Defendant, State Automobile & Cаsualty Underwriters, appeals from the decision of the district court granting plaintiff’s, the insured’s, motion for summary judgment and denying defendant’s cross motion for summary judgment. We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.
The facts giving rise to this declaratory judgment action arose out of an altercation between the insured, Aaron L. Brown, and Lawrence Hellendrung, Jr., a baggage clerk, аt the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport in April of 1970. The insured misplaced a baggage claim ticket and proceeded to a taxi stand without producing his claim ticket. The baggаge clerk, Hel-lendrung, pursued the insured, insisting that he produce the claim check. When the cab arrived, an argument and tug-of-war ensued over the piece of luggage the insured held in his hand. This tugging rеsulted in a deep cut on the insured’s finger. The insured then struck Hellendrung with his open right hand. In the instant declaratory judgment action, the insurer maintained the insured verbally threatened Hel-lendrung several times before actually striking him. The insured argued, both in the Hellendrung action and in this action, that he struck Hellendrung reflexively, as a result of the cut on his finger.
Hellendrung filed a complaint in April of 1972. He alleged the insured “* * * did strike upon the head and body of plaintiff and caused said plaintiff personal injuries * * *On April 25, 1972, the insured, plaintiff in this action, tendered defense of the matter to his insurer, the defendаnt in this case. In September of 1972, the insurer declined to defend the Hellendrung action on the ground the incident fell within the terms of the intentional acts exclusion in the insured’s homeowner’s liability policy. The insured unsuccessfully defended the suit against him at his own expense. On February 6, 1976, the trial court awarded Hellendrung $6,000 in compensatory damages and made the following conclusions of lаw.
“Plaintiff is entitled to the judgment of Court finding:
*824 1. That defendant without provocation or justification did strike the plaintiff.
2. That said striking was a direct cause of injuries to plaintiff.
3. That although defendant intended to strike the plaintiff, defendant did not intend to cause bodily injury to plaintiff and thus the injuries were unintended. (Emphasis added.)
4. That plaintiff was in no way negligent.”
After the insurer refused to satisfy the judgment and reimburse its insured for attorney’s fees incurred in defending the Hel-lendrung action, the insured, Aaron Brown, instituted this declaratory judgment action. He sought a declaration that the insurer breached its duties to defend and indemnify him. He sought to recover consequential damages flowing from the breaches of the сontract of insurance and punitive damages. Both parties moved for summary judgment. The district court granted summary judgment in the insured’s favor. The court held that the insurer breached its duty to defend the insured because it failed to resolve the pleading’s ambiguity in the insured’s favor. The court further held that the insurer breached its duty to indemnify the insured. The court collaterally estopped the insurer from litigating the issue of intent to injure, resolved in the insured’s favor in the Hel-lendrung action and determinative on the issue of coverage afforded by the policy. The court ordered the insurer to satisfy the Hellendrung judgment and to pay the insured’s attorney’s fees incurred in defense of that action and in the instant declaratory judgment action. He denied the insured’s request for punitive dаmages.
Defendant, the insurer, appeals arguing that the district court erred in granting the plaintiff’s, its insured’s, motion for summary judgment. The insurer urges us to hold that its insured intended to injure the baggage clerk as a mаtter of law and to direct the trial court to enter judgment in its favor. In the alternative, the insurer argues that the trial court erred in barring the litigation of the question of intent to injure because it was not a necessary issue in the determination of its insured’s liability to Hellendrung.
I. The Duty To Indemnify
The insured’s homeowner’s liability policy contained a standard intentional acts exclusion which excluded coverage for “bodily injury or property damage caused intentionally by or at the direction of the insured.” In
Caspersen v. Webber,
The insurer argues that it was entitled to summary judgment on the issue of its duty to indemnify becausе intent to injure as a matter of law should have been inferred from the “undisputed” material facts pertaining to the character of the insured’s act in striking Hellendrung.
We inferred intent to injure as a matter of law in Iowa
Kemper Ins. Co. v. Stone,
*825 In light of these cases, the district court properly denied defendant’s cross-motion for summary judgment.
The insurer argues more persuasively that the district court erred when it entered summary judgment in the insured’s favor on the indemnification issue. The Hellen-drung trial court concluded the insured did not intend to injure the baggage clerk. The district court in the instаnt case held that the insurer could not collaterally attack this finding. The district court correctly perceived that the issue of intent to injure determines whether coverage is affоrded by the policy. However, it failed to consider an essential requirement in the application of the doctrine of collateral es-toppel.
Collateral estоppel precludes the re-litigation of issues which are identical to issues actually litigated in a previous action.
Hauser v. Mealey,
Furthermore, the resolution of the issue in the previous actiоn must be necessary and essential to the judgment. If it is gratuitous, the doctrine is inapplicable.
State v. Bott,
Intent to do an act is a central issue in an assault and battery action. However, proof of intent to injure is not required for a plaintiff to recover on an assault and battery theory. W. Prosser, The Law of Torts § 9 (4th ed. 1971).
The issue of intent to injure was not a necessary or essential issue in the determination of the insured’s liability to Hellendrung. The district court improperly denied the insurer the opportunity to litigate this issue. The insured contended he struck Hellendrung reflexively. The insurer contended the insured intended to injure Hellendrung. Therefore, the trial court improperly granted summary judgment in favor of the insured on the coverage question because there was a material issuе of disputed fact regarding intent to injure which the insurer was entitled to litigate. Larson
v. Independent School Dist. No. 314,
If an insurer breaches its duty to indemnify, it is liable for the amount of the judgment entered against its insured as well as the interеst accruing until the date of payment. Additionally, attorney fees incurred in an attempt to force the insurer to provide indemnification, including the costs of the appeal, may bе recovered if the insured is successful on the issue of breach of the duty to indemnify and if he defended the main action himself.
Lanoue v. Fireman’s Fund Am. Ins. Cos.,
If the fact finder determines on remand that the insured did not intend to injure Hellendrung, the insurer must indemnify him. Only then is the insurer liable for the amount of the judgment entered against the insured in the Hellendrung action and attorneys’ fees incurred in the declaratory judgment action and in this aрpeal.
II. The Duty To Defend
Hellendrung’s complaint alleged that the insured “* * * did strike upon the head and body of [Hellendrung] and caused [Hel-lendrung] personal injuries hereinafter described * * * .” The complaint obviously was broad enough to include two causes of action, one in assault and battery and the other in negligence.
The duty to defend is distinct from and broader in scope than the duty to indemnify especially where a claim is arguably within the terms of policy coverage. If any part of the claim is arguably within the scope of coverage afforded by the poliсy, the insurer should defend and reserve its right to contest coverage based on facts
*826
developed at trial.
Lanoue v. Fireman’s Fund Am. Ins. Cos.,
Hellendrung’s claim against the insured was arguably within the scope of coverage afforded by the рolicy. It stated a cause of action in negligence; a claim clearly covered by the terms of the policy. It also stated a claim on an assault and battery theory. As discussed earlier, we held in
Caspersen v. Webber,
Based on the foregoing authority, the district court properly entered summary judgmеnt in the insured’s favor on the issue of the insurer’s duty to defend.
We have conceptualized an award of attorney’s fees and costs incurred by the insured in defending an action himself as consequential damages flowing from a breach of the contract of insurance.
Lanoue v. Fireman’s Fund Am. Ins. Cos.,
The district court properly awarded the insured the costs and attorney’s fees incurred in his defense of thе Hellendrung action because the insurer breached its duty to defend him.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed in part; reversed and remanded in part.
