Interstate Cleaning Corporation (ICC) alleges Commercial Underwriters Insurance Company (Underwriters) breached its duties to defend and to indemnify against an action brought in Hawaii by Chad and Jamie Awai (Awais). On cross motions for summary judgment, the district court 2 granted Underwriters’s motion for summary judgment.
Applying Missouri law, the district court held ICC provided Underwriters with untimely notice of the Awais’ lawsuit, abrogating Underwriters’s duties to defend and to indemnify. ICC appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment, contending (1) Hawaii law applies, (2) ICC provided Underwriters with timely notice, and (3) coverage existed under the policy. Because we find no applicable conflict of laws between Hawaii and Missouri, we apply Missouri law.- We further find ICC failed in a timely manner to notify Underwriters of the Awais’ lawsuit. We affirm. 3
1. BACKGROUND
ICC, a Missouri corporation with its principal place of business in Missouri, provides cleaning services to shopping malls, retail stores, and commercial buildings throughout the United States and Puerto Rico. Underwriters, a California corporation with its principal place of business in California, provided ICC with a general commercial liability insurance policy (Policy). The Policy, containing a self-insured endorsement, provides ICC must expend $50,000 for a single occurrence, or $300,000 in a year for multiple occurrences, before Underwriters’s duties to defend and to indemnify ICC arise. The self-insured endorsement also predicates insurance coverage on ICC providing Underwriters with “immediate” notice of a claim made or a suit brought “which but for the provisions of this self-insured retention endorsement would involve or might involve this policy.” The self-insured endorsement considers ICC’s failure to provide notice of a claim or suit a material breach of the Policy, voiding any coverage.
In May 1997, the Awais informed ICC of their claim. In October 1997, the Awais brought a lawsuit in Hawaii state court against ICC and Mr. Awai’s manager, William Cariaga (Cariaga). The Awais based *1027 their lawsuit on sexual harassment, allegedly committed by Cariaga and imputed to ICC. The alleged harassment occurred while ICC employed Mr. Awai as a maintenance worker in Hawaii. Believing the Awais’ lawsuit was a nuisance suit, ICC decided not to notify Underwriters of the Awais’ action when served with the complaint. Shortly before trial, the Awais offered to settle the lawsuit for $25,000. ICC rejected the offer.
After a March 1999 trial, the jury rendered a verdict in Mr. Awai’s favor against both Cariaga and ICC, and in Mrs. Awai’s favor against only Cariaga. Three months later, ICC moved to alter or amend the judgment. The state court granted ICC’s motion. The state court’s amended judgment (1) imposed liability on ICC for Mr. Awai’s sexual harassment claim and for lost wages; and (2) ordered a new trial on compensatory damages, unless the Awais agreed to a remittitur. The Awais did not agree to the remittitur, and an appeal was filed. Nine months later, ICC and the Awais settled the action.
On April 6, 1999, almost two years after the Awais’ claim was first made, about one and one-half years after the suit was filed, and about one month after the jury verdict, ICC notified Underwriters of the Awais’ lawsuit. Underwriters declined to defend or to indemnify ICC, asserting the Policy provided no coverage for the acts alleged by the Awais. Underwriters denied coverage in letters stating it was not waiving any other Policy provisions or defenses, and the statements and actions of Underwriters could not estop Underwriters from asserting another defense.
Over a year after ICC notified Underwriters of the Awais’ claims, ICC brought a breach of contract claim against Underwriters. ICC alleged Underwriters breached its duties to defend and to indemnify by not defending the Awais’ lawsuit or indemnifying ICC for amounts paid to settle the Awais’ lawsuit. Underwriters then asserted ICC’s failure to provide timely notice of the Awais’ lawsuit abrogated Underwriters’s duties to defend and to indemnify.
On motions for partial summary judgment and summary judgment, the district court granted summary judgment to Underwriters. Applying Missouri law, the district court held ICC failed to provide Underwriters with timely notice as required by the Policy, and Underwriters suffered prejudice because of ICC’s untimely notice. The district court also held the Policy did not provide ICC with coverage for acts alleged in the Awais’ lawsuit. ICC now appeals the district court’s entry of summary judgment.
II. DISCUSSION
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. Bowen v. Mo. Dep’t of Soc. Servs.,
A. Applicable State Law
We must first determine whether Missouri substantive law applies to this appeal. We review a district court’s choice-of-law determination
de novo. Brown v. Home Ins. Co.,
Hawaii and Missouri apply the same legal standards to (1) the prejudice from the timeliness of an insured’s notice of a claim to an insurer, (2) estoppel from asserting other policy defenses, and (3) waiver of policy defenses. First, both Hawaii and Missouri require an insurer to demonstrate it suffered prejudice by the insured’s untimely notice before the insurer can escape its obligations.
Compare Johnston v. Sweany,
Because Hawaii’s law interests and Missouri’s law interests can be reconciled, we need not engage in a conflict of laws analysis.
See Brown,
B. Duty to Defend and to Indemnify
The Pobcy conditioned Underwriters’s duty to defend and to indemnify upon ICC timely notifying Underwriters of the Awais’ lawsuit. The Pobcy provides:
[I]f a claim is made or a suit is brought against the insured, which but for the provisions of this self-insured retention endorsement would involve or might involve this pobcy, the insured shall immediately forward to the company every demand, notice, summons or other process received by the insured or the insured’s representative.
A condition predicating coverage upon the insured notifying the insurer immediately of an occurrence or forwarding suit papers to the insurer is enforceable.
See Johnston,
An insured’s failure to give timely notice may be excused by substantial compliance and by incapacity or impossibility.
Tresner v. State Farm Ins. Co.,
*1029 To ascertain if ICC substantially complied with the Policy’s notice provision, we must determine if ICC’s delay prejudiced Underwriters. See id. at 15. Underwriters bears the burden of establishing prejudice. Id. at 11, 16. Prejudice is a question of fact. Id. at 16. Although a question of fact, the issue of prejudice may become a question of law if all reasonable persons would conclude the insured did not provide notice in a reasonable time. Id. at 14.
In
Johnston,
Johnston sued Sweany for damages caused by Sweany negligently repairing Johnston’s home. Sweany failed to provide his insurer with notice of the suit until after he had confessed judgment. The Missouri Supreme Court affirmed the trial court’s grant of summary judgment for Sweany’s insurer, holding Sweany’s insurer had suffered prejudice.
Johnston,
ICC failed to notify Underwriters of the Awais’ lawsuit until after ICC defended the Awais’ action, and rejected settlement before trial (Awais demanded $25,000), and until after the jury had rendered a verdict. Like in Johnston, this tardiness deprived Underwriters of the opportunity to investigate facts, to defend on liability, to settle the lawsuit, and to choose a trial strategy. By the time ICC notified Underwriters of the Awais’ claims, Underwriters had already been prejudiced. The jury had already found ICC liable and established a value for the Awais’ claims. The district court was correct, ICC failed to provide timely notice as required by the Policy, and Underwriters suffered prejudice from the delay.
C. Estoppel and Waiver
ICC asserts Underwriters is either es-topped from raising the failure to notify defense, or Underwriters waived ICC’s requirement to comply with the Policy’s notice provision. We do not agree.
Under Missouri law, estoppel is the preferred theory to prevent an insurer from asserting a policy defense inconsistent with a previously asserted defense.
Shahan,
ICC argues it was prejudiced by filing this lawsuit when Underwriters had not raised the untimely notice defense and, instead, only argued the Awais’ lawsuit did not fall within the scope of the Policy. Filing suit is not sufficient prejudice to invoke estoppel.
Brown,
Underwriters also did not waive its policy notice defense. Waiver, a disfavored defense in this context, can be implied by conduct, but the conduct must unequivocally and clearly establish the in
*1030
surer intentionally relinquished the right.
Shahan,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Underwriters.
