OPINION OF THE COURT
In February 1986, defendant D. Benvenuti Properties (hereinafter Benvenuti) contracted with plaintiff, as contractor, to supply the materials and erect the structural steel and metal roofing of a Honda automobile distribution center building to be constructed on Benvenuti’s property. Plaintiff then subcontracted with defendant R A. Marker & Sons, Inc. (hereinafter Marker) to furnish and erect the structural steel and roof system at the site. The contract between plaintiff and Marker provided that Marker would indemnify both Benvenuti and plaintiff and hold them harmless against all claims for injuries arising out of Marker’s performance of the work. It also required Marker to "procure, maintain, and furnish to [plaintiff] evidence of’ comprehensive liability insurance for, inter alia, contractor operations and products and completed operations "with limits * * * satisfactory to [plaintiff] as additional insureds” (emphasis supplied). The same clause stipulated that, upon Marker’s failure to comply with its insurance obligation, plaintiff could obtain its own coverage and charge its expense against any sums due Marker.
Defendant Pennsylvania Manufacturing Association Insur
Pursuant to the foregoing insurance provisions of the subcontract, Marker thereafter sent to plaintiff a certificate of insurance on a form prepared and executed by PMA, attesting that a comprehensive insurance policy had been issued to Marker and summarizing the types and limits of coverage contained therein. Upon review of the certificate by plaintiff, however, the certificate was rejected as unsatisfactory on the ground that it did not name plaintiff as an additional insured. Marker notified PMA, who then issued a new certificate of insurance, identical to the previous certificate, except that it added a notation that plaintiff was an additional insured. Upon receiving this certificate, plaintiff permitted Marker to proceed with his performance under the subcontract.
On September 15, 1986, Timothy Fultz, a Marker employee working at the Benvenuti construction site, fell from a steel roof beam, sustaining serious injuries. He subsequently sued both Benvenuti and plaintiff. Plaintiff timely notified PMA of both the occurrence of the accident and the commencement of suit by Fultz, and demanded that PMA furnish a defense and indemnification under the policy issued Marker. Upon PMA’s disclaimer, this action was commenced by plaintiff seeking a declaratory judgment that, inter alia, PMA was obligated to defend and indemnify it on the claims in the action by Fultz.
After issue was joined, PMA moved for summary judgment and plaintiff cross-moved for partial summary judgment on its claim against PMA. PMA’s proof on the motion and cross motion was that, in fact, the policy issued to Marker was never amended to include plaintiff as a named insured and that the designation of plaintiff as an additional insured in the certificate of insurance was "[d]ue to clerical error”.
Supreme Court denied PMA’s motion but granted plaintiff’s cross motion for summary judgment on two grounds. It held that the contractual liability endorsement of Marker’s policy,
In our view, an issue of fact exists as to whether PMA had agreed to provide plaintiff, as well as Marker, coverage under the policy. The contractual liability endorsement ran only to Marker’s liability, not plaintiff’s. The certificate of insurance naming plaintiff as an additional insured is evidence of PMA’s agreement to provide plaintiff coverage, but it is neither conclusive proof of the existence of such a contract nor, in and of itself, a contract to insure plaintiff (see, Hartford Acc. & Indent. Co. v Transamerica Ins. Co.,
We do, however, agree with Supreme Court on its alternative ground for granting plaintiff summary judgment, i.e., that by issuing the certificate of insurance in which plaintiff was named as an additional insured, PMA was es-topped from denying coverage for plaintiff. The uncontested evidence submitted on the cross motion established that PMA was informed that plaintiff had required a revised certificate that an endorsement had been obtained adding it as an insured under the policy and that plaintiff had relied upon the amended certificate in permitting Marker to proceed with the work and in electing not to obtain its own coverage and to charge back the cost thereof to Marker, as plaintiff could have done under its subcontract with Marker. Plaintiff’s reliance upon the certificate was reasonable, despite the form language in the preamble of the certificate, now emphasized by PMA, that the certificate did not "amend, extend or otherwise alter
Thus, the elements of common-law estoppel against PMA’s denial of coverage were established by plaintiff (see, Triple Cities Constr. Co. v Maryland Cas. Co., 4 NY2d 443, 448; Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v Childs Co.,
In this State, once the foundational facts for an estoppel have been established, liability of an insurer may be imposed, even for a loss falling outside the risks insured under the policy (Draper v Oswego County Fire Relief Assn.,
Casey, J. P., Weiss, Mercure and Harvey, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed, with costs.
