Lead Opinion
Opinion by Judge HALL; Partial Concurrence and Partial Dissent by Judge BYBEE
Sony Computer Entertainment America, Inc. appeals the district court’s summary judgment in favor of defendants American International Specialty Lines Insurance Company and American Home Assurance Company. Sony sued the sister insurance companies for failing to indemnify and defend it in a class action suit alleging product defects in a video game system known as the Sony PlayStation 2. The district court found that neither insurance company had a duty to indemnify or defend Sony in the lawsuit. We affirm.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
A Sony and the PlayStation 2
Sony markets, distributes, and supports the PlayStation family of products. The PlayStation 2 is the successor to the original PlayStation, an advanced computer console. The PlayStation 2 plays video games designed for the system on either CD discs or DVD discs, as well as games designed for the original PlayStation. Unlike the original PlayStation, however, the PlayStation 2 was marketed as a home entertainment system, able to play audio and video CDs and DVDs as well as video games.
1. American International Specialty Lines Insurance Company Policy
Sony purchased a $10 million media liability insurance policy from American International Specialty Lines Company (AISLIC) for the period of July 1, 2001 to July 1, 2002. The policy, entitled “Multimedia Professional Liability Policy,” provided that AISLIC would indemnify Sony in certain lawsuits. AISLIC promised to “pay on [Sony’s] behalf those amounts ... that [Sony] is legally obligated to pay as damages ... resulting from any claim ... during the policy period for [Sony’s] wrongful act in the business of the insured.” The term “wrongful act” was defined to include (a) defamation, (b) invasion of privacy or publicity, (c) infringement of copyright, title, slogan, trademark, or trade dress, (d) unfair competition (but only in conjunction with wrongful acts described in section (c)), (e) unauthorized use of name or likeness, (f) unintentional failure to credit on a matter, and (g) defective advice, incitement, or “negligent publication.”
The AISLIC policy did not obligate AISLIC to defend Sony in every lawsuit alleging a covered wrongful act. Rather, it stated that AISLIC had “the right but not the duty to defend any claim first made against [Sony] during the policy period and reported to [AISLIC] in writing for [Sony’s] wrongful act.” However, the policy provided that AISLIC would be responsible for at least part of Sony’s defense costs. If Sony chose its own counsel in a suit alleging a covered wrongful act, it would pay for its own defense until its deductible was exhausted, and then for a portion of it after the deductible was exhausted. If Sony was defended by AISLIC’s chosen counsel, AISLIC would be responsible for all defense costs after Sony paid its deductible.
The AISLIC policy excluded a number of claims from policy coverage. For example, AISLIC was not obligated to pay damages arising from “unfair or deceptive business practices including, but not limited to, violations of any local, state or federal consumer protection laws” (Exclusion C), “alleging or arising out of a breach of any express warranties, representations or guarantees” (Exclusion J), or “arising out of false advertising or misrepresentation in advertising” (Exclusion P). This last exclusion had an exception, whereby AISLIC promised to “defend suits alleging [false advertising or misrepresentation in advertising] until there is a judgment, final adjudication, adverse admission or finding of fact against [Sony] at which time [Sony] shall reimburse [AISLIC] for claim expense.”
2. American Home Assurance Company Policy
Sony purchased a $2 million general commercial insurance policy from American Home Assurance Company (American Home) for the period of April 1, 2000 to April 1, 2001. The policy, entitled “Commercial General Liability Coverage,” provided that American Home would “pay those sums that the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as damages because of ‘bodily injury’ or ‘property damage,’ ” as well as “defend the insured against any ‘suit’ seeking those damages.” Property damage was defined to include both “physical injury to tangible property, including all resulting loss of use of that property”
As with the AISLIC policy, a number of exclusions in the American Home policy limited American Home’s duties. In particular, under Exclusion (m), the policy did not cover “ ‘property damage’ to ‘impaired property’ or property that has not been physically injured, arising out of ... a defect, deficiency, inadequacy, or dangerous condition in ‘[Sony’s] product.’ ” Exclusion (m) had an exception for the loss of use of property “arising out of sudden and accidental physical injury to ‘[Sony’s] product’ or ‘[Sony’s] work’ after it has been put to its intended use.”
C. Kim/Kaen Lawsuits
In July 2002, PlayStation users sued Sony in two separate class actions in California state court, later consolidated as the Kim/Kaen ease in San Mateo County. The Kim/Kaen plaintiffs alleged that the PlayStation 2s suffered from an “inherent” or “fundamental” design defect that rendered them unable to play DVDs and certain game discs. The complaints set forth causes of action for breach of express and implied warranties, fraud, negligent misrepresentation, bad faith, violations of the Consumer Legal Remedies Act (Cal. Civ. Code § 1750 et seq.), false advertising (Cal. Bus. & Prof.Code § 17500 et seq.), and unfair business practices (Cal. Bus. & Prof.Code § 17200 et seq.). The assertions in the false advertising and negligent misrepresentation claims primarily revolved around Sony’s statements in press releases, advertising, product packaging, and instruction manuals that the PlayStation 2 would function as a DVD player as well as a game player.
D. This Action
Sony tendered the Kim/Kaen claims to AISLIC and American Home, both of which eventually denied coverage. Sony filed this action in February 2004, claiming that AISLIC and American Home had breached their contractual duty to defend and indemnify Sony, and breached the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
American Home moved for summary judgment on all counts, and Sony moved for partial summary judgment on the duty to defend claim. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of American Home. It found that American Home had no duty to defend Sony in the suit, and that, accordingly, the indemnification and bad faith claims failed as well. Sony Comp. Entm’t Am., Inc. v. Am. Home Ins. Co., No. CV 04-00492-PJH,
Later that year, AISLIC moved for summary judgment on all claims and Sony cross-motioned with respect to the duty to defend claim. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of AISLIC, finding that AISLIC had no duty to indemnify or defend Sony in the Kim/Kaen suits, and that AISLIC had not engaged in any bad faith. Sony Comp. Entm’t Am., Inc. v. Am. Home Assur. Co. and Am. Int’l Specialty Lines Ins. Co., No. 04-00492 PJH,
II. DISCUSSION
A Standard of Review
A district court’s grant of summary judgment is reviewed de novo. Suzuki Motor Corp. v. Consumers Union of United States, Inc.,
B. Principles of Insurance Policy Interpretation
Though insurance contracts have special features, the general rules of contract interpretation still apply in California. Bank of the W. v. Superior Court,
The terms in an insurance policy must be read in context and in reference to the policy as a whole, with each clause helping to interpret the other. Cal. Civ. Code § 1641; Bay Cities Paving & Grading, Inc. v. Lawyers’ Mutual Ins. Co.,
C. AISLIC Had No Duty to Indemnify or Defend Sony
The AISLIC policy obligated AISLIC to indemnify Sony and provide defense costs for lawsuits arising from certain “wrongful acts,” including “negligent publication.” Sony argues that the district court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of AISLIC because the false advertising and negligent misrepresentation claims in the Kim/Kaen lawsuits allege “negligent publication.” Alternatively, Sony argues that AISLIC is obligated to defend it in the Kim/Kaen suits by virtue of Exclusion P of the insurance policy. We disagree and affirm the district court.
1. The affirmative coverage provisions of the AISLIC policy do not obligate AISLIC to indemnify or defend Sony
We begin our analysis by examining the policy’s affirmative coverage clauses, be
i Meaning of “negligent publication ”
“Negligent publication” is not defined in the AISLIC policy, nor does it appear in lay or legal dictionaries or in any California statute. Because there is no evidence that the parties intended the term to carry a technical meaning, the ordinary and popular meaning of the term governs. AIU Ins. Co.,
Sony argues that the term “negligent publication” should have a broad meaning which it derives from stringing together the dictionary definitions of “negligent” and “publication.” According to Sony, “negligent publication” in the AISLIC policy refers to “a communication of information to the public, lacking or exhibiting a lack of due care or concern.” Sony argues that this definition, broad enough to include the false advertising and negligent misrepresentation claims in the Kim/Kaen lawsuits, is the plain meaning of the term.
Sony’s definition is not the proper plain meaning of the term. While Sony is correct that courts often consult dictionaries to derive the ordinary and popular meaning of terms in insurance contracts, see Scott v. Continental Ins. Co.,
The policy Sony purchased from AISLIC covered Sony for wrongful acts defined in seven different sections, each including a list of related terms. For example, part (a) included “defamation, disparagement, or harm to the character or reputation of any person, or entity”; part (b) listed “invasion, infringement, or interference with rights of privacy or publicity”; parts (c), (d), (e), and (f) covered copyright infringement, unfair competition, unauthorized use of name or likeness, and unintentional failure to credit on a matter, respectively. Part (g) read that wrongful acts also consisted of “defective advice, incitement, and negligent publication.” Given that sections (a)-(f) each listed a series of related torts, the placement of “negligent publication” within the policy suggests that the term refers to a narrow tort relating to defective advice and incitement, not a broad tort distinct from those terms. See Am. Motorists Ins. Co. v. Allied-Sysco Food Services, Inc.,
Further, the AISLIC policy was a media liability policy. Its affirmative coverage provisions were strictly limited to the types of claims normally faced by media publishers, such as defamation, copyright infringement, and so on. Notably absent from those provisions was any coverage for product defects. In fact, the exclusions in the policy made clear that it was not intended to protect Sony from suits like Kim/Kaen. AISLIC explicitly disclaimed liability for suits alleging breach of warranties, representations, or guarantees (Exclusion J); for suits arising from violations of consumer protection laws (Exclusion C); and for suits alleging false advertising or misrepresentation in advertising (Exclusion P).
Sony’s construction of “negligent publication” is also unpersuasive because it is not supported by the case law, which we look to as further evidence of the proper meaning of the term. See AIU,
For example, in one line of cases, “negligent publication” is used to describe a cause of action in which plaintiffs attempt to hold publishers liable for material that led readers to engage in harmful conduct. See, e.g. Way v. Boy Scouts of Am.,
Other courts have used the term “negligent publication” to explain that creative pleading does not change the analysis of a defamation-based claim or applicable privileges, see, e.g., Newcombe v. Adolf Coors Co.,
Thus, while the term “negligent publication” has been used in a variety of cases, no case uses the term as expansively as Sony suggests. Sony would have “negligent publication” mean “a communication of information to the public, lacking or exhibiting a lack of due care or concern,” yet the case law is essentially limited to plaintiffs suing publishers for the contents of books, articles, or advertisements. A couple of cases have involved plaintiffs suing individuals or governments — rather than publishers — for defamation or related claims, see, e.g., Block,
In light of the above, we cannot adopt Sony’s definition of “negligent publication” as the meaning of the term in the AISLIC policy. A more limited definition of the term is appropriate, one that is consistent with the context of the policy and supported in .the case law. We find that defining the term “negligent publication” as a narrow tort in which the publication of material leads the reader to commit a harmful act meets these criteria.
This definition of “negligent publication” is supported by the Smith, Way, and Hyde line of cases, which involved plaintiffs who sued publishers for harm resulting from the contents of a book, magazine, or newspaper. The legal literature is also helpful in this respect; scholars have recognized “negligent publication” as a cause of action in which plaintiffs attempt to hold a publisher liable for harm encouraged or instructed by a publication.
More importantly, defining “negligent publication” in this manner is consistent with the context of the AISLIC policy. Recall that “negligent publication” was placed next to defective advice and incitement in the AISLIC policy. Our definition of “negligent publication” appropriately describes a tort similar to those wrongful acts. For example, in incitement cases,
We find that defining “negligent publication” as a tort faced only by publishers also properly construes the policy as a whole, because it takes into account the AISLIC policy’s status as a media liability policy with limited coverage provisions. Bank of the W.,
In sum, we hold that the term “negligent publication” in the AISLIC policy refers to a very narrow tort in which the publication of material encourages or instructs readers to engage in harmful conduct. We reject Sony’s expansive definition as inconsistent with the context of the policy as a whole and unsupported by the case law. Sony, a sophisticated purchaser, clearly could have purchased coverage for product defects or false advertising — indeed, Sony previously held an insurance policy with AISLIC that covered “any error or omission, misstatement, misleading statement or misinterpretation” — yet the policy at issue in this lawsuit did not include such coverage. Sony’s attempt to expand the meaning of “negligent publica
ii. The Kim/Kaen suits do not allege “negligent publication ”
To determine whether the Kim/ Kaen lawsuits alleged claims of “negligent publication,” we must compare the allegations of the complaints with the coverage language of the policy. Palmer,
Therefore, we hold that AISLIC does not have an obligation to indemnify or provide any defense costs for Sony in the Kim/Kaen suits under the “negligent publication” coverage provision of the policy. Sony does not allege coverage under any other wrongful act, thus no affirmative coverage provision in the AISLIC policy requires AISLIC to insure Sony with respect to the class action suits.
2. Exclusion P does not create an independent duty to defend
Sony argues that even if the Panel does not agree that AISLIC must indemnify Sony or pay its defense costs under the coverage provisions, AISLIC nonetheless has a duty to defend Sony under the exception language in Exclusion P. Exclusion P disallows coverage for claims “arising out of false advertising or misrepresentation in advertising” but goes on to state: “However, we will defend suits alleging any of the foregoing conduct until there is a judgment, final adjudication, adverse admission or finding of fact against [Sony].”
The district court properly held that Exclusion P cannot establish coverage that does not exist under the affirmative coverage provisions. While an insurer’s duty to defend is broad in scope, Montrose Chem. Corp. v. Superior Court,
The rule is no different for exceptions to exclusions. A “carve back” within an exclusionary provision merely restores already-existing coverage. “[T]here is no cure for a lack of coverage under the insuring clause. Even if the effect of an exception is to render a particular exclusion inoperative, the insured must still prove the loss is covered.” Old Republic,
In light of the above, we hold that because there is no coverage under the insuring provisions of the AISLIC Policy, there is no coverage under the carve-out for defense of false advertising within Exclusion P. Therefore, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment on the issues of AISLIC’s duties to indemnify and defend Sony. AISLIC did not engage in bad faith when it refused coverage because coverage did not exist, thus summary judgment on that claim was also appropriate. See Love v. Fire Ins. Exch.,
D. American Home Had No Duty to Defend or Indemnify Sony
The American Home policy provided that American Home had a duty to indemnify and defend Sony against any lawsuit seeking bodily injury or property damage. Property damage was defined to include “physical injury to tangible property” as well as “loss of use of tangible property that is not physically injured.” However, the policy excluded coverage for property damage to Sony’s own product (Exclusion (k)), as well as coverage for “impaired property or property not physically injured” arising out of “a defect, deficiency, inadequacy, or dangerous condition in ‘[Sony’s] product’” (Exclusion (m)). The impaired property exclusion had an exception for “the loss of use of other property arising out of sudden and accidental physical injury” to Sony’s product after it was put to its intended use.
Sony argues that the Kim/Kaen suits allege both “loss of use of tangible property,” and “physical injury to property,” therefore the district court erred when it granted summary judgment in favor of American Home on the duty to defend and indemnity claims. We disagree. While an insurer must defend any claim potentially covered by a policy, Montrose Chem. Corp.,
1. Loss of use claims
The Kim/Kaen complaints did not allege that the defects in the PlayStation 2
These allegations are far from “classic ‘loss of use’ ” claims. As the district court noted, the statements regarding discs freezing and skipping referenced the defects in the PlayStation 2, not defects in the discs themselves. Sony Comp. Entm’t, No. C 04-0492 PJH, at 6,
Even if Sony could establish coverage for the Kim/Kaen suits under the loss of use provision, the lawsuits fall squarely within the purview of Exclusion (m). That provision excludes coverage for “loss of use” property damage arising out of “a defect, deficiency, inadequacy, or dangerous condition in ‘[Sony’s] product.’ ” Any loss of use of the discs inserted into the PlayStation 2 is the result of a defect in Sony’s product, and is therefore excluded from coverage under Exclusion (m). See America Online, Inc. v. St. Paul Mercury Ins. Co.,
Sony’s only response to the Exclusion (m) argument is that the “sudden and accidental” physical injury exception to the exclusion applies. Sony unconvincingly contends that because the complaints allege that the freezing and locking of the discs can happen at any time and that the defects in the console generally manifest at certain time periods, the allegations “evince[] the possibility that the loss of use of discs resulted from a sudden and accidental physical injury to the PlayStation 2s.” But these allegations provide far more support for the theory that the devices deteriorated over time than that each and every class member’s devices experienced a sudden and accidental physical
Accordingly, we hold that the Kim/Kaen lawsuits are not covered under the “loss of use” coverage provision, and that, even if they were, they are excluded from coverage under Exclusion (m). The sudden and accidental injury exception to Exclusion (m) is inapplicable.
2. Physical damage claims
The Kim/Kaen complaints themselves did not allege any property damage to discs. In fact, in depositions, all three class representatives specifically denied any claims of physical injury to discs inserted into the PlayStation 2. Further, none of the customer statements in the original complaint or motions for class certification or jury trial referenced scratched or damaged discs.
Despite the lack of reference to property damages in the lawsuit, Sony argues that the Kim/Kaen complaint potentially includes claims of physical damage to discs inserted into the PlayStation 2. It argues that merely because class plaintiffs did not suffer physical injury to the discs does not mean the class could not have recovered on such a theory, and that Sony’s retender of the Kim/Kaen complaint to American Home in October 2003 was accompanied by evidence of customer complaints of physical injury to discs and/or games.
We find these arguments unpersuasive. Though the duty to defend is broad, “the insured may not speculate about unpled third party claims to manufacture coverage.” Hurley Construction Co. v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co.,
Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s summary judgment in favor of American Home on the duty to defend issue. Sony has not established the potential for coverage either under the loss of use or physical damage provisions of the policy. Sony’s indemnification claim fails as well for the duty to defend is broader than the duty to indemnify. Montrose,
III. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the district court.
Notes
. Sony previously held an insurance policy with AISLIC that also covered "any error or omission, misstatement, misleading statement or misinterpretation,’' but the 2001-2002 policy did not include such coverage.
. Sony argues that Exclusion P "provides strong evidence of coverage” because AISLIC would only have included the exclusion if it believed that false advertising was otherwise covered. This type of argument has been rejected by California courts as "superficial and contrary to proper coverage analysis.” Old Republic Ins. Co. v. Superior Court,
. See, e.g., Susan M. Gilles, “Poisonous" Publications and Other False Speech Physical Harm Cases, 37 Wake Forest L.Rev. 1073, 1081-83 (2002) ("[Ajctions for negligent publication ... [involve plaintiffs who] sue publishers and assert that by publishing false statements that cause physical harm, the defendants have breached a duty to independently investigate the accuracy of the text.”) (citing Smith as an example); see also Mark Sableman, Link Law Revisited: Internet Linking Law at Five Years, 16 Berkeley Tech. L.J. 1273, 1316 n. 235 (2001) (" '[Njegligent publication’ theory seeks to hold a publisher liable for publishing material that instructs and/or encourages readers in committing violent or other unlawful conduct.”); Charles A. Glas-ser, Jr. & Mark A. Sirota, Outline of Decisions Involving “Negligent Publication" and Products Liability Claims Against Publishers, 516 Practising Law Inst. 719, 721 (1998) (citing Way).
. For example, the district court relied on Newcombe to hold that "negligent publication” referred to "that category of tort claims typified by defamation and misappropriation,” Sony Comp. Entm't,
. Sony vigorously argues that coverage provisions can and do appear in exclusions to policy coverage. The cases it cites fail to prove its point. See, e.g., Aydin v. First State Ins. Co.,
. Recall that the AISLIC policy did not lay out a clear "duty to defend” lawsuits alleging covered acts. Rather, it had a "right but not a duty to defend” such suits, but promised to pay a varying portion of Sony’s defense costs in excess of Sony’s deductible depending on whether Sony chose its own lawyer or used AISLIC’s counsel.
. Sony’s citation to Park Univ. Enter. v. American Cas. Co.,
. Sony also argues that the district court improperly placed the burden on Sony to establish that the “sudden and accidental’’ exception applies. While the district court cited a case dealing with an indemnity provision rather than a duty to defend provision, see Aydin,
. The customer complaints are properly part of the duty to defend analysis because they were known to American Home at the time of tender. Montrose,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part:
I agree with the majority that American Home Assurance Company had no duty to indemnify or defend Sony Computer Entertainment America, Inc. (“Sony”). I thus concur in Section II.D of the majority opinion. I also agree that American International Specialty Lines Insurance Company (“AISLIC”) had no duty to indemnify Sony. For the reasons I explain below, however, I disagree with the majority’s conclusion that AISLIC had no duty to defend Sony. I respectfully dissent from that portion of Section II.C of the majority opinion.
I
Like the majority, I begin my analysis by examining the policy’s coverage clauses; if a claim does not fall within those clauses, no coverage exists. Palmer v. Truck Ins. Exch.,
A
In interpreting the phrase
AISLIC does not contend that the parties gave the phrase “negligent publication” a technical or special meaning. Accordingly, the words “negligent publication” are to be “interpreted in their ordinary and popular sense.” Id. at 648,
Sony contends that the ordinary and popular meaning of the phrase “negligent publication” can be determined by combining the dictionary definitions of the individual words in the two-word phrase. I agree. When a layperson encounters an unknown phrase, absent a technical or special meaning, that layperson interprets the phrase by combining the meanings of the individual words comprising that phrase. In this ease, a layperson would understand that “negligent publication” would simply refer to a publication distributed negligently. “In seeking to ascertain the ordinary sense of words [in an insurance policy], courts in insurance cases regularly turn to general dictionaries.” Scott v. Cont’l Ins. Co.,
B
Applying this definition of “negligent publication,” the Kim/Kaen lawsuits assert claims — namely, false advertising and negligent publication — within the meaning of “negligent publication.” The majority concedes as much. Maj. Op. 1013. The Kim complaint claims that Sony’s “press releases and advertisements have not and do not disclose the defect or the viewing or software compatibility problems described in this Complaint.” The Kim complaint clearly complains about Sony’s press releases and advertising, that is, its communication of information to the public. Furthermore, by alleging that those communications fail to disclose certain defects, the Kim complaint can be understood to contend that Sony’s communications were “negligent” or “exhibit[ed] a lack of due care or concern.” Similarly, the Kaen complaint claims that Sony issued advertisements that were “untrue, misleading, and likely to deceive the public.” Unless there was an applicable exclusion, the affirmative provisions of the insurance contract provided coverage for the Kim/Kaen claims, and AISLIC had a duty to indemnify Sony.
II
The majority comes to a contrary conclusion. It does not contend that “negligent publication” has a technical or special meaning. On the contrary, the majority acknowledges that “[b]ecause there is no evidence that the parties intended the term to carry a technical meaning, the ordinary and popular meaning of the term governs.” Maj. Op. 1013. The majority,
A
The majority argues that we should not apply the dictionary definition of the phrase “negligent publication” because it is inconsistent with the context of the AISLIC policy as a whole. Maj. Op. 1013. I agree with the majority that the “meanings of a word as found in a dictionary cannot be inserted into the text of an insurance policy without regard to the document construed as a whole.” Scott,
Other indications in the policy, however, support Sony’s interpretation of “negligent publication,” in particular, Exclusion P. Exclusion P disallows indemnity coverage for claims “arising out of false advertising or misrepresentation in advertising” but goes on to carve back a duty to defend in those cases. Although I agree that an exclusion cannot expand coverage that does not exist under the affirmative coverage provisions, see Stanford Ranch, Inc. v. Md. Cas. Co.
B
The majority also finds the dictionary definition of “negligent publication” unpersuasive because it is not supported by the case law. Maj. Op. 1014. I fear that in the course of implementing the common law system, we have become so adept at looking to judicial cases to obtain the solutions to the challenges we encounter, that we have come to believe that even when determining the ordinary and popular meaning of words, the solution is to be found in case law. The California Supreme Court has admonished that absent evidence that the parties intended the provision to have a specialized meaning that a term must be construed as would a layperson, and not as it might be analyzed by an attorney or an insurance expert, or, I
The consequences of the majority’s methodology would surely befuddle a layman. On the one hand, the majority finds that the term “negligent publication” cannot encompass the definition that Sony proposes because none of the cases “use the term as broadly as Sony does.” Maj. Op. 1014. On the other hand, the majority acknowledges that “the cases do not yield one clear definition of ‘negligent publication.’ ” Maj. Op. 1014. The very fact, however, that courts across the country have applied the phrase “negligent publication” liberally and loosely to a broad variety of claims and theories of recovery is evidence that each of those courts is individually applying the plain meaning of the phrase. If the phrase does not have a consistent meaning, cited by the majority, then why prefer the cases over the dictionary?
The only commonality in the “variety of cases” cited by the majority involving the phrase “negligent publication” is that all of them use a definition that is consistent with the ordinary or popular meaning of the words. That is, they all involve the publication of something in a negligent matter. Although it is true that none of the cases encompass Sony’s proffered definition, I am puzzled as to why cases that “do not yield one clear definition of ‘negligent publication’ ” should be seen as a “limited set.” Maj. Op. 1014. If the first court to use the phrase had been deemed to have created a closed set, then none of the subsequent cases could have created separate definitions. I am unaware that Sony missed any secret deadline after which a term may no longer be used in new judicial contexts, and the possible usages for the term is closed to the conjunction of the ways in which it had thus far been used. Absent such a deadline, I would do what every court to have used the phrase “negligent publication” has done, and I would look to the plain meaning of the words to determine their meaning. That plain meaning is better determined by looking in a dictionary than in court cases.
Ill
Having concluded that the policy’s affirmative insuring agreements create coverage for Sony’s disputed claim, I next turn to the exclusions, to determine whether coverage has been otherwise excluded. See Stanford Ranch,
. The majority refers to “negligent publication” as a “term.” I believe that “phrase” is more appropriate and therefore refer to it as such. Although this may seem like mere semantics, my disagreement with the majority turns on the fact that the majority believes that "negligent publication” must be a single term with a single definition, whereas I believe that "negligent publication” is not a single term at all, but a phrase made up of two individual words that have meaning both individually and in combination.
