699 N.E.2d 127 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1997
The material facts are undisputed. Snavely Company, Inc., a general contractor on an apartment construction job, subcontracted various portions of the work to Zavarella Brothers Construction Company. In paragraph 15 of the contract, the parties agreed as follows:
"Subcontractor shall submit a Certificate of Insurance and Workmen's Compensation on this project. The insurance minimum limits required are $1,000,000 combined single limit (bodily injury and property damage) with respect to comprehensive general liability and automobile liability. Snavely Company, Inc. *149 shall be named as an additional insured on the policy or policies. This shall cover the use of all equipment, hoists, and vehicles on the site or sites."
In paragraph 20 of the subcontracting contract, Zavarella agreed to "indemnify and save the general contractor harmless from any claim, legal action, damages, liabilities and expenses in connection with the loss of life, bodily injury or personal injury, or property damage arising from any omission, act, or activity by the subcontractor in accordance with the performance required under the terms of the contract between the general contractor and the subcontractor as of the date of this contract."
Zavarella submitted a certificate demonstrating that it purchased the insurance and named Snavely as an additional insured.
While on the job, one of Zavarellas employees suffered severe injuries in a fall. The employee first collected benefits from the Workers' Compensation Fund, and then brought an intentional tort action against Zavarella. The court directed a verdict in favor of Zavarella.
The employee then brought an action against Snavely, setting forth causes of action sounding in negligence. Pursuant to the above-quoted subcontracting agreement, Snavely requested that Zavarella's insurance company, appellee American Economy Insurance Company ("American"), provide a defense. After receiving several refusals to defend, Snavely's own insurer, appellant Buckeye Union Insurance Company ("Buckeye"), defended the matter. Buckeye ultimately settled with the employee for $725,000.
Buckeye then commenced this action against American, seeking indemnity for the amount of the settlement and $21,000 in legal fees it expended. American defended the indemnity action by arguing that Zavarella's agreement to name Snavely as an additional insured on the American policy constituted an indemnity agreement that was void as being against the public policy set forth in R.C.
The trial court agreed with American and, citing both R.C.
Since both parties agree that there are no issues of material fact, we examine the subcontracting agreement and insurance policy as a matter of law. Alexander v. Buckeye Pipe Line Co.
(1978),
R.C.
"A[n] * ** agreement * * * in, or in connection with or collateral to, a contract or agreement relative to the * * * construction, alteration, repair, or maintenance of a building, * * * pursuant to which contract or agreement the promisee * * * has hired the promisor to perform work, purporting to indemnify the promisee against liability for damages arising out of bodily injury to persons or damage to property initiated or proximately caused by or resulting from the negligence of the promisee * * * is against public policy and void. Nothing in this section shall prohibit any person from purchasing insurance from an insurance company authorized to do business in the state of Ohio for his own protection or from purchasing a construction bond."
In Kendall, supra,
"R.C.
Buckeye argues that it is not seeking indemnification under the insurance policy, but is simply trying to enforce its rights as an additional insured under the policy. In support of this argument it cites Brzeczek v. Standard Oil Co. (1982),
American argues that the additional-insured clause is nothing more than an indemnity clause. It maintains that the employee no longer has any legal recourse against Zavarella (having exhausted both a workers compensation claim and an intentional tort claim) so any other possible liability would only be against Snavely for Snavely's own liability. American contends that forcing it to reimburse Snavely would be tantamount to indemnification. American distinguishes Brzeczek on grounds that there were unresolved ambiguities concerning the proximate cause of Brzeczek's injuries; in other words, fault had not been established, so the indemnity provision might not have applied.
In Brzeczek, Standard Oil hired Tulsa Tank Cleaning Company to remove sludge from tanks or vessels located on Standard Oil property. Their agreement provided that Tulsa Tank would name Standard Oil as an additional insured and that Tulsa Tank would indemnify Standard Oil for any liability in connection with its work, unless the liability was initiated or resulted from Standard Oils negligence. When a Tulsa Tank employee sustained injuries, he sued Standard Oil. Tulsa Tank refused Standard Oil's request to defend the matter. Standard Oil then commenced a third party action naming Tulsa Tank and its insurer as *151 third-party defendants, claiming that they breached both the indemnity and insurance provisions of their contract.
The trial court granted summary judgment in Tulsa Tank's favor, finding that the last sentence of R.C.
Brzeczek stands for the proposition that indemnity clauses and agreements to add another party as an additional insured are two different things. The contract between Snavely and Zavarella demonstrates this point. The two companies specifically incorporated into the subcontracting agreement separate clauses that Zavarella would (1) indemnify Snavely and (2) list it as an additional insured. Were this simply an indemnification clause, there would have been no need for Zavarella to list Snavely as an additional insured.
The difficulty with Buckeye's argument, however, is that the additional-insured clause does not serve its intended purpose. An endorsement to the additional-insured clause of the American policy states that "WHO IS INSURED (Section II) is amended to include as an insured the person or organization shown in the Schedule [Snavely Company, Inc.], but only with respect toliability arising out of `your work' for that insured or by you." (Emphasis added.) In the context of this endorsement, the word "you" refers to Zavarella.
We find, as a matter of law, that the additional-insured clause of the policy could only cover Snavely for liability arising from Zavarella's work for Snavely. If we were to read the additional-insured clause as permitting Snavely to be insured against its own negligence, it would run counter to the public policy set forth in R.C.
We have no doubt that the additional-insured language of the policy permits no recovery for Snavely. The employee filed causes of action against Snavely seeking damages for Snavely's negligence. Certainly, the employees causes of action against Snavely did not relate to any negligence by Zavarella, By seeking recovery under the workers compensation law, the employee waived recovery for *152
Zavarella's negligence. See Blankenship v. Cincinnati MilacronChemicals, Inc. (1982),
Buckeye argued in its motion for summary judgment that if the court were to find that Zavarella failed to provide Snavely with status as an additional insured, it should find a breach of the subcontracting agreement and enter judgment regardless. Snavely doubtless thought that the additional-insured language would do indirectly what R.C.
JAMES D. SWEENEY, C.J., and PATRICIA ANN BLACKMON, J., concur.