- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 8 NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 9 GREAT AMERICAN ASSURANCE 10 COMPANY, Case No. 21-cv-01135-RS 11 Plaintiff, ORDER DENYING IN PART AND 12 v. GRANTING IN PART CROSS- MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY 13 ZURICH AMERICAN INSURANCE JUDGMENT AND MOTION FOR COMPANY, et al., JUDGMENT ON THE PLEADINGS 14 Defendants. 15 16 I. INTRODUCTION 17 This dispute among three insurance carriers, all of whom issued policies to the same 18 insured, arises from the notorious sinking and tilting of the Millennium Tower, a residential hi-rise 19 in San Francisco, during and after its construction. The litigation arising from the Millennium 20 Tower construction involved hundreds of parties, multiple cross and countersuits, and a myriad of 21 insurance programs and policies. Over 40 actions were eventually coordinated under a case in San 22 Francisco Superior Court entitled, Laura S. Lehman v. Transbay Joint Powers Authority, et al., 23 Case Number CGC-16-553758. They were then settled globally, under a “double blind” 24 settlement, where parties do not know how much each defendant paid, or how much plaintiffs 25 received in total. 26 Plaintiff in this case is Great American Assurance Company, which issued a $25 million 27 excess liability policy to Webcor Builders, the general contractor on the Millennium Tower 1 demanded that all of it insurance carriers that had issued policies for the period of June 30, 2008, 2 to June 30, 2009 (the “08-09 Insurance Tower” or “08-09 policy period”) contribute their 3 remaining available policy limits to resolve all the claims against Webcor in the coordinated 4 lawsuits.1 Great American agreed, and paid its $25 million limits. 5 The Great American policy sat at the “top” of the 08-09 Insurance Tower. Defendant 6 Zurich American Insurance Company issued a primary $1 million policy sitting at the “bottom” of 7 the tower. Defendant Westchester Fire Insurance provided the first level excess coverage over the 8 Zurich policy, with a $25 million limit of liability. 9 By the time of the settlement, Zurich and Westchester’s policy limits had been eroded by 10 defense costs, but they both agreed to pay the remaining policy limits. Two other Webcor insurers, 11 not involved in this litigation, also contributed their remaining policy limits, for a total payment by 12 insurers on Webcor’s behalf that approached $100 million.2 In this action, Great American seeks 13 to recover the $25 million it paid (plus prejudgment interest) under the doctrines of equitable 14 subrogation and/or equitable indemnity. Great American originally asserted a claim for equitable 15 contribution as well, but has since agreed to dismiss it as inapplicable on these facts. 16 Great American, Westchester, and Zurich now each move for summary judgment. An 17 earlier-filed motion brought by Westchester for judgment on the pleadings was heard with the 18 summary judgment motions and is also before the court, although it is effectively subsumed by 19 20 1 Great American uses the term “Armstrong election” to refer to the California appellate court 21 decision in Armstrong World Industries, Inc. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. 45 Cal.App.4th 1, 49-50 (1996), which is generally understood to give insureds in matters involving continuous losses the 22 right to select a particular policy period for purposes of determining the amount of the deductible 23 and policy limits that apply. As further elaborated by the California Supreme Court in Montrose Chemical Corp. of California v. Superior Court, 9 Cal.5th 215 (2020) (“Montrose III”), the 24 insured’s election does not preclude later reallocation proceedings between or among the insurance carriers. The applicability of Montrose III to the facts here is discussed further below. 25 2 Despite the fact that all parties agree the settlement amount was to be confidential, Westchester’s 26 briefing states the figure, and it submitted no sealing request to have it redacted from the public 27 record. This order will nonetheless avoid stating the exact amount. 1 Westchester’s summary judgment motion. For reasons explained below, the motions by Great 2 American and Westchester will both be denied, and Zurich’s motion will be granted. 3 4 II. BACKGROUND 5 The Millennium Tower 6 As noted, Webcor was the general contractor for the Millennium Tower construction 7 project. The Millennium Tower comprises three primary structures: a 58-story tower, an adjacent 8 12-story building on a reinforced concrete podium that includes residences and common areas, and 9 a five-level subterranean garage. The facility includes 419 separate residential condominiums and 10 two commercial units. 11 The east end of the Transbay Transit Center, a $6 billion public work project, abuts the 12 property to the south. The later-built 350 Mission Street building is across the street, to the north. 13 Webcor was also the general contractor for the 350 Mission Street project. Construction of that 14 building allegedly contributed to the property damage at the Millennium Tower. 15 Construction of the Millennium Tower started in August of 2005, and the Certificate of 16 Final Completion and Occupancy was issued in August of 2009. The principal thrust of the 17 underlying litigation was that the tower was allegedly erected on an improperly designed and 18 constructed foundation system. The building’s foundation was purportedly besieged by other 19 negligent construction practices as well. 20 By the time construction was completed in mid-2009, the Millennium Tower had already 21 sunk more than 8.3 inches. The tower has since dropped more than another 9 inches, bringing it to 22 a total depth of more than 17 inches. In addition to sinking, allegedly separate and distinct causes 23 have resulted in the building tilting. The floors are now unlevel, and at the top, the Millennium 24 Tower leans more than 14 inches to the west and 6 inches to the north. 25 The underlying litigation alleged additional categories of damage-causing defects 26 including: (a) misalignment, hardware failure, and air and water transmission relating to the 27 building’s “curtain wall”; (b) subterranean water intrusion in the garage and basement; (c) coating 1 failure and corrosion of aluminum on the building’s exterior; and, (d) intra-unit air transmission 2 posing fire and smoke risks. These defects and damages allegedly are unrelated to the sinkage and 3 tilt of the Tower. 4 5 The settlement 6 The Underlying Litigation was resolved in 2020. To fund Webcor’s share of the 7 confidential global settlement, Webcor demanded that all its insurers providing coverage in the 8 08/09 Policy Period pay their full remaining limits. In response, Zurich paid its remaining limit of 9 $445,806, and Westchester paid $23,000,000 from its 08/09 policy. The Westchester 07/08 policy 10 did not contribute. 11 Great American agreed to Webcor’s demand and paid its $25 million limit under its 08/09 12 policy pursuant to a reservation of rights. Great American expressly reserved the right to seek 13 reimbursement from insurers that had issued lower-level policies in other policy periods in a “Side 14 Agreement Between and Among Insurers and Risk Financing Entities Relating to the Millennium 15 Tower Litigation Global Settlement” (“the Side Agreement”). 16 The Side Agreement stated: “Released Matters in Section 1.30 of the Global Agreement do 17 not include, among other things, the following: … (9) Any claims for reimbursement solely 18 regarding payments toward the Global Settlement Proceeds made by insurers or risk financing 19 entities of a named insured for equitable indemnity, equitable contribution, or equitable 20 subrogation against other insurers of the same insured.” The Side Agreement was signed by 21 representatives of Great American, Zurich and Westchester. 22 23 III. SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARDS 24 Summary judgment is proper “if the pleadings and admissions on file, together with the 25 affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving 26 party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). The purpose of summary 27 judgment “is to isolate and dispose of factually unsupported claims or defenses.” Celotex v. 1 Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323-24 (1986). The moving party “always bears the initial responsibility of 2 informing the district court of the basis for its motion, and identifying those portions of the 3 pleadings and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, which it believes demonstrate 4 the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.” Id. at 323 (citations and internal quotation marks 5 omitted). If it meets this burden, the moving party is then entitled to judgment as a matter of law 6 when the non-moving party fails to make a sufficient showing on an essential element of the case 7 with respect to which he bears the burden of proof at trial. Id. at 322-23. The non-moving party 8 “must set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e). 9 The non-moving party cannot defeat the moving party’s properly supported motion for summary 10 judgment simply by alleging some factual dispute between the parties. To preclude the entry of 11 summary judgment, the non-moving party must bring forth material facts, i.e., “facts that might 12 affect the outcome of the suit under the governing law . . . . Factual disputes that are irrelevant or 13 unnecessary will not be counted.” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 247-48 (1986). 14 The opposing party “must do more than simply show that there is some metaphysical doubt as to 15 the material facts.” Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio, 475 U.S. 574, 588 (1986). 16 17 IV. DISCUSSION 18 A. Great America’s motion for summary judgment 19 Great America contends Webcor faced liability for property damage caused by at least four 20 separate occurrences: (1) the “subsidence” occurrence; (2) damage to the Tower’s “curtain wall”; 21 (3) garage waterproofing-related damages; and (4) additional sink/tilt damages caused by 22 Webcor’s “dewatering” of the adjacent construction project at 350 Mission. Great American 23 insists these four occurrences involved separate damage arising from separate causes, but that the 24 “subsidence” occurrence represented the most significant—with repair costs estimated at more 25 than $100 million. Great American expressly bases it motion solely on the “subsidence” 26 27 1 occurrence.3 2 3 Applicability of Montrose III 4 Great American’s basic theory is this: Although Webcor made an Armstrong election to 5 demand coverage under the 08-09 Insurance Tower, the first damage from Webcor’s alleged 6 negligence was manifest no later than during the 07-08 policy term, which was prior to the time 7 Great American had issued any policy to Webcor. Westchester and Zurich, in contrast, had issued 8 policies in 07-08 and in earlier years. Thus, in Great American’s view, it was not actually liable 9 under its policy, and Zurich and Westchester’s policy limits had not in fact been exhausted, 10 because they should have paid under other policy years. 11 Great American contends it acted consistently with the California Supreme Court’s 12 direction in Montrose III, which it characterizes as teaching “that where a high-level excess 13 insurer believes a claim ought to be paid by a lower-level excess insurer whose policy covers a 14 different period, that high level insurer should first pay the claim and then seek reimbursement 15 from the lower-level insurer.” The Montrose III decision, however, arose in markedly different 16 circumstances from those presented here. 17 The backdrop to Montrose III included In Montrose Chem. Corp. of Calif. v. Admiral Ins. 18 Co., 10 Cal. 4th 645 (1995) (“Montrose I”), in which the California Supreme Court adopted a 19 “continuous trigger” theory of coverage in progressive “long-tail” cases, where damages from an 20 occurrence span multiple policy years, finding all policies in which damage results from a covered 21 occurrence may owe coverage obligations. Montrose I then led to In Aerojet-General Corp. v. 22 Transport Indem. Co., 17 Cal. 4th 38 (1997), where the court held that under a continuous trigger 23 of coverage analysis, if specified harm is caused by a covered occurrence, and at least some 24 3 Great American states it does not intend to waive its right to rely on other occurrences as a basis 25 for equitable subrogation or indemnity, and if the present motion fails, it will take the position that 26 “each of the other occurrences should be paid by carriers on the risk in years other than the 08/09 Policy Period.” 27 1 amount of damage occurs during a policy period, the insurer on that risk is fully liable for all 2 subsequent damage “even if some such harm results beyond the policy period.” Id. at 57. 3 In the wake of these decisions, many insurers and the insurance industry generally adopted 4 policy language limiting coverage in long-tail exposure cases, such that the only policy that covers 5 all damage resulting from a continuing occurrence is the policy in force when the damage began. 6 See, e.g., Pennsylvania Gen. Ins. Co. v. Am. Safety Indem. Co., 185 Cal. App. 4th 1515, 1525 7 (2010); City of San Buenaventura v. Ins. Co. of the State of Penn., 719 F.3d 1115, 1118 (9th Cir. 8 2013). Great American asserts that is precisely what the policies do here—the language of these 9 policies places coverage for all subsequent damage caused by an occurrence in the policies in 10 force when damage begins. Great American states: “Accordingly, under the ‘Montrose-exclusion’ 11 which is included in each policy at issue in this matter, the only policy period in which coverage 12 can be found for an occurrence that results in continuous or progressively deteriorating damage is 13 the policy in place when damage from that particular occurrence first resulted.” 14 Montrose III, in contrast, involved the very policies that gave rise to the Montrose I 15 “continuous-trigger” rule. Those policies obviously predated the adoption of the “Montrose- 16 exclusion” by insurance companies. The Montrose III court identified the issue it was addressing 17 as a “follow-on question” that resulted from prior decisions adopting the “all-sums-with-stacking” 18 approach to the coverage of long-tail injuries. Id. at 228. Specifically, the court explained, it was 19 deciding whether under the language of those policies “an insured would be permitted to access 20 any higher layer excess policy once it has exhausted the directly underlying excess policy covering 21 the same period”—so-called “vertical stacking”—or whether instead an insured would be required 22 “to exhaust all of its lower layer excess coverage across all relevant policy periods before 23 accessing any of its higher layer coverage”—so-called “horizontal stacking.” Id. at 229. 24 The Montrose III court decided vertical stacking was the correct rule: 25 In sum, we conclude that in a case involving continuous injury, where all primary insurance has been exhausted, the policy language 26 at issue here permits the insured to access any excess policy for 27 indemnification during a triggered policy period once the directly underlying excess insurance has been exhausted. 1 2 Id. at 237. 3 In explaining why this result was not unfair to excess insurers at the upper levels of the 4 “stack,” the court made the observations on which Great America premises its claims: 5 Even though a rule of vertical exhaustion permits Montrose to 6 access excess insurance from any given policy period, provided the directly underlying insurance has been exhausted, insurers may seek 7 contribution from other excess insurers also liable to the insured. The exhaustion rule does not alter the usual rules of equitable 8 contribution between insurers. An insurer required to provide excess coverage for a long-tail injury may lessen its burden by seeking 9 reimbursement from other insurers that issued policies during the 10 relevant period. 11 Id. at 236. 12 The problem for Great American, though, is that this case did not present the vertical vs. 13 horizontal exhaustion issue. Montrose III indeed teaches that an excess insurer whose policy is 14 implicated as a result of the vertical exhaustion rule must first pay and then seek reimbursement 15 from other insurers under “the usual rules of equitable contribution.” That rule, however, 16 presupposes coverage is generally available given the time period for which the excess policy was 17 issued, and that the only question is whether the attachment point has been reached. There was no 18 dispute in Montrose III that policies from all the relevant years potentially provided coverage, 19 because of the “all-sums-with-stacking.” 20 Here, Great American quite vehemently insists that there was no coverage available for the 21 08-09 policy period because, it contends, the undisputed facts show property damage began in the 22 07/08 policy period, and the policy included a “Montrose exclusion.” Great American argues, 23 “[b]y June 30, 2008, due in part to extended dewatering, the foundation itself was damaged . . . . 24 And not only was the foundation itself damaged—its failing condition was causing additional 25 physical damage to other parts of the structure.” 26 While Webcor may have had a right under Armstrong to designate the policy period under 27 which it was making its claim, nothing in either Armstrong or Montrose III creates coverage that 1 would not otherwise exist—except to the extent that allowing vertical exhaustion rather than 2 horizontal exhaustion could be characterized as expanding coverage. Great American is in a 3 fundamentally different position from the excess insurers in Montrose III, who were arguing that 4 their policies had not been implicated yet, and might never be if the amounts available under the 5 lower-level policies across all the years proved sufficient. Great American, in contrast, contends 6 its policy would never have been implicated, because the damage was manifest before the policy 7 issued. Accordingly, the actual holding of Montrose III has no applicability to Great American, 8 and did not require Great American simply to pay first, and seek reimbursement later. 9 That said, neither does Montrose III preclude Great American from seeking recovery on 10 any equitable theory that might otherwise be available. While the primary holding of the case is 11 not implicated by these facts, the court’s observation that the “usual” equitable rules remain 12 unaltered leaves recovery under those rules theoretically open to Great American. 13 14 Recovery in equity 15 The case law discussing the three principles of contribution, indemnification and subrogation in the insurance context is 16 surprisingly muddled; courts have often confused the principles, 17 thereby providing a fertile supply of quotations for parties seeking to utilize any one of the three concepts as the need arises. As one 18 California appellate court noted, “[i]t is hard to imagine another set of legal terms with more soporific effect than indemnity, 19 subrogation, [and] contribution . . . .” 20 Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co. v. Commerce & Indus. Ins. Co., 2000 WL 1721080, at *2 (N.D. Cal. 21 Nov. 7, 2000) (quoting Herrick Corp. v. Canadian Insurance Co., 29 Cal. App. 4th 753, 756 22 (1994)). As explained in Travelers Indem. Co. of Connecticut v. Hudson Ins. Co., 442 F. Supp. 3d 23 1259, 1268 (E.D. Cal. 2020), however, “distinguishing between these three equitable theories of 24 recovery is of import because, depending on the facts involved in a particular action, a claim 25 brought under the wrong theory may fail as a matter of law.” 26 “[T]]he right to contribution arises when several insurers are obligated to indemnify or 27 defend the same loss or claim, and one insurer has paid more than its share of the loss or defended 1 the action without any participation by the others.” Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co. v. Maryland Cas. 2 Co., 65 Cal. App. 4th 1279, 1293 (1998). As such, the right to equitable contribution arises only 3 when all of the insurance carriers “share the same level of obligation on the same risk as to the 4 same insured.” Id at 1294 n. 4. Recognizing that condition is not satisfied here, Great American 5 has withdrawn its claim for equitable contribution.4 6 “Equitable subrogation enables one insurer who has paid a debt for which another insurer 7 is primarily liable to sue from the perspective of the insured under the policy on the argument that 8 the second insurer has failed to pay.” Commerce & Indus., 2000 WL 1721080, at *3. “In a 9 subrogation claim, the insurer seeking reimbursement from another insurer ‘stands in the shoes’ of 10 the insured and succeeds only to the rights of the insured.” Id. 11 Finally, “[e]quitable indemnification is similar to equitable subrogation in that it also 12 enables an insurer that has paid an obligation which was entirely the responsibility of a co-insurer 13 to place the complete burden for the loss on that other party.” Id. Because the party seeking 14 reimbursement through indemnification does so in his or her own right (as with a contribution 15 claim), the claim is not subject to the defenses that might apply against the insured. Id. 16 Both in its motion for judgment on the pleadings and its motion for summary judgment, 17 Westchester argues that equitable indemnity is unavailable to Great American on these facts as a 18 matter of law. There is case law to support that argument. See, e.g., Commerce & Indus., 2000 WL 19 1721080, at *3-4 (finding that an excess insurer may not seek reimbursement from a primary 20 insurer through equitable indemnification). More recent authority from a California appellate 21 court, however, declines to read the doctrine so narrowly, and concludes that California law 22 permits its use wherever “one party pays a debt for which another is primarily liable and which in 23 equity and good conscience should have been paid by the latter party.” Travelers Indem. Co. of 24 25 4 The Montrose III court specifically used the term “equitable contribution” to refer to an excess insurer’s right to seek reimbursement in the circumstances of that case. This would appear to be an 26 example of the “muddle” arising from cases using the various terms imprecisely. In any event, 27 there is no dispute that Great American cannot proceed on an equitable contribution theory. 1 Connecticut v. Navigators Specialty Ins. Co., 70 Cal. App. 5th 341, 363 (2021). Accordingly, 2 Westchester is not entitled to judgment that Great American is categorically precluded from 3 pursuing an equitable indemnity claim. 4 Nonetheless, Great American has failed to show that it is entitled to summary judgment in 5 its favor under either equitable indemnity or equitable subrogation. Again, Great American’s 6 primary theory is that the damage first occurred no later than during the 07-08 policy period, and 7 that Westchester therefore should have paid under its policy for that time period, and not under its 8 08-09 policy. Even assuming Great American has shown as a matter of law that the damage 9 triggered coverage under the 07-08 insurance tower, it has failed to show that resulted in it paying 10 $25 million that should instead have been paid by Westchester.5 Rather, if Westchester’s payment 11 had been made under the earlier policy, Great American could have asserted the policies under its 12 08-09 excess policy had not been exhausted and then refused to pay into the settlement, but that 13 would not mean Westchester was obligated to pay an additional $25 million. Great American fully 14 embraces the fact that all of the policies involved had Montrose-exclusions, such that whatever 15 year’s policy properly applied to the subsidence issue, the insurer’s liability would be capped at 16 the policy limits for that year. 17 It is undisputed that Westchester paid $23 million—characterized as the remaining limits 18 under its 08-09 policy. Even if payment should have been characterized as being made under the 19 07-08 policy instead, the fact would remain that Westchester paid its full policy limits.6 Great 20 21 5 Although the complaint alleges claims for reimbursement against Zurich, in none of its briefing on any of the pending motions does Great American argue that Zurich must reimburse it in any 22 amount or identify any other basis for liability against Zurich. Accordingly, Zurich’s motion for 23 summary judgment in its favor must be, and hereby is, granted. 24 6 Westchester acknowledges that if payment had been made under the 07-08 policy, an additional $2 million would have been available. It is unclear how Great American could show that its 25 payment effectively “covered” that additional $2 million liability Westchester would have faced if paying under the older policy, such that Great American would be entitled to reimbursement in 26 that amount. Such a claim, however, might be marginally more viable than its assertion to a right 27 for reimbursement of the full $25 million it paid. 1 American’s payment of its own policy limits under the 08-09 policy perhaps could have been 2 avoided had Great American pursued, and prevailed on, its argument that the damage occurred 3 prior to inception of the policy (and was therefore simply not covered, without regard to any 4 exhaustion issues). The payment cannot reasonably be characterized, though, as having been made 5 on obligation for which Westchester was primarily liable, which is an element of both equitable 6 indemnity and equitable subrogation. 7 Great American offers one argument for imposing on Westchester an obligation to pay 8 more than its policy limits on a one-time basis. Great American points to a mutual release of all 9 claims entered into between Westchester and Webcor.7 Great American argues that even though 10 that release cannot be used to defeat its own affirmative subrogation claim, it precludes 11 Westchester from relying on the Montrose exclusion in its policies to avoid paying under more 12 than one policy year. 13 Great American has not established a legal or equitable basis to construe the release as 14 opening the door for a third party to impose potentially unlimited liability on Westchester in 15 contravention of the terms of the insurance policy. Furthermore, even if the release did somehow 16 expand Westchester’s exposure after-the-fact, it still would not mean the payment made by Great 17 American was for an obligation primarily owed by Westchester.8 18 19 7 Westchester and Zurich point to the same release to argue the equitable subrogation claim fails, because Great American must “stand in the shoes” of Webcor. Since Webcor has released all its 20 claims, Westchester and Zurich argue, there is nothing left for Great American to pursue. On this point, Great American has the better argument that the release cannot be enforced against it, where 21 Westchester was on notice that Great American would pursue subrogation and where the parties entered a separate agreement specifically preserving subrogation and other equitable 22 reimbursement claims. 23 8 Although Great American has failed to show it paid an obligation attaching to Westchester in any 24 event, it is also worth noting that the total costs of repair were estimated to exceed by a large degree the policy limits paid into the settlement. Accordingly, it might not be reasonable to 25 assume if there were a compelling argument that Westchester was obligated to pay more than one policy limit, the demand on Great American would have been proportionately reduced. Rather, the 26 result might have been that all carriers were still required to pay their limits, resulting only in an 27 increase in the total pot. 1 Finally, Great American suggests in passing that Westchester might have been obligated to 2 pay additional sum for different “occurrences.” For the same reasons discussed above, it is unclear 3 how any greater liability on Westchester’s part necessarily would support a conclusion that Great 4 America’s payment could be applied to the liability, such that a reimbursement obligation would 5 arise. In any event, Great America’s motion is expressly limited to the subsidence occurrence and 6 must be denied. 7 8 B. Westchester’s motion for summary judgment 9 Westchester contends that in addition to the issues discussed above, Great America’s 10 claims fail as a matter of law because it is simply impossible under this factual scenario to make a 11 determination as to what the settlement payments made by all of the various parties did and did 12 not cover. Because Great American’s theory is that the subsidence damages should have been 13 covered only under the 07-08 policy period, the parties agree finding liability will require 14 determining what portion of Webcor’s total settlement payment may be allocated to that 15 occurrence. 16 Great American contends allocation is a relatively simple process of determining what 17 portion of all settled damages constituted the projected cost of addressing the foundation issues. 18 Westchester, in turn, insists the answer is inherently unknowable, given how little is known 19 regarding the amounts contributed by all of the settlement participants, and because the mediation 20 privilege precludes use of much of what is known. Westchester has made a strong showing that it 21 may ultimately not be possible to make a fully grounded and supportable allocation calculation. 22 Westchester has not established, however, that the question can be called against Great American 23 as a matter of law at this juncture. Furthermore, although the parties appear to disagree as to the 24 exact scope of the evidence that will be precluded by the mediation privilege, they have not 25 presented specific, crystalized, disputes sufficient to evaluate whether the privilege will preclude 26 Great American from establishing a viable approach to allocation. Accordingly, while the 27 allocation issue may present an additional challenging hurdle for Great American even if it 1 succeeds in showing how its payment can otherwise be deemed to have covered an obligation 2 || owed by Westchester, summary judgment for Westchester is not warranted. 3 4 C. Other matters 5 Westchester filed a “response” to Zurich’s motion for summary Judgment, not to oppose it, 6 || but to assert some other points. Zurich moves to strike that response as unauthorized and 7 || improper, on grounds that it includes content “potentially prejudicial” to Webcor. Neither the 8 || Westchester response nor Zurich’s motion to strike have affected any of the analysis above. The 9 motion to strike is granted. 10 Shortly before the hearing, Zurich also sought leave to reply to evidentiary objections 11 Great America lodged in response to Zurich’s reply brief. The motion is granted, and the reply is 12 || deemed filed. 5 13 Finally, the parties submitted a host of sealing motions in connection with briefing on the 14 || various motions. While the redactions are not entirely consistent, an adequate effort has been made 3 15 to limit the amount of material sought to be sealed, and it all appears to meet the criteria for 16 sealing. The motions are therefore granted. V. CONCLUSION 19 Zurich’s motion for summary judgment is granted. The remaining substantive motions are 20 || denied. The procedural motions listed in section C above are granted. 21 22 || ITISSO ORDERED. 23 24 Dated: February 21, 2023 25 26 RICHARD SEEBORG _ Chief United States District Judge 27 CASE No. 21-cv-01135-RS
Document Info
Docket Number: 3:21-cv-01135
Filed Date: 2/21/2023
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 6/20/2024