Opinion
In
Hameid
v.
National Fire Ins. of Hartford
(2003)
Here we consider a variant of the CGL policy, which, unlike the policy considered in Hameid, contained the following definition of advertisement: “ ‘Advertisement’ means a notice that is broadcast or published to the general public or specific market segments about your goods, products or services for the purpose of attracting customers or supporters.” Contrary to appellant’s argument, this definition, while not considered by the court in Hameid, did not expand the scope of the policy’s advertising coverage to include personal promotion or solicitation of business.
Because the record here does not disclose the occurrence of any activity which was covered under the advertising provisions of appellant’s policy, the trial court did not err in granting the insurer’s motion for summary judgment.
SUMMARY
A. The Underlying Claim
In June 2001 plaintiff Rombe Corporation (Rombe) was a franchisee of TRC Staffing Services (TRC), a nationwide temporary employment agency. On June 6, 2001, Rombe invited customers and employees of its franchise to a breakfast meeting at a hotel. At the meeting Rod Beals, one of Rombe’s *486 principаls, announced that Rombe would no longer be affiliated with TRC. Rather, Beals announced Rombe would be starting a new employment agency, Smart Staffing Solutions. Beals asked those in attendance to become customers and employees of the new agency. The breakfast meeting and Rombe’s plans were later reported in an Internet newsletter.
On the following day, June 7, 2001, Rombe sent TRC a letter advising TRC that Rombe would not be renewing its franchise agreement when that agreement expired on September 8, 2001.
On September 10, 2001, TRC sued Rombe. TRC alleged causes of action for breach of contract, misappropriation of trade secrets and unfair competition.
B. Coverage Litigation
At the time TRC filed its complaint against Rombe, Rombe was covered by a premier businessowners policy issued by defendant AMCO Insurance Company (AMCO). The policy AMCO issued was in many important respects similar to the CGL policy considered in Hameid. Like the policy in Hameid, AMCO’s policy provided liability coverage for “advertising injuries.” Like the policy considered in Hameid, the advertising offenses covered by AMCO’s policy included: slander or libel; violation of the right to privacy; copyright, title or slogan infringement; and misappropriation of advertising ideas or style of doing business. As we noted at the outset, unlike the policy considered in Hameid, the AMCO policy included the following definition of advertisement: “a notice that is broadcast or published to the general public or specific market segments about your goods, products or services for the purpose of attracting customers or supporters.” 1
Rombe tendered defensе of the TRC complaint to AMCO. Because AMCO did not believe the complaint or any information provided by Rombe disclosed the existence or potential existence of any covered claim, AMCO declined Rombe’s tender of defense.
TRC and Rombe eventually entered into a settlement agreement. *487 After settling with TRC, Rombe filed a complaint against AMCO, 2 alleging that in failing to provide it with a dеfense to the TRC claim, AMCO was liable for breach of contract and breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing. Rombe filed a motion for summary adjudication and AMCO filed a cross-motion for summary judgment.
The trial court granted AMCO’s motion. Although the trial court found that the “market segment” qualification in the policy’s definition of advertisement might be broad enough to include the breakfast Rоmbe hosted, neither the breakfast nor the press report involved any use of TRC’s advertising idea or any other covered advertising offense. Judgment was entered in favor of AMCO, and Rombe filed a timely notice of appeal.
DISCUSSION
I
Summary judgment may be granted only when a moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (c).) Where the motion is brought by a defendant, the defendant will beаr the burden of persuasion that “ ‘one or more elements of’ the ‘cause of action’ in question ‘cannot be established,’ or that ‘there is a complete defense’ thereto.”
(Aguilar v. Atlantic Richfield Co.
(2001)
In broadly outlining the law of summary judgment, the Supreme Court stated: “If a party moving for summary judgment in any action . . . would prevail at trial without submission of any issue of material fact to a trier of fact for determination, then he should prevail on summary judgment. In such a case ... the ‘court should grant’ the motion ‘and avoid a . . . trial’ rendered ‘useless’ by nonsuit or directed verdict or similar device.”
{Aguilar, supra,
*488
Importantly, as AMCO points out, we review the “trial court’s ruling, not its rationale; thus, we are not bound by the trial court’s stated reasons for granting summary judgment.”
{California Automobile Ins. Co.
v.
Hogan
(2003)
II
Familiar principles govern adjudication of the insurer’s duty to defend. “In
Horace Mann Ins. Co. v. Barbara B.
(1993)
“ ‘The determination whether the insurer owes a duty to defend usually is made in the first instance by comparing the allegations of the complaint with the terms of the policy. Facts extrinsic to the complaint also give rise to a duty to defend when they reveal a possibility that the claim may be covered by the policy.
(Gray, supra,
“The insured’s desire to secure the right to call on the insurer’s suрerior resources for the defense of third party claims is, in all likelihood, typically as significant a motive for the purchase of insurance as is the wish to obtain indemnity for possible liability. As a consequence, California courts have been consistently solicitous of insureds’ expectations on this score. (See, e.g.,
Horace Mann, supra, 4
Cal.4th 1076;
CNA Casualty of California
v.
*489
Seaboard Surety Co.
(1986)
m
As it did in the trial court, Rombe argues the breakfast it hosted, and the later Intеrnet report of the breakfast and Rombe’s plans constituted the “ ‘use of another’s advertising idea in your “advertisement” ’ ” within the meaning of the coverage provisions of AMCO’s policy. Rombe contends that the breakfast was arguably a form of advertisement to “specific market segments.” In attempting to establish the requisite advertising offense, Rombe relies on the fact that in its underlying lawsuit, TRC alleged misappropriation of its trade secrets and customer lists. Rombe argues that the alleged misappropriation of trade secrets and customer lists was broad enough to suggest the use of “another’s advertising idea” at the breakfast and in the later Internet report.
For its part AMCO contends that the breakfast was not an advertisement and that the news report about the breakfast did nоt involve any arguable use of TRC’s advertising ideas. We agree with AMCO on both counts. As we explain more fully below, the breakfast was not an advertisement within the meaning of AMCO’s policy. With respect to the press report, the record on appeal does not include the report, but only a description of the report as set forth in TRC’s underlying complaint. That description does not suggest any use of AMCO’s advertising idea or any other advertising offense. Thus even if the press report were an advertisement, it did not involve any covered advertising offense.
A. “Advertising” Under Hameid
The plaintiff in
Hameid
operated a beauty salon and had been sued by a competitor after he had recruited the competitor’s employees and made direct solicitations to the competitor’s customers. The Court of Appeal found that when viewed as a “ ‘start-up community beauty salon,’ the relatively limited solicitation of customers through phone calls and . . . mailers served to call public attention to the salon’[s] beauty services.” (Hameid,
supra,
The Supreme Court reversed. It found that the plaintiff’s solicitation of his competitor’s emplоyees and customers was not a covered form of advertising under the CGL policy.
(Hameid, supra,
The court relied in particular on the holding in
Select Design Ltd. v. Union Mut. Fire Ins.
(1996)
The court also relied on
Monumental Life Ins. Co. v. U.S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co.
(1993)
Finally, in
Hameid
the court rejected the notion that the term “advertising” was elastic and that its meaning could change with the context in which a particular insured did business. “As mentioned,
Foxfire, [supra,
B. “Specific Market Segments”
As we have noted, the policy considered in
Hameid
did not contain the definition of “advertisement” which appears on the face of AMCO’s policy. (See
Hameid, supra,
Under the policy’s definition, “advertisements” are notices “published or broadcаst” either to the general public or specific market segments. Any plain reading of the words “published” and “broadcast” include the notion of a relatively large and disparate audience. 4 As we interpret the AMCO policy, the reference to “specific market segments,” is only a means of relieving an insured of the burden of showing that its advertising was directed to the general public, as opposed to some defined market, such as medical professionals, racing car enthusiasts, or horse breeders. The term “specific market segments” does not relieve an insured of the burden of demonstrating that it was engaged in relatively wide dissemination of its advertisements even if the distribution was focused on recipients with particular characteristics or interests.
We reject any broader interpretation of the AMCO policy for many of the reasons the court in Hameid discussed. An interpretation of the term “specific market segments” that is flexible enough to include guests at a meal hosted by an insured is flexible enough to include any kind of business communication. In the case of specialized fields of trade, such a broad interpretation of “specific market segments” could easily include the one-on-one solicitations which the court in Hameid found outside the scope of advertising. As the court in Select Design noted, such an expansion would provide coverage for almost all commercial disputes between competitors. We do not think the ISO, from which AMCO derived its definition of advertisements, 5 intended to provide such a radical alteration of the existing majority view of advertising coverage.
A malleable interpretation of “specific market segments” would also permit the very case-by-case, industry-by-industry interpretation which the court in
Hameid
rejected. As the court in
Hameid
noted, such a case-by-case approach encourages litigation and undermines the standardization which is needed by both insurers and insureds.
(Hameid, supra,
*493 C. Rombe’s Breakfast
Neither the breakfast meeting Rombe hosted nor any solicitation which occurred there involved the broad dissemination оf information which AMCO’s policy required. As we have indicated, the record shows that the breakfast involved invited guests who learned about Rombe’s future plans and were encouraged to use its services. This in-person form of promotion is not what is commonly thought of as advertising. (Hameid, supra, 31 Cal.4th at pp. 29-30.) Thus, the breakfast did not involve any activity covered by the terms of the AMCO policy.
D. The Internet Report
TRC’s complaint contained the following allegations: “38. Defendants further solicited both TRC customers and TRC temporary employees through the media. Rod Beals’ meeting at the Handlery Hotel was reported in a Filipino Press [I]ntemet newsletter of ‘Local News.’ A true and correct copy of this newsletter is attached hereto as Exhibit D.
“39. As reported by the Filipino Press, Defendants intend to operate TRC’s business as their own by ‘chаnging [TRC’s] name, [and] dropping the franchise affiliation,’ and further intend to divert all of TRC’s temporary employees to Defendants’ new venture, known as SmartStaff.”
As we indicated, although the Filipino Press report was attached to TRC’s complaint, it does not appear in the record on appeal in this case. Given its presumptively broad dissemination, the press report might have been an аdvertisement within the meaning of AMCO’s policy. However, under the terms of AMCO’s policy, in order to give rise to coverage, advertising by an insured must also involve some advertising offense. Here, nothing in the record suggests that the Internet account of the breakfast involved any such offense.
Under the policy, advertising offenses include slander or libel, violation of the right to privacy, copyright, title or slogаn infringement, and the misappropriation of advertising ideas or style of doing business. Nothing on the face of TRC’s complaint or anywhere else in the record shows that the press report involved any of these offenses. The report appears to have simply reported what occurred at the Rombe breakfast. Thus the press report would not by itself give rise to the possibility of any coverage under AMCO’s policy.
*494 CONCLUSION
Nothing in the record supports any potential coverage under AMCO’s policy. The breakfast Rombe hosted did not involve any advertising and the later report of the breakfast did not involve any advertising offense.
Judgment affirmed. Respondents to recover their costs of appeal.
O’Rourke, J., and Irion, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied July 20, 2005. Geоrge, C. J., and Baxter, J., did not participate therein.
Notes
This definition was drafted by the Insurance Services Office (ISO), which drafts standard insurance policies.
(Hameid, supra,
Rombe also named Allied Insurance and Nationwide Insurance as defendants. All references to AMCO include Allied Insurance and Nationwide Insurance.
We recognize that Rombe relies upon
Sentex Systems, supra, 93
F.3d at pages 580-581. However,
Sentex Systems
preceded
Hameid
and its holding was implicitly rejected in
Hameid.
(See
Hameid, supra,
Webster’s Third New International Dictionary (1981) at page 1837 provides the following definitions of “publish”: “to call to the attention of the public: ADVERTISE,” “to place before the public (as through a mass medium): DISSEMINATE.” “Broadcast” is defined as follows: “1: cast or scattered in all directions <seed [broadcast] from the hand in sowingx widely diffused 2: made public by means of radio or television (<the use of [broadcast] appeals to motorists to keep off the roads>).”
See footnote 1, ante.
