OPINION OF THE COURT
The issue is whether a disclaimer of liability, based on specified exclusions in two professional “errors and omissions” indemnity insurance policies, waived the insurers’ defense that the claim was outside the scope of the insuring clause of the policy.
The plaintiff, Albert J. Schiff Associates, Inc., life insurance agents and employee benefit consultants, purchased two such insurance contracts from the defendants, who are Lloyd’s insurers.
It was a letter of disclaimer based on these three exclusions that precipitated the dispute between the insured and its insurers. The disclaimer disavowed any obligation to defend or indemnify against a suit brought against the insured in a Massachusetts court. The complaint in that action, brought by a competitor of the insured, one Backman, charged the insured with what is reasonably to be construed, as it was by the majority at the Appellate Division, as a “willful and malicious usurpation of a trade or commercial secret”. Specifically, it alleged that Backman, the developer of a novel insurance program (the Double Dollar Plan), revealed it to Albert J. Schiff, concededly agent plenipotentiary for the corporation which bears his name. It goes on to describe how Schiff, despite the injunction of a written agreement which proscribed his disclosing the plan to others, except under conditions not relevant here, once privy to this information, converted it lock, stock and barrel for the benefit of his corporation, albeit under another name (the Executive Salary Protection Plan). So insistent was the pléader in his assertion that Schiff’s conduct was “willful” that only once in a 10-count complaint did any form of the qualitatively lesser word “neglected” appear, and then only to be preceded by the adjective “willfully”.
These facts are before us in the following procedural context. After the insured received the insurers’ disclaimer of liability, it commenced this action. Juxtaposing the Massachusetts complaint and the language of the insurance contracts (see Shapiro v Glens Falls Ins. Co.,
On appeal to the Appellate Division, that court sharply divided, Justice Sullivan, writing for a majority of three, declined to reach the merits of the disclaimer, but, of the view that the Massachusetts claim did “not in any way suggest a negligent act, error or omission in the performance of any professional services”, held that the claim therefore was not within the policy coverage. Concordantly, the court reversed on the law. Of the two dissenters, Justice Kupferman, characterizing the Massachusetts claim as one based on “idea piracy” would have made no determination with respect to indemnity, but would have affirmed Special Term in providing a defense. For his part, Justice Birns, who also would have affirmed, expressed the opinion that, since the disclaimer relied solely on particular exclusions, it constituted “a waiver” of any unspecified grounds, including the insuring clause itself; since he thought the applicability of the named exclusions unclear, he too would have had the disposition of that issue await the resolution of the underlying Massachusetts action. For the reasons which follow, we believe the result reached by the Appellate Division should be upheld.
We start our analysis by noting that the coverage under the policies in this case is not merely what is found under the heading “insuring agreement”. Just as this clause affirmatively indicates the coverage which is included, so does the “exclusion” clause tell us expressly what is not. In policies so drawn, the protection the insured has purchased is the sum total, or net balance, however one labels it, of a coming together of the two. For it is not either alone, but the combination of both, which defines the scope of the protection afforded — no more and no less.
Now, failure to appreciate the relationship between the two clauses — that they are each part of a whole — has often led not only to misdescription of what is coverage and what is not, but also to consequent contextual misapplication of the concepts of waiver and estoppel as well (e.g., S & E Motor Hire Corp v New York Ind. Co.,
Thus, for the insured to extend its coverage to more than it originally bargained, it would have had to enter into a supplemental contract expanding the insuring clause or contracting the exceptions. However, this extension of coverage cannot be attained by waiver, which is a voluntary and intentional relinquishment of a known right (Davison v Klaess,
Distinguished from waiver, of course, is the intervention of principles of equitable estoppel, in an appropriate case, such as where an insurer, though in fact not obligated to provide coverage, without asserting policy defenses or reserving the privilege to do so, undertakes the defense of the case, in reliance on which the insured suffers the detriment of losing the right to control its own defense. In such circumstances, though coverage as such does not exist, the insurer will not be heard to say so (see O’Dowd v American Sur. Co. of N. Y.,
Turning now to the coverage provided by the policies, it is axiomatic that, while a contract of insurance is to be construed liberally in favor of the insured, where its terms are clear and unambiguous, they must be so read (Government Employees Ins. Co. v Kligler,
The insured, nevertheless, argues that, because the allegedly misappropriated plan presumably furthered one or more of the three insurance activities enumerated in the policies, the lawsuit pertaining to such misappropriation falls within the ambit of coverage. Disregarding for now the qualitative character of this alleged acquisition, surely this assertion stands on no firmer ground than would, let
The renting of an office, the engagement of employees, arrangements to expand the size of one’s activities, these may all have some connection with a covered business or profession. But, while they may set the stage for the performance of business or professional services, they are not the professional activities contemplated by this special coverage. An errors and omissions policy is intended to insure a member of a designated calling against liability arising out of the mistakes inherent in the practice of that particular profession or business (see Grieb v Citizens Cas. Co.,
Having decided that the underlying litigation falls outside the scope of the policies, we now need state only that the insurers did not lose their right to the defense of noncoverage by their initial disclaimer of liability based on the three policy exclusions, since that defense is never waived by a failure to assert it in a notice of disclaimer. Further, there is no question of estoppel in this case since the insurers at all times denied liability to indemnify and refused to undertake to defend. Thus, the defense of noncoverage remained intact and was properly asserted on the motion to dismiss.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.
Order affirmed, with costs.
Notes
. The insurance policies, which were obtained through Lloyd’s brokers in England, are identical except that one is primary and the other excess. The defendants here are the underwriters and other participants in the coverage so written.
. Our court long ago made clear that it will not countenance the avoidance of the law of waiver by respecting the labeling as an exclusion of what, substantively is a condition. (Draper, at p 18.)
