Fisher, D. v. A.O. Smith Harvestore Prod. Inc. ( 2020 )


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  • J-A10010-20
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    DANIELLE FISHER                 :          IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :               PENNSYLVANIA
    v.                    :
    :
    A.O. SMITH HARVESTORE           :
    PRODUCTS, INC.; A.O. SMITH      :
    CORPORATION; A.O. SMITH         :
    (HARVESTORE PRODUCTS);          :
    HARVESTORE SYSTEMS T/D/B/A      :
    HARVESTORE; COLUMBIA TEC TANK; :
    CST INDUSTRIES, INC.; AND PENN  :
    JERSEY PRODUCTS, INC.,          :
    :
    APPEAL OF: CST INDUSTRIES, INC. :          No. 2182 EDA 2019
    Appeal from the Judgment Entered September 20, 2019
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County Civil Division at No(s):
    Case #: 2011-03913-0481
    BEFORE:      BOWES, J., SHOGAN, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*
    MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.:                         Filed: September 24, 2020
    CST Industries, Inc. (“CST”) appeals from judgment entered upon the
    non-jury verdict in favor of A.O. Smith Corporation (“A.O. Smith”) on its
    contractual indemnification claim against CST. CST also challenges the trial
    court’s post-trial award of attorney fees to A.O. Smith. We affirm.
    The facts relevant to this appeal are as follows. Harvestore Products,
    Inc. (“Harvestore”) was a subsidiary of A.O. Smith that manufactured
    products including roller mills, which are machines that grind grain. In 1996,
    Harvestore sold certain assets to an entity not relevant to this appeal;
    ____________________________________________
    *   Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-A10010-20
    however, Harvestore retained, among other liabilities, those for the
    aforementioned roller mills.    A.O. Smith dissolved Harvestore the following
    year, along with another subsidiary, Peabody TecTank (“Peabody”).            A.O.
    Smith then transferred the retained assets and liabilities of Harvestore and
    Peabody to its Engineered Storage Products Company division (“ESPC”). The
    “transfer” was solely an accounting construct, as the ESPC was not a separate
    legal entity from A.O. Smith.
    In December 2000, A.O. Smith and CST entered into an Asset Purchase
    Agreement (“APA”) concerning certain assets and liabilities of the ESPC
    division. The APA contained the following provisions.
    [A.O. Smith], through its division, [ESPC] (the “Division”),
    is engaged in the business of designing, engineering,
    manufacturing, marketing and erecting liquid and dry bulk storage
    tanks. [CST] desires to purchase substantially all of the operating
    assets of the Division and to assume certain of the operating
    liabilities as specified herein, and [A.O. Smith] desires to sell the
    Division as an ongoing business and delegate such liabilities to
    [CST], on the terms and subject to the conditions set forth in this
    Agreement. The term “Division” is sometimes used herein as
    though it were a separate entity; when so used the term means
    that [A.O. Smith] is the entity referred to but only insofar as the
    activities, assets or liabilities relate to the Division and are
    accounted for as part of the Division’s activities. The term
    “Business” means the business of the Division as conducted as of
    the date of this Agreement.
    In reliance upon the representations and warranties made
    herein and in consideration of the mutual covenants and
    agreements herein contained, [CST] and [A.O. Smith] hereby
    agree as follows:
    ARTICLE I
    PURCHASE AND SALE OF ASSETS
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    1.1 Purchase and Sale.            Subject to the terms and
    conditions contained herein, at the Closing, [A.O. Smith] shall sell,
    convey, transfer, assign and deliver to [CST], and [CST] shall
    purchase and accept from [A.O. Smith], all of [A.O. Smith]’s right,
    title and interest in and to all of the assets used primarily or held
    for use primarily in the Division or the Business, and all tangible
    assets located at the Facilities . . . except the Excluded Assets and
    Nontransferred Assets . . . (collectively, the “Purchased Assets”).
    1.2    Definitions: Purchased Assets.
    1.2.1 Definitions. For purposes of this Agreement, the
    following terms have the meanings set forth below:
    ....
    “Assumed Liabilities” means only the following liabilities of
    [A.O. Smith] relating to the Division, the Business or the
    Purchased Assets as of the Closing Date . . . subject to Section
    1.5    [regarding    excluded   liabilities] and    Article      XI
    [“Indemnification”]: . . .
    (C) all liabilities in the nature of product liability,
    including, without limitation, any liability for claims made for
    injury to person, damage to property or other damage
    arising from, caused by or arising out of any product
    designed, manufactured, assembled, installed, sold, leased
    or licensed by the Division, prior to the Closing date[.]
    ....
    1.4 Assumed Liabilities. Provided that the transactions
    herein contemplated are consummated, and subject to Section 1.5
    and Article XI, [CST] will assume and pay, perform and discharge
    when due, and will indemnify [A.O. Smith] against, the Assumed
    Liabilities and no others, except as provided herein.
    1.5 Excluded Liabilities. [CST] shall not be responsible for
    any liability or obligation of [A.O. Smith] that is owed to or at the
    behest of a third party other than the Assumed Liabilities nor for
    any liability or obligation if and to the extent [A.O. Smith] has an
    indemnification obligation with respect thereto under Article XI
    (the “Excluded Liabilities”). Without limitation, [CST] shall not be
    responsible for, and the Excluded Liabilities shall include:
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    ....
    (o) any liabilities of [A.O. Smith] arising out of any
    litigation matters identified in Exhibit 2.13, other than those
    matters referenced in Item 2 of Exhibit 2.13. [Exhibit 2.13 is
    entitled “Litigation.” Among other things, Item 2 lists litigation
    respecting product liability and references Exhibit 2.22. Exhibit
    2.22, “Products Liability,” includes the case of William Smith v.
    A.O. Smith Harvestore Products, Inc., a New York products
    liability action involving a roller mill.]
    ....
    ARTICLE XI
    INDEMNIFICATION
    ....
    11.2 Indemnification by [CST]. Subject to [certain limitations
    and qualifications], [CST] shall indemnify [A.O. Smith], and its
    officers, directors, employees, shareholders, agents and
    representatives against and hold them harmless from any
    Damages[, including reasonable attorney fees,] incurred or
    sustained by [A.O. Smith] or any of its shareholders, officers or
    directors as a result of
    (i) the breach of any term, provision, covenant or
    agreement contained in this Agreement by [CST];
    ....
    (iii) [CST]’s failure to pay, perform and discharge, when
    due, any of the Assumed Liabilities[.]
    APA (Joint Trial Exhibit JX086) at 1-2, 9-10, 37-38 (some formatting modified
    for ease of reading).
    Approximately one decade after the APA was executed, Danielle Fisher
    initiated the instant lawsuit against A.O. Smith contending that she had been
    injured by a Harvestore roller mill. A.O. Smith sought indemnification for Ms.
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    Fisher’s claim from CST based upon the APA. CST declined. The trial court
    entered summary judgment in favor of A.O. Smith, holding that the language
    of the APA indicated that CST had assumed liability for personal injuries
    caused by Harvestore roller mills. Thereafter, CST’s insurers opted to settle
    with Ms. Fisher, and the trial court approved the global settlement of Ms.
    Fisher’s personal injury claims. A.O. Smith then filed a petition for attorney
    fees, which the trial court denied.
    Multiple appeals followed. Ultimately, this Court, sitting en banc, ruled
    that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment to A.O. Smith.
    Vacating the grant of summary judgment, this Court did not reach the issue
    of whether A.O. Smith was entitled to attorney fees under the APA.                 This
    Court dismissed the related appeals as moot.        See Fisher v. A.O. Smith
    Harvestore Products, Inc., 
    145 A.3d 738
    , 750 (Pa.Super. 2016) (en banc).
    On   remand,    the   trial   court   scheduled   a   trial   to   resolve   the
    indemnification issues. Prior to trial, CST filed for bankruptcy in the United
    States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.               As a result, the
    indemnification proceedings were subject to an automatic stay.                In the
    bankruptcy court, CST’s insurers, Illinois Union Insurance Company and its
    affiliates and their successors (collectively identifying themselves as “Chubb”),
    moved for relief from the stay. Specifically, Chubb argued that because CST’s
    insurers had paid the company’s portion of the settlement to Ms. Fisher, the
    indemnification claim was “essentially an action between two non-Debtors.”
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    Chubb’s Motion for Relief from the Automatic Stay, 10/24/17, at 4. 1 As the
    funds had already been paid and any recoupment from A.O. Smith would be
    realized by the insurers rather than CST, resolution of the indemnification
    claim would not have any impact on the bankruptcy estate.
    Id. The bankruptcy court
    granted Chubb’s motion, lifting the stay and directing that,
    should CST receive the return of any funds from A.O. Smith as a result of
    Chubb’s litigation of the indemnification claim, CST was to immediately remit
    any such amount to the insurers.
    Id. at
    Bankruptcy Court Order, 12/4/17, at
    ¶¶ 1-3.2
    With the stay lifted, the indemnification claim proceeded to a bench trial.
    On May 7, 2019, the trial court issued findings of fact and conclusions of law
    and entered a verdict in favor of A.O. Smith.       Both parties filed post-trial
    motions: CST raised multiple claims of trial court error in construing the APA
    and in evaluating the evidence while A.O. Smith sought the entry of judgment
    against CST and Chubb for the attorney fees and costs that it incurred
    subsequent to the approval of CST’s settlement with Ms. Fisher.          The trial
    court denied CST’s motion, but granted A.O. Smith’s motion providing that
    CST and Chubb were “jointly and severally liable to A.O. Smith for all
    ____________________________________________
    1Chubb’s motion is in the certified record in A.O. Smith’s Motion for Post-Trial
    Relief, 5/29/19, at Exhibit D.
    2The order lifting the bankruptcy stay is in the certified record in A.O. Smith’s
    Motion for Post-Trial Relief, 5/29/19, at Exhibit E.
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    reasonable attorneys’ fees and expenses that A.O. Smith has incurred in this
    matter subsequent to February 8, 2013[.]”          Order (A.O. Smith’s post-trial
    motion), 6/27/19, at 2.
    CST filed a timely notice of appeal, and both CST and the trial court
    complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925. The parties presented their positions at video
    argument, and this appeal is ripe for our disposition.           CST presents the
    following questions for our consideration:
    1.    Did the Court of Common Pleas err by failing to apply the
    law of the case as directed by the Superior Court in its en
    banc opinion?
    A.    Did the court again misapply Illinois law in holding
    CST had to prove the non-inclusion of roller mill
    liabilities in the APA?
    B.    Did the trial court misconstrue “Division” despite this
    Court’s direction and the evidence at trial?
    2.    When the trial court said that CST needed to establish that
    roller mill liabilities were “Excluded Liabilities,” did it err not
    only in shifting the burden but in failing to consider the
    evidence that the liabilities were in fact expressly excluded?
    3.    Given that the trial court had already found that CST did not
    breach the indemnification obligation of the APA since it paid
    Ms. Fisher when due, and given that A.O. Smith abandoned
    any request for fees pre-trial and at trial, did the trial court
    err in awarding (A) A.O. Smith attorneys’ fees not pleaded
    until its post-trial motion; and (B) “jointly and severally”
    against CST and a non-party on the never-established
    ground that the non-party was a “successor” to CST?
    CST’s brief at 3-4.
    We begin with a review of the applicable legal principles.
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    Our standard of review in non-jury cases is limited to: a
    determination of whether the findings of the trial court are
    supported by competent evidence and whether the trial court
    committed error in the application of law. Findings of the trial
    judge in a non-jury case must be given the same weight and effect
    on appeal as a verdict of a jury and will not be disturbed on appeal
    absent error of law or abuse of discretion. When this Court
    reviews the findings of the trial judge, the evidence is viewed in
    the light most favorable to the victorious party below and all
    evidence and proper inferences favorable to that party must be
    taken as true and all unfavorable inferences rejected.
    Landis v. Wilt, 
    222 A.3d 28
    , 34 (Pa.Super. 2019) (quotation marks omitted).
    The APA provides that it is governed by Illinois law. See APA at 46.3
    Under Illinois law, “[i]ndemnification agreements are . . . subject to the
    ordinary rules of contract interpretation.” Henry v. Waller, 
    975 N.E.2d 93
    ,
    97 (Ill. App. Ct. 2012).
    The primary goal of contract interpretation is to give effect to the
    intent of the parties. In determining the intent of the parties, a
    court must consider the contract document as a whole and not
    focus on isolated portions of the document. If the language of a
    contract is clear and unambiguous, the intent of the parties must
    be determined solely from the language of the contract document
    itself, which should be given its plain and ordinary meaning, and
    the contract should be enforced as written. However, if the
    contract language is ambiguous, the meaning of the contract
    language must be ascertained through a consideration of extrinsic
    evidence.
    The determination of whether a contract is ambiguous is a
    question of law for a court to decide. . . . If a court determines
    that a contract is ambiguous, extrinsic evidence may be
    considered by the trier of fact in determining the intent of the
    parties.
    ____________________________________________
    3   The APA is in the certified record as Joint Trial Exhibit JX086.
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    Richard W. McCarthy Tr. Dated September 2, 2004 v. Illinois Cas. Co.,
    
    946 N.E.2d 895
    , 903 (Ill. App. Ct. 2011) (cleaned up). Specifically, “the court
    should admit parol evidence to explain ambiguities in a written document
    presented as a contract.” CFC Inv., L.L.C. v. McLean, 
    900 N.E.2d 716
    , 723
    (Ill. App. Ct. 2008). “Evidence as to [the] intent of parties to an ambiguous
    agreement . . . may be drawn from either contemporaneous or subsequent
    acts or conduct, looking to the substance and not the form of the transaction.”
    Matter of Estate of Dorfman, 
    486 N.E.2d 310
    , 314 (Ill. App. Ct. 1985).
    Concomitantly, we note that “indemnity contracts are to be strictly
    construed, and any ambiguity in the agreement is to be construed most
    strongly against the indemnitee.” Blackshare v. Banfield, 
    857 N.E.2d 743
    ,
    746 (Ill. App. Ct. 2006).    “While the indemnity provision must be strictly
    construed, each case also depends upon the language and facts of that
    particular case.” 933 Van Buren Condo. Ass’n v. W. Van Buren, LLC, 
    61 N.E.3d 929
    , 941 (Ill. App. Ct. 2016) (cleaned up).
    With these principles in mind, we turn to the claims of error raised by
    CST. In its first claim, CST contends that the trial court failed to apply the law
    of the case upon remand from this Court’s en banc decision. Specifically, CST
    represents that this Court’s prior decision included rulings that (1) the APA’s
    definition of assumed liabilities was not sufficient to cover future roller mill
    liabilities; (2) the APA does not support the conclusion that the identification
    of an existing roller mill case in Exhibit 2.22 made it an assumed liability; and
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    (3) the APA simply does not set forth an expression of intent for CST to assume
    roller mill liabilities. See CST’s brief at 34-35 (citing 
    Fisher, supra
    at 20-
    22). Applying to these alleged holdings the requirement of Illinois law that
    agreements to indemnify be clear and explicit, CST maintains that the trial
    court was obligated to conclude that no indemnification could be ordered in
    this case.
    Id. at
    37-38. CST further argues that, to the extent that extrinsic
    evidence was admissible to establish the parties’ intent, the trial court ignored
    some of it and overly relied upon self-serving testimony of A.O. Smith’s
    representative in charge of negotiating the APA, Steve Rettler, whose
    testimony allegedly contradicted the express terms of the APA.
    Id. at
    44.
    We find no merit in CST’s arguments. First, the law of the case doctrine
    provides, in relevant part, that “upon remand for further proceedings, a trial
    court may not alter the resolution of a legal question previously decided by
    the appellate court in the matter[.]” Mariner Chestnut Partners, L.P. v.
    Lenfest, 
    152 A.3d 265
    , 282 (Pa.Super. 2016).4 “To determine whether the
    law of the case doctrine applies, a court must examine the rulings at issue in
    the context of the procedural posture of the case.”
    Id. at
    282-83.
    Critically, CST’s arguments misconstrue this Court’s holding in 
    Fisher, supra
    . We did not, as CTS suggests, hold that the APA was insufficiently clear
    ____________________________________________
    4 We agree with CST that the applicability of the law-of-the-case doctrine to
    the rulings of the Pennsylvania courts adjudicating this case is a question of
    Pennsylvania law. See CST’s brief at 33 (invoking Pennsylvania law).
    - 10 -
    J-A10010-20
    to justify finding the existence of an indemnification obligation under Illinois
    law. Rather, we held that the issue was not so clear and free from doubt as
    to permit it to be decided at summary judgment. The limited nature of our
    holding could not have been more plainly expressed:
    The trial court’s decision rested on the APA’s plain language. In
    vacating the trial court’s order, we conclude only that the
    APA’s plain language does not justify entry of summary
    judgment in [A.O.] Smith’s favor. If, under the circumstances
    of this case, any extrinsic evidence is admissible and relevant, its
    import will depend on findings of fact. Any such findings must
    come from the trial court in the first instance.
    Id. at
    748 n.10 (citations omitted, emphasis added). Since this Court ruled
    that the trial court erred in granting A.O. Smith judgment as a matter of law
    because an issue of fact—the intent of the parties—precluded summary
    judgment, the trial court would have violated the law of the case had it not
    held a full trial for the finder of fact to resolve the issue.
    That the trial court reached the same conclusion in its verdict on remand
    is not an indication that it discarded this Court’s rulings.     On the contrary,
    this Court acknowledged that the language of the APA does “not foreclose the
    possibility that CST assumed liabilities unrelated to the bulk storage tank
    Business,” and that it “arguably supports a conclusion that CST agreed to
    discharge certain liabilities not within the contractual definition of Assumed
    Liabilities.” 
    Fisher, supra
    at 748 & n.11. The trial court’s conclusion that
    the extrinsic evidence supported A.O. Smith’s position as to the parties’ intent
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    does not contradict any prior holding of this Court, and therefore does not
    violate the law of the case doctrine.
    Nor do we discern any merit in CST’s argument that the trial court
    ignored evidence or Illinois law. First, CST’s view of Illinois law appears to be
    that if there is any ambiguity in an indemnification agreement, there can be
    no indemnification obligation. In other words, it contends that Illinois law only
    permits the enforcement of unambiguous indemnification contracts. However,
    as our recitation of Illinois law above reveals, indemnification agreements are
    subject to the same rules of construction as any other contract. Namely, such
    instruments are to be construed in light of the language used and the factual
    circumstances engendering their execution, with ambiguities resolved by
    using extrinsic evidence to determine the parties’ intent. See, e.g., 933 Van
    Buren Condo. Ass’n, supra at 941. CST offers no authority to support the
    position that there can be no indemnification obligation that is not clear from
    the four corners of the contract.
    As for the allegation that the trial court ignored evidence, from our
    review of the trial court’s findings of fact, conclusions of law, and Pa.R.A.P.
    1925(a) opinion, we see no indication that the trial court refused to consider
    relevant evidence. In making its determination, the trial court expressly relied
    upon the testimony of CST’s owner and president William “Don” Wagner and
    his assistant Ronald Stier, as well as that of Mr. Rettler.     See Trial Court
    Opinion, 11/13/19, at 8. The trial court found Mr. Rettler credible in explaining
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    that the purpose of using the separate terms “Division” and “Business” in the
    APA was to distinguish between: (1) the complete assets and liabilities of the
    ESPC accounted for on its books, which would include liabilities of no-longer-
    operating Harvestore and Peabody (“Division”); and (2) the business that
    ESPC was actively conducting at the time of the agreement (“Business”).5 See
    Findings of Fact, 5/7/19, at 4.
    When negotiating the liabilities that were transferred under the APA,
    A.O. Smith attempted to maximize the scope of transfer, while CST sought to
    narrow the scope as much as possible.
    Id. at
    4-5. During this process, CST
    had management, attorneys, and accountants review ESPC’s books, including
    “financial statements, balance sheets, historical litigation and pending claims,
    product liability loss runs, product failures, and historical warranty credits.”
    Id. at
    6.    Among the documents reviewed by CST were those related to
    warranty credits and personal injury claims flowing from Harvestore legacy
    products,6 as well as those arising from Peabody legacy liabilities.
    Id. at
    7-8.
    ____________________________________________
    5 CST argues that the distinction between Division and Business being
    temporal (“with Division being ‘former’ and Business being ‘current’”) does not
    make sense in viewing the APA as a whole, because “there are present-tense
    descriptions attributed to the Division throughout the APA.” CST’s brief at 44.
    CST misunderstands the definitions accepted by the trial court. The Division
    does not refer solely to liabilities for past conduct, but rather encompasses
    the current Business plus liabilities for former conduct.
    6 Among these were the 1994 William Smith roller mill case in New York,
    another roller mill claim by Colin Usry in 1996, a closed personal injury claim
    regarding a Harvestore belt feeder.
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    As such, CST was aware that the Division had exposure to liability from
    Peabody and Harvestore products, including Harverstore’s Aquastore product
    line, belt feeders, and roller mills.
    Id. at
    8.
    
    The parties went back and forth on drafts of the definition of “Assumed
    Liabilities,” ultimately agreeing upon one which included “all liabilities in the
    nature of product liability, including, without limitation,” liability for claims for
    damages arising out of various aspects of the products and services of the
    Division.
    Id. at
    5.   CST specifically negotiated to have all Peabody liabilities,
    and some Harvestore liabilities such as the belt feeder liability, enumerated
    among the liabilities that were expressly excluded from the assumed liabilities.
    However, while Mr. Wagner acknowledged that CST had information about the
    Division’s roller mill liabilities, it did not include those among the excluded
    product liabilities. Mr. Wagner simply “did not consider the roller mill liabilities
    to be a ‘significant issue.’”
    Id. at
    9. This is corroborated by the fact that the
    William Smith roller mill case was actually excluded from the list of excluded
    liabilities, leaving it within the realm of assumed product liabilities. See Trial
    Court Opinion, 11/13/19, at 7-8.
    CST’s argument concerning the trial court’s treatment of the trial
    evidence fails to appreciate that this Court’s review of the factual findings in
    the instant appeal is far different that the review we conducted in Fisher.
    There, this Court applied the same standard as the trial court in viewing the
    record in the light most favorable to CST and examined whether judgment as
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    a matter of law in favor of A.O. Smith was clear and free from doubt.         See
    
    Fisher, supra
    at 741. Here, by contrast, our standard of review gives great
    deference to the trial court’s factual determinations, and we must view the
    evidence in the light most favorable to A.O. Smith as the verdict winner. See
    Landis, supra at 34. The trial court, as fact finder, was free to accept some,
    all, or none of the evidence. See Williams v. Taylor, 
    188 A.3d 447
    , 450
    (Pa.Super. 2018). This Court will not second-guess credibility determinations
    that are supported by the record or reweigh the evidence to CST’s liking.
    Id. The above recitation
    of the trial court’s analysis of the evidence does
    not indicate that it refused to consider any of the testimony or exhibits offered
    at trial.   Rather, the trial court concluded that the language of the APA,
    augmented by the extrinsic evidence of the course of negotiations and the
    difference between the terms Division and Business, established that the
    parties’ intent was to include the ESPC’s product liabilities for Harvestore roller
    mills in the liabilities assumed by CST. Therefore, because we discern no error
    of law and the above-detailed review confirms that the trial court’s factual
    findings are supported by competent evidence, CST’s first issue lacks merit.
    CST’s next issue is that the trial court improperly shifted the burden of
    proof at trial.    See CST’s brief at 3.       CST maintains that instead of
    acknowledging that A.O. Smith had the burden to show that CST intended to
    assume liability for the roller mills, the trial court “presumed that roller mill
    liabilities were included unless CST could prove it expressly excluded them.”
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    Id. at
    47. CST argues that, in so doing, the trial court acted “contrary to
    Illinois law, the testimony at trial, and CST’s (non-existent) burden.”
    Id. CST again seeks
    to have this Court rule in its favor based upon snippets
    of trial testimony that support its position on the factual question of the
    parties’ intent. As we have already explained, that is not our role in reviewing
    a non-jury verdict.     See Williams, supra at 450.           The trial court, after
    considering all the evidence, concluded that the parties intended to include
    roller mill liabilities among the assumed liabilities. We have no basis to disturb
    that finding.
    Specifically, the court adjudged that, in defining “Assumed Liabilities”
    relating to the product liability in reference to not merely the Business but also
    to the Division, the parties intended to include within that definition not only
    those liabilities related to the ESPC’s current products, but also those
    associated with Harvestore and Peabody legacy products.            This conclusion is
    in harmony with the language of the APA, which provides that “Assumed
    Liabilities” included “all liabilities in the nature of product liability” except those
    included among the “Excluded Liabilities.” APA at 2. Therefore, the trial court
    did not shift the burden of proof to CST. Rather, it merely applied the express
    language of the APA. The trial court did not commit legal error, but instead
    enforced the contract as written after utilizing extrinsic evidence to determine
    the parties’ intent as to the ambiguous Business/Division distinction. No relief
    is due on CST’s second claim.
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    In its third and final issue, CST challenges the trial court’s award of
    attorney fees to A.O. Smith. CST notes that, prior to remand, the trial court
    ruled that A.O. Smith was not entitled to attorney fees under the terms of the
    APA because CST complied with its indemnification obligation by settling the
    claims with Ms. Fisher. CST claims that the trial court erred in reversing its
    prior decision on this point.     Additionally, CST argues that A.O. Smith
    abandoned its request for fees at the trial following this Court’s remand. See
    CST’s brief at 4, 53-54. Moreover, CST contends that A.O. Smith waived any
    right to damages for CST’s failure to indemnify under the APA when A.O. Smith
    agreed that CST could settle Ms. Fisher’s claim but allowed CST to reserve the
    right to appeal the trial court’s summary judgment order.
    Id. at
    54. Finally,
    CST argues that Chubb was never joined as a party to this action, and there
    is no proof that Chubb is CST’s successor, meaning that Chubb has been
    denied a full and fair opportunity to contest the judgment entered against it.
    Id. at
    55-57.
    A.O. Smith counters that CST was on notice before it settled Ms. Fisher’s
    claim that A.O. Smith would be seeking attorney fees pursuant to the
    indemnification provisions of the APA, and that it would seek to recover fees
    that it would incur when CST appealed the summary judgment ruling. See
    A.O. Smith’s brief at 56. Since this Court vacated that ruling and re-opened
    the question of A.O. Smith’s entitlement to indemnification, A.O. Smith posits
    that the fee claim was not ripe to be reasserted until the trial court issued its
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    J-A10010-20
    findings of the fact regarding CST’s breach of the APA and entered a verdict
    in A.O. Smith’s favor.
    Id. at
    58-59. A.O. Smith further asserts that CST’s
    argument concerning A.O. Smith’s agreement to an appeal following the
    settlement is baseless, as “A.O. Smith has consistently maintained that CST’s
    decision to pursue litigation to force A.O. Smith to pay for the settlement that
    CST negotiated with Ms. Fisher would result in damages in the form of
    attorney’s fees that are recoverable by A.O. Smith pursuant to the APA.”
    Id. at
    60. 
    Finally, A.O. Smith insists that Chubb was properly included as a payor
    of the attorney fee damages because Chubb obtained leave from the
    bankruptcy court to litigate CST’s indemnification claim by declaring that it
    was “subrogated to the right of CST to pursue” return of the funds it paid to
    Ms. Fisher.
    Id. at
    61. 
    A.O. Smith argues that, since Chubb took all of the
    benefits of CST’s rights when it pursued CST’s claim in subrogation, Chubb
    also exposed itself to all liabilities CST faced through the litigation.
    Id. at
    63-
    64.
    The trial court’s opinion on this issue is succinct, if not meager.        It
    indicates merely that because it found that CST was required to indemnify
    A.O. Smith, CST breached the APA by not doing so initially, and “[t]he costs
    stemming from this breach are thus recoverable by A.O. Smith under the
    APA.” Trial Court Opinion, 11/13/19, at 9. The court also states that the
    Chubb entities “are successors in interest to CST,” citing as authority for this
    proposition its order granting A.O. Smith’s post-trial motion.
    Id. The cited -
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    J-A10010-20
    order contains no explanation for Chubb’s successor status or reference to
    evidence thereof. However, the order references A.O. Smith’s motion, which
    does include such evidentiary support. See A.O. Smith’s Motion for Post-Trial
    Relief, 5/29/19, at Exhibit D (Chubb’s Motion for Relief from the Automatic
    Stay, 10/24/17), and Exhibit E (Bankruptcy Court Order, 12/4/17).
    Upon thorough review of all the pertinent filings, we glean no basis to
    disturb the trial court’s order. First, the APA provides that CST shall indemnify
    A.O. Smith for damages it incurs, including reasonable attorney fees, as a
    result of CST’s failure to “pay, perform and discharge, when due, any of the
    Assumed Liabilities[.]” APA at 37-38. Such provisions are permissible under
    Illinois law. See, e.g., Downs v. Rosenthal Collins Grp., LLC, 
    895 N.E.2d 1057
    , 1059 (Ill. App. Ct. 2008) (noting attorney fees are recoverable if
    specifically provided for in the indemnity contract). Further, A.O. Smith placed
    CST and Chubb on notice of its claim to recover future attorney-fee damages
    both before and after CST settled Ms. Fisher’s claim and pursued litigation to
    get that money back from A.O. Smith. See, e.g., Chubb’s Motion for Relief
    from the Automatic Stay, 10/24/17, at 4.
    Second, we reject CST’s contention that it did not breach the APA
    because it paid Ms. Fisher’s claim. We see no relevant distinction between (1)
    forcing A.O. Smith to litigate CST’s duty to perform and then paying the
    liability after CST’s efforts to avoid performing failed, and (2) paying the
    liability and then forcing A.O. Smith to litigate CST’s right to recover the
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    J-A10010-20
    payment based upon a lack of duty to perform.               Either way, A.O. Smith
    suffered damages in the form of litigation costs and attorney fees resulting
    from CST’s refusal to accept and perform its contractual duty.
    Third, as noted above, Chubb sought leave from the court in which CST’s
    bankruptcy was pending to purse the instant indemnification claim by
    representing to that court that it was “essentially an action between two non-
    Debtors” because the real impact of the resolution of the indemnification claim
    would be felt by Chubb and the other insurers who paid Ms. Fisher’s
    settlement. Chubb’s Motion for Relief from the Automatic Stay, 10/24/17, at
    4. In another filing, Chubb expressly invoked its subrogation rights under
    Pennsylvania law to be legally substituted for CST in the instant case to
    recover the amount it paid to A.O. Smith on CST’s behalf. See Response and
    Reservation of Rights, 11/7/17, at 4.7             See also
    id. at 5
    (“Insurers are
    therefore subrogated to the right of CST to pursue the indemnity claim, and,
    if successful, recover amounts paid to A.O. Smith under the settlement
    agreement.” (unnecessary capitalization omitted))
    “It is well-established that subrogation is derivative in nature, placing
    the subrogee in the precise position of the one to whose rights and disabilities
    he is subrogated.” Universal Underwriters Ins. Co. v. A. Richard Kacin,
    ____________________________________________
    7This filing is in the certified record in A.O. Smith’s Motion to Dismiss CST’s
    Claims, 2/26/18, at Exhibit E.
    - 20 -
    J-A10010-20
    Inc., 
    916 A.2d 686
    , 694 (Pa.Super. 2007) (cleaned up).        8   “[S]ubrogation is
    not an inflexible legal concept but an exercise of equitable powers, and a court
    is to enforce subrogation interests with a proper equitable discretion and with
    a due regard for the legal and equitable rights of others.” Prof’l Flooring
    Co., Inc. v. Bushar Corp., 
    152 A.3d 292
    , 302 (Pa.Super. 2016).
    As CST’s subrogee, Chubb succeeded to CST’s position in this case, and
    thereby had both notice of A.O. Smith’s allegations of breach and damages in
    the nature of fees, and a full and fair opportunity to be heard on both issues.
    Not only did Chubb step into CST’s shoes, it was the driving force behind A.O.
    Smith’s incursion of the costs and fees of the trial. As such, we conclude that
    naming Chubb, itself, in the fee order was within the trial court’s flexible
    exercise of equitable discretion invoked by Chubb through its filings. Accord
    Nathan A. Watson Co. v. Employers Mut. Cas. Co., 
    218 S.W.3d 797
    , 803
    (Tex. App. 2007) (“[W]e hold that when an insurer sues in subrogation under
    a contract, it is entitled to all of the rights of its subrogee and likewise exposed
    to all of its liabilities.”).
    Finally, the fact that the trial court had denied A.O. Smith’s initial fee
    request, which included the costs of defending Fisher’s claims, did not prevent
    A.O. Smith from later pursuing the damages it sustained as a result of CST’s
    ____________________________________________
    8 As the question whether Chubb could pursue CST’s claims in Pennsylvania
    court does not involve construction or interpretation of the APA, we again
    agree that Pennsylvania rather than Illinois law is applicable to the issue.
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    J-A10010-20
    efforts to undo its performance of an assumed liability. See, e.g., Wright v.
    Misty Mountain Farm, LLC, 
    125 A.3d 814
    , 818 (Pa.Super. 2015) (“A trial
    judge may always revisit her own pretrial rulings without violating the law of
    the case doctrine.”). Indeed, Chubb acknowledged in its motion to lift the
    bankruptcy stay that A.O. Smith had not abandoned its attorney fee request,
    and thus should have fully expected the claim to resurface when it obtained
    relief from the bankruptcy stay.
    Nor does the fact that the fee request was not renewed until after trial
    warrant reversal.    Until the trial court made the factual finding that CST
    breached the APA, the nature and extent of A.O. Smith’s damages caused by
    CST’s breach was unknown. Moreover, while attempting to get the bankruptcy
    court’s approval to pursue CST’s claim, Chubb acknowledged that this would
    be the procedure used: “the indemnity claim must be fully and finally
    resolved before a petition can be filed or a decision may be rendered
    on the attorneys’ fees claim.” Chubb’s Motion for Relief from the Automatic
    Stay, 10/24/17, at 4 (unnecessary capitalization omitted, emphasis added).
    Chubb cannot now complain that it was unaware that, if A.O. Smith prevailed
    in the indemnification trial, a post-trial petition for attorney fees would likely
    follow. As such, we hold that none of the attorney fee arguments merits relief.
    For all the above reasons, we affirm the grant of A.O. Smith’s post-trial
    motion and the judgment entered upon the trial court’s verdict.
    Judgment affirmed.
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    J-A10010-20
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 9/24/20
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