC policy and were not additional insureds as a result of
    any contract with Ebensteiner. The Horton entities were named insured under the
    Admiral policy, and it is Admiral's unfulfilled defense obligations under that policy that
    gives rise to ASIC's subrogation claim. In short, unlike the circumstances we confronted
    in USAA, here, ASIC is in no sense seeking to recover subrogation for any wrong it
    committed.
    18
    B. Volunteer
    Like the trial court, we also reject Admiral's contention that it voluntarily paid the
    Horton entities' defense costs.
    The record shows that, notwithstanding requests from ASIC, the law firm
    defending Holding and the other Horton entities refused to provide ASIC with separate
    billing for each of the three entities. We also note the record shows and the trial court
    found that Admiral and Horton failed to disclose to ASIC the existence of the Admiral
    policies. Given these circumstances, the volunteer defense did not require that ASIC
    engage in further coverage litigation with Holding or the other Horton entities in order to
    preserve its rights against Admiral, which, as we have discussed, owed the Horton
    entities a duty of defense. In this regard, we note where, as here, one insurer has an
    otherwise valid subrogation claim against another insurer, the "volunteer" defense has
    been criticized: "'"[T]here are . . . compelling reasons for allowing recovery when the
    other insurer has not entered the case at all or has refused to defend the insured against
    suit by the injured party. . . . [T]his view represents the current trend and better rule in
    the 'volunteer' situations."' [Citation.]" (Fireman's Fund, supra, 65 Cal.App.4th at p.
    1290.)
    19
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. ASIC to recover its costs of appeal.
    BENKE, Acting P. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    McINTYRE, J.
    O'ROURKE, J.
    20
    

Document Info

Docket Number: D061587

Judges: Benke

Filed Date: 9/27/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/3/2024