Farmers Ins. Exchange v. Superior Court CA2/7 , 163 Cal. Rptr. 3d 609 ( 2013 )


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  • Filed 10/1/13 Farmers Ins. Exchange v. Superior Court CA2/7
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION SEVEN
    FARMERS INSURANCE EXCHANGE,                                          B248324
    Petitioner,                                                 (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BC477720)
    v.
    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF LOS
    ANGELES COUNTY,
    Respondent;
    JOSE LUIS CERVANTES BAUTISTA
    et al.,
    Real Parties in Interest.
    ORIGINAL PROCEEDINGS in mandate. Salvatore Sirna, Judge. Petition
    granted.
    Archer Norris, Limor Lehavi, Mariyetta A. Meyers-Lopez; Greines, Martin, Stein
    & Richland, Robert A. Olson and Feris M. Greenberger for Petitioner.
    No appearance for respondent.
    Louis G. Fazzi and Fernando J. Bernheim for Real Parties in Interest.
    ______________________
    INTRODUCTION
    Farmers Insurance Exchange (Farmers) petitions this court for a writ of mandate
    directing the trial court to set aside its order denying Farmers‟ motion for summary
    adjudication. Farmers brought this action for declaratory relief and sought summary
    adjudication on the ground there was no potential for coverage under the homeowners
    insurance policy it issued to its insureds, real parties in interest Jose Luis Cervantes
    Bautista and Sara Bautista. We agree with Farmers and grant the petition.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Farmers issued a homeowners insurance policy for a house in Pomona to Jose
    Bautista and Lourdes M. Sanchez. Sara Bautista, Jose‟s wife, was an additional insured
    under the policy. The policy provided personal liability coverage in the amount of
    $300,000 per occurrence under Coverage E, which states: “We pay those damages which
    an insured becomes legally obligated to pay because of bodily injury . . . resulting from
    an occurrence to which this coverage applies.” (Bold omitted.) The policy excludes
    from Coverage E bodily injury that “7. results from the ownership, maintenance, use,
    loading or unloading of . . . b. motor vehicles . . . .” (Bold omitted.)
    Farmers also issued a vehicle insurance policy covering a 2004 Dodge pickup
    truck owned by Jose Bautista. The policy provided coverage for bodily injury in the
    amounts of $30,000 per person and $60,000 per occurrence. Under Coverage A, the
    policy provided: “We will pay damages for which any insured person is legally liable
    because of bodily injury to any person . . . arising out of the ownership, maintenance or
    use of a private passenger car, a utility car, or a utility trailer.”1
    1      “Utility car” includes a pickup truck.
    2
    On August 17, 2007 the Bautistas‟ granddaughter, Valerie Bautista, who was less
    than two years old, was killed in the driveway of the Bautistas‟ house when Jose Bautista
    ran over her with his pickup truck. Sara Bautista routinely allowed the grandchildren to
    greet Jose at his truck when he came home. She knew that she needed to take extra
    precautions and supervise the younger grandchildren, including Valerie, when they went
    to greet Jose, to keep them out of what the Bautistas call the “zone of danger.” On the
    day of the accident, however, Valerie “got out of the house without [Sara] knowing it.”
    She walked in front of Jose‟s truck, and he ran her over.
    On August 14, 2009 Valerie‟s mother, Kenia Casaya, and her sisters filed an
    action against the Bautistas and Valerie‟s father, Jose Luis Bautista, Jr., for wrongful
    death, negligence, and negligent supervision. Their second amended complaint, which
    included Valerie‟s father as a plaintiff rather than a defendant, contained two causes of
    action, the first for negligence in operating a motor vehicle and the second for general
    negligence. In the second cause of action, the plaintiffs alleged that “[d]efendant SARA
    BAUTISTA, so negligently cared for, supervised, watched, managed, controlled and
    failed to care for, supervise, watch, manage and control decedent Valerie Bautista, who
    was a[t] the time an infant under the age of two (2) years, as to allow decedent Valerie
    Bautista to leave Defendant‟s [sic] home unsupervised, where she was run over and killed
    by Defendant JOSE LUIS BAUTISTA, while in the driveway of Defendants‟ home.”
    (Underscoring omitted.)
    Farmers provided a defense to the Bautistas in the Casaya action. On July 6, 2012
    the parties resolved that action by a stipulated judgment in the amount of $360,000. In
    addition, the plaintiffs signed a covenant not to execute on the judgment in exchange for
    an assignment of action by the Bautistas.
    Farmers then filed this action against the Bautistas for declaratory relief. Farmers
    sought a declaration that it was not obligated to provide coverage under the Bautistas‟
    homeowners insurance policy with respect to the Casaya action for two reasons: (1) The
    motor vehicle exclusion in the homeowners policy precluded any potential coverage
    because all of the claims in the Casaya action arose out of Jose Bautista‟s use of a motor
    3
    vehicle; and (2) the homeowners policy excluded coverage for residents of the insureds‟
    household, and Valerie was a resident of the Bautistas‟ household at the time of the
    accident. The Bautistas filed a cross-complaint for breach of the implied covenant of
    good faith and fair dealing and for fraud based on Farmers‟ failure to pay benefits due
    under both the homeowners and automobile insurance policies.
    Farmers filed a motion for summary adjudication on the complaint and the
    Bautistas‟ cross-complaint on the ground there was no potential for coverage and thus no
    duty to defend or indemnify the Bautistas under the homeowners insurance policy.
    Relying on State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Partridge (1973) 
    10 Cal.3d 94
     (Partridge)
    and National American Ins. Co. v. Coburn (1989) 
    209 Cal.App.3d 914
     (Coburn), Farmers
    argued that because Jose‟s use of a vehicle caused Valerie‟s death, and Sara‟s negligent
    supervision of Valerie was not an independent cause of Valerie‟s death, the motor vehicle
    exclusion in the homeowners insurance policy precluded coverage under that policy. The
    Bautistas opposed the motion on the ground that two independent negligent acts, Jose‟s
    negligent use of the vehicle and Sara‟s negligent supervision of the children, caused
    Valerie‟s death. The Bautistas argued that under Partridge and State Farm Fire & Cas.
    Co. v. Kohl (1982) 
    131 Cal.App.3d 1031
     (Kohl) Sara Bautista was independently liable
    for Valerie‟s death because she placed Valerie in the “zone of danger,” and therefore the
    Bautistas‟ homeowners insurance policy provided coverage.
    The trial court agreed with the Bautistas and denied Farmers‟ motion for summary
    adjudication. The court found that under Partridge and Kohl “Sara Bautista‟s negligent
    supervision [of Valerie] exists independently of the „use‟ of a motor vehicle.” The court
    concluded that the motor vehicle exclusion in the homeowners insurance policy did not
    apply.
    Farmers filed this petition for writ of mandate seeking review of the order denying
    its summary adjudication motion. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (m)(1).) We issued an
    order to show cause why the writ should not be granted.
    4
    DISCUSSION
    A.    Propriety of Writ Review and Standard of Review
    “„An order denying a motion for summary adjudication may be reviewed by way
    of a petition for writ of mandate. [Citation.] Where the trial court‟s denial of a motion
    for summary judgment will result in trial on non-actionable claims, a writ of mandate will
    issue. [Citations.] Likewise, a writ of mandate may issue to prevent trial of
    nonactionable claims after the erroneous denial of a motion for summary adjudication.
    [¶] Since a motion for summary judgment or summary adjudication “involves pure
    matters of law,” we review a ruling on the motion de novo to determine whether the
    moving and opposing papers show a triable issue of material fact. [Citations.] Thus, the
    appellate court need not defer to the trial court‟s decision. “„We are not bound by the
    trial court‟s stated reasons, if any, supporting its ruling; we review the ruling, not its
    rationale.‟” [Citation.]‟ [Citation.]” (Arnall v. Superior Court (2010) 
    190 Cal.App.4th 360
    , 364; accord, Diamond v. Superior Court (2013) 
    217 Cal.App.4th 1172
    , 1182.)
    B.    The Applicable Law
    The leading case in this area of law is Partridge. In Partridge the defendant was
    insured under homeowners and automobile policies issued by State Farm. The
    homeowners policy excluded coverage for injuries arising out of the use of an
    automobile. The defendant owned a pistol that he had modified by filing the trigger
    mechanism so that it had “hair trigger action.” He was out driving his four-wheel drive
    Ford Bronco with two friends and using the pistol to shoot jackrabbits through an open
    window when the car hit a bump and the pistol discharged. The bullet hit and seriously
    injured one of his friends. (Partridge, supra, 10 Cal.3d at pp. 96-98.) The trial court
    found that the defendant‟s negligence in modifying the pistol was an independent,
    concurrent proximate cause of the friend‟s injuries, and therefore his homeowners
    insurance as well as his automobile insurance provided coverage for the accident. (Id. at
    p. 99.)
    5
    The court observed that the use of the defendant‟s vehicle was not the sole cause
    of the victim‟s injuries “but was only one of two joint causes of the accident,” with the
    other cause being the modification of the pistol. (Partridge, supra, 10 Cal.3d at p. 102.)
    Assuming the connection between the vehicle and the accident was “the type of non-
    ambiguous causal relationship which would normally bring the exclusionary clause into
    play, the crucial question presented [was] whether a liability insurance policy provides
    coverage for an accident caused jointly by an insured risk (the negligent filing of the
    trigger mechanism) and by an excluded risk (the negligent driving).”2 (Ibid.) The court
    concluded “that when two such risks constitute concurrent proximate causes of an
    accident, the insurer is liable so long as one of the causes is covered by the policy.”
    (Ibid.)
    The court explained that in issuing the homeowners insurance policy, “State Farm
    agreed to protect the insured against liability accruing from non-auto-related risks.”
    (Partridge, supra, 10 Cal.3d at p. 103.) State Farm admitted that had the pistol
    accidently fired in another setting, any damages caused by the firing of the gun would be
    covered under the policy. The court concluded that the fact that the gun accidently fired
    in the car did not preclude coverage. The defendant‟s “negligent modification of the gun
    suffices, in itself, to render him fully liable for the resulting injuries. Under these facts
    the damages to [the victim] are, under the language of the homeowner‟s coverage clause,
    2       The court noted that a “different rule of construction applies to exclusionary
    clauses as distinguished from coverage clauses. Whereas coverage clauses are
    interpreted broadly so as to afford the greatest possible protection to the insured
    [citations], exclusionary clauses are interpreted narrowly against the insurer. [Citations.]
    These differing canons of construction, both derived from the fundamental principle that
    all ambiguities in an insurance policy are construed against the insurer-draftsman, mean
    that in ambiguous situations an insurer might be found liable under both insurance
    policies. [Citations.]” (Partridge, supra, 10 Cal.3d at pp. 101-102.) Thus, “the fact that
    an accident has been found to „arise out of the use‟ of a vehicle for purposes of an
    automobile policy is not necessarily determinative of the question of whether that same
    accident falls within a similarly worded exclusionary clause of a homeowner‟s policy.
    [Citations.]” (Id. at p. 102.)
    6
    „sums which the Insured . . . [became] legally obligated to pay‟ because of the negligent
    filing of the trigger mechanism; inasmuch as the liability of the insured arises from his
    non-auto-related conduct, and exists independently of any „use‟ of his car, . . . the
    homeowner‟s policy covers that liability.” (Ibid.)
    Kohl followed Partridge. In Kohl, which also involved homeowners and
    automobile insurance policies, the insured was driving his truck when he struck a
    motorcyclist who was then thrown to the ground. After the accident, the insured and a
    bystander dragged the motorcyclist out of the street, causing the motorcyclist additional
    serious injuries. (Kohl, supra, 131 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1033, 1034.) The question was
    whether the collision and the dragging constituted two separate occurrences for purposes
    of insurance coverage. (Id. at pp. 1034-1035.)
    The Kohl court stated that “[i]n determining whether, under a particular set of
    circumstances, there was one accident or occurrence, the so-called „causation‟ theory is
    applied. Hence a single uninterrupted course of conduct which gives rise to a number of
    injuries or incidents of property damage is one „accident‟ or „occurrence.‟ On the other
    hand, if the original cause is interrupted or replaced by another cause, then there is more
    than one „accident‟ or „occurrence.‟ [Citations.]” (Kohl, supra, 131 Cal.App.3d at
    p. 1035, italics omitted.) The court found “that under general tort principles, the
    additional injury suffered by [the motorcyclist] as a result of the conduct of [the insured
    and the bystander] in negligently „dragging‟ [the motorcyclist] would be covered by the
    automobile policy, since that subsequent negligence would be a foreseeable consequence
    of the original accident. From that viewpoint it would follow that the subsequent
    additional injuries arose out of the „use‟ and „operation‟ of the motor vehicle [citation]
    thus invoking the coverage clause of the auto policy.” (Ibid., italics omitted.)
    The Kohl court then turned to Partridge to determine whether there could
    nonetheless be coverage under the homeowners policy. “[T]he question narrows as to
    one of whether the postaccident conduct of [the insured] was so intimately involved with
    the use of the vehicle and the part of a course of interrupted conduct as to require the
    finding that it „arose‟ out of such use for the purposes of the exclusionary clause or, on
    7
    the other hand, was independent nonvehicular conduct which replaced or concurred with
    the vehicle use as a cause of the additional injury.” (Kohl, supra, 131 Cal.App.3d at
    p. 1036.) The court recognized that in contrast to Partridge, where “the operation of the
    vehicle . . . impacted on the existing and continuing antecedent nonvehicular negligence
    of the insured,” in the current case “the nonvehicular conduct of [the insured] impacted
    on his antecedent vehicular negligence.” (Id. at p. 1039, italics omitted.) The court
    nevertheless found Partridge “indistinguishable in principle,” “controlling,” and that “its
    effect is not altered by the sequential order of the two types of conduct.” (Ibid.) The
    insured‟s act of dragging the motorcyclist “was independent of and unrelated to his use of
    the vehicle even though his use of the vehicle placed the victim in a position which led to
    the additional injury.” (Ibid.) Thus, both the accident and the “dragging” were
    concurrent proximate causes of the motorcyclist‟s injuries, and there was coverage under
    the homeowners policy. (Id. at pp. 1033, 1039.)
    In Ohio Casualty Ins. Co. v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. (1983) 
    148 Cal.App.3d 641
     (Ohio Casualty) the court followed Partridge and Kohl. The insured in
    Ohio Casualty was a parent who took a group of high school teachers and students for an
    outing on a lake in his boat, and one of the students was injured when she dove off the
    boat for a swim while the boat was stationary and she was run over by another boat
    operated by one of the teachers. (Id. at p. 643.) The injured student sued the parent for
    negligent operation of the boat and negligent supervision of the student in giving her
    permission to dive into the lake. (Ibid.) The parent had a yacht policy with one insurer
    and a homeowners policy, “which excluded coverage for bodily injury arising out of the
    use or operation of a watercraft,” with another insurer. (Id. at p. 644.) The yacht insurer
    provided coverage and a defense to the parent, and then sued the homeowner‟s insurer for
    one-half the cost of the indemnity and defense. (Id. at pp. 643-644.)
    The Ohio Casualty court held that the watercraft exclusion in the homeowners
    policy did not apply because the “only „use‟ of the boat was to transport [the injured
    student and the insured parent] to the scene of the accident,” and “[o]nce there, the boat‟s
    engine was turned off and it became nothing more than a floating dock or platform.”
    8
    (Ohio Casualty, supra, 148 Cal.App.3d at p. 646.) The court stated that the insured‟s
    negligent supervision of the injured student “was not in any way dependent on the use of
    the boat before liability would arise,” and that the insured‟s liability “would be unaffected
    whether the acts occurred on a boat, a pier, or on the shore.” (Ibid.) The court noted that
    the insured‟s “negligent supervision of [the student‟s] swimming was separate and
    independent of any use of the excluded watercraft because there were many ways and
    places such conduct could have given rise to liability without use of the boat, even though
    in the instant case it was a use of the boat which actually placed the victim in the position
    which led to the injury.” (Id. at p. 648.)
    Coburn, however, distinguished Partridge. In Coburn the insured had a
    homeowner‟s insurance policy with a motor vehicle exclusion. The insured was
    preparing for a camping trip by loading a van he had parked in his driveway, while his
    children were playing with three other children. The insured had put the van in park but
    had not set the parking brake. While the insured was in the house, one of the children
    moved the shift lever in the unattended van and it rolled backward down the driveway,
    killing one of the children playing with the insured‟s children. (Coburn, supra, 209
    Cal.App.3d at pp. 916-917.) Relying on Partridge, the insured argued that the “alleged
    negligent supervision of the children was independent of any act excluded by the policy”
    and therefore covered. (Id. at p. 918.) The court disagreed, “conclud[ing] the alleged
    liability of the [insured] does not arise from [his] nonauto-related conduct and exist
    independently of any use of [the] vehicle. Thus the homeowner‟s policy does not afford
    coverage for that alleged liability.” (Ibid.)
    The Coburn court explained that “„in order for Partridge to apply, there must be
    two negligent acts or omissions of the insured, one of which, independently of the
    excluded cause, renders the insured liable for the resulting injuries. [Citations.]‟
    [Citation.] [¶] Here, the alleged negligence consisting of the [insured‟s] failure to
    properly supervise the children, exposing them to the hazard of a vehicle parked on an
    incline with its doors open and without its parking brake set, and [the insured‟s] leaving
    the vehicle‟s doors open while it was parked on an incline without setting the parking
    9
    brake, could not render the [insured] liable for the [child‟s] death independently of [the
    insured‟s] use and loading of the vehicle. All the alleged negligence arose from the
    [insured‟s] auto-related conduct, i.e., the use and loading of the van for the camping trip.
    It cannot be seriously argued that the parking, leaving open and braking of a vehicle are
    anything other than aspects of the „use‟ of the vehicle. None of the alleged negligence,
    including the negligent supervision of the children, exists independently of [the insured‟s]
    use and loading of the vehicle. Under the exclusionary clause the personal liability claim
    arose out of the use and loading of the van, a motor vehicle operated by the insured . . . .”
    (Coburn, supra, 209 Cal.App.3d at pp. 919-920, fn. omitted.)
    Prince v. United Nat. Ins. Co. (2006) 
    142 Cal.App.4th 233
     (Prince) also
    distinguished Partridge and followed Coburn. In Prince the foster mother of two young
    children left them in her car on a hot day for more than six hours and they died. (Id. at
    p. 235.) In finding that the exclusionary clause applied, the court noted that the foster
    mother‟s “negligence in leaving the children in the hot vehicle „simply cannot be
    dissociated from the use of the vehicle.‟ ([Coburn], supra, 209 Cal.App.3d at pp. 920-
    921.) It was her abandonment of them in the vehicle that subjected them to the
    conditions causing their deaths. Had she left them on a park bench, in a grocery store, or
    on a neighbor‟s porch, they would not have expired from hyperthermia.” (Prince, supra,
    at p. 245.)
    C.     Application to This Case
    The coverage issue in this case turns on whether Jose‟s negligent operation of his
    truck and Sara‟s negligent supervision of the children are dependent or independent
    concurrent proximate causes of Valerie‟s fatal injuries. The difficulty in resolving this
    issue arises in part from determining how independent a proximate cause has to be in
    order to avoid the motor vehicle exclusion in the homeowners policy, and in part from the
    elasticity of the concept of proximate case. (See Bridge v. Phoenix Bond & Indem. Co.
    (2008) 
    553 U.S. 639
    , 654 [
    128 S.Ct. 2131
    , 
    170 L.Ed.2d 1012
    ] [proximate cause “is a
    flexible concept that does not lend itself to „“a black-letter rule that will dictate the result
    10
    in every case”‟”]; Korea Supply Co. v. Lockheed Martin Corp. (2003) 
    29 Cal.4th 1134
    ,
    1181 [proximate cause “is a generic label for „the judicial tools used to limit a person‟s
    responsibility for the consequences of [his or her] acts‟”]; Mays v. Chang (W.Va. 2003)
    
    579 S.E.2d 561
    , 565 [“proximate cause is an „elastic and mystical term that is
    meaningless unless it is applied to the facts of a particular case‟”].) It does not always
    provide easy answers in close cases like this one.
    This case is somewhere between Partridge, Kohl, and Ohio Casualty, on the one
    hand, and Coburn and Prince, on the other. We conclude that the nature of the
    allegations and the undisputed facts in this record, however, bring this case closer to
    Coburn and Prince than to Partridge, Kohl, and Ohio Casualty. In Partridge, Kohl, and
    Ohio Casualty, “„[t]he excluded instrumentality did not play an active role in causing the
    injury.‟” (Prince, supra, 142 Cal.App.4th at p. 242, quoting from Ohio Casualty, supra,
    148 Cal.App.3d at p. 646.) In such cases, courts have generally found that the motor
    vehicle or other relevant exclusion does not apply. (See, e.g., Safeco Ins. Co. of America
    v. Parks (2009) 
    170 Cal.App.4th 992
    , 998, 1012 [vehicle exclusion in homeowner‟s
    policy did not apply where insured was driving victim home, her car got a flat tire, and a
    friend picked them up; after the friend ejected victim from friend‟s car, victim started
    walking along freeway and was struck by a passing vehicle]; Aetna Casualty & Surety
    Co. v. Safeco Ins. Co. (1980) 
    103 Cal.App.3d 694
    , 696-697, 700 [vehicle exclusion in
    homeowners policy did not apply where insured‟s son accidentally shot passenger in car
    while “chambering a round” at target practice site]; Glens Falls Ins. Co. v. Rich (1975) 
    49 Cal.App.3d 390
    , 392, 394-395, 397 [vehicle exclusion in homeowners policy did not
    apply where insured accidentally shot passenger when he reached for a loaded shotgun
    under the front seat to shoot a squirrel sitting on a stump]; see also Taylor v. American
    Fire & Cas. Co. (Utah Ct.App. 1996) 
    925 P.2d 1279
    , 1284 [“when determining a
    homeowners‟ policy exclusion of coverage for damages arising from the use of a motor
    vehicle, we focus on the instrumentality causing the damages and not the theory of
    liability alleged in the complaint”].)
    11
    In contrast, the excluded instrumentality in Coburn, Prince, and this case, the
    motor vehicle, played an active role in causing the injury by rolling over the victim
    (Coburn), heating up on a hot day (Prince), and running over the victim (this case). The
    injury “involved no instrumentality other than the vehicle itself,” and “there would have
    been no accident without the use or operation of” the vehicle. (Safeco Ins. Co. v. Gilstrap
    (1983) 
    141 Cal.App.3d 524
    , 530-531; see State Farm Fire & Casualty Co. v. Salas
    (1990) 
    222 Cal.App.3d 268
    , 278 [“the „excluded instrumentality‟ . . . was not the mere
    passive situs of negligence divorced from the vehicle‟s maintenance”].) In such cases,
    courts have generally found that the motor vehicle or relevant exclusion applies to bar
    coverage. (See, e.g., Belmonte v. Employers Ins. Co. (2000) 
    83 Cal.App.4th 430
    , 434
    [vehicle exclusion precluded coverage where van negligently driven by insured‟s niece
    hit and injured the victim, even though insured was allegedly negligent in allowing his
    niece to obtain the key]; Gurrola v. Great Southwest Ins. Co. (1993) 
    17 Cal.App.4th 65
    ,
    68-69 [vehicle exclusion precluded coverage under comprehensive general liability
    (CGL) policy where insured‟s negligently driven rebuilt Bantam Coupe killed passenger
    in collision, even though the insured was allegedly negligent in welding the vehicle];
    State Farm Fire & Casualty Co. v. Keenan (1985) 
    171 Cal.App.3d 1
    , 22 [aircraft
    exclusion precluded coverage where airplane “crash involved no instrumentality other
    than the accident aircraft, and there would have been no crash in the absence of the use or
    operation of the accident aircraft,” even though insureds allegedly were negligent in
    entrusting the airplane to the pilot]; Hartford Fire Ins. Co. v. Superior Court (1983) 
    142 Cal.App.3d 406
    , 412, 415 [aircraft exclusion precluded coverage under homeowners
    policy where insured crashed plane shortly after takeoff killing one passenger and
    injuring others, even though insured allegedly was negligent in his “„preflight preparation
    and/or planning‟” and in piloting plane while under the influence of alcohol]; Safeco Ins.
    Co. v. Gilstrap, supra, 141 Cal.App.3d at p. 530 [vehicle exclusion precluded coverage
    where insureds‟ unlicensed son drove motorcycle and injured passenger in collision, even
    though the insureds allegedly were negligent in entrusting the motorcycle to their son];
    Allstate Ins. Co. v. Jones (1983) 
    139 Cal.App.3d 271
    , 277 [vehicle exclusion precluded
    12
    coverage under CGL policy where rebar on insured‟s truck struck and killed driver of the
    other car in a collision, even though the insured allegedly was negligent in loading and
    securing the rebar on the truck]; State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Camara (1976) 
    63 Cal.App.3d 48
    , 53-56 [vehicle exclusion precluded coverage under homeowners policy
    where insured drove a dune buggy and injured the passenger, even though the insured
    allegedly was negligent in designing and building the dune buggy]; State Farm Fire &
    Cas. Co. v. Estate of Evoniuk (N.D.Cal. 1988) 
    681 F.Supp. 662
    , 664-665 [vehicle
    exclusion precluded coverage under homeowners policy where insureds‟ minor son drove
    motorcycle after drinking alcohol in the presence of his mother, even though the parents
    allegedly were negligent in supervising their son].)
    Moreover, as in Coburn, the supervision here was negligent only because it
    exposed the children to the danger of negligent automobile use. Although the negligent
    supervision claimed in this case is not as closely “auto-related” as it was in Coburn, it is
    still related enough that it does not constitute an “independent, concurrent proximate
    cause[] of” Valerie‟s fatal injuries. (Partridge, supra, 10 Cal.3d at p. 99; see Medill v.
    Westport Ins. Corp. (2006) 
    143 Cal.App.4th 819
    , 835 [“[c]ourts following Partridge have
    made it clear that its holding only applies to „multiple causes that operated totally
    independently of one another‟”]; Allstate Ins. Co. v. Jones, supra, 139 Cal.App.3d at
    p. 277 [“[i]t is clear when reviewing the facts set forth in Partridge . . . and Kohl that one
    of the negligent acts which occurred did not depend upon the use of an automobile and,
    thus, did not fall within the exclusionary clause”].)
    It was undisputed that “Sara‟s alleged negligence is in allowing Valerie to be out
    of the house in the zone of danger,” which was created when Jose came home in his
    truck. It was undisputed that Sara “needed to take extra precautions for the younger
    grandchildren, including Valerie,” because the “grandchildren would routinely go out to
    greet Jose at his truck, when he came home.” Sara testified that the children were
    normally excited when their grandfather arrived home, that they waited in anticipation for
    him to come home, and that “[t]hey would hear him and then they would go out.” In
    addition, it was “kind of normal to be on the lookout for . . . Grandpa coming home to
    13
    ensure that the younger ones would be safe.” As the Bautistas argue in their answer to
    the petition, “it was foreseeable that if Valerie got out of the house unsupervised, due to
    her tender years, she could be injured and killed in just the manner which she was.”
    Thus, Sara‟s alleged negligent supervision consisted of allowing Valerie to become
    exposed to the specific hazard created by the arrival of Jose in his truck. The undisputed
    evidence on summary judgment, and the Bautistas‟ position in this litigation, is not that
    Sara‟s negligence allowed the children to be exposed to one of a number of dangers, such
    as the danger of wandering away and becoming lost, abduction by strangers in the
    neighborhood, or even collisions with cars driving down the street. To the contrary, the
    Bautistas claim, and the evidence is undisputed, that Sara‟s only negligence in this case
    was to expose the children to the known danger of Jose‟s use of the truck. None of the
    alleged negligent supervision “exists independently of [Jose‟s] use . . . of the vehicle.”
    (Coburn, supra, 209 Cal.App.3d at p. 920.) As in Coburn, “the conduct of [Sara] in
    negligently supervising the children . . . was an omission separate from the use of the
    vehicle only in terms of time and it cannot be disassociated from the use of the vehicle
    itself . . . .” (Id. at pp. 920-921.)
    Similarly, as in Prince, it was Sara‟s failure to supervise Valerie when she went
    out to greet Jose as he drove home in his pickup truck that “subjected [Valerie] to the
    conditions causing [her] death[].” (Prince, supra, 142 Cal.App.4th at 245.) Had Sara‟s
    failure to supervise Valerie occurred at any other time, Valerie would not have been
    exposed to the risk of Jose‟s truck arriving home. As the court stated in Prince, “„in
    order for Partridge to apply there must be two negligent acts or omissions of the insured,
    one of which, independently of the excluded cause, renders the insured liable for the
    resulting injuries.‟” (Id. at p. 239; see Garvey v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co. (1989)
    
    48 Cal.3d 395
    , 399 [Partridge “should be utilized only in liability cases in which true
    concurrent causes, each originating from an independent act of negligence,
    simultaneously join together to produce injury”].) Sara‟s alleged negligent supervision
    would not have rendered her and Jose liable independently of Jose‟s driving of his
    14
    vehicle, and was not a “totally independent[]” cause of Valerie‟s death. (Medill v.
    Westport Ins. Corp., 
    supra,
     143 Cal.App.4th at p. 835.)3
    Moreover, as in Coburn, where the injury caused by the insured‟s non-vehicular
    negligence (failing to supervise children while packing a van parked in his driveway)
    could only have occurred at the time and in the manner of the vehicular negligence
    (loading a van in the driveway without setting the parking brake), Sara‟s non-vehicular
    negligence (failing to supervise children while Jose drove his truck in the driveway) can
    only have occurred at the time and place of the vehicular negligence: in the Bautistas‟
    driveway when Jose came home from work. In contrast, in Partridge, the injury caused
    by the insured‟s non-vehicular negligence (modifying the gun‟s trigger mechanism) could
    have occurred anywhere at any time: on the road, at home, or in a public place.
    Similarly, in Kohl, the injury caused by the insured‟s non-vehicular negligence (dragging
    an injured person) could have occurred anywhere at any time: on the asphalt, during a
    rescue from a burning building, or on a football field. (But see Kohl, supra, 131
    3      Cases from other jurisdictions have reached similar conclusions. (See, e.g.,
    Bartow v. Homesite Ins. Co., Inc. (D.N.J. Dec. 29, 2009, No. 09-2061) 
    2009 WL 5216964
     at pp. 6, 8 [automobile exclusion in homeowner‟s insurance policy applied
    because negligent supervision by father, who ran over his toddler son with his SUV, was
    not “a wholly independent, discrete, act . . . that would constitute a dual cause of” the
    toddler‟s death, and the father‟s “failure to monitor the toddler‟s whereabouts is
    inextricably tied to [the father‟s] manipulation of the vehicle”]; Phoenix Ins. Co. v.
    Churchwell (Mass.Ct.App. 2003) 
    785 N.E.2d 392
    , 395 [“it would be difficult to separate
    [the mother‟s] negligent supervision claim” of failing to place a child, subsequently
    injured in a car accident, into a proper child restraint seat, from the insured‟s “operation
    of her motor vehicle and to hold that [the child‟s] injuries did not arise out of the
    operation of a motor vehicle, a risk not covered by the homeowner‟s policy”]; Austin
    Mut. Ins. Co. v. Klande (Minn.Ct.App. 1997) 
    563 N.W.2d 282
    , 283, 284 [“the insureds‟
    alleged negligent supervision of the child [who was injured when a motorcycle in the
    garage fell on him] was not a divisible concurrent cause of the accident, such as would
    implicate coverage under insureds‟ homeowner policy notwithstanding the motor vehicle
    exclusion,” but rather was “so intertwined with and intimately connected to the insureds‟
    ownership and use of the motorcycle it cannot be said that the claim arose independently
    of the motorized vehicle related cause”].) As in Coburn and Prince, the instrumentality
    of the harm in Bartow, Churchwell, and Klande was a motor vehicle.
    15
    Cal.App.3d at p. 1041 (dis. opn. of Beach, J.) [“vehicular accident placed plaintiff on the
    ground, a condition crying for rescue,” and although “the rescue may be separable from
    driving the vehicle . . . the results of both are included in the greater circle of
    circumstance or condition which is defined as arising from operation of a vehicle”].)
    Sara‟s negligent supervision was not “separate and independent” of Jose‟s negligent
    automobile use because there was only one way, one place, and one time Sara‟s
    negligence could give rise to liability: when Jose arrived home in his truck. (Cf. Ohio
    Casualty, supra, 148 Cal.App.3d at p. 648 [“there were many ways and places” the
    insured‟s negligent supervision of child could have led to injury independent of use of
    yacht].)
    Therefore, the trial court erred in finding “Sara Bautista‟s negligent supervision
    [of Valerie] exists independently of the „use‟ of a motor vehicle,” and that the motor
    vehicle exclusion in the homeowners insurance policy did not apply. Her negligence was
    sufficiently related to Jose‟s use of the vehicle and “part of a course of uninterrupted
    conduct” that it fell within the motor vehicle exclusion. (Kohl, supra, 131 Cal.App.3d at
    p. 1036.) Farmers had no liability under the homeowners insurance policy as a matter of
    law and was entitled to summary adjudication on its complaint and the Bautistas‟ cross-
    complaint that it had no duty to indemnify or defend the Bautistas in the Casaya action.
    (See County of Los Angeles v. Superior Court (2009) 
    181 Cal.App.4th 218
    , 226.) We
    therefore order the trial court to grant Farmer‟s motion for summary adjudication.
    (Arnall v. Superior Court, supra, 190 Cal.App.4th at p. 374; see Choate v. Celite Corp.
    (2013) 
    215 Cal.App.4th 1460
    , 1468.)
    16
    DISPOSITION
    Let a peremptory writ of mandate issue directing the trial court to vacate its order
    denying Farmers‟ motion for summary adjudication and to issue a new order granting
    Farmers‟ motion for summary adjudication that it had no duty to defend or indemnify the
    Bautistas under the homeowners insurance policy. Farmers is to recover its costs.
    SEGAL, J.*
    We concur:
    PERLUSS, P. J.
    ZELON, J.
    *       Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to
    article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    17
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B248324

Citation Numbers: 220 Cal. App. 4th 1199, 163 Cal. Rptr. 3d 609, 2013 WL 5786644, 2013 Cal. App. LEXIS 864

Judges: Segal

Filed Date: 10/1/2013

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/3/2024