ALLSTATE INSURANCE COMPANY, Plaintiff,
v.
Shaucat SALAHUTDIN, Jennie S. Salahutdin, Felicisimo I. Alcantara and Evelyn C. Alcantara, Defendants.
United States District Court, N.D. California.
*1310 Cynthia Mellema, Sonnenschein, Neth & Rosenthal, San Francisco, CA, for plaintiff.
Lola Ellwein, Miller, Starr & Regalia, Walnut Creek, CA, for defendants Salahutdin.
G. Berglund, Half Moon Bay, CA, for defendants Alcantara.
ORDER GRANTING SUMMARY JUDGMENT FOR PLAINTIFF
LYNCH, District Judge.
Plaintiff Allstate Insurance Company has filed a declaratory relief action. Defendants Shaucat Salahutdin and Jennie S. Salahutdin have cross-complained alleging bad faith. Allstate now brings summary judgment motions on both the declaratory relief action and the bad faith action. For the reasons set forth below, the Court GRANTS both motions.
STATEMENT OF FACTS
The Salahutdins and Alcantaras[1] are neighbors. These parties dispute the ownership of a strip of land between their properties. In December 1989, the Alcantaras began building a fence in the disputed land. The fence builders used a string to align the fence. This string was attached to the Salahutdins' address pole. Mrs. Salahutdin, upset that the Alcantaras were building a fence on what she believed to be her property, removed the string.
The Salahutdins filed suit on September 5, 1990, against the Alcantaras claiming a prescriptive easement and easement by estoppel across the disputed land. The Alcantaras cross-complained for intentional infliction of emotional distress and trespass. The cross-complaint alleges only these two causes of action, both of which are intentional torts. They based this cross-complaint upon the actions of Mrs. Salahutdin when she removed the string from her address pole. The Alcantara's cross-complaint is the subject of this declaratory relief action.
The Salahutdins had purchased an Allstate Deluxe Plus Homeowners Policy. That policy covered, under Section II Family Liability Protection, "damages which an insured person becomes legally obligated to pay because of bodily injury or property damage arising from an accident...." The policy also provided for a duty to defend.
On May 21, 1991, the Salahutdins tendered to Allstate the defense of this cross-complaint. On October 24, 1991, coverage counsel for Allstate determined that the Salahutdins' policy did not cover the damages complained of in the Alcantaras cross complaint. Specifically, Allstate correctly states that the policy only covered "damages arising from an accident." Allstate contends that Mrs. Salahutdin's action in removing the string from the address pole was an intentional act. Further, Allstate claims that an intentional act cannot be an accident. Accordingly, Allstate asserts that there is no coverage.
The Salahutdins admit that Mrs. Salahutdin intended to remove the string from the address pole and that all of her actions were taken deliberately. But, the Salahutdins contend that the term "accident" should be applied to the consequences of the act, not the act itself. They claim that Mrs. Salahutdin did not intend to damage the Alcantaras. They allege that she did not intend to trespass, nor physically or emotionally injure the Alcantaras. Essentially, the Salahutdins claim that the policy covers the Alcantara cross-complaint because it covers intentional acts which are not intended to inflict injury.
DISCUSSION
I. Declaratory Relief Claim
The duty to defend requires an insurance company to defend its insured against any loss potentially covered by the insurance policy. Chamberlain v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
The burden then shifts to the insurance company to prove that a policy exclusion applies. Merced Mutual Ins. Co. v. Mendez,
Essentially, the issue in this case is whether an insurance coverage provision limited to "damages arising from an accident" precludes coverage when the insured intends his actions, but not the resulting damage. The law on this issue in California is not entirely consistent. Compare Commercial Union Ins. Co. v. Superior Court,
In construing coverage provisions similar to that at issue here, the term "accident" has been defined as "`arising from extrinsic causes[;] occurring unexpectedly or by chance[; or] happening without intent or through carelessness.'" St. Paul Fire & Marine,
The Ninth Circuit addressed the same coverage provision as in the present case and found that it did not cover intentional acts by the insured, even when the insured did not intend the resulting damage. Chamberlain v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
The Salahutdins rely on cases which discuss the intentional acts exclusionary clause or the statutory prohibition against insurance for intentional acts, California Insurance Code Section 533. However, the intentional acts exclusion and Section 533 have not been interpreted in the same manner as coverage provisions which only cover accidents. See Chamberlain,
California courts distinguish between situations in which the dispute focuses on whether a particular loss falls within a policy's coverage and those in which the dispute focuses on the applicability of an exclusionary clause to conduct concededly covered by the policy.
Chamberlain,
Meyer and Firco are further distinguishable because the insurance policies in those cases were written to cover the very activity which caused the damage. In Meyer, the insured was a waterwell driller and the policy covered damages arising out of their drilling activities. Meyer,
This Court follows Merced Mutual, Commercial Union, Royal Globe, and Chamberlain, which hold that an insurance coverage provision which covers "damages arising out of an accident" does not cover acts intended by the insured, regardless of whether the *1313 insured intended the resulting damage. The Court finds that Mrs. Salahutdin intended to remove the string from her address pole. The Court also finds that Mrs. Salahutdin knew that the string was being used to align a fence on land whose ownership was in dispute. She took all of her actions deliberately and intentionally. Therefore, the damages arising from Mrs. Salahutdin's action are not covered under the terms of the Salahutdins' homeowners policy. Accordingly, the Court GRANTS Allstate's motion for summary judgment on the declaratory relief claim.
II. Bad Faith Claim
The Salahutdins have cross-complained for bad faith. They claim that Allstate (1) breached the duty to defend; (2) unreasonably denied coverage; (3) did not adequately investigate the Salahutdins' claim; and (4) did not timely respond to the tender of the defense. In light of the Court's disposition of Allstate's declaratory relief claim, there is no merit to the allegations that Allstate breached the duty to defend or unreasonably denied coverage. Marglen Industries, Inc. v. Aetna Casualty and Surety Company,
The Salahutdins' last claim is that Allstate unreasonably delayed its determination of coverage. The court in Murray stated in dicta that "in unusual circumstances," claims of unreasonable delay may state a cause of action for bad faith even if there is no coverage under the policy. Murray,
In addition, the Court finds that the delay in this case was not so "unusual" as to give rise to bad faith liability. The Salahutdins tendered the defense of the Alcantaras' cross-complaint to their agent on May 21, 1991. The agent forwarded the claim to the claims office. On August 2, 1991, the claims office notified the Salahutdins that Allstate was unable to accept their tender of a defense without the assistance of coverage counsel. On October 24, 1991, coverage counsel concluded that coverage did not exist. This appears to be the normal chain of events when a claim is denied. In light of the potential liability for bad faith, it is not unreasonable for an insurance company to seek an independent opinion before rejecting a tender of defense or denying coverage. Furthermore, the legal issue presented in this case is not entirely settled in California. Compare Commercial Union Ins. Co. v. Superior Court,
CONCLUSION
In accordance with the foregoing, the Court GRANTS Allstate's motions for summary judgment on the declaratory relief claim and on the bad faith counter-claim.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The Alcantaras are defendants in this action and in the underlying suit.
[2] The parties also dispute whether the damages claimed constitute "bodily injury" or "property damage" as defined under the policy. This Order does not address those issues in light of the Court's ruling that there is no coverage under the policy because the claimed damage does not arise from an "accident."
