We granted certiorari to review the decision of the Court of Appeals in
McKemie v. Great American Ins. Co.,
McKemie, respondent in certiorari, brought a damage suit against Great American, applicant in certiorari, claiming that it had wrongfully refused to defend her in a prior civil action. Great American had issued a landlord-tenant liability policy to landlord McKemie which covered damages for bodily injury or property damage caused by an occurrence and arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use of the insured premises. Great American also assumed the duty to "defend any suit against the insured seeking damages on account of such bodily injury or property damage.”
Two tenants sued McKemie. McKemie called upon Great American to defend and it refused. The essence of Great American’s position is that the suit against McKemie was one alleging a failure to provide an adequate and lawful rental dwelling 1 and that no damages were sought on account of bodily injury or property damage. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Great American.
The Court of Appeals reversed stating that although the tenants’ complaint did not allege any personal or property damage resulting from any occurrence and therefore the complaint alone was not enough to require *85 Great American to defend, "later-revealed facts” 2 may have required Great American to defend.
We hold that the correctness of an insurer’s decision to defend or not cannot be determined by "later-revealed facts” of which the insurer has no knowledge or notice. Under the later-revealed facts doctrine, even if an insurer justifiably refused to defend a case based on the information it had at the outset, it would have to monitor the case throughout to be sure that its duty did not arise later. Such a burden would be intolerable.
The cases of
Loftin v. U. S. Fire Ins. Co.,
In the case at bar, Great American did not insure against housing code violations, nuisance, or any breach of a landlord’s contractual duties to his tenant. Had the tenants won their suit and recovered the damages they asked (rent previously paid, damages for nuisance, damages for constructive eviction, etc.), Great American would not have had to pay the claim. No liability covered by the policy was asserted.
Consequently, Great American justifiably refused to defend based upon the complaint it was sent. If McKemie felt that facts later revealed in a deposition brought the case within the coverage of the policy, she was under a duty to send this information to Great American and again call upon it to defend. 5 The record does not indicate that this was done.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
Nuisance, housing code violations, etc.
A tenant’s deposition in the prior case.
This holding places the case at bar in a category with
Morgan v. New York Cas. Co.,
These holdings were reaffirmed in State Farm Mut. Auto Ins. Co. v. Keene, supra.
Note that in Loftin the insurance company was notified of facts bringing the case within the coverage of the policy and yet the insurer still refused to defend.
