TICOR TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA, a California
corporation, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
AMERICAN RESOURCES, LTD., a Hawaii corporation, Individually
and Through the Trustee for the Estate of American
Resources, Ltd., and Harold Chu,
Defendants-Appellants.
No. 87-2425.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted April 6, 1988.
Decided Oct. 18, 1988.
Harold Chu, Honolulu, Hawaii, for defendants-appellants.
Wesley W. Ichida, Case & Lynch, Honolulu, Hawaii, for plaintiff-appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Hawaii.
Before WALLACE, REINHARDT and NOONAN, Circuit Judges.
REINHARDT, Circuit Judge:
The district court granted Ticor Title Insurance Co.'s ("Ticor Title") summary judgment motion for federal declaratory relief. The court held that Ticor Title had no duty to defend or indemnify American Resources, Ltd., in several suits brought against it. American Resources was a party to a joint venture that owned the land insured by Ticor Title. American Resources appeals.
I. Facts
Although the facts pertaining to this lawsuit are complex, a full recounting is not necessary. We need only observe that American Resources placed a $3 million mortgage on land it owned on the north shore of Oahu in favor of Pacific Loan. When Pacific Loan threatened a foreclosure action on certain adjacent land, American Resources contributed its parcel to a joint venture to which it became a party. As part of the transaction, Pacific Loan released the mortgage on the property originally owned by American Resources. The release of this mortgage, like the mortgage itself, went unrecorded. Subsequently, Ticor Title insured the joint venture's property. The policy obligated Ticor Title to defend the insured against actions "founded on a claim of title, encumbrance or defect".
In 1981 Thrift Guaranty Corporation ("Thrift") took over Pacific Loan. Thrift, through Pacific Loan, brought suit in Hawaii state court against American Resources and others, claiming that the defendants had committed various fraudulent acts and unfair dealings, including obtaining the release of the mortgage. It alleged that American Resources had not paid any consideration for the release, and it sought to reinstate the mortgage. Subsequently, two other actions were filed. In 1982 Michael McCarthy, a principal of American Resources, brought a federal action against Pacific Loan; in its counterclaim Thrift, through Pacific Loan, raised many of the same allegations raised in the Hawaii state court action. That same year Thrift, again through Pacific Loan, filed suit against American Resources in Alaska state court, and again raised allegations similar to those in the original Hawaii state action.
In February 1985, American Resources tendered to Ticor Title the defense of the lawsuits, asserting that claims had been made that an encumbrance existed on the property held by the joint venture. Ticor Title undertook the defense under a reservation of rights, but then brought this action seeking a declaration that it had no duty to defend or to indemnify American Resources. The district court granted summary judgment in Ticor Title's favor. We reverse.
II. Jurisdiction
This case is before us on diversity of citizenship. Ticor Title is a California corporation while American Resources is based in Hawaii. There thus exists jurisdiction over the action for purposes of deciding the issues on which Ticor Title seeks federal declaratory relief. See Continental Airlines v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.,
III. Duty to Defend
The title insurance policies in question were issued in Hawaii to a Hawaiian joint venture and apply to Hawaiian lands. Thus, the law of the State of Hawaii applies to this case. Under Hawaii law, the insurer's duty to defend its insured is contractual in nature, and thus depends on the language of the insurance policy. First Ins. Co. of Hawaii v. State,
A. Is a party to a joint venture covered under a title policy obtained by the joint venture?
First, Ticor Title argues that American Resources is not an insured under the policy because the joint venture, and not American Resources, is the policy's named insured. While the parties have cited no case that directly addresses the question whether a party to a joint venture is covered by the insurance of the joint venture and while our research has revealed little authority directly addressing the question, the few cases we have found do not support Ticor Title's view. In California, for example, "[i]nsurance on a joint venture covers liability of the individual partners or joint venturers." Quetnick v. McConnell,
B. Does the availability to the insured of an affirmative defense excuse an insurer from affording a defense?
Next, Ticor Title argues that because the district court has construed a 1986 settlement agreement between Pacific Loan and the other parties to the joint venture, excepting American Resources, to mean that there is "no real possibility" that American Resources could face any damages arising out of the lawsuits, American Resources no longer has any insurable interest under the policy. We disagree.
An insurer is not relieved of its duty to defend against a claim merely because the insured may be entitled to assert a valid affirmative defense such as the 1986 settlement agreement. Rather, we look to the face of the underlying complaint and try to determine therefrom whether any of the alleged claims fall within the title policy's coverage. See Hawaiian Ins. & Guaranty Co., Ltd. v. Blair, Ltd.,
We observe that adoption of Ticor Title's view would mean that an insured would have to defend itself in all situations where there exists an affirmative defense under a title insurance policy. For example, the insured rather than the insurer would have to raise the defense of the statute of limitations, or, as in this case, a release or settlement agreement. Such a result is inconsistent with title insurance law. The insured is not required to defend himself whenever he has a legitimate defense. To the contrary, when there is an action against an insured, and the action raises claims that come within the title insurance policy's coverage, the insurer, not the insured, must defend the action, whether the defense consists of a simple denial of the allegation or the assertion of a statutory, contractual, or equitable bar.4
Moreover, because the settlement agreement did not include American Resources, when the Hawaii state claims were dismissed as to the other parties American Resources remained a defendant. Thus, American Resources, unlike the parties to the settlement agreement, still faces an active, vital lawsuit in which claims are asserted that on their face are within the coverage of the title policy.
C. Are the exclusions set forth in the policy applicable?
Ticor Title also argues that the exclusions contained in the policy bar coverage. The general exceptions to the policy include
defects, liens, encumbrances or other matters created or suffered by the insured; defects, liens, encumbrances or other matters which were at the date of this policy known to the insured, or to any agent of the insured, but were not at the date disclosed by the public records, unless such defects, liens, encumbrances or other matters were prior to the date of this policy disclosed in writing to the company....
Ticor Title contends that because American Resources knowingly and purposefully "created" a defect in title when it both mortgaged the property and obtained the release of the mortgage, the general exceptions are applicable.
We disagree for two reasons. First, for purposes of summary judgment, we must view the facts in the light most favorable to American Resources. See Ashton v. Cory,
We reach the above conclusion notwithstanding the argument raised obliquely by Ticor Title that even if the alleged encumbrance were successfully removed prior to the time the insurance was purchased, its original creation by American Resources constitutes conduct that falls within the exclusions. First, we observe that insurance policies are contracts of adhesion and are prepared by the insurer; under Hawaii law, such contracts must be " 'construed liberally in favor of the insured and the ambiguities resolved against the insurer.' " Sturla, Inc. v. Fireman's Fund Insurance Co.,
The exclusions to the policy simply do not apply where the insured puts on a mortgage but subsequently obtains its removal prior to the time the policy is purchased. We interpret the exclusions to encompass defects, liens or encumbrances that exist at the time the policy is purchased. They do not include defects, liens or encumbrances that once existed but were removed prior to the purchase of the policy and are now of purely historic interest. This interpretation is consistent with the plain language of the contract as well as the reasonable expectations of the insured. Here, because, under the facts we must assume the mortgage was properly released and there was no encumbrance or lien on the property at the time the property was insured, the exceptions do not relieve Ticor Title of its duty to defend.
For the above reasons, we reverse the declaratory judgment granted by the district court and hold that Ticor Title has an obligation to defend American Resources in the various suits brought against it.7
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
WALLACE, Circuit Judge, concurring:
I join in Judge Reinhardt's opinion except for footnote 7, which is clearly dictum. Although it is appropriate to alert the district court to problems it should consider on remand, we should not decide the case for the district court when such a decision is obviously unnecessary to our holding.
Notes
See infra note 7
We note that in the Hawaii state court action Thrift sought the reimposition of the mortgage and in the two others it sought the imposition of a constructive trust. Ticor Title does not contend on appeal that the difference in remedy sought affects its obligations under the policy. See also note 7 infra
Ticor Title has a duty to defend even though American Resources is no longer a party to the joint venture, for American Resources would suffer a pecuniary loss if title were defective. See 9 Appleman, Insurance Law & Practice Sec. 5202 (1981)
Similarly, there is "no real possibility" that the insured could be held liable for damages when an action is frivolous or meritless, or the allegations in the complaint are false. Nevertheless, the duty to defend, being far broader than the duty to pay, exists in such cases. See First Ins. Co. of Hawaii v. State,
The question whether the mortgage was properly released involves disputed issues of material facts. We make no determinations regarding those disputed facts--only the assumptions most favorable to American Resources
As we note infra, in order to hold the duty to defend inapplicable, a court must find that the only possible interpretation of the conduct at issue places it outside the policy's coverage. See International Paper Co. v. Continental Cas. Co.,
[C]onsidering the plasticity of modern pleadings, in many cases no one can determine whether the third party suit does or does not fall within the indemnification coverage of the policy until the suit itself is resolved. Therefore, the many cases, in which the court "found" ambiguity, were not dealing with ambiguity at all but with factual situations that could not be resolved until the conclusion of the underlying tort action and often after the liability to pay became known. Hence the "ambiguity". Thus, to the extent that the question of duty to pay cannot be resolved until the conclusion of the trial the policy can be termed ambiguous. But the provision for defense of suits is useless and meaningless unless it is offered when the suit arises. To suggest that the insured must prove the insurer's obligation to pay before the insurer is required to provide a defense would make this provision a hollow promise and mean a return to the old indemnity contracts which is not within the contemplation of the parties ... The uncertainty in regard to payment is immaterial to the question of defense and thus the policy is not ambiguous.
Because the district court determined that Ticor did not have a duty to defend, it did not address the issue of Ticor's duty to indemnify for judgments awarded in the underlying actions. We note that none of the pending actions has yet determined whether and to what extent American Resources is liable to Thrift; it is therefore doubtful that there exists an actual controversy concerning Ticor Title's obligation to indemnify its insured. See Societe de Conditionnement v. Hunter Engineering,
