MEMORANDUM OF DECISION GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
FACTS
The facts herein are essentially undisputed. Plaintiffs are directors and officers of a now defunct Savings and Loan business (S & L). Defendants are the International Insurance Company, the insurer that issued to plaintiffs a directors’ and officers’ liability policy (Policy), and International’s claims representative, Crum & Forster.
In August 1984, the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC) investigated the S & L and came to an agreement (Supervisory Agreement) with the S & L whereby the FSLIC became its receiver and the directors and officers, some of whom are plaintiffs here, admitted to having violated certain statutes and regulations. In the Supervisory Agreement, the S & L was informed that a formal enforcement action by the FSLIC might follow.
The Policy herein is a claims made policy requiring plaintiffs to inform defendants of a claim (or a circumstance likely to lead to a claim) within 60 days of the expiration of the term of the policy. The policy term was from March 3, 1982 to March 3, 1985. Plaintiffs did not inform defendants of the FSLIC investigation and Supervisory Agreement until approximately one year after the expiration of the Policy.
Defendants’ motion presents the following issues:
1. Whether the FSLIC claim was made during the time the Policy was in effect;
2. Whether plaintiffs timely reported the FSLIC claim to defendants under the Policy;
3. Whether the plaintiffs have stated a claim against defendant Crum & Forster;
*189 4. Whether there is sufficient evidentiary support for the punitive damage allegation.
Plaintiffs have cross moved for summary judgment on the first two issues.
Timely Claim
Defendants direct the Court’s attention to
Hoyt v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co.,
Plaintiffs, on the other hand, direct the Court’s attention to
Mt. Hawley v. Federal Savings & Loan Ins. Corp.,
This Court holds that the FSLIC investigation and the Supervisory Agreement constituted a circumstance that might subsequently give rise to a claim, as defined in the Policy at Section VII.A.(ii). Given the conditional language of the Policy, there need not have been a formal claim or lawsuit for monetary damages.
Timely Notice
The next issue is whether the lack of timely notice, about which there is no material dispute, precludes defendants’ liability on the policy. California’s “notice-prejudice” rule operates to bar insurance companies from disavowing coverage on the basis of lack of timely notice unless the insurance company can show palpable prejudice from the delay.
E.g., Campbell v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
A claims made policy generally provides coverage only for claims made and actually reported to the insured during the period specified in the policy. Occurrence policies cover the insured for any subsequent claim arising out of an occurrence that took place during the period specified in the policy. Under a claims made policy, even if events occur during the policy period which might give rise to valid claims, there is no coverage if claims or potential claims for those occurrences are not made and reported to the insurer during the period specified in the policy.
E.g., Pacific Indemnity Co. v. Imperial Cas. & Indemnity Co.,
Defendants contend that the issue of whether the notice-prejudice rule applies to claims made policies has yet to be decided by the California courts.
2
This appears to be true. A number of cases, applying the law of other jurisdictions, use the fundamental distinction between claims made policies and occurrence policies to militate against application of the notice-prejudice rule.
E.g., City of Harrisburg v. Int’l Surplus Lines Ins. Co.,
An insurer may limit policy coverage in plain and conspicuous language and thereby limit the risk it undertakes to assume.
Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co. v. Fibreboard Corp.,
Defendants also cite authority from various other jurisdictions that have considered and upheld the reporting requirements of claims made policies.
E.g., City of Harrisburg,
In
Brown-Spaulding & Assocs. v. Int’l Surplus Lines Ins. Co.,
The
Brown-Spaulding
court distinguished a similar case,
Gulf Ins. Co., supra,
in which the option to purchase additional time to report the claim was clear and unconditional; under the policy in
Brown-Spaulding,
the option to buy additional reporting time was available only under certain conditions.
Brown-Spaulding,
at 1448,
We appreciate that one of the advantages of the claims made policy is liability coverage for a reduced premium and our decision does not prohibit the issuance of such a policy. However, as demonstrated by the instant case, the security of retrospective coverage afforded to an insured may only be illusory because of reporting requirements. Thus, by our holding today ... a reporting provision in a claims made and reported requiring a claim to be reported to the insurer during the policy period is void and unenforceable____
Id. (emphasis added).
Under the Policy herein, a claim made during the policy period must be reported within 60 days after termination of the policy. Plaintiffs were also entitled to purchase a one year reporting period additional to the 60 day reporting period in their policy, but declined to exercise that option. Plaintiffs did not actually notify defendants until months after the 60 day period had expired.
The Brown-Spaulding court explicitly held that three weeks was a “reasonable” time in which to have reported a claim. If the notice-prejudice rule were applicable to this type of claims made policy, the Brown-Spaulding court would have had no cause to decide the reasonableness of the notice. Under the notice-prejudice rule, the timing of notice to the insurer is irrelevant; the only pertinent inquiry is whether there was prejudice to the insurer.
The 60 day reporting tail on the Policy herein is reasonable. This extra time to report claims for which an insured reasonably expects to be covered, combined with the opportunity to purchase additional reporting time, rescues this Policy from invalidity under Brown-Spaulding.
In light of the pronouncements in Brown-Spaulding, and a trend toward encouraging an environment in which claims made policies can serve their intended purpose, this Court believes that the California Supreme Court would, if faced with this issue, reject application of the notice-prejudice rule to claims made policies and strictly construe their reporting requirement, so long as those requirements were reasonable and in line with public policy.
The social utility of claims made policies has been well documented.
See Brown-Spaulding,
at 1447-1450,
Crum & Forster
Plaintiffs have submitted no evidence — only assertions of counsel — tending to show that Crum & Forster is a party to the Policy at issue. Defendants have submitted declarations of a representative of Crum & Forster to the effect that it is not *192 a party to the Policy. Additionally, defendants point to an attachment to the plaintiffs’ own complaint in this action — an application to renew the insurance policy in which the question of the identity of plaintiffs’ previous insurer is answered by the plaintiffs themselves as “International Insurance Co.”
Plaintiffs point to the fact that the name Crum & Forster appears on the face of the policy. Yet plaintiffs offer no evidence to contradict Crum & Forster’s sworn assertion that it acted merely as the underwriting and claims representative for International. Nor can Crum & Forster, as agent, be held liable on any theory based on conspiracy or implied contractual duties on the facts as pleaded.
Gruenberg v. Aetna Ins. Co.,
CONCLUSION
Defendant Crum & Forster’s motion for summary judgment is GRANTED. Defendant International’s motion for summary judgment is GRANTED. Plaintiffs’ cross-motion for summary judgment is DENIED. The Court does not reach the issue of punitive damages.
Notes
. Jurisdiction of this action is based on 28 U.S.C. 1332. Therefore, this Court is bound to apply the substantive law of California.
Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins,
.
Sitting in diversity and with the highest state court not yet having ruled on this issue, this Court is required to "predict” how the state’s highest court would rule if confronted with this issue. The state’s lower courts provide valuable guidance but are not necessarily dispositive.
Miller v. Fairchild Indus., Inc., 797
F.2d 727, 735 (9th Cir.1986);
Dimidowich v. Bell & Howell,
.
See Zuckerman,
