*382 Opinion
Los Angeles Mutual Insurance Company (hereafter L.A.) sought declaratory relief as to its obligations under a policy of fire insurance issued to cover a hotel owned by John G. Cawog, and located at 501 East First Street in Los Angeles. Cawog answered аnd cross-complained for $10,000, the full value of the policy.
The trial court rendered a judgment exonerating L.A. from any liability under its policy on the grounds that Cawog had failed to renew a policy of fire insurance on the property which had previously been issued by another company, thus breaching a warranty of co-insurance. Cawog appeals.
The facts are not in dispute, thus this appeal presents a question of law in the interpretation of the so-called “Co-Insurance Clause” in the policy.
(Continental Cas. Co. v. Phoenix Constr. Co.,
Facts
On January 24, 1968, L.A. issued a policy of fire insurance in the amount of $10,000 on the Alameda Hotel, an old two-story structure owned by Cawog. On that date a similar $10,000 policy issued by the Jefferson Insurance Company was in effect. L.A.’s policy cоntained the following: “It is understood and agreed that this policy being written in the amount of $10,000 is 50% of all contributing insurance. It is hereby warranted that all contributing insurance shall be maintained to the extent that this policy participation will not exceed said 50%.” The Jefferson policy expired on August 1, 1968, and was not renewed. The building was damaged by fire on October 1, 1968, and evidence was offered which set the amount of the loss in excess of $20,000. (The court made no findings as to the amount of the loss because of its legal conclusion that L.A. was “exonerated of liability.”)
Discussion
In support of the judgment, L. A. directs our attention to the following language in
Craig
v.
United States F. & G. Co.,
We are not here dealing with false statеments made in the application for insurance, the Jefferson policy was in force at the time of the application, hence Craig and other cases of similar import cited by L.A. are of little value in analyzing the situation here.
Insurancе Code section 444 provides: “A warranty may relate to the past, the present, the future, or to any or all of these.”
Insurance Cede section 445 provides: “A statement in a policy, which imports that there is an intention to do or not to do a thing whiсh materially affects the risk, is a warranty that such act or omission will take place." (Italics added.)
And finally, Insurance Code section 448 provides: “Unless the policy declares that a violation of specified provisions thereof shall avoid it, the breach of an immaterial provision does not avoid the policy.”
The policy here does not provide for avoidance or termination of the policy for a failure to keep the other insurance in force, ergo the above referеnced Insurance Code provisions, in light of the present facts, direct our attention to a consideration of the materiality of the questioned warranty and the objective served by its inclusion in the policy.
The rule in California is that no right to avoid оr rescind an existing policy of insurance arises from the violation by the insured of a provision in the policy unless such provision materially affects the risk or the policy specifically sets forth that the breach will avoid the policy.
(Victoria S.S. Co.
v.
Western Assur. Co.,
The rule is thе same regardless of the fact that the provision may be characterized as a warranty.
No California authority has been cited by the parties nor has our research disclosed any which deals squarely with the materiality of coinsurancе clauses generally. The materiality of a warranty to keep other insurance in force must be tested, in the same manner as any warranty of future conduct, according to the facts and circumstances of the case.
*384
“An insurance pоlicy must be interpreted in the light of the reasonable and normal expectations of the parties as to the extent of coverage.”
(Migliore
v.
Sheet Metal Workers’ Welfare Plan,
In
McKenzie
v.
Scottish U. & N. Ins. Co.,
Purcell
v.
Pacific Automobile Ins. Co.,
Zimmerman
v.
Continental Life Ins. Co., 99
Cal.App. 723 [
In the so-called Lloyds of London cases
(Rittenhouse Foundation, Inc.
v.
Lloyds London,
In Rittenhouse, page 789, footnote 6, the court described the materiality of such warranty: “As these cases indicate, the raison d’etre of the warranty clause is that Lloyd’s maintain no investigating or other servicing facilities *385 in this country and frequently rely altogether on domestic carriers in whose judgment and business policies Lloyd’s have confidence.”
And in
Millers’ Nat. Ins. Co., Chicago, Ill.
v.
Witchita Flour M. Co.,
In the case at bar the failure of Cawog to renew the Jefferson policy did not increase the risk of fire as did the fаilures in McKenzie. The question to be answered is, what did L.A. intend to achieve by the inclusion of such a requirement in the policy? Did the breach affect the risk in some other way or materially impair the rights or expectations of L.A.?
L.A. offered no evidence that thе premiums were affected by the disputed warranty nor that the presence in the picture of the other insurance company affected the policy other than to provide a base for computing L.A.’s share of the loss. The trial court made no specific findings as to materiality but rather included a general statement of materiality in its conclusions of law.
The clause under consideration is designated a “co-insurance clause.” Coinsurance means a relative division оf the risk between insured and insurer and such clauses are “designed to compel the insured, either as self-insurer or otherwise, to carry insurance on the risk. . . .”
(Home Ins. Co., New York
v.
Eisenson,
“The effect of a coinsurance clause is to reduce the liability of an insurer in terms of the percentage of coverage which the clause requires the insured to maintain. That is to say, coinsurance clauses in substance require the insured to maintain insurance on the property covered by the policy in a certain amоunt and stipulate that upon his failure to do so, the insured shall become a coinsurer and bear his proportionate part of the loss on the deficit.” (16 Couch on Insurance (2d ed. 1966) § 62:124; also see
Commercial Union Assur. Co.
v.
Preston,
‘ ‘From its very nature such a provision can only take effect where the actual loss is partial and less than the amount of the insurance; and in effect it brings to a partial loss the situation which necessarily obtains in the case of a total loss where the owner has insured his property for less thаn
*386
its actual value.”
(Templeton
v.
Insurance Co. of North America, supra,
Where the loss exceeds the insurance coverage, as appears to be the case here, there is no contribution by the insurer beyond the terms of the policy. (Reed & Thomas, Adjustment of Property Losses (3d ed.) p. 404.)
It is only reasonable to conclude that the purposе of the coinsurance clause in the instant contract was to limit L.A.’s liability to- 50 percent of the loss. So long as that limit was maintained it appears immaterial, whether the other 50 percent was covered by a policy of insurance or by Cаwog as a self-insurer. More importantly, Cawog could have reasonably understood that it was of no consequence, whether the remaining 50 percent came from insurance coverage or from his own resources as self-insurer.
Even in the presence of the other insurance, i.e., absent a breach of the warranty, L.A. would pay 50 percent. Presumably their premiums were predicated upon such risk. The premiums were paid, so L.A. is being asked to respond to no greater obligation than it undertook. It had an expectation of only $10,000 additional insurance. That figure can be used for any prorating or computation if the amount of the loss requires it.
Two other clauses limiting the liability of the insurer are to be found in the policy. The еxtended coverage clause need not detain us since it does not relate to the loss which occurred.
The debris removal clause which provides for payment of the expense of removal of debris after fire loss requires only brief comment. That clause provides the following: “The total liability under this policy for both loss to property and debris removal expense shall not exceed the amount of insurance applying under this policy to the property covеred.
“This company shall not be liable for a greater proportion of such debris removal expense than the amount of insurance under this policy bears to the whole amount of insurance covering the property against the pеril causing the loss, whether or not such other insurance covers such expense.”
The foregoing would not only limit debris removal as a portion of the policy coverage, i.e., both loss and debris removal together could not generate more liability for the insurer than the policy limit, but would treat the insured as if another policy in force did cover debris removal. By the same token, if such additional coverage could be proven, it would be available to the insurer by way of contribution. In аny event, as to both clauses, the absence of another insurer did not serve to extend the risk. Neither clause would be relevant to L.A.’s requirement of additional coverage. Conse *387 quently neither clause would make the rider a material provision for the purposes of avoiding the policy.
Elsewhere in the policy is a “70' percent average” clause which limits the liability of L.A. to a portion of the loss which the insurance bears to 70 percent of the cash value of the prоperty. This latter provision may serve to reduce L.A.’s contribution below the policy limits, depending upon the finding of the trial court as to the dollar value of the property and the loss.
As noted earlier the trial court found no liability because оf the breach of warranty and correspondingly made no findings as to the amount of the loss, hence we are unable to simply enter judgment for Cawog for the full value of the policy.
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded for additional findings on the value of the property and the amount of the loss. The trial court is directed to enter judgment for Cawog in the amount dictated by those findings.
Herndon, Acting P. J., and Fleming, J., concurred.
