Case Information
*1 Bеfore EMILIO M. GARZA and DENNIS, Circuit Judges, and VANCE, [*] District Judge.
____________________
[*] District Judge of the Eastern District of Louisiana, sitting by designation.
PER CURIAM. [**]
In this insurance coverage dispute, an equipment rental company, Brambles Equipment Services, Inc., sued its customer's comprehensive general liability carriеr, Travelers Indemnity Company. Brambles sought to require Travelers to defend and indemnify it against the personal injury claims of its customer's employee under the "additional insured" endorsement of the customer's comprehensive general liability рolicy. The district court granted Travelers' motion for summary judgment, and Brambles now appeals the decision. For the following reasons, we AFFIRM.
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
On December 14, 2000, Laiche & Company rented a man lift from Brambles. The rental agreement between Laiche and Brambles requirеd Laiche to indemnify and defend Brambles:
[Laiche] hereby indemnifies, defends, and holds [Brambles] . . . harmless from all liability whatsoever, and shall pay all damages, losses, liabilities, and expenses (including attorney's fees and other defense costs and еxpenses) for any injury or damage [sic] operation or condition of the Equipment. [Laiche] shall so indemnify from and hold [Brambles] harmless even though the injury or damage is caused by or arising out of the machinery or the design, condition, transportаtion, repair, maintenance, or use of the Equipment whether or not any service of defect is caused in whole or part by the company, or neglect or failure of [Brambles] to warn or give instructions ____________________
[**] Pursuant to 5th Cir. R. 47.5, the Court has determined that this opinion should not be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5th Cir. R. 47.5.4. about the design, condition, repair, or maintenance of
the Equipment or its suitability for the job for which it was rented or improper or inadequate instructions or warnings about the operation, use, condition, or suitability of the Equipment.
Laiche further agreed "to protect [Brambles] with comprehensive general liability insurance covering all losses and damages."
Laiсhe maintained a comprehensive general liability policy underwritten by Travelers. The Blanket Additional Insured endorsement provided that the Policy covered
any person or organization you are required by written contract to include as an insured, but only with respect to liability arising out of "your work". This coverage does not include liability arising out of the independent acts or omissions of such person or organization. The written contract must be executed prior to thе occurrence of any loss.
Laiche's employee Eddie Edwards used the man lift for a paint job the day Laiche rented the equipment. While Edwards was using the man lift, it began to roll and then overturned, injuring Edwards. Laiche paid Edwards benefits pursuant to the Louisiana Workers' Compensation Act. Edwards and his wife filed suit against Brambles, seeking damages for injuries caused by Brambles' negligence. The Edwards' allegations of negligence included, among others, failure to discover the dangerous conditiоn of the man lift, failure to warn users of its defective nature, and failure to maintain the man lift properly.
Brambles filed a third-party complaint against Travelers, seeking a defense against the Edwards' claims and indemnity under the rental agreement. Travelers successfully moved to bifurcate *4 the third-party action from the underlying lawsuit. Thereafter, the parties settled the tort action, and following briefing and argument, the district court decided the third-party action on cross-motions for summary judgment. The district court rendered summary judgment for Travelers and dismissed Brambles' claims with prejudice. Brambles now appeals.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
We review the district court's ruling on a motion for
summary judgment de novo , applying the same legal standard as the
district court. See Wyаtt v. Hunt Plywood Co. ,
B.
Applicable Louisiana Contract Law
Because this is a diversity case, we apply the substantive
law of Louisiana to the issue of coverage. See Erie R. Co. v.
Tompkins ,
C. Analysis
The additional insured endorsement extends coverage to "any person or organization you are required by written contract to include as an insured." The rental agreement required Laiche "to protect [Brambles] with comprehensive general liability insurance covering all losses and damages." The district court concluded that, as a result of this requirement, Brambles was an additional insured under the endorsement. Travelers contends that Brambles is not an additional insured under the endorsement because the rental agreement did not require Laiche to include Brambles specifically as an additional insured, but merely obligated Laiche tо protect Brambles by carrying insurance to fulfill its contractual obligation to indemnify Brambles.
We hold that the language of the rental agreement is
sufficient to make Brambles an additional insured under the
endorsement. The rental agreement required Laiche "to protect"
Brambles with comprehensive general liability insurance. The
ordinary, common sense meaning of "to protect with comprehensive
general liability insurance" is "to cover" with insurance. A
requirement that one party protect another party with insurance
*7
means that the party must secure insurance for the second party.
See Woods v. Dravo Basic Materials Co., Inc. ,
Under the endorsement, any person or organization that Laiche is required by written contract to include as an insured is considered an "insured" under the Policy, "but only with respect to liability arising out of 'your work.'" "Your work" is defined in the Policy as "[w]ork оr operations performed by [Laiche] or on [Laiche's] behalf; and [m]aterials, parts, or equipment furnished in connection with such work or operations." The endorsement specifically excludes coverage for liability arising out of such party's "independent acts or omissions."
Travelers argues that this exclusion precludes Brambles from recovering under the endorsement because Brambles is seeking coverage for liability stemming from its own independent negligence. The Edwards' complaint in the underlying tort action against Brambles alleges negligence based only on the independent acts and omissions of Brambles. The clear language of the *8 exclusion in the endorsement unambiguously excludes covеrage of Brambles for liability arising out of these acts and omissions. As a result, Travelers is entitled to summary judgment with respect to Brambles' claims under the Policy.
Brambles argues that the district court's interpretation of
the endorsement renders it ambiguous. The district court
construed the "other insured" provision as applying only in
instances in which the other insured is vicariously liable.
Louisiana's comparative fault law recognizes vicarious liability
only in the limited context of certain relationships, suсh as an
employer-employee relationship. See L A . C IV . C ODE arts. 2320,
2323, 2324. Brambles contends that because there was no such
relationship between it and Laiche, the "independent acts or
omissions" exclusion literally negates all of its coverage as an
additional insured. Brambles asserts that the endorsement is
ambiguous because it establishes coverage for Brambles as an
additional insured under the policy, but then the exclusion
negates that coverage, and "[c]оverage cannot be provided by the
right hand and then excluded by the left hand." Seals v. Morris ,
To begin with, the cases Brambles cites are distinguishable
from this case. In each of thosе cases, the insurance policy
*9
itself was ambiguous, expressly declaring coverage in one
provision and declaring effectually in another provision that
there was no coverage. See Seals ,
Brambles further argues that the Court should interpret the endorsement as if Brambles were the only additional insured under the policy. As the district court noted, however:
To interpret the еndorsement only with respect to the relationship between Brambles and Laiche would be to interpret the endorsement contrary to the intent of the parties and the clear language of the contract.
Brambles' reliancе on Section IV, Paragraph 7 of the policy entitled "Separation of Insureds" is misplaced. Brambles argues that the provision unequivocally establishes that the policy must be read and construed as if Brambles were the only insured contemplated. The Separation of Insureds provision establishes, however, that the insurance applies as if each "Named Insured" *10 were the only Named Insured. The Common Policy Declarations identify Laiche as the Named Insured under the рolicy. The policy clearly distinguishes between the "Named Insured" identified in the policy declarations, i.e., Laiche, and the "insureds" covered under the policy, which include, for example, Laiche's employees and additional insurеds as described in the endorsement. Brambles is not a Named Insured under the policy, and thus the Separation of Insureds provision does not apply to it.
III. CONCLUSION
Because we conclude that the exclusion in the endorsement excludes coverage to Brambles in this case, we AFFIRM the district court's grant of Travelers' motion for summary judgment.
