Opinion
D. A. Whitacre Construction, Inc. (Whitacre), a framing subcontractor on a construction project, was insured under a commercial general liability (CGL) insurance policy issued by plaintiff Pennsylvania General Insurance Company (Pennsylvania General) for the period October 1998 through December 2001. While insured by Pennsylvania General, Whitacre entered into a subcontract to perform work on a project and completed that work. At the conclusion of Pennsylvania General’s coverage period, and after Whitacre’s work on the project was completed, Whitacre was insured by a CGL policy issued by defendant American Safety Indemnity Company (ASIC), for the period December 2001 through December 2002. 1
In an ensuing construction defect lawsuit involving Whitacre (the construction defect litigation), various parties alleged that Whitacre’s work on the project was improperly done and had created various problems with the project. Whitacre tendered its defense to both Pennsylvania General and ASIC. Pennsylvania General accepted Whitacre’s tender of the defense under a reservation of rights and ultimately paid the defense and settlement costs for Whitacre. ASIC declined Whitacre’s tender, asserting there was no possibility of coverage under its policy, and did not participate in defending or indemnifying Whitacre.
After the underlying construction defect litigation was settled, Pennsylvania General filed the present lawsuit against ASIC seeking equitable contribution from ASIC for a portion of the defense and indemnity costs paid by Pennsylvania General. The trial court, ruling on cross-motions for summary judgment, concluded ASIC had no responsibility to pay any portion of the
I
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
A. The Involved Entities
Whitacre was a framing subcontractor. Pennsylvania General insured Whitacre under a CGL policy for the period October 7, 1998, through December 31, 2001. ASIC insured Whitacre under a CGL policy for the period December 31, 2001, through December 31, 2002. National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (National), a cross-defendant, insured Whitacre under a CGL policy for the period December 31, 2002, through October 1, 2005.
B. The Project
In the summer of 1999 an entity known as “900 F Street Partners” (owners) retained GAFCON/Taylor Ball, Joint Venture (GAFCON) as general contractor for a construction project. In December 1999, GAFCON entered into a subcontract with Whitacre pursuant to which Whitacre agreed to provide framing and rough carpentry work for the project. Whitacre substantially completed its work by June 2001, although it performed some punch list work after June 2001. The final inspection notice for the entire project was issued in March 2002.
C. The Third Party Lawsuits
In the construction defect litigation, involving a series of lawsuits commenced in April 2002 that ultimately consolidated, owners alleged there were numerous problems in the construction of the project. Among the claims asserted in the construction defect litigation was the allegation that Whitacre’s work was deficient and had caused damage to the project. 2
Whitacre tendered the defense of the construction defect litigation to numerous insurers, including Pennsylvania General and ASIC. Pennsylvania General accepted the tender of the defense for Whitacre as well as for GAFCON as an additional insured under the policy under a reservation of rights. 3 ASIC declined Whitacre’s tender of the defense (as well as GAFCON’s tender of the defense as an additional insured under the ASIC policy), asserting various provisions of its policy excluded coverage for the claims asserted in the construction defect litigation, including a “pre-existing damage” exclusion in ASIC’s policy.
Pennsylvania General funded the defense of Whitacre and GAFCON in the construction defect litigation and paid about $780,000 as defense costs. Pennsylvania General and its assignor paid an additional $775,000 to settle the claims asserted in the construction defect litigation against its insureds. 4
II
THE PRESENT ACTION
Pennsylvania General filed the present action seeking declaratory relief and equitable contribution from ASIC, asserting ASIC’s policy provided coverage for some or all of the damages sought against Whitacre in the construction defect litigation and therefore ASIC should be required to contribute to the defense and settlement costs paid by Pennsylvania General. ASIC’s answer denied its policy provided any potential for coverage and therefore asserted it owed no defense or indemnity obligations to Whitacre. ASIC filed a cross-complaint against a subsequent insurer (National) asserting that, if ASIC owed any obligation to share in the costs of defending and indemnifying Whitacre, it was entitled to equitable contribution from National as another insurer that also owed defense or indemnity obligations to Whitacre.
Pennsylvania General’s cross-motion for summary judgment interposed the same arguments: there was at least a potential for coverage under ASIC’s policy for the claims asserted in the construction defect litigation; this potential coverage entitled Pennsylvania General (as another insurer that honored its obligation to provide a defense to Whitacre) to require ASIC to contribute to the defense costs under equitable contribution principles; and ASIC was presumptively liable to contribute to the settlement costs. ASIC’s opposition to Pennsylvania General’s motion asserted there was no potential for coverage under its policy, and therefore no duty to defend or indemnify, because ASIC’s policy contained language excluding coverage for any occurrence that happened before the effective date of its policy. ASIC argued the term “occurrence” employed in ASIC’s policy expressly and unambiguously referred to the underlying conduct that caused the resulting damage, rather than to the damage resulting from that conduct, and it was undisputed Whitacre’s conduct was completed before the effective date of ASIC’s policy. ASIC therefore argued there was no potential for coverage under ASIC’s policy, regardless of when the damage resulting from Whitacre’s conduct may have occurred, because all of Whitacre’s work (the causal conduct) was completed prior to ASIC’s policy period; ASIC’s definition of “occurrence” did not suggest damage resulting from that conduct was germane to determining when there was an occurrence.
The trial court therefore entered summary judgment in favor of ASIC, and against Pennsylvania General. 6
APPLICABLE LEGAL PRINCIPLES
A. Standard of Review
“On appeal after a motion for summary judgment has been granted, we review the record de novo, considering all the evidence set forth in the moving and opposition papers except that to which objections have been made and sustained.”
(Guz
v.
Bechtel National, Inc.
(2000)
B. Interpreting Insurance Contracts
The order granting summary judgment turned principally on the trial court’s interpretation of ASIC’s CGL policy. The legal principles applicable to interpreting insurance policies, which we apply de novo on appeal
(Standard Fire Ins. Co. v. Spectrum Community Assn.
(2006)
“ ‘When determining whether a particular policy provides a potential for coverage . . . , we are guided by the principle that interpretation of an insurance policy is a question of law. [Citation.]’ [Citation.] [¶] ‘The insurer is entitled to summary adjudication that no potential for indemnity exists . . . if the evidence establishes as a matter of law that there is no coverage. [Citation.] We apply a de novo standard of review to an order granting summary judgment when, on undisputed facts, the order is based on the interpretation or application of the terms of an insurance policy.’ [Citations.]
“In reviewing de novo a superior court’s summary adjudication order in a dispute over the interpretation of the provisions of a policy of insurance, the reviewing court applies settled rules governing the interpretation of insurance contracts. We reiterated those rules in our decision in
“ ‘ “A policy provision will be considered ambiguous when it is capable of two or more constructions, both of which are reasonable.” [Citations.] The fact that a term is not defined in the policies does not make it ambiguous. [Citations.] Nor does “[disagreement concerning the meaning of a phrase,” or “ ‘the fact that a word or phrase isolated from its context is susceptible of more than one meaning.’ ” [Citation.] “ ‘[L]anguage in a contract must be construed in the context of that instrument as a whole, and in the circumstances of that case, and cannot be found to be ambiguous in the abstract.’ ” [Citation.] “If an asserted ambiguity is not eliminated by the language and context of the policy, courts then invoke the principle that ambiguities are generally construed against the party who caused the uncertainty to exist (i.e., the insurer) in order to protect the insured’s reasonable expectation of coverage.” [Citation.]’ [(Quoting
Foster-Gardner, supra,
C. The Relevant Policy Provisions
Because our analysis begins with an examination of the relevant policy provisions, rather than general rules that may not necessarily be responsive to the policy language
(Harbor Ins. Co. v. Central National Ins. Co.
(1985)
ASIC’s CGL policy provided it would indemnify Whitacre for any amount Whitacre became obligated to pay as “ ‘property damage’ to which this insurance applies,” and specified that “[t]his insurance applies to . . . ‘property damage’ only if: [¶] (1) The . . . ‘property damage’ is caused by an ‘occurrence’ that takes place in the ‘coverage territory’; and [¶] (2) The . . .
ASIC’s CGL policy also contained two 1999 endorsements that modified the standard policy provisions. The standard definition of “occurrence” contained in the 1997 version of the CGL policy 7 was replaced by ASIC’s 1999 endorsement that refined the definition of “occurrence” by adding the following italicized language: “ ‘Occurrence’ means an accident, including continuous or repeated exposure to substantially the same general harmful conditions that happens during the term of this insurance. ‘Property damage’ . . . which commenced prior to the effective date of this insurance will be deemed to have happened prior to, and not during, the term of this insurance.” (Italics added.)
At the same time, ASIC added another 1999 endorsement, entitled “PREEXISTING INJURY OR DAMAGE EXCLUSION,” which stated: “This insurance does not apply to: [¶] 1. Any ‘occurrence’, incident or ‘suit’. . . [¶] [(a)] which first occurred prior to the inception date of this policy . . . ; or [¶] [(b)] which is, or is alleged to be, in the process of occurring as of the inception date of this policy . . . even if the ‘occurrence’ continues during this policy period.”
D. Analysis of Summary Judgment Order
The pivotal issue is whether the terms of ASIC’s CGL policy clearly and unambiguously provide that two separate “triggers of coverage”
8
—i.e., the causal acts by Whitacre and the commencement of damages resulting from those acts—must happen during the effective date of the policy before a potential for coverage exists. ASIC’s interpretation of its CGL policy rests on the assertion that its CGL policy distinctly defined (and differentiated between) the terms “occurrence” and “property damage” and did not incorporate property damage as a defining characteristic of an “occurrence.” ASIC argues there are therefore two separate triggers of coverage—an “occurrence” and “property damage”—and the former is the causal event or conduct that
The courts have repeatedly confronted insurance policies that have insured against an occurrence and that employed language defining the term “occurrence” to mean “an accident, including continuous or repeated exposure to substantially the same general harmful conditions.” In a series of cases, those courts have concluded that “the time of occurrence of an accident within the meaning of an insurance policy is the time the complaining party was damaged, not the time the wrongful act was committed.”
(Hallmark Ins. Co. v. Superior Court
(1988)
We conclude ASIC’s CGL policy, read as a whole, remains reasonably susceptible of the interpretation that resulting damage, not the causal conduct, is still a defining characteristic of the occurrence that must take place during the policy period to create coverage. When construing an insurance policy, we must resolve ambiguities in coverage clauses most
Additionally, ASIC’s other 1999 endorsement buttresses the interpretation that ASIC’s CGL policy employed the term “occurrence” to refer to the damage, not to the causal acts that produced the damage. ASIC’s other 1999 endorsement states the insurance would not apply to “[a]ny ‘occurrence’ . . . [¶]... which first occurred prior to the inception date of this policy . . . ; or [¶] . . . which is, or is alleged to be, in the process of occurring as of the inception date of this policy . . . even if the ‘occurrence’ continues during this policy period.” That language is found under the heading “PRE-EXISTING INJURY OR DAMAGE EXCLUSION,” not “Pre-Existing Causal Conduct Exclusion,” which supports the interpretation that the term “occurrence” (and that which ASIC will exclude from coverage if it first happened before the inception date of ASIC’s policy) refers to the “injury or damage” resulting from the conduct, not the causal conduct itself.
ASIC’s policy language argument rests on its quote from the policy stating that the insurance applies to property damage only if the “ ‘property damage’ is caused by an ‘occurrence.’ ” 10 This partial quote from the policy, ASIC asserts, demonstrates that property damage is separate from and not an element of the definition of an occurrence. However, ASIC’s interpretation rests on a partial quote that has been shorn from the language (represented by the italics) explaining that its CGL has territorial limitations. The full quote—that the insurance only applies to “ ‘property damage’ . . . caused by an ‘occurrence’ that takes place in the ‘coverage territory’ ” (CGL policy, § I, coverage A, ¶ 1(a) & (b), italics added)—is at least equally susceptible of the interpretation that the quoted language was designed to impose territorial requirements on coverage (e.g., that the insurance only applies to “ ‘property damage’ . . . that takes place in the ‘coverage territory’ ”), and was not designed to redefine the term “occurrence” as limited to the causal conduct leading to the covered damage.
ASIC’s case law argument is also unconvincing. ASIC cites several cases, including
EOTT Energy Corp. v. Storebrand Internat. Ins. Co.
(1996)
ASIC cites one
case—USF Ins. Co. v. Clarendon America Ins. Co.
(C.D.Cal. 2006)
Although the
USF
court did state that the language of the Clarendon policies “make[s] a clear distinction between the ‘occurrence,’ which is the accident or exposure that
causes
damage to the claimant, and the resulting ‘physical damage’ ”
(USF, supra,
We agree with the
USF
court insofar as it concluded the proper interpretation of the language employed in ASIC’s policy is that it was designed to “ ‘circumvent the continuous injury trigger of the coverage rule laid down’ in
[Montrose].” (USF, supra,
Our construction—that a reasonable insured could conclude the purpose and effect of ASIC’s 1999 policy endorsements was to obviate
Montrose's
continuous trigger approach rather than to exclude coverage if the injury-producing conduct preceded the inception of the policy—is reinforced when considering the coverage afforded by ASIC’s policy under the so-called “products-completed operations hazard.” (Cf.
Prudential Ins. Co. of America, Inc. v. Superior Court
(2002)
ASIC’s proffered construction—that the terms “occurrence” and “your work” should be treated as synonymous and therefore as being simultaneously amended by the 1999 endorsements—ignores that the original policy separately defined and employed those terms. However, the interpretation we adopt—the term “occurrence” refers to the damage and the term “your work” refers to the conduct that produced the injury—harmonizes and gives effect to how a reasonable insured could read ASIC’s CGL policy provisions as modified by the 1999 endorsements: under the CGL policy provisions, the products-completed operations hazard protected against claims for property damages “arising out of . . . ‘your work’ ” once that work was completed, regardless of when that work was completed, as long as (under the 1999 endorsements) the property damage (or occurrence) “happens during the term of this insurance” but cautioning “ ‘[pjroperty damage’ . . . which commenced prior to the effective date of this insurance will be deemed to have happened prior to, and not during, the term of this insurance.”
We conclude that ASIC’s CGL policy is reasonably susceptible of the interpretation that the trigger of coverage was damage to property, not the causal conduct, and the 1999 endorsements were merely designed to obviate the application of the “progressive damage-continuous trigger” articulated in Montrose. As we have previously noted, the facts here were disputed on when the damages sought in the construction defect litigation first commenced. Accordingly, it was error to grant summary judgment in ASIC’s favor insofar as Pennsylvania General sought contribution for the indemnity payments, and it was also error to grant summary judgment in ASIC’s favor insofar as the Pennsylvania General action sought equitable contribution for the defense costs paid in the underlying action.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed. Pennsylvania General is entitled to its costs on appeal against ASIC. ASIC and National shall bear their own costs on appeal.
Benke, Acting P. J., and Irion, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied June 18, 2010, and the petition of appellant American Safety Indemnity Company for review by the Supreme Court was denied October 27, 2010, SI85204. Corrigan, J., did not participate therein.
Notes
ASIC provided Whitacre coverage for only one year. Thereafter, Whitacre was covered by a different CGL policy, issued by another insurer, that insured Whitacre for the period December 2002 through October 2005.
Pennsylvania General and ASIC disputed whether the damages allegedly caused by Whitacre’s work first manifested during Pennsylvania General’s policy period. ASIC produced two letters from GAFCON’s representative, written in the summer of 2001, informing Whitacre that the work performed by Whitacre was not acceptable, including concerns about ceiling deflection, walls that were not perpendicular to the floor, and window framing issues. However, Pennsylvania General presented evidence that these complaints were discussed between GAFCON and Whitacre and resolved because they agreed there was no damage to the
Pennsylvania General’s reservation of rights letter noted various exclusions that potentially could eliminate coverage for the claims asserted against Whitacre, including questions about whether the damages sought in the construction defect litigation occurred during Pennsylvania General’s policy period.
Pennsylvania General funded $200,000 of the settlement. An excess insurer paid the remaining $575,000 of the settlement, and later assigned its rights to Pennsylvania General to seek recovery of all or part of that amount from ASIC.
Although the dispositive rulings on the various motions for summary judgment involved the motions made by Pennsylvania General and ASIC, National also moved for and obtained summary judgment in its favor. However, the order granting National’s summary judgment motion was premised on the foundational ruling that, because ASIC was not liable to Pennsylvania General for contribution, ASIC could not establish the elements of a claim for contribution against National.
The court also granted National’s motion for summary judgment against ASIC. ASIC’s claim against National for equitable contribution was dependent on the predicate determination that ASIC was liable to Pennsylvania General for some portion of the defense and/or-settlement costs. Accordingly, after the court determined ASIC was not liable to Pennsylvania General, it determined ASIC could not maintain any claim against National, and therefore granted National’s motion for summary judgment. Considering our determination that summary judgment in favor of ASIC was error, we must reverse the order in favor of National and remand for further proceedings on ASIC’s cross-complaint against National. (Cf.
Pfeiffer Venice Properties v. Bernard
(2002)
Additionally, we note that in the present appeal Pennsylvania General argues (and ASIC disputes) ASIC also is liable for contribution insofar as Pennsylvania General paid to defend and indemnify GAFCON as an additional insured. Although that claim was raised by Pennsylvania General in its summary judgment motion, it was not among the issues resolved by the trial court in connection with the ruling on ASIC’s summary judgment motion, which is the only ruling before us in the current appeal. Accordingly, we express no opinion on this issue.
The 1997 version of ASIC’s CGL policy defined “occurrence” to mean “an accident, including continuous or repeated exposure to substantially the same general harmful conditions.”
“ ‘[T]rigger of coverage’ is a term of convenience used to describe that which, under the specific terms of an insurance policy, must happen in the policy period in order for the
potential
of coverage to arise. The issue is largely one of timing—what must take place
within the policy’s effective dates
for the potential of coverage to be ‘triggered’?”
(Montrose, supra,
The trial court also stated in its ruling that Pennsylvania General’s April 13, 2005, reservation of rights letter, by which Pennsylvania General accepted Whitacre’s tender of the defense, “likewise supports that there was an ‘occurrence’ during [Pennsylvania General’s] policy period,” which necessarily excluded coverage under ASIC’s 1999 “PRE-EXISTING INJURY OR DAMAGE EXCLUSION.” On appeal, however, Pennsylvania General persuasively argues the statements in its reservation of rights letter were not an admission that there was in fact an occurrence for purposes of the trigger to coverage and, indeed, the letter specifically reserved its right to contest whether there was coverage. ASIC acknowledges the trial court’s mention of the reservation of rights letter was incidental, and its ruling was not dependent on the letter. We agree this letter appears to be collateral to the central inquiry and therefore do not further consider this letter or the trial court’s incidental reliance on it.
ASIC’s appellate brief, in an apparent attempt to buttress its contention that the occurrence is necessarily used to denote the causal conduct and not the distinct issue of the resulting damage, also appears to argue ASIC’s CGL policy also uses the phrase “occurrence giving rise to the property damage.” However, ASIC has not directed this court to the portion of the policy containing this phraseology, and we therefore do not further examine this aspect of ASIC’s appellate argument.
(Air Couriers Internat.
v.
Employment Development Dept.
(2007)
One of the cases cited by ASIC as supporting its interpretative gloss on the term “occurrence,”
Chemstar, Inc. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., supra,
ASIC cites a second case,
Clarendon America Ins. Co. v. Mt. Hawley Ins. Co.
(C.D.Cal. 2008)
Clarendon’s policy required that the property damage “ ‘caused by an occurrence which takes place in the coverage territory,’ ” was “ ‘caused by an occurrence which takes place
