Opinion
This appeal raises issues concerning whether a directors and officers (D&O). liability policy covers a breach of contract claim where an officer entered into a contract without stating that he was acting on behalf of the corporation. The corporation subsequently disputed liability under the contract, and the other contracting party brought suit against the corporation and the officer, seeking to recover the contract price. The officer sought a defense from the D&O insurer, which denied the claim. The corporation and the officer settled the suit for the contract price.
In this action against the insurer for bad faith, the trial court entered judgment for the insurer after sustaining a demurrer without leave to amend. We affirm because the D&O policy did not cover the corporation’s contractual debt or the officer’s liability for breaching a contract. The breach of the contractual obligation asserted in this case did not give rise to a loss caused by a wrongful act within the meaning of the policy. Rather, the corporation was simply being required to pay an amount it voluntarily contracted to pay. To hold the insurer liable for the contract price would be tantamount to making it a business partner of the corporation and the officer, which was not the mutual intention of the insurer and the insured under the policy.
I
BACKGROUND
We accept as true the following allegations of the complaint. (See
Blank v. Kirwan
(1985)
IntemetStudios.com, Inc. (IntemetStudios), produced, distributed and marketed filmed entertainment products. The company operated a Web site for marketing films. Robert Maclean was an officer of IntemetStudios.
August Entertainment, Inc. (August Entertainment), acts as the exclusive sales agent for various principals who own or control the rights of exploitation to several motion pictures. Gregory Cascante was the president of August Entertainment.
In October 1999, Maclean and Cascante began negotiations—by telephone, meetings, and correspondence—concerning possible deals between IntemetStudios and August Entertainment. On March 14, 2000, Cascante faxed a memo to Maclean on August Entertainment letterhead, proposing that IntemetStudios offer a minimum guarantee of $2 million to August Entertainment for the distribution rights to certain films. The memo contained other proposed terms. Cascante ended the memo, “If this structure is of interest to [I]ntemetstudios.com please call me with any questions you have.” It was signed, “Thanks in advance, Gregory Cascante.”
On March 24, 2000, Maclean sent a letter to Cascante on IntemetStudios letterhead. Maclean referenced Cascante’s earlier memo, stating, “[W]e are prepared to pay a minimum guarantee of 2 million dollars with respect to the [film] titles . . . attached hereto • ■ ■ [¶] • ■ . HD You can consider this a firm offer for the purchase of these rights subject only to verification of sales agency agreements and proof of lab access to the materials. Please provide us with confirmation of your acceptance of our offer.” The letter was signed, “Yours tmly, Rob Maclean.”
Cascante received the letter and wrote on it, “On behalf of August Entertainment] I accept your offer.” He signed the letter and also wrote the date, “3/24/2000.” Cascante returned the letter to Maclean.
In subsequent correspondence, InternetStudios informed August Entertainment that it would “not go forward with the proposed acquisition and distribution rights” outlined in Maclean’s March 24, 2000 letter because “as a result of our due diligence, it became clear that InternetStudios was unable to actually acquire all of August’s distribution rights in the subject films.” InternetStudios proposed that Maclean and Cascante schedule a meeting “to see if it is possible to work out an arrangement between InternetStudios and
A. The Underlying Action
In September 2000, August Entertainment filed an action against InternetStudios (August Entertainment, Inc. v. IntemetStudios.com, Inc. (Super. Ct. L.A. County, 2000, No. BC235673)). After two demurrers, August Entertainment filed a second amended complaint in November 2000, alleging causes of action for breach of contract and anticipatory repudiation. InternetStudios was the only named defendant. Twenty Doe defendants were also included. The complaint alleged: (1) August Entertainment and InternetStudios were corporations; (2) on March 24, 2000, InternetStudios, “by and through its agent Maclean, made a written offer to August Entertainment to obtain a license of rights in [certain] Pictures”; and (3) August Entertainment, “by and through its agent, Gregory Cascante, . . . accepted InternetStudios’ offer and entered into [a] contract with InternetStudios . . . concerning the license to InternetStudios of such rights of exploitation to the Pictures as were controlled by August [Entertainment].” August Entertainment alleged that it was owed $2 million under the contract. Eventually, InternetStudios filed an answer to the complaint.
In April 2001, August Entertainment filed a two-page “First Amendment to Second Amended Complaint,” amending the name “InternetStudios” throughout the complaint to mean “IntemetStudios.Com, Inc., Does 1 through 20, inclusive, and/or each or any of them.” August Entertainment then served Maclean as Doe 1. Maclean answered the complaint.
Philadelphia Indemnity Insurance Company (Philadelphia) had issued an “Executive Safeguard” policy to IntemetStudios, effective April 10, 2000, to April 10, 2001. The policy consisted of four parts, numbered as follows: (1) “Directors and Officers Liability & Company Reimbursement Insurance”; (2) “Employment Practices Liability Insurance”; (3) “Fiduciary Liability Insurance”; and (4) “Special Risk Insurance.” Part one provided $3 million in D&O coverage and contained two insuring agreements. Under “Insuring Agreement A,” entitled, “Directors and Officers Liability Coverage,” Philadelphia agreed to pay for any “loss” on behalf of an “insured” based on a claim first made during the policy period for a “wrongful act,” except for a “loss” that IntemetStudios had actually paid on behalf of the insured as indemnification.
“Insured” meant “any person who has been, now is or shall become a duly elected director or a duly elected or appointed officer of [IntemetStudios].” “Loss” was defined as “[d]efense [c]osts and any money the insured is legally obligated to pay as damages or in settlement” but did not include criminal or civil fines, penalties imposed by law, taxes, matters uninsurable under the law, or punitive damages. “Wrongful act” meant any “actual or alleged error, misstatement, misleading statement, act, omission, neglect, or breach of duty committed by an Insured, individually or otherwise, in [his or her] capacity as a director or officer of [IntemetStudios]; or [][]... matter claimed against an Insured solely in [his or her] capacity as such.”
Under “Insuring Agreement B,” entitled, “Company Reimbursement Coverage,” Philadelphia agreed to pay on behalf of “the Company” (IntemetStudios) any “loss” from a claim made during the policy period for “wrongful acts” by an “insured” to the extent that IntemetStudios had indemnified an “insured” pursuant to law (common or statutory), contract, or IntemetStudios’s charter or bylaws. This coverage, unlike “Insuring Agreement A,” excluded “any actual or alleged liability of the Company under any express contract or agreement.”
On September 11, 2001, counsel for IntemetStudios wrote to Philadelphia, making a claim under part one of the policy for D&O liability, not the company reimbursement coverage. Counsel enclosed a copy of the complaint and the letter from August Entertainment that explained Maclean’s potential liability. Maclean’s attorney also contacted Philadelphia.
By letter dated November 12, 2001, Philadelphia denied the claim. It denied coverage as to
IntemetStudios,
relying on the exclusion for causes of action based on an express contract or agreement. It denied coverage as to
Maclean,
stating that
Meanwhile, IntemetStudios had become insolvent. Shortly after Philadelphia denied coverage, IntemetStudios, August Entertainment, and Maclean decided to settle the case. Pursuant to a written settlement agreement dated November 21, 2001, they agreed: (1) Maclean was acting as an officer of IntemetStudios when he wrote the March 24, 2000 letter to Cascante; (2) Maclean and IntemetStudios intended that IntemetStudios alone be bound by the offer in the letter; (3) IntemetStudios and Maclean owed August Entertainment $2 million under the resulting contract; (4) August Entertainment would dismiss its claims against IntemetStudios; (5) Maclean would pay August Entertainment $2 million plus presettlement interest; (6) Maclean would assign to August Entertainment all of his rights and claims against Philadelphia under the insurance policy; (7) subject to narrow exceptions, August Entertainment would look solely to its recovery against Philadelphia, if any, in satisfaction of Maclean’s payment; and (8) under certain circumstances, judgment would be entered against Maclean for $2 million plus interest. On July 8, 2002, pursuant to stipulation, judgment was entered against Maclean in the amount of $2,162,500.
B. The Present Action
In October 2004, August Entertainment filed this action against Philadelphia, alleging claims for breach of contract, breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and fraud. Each cause of action was based on Philadelphia’s denial of Maclean’s insurance claim and its failure to indemnify him for the amount of the judgment.
Philadelphia filed a demurrer, contending that the policy afforded no potential for coverage because Maclean’s alleged liability was based on conduct he committed in his individual capacity. August Entertainment filed opposition, arguing that coverage existed because Maclean had committed a “wrongful act” within the meaning of the policy by mistakenly signing the contract without stating he was an agent of IntemetStudios. The trial court sustained the demurrer with leave to amend, explaining, “Broken down to its essentials, this is an attempt to force the insurance company to pay for a corporate breach of contract.”
August Entertainment filed a first amended complaint substantially similar to the first one. Philadelphia demurred on the same ground as before. August Entertainment filed opposition. The trial court sustained the demurrer without leave to amend, stating, “What plaintiff is seeking to do is have an insurance company pay for a business debt under an [errors and omissions] policy where the alleged wrongful act of the officer consists of signing a contract without indicating he is signing as an officer of the corporation.” Judgment was entered in favor of Philadelphia. August Entertainment appealed.
II
DISCUSSION
In reviewing the ruling on a demurrer, “we are guided by long-settled rules. ‘We treat the demurrer as admitting all material facts properly pleaded, but not contentions, deductions or conclusions of fact or law. ... We also consider matters which may be judicially noticed.’ . . . When a demurrer is sustained, we determine
“Interpretation of an insurance policy is a question of law and follows the general rules of contract interpretation. . . . ‘The fundamental rules of contract interpretation are based on the premise that the interpretation of a contract must give effect to the “mutual intention” of the parties. “. . . Such intent is to be inferred, if possible, solely from the written provisions of the contract. . . . The ‘clear and explicit’ meaning of these provisions, interpreted in their ‘ordinary and popular sense,’ unless ‘used by the parties in a technical sense or a special meaning is given to them by usage’ . . . , controls judicial interpretation.” ’ ”
(MacKinnon v. Truck Ins. Exchange
(2003)
D&O insurance is “a specialized form of coverage for (i) claims against corporate directors and officers based on acts committed in their corporate capacities; [and] (ii) the corporation’s indemnification obligations to its directors and officers for such claims .... [f] ... [f] [U]nlike general liability insurance, which is typically written on standard forms, D&O policy provisions often vary depending on a number of factors, including the nature of the insured’s business, the insured’s financial condition, and [the] insured’s status as a public or private company. Cases must therefore be reviewed in the context of the specific policy language at issue.....[][] ...[][] The availability of such insurance is important in attracting persons to serve as directors and officers of corporations.” (Croskey et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Insurance Litigation (The Rutter Group 2006) ¶¶ 7:1550 to 7:1552, p. 7F-1; see generally Troy & Gould, Advising and Defending Corporate Directors and Officers (Cont.Ed.Bar 2006) §§ 12.1-12.118, pp. 447-510 (Troy & Gould) [discussing D&O liability insurance].)
As provided by statute: “A corporation shall have power to purchase and maintain insurance on behalf of any agent of the corporation against any liability asserted against or incurred by the agent in that capacity or arising out of the agent’s status as such whether or not the corporation would have the power to indemnify the agent against that liability under this section.” (Corp. Code, § 317, subd. (i).) This statute permits, but does not require, a corporation to purchase whatever D&O insurance may be available on the market. (See 1 Marsh’s Cal. Corporation Law (4th ed. 2006) § 11.23, p. 11-226.) The availability of coverage is “governed by insurance law and public policy applicable to insurance contracts and by the willingness of the carriers ... to write particular types of policies.” (Id., § 11.23, pp. 11-226 to 11-227.) The statute does not authorize an insurance company to cover a risk that it could not lawfully cover in the statute’s absence. (Id., § 11.23, p. 11-227.) For instance, a D&O policy cannot insure against willful wrongdoing. (Id., § 11.23, p. 11-226; Troy & Gould, supra, § 12.9, pp. 452-453.)
D&O policies generally do not contain a duty to defend, but the insurer is usually obligated to pay defense costs as part of the “loss.” (See
Gon v. First State Ins. Co.
(9th Cir. 1989)
Although August Entertainment’s pleadings and opening brief on appeal make passing reference to the duty to defend, the gist of its argument is that Philadelphia is liable under the D&O insurance for August Entertainment’s judgment against Maclean, that is, for indemnity. The question, therefore, is whether actual, not potential, coverage existed. (See
Buss v. Superior Court
(1997)
One California case has addressed the issue before us. In
Oak Park Calabasas Condominium Assn.
v.
State Farm Fire and Casualty Co.
(2006)
The association then sued its insurer for breach of the policy. The case was tried to the court, which found in favor of the insurer. On appeal, the association argued that the term “wrongful acts” was not limited to negligent conduct but included errors such as breach of contract. The insurer contended that the policy covered only torts.
The Court of Appeal held for the insurer, explaining the implications of the association’s argument: “[The parties] engaged in exotic rules of grammar to argue their respective positions on appeal, but we see no reason to resort to such devices in resolving the matter. First it appears to this court that if [the association’s] construction of the policy were correct, any condominium association could choose to enter a reconstruction, remodeling or renovation contract with a contractor, then decide not to pay the bill, thus shifting the obligation to its insurer. No rational insurer would wish to undertake such an insuring obligation. It would be literally impossible, from an actuarial standpoint, to set appropriate premiums to guard against the risk that an association would enter into multimillion-dollar construction contracts, and then not pay for the construction work. That type of risk would be virtually impossible to underwrite.
“Second this court is convinced that the concept of fortuity requires a disposition that favors [the insurer]. [The association] has alleged nothing which was unanticipated from the standpoint of its position
A similar analysis applies in this case. If we accept August Entertainment’s fine of reasoning, D&O insurers could be held liable for
corporate
debts based on the way in which an officer signs a contract on behalf of the corporation, for example, by failing to include “Inc.” in the company name or
omitting “by” before his or her signature. (See
Otis Elevator Co. v. Berry
(1938)
Yet, D&O policies typically exclude coverage for breach of contract. Here, under Insuring Agreement B, the policy expressly excluded actual or alleged liability of the
company
for breach of contract. And, under Insuring Agreement A, the policy limited coverage for
directors and officers
to liability arising from errors committed in their official capacity, which effectively excluded contract liability for two reasons. First, an officer acting in an official capacity cannot be held liable for breach of a corporate contract. (See
Reynolds v. Bement
(2005)
According to the “facts” recited in the underlying settlement agreement, IntemetStudios authorized Maclean, on its behalf, to make a contract offer to August Entertainment that would bind IntemetStudios alone. But after August Entertainment sought to enforce the resulting contract, IntemetStudios ultimately took the position that because of the manner in which Maclean had made the offer, the D&O insurance provided coverage for the entire contract price, essentially making the insurer an unwitting investor in the deal. ■
Here, similar to Oak Park, a corporation intentionally entered into a contract, decided not to make payment on it, and looked to its D&O insurer for a bailout. As Oak Park recognized, this is not the type of claim covered by D&O insurance. We acknowledge, however, that while the legal analysis in Oak Park is applicable here, that decision could be distinguished factually because the condominium association’s policy limited “wrongful acts” to negligence while the definition of “wrongful acts” in this case is broader in scope. Thus, Oak Park is not precisely on point.
“[T]here are few California appellate decisions dealing with D&O policies.
In
American Casualty v. Union Welfare Fund
(1997)
The international trustees and American Casualty litigated the indemnity issue in a declaratory relief action. The district court found for the trustees. The Nevada Supreme Court reversed, explaining: “American contends correctly that the judgment against it in this case represents an amount that cannot be properly considered a ‘loss’ resulting from any ‘wrongful act’ of the international trustees. The policy provides that American agrees that ‘if claim or claims are . . . first made against the Insureds [i.e., the international trustees], individually or collectively during the policy year for a Wrongful Act, [then American Casualty] will pay on behalf of the Insureds all loss which said Insureds shall be legally obligated to pay.’ . . . Although a loss is defined very broadly to include almost any amount awarded against the insureds, the issue in this case is not the definition of ‘loss,’ or whether the damages in this case could fall within that definition. Instead, the issue is whether the judgment which the international trustees were required to pay was a ‘loss’ that resulted from any ‘wrongful act’ of the international trustees. Simply put, the policy only covers loss resulting from wrongful acts, whether actually committed or merely alleged.
“American argued in the district court and in its briefs in this court that the policy did not cover the loss in this case because the loss ... did not result from any ‘wrongful act’ of the international trustees; the ‘loss’ was not a loss at all; it was merely the judicial enforcement of the international trustees’ contractual obligations to the local [fund] under the merger agreement. American argues that it never agreed to pay the international trustees’ obligations under the merger agreement^] an obligation for which the international trustees were fully paid [by the local fund under that agreement].
“The ‘loss’ in this case did not result from any actual or alleged ‘wrongful act’ of the international trustees. The ‘wrongful act’ was the failure to defend. . . . This failure to defend did not result in the local [fund’s] costs in defending the third party action against [it], because the costs involved in defending the third party suit would have been incurred whether or not the international trustees had committed the wrongful act of failing to defend the
“The international trustees were required to pay their contractual obligation. This contractual obligation did not result from their wrongful act of refusing to satisfy it. To hold otherwise would allow an insured to turn all of its legal liabilities into insured events by the intentional act of refusing to pay them. The refusal to pay an obligation simply is not the cause of the obligation, and the international trustees’ wrongful act in this case did not result in their obligation to pay; their contract imposed on them the obligation to pay. [¶]... [¶]
“American did not insure the international trustees against debts they are obligated to pay pursuant to the merger agreement with the local [fund]. Because the judgment of the district court is based on a theory that the contractual obligation of the international trustees under the merger agreement is covered as a loss under the policy, we must reverse that judgment.” (American Casualty v. Union Welfare Fund, supra, 113 Nev. at pp. 769-771 [942 P.2d at pp. 176-177], fns. omitted.) In short, an insured’s alleged or actual refusal to make payment under a contract does not give rise to a loss caused by a wrongful act.
In
Toombs NJ Inc. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur.
(1991)
As noted in a leading treatise: “Professional liability policies often contain an exclusion for ‘[a]ny “claim” arising out of a breach of contract, or out of liability assumed under any contract or agreement.’ Even in the absence of an express exclusion, courts have held that a claim alleging breach of contract is not covered under a professional liability policy because there is no ‘wrongful act’ and no ‘loss’ since the insured is simply being required to pay an amount it agreed to pay.” (23 Appleman on Insurance 2d (Holmes ed. 2003) § 146.6[I], pp. 120-121, italics added, fn. omitted.)
August Entertainment contends that coverage existed here because Maclean was negligent in the way he made the contract offer. But the mere existence of
The court concluded that there was no coverage, explaining: “The multicover liability endorsement does not provide coverage for all sums which [the employer] must pay to the Fund but only those arising from a ‘negligent act, error, or omission.’ [The employer] contends that it ‘did not set out purposely to avoid [its] contractual obligations.’. .. Although this may be true, it misses the point. Our inquiry is not directed toward [the employer’s] motives. ... In addition, it is irrelevant that [the employer] acted pursuant to [its attorney’s] advice. Although [the attorney] may have been mistaken, or even negligent . . . , this does not convert [the employer’s] intentional act in refusing to further honor the collective bargaining agreement into a negligent one.
“[The employer’s] liability to the pension fund is contractual. Although at the time [the employer] refused to make fund payments it did not believe it had any contractual obligation to do so, these beliefs do not change the contractual nature of the obligation. The Fund was awarded amounts owed pursuant to the collective bargaining agreement, not damages for negligence, and these payments are not covered by [the insurance] policy. . . . [E]ven though the insured’s actions in precipitating the breach may have been careless, they were not covered by the policy. . . .
“. . . Under [the employer’s] logic, any default arising from a mistaken assumption regarding one’s contractual liability could be transformed into an insured event. Indeed, refusing to pay a debt in reliance upon erroneous advice of counsel would convert a contractual debt into damage arising from a negligent omission. We dare not imagine the creative legal theories treading just short of malpractice and frivolity that could seek to transform contract obligations into insured events.” (Baylor, supra, 987 F.2d at pp. 419-420, citation and fins, omitted.)
Baylor
was followed in
Pacific Ins. Co. v. Eaton Vance Management
(1st Cir. 2004)
The employer argued that coverage existed because it failed to administer the plan in accordance with its terms, which was a breach of fiduciary duty under federal law. The court disagreed, concluding
“[T]hat the alleged breach of fiduciary duty resulted in the late payment of funds does not alter the essential fact that the liability was ‘incurred ... by reason of’ the adoption of the 1984 documents .... The insurance policy at issue covers debts ‘incurred ... by reason of,’
inter alia,
a breach of fiduciary duty; it does not cover debts that are ‘incurred’ through a contractual obligation ....”
(Pacific Ins. Co. v. Eaton Vance Management, supra,
369 F.3d at pp. 590-591.) Thus, a multiperil insurance policy providing coverage for negligence would not cover a claim that the insured “forgot to pay its bills.”
(Cincinnati Ins. Co.
v.
Metropolitan Properties
(11th Cir. 1986)
Similarly, in
May Dept. Stores Co. v. Federal Ins. Co.
(7th Cir. 2002)
Based on the foregoing authorities, we conclude that, under the policy in this case, the insurer was not liable for the underlying settlement or judgment. To hold otherwise would make it a de facto party to a corporate contract and require it to pay the full contract price (plus interest), letting the corporation completely off the hook. Performance of a contractual obligation—here the payment of $2 million—is a debt the corporation voluntarily accepted. It is not a loss resulting from a wrongful act within the meaning of the policy.
When the D&O policy was issued, neither the insurer nor the insured could have reasonably expected that insurance benefits would be available to cover the contract price of a business deal gone wrong. Such an expectation would expand the scope of the insurer’s liability enormously and unpredictably without corresponding
Maclean’s role in the transaction turns out to be a nonissue. In his capacity as an officer, he cannot be held liable for breach of a corporate contract. If he was acting in his individual capacity in breaching the contract, the D&O insurance did not cover any of his acts or omissions, much less a refusal to honor a $2 million commitment. And regardless of how the contract was formed—even if Maclean acted for an undisclosed principal and was thus personally liable—the failure to pay the contract price, as already explained, was not a loss caused by a wrongful act.
Finally, if the insurer in this case had wanted to cover a breach of contract, it certainly knew how to do so. Under part two of the policy, entitled “Employment Practices Liability Insurance,” the term “wrongful act” was defined to cover several types of employment-related conduct, including “breach of a written or oral employment contract or quasi-employment contract.” But, as stated, “wrongful act,” as defined in part one, the D&O liability insurance, did not include a breach of contract of any kind—all the more reason why an officer could not reasonably expect the D&O coverage to apply to a contract claim, whether sued in an individual or official capacity.
Nevertheless, August Entertainment points out that the D&O insurance contained an exclusion that mirrored everything that was covered by the employment practices insurance. Thus, the D&O coverage expressly excluded claims for breach of a written or oral employment contract or quasi-employment contract. From this, August Entertainment contends that the D&O insurance, by implication, must have included all nonemployment contract claims. Not so.
As we have stated, under the insuring provisions of the D&O coverage, the refusal to make payment on a contract was not a loss resulting from a wrongful act. And an exclusion from that coverage—for employment contracts—did not expand the insuring provisions beyond their original scope.
(See
Waller
v.
Truck Ins. Exchange, Inc.
(1995)
Our decision is consistent with
Vandenberg
v.
Superior Court
(1999)
In deciding that coverage could exist under such language, the court stated: “A reasonable layperson would certainly understand
‘legally obligated to
pay’ to refer to any obligation that is binding and enforceable under the law, whether pursuant to contract or tort liability. Further, a reasonable layperson, cognizant that he or she is purchasing a
‘general
liability’ insurance policy, would not conclude such coverage term only refers to liability pled in tort, and thus entirely excludes liability pled on a theory of breach of contract. Under general insurance principles, [courts] must interpret the phrase ‘legally obligated to pay as damages’ in accordance with the ordinary and popular sense, not the legalistic [sense].”
(Vandenberg, supra,
Yet,
Vandenberg
did not hold that contract damages were definitely recoverable under CGL policies, noting that a breach of contract claim would still be subject to limitations imposed by other terms of the policies—“ ‘bodily injury and property damage as defined, caused by an occurrence.’ ”
(Vandenberg, supra,
And
Vandenberg
recognized that “[predicating coverage upon an injured party’s choice of remedy or the form of action sought is not the law of this state.”
(Vandenberg, supra,
Here, the risk and injury concern a debt arising from a corporation’s or officer’s breach of a corporate contract viewed in light of a D&O policy covering a “loss” caused by a “wrongful act.” Applying the test set forth in
Vandenberg,
we have concluded above that coverage did not exist for the failure to pay the contract price. “The policy, after all, is a Directors’ and Officers’ liability policy . . . ; it is not an expanded comprehensive liability policy insuring the [corporation] against liability for everything it does.”
(Olympic Club v. Underwriters at Lloyd’s London
(9th Cir. 1993)
We do not suggest that officers who make seemingly minor scrivener errors must face financial ruin if they fail to disclose their principal. The question before us involves coverage under a particular D&O policy. Broader coverage may be available. (See, e.g.,
Clement v. Smith
(1993)
III
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
Spencer, P. J., concurred. Vogel, J., concurred in judgment only.
A petition for a rehearing was denied February 1, 2007, and appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied April 11, 2007, S150353. George, C. J., did not participate therein.
