Opinion
Mеtabolite International, Inc. (claimant), as an insured, appeals from a superior court ruling denying its application for an order to show cause why defendant Golden Eagle Insurance Company (Golden Eagle), claimant’s insurer in conservation, should not be required to honor its request to provide a defense in a third party lawsuit for damages filed against it by a consumer of one of its рroducts. We affirm.
Facts
Claimant manufactures and sells appetite suppressants and other diet products. Beginning in August 1996, Golden Eagle issued claimant a commercial general liability policy of insuranсe. In August 1999, one Yolanda Perez filed a complaint in the San Diego County Superior Court, denominated “Class Action Complaint for Damages and Injunctive Relief,” against claimant.
(Perez v. Metabolife International, Inc.
(Super. Ct. San Diego County, No. GIC 733138)
(Perez).)
Claimant tendered the defense of the
Perez
litigation to Golden Eаgle, asserting the insurer was under a duty to provide a defense for its insured in that litigation under the terms of the general liability policy. The Commissioner of Insurance, as Golden Eagle’s conservator in the liquidаtion proceedings, rejected the defense tender on the ground that “the claims being made in this [underlying
Perez]
lawsuit do not qualify as ‘bodily injury’ claims as defined in the policy.”
1
Claimant then sought judicial relief, filing an application for an order to show cause with the San Francisco Superior Court, the procedure and venire for all such proceedings involving Golden Eagle in liquidation. (See Ins. Code, § 1032.) Following briefing and oral argument, the trial court denied the application in light of the class action nature of the
Perez
litigation. It was on that ground, the trial court reasoned, that there was “no possibility . . . therе is coverage under the allegations of the complaint. A class action is a special type of case and if one or more of the plaintiffs opts out and pursue their casе on their own, the case becomes completely changed in character. For this reason, the reasoning and holding in
Gray
v.
Zurich [Insurance Co.
(1966)
Analysis
Counsel for claimant asserts the trial court erred as a matter of law because
The Perez complaint exhibits two features relevant to our inquiry. First, it is shot through with class action allegations that transcend the plaintiff’s individual experience with claimant’s products; indeed, the great bulk of the 17-page pleading is devoted, not to allegations respecting the named plaintiff and her asserted injuries, but to class action allegations. Of the 61 paragraphs of allegations in the Perez complаint, only one—paragraph 6—sets forth allegations particular to Ms. Perez and unrelated to class action issues. 3 It is unmistakably clear, in short, that the Perez lawsuit was filed in the hope of achieving certification and class aсtion status. Contrary to counsel’s assertion that the Perez proceeding was “an individual action with class action allegations,” the complaint demonstrates it was a class action with an individual allegation. Second, and related to the first point, although there is an allegation to the effect the third party plaintiff, Ms. Perez, sustained personal injuries as a result of ingesting claimant’s product, no сlaim for recovery of damages for those alleged injuries is asserted in the complaint. Instead, the following statement appears in paragraph 9: “Plaintiff expressly disclaims seeking recovery for personal injuries attributable to the use of consumed [.?zc] the appetite suppressant Metabolife 356 and other diet drug products containing ephedrine in this class action. Plaintiff and the members of class [sic] preserve [sic] their rights to pursue claims for personal injuries arising from their use of the diet drugs [sic] products in other litigation.” 4
In support of the claimed duty to defend under its liability policy with Golden Eagle, claimant argues not only that the uncertified
We are aware, of course, and not unmindful of the familiar proposition that “the duty to defend is broader than the duty to indemnify.”
(Montrose, supra,
That statement of the governing standard, however, is qualified by the commonsense proposition that “[a]n insured may not trigger the duty to defend by speculating about extraneous ‘facts’ regarding potential liаbility or ways in which the third party claimant might amend its complaint at some future date .... Thus, the issue[] . . . [is] what facts [the insurer] knew at the time [insureds] tendered the defense of the [underlying] lawsuit, both from the allegations on thе face of the third party complaint, and from extrinsic information available to it at the time; and whether these known facts created a potential for coverage under the terms оf the [p]olicy.”
(Gunderson v. Fire Ins. Exchange
(1995)
We think these latter precedents are in point in the circumstances presented on this record. As noted,
ante,
the
Perez
complaint is not only
couched overwhelmingly in class action terms, but the named plaintiff expressly disclaims any interest in seeking recovery of damages for her аlleged personal injuries, despite that fact that such an allegation is required to trigger coverage and a related duty to defend under the policy. All told, we think these features take the сase beyond even the enlarged pale cast by such duty to defend cases as
Gray
and
Montrose.
True, the complaint is subject to amendment, if leave to do so is granted by the trial court. However, given the nature of the
Perez
action as gleaned from the unamended
Conclusion
Thе order of the superior court denying claimant’s application for an order to show cause is affirmed.
Kay, P. J., and Reardon, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied July 10, 2002.
Notes
As relevant here, the liability policy at issue provides insurer “will pay those sums that the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as damages because of ‘bodily injury’ or ‘property damage’ to which this insurance applies.” In rejecting claimant’s request for a defense, thе commissioner reasoned that because the Perez action sought recovery of only economic damages, no duty to defend arose. See discussion, post.
We grant claimant’s request to judicially notice proceedings in both the Perez action and in Gasperoni v. Metabolife International, Inc. (E.D.Mich. Sept. 27. 2000, No. 00-71255), pending as of June 10, 2002) a nationwide class action pending in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan. (Evid. Code, § 452.) We are advised by claimant that the San Diego Superior Court, where the Perez action was laid, denied plaintiff’s motion to certify the proceeding as a class action and that a renewed certification motiоn was stayed by the trial court pending the conclusion of settlement proceedings in Gasperoni.
“Plaintiff Yolanda Perez is an adult resident of the County of San Diego in the State of California. During the class period stated herein, plaintiff Yolanda Perez has purchased and consumed Metabolife 356 which were [sic] manufactured and distributed by the defendants named herein, without disclosure to her that these diet drugs wеre extremely dangerous to her health.”
The implicit rationale for this limitation on the relief sought is, again, the hope for class action certification; because personal injury claims vary from individual to individual, they are rarely certified as class actions because they lack the requisite “commonality.” (See, e.g.,
Jolly v. Eli Lilly & Co.
(1988)
In passing, we note that if the plaintiff in the Perez litigation does succeed in amending the complaint along the theoretical lines mentioned above, the insured could retender to its insurer the duty to defend issue.
