OPINION OF THE COURT
Where an insurer breaches a contractual duty to defend its insured in a personal injury action, and the insured thereafter concludes a reasonable settlement with the injured party, is the insurer liable to indemnify the insured even if coverage is disputed? While disagreeing with the court below that the insurer must indemnify the insured irrespective of actual coverage, we hold that the burden is on the insurer to establish that the loss was not covered by the policy.
For defense of the third-party action, Servidone looked to defendant, Security Insurance Company, its compensation and liability insurance carrier (the insurer). Security responded that, pursuant to an exclusion in the policy, a loss based upon any obligation the insured had assumed by contract was outside coverage, but it nonetheless agreed to defend Servidone as to both claims asserted by the Government, reserving its right to disclaim liability for recovery based on contractual indemnification. The litigation proceeded. On February 21, 1978, a pretrial order was entered, which defined the third-party action as one “in contract for indemnity.” Security immediately withdrew, contending that the United States had formally abandoned its claim for common-law indemnification, leaving only its claim under the construction contract, and since the policy excluded losses based on contractual obligations assumed by the insured, the insurer had no further obligation. Servidone engaged new counsel, who prepared for trial and sought a declaratory judgment against Security. When Servidone in 1980 notified Security that it had an opportunity to settle with Cuttino for $50,000, Security made no response. On March 18, 1980, Servidone advised Security that it intended to settle for $50,000, again met by silence.
Before the settlement with Cuttino was concluded, Special Term entered an order in Servidone’s action declaring that the insurer had breached its contractual obligation by failing to provide an unqualified defense and directing that Security pay Servidone any damages flowing from the breach, including the reasonable value of legal services incurred in defense of the third-party action, with damages to be determined at trial; the
Neither Security’s breach of its duty to defend nor the reasonableness of the settlement amount is disputed. The difference centers on the effect to be accorded the insurer’s contention that the loss is simply not within the policy coverage. Without finding that the loss was covered, the Appellate Division majority imposed a duty to indemnify on the insurer because, based on the claims asserted, it perceived a possibility of coverage and concluded that the settlement constituted “damages it necessarily suffered by reason of Security’s failure to meet its contractual burden of protecting Servidone from attack.” (
We agree with the dissent that an insurer’s breach of duty to defend does not create coverage and that, even in cases of negotiated settlements, there can be no duty to indemnify unless there is first a covered loss. Since the loss compromised by Servidone was not determined to be within the covered risks, we reverse the order awarding Servidone the full settlement amount and remit the case for further proceedings.
The insured’s right to representation and the insurer’s correlative duty to defend suits, however groundless, false or fraudulent, are in a sense “litigation insurance” expressly provided by
The duty to indemnify is, however, distinctly different. The duty to defend is measured against the allegations of pleadings but the duty to pay is determined by the actual basis for the insured’s liability to a third person (see, Rochester Woodcraft Shop v General Acc. Fire & Life Assur. Corp.,
Neither Rosen & Sons v Security Mut. Ins. Co. (
While further proceedings are required to determine the basis for Servidone’s liability to Cuttino — not from the pleadings but from the actual facts — the burden of proof will rest with the insurer to demonstrate that the loss compromised by the insured was not within policy coverage. If the insurer does not establish that this loss falls entirely within the policy exclusion as claimed, it will have failed to sustain its burden (Prashker v United States Guar. Co.,
The duty to indemnify requires a covered loss, but it should be apparent that a plenary trial of the issue is not always necessary (see, e.g., Butterweich v Goodman & Garson,
Accordingly, the order insofar as appealed from should be reversed, with costs, and the case remitted to Supreme Court,
Chief Judge Wachtler and Judges Jasen, Meyer, Simons and Alexander concur.
Order insofar as appealed from reversed, etc.
Notes
Whether an award of additional costs or attorneys’ fees might be appropriate if the insured is ultimately successful is a question we do not reach on this appeal.
