COLONY NATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellee v. UNITED FIRE AND CASUALTY COMPANY, Defendant-Appellant
No. 16-40676
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit
Filed January 31, 2017
We remand with instructions that the district court conform the written judgement to the oral pronouncement. The Sentence, as so MODIFIED, is AFFIRMED.
Joe Michael Dodson, Esq., Strong Pipkin Bissell & Ledyard, L.L.P., Beaumont, TX, for Defendant-Appellant
Before WIENER, CLEMENT, and HIGGINSON, Circuit Judges.
JACQUES WIENER, Circuit Judge: *
Plaintiff-Appellee Colony National Insurance Company (“Colony”) claims that Defendant-Appellant United Fire & Casualty Company (“United”) had a duty to
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
A. Factual Background
Carothers was the general contractor on a Red River Army Depot job. Self-Concrete, Inc. (“Self-Concrete”), a sub-contractor of Carothers, contracted to form and pour tilt wall concrete panels. United insured Self-Concrete through a commercial general liability policy, and Carothers was an additional insured under the United policy.
Premier Constructors, Inc. (“Premier”) was a sub-contractor of Carothers, hired to erect tilt wall panels. Premier hired Joyce Steel Erection (“Joyce”) to hoist and lift the tilt wall panels. Colony insured Premier and further insured Carothers as an additional insured.
Gordon Bonner (“Bonner”), an employee of Premier, filed a lawsuit against Carothers, Self-Concrete, and Joyce, following an accident on the jobsite (the “Bonner lawsuit”). According to Bonner, the accident occurred when one of Self-Concrete’s tilt walls was being hoisted into place and the panel swung out in an uncontrolled manner, pinning Bonner against a retaining wall. As a result, Bonner suffered severe injuries.
Carothers tendered defense to United and Colony in the Bonner lawsuit. Colony accepted the tender and defended Carothers; United declined to defend Carothers.1 The Bonner lawsuit was ultimately settled.
B. Procedural Background
Colony filed this action against United for breach of contract, with claims for subrogation and contribution for United’s refusal to defend Carothers in the Bonner lawsuit. United claimed that Bonner did not allege facts under which coverage for Carothers was invoked by its policy because Bonner did not allege facts or claims that imputed liability of Self-Concrete to Carothers. Colony and United filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The district court referred the motions to a magistrate judge and ultimately adopted the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation, granting Colony’s motion for summary judgment and denying United’s motion. The court concluded that United was responsible for one-half of Colony’s costs incurred in defending Carothers in the Bonner lawsuit, including, pre- and post-judgment interest. United appeals.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
“We review a grant of summary judgment de novo under the same standard applied by the district court.”2 Summary judgment is appropriate when “there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a
III. ANALYSIS
A. The Duty to Defend
Under Texas law, the duty to defend and the duty to indemnify are distinct and separate duties.5 The duty to defend is the broader of the two.6 An insurer’s duty to defend is governed by the eight-corners or complaint-allegation rule. It determines the duty to defend by examining “the third-party plaintiff‘s pleadings, considered in light of the policy provisions, without regard to the truth or falsity of those allegations.”7 We therefore look only to the “eight corners” of the two documents, viz., the pleadings in the underlying lawsuit and the insurance contract between the insurer and insured, to determine if the insurer has a duty to defend.8 “Even if the plaintiff‘s complaint alleges multiple claims or claims in the alternative, some of which are covered under the policy and some of which are not, the duty to defend arises if at least one of the claims in the complaint is facially within the policy’s coverage.”9 Whether an insurer is obligated to defend an insured is a question of law for the court to decide.10
United does not dispute that Carothers is an additional insured under its policy with Self-Concrete. However, United argues that it does not owe a duty to defend Carothers in the Bonner lawsuit because Bonner did not allege claims against Self-Concrete that can be imputed to Carothers.
1. Bonner’s Petition11
Bonner alleged that Carothers undertook “to perform services they knew or should have known were necessary for ... BONNER’S protection.” Bonner also alleged that Carothers was under an obligation to ensure that work on the jobsite was implemented, complied with, and enforced, in accordance with its contracts and with (1) the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Safety and Health Requirements Manual, (2) Occupational Safety and Health Administration (“OSHA”) Regulations, and (3) Carothers’s Safety Policy/Accident Prevention Plan, as well as, ensuring subcontractor implementation, compliance, and enforcement under the same. Bonner claimed that Carothers breached its duty to Bonner with respect to ensuring that (1) he had a safe place to work, (2) unsafe conditions were corrected, including bringing such unsafe conditions
Bonner claimed that Self-Concrete had a duty to follow the plans furnished by Carothers properly in forming, pouring, and preparation of the concrete tilt-up panels, and that it had breached such duty.12 Bonner also alleged that the subcontract required Self-Concrete to clean the jobsite at the end of each day, but failed to clean up at the worksite in question, which resulted in a dangerous jobsite condition that was a direct and proximate cause of Bonner’s injuries. Bonner additionally alleged gross negligence in Self-Concrete’s failure to clean the worksite so that workers coming in to assist in the erection of the tilt wall would have a clear area in which to do their work, amounting to an extreme degree of risk to Bonner.
2. Bonner’s Petition Applied to the United Insurance Policy
Relevant United policy language states:
Additional Insured—Owners, Lessees or Contractors—Automatic Status When Required in Construction Agreement With You
a. Any person or organization for whom you are performing operations when you and such person or organization have agreed in writing in a contract or agreement that such person or organization be added as an additional insured on your policy. Such person or organization is an additional insured only with respect to your liability which may be imputed to that person or organization directly arising out of your ongoing operations performed for that person or organization. A person’s or organization’s status as an insured under this endorsement ends when your operations for that insured are completed.
Based on the United policy’s language, we must decide whether Bonner’s pleadings sufficiently allege liability with respect to Self-Concrete which may be imputed to Carothers directly arising out of Self-Concrete’s ongoing operations performed for Carothers.
United contends that Bonner’s allegations are based solely on the independent acts of Carothers and Self-Concrete and that there are no facts or theories that support imputed liability. United reasons that, because the accident was caused by an out of control tilt wall panel, and the contract between Self-Concrete and Carothers specifically excluded lifting tilt wall panels from the scope of Self-Concrete’s work, it is not under a duty to defend Carothers. However, Bonner expressly alleges that Carothers retained authority over the jobsite and plans for the tilt wall panels and further failed to ensure that its subcontractors abided by the requirements and standards contained in the subcontracts. This is sufficient to find liability on
Although an employer is not generally liable for the negligence of an independent contractor,14 an employer may be liable when it controls “operative details” of the independent contractor’s work.15 To have control of “operative details,” the employer must have “the right to control the means, methods, or details of the independent contractor’s work to the extent that the independent contractor is not entirely free to do the work his own way.”16 The right to “inspect, test, and approve” the independent contractor’s work to ensure compliance with the contract specifications and safety requirements does “not implicate a right to control the details of the independent contractor’s work.”17
Here, Bonner alleged that Carothers provided plans for the tilt wall panel formation to Self-Concrete. Providing “plans” may be typical of a general contractor and may not rise to the level of imputing liability to a general contractor for the purposes of tort liability.18 However, Bonner alleged that Carothers’s control over the “plans” included much more than simply furnishing the plans. Moreover, Bonner’s petition generally set forth the detailed level of control that Carothers exercised over the jobsite and Self-Concrete’s work, which, in addition to following the terms of its contracts, included having the right and duty to enforce regulations of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, OSHA, and Carothers’s own Safety Policy/Accident Prevention Plan, which were incorporated into Carothers and Self-Concrete’s subcontract. This level of control over Self-Concrete’s actions amounts to “operative control” so that United was under a duty to defend Carothers in the Bonner lawsuit.
This is especially true under Texas’s broad scope of the duty to defend which extends even “[w]here the [petition] does not state facts sufficiently to clearly bring the case within ... coverage”, because “the general rule is that the insurer is obligated to defend if there is, potentially, a case under the [petition] within the coverage of the policy.”19
B. Priority of Coverage
Under Texas law, when coverage is triggered under policies issued by different insurers for a claim of injury, the duty to defend is absolute because the insurance contract requires the insurer to defend the insured, not merely to provide a partial or pro rata defense.20 Each insurer whose policy obligations are triggered independently owes the insured a complete defense.21 To determine priority of coverage, a court must first determine whether the insured is entitled to complete coverage by each of the insurers involved.22 If the insured is covered by each insurer, then the court will determine if each applicable policy contains an “other insurance” clause that seeks to limit coverage of liability.23 If both policies under consideration contain a provision that negates liability because of the existence of another policy, then the conflicting provisions are mutually repugnant and are ignored, and the liability is applied on a pro rata basis between the insurers.24
United argues that even if the court finds that it was required to defend Carothers in the Bonner lawsuit, it need not cover half the costs of defense to Carothers because the Colony policy is primary and non-contributing, and the United policy is excess.
1. The “Other Insurance” Clauses
Both the United policy and the Colony policy contain “other insurance” clauses. These policies mirror each other as to “other insurance” and state that defense costs should be shared equally. Both policies are primary policies, except when dealing with an additional insured like Carothers. When coverage is needed for Carothers, both policies become excess. As a result, the “other insurance” clauses are mutually repugnant, cancelling each other out and requiring the equal sharing of defense costs.25 Consequently, Colony and United were obligated to share in the costs of defending Carothers in the Bonner lawsuit.
2. The Colony Policy’s Primary and Non-Contributing Insurance Endorsement
United claims that, even if it is obligated to share in the defense costs of defending Carothers, the Colony policy’s “Primary and Non-Contributing Insurance Endorsement” negates its duty and forces the United policy to be excess to the Colony policy. United claims that because the endorsement “deletes in its entirety and replaces” the Colony policy’s “other insurance” clause as to the third party, any argument that the “other insurance” clause in the Colony policy requires United to share in defense costs is completely
Inserting the respective party names into the policy language demonstrates why United’s argument fails:
With respect to Carothers, the insurance provided by this policy shall be primary and non-contributing insurance. Any and all other valid and collectible insurance available to Carothers in respect of work performed by Premier under written contractual agreements with Carothers for a loss covered by this policy, shall in no instance be considered as primary, co insurance, or contributing insurance. Rather, any such other insurance shall be considered in excess over and above the insurance provided by this policy.
Third Party to whom this endorsement applies is: [BLANK]
Absence of a specifically named Third Party means that the provisions of this endorsement apply “as required by written contractual agreement with Carothers.”
The “you” referenced in the endorsement clearly refers to Colony’s named insured, Premier, and does not have any application to Carothers. The “Third Party” to whom the endorsement applies is Carothers, the party with whom Premier contracted.26 The term “third party” does not include Self-Concrete or United: The policy is primary only as to Carothers and only “in respect of work performed by Premier ... for a loss covered by the policy.” Here, Colony seeks recovery from United based on Self-Concrete’s imputed liability to Carothers. Furthermore, the United policy is not other insurance “in respect of” work performed by Premier. Bonner alleged that Self-Concrete—not Premier—was responsible for his injuries, so the United policy is not coverage to which the endorsement makes Colony primary. The Colony policy and the United policy are “mutually repugnant” cancelling out each other, so the insurers share the costs of defending Carothers in the Bonner lawsuit equally.
C. Waiver of the Right to Subrogation
Colony’s policy contains a subrogation clause, entitling it to recover defense costs from any insurer that breached its duty to defend an insured party.27 United contends that Colony waived its subrogation right against United and Carothers and that both prongs of the test for waiver of subrogation are met through the subcontract between Carothers and Premier and the policy that Colony issued to Premier. A valid waiver of subrogation generally requires that an insured must (1) obligate itself to a waiver pursuant to an underlying contract and (2) obtain a separate endorsement from its insurance carrier, waiving those rights.28
1. The Subcontract
The subcontract between Carothers and Premier required Premier to obtain additional insurance to give adequate and complete protection to Carothers. Section 13 of the subcontract provides that “[t]he Subcontractor’s insurance shall contain a standard cross-liability endorsement and a waiver of all rights of subrogation against the Contractor, Contractor’s surety, and Contractor’s insurers.” United claims that it qualifies as the “Contractor’s insurer” so Colony waived its right of subrogation against United.
2. The Endorsement
Even if we assume United qualifies as one of the “Contractor’s insurers” under the subcontract between Carothers and Premier, no separate endorsement from Colony waived Colony’s rights to subrogate United.
The Colony policy contains an endorsement that states:
WAIVER OF TRANSFER OF RIGHTS OF RECOVERY AGAINST OTHERS TO US
This endorsement modifies insurance provided under the following:
COMMERCIAL GENERAL LIABILITY COVERAGE PART PRODUCTS/COMPLETED OPERATIONS COVERAGE PART SCHEDULE
Name of Person or Organization:
Any person or organization to whom or to which you are obligated by virtue of a written contract to waive your right of recovery.
SECTION IV—CONDITIONS. 8. Transfer of Rights of Recovery Against Others To Us is amended by the addition of the following:
We waive any right of recovery we may have against the person or organization shown in the Schedule above because of payments we make for injury or damage arising out of your ongoing operations or “your work” done under a contract with that person or organization and included in the “products-completed operations hazard.” This waiver applies only to the person or organization shown in the Schedule above.
United claims that it qualifies under the schedule as one of the “organizations to whom [Colony] is obligated by virtue of a written contract to waive [its] right to recovery.” However, the “you” and “your” in the subject Colony policy endorsement and schedule unequivocally refer to Premier as Colony’s named insured. When we insert proper names, the Colony endorsement reads:
Colony waive(s) any right of recovery Colony may have against Carothers because of payments Colony make(s) for injury or damage arising out of Premier’s ongoing operations or ‘Premier’s work’ done under a contract with Carothers and included in the ‘products completed operations hazard.’ This waiver applies only to Carothers.
And, when we insert proper names in the schedule it reads:
Any person or organization to whom or to which Premier [is] obligated by virtue of a written contract to waive Premier’s right of recovery.
Carothers is the only party that could be listed in the schedule because Carothers is
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment.
