Opinion
Plaintiff Mid-Century Insurance Company brought this action for a declaration that it had no duty to pay benefits to its insured, defendant Ron Gardner, for personal injuries he sustained in an accident with an uninsured driver.
1
It claimed the policy Mr. Gardner had purchased offered no coverage. The parties stipulated to a trial before a temporary judge, who ruled in the plaintiff insurer’s favor and entered judgment accordingly. With
Background
The matter was submitted to the temporary judge on deposition excerpts and exhibits, which make for disjointed reading on appeal. We shall do our best to assemble the pertinent facts from this record, with any conflicts resolved or inferences drawn in favor of the judgment.
Saving the facts of disputed significance for the discussion, we begin with those which serve as a framework. Mr. Gardner started working as a landscape contractor in Chico in 1959, incorporating in 1986 as Gardner’s Landscaping, Inc. The corporation maintained a “commercial vehicle” insurance policy with Financial Indemnity Company, which on amended declarations (bearing an effective date of Mar. 13, 1987) listed 17 vehicles registered to the corporation (beginning with a 1975 “Ford F700 Dump” and ending with a 1987 Ford half-ton pickup truck). Among these was a 1987 Nissan pickup truck, listed as unit “023.” The policy included coverage of $30,000 per person for bodily injury resulting from an accident involving an uninsured motorist.
In April 1987, Mr. Gardner was driving the 1987 Nissan pickup truck on corporation business when he was involved in an accident with an uninsured motorist. The parties do not dispute that he sustained serious bodily injuries in an amount in excess of $30,000.
At the time of the accident, the plaintiff insurer had issued several identical automobile insurance policies to Mr. Gardner as the “named insured.” The vehicles covered under these policies were a 1986 Cadillac Fleetwood, a 1978 Ford van, a 1980 VW Rabbit, and a 1979 Datsun 280Z. The policy that was admitted as a trial exhibit covered the Cadillac. The policies provided $100,000 in benefits for bodily injuries caused by an uninsured motorist. All these vehicles, however, were actually owned by the corporation.
The procedural background of this matter is uncompliсated. Mr. Gardner demanded uninsured motorist benefits from both the plaintiff insurer and Financial Indemnity Company. Apparently, Financial Indemnity Company
Discussion
I
We initially consider the stated basis for the temporary judge’s ruling. There can be no dispute that Mr. Gardner is the explicit “named insured” under the plaintiff’s policies.
2
The question then is whether he is nevertheless excluded under the terms of the policy. To quote the exact languagе of the exclusionary clause in question, “This coverage does not apply to bodily injury sustained by a person: H] 1. While occupying a motor vehicle
owned by you
or a family member for which insurance is not afforded under this policy . . . .” (Italics altered.) Consequently, in order for this exclusion to apply, it must be shown Mr. Gardner “owned” the 1987 Nissan pickup truck insured by Financial Indemnity Company in which he was riding at the time of the accident. The plaintiff insurer attempts to demonstrate this in two ways. First (in an argument made clear only in oral argument), it asserts that “[b]y any ordinary reasonable definition [of ‘owned,’] he owned it.” Second, it argues Mr. Gardner “has such unity of interest and identity with the
A.
As was pointed out below by Financial Indemnity Company, the plaintiff insurer’s policy simply uses the term “owned” without giving it a more specialized definition. We therefore begin by applying the meaning a reasonable person would ordinarily give the term.
(Reserve Insurance Co.
v.
Pisciotta
(1982)
Under the ordinary sense of this definition, Mr. Gardner did not own the vehicle in which he was injured. Title to the 1987 pickup truck was in the corporation’s name, which held the vehicle as its property. Regardless of the extent to which Mr. Gardner owned or controlled the corporation as a stockholder and executive officer (including the use of the pickup truck), this does not confer upon him the corporation’s title to the truck. “[I]t cannot be said that the facts disclose a sale [of the real property] by trustees to themselves. . . . [T]he trustees, though directors and stockholders of the defendant bank, were not
the
bank.”
(Copsey
v.
Sacramento Bank
(1901)
The plaintiff’s efforts to demonstrate that Mr. Gardner owned the truck in the “ordinary” sense of the word are self-defeating, because if there
are
multiple meanings we must choose the one which will achieve the policy’s object of providing coverage for loss.
(Reserve Insurance Co., supra,
30 Cal.3d at pp. 807-808.) Therefore, we need not recount the cases it cites for the principle that ownership of a vehicle for insurance purposes is not limited to the entity holding title. If there are multiple possible “owners” of a vehicle, it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to make clear which types of ownership would work a forfeiture of coverage under the policy.
(Id.
at p. 808.) Having failed to specify in its exclusion that ownership could be anything other than holding the title of record (which is certainly ownership
B.
Since, for purposes of the plaintiff’s exclusionary clause, it is the corporation which owned the 1987 pickup truck, the plaintiff can come within the ambit of the clause only by disregarding the corporate form of Gardner’s Landscaping in order to show that Mr. Gardner actually “owned” the pickup truck. This would require us to apply the suggestively named doctrine of “piercing the corporate veil.” (See 9 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (9th ed. 1989) Corporations, § 12, p. 524.) We shall recount the principles relevant to this doctrine, and then determine if the plaintiff’s evidentiary showing was sufficient to warrant its application.
1.
“The alter ego doctrine arises when a plaintiff comes into court claiming that an opposing party is using the corporate form unjustly and in derogation of the plaintiff’s interests.”
(Mesler
v.
Bragg Management Co.
(1985)
It is the plaintiff’s burden to overcome the presumption of the separate existence of the corporate entity.
(MacPherson
v.
Eccleston
(1961) 190
The appellate court in
Associated Vendors, Inc.
v.
Oakland Meat Co.
(1962)
2.
The only evidence relevant to the question of piercing the corporate veil came from the excerpts of Mr. Gardner’s deposition read into the record. According to Mr. Gardner, he is listed as chief executive officer of Gardner Landscaping, Inc. Although he was not sure if any stock had been issued, he
The only vehicle of which he or his wife made personal, nonbusiness use was the 1986 Cadillac. He admitted he did not personally own any vehicles; all vehicles, including the Cadillac, were owned by the corporation. The corporation also paid the premiums on the vehicles insured by the plaintiff. His explanation for this perquisite was that he did “a lot of business that would be. . . out on the road at various times where I could take—be taking someone to lunch or we could be going out with maybe a business party, and I used the Cadillac.” He acknowledged that the registration for three commercial vehicles acquired in 1988-1989 listed him personally as an owner. In charge of purchasing the vehicles, he did not and would not have any purpose in telling the dealer to list title in that manner. He assumed the dealer made an error; the vehicles were supposed to be listed solely in the corporation’s name.
With respect to the circumstances under which the Cadillac and other vehicles cаme to be insured with the plaintiff rather than Financial Indemnity Company, Mr. Gardner stated he normally sent all his insurance business for the corporation to his regular insurance agency (Lindo, Hanna & Abbott). Either he would call the agency or have his office call it whenever he added or eliminated vehicles. The agency was aware he always wanted the “best” insurance; he would simply tell them he wanted coverage and leave the arrangements to them. This included the amount of uninsured motorist coverage. He was not personally aware why certain vehicles wound up being insured by the plaintiff, nor has he asked his agent about this since the accident. The plaintiff’s agent testified he dealt with Mr. Gardner’s daughter. She had been referred to the agent by the Gardner’s usual agency because it did not handle personal automobile insurance. She referred to the vehicles to be insured by the plaintiff as her father’s.
The temporary judge identified the following facts before reaching his conclusion: “Mr. Gardner incorporated his landscaping business in 1986, he or his wife owned all the stock, he is the manager and controls the operations
Under the factors set out earlier, neither the facts relied upon by the temporary judge nor the totality of the facts adduced at trial are sufficient to support a conclusion that Gardner Landscaping’s corporate entity should be disregarded for the purpose of establishing Mr. Gardner as the owner of the pickup truck in which he was injured. The plaintiff has a gaping lacuna in its proof with respect to
any
evidence that Mr. Gardner generally treated corporate assets as his own or disregarded the separate nature of the business. About the only factor to which the plaintiff can point is Mr. Gardner’s domination of ownership and control, but we have already pointed out this factor is not significant in isolation. The plaintiff misreads the record in asserting Mr. Gardner took money from the corporation whenever he needed it—the record clearly shows he was paid a salary. The fact thаt the day-today operations of the business are unchanged is of no significance whatsoever in and of itself; what
would
have been relevant were any facts to show he had not stopped treating the business as his personal property. The fact three vehicles were registered
by a dealer
in Mr. Gardner’s name along with the corporation at some point after the accident is of minimal probity (if any), and was not even noted by the temporary judge. Otherwise, we are simply presented with the fairly common circumstance of a corporation providing its executive officer with the perquisite of vehicles for his pеrsonal use and the concomitant insurance. No rational inference of subterfuge may be drawn from this. Nor do we find any particularly inequitable result. The plaintiff received premiums from Mr. Gardner for uninsured motorist coverage, which was not limited to the vehicles insured under the policy. There is no evidence he manipulated the insurers to the nefarious end of evading the
3.
Having found Mr. Gardner did not own the vehicle in which he was injured in the ordinary sense of the word used in the policy, and having concluded it is improper to deem him the owner in his corporation’s stead, the exclusion on which the temporary judge relied is inapplicable. This is not, however, the end of our task. It is axiomatic we review judicial action, not judicial reasoning.
(Constance B.
v.
State of California
(1986)
II
Unlike the “other-car” exclusion we have just discussed, the other exclusions on which the plaintiff relies require a quick overview of the plaintiff’s policy. Under the general definitions section, “‘you’ or ‘your’ mean the ‘named insured’ shown in the Declarations . . . .” This, of course, is Mr. Gardner. Following the coverage for bodily injury/property damage liability appears “Part II—Uninsured Motorist” coverage, under which the plaintiff insurer promised to “pay
damages
for
bodily injury
which an
insured person
is legally entitled to recover from the оwner or operator of an
uninsured motor
vehicle.” (Italics in original.) An “insured person” under the specific part II definition is the named insured, a family member, any occupant of the named insured’s “insured car” (here, the Cadillac),
4
and any person entitled to recover damages because of injury to the named insured, the named insured’s family, or occupants of the insured car. Next comes the “Exclusions” section. To quote the provision pertinent to this appeal, “This coverage does not apply to
bodily injury
sustained by a person: . . . ffl 4. If the injured person was
occupying
a vehicle [that the named insured] do[es]
A.
The two quoted exclusions (for ease of reference, the “Exclusions” exclusion and the “Other Insurance” exclusion) each deal with the effect of other insurance. It has been noted that “insurance carriеrs planning their policies have several alternatives open to them when faced with the situation where their insured is covered under more than one policy for the same injury. In some cases, they can make their coverage inapplicable. Or they can make it applicable only as excess.” (1 Eisler, Cal. Uninsured Motorist Law (4th ed. 1990 rev.) § [15.10], p. 15-2.) As an example, “suppose A, while a passenger in B’s automobile, is injured by a negligent uninsured motorist. If B has uninsured motorist protection in the policy covering his car, that policy affords what we classify as primary coverage. If A is the named insured in another policy which includes uninsured motorist coverage, then that protection, and any other which might apply to A in this situation, is termed secondary.” (Id. at p. 15-3.) As Eisler continues, “Insurance Code Section 11580.2(c)(2)[ 5 ] allows A’s insurer to preclude coverage altogether where, as above, A is injured while riding in B’s car if B’s car has uninsured motorist coverage.” (Id. at § [15.20], p. 15-3.)
B.
With respect to the “Exclusions” exclusion for bodily injury suffered by an injured person who was occupying a vehicle not owned by a named insured “which is insured for
this coverage
under another policy” (italics added), the plaintiff insurer points out this provision is authorized by Insurance Code section 11580.2, subdivision (c)(2). It then cites a number of cases which interpret the expression “similar” insurance used in the various policies at issue in the cases (in reflection of the statute’s usage) as precluding recovery by injured guests under their own uninsured motorist insurance when their damages exceeded the minimum uninsured motorist coverage
However, Heftier did not consider the effect, either in conjunction with this ambiguity or by itself, of the “Other Insurance” exclusion. We now undertake that task.
C.
As noted, the “Other Insurance” exclusion declared (with our bracketed editorial comment) that plaintiff insurer “will not provide insurance for a vehicle other than your insured car [the Cadillac] unless the owner [the corporation] of that [other] vеhicle [the Nissan pickup] has no other insurance applicable to this part [part II, dealing with uninsured motorists].” (Italics deleted.) The plaintiff insurer argues that this provision bars coverage in this case and that nothing in the
Heftier
decision changes this result. In its view,
Hefner
“was only concerned with the interpretation of the policy exclusion concerning ‘this coverage[,]’ and in no way does
Hefner
stand for the position that the policy exclusion concerning ‘other insurance’ is unclear
First of all, it is far from clear what this exclusion was intended to cover. Its рhraseology is odd, stating the insurer “will not
provide insurance
for a vehicle.” (Italics added.) After all, the uninsured motorist coverage promises to pay benefits to
insured persons
injured by an uninsured motorist; it does not promise to pay injuries connected with any particular vehicle. Does it mean that the insurer will not issue a policy under these circumstances? Or does it mean the same as the “Exclusions” exclusion, namely that “This coverage does not apply to bodily injury sustained by a person: ...[<][] 4. If the injured person was occupying a vehicle you do not own which is insured for this coverage under another policy”? (Italics deleted.) If it indeed is intended to mean thе same thing as the other exclusion, then it is subject to the same defect found in
Hefner.
If it means something different, then there is an irreconcilable conflict between the two clauses. In such a case, the provision that affords coverage—here the “Exclusions” exclusionary clause, as construed by Hefner—controls.
(Crane
v.
State Farm Fire & Cas. Co.
(1971)
Second, even if this other insurance clause could be read to mean that coverage is excluded unless the owner of the other vehicle “has no other insurance,” it is still unclear whether such a provision could be squared with the statutorily authorized exemption. The statutory exemption applies when the other vehicle is covered by “insurance similar to that provided in this section” (Ins. Code, § 11580.2, subd. (c)(2)), not when the other vehicle has “no other [uninsured motorist] insurance.” Under the contractual exclusion, the policy would not provide coverage even if the other vehicle were underinsured, so long as it had some uninsured motorist coverage. Such a construction would be at odds with the statutory scheme. It has been noted “that the insurance coverage provided for by section 11580.2 is a mandatory
minimum
uninsured motorist coverage which every policy must provide by
Ill
This leaves the matter of the proper resolution of this appeal. The plaintiff was not suffering under any improper court-imposed limitations on its ability to introduce evidence, nor was its litigation theory erroneously based. We may consequently assume it marshalled the best case it could at trial. Under these circumstances, it is proper for us to direct that judgment be entered in favor оf the defendant to avoid any additional expense. (Code Civ. Proc., § 43;
Burtis
v.
Universal Pictures Co., Inc.
(1953)
Disposition
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded to the trial court with directions to enter a new and different judgment declaring that defendant Gardner is entitled to coverage under the uninsured motorist coverage contained in the plaintiff’s policies issued to him. The plaintiff will be responsible on all damages up to $100,000 for 10/13 of indemnification. Defendant Gаrdner shall recover costs of appeal.
Puglia, P. J., and Blease, J., concurred.
Notes
Financial Indemnity Company was also named as a defendant below, but did not appeal from the judgment.
The plaintiff insurer had sought to amend its complaint to add a cause of action for reformation (to change the named insured to the corporation) or rescission based on its “discovery” at a deposition in April 1990 that the corporation actually owned the Cadillac, not Mr. Gardner. It subsequently withdrew this motion, only to resurrect the issue at trial. Both defendants objected to this belated effort to amend the complaint. The temporary judge agreed tо allow the defendants to reopen the trial if he granted the plaintiff’s motion, at which point the plaintiff withdrew its attempt to seek rescission based on the purported material misrepresentation. It did, however, argue in favor of reformation. The temporary judge did not explicitly rule on the issue.
On appeal, the plaintiff revives the misrepresentation argument as a basis for voiding coverage under the policy. It makes no argument in favor of reforming the policy to list the corporation as the named insurer. With respect to either issue, principles of waiver preclude our consideration.
The relevant considerations include: the commingling of funds and other assets; the failure to segregate funds of the individual and the corporation; the unauthorized diversion of corporate funds to other than corporate purposes; the treatment by an individual of corporate assets as his own; the failure to seek authority to issue stock or issue stock under existing authorization; the representation by an individual that he is personally liable for corporate debts; the failure to maintain adequate corporate minutes or records; the intermingling of the individual and corporate records; the ownership of all the stock by a single individual or family; the domination or control of the corporation by the stockholders; the use of a single address for the individual and the corporation; the inadequacy of the corporation’s capitalization; the use of the corporation as a mere conduit for an individual’s business; the concealment of the ownership of the corporation; the disregard of formalities and the failure to maintain arm’s-length transactions with the corporation; and the attempts to segregate liabilities to the corporation. (Id. at pp. 838-840.)
This term is among the policy’s general definitions. “Your insured car” is the vehicle listed on the declarations page or its replacement, an,y after-acquired vehicle, and any temporary substitute for the vehicle listed on the declarations page.
This statute provides in relevant part, “The insurance coverage provided for in this section [dealing with uninsured motorist coverage] does not apply either as primary or excess coverage to: . . . bodily injury of the insured while in or upon or while entering into or alighting from a motor vehicle other than the described motor vehicle if the owner thereof has insurance similar to that provided in this section.” (Italics added.)
The cases are
Interinsurance Exchange
v.
Alcivar
(1979)
