Having considered the briefs and record, and having heard oral argument we are persuaded that the able district judge explained the facts and the law in this case extremely well. Judge Schroeder’s opinion addressed all of the issues raised on appeal. We adopt his opinion, in substantial part, as our own. In addition, we will address the issue of attorney fees on appeal following reproduction of the district court’s opinion below:
“In 1977 Floyd Harvey, doing business as Hell’s Canyon Excursions, filed a complaint alleging that on or about January 31 or February 1, 1974, Bruce Oakes, among others, damaged property belonging to Hell’s Canyon Excursions. Mutual of En-umclaw defended Oakes, their insured, in that action under the terms of Homeowner’s policy in effect at the time of the occurrence. On March 26, 1984, a judgment was entered in favor of Hells’ Canyon and jointly and severally against Oakes and his co-defendant in the amount of $219,200 plus $45,444 costs, including $35,000 attorney fees. Since then Hell’s Canyon has demanded that Mutual of Enumclaw pay Hell’s Canyon those costs which Hell’s Canyon argues are due them under Mutual of Enumclaw’s policy insuring Oakes. Mutual of Enumclaw filed its complaint in this action on April 15, 1986, amended May 28, 1986, asking for a declaratory judgment seeking determinations that 1) Mutual of Enumclaw has no duty to indemnify or *1011 provide coverage for Bruce Oakes; 2) Mutual of Enumclaw has no duty to further defend Oakes; 3) Mutual of Enumclaw has no duty to pay that portion of the costs consisting of attorney’s fees; 4) Mutual of Enumclaw be awarded attornеy fees and costs incurred in the declaratory judgment action. On June 5, 1986, Hell’s Canyon answered and counterclaimed for declaratory judgment that:
“1. Mutual of Enumclaw has the duty to pay Hell’s Canyon for all costs, including attorney fees, taxed against Bruce Oakes, plus interest on those items; 2) Attorney fees and costs incurred in the declaratory judgment action be awarded to Floyd Harvey/Hell’s Canyon.
“On May 7, 1986, Floyd Harvey/Hell’s Canyon filed an application for writ of execution on the March 1984 judgment, followed on April 3, 1987 by this summary judgment motion for $46,440.01 plus interest, costs and fees in the instant action. On July 10,1987, Floyd Harvey/Hell’s Canyon filed an amended counterclaim alleging an additional entitlement under the policy to interest on the entire $264,644.01 judgment which consisted of $219,200 damages plus $45,444.01 costs; the defendant’s amended motion for summary judgment on August 7, 1987, reflected the new demand.
“The following issues are presented by the motion for summary judgment:
“1. Whether Hell’s Canyon has standing to recover portions of the judgment directly from Mutual of Enumclaw instead of from Mutual of Enumclaw’s insured, Bruce Oakes.
“2. Whether Mutual of Enumclaw is liable under policy Section II, Supplementary Coverages 2.a to pay the costs taxed against Oakes even though there may not be coverage under the policy for the conduct of Oakes which gave rise to the underlying action;
“3. Whether attorney fees should be considered an element of the costs taxed against Oakes which are payable under the policy.
“4. Whether Mutual of Enumclaw’s failure to tender that рortion of the judgment consisting of costs taxed against Oakes is enough to trigger Section II, Supplementary Coverages 2(c) which obligates the insurer to pay ‘all interest on the entire amount of any judgment which accrues after entry of the judgment and before the insurer has paid or tendered or deposited in court that part of the judgment which does not exceed the limit of (the insurer’s) liability thereon.’
“Issue I: Standing
“The insurance policy itself, Section II, Conditions Applicable Only to Section II, 8.b. confers standing. That provision states, ‘Any person or organization or the legal representative thereof who has secured such judgment (a judgment against the Insured after actual trial) ... shall thereafter be entitled to recover under this policy to the extent of thе insurance afforded under this policy.’ The judgment in favor of Hell’s Canyon dated March 26, 1984, states that the judgment was entered following a full jury trial. Therefore, under the terms of the policy, Hell’s Canyon, having secured such judgment, is entitled to recover under the policy to the extent insurance afforded by the policy encompasses that judgment.
“Issue 2: Are Costs Taxed Against Oakes Payable even Though Oakes Conduct is not Covered under the Policy?
“Supplementary Coverages 2. of the policy provides, that the Insurer will pay, as an element of personal liability claims expenses, ‘a. all expenses incurred by (the) Company and all costs taxed against the insured in any suit defended by (the) Company;!
“Mutual of Enumclaw maintains that the application of this provisiоn turns on whether coverage existed for the underlying claim giving rise to the lawsuit. Mutual of Enumclaw argues that the jury determined Oakes’ conduct to have been intentional. That being the case, the policy excludes coverage under Section II, Exclusion l.f. which states that the policy does not apply to ‘... property damage which is either expected or intended from the standpoint of the Insured.’ Since the policy excludes coverage, Mutual of Enumclaw maintains that Supplementary Coverages *1012 2.a., the provision allowing the payment of costs, is not operative in this case. Additionally it argues the non-applicability of the cost provision on the grounds that it undertook the defense with a full reservation of rights. Hell’s Canyon maintains thаt the provision obligating the insurer to pay costs is independent of the obligation to pay for the conduct of Oakes, and that the reservation of rights operated to reserve only those rights which existed under the policy of insurance, not to absolve Mutual of Enumclaw of contractual duties nor deprive the insured of Hell’s Canyon of contractual entitlements.
“Pоlicy Section II, Supplementary Coverages 2. (Personal Liability Claims Expenses) provides that the company will pay ‘a. all expenses incurred by Company and all costs taxed against the insured in any suit defended by Company.’ A further sentence appearing at the end of Coverage 2. provides that ‘any expenses (costs are treated by the policy as an element of expenses) incurred by this Company under this provision (supplementary Coverage 2.) shall not reduce the applicable limit of liability.’ That language, as well as the placement of Coverage 2. under a heading named, ‘Supplementary Coverages’ implies that the provisions contained therein are separate from and in addition to the basic policy coverage, and, therefore, that Mutual of Enumclaw’s obligation to pay such costs is unaffected by the fact that the policy does not cover Oakes’ intentionally tortious conduct.
* * *
“In
Liberty National Ins. Co. v. Eberhart,
“The results in the cases depend ‘upon the language employed by the parties in their contract.’ 76 ALR2D 985. Language in the policy of this case does not indicate that payment of costs is conditioned upon a final determination that the policy covers the insured’s conduct. The language of the policy says that the Company will pay all costs taxed against the insured in any suit defended by the Company. Beyond what appears to be the clear term of the policy, it is arguable that since the Company has the right to control the defense, including the power to refuse settlement, it should also bear the consequences of its case mаnagement decisions, including the consequence that the trial court may tax the opponent’s costs against the insured.
See River Valley Cartage Co., Inc. v.
*1013
Hawkeye-Security Ins. Co.,
“Mutual of Enumclaw also argues that undertaking Oakes’ defense with a reservation of rights exonerates it from having to pay costs. The court rejects this contention. ‘It is generally recognized that coverage defenses may be properly preserved by a reservation of rights agreement.’
American Employers’ Insurance Co. v. Crawford,
“Issue 3: Attorney Fees are an Element of Costs
“Hell’s Canyon maintains that the ‘costs’ Mutual of Enumclaw is obligated to pay under Section II, Supplementary-'Coverages 2.a. should be interpreted to include attorney fees. Though the word ‘costs’ аs a legal term of art may be ambiguous, it is not so from the perspective of the ordinary person unfamiliar with the jargon of the legal and insurance professions standing in the position of the insured. An insurance policy must be interpreted from that perspective.
Wardle v. International Health & Life Ins. Co.,
4. costs pi: expenses incurred in litigation; as a: those payable to the attorney or counsel by his clients esp. when fixed by law b: those given by the law or the court to the prevailing against the losing pаrty in equity and frequently by statute —called also bill of costs ...
“The definition represents the common understanding of the term ‘costs.’ The plain, ordinary and popular meaning of ‘costs’ is the expense of litigation which includes attorney fees.
“Issue 4: Mutual of Enumclaw’s Failure to Tender Costs Entitles Hell’s Canyon to Interest on the Entire Amount of the Judgment
“Hell’s Canyon contends that Mutual of Enumclaw’s failure to tender or deposit with the court the costs taxed against Bruce Oakes in the underlying action entitles it to post judgment interest on the entire judgment under the terms of the policy. Mutual of Enumclaw maintains that Hell’s Canyon is entitled to no interest because costs are not part of the judgment, and, alternatively, that the obligation ceases upon tender of policy limits to which the insured is entitlеd, which in this case is zero.
“Section II, Supplementary Coverages 2.c. obligates the company to pay interest until the ‘Company has paid or tendered or deposited in court that part of the judgment which does not exceed the limit of this Company’s liability thereon;’ The result turns on the meaning of the term ‘limit of this Company’s liability thereon.’ If that phrase is interpreted to meаn ‘until the Company has paid, tendered or deposited the amounts for which it is liable under all parts of the insurance contract,’ then Mutual of Enumclaw continues to be obligated to pay interest since costs have been determined to be a contractual obligation due under the policy and since Mutual of
*1014
Enumclaw has not yet tendered those costs. On the other hand, if ‘limit of this Company’s liability thereon,’ is interpreted to mean those amounts which flow from the underlying, basic coverage for the conduct of Oakes, then the obligation ended at the time that there was a factual basis for determining that Oakes’ conduct was not covered by the policy. Hell’s Canyon cites
River Valley Cartage Company, Inc. v. Hawkeye-Security Ins. Co.,
While it is true that interest is a separate and distinct obligation from the judgment, the provision in -the policy only makes sense if the word ‘judgment’ is read tо include interest. Otherwise the insurer could, by offering a sum that in most instances the judgment creditor would have to refuse in order to preserve his full rights, free itself from the impact of the provision which is its incentive for speedily discharging its entire obligation.
River Valley Cartage Company, Inc. v. Hawkeye-Security Ins. Co.,
“In
Stibal v. Carland,
“In opposition to Hell’s Canyon’s position, Mutual of Enumclaw cites
Allegheny Airlines, Inc. v. Forth Corporation,
“The reasoning of
River Valley Cartage Company, Inc. v. Hawkeye-Security Ins. Co.,
ATTORNEY FEES
The trial court awarded attorney fees to respondents for successfully defending the declaratory action pursuant to I.C. § 41-1839 (1977) which provides in relevant part:
41-1839. Allоwance of attorney fees in suits against insurers. — (1) Any insurer issuing any policy, certificate or contract of insurance, surety, guaranty or indemnity of any kind or nature whatsoever, which shall fail for a period of thirty (30) days after proof of loss has been furnished as provided in such policy, certificate or contract, to pay to the person entitled thereto the amount justly due under such policy, certificate or contract, shall in any action thereafter brought against the insurer in any court in this state for recovery under the terms of the policy, certificate or contract, pay such further amount as the court shall adjudge reasonable as attorney’s fees in such' action.
(2) In any such action, if it is alleged that before the commеncement thereof, a tender of the full amount justly due was made to the person entitled thereto, and such amount is thereupon deposited in the court, and if the allegation is found to be true, or if it is determined in such action that no amount is justly due, then no such attorney’s fees may be recovered.
In order to receive fees under this statute, the party must prevail in the litigation.
Manduca Datsun, Inc. v. Universal Underwriters Ins. Co.,
Where a person entitled to an amount justly due under the policy successfully resists an insurer’s appeal from an award of attorney fees in the district court, this Court will award additional attorney fees for the appeal.
Erikson v. Nationwide Mutual Ins. Co.,
The trial court judgment is affirmed. Costs and attorney fees on appeal to respondents Harvey and Hells Canyon Excursions.
