Opinion
Homestore, Inc., and several of its officers and directors, Barbara Alexander, Michael A. Buckman, M. Jeffrey Chamey, L. John Doerr, Joseph E. Hanauer, William E. Kelvie, Kenneth M. Klein, Terrence M. McDermott, Allan P. Merrill, Evelyn Yalung and Stuart H. Wolff (Appellant Insureds), appeal from the judgment entered after an order granting summary judgment for TIG Insurance Company of Michigan (TIG) in an action seeking rescission of Homestore’s directors and officers (D&O) liability insurance policy. We affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
1. The Securities Claims and Criminal Investigation
Homestore, a publicly traded company, is an Internet-based provider of residential real estate listings and related content. Homestore appeared to be performing well during fiscal year 2000 and the first quarter of 2001. However, in December 2001 Homestore announced the audit committee
Soon after Homestore’s announcement shareholders began filing federal securities class action and derivative liability lawsuits against Homestore and many of its current and former officers and directors. The plaintiffs alleged, among other things, Homestore had materially overstated its revenues and its financial statements were materially inaccurate and misleading.
In September 2002 the United States Attorney for the Central District of California filed a criminal information alleging a scheme to commit securities fraud and naming Homestore’s former chief financial officer, Joseph Shew, and two other former Homestore officers. Shew pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud and admitted that from March through December 2001 he had conspired to overstate Homestore’s advertising revenue and filed false form 10-Q’s (quarterly financial reports) with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
2. The Insurance Policies
On August 2, 2001 Shew signed a renewal application for a primary level D&O liability policy with Genesis Insurance Company for the policy year August 2001 through August 2002. As part of the underwriting process Genesis required Homestore to submit its most recent form 10-Q with the application. Homestore provided the form 10-Q it had filed for the quarter ended March 31, 2001.
Genesis issued a $10 million D&O policy, which included coverage for securities claims. Section VIH (General Conditions), paragraph C(l) of the policy states, “[T]he statements in the Application and in any materials submitted therewith are [the Directors’, Officers’ and the Company’s] representations, that they shall be deemed material to the acceptance of the risk or hazard assumed by the Insurer under this Policy, and that this Policy is issued in reliance upon the truth of such representations[.]” Paragraph C(2), the language at issue in this appeal, provides, “[I]n the event that the Application, including materials submitted therewith, contains misrepresentations made with the actual intent to deceive, or contain misrepresentations which materially affect either the acceptance of the risk or the hazard assumed by the Insurer under this Policy, no coverage shall be afforded under this Policy . . . for any Director or Officer who did not sign the Application but who knew on the inception date of this Policy the facts that were so misrepresented, and this Policy in its entirety shall be void and of no effect whatsoever if such misrepresentations were known to be untrue on the inception date of the Policy by one or more of the individuals who signed the Application.”
The Genesis application was also submitted on behalf of Homestore to TIG to obtain excess D&O coverage. TIG’s underwriter reviewed Homestore’s form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2001 as part of its own underwriting process. TIG issued a $5 million D&O policy, which provided excess coverage in conformity
3. The State and Federal Court Actions
On February 21, 2003 TIG filed a complaint in Los Angeles County Superior Court for rescission, alleging it was entitled to rescind the D&O policy as to Homestore, the Appellant Insureds and other insured officers and directors who are not part of this action under state law and the policy’s terms because Shew knew the form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2001, upon which TIG had relied in deciding to issue the policy, contained material misrepresentations regarding Homestore’s financial condition. 2 In May 2004 the trial court granted TIG’s motion for summary judgment: “The Court finds that the application upon which the TIG Excess Policy was issued contains factual misrepresentations which were made with the actual intent to deceive and which were material to the acceptance of the risk and the hazard assumed by TIG, and the signatory of the application, Homestore’s former Chief Financial Officer, Joseph Shew, knew such misrepresentations to be untrue at the time he signed the application and as of the inception date of the TIG Excess Policy. . . . Accordingly, under the plain meaning of the applicable provisions of the TIG Excess Policy, and pursuant to California law, the Court finds that TIG has the right to rescind the TIG Excess Policy in its entirety so that it shall be null, void and of no effect whatsoever as to all insureds.”
Approximately 10 months earlier, in a similar action filed by Genesis in the United States District Court for the Central District of California to rescind the Genesis policy, the district court had granted Genesis’s motion for summary judgment. The Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court’s order in a consolidated appeal by Genesis and several other insurers who had also issued D&O policies to Homestore and its officers and directors.
(Federal Ins. Co. v. Homestore, Inc.
(9th Cir., Aug. 12, 2005, No. 03-55995)
CONTENTIONS
Homestore and the Appellant Insureds contend (1) section VIII, paragraph C(2) is ambiguous as to whether TIG may rescind the D&O policy as to the Appellant
DISCUSSION
1. Standard of Review
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo and decide independently whether the facts not subject to triable dispute warrant judgment for the moving party as a matter of law.
(Intel Corp.
v.
Hamidi
(2003)
Interpretation of an insurance policy is a question of law and follows the general rules of contract interpretation.
(Haynes v. Farmers Ins. Exchange
(2004)
2. California Law and the Unambiguous Policy Language Permit TIG to Rescind the Policy as to the Appellant Insureds
Governing law permits an insurer to rescind a policy when the insured has misrepresented or concealed material information in connection
with obtaining insurance. (Ins. Code, §§331 [“Concealment, whether intentional or unintentional, entitles the injured party to rescind insurance.”],
4
359 [“If a representation is false in a material point, whether affirmative or promissory, the injured party is entitled to rescind the contract from
The unambiguous language in section VIII, paragraph C(2) is consistent with TIG’s statutory right to rescind the contract of insurance with respect to the Appellant Insureds notwithstanding the fact they did not sign the application and were apparently unaware of the false financial information included in the form 10-Q. 5 The policy provides that, if the application for insurance or information submitted with the application includes material misrepresentations and the person who signed the application—in this case Joseph Shew—knew of the misrepresentations, the policy is void in its entirety. To be sure, the policy also provides that, if the application or materials submitted with it include misrepresentations made with the actual intent to deceive or material to the risk assumed by TIG, coverage will be denied for any nonsigning director or officer who knew on the policy’s inception date of the misrepresentations. This distinct right to rescind as to nonsigning individuals with actual knowledge of the application’s false representations of fact, however, does not, under any reasonable interpretation of the policy language, restrict TIG’s broader right (consistent with Ins. Code, § 650) to rescind the contract as to all insureds in the case of an application actually signed by an officer who had knowledge of the false statements. The clause simply does not provide that the policy will be void only as to the particular signer who had knowledge of the misrepresented facts.
Homestore and the Appellant Insureds dispute this conclusion, asserting section VIH, paragraph C(2) is reasonably subject to the interpretation that a misrepresentation known by one or more of the individuals who signed the application renders the policy voidable only as to the signers and not innocent nonsigners. That argument relies on a distorted dissection of the provision’s grammar and sentence structure
6
and would render the distinction
Relying on
Watts v. Farmers Ins. Exchange (2002) 98
Cal.App.4th 1246 [
Insurance Code section 650 also belies Homestore and the Appellant Insureds’ public policy argument that permitting rescission as to the Appellant Insureds is contrary to their reasonable expectations and renders the securities coverage illusory. A contractual provision consistent with the Insurance Code cannot be contrary to public policy.
Indeed, the severability of D&O coverage has been litigated for more than 30 years;
10
and the need for companies and their officers and directors to ensure they obtain coverage with unambiguous severability provisions to protect against exactly what happened in this case has long been identified. “[S]uch [severability] provisions have become more common. Their effect is that misrepresentations or nondisclosures in the insurance application are
not
imputed from one officer or director to another.” (Croskey et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Insurance Litigation,
supra,
¶ 7.1564, p. 7F-4; see
Shapiro v. American Home Assur. Co.
(D.C. Mass. 1984)
3. The Rescission Provision Is Not Subject to the Heightened Standard Applied to Exclusions and Termination Provisions
As an alternative to their argument section VIII, paragraph C(2) is ambiguous regarding TIG’s right to rescind the policy as to innocent nonsigning insureds, Homestore and the Appellant Insureds assert the provision is unenforceable because it was not “conspicuous, plain and clear,” relying on cases dealing with provisions in the insurance contract that purport to exclude or limit coverage. In general, provisions relating to exclusions from coverage must be “ ‘conspicuous’ ”—“placed and printed so that [they] will attract the reader’s attention”*
11
—and “ ‘plain and clear’ ”—“stated precisely and understandably, in words that are part of the working vocabulary of the average
layperson.”
(Haynes
v.
Farmers Ins. Exchange, supra,
There is a significant distinction between the rescission provision at issue here and policy exclusions or the termination provision in
Paramount Properties Co. v. Transamerica Title Ins. Co., supra,
Section VIII, paragraph C(2) is sufficiently conspicuous as a term consistent with the Insurance Code to be enforceable. It is in the section titled “REPRESENTATIONS.” That is exactly where one would expect to find the consequences for any misrepresentations made in connection with the insurance application to be enumerated. The section itself is short—two numbered paragraphs following an introductory paragraph and an introductory sentence—and each paragraph and the introductory sentence are set off by double spacing. It is in the same type, with spacing in the same manner, as the other general condition provisions in section VIII. It is not hidden in “dense pack” or on an overcrowded page—the hallmark of exclusions found not to be conspicuous.
Additionally, although the “plain and clear” standard for exclusions does not apply, section VIII, paragraph C(2) nonetheless satisfies this standard. Unlike the pollution exclusion in
MacKinnon v. Truck Ins. Exchange, supra,
4. The Undisputed Evidence Demonstrates the Misrepresentations in the Form 10-Q Were Material to TIG’s Acceptance of the Risk
It is undisputed Homestore’s financial statements for the quarter ended March 31, 2001, which were reviewed by TIG’s underwriter, overstated Homestore’s revenue by $41.7 million and understated its loss by $32.7 million and its loss per share by $0.34. It is also undisputed section VIE, paragraph C(l) states, “[T]he statements in the Application and in any materials . .. shall be deemed material to the acceptance of the risk or hazard assumed by the Insurer under this Policy, and that this Policy is issued in reliance upon the truth of such representations.”
Homestore and the Appellant Insureds contend, however, TIG was required to prove the misrepresentations in fact had a material effect on TIG’s acceptance of the risk, not just that they were “deemed material,” because, to rescind on the basis of
Although Homestore and the Appellant Insureds’ argument may have merit as a matter of contract interpretation (see
Farmers Ins. Exchange
v.
Knopp, supra,
The judgment is affirmed. TIG is to recover its costs on appeal.
Johnson, J., and Zelon, J., concurred.
Notes
At the conclusion of the inquiry, for the three-month period ending March 31, 2001, Homestore reduced its previously reported revenue from $105.5 million to $63.8 million; increased its net loss from $67.1 million to $99.8 million; and increased its net loss per share from $0.71 to $1.05. It also reduced its previously reported revenue for the three-month period ending March 31, 2000 by $900,000, although there was no effect on its net loss or its net loss per share in that reporting period.
Shew was a named defendant in the action filed by TIG; however, TIG voluntarily dismissed Shew pursuant to the terms of a stipulation of dismissal. The stipulation stated, “On August 2, 2001 Mr. Shew knew that the 1Q2001 Report contained material misrepresentations concerning Homestore’s true financial condition.”
TIG contends the Ninth Circuit’s decision should be given collateral estoppel effect to preclude Homestore and the Appellant Insureds from relitigating the issue of the proper interpretation of section VIH, paragraph C(2). In light of our conclusion the unambiguous policy language permitted TIG to rescind the D&O policy as to the Appellant Insureds, we need not address whether TIG may raise the issue of collateral estoppel on appeal when it failed to advance it as one of the grounds for summary judgment in the trial court. (See
Martin v. Martin
(1970)
Concealment is defined as “[n]eglect to communicate that which a party knows, and ought to communicate.” (Ins. Code, § 330.) Insurance Code section 332 provides, “Each party to a contract of insurance shall communicate to the other, in good faith, all facts within his knowledge which are or which he believes to be material to the contract and as to which he makes no warranty, and which the other has not the means of ascertaining.”
Homestore and the Appellant Insureds contend TIG did not argue statutory rescission in the trial court and any right to rescind must be predicated on the parties’ contract, not statute. The complaint at paragraph 74, however, asserts rescission is based on the terms of the TIG policy, Civil Code section 1691, and Insurance Code sections 330, 331, 350, 351, 358, 359, and 650. The trial court also cited Insurance Code section 650 in its order granting summary judgment in favor of TIG. Moreover, whether it cited them or not, TIG never waived the governing sections of the Insurance Code when it agreed to section VIII, paragraph C. (Section VIH, paragraph G, “Conformity to Statute,” expressly states, “Any terms of this Policy which are in conflict with the terms of any applicable laws construing this policy ... are hereby amended to conform to such laws.”) Consequently, the relevant inquiry is whether the terms of the policy limited the statutory grounds for rescission otherwise available to TIG.
Homestore and the Appellant Insureds assert the final portion of section VHI, paragraph C(2) applies only to individuals who signed the application because it uses the coordinate conjunction “and” to introduce the final clause, rather than using the disjunctive or adversative conjunction “but,” and thereby signals the reader that what follows adds to, rather than detracts from, the preceding clause. According to Homestore and the Appellant Insureds, the penultimate clause assured innocent officers and directors their coverage would not be affected by misrepresentations made in connection with the application process. Homestore and the Appellant Insureds’ premise is incorrect. The first clause advises nonsigning officers and directors with knowledge of misrepresentations they will not be covered. The second clause adds to that declination of coverage by providing no one will be covered if one of the officers or directors who actually signed the application had knowledge of the misrepresentation.
At some point in their briefs Homestore and the Appellant Insureds appear to suggest yet another construction for the final portion of paragraph C(2): If a misrepresentation was known to one or more of the individuals who signed the application, the policy is voidable as to all signers, culpable or not, but again remains effective as to innocent nonsigners. While that interpretation, unlike their primary argument, would differentiate between signers and nonsigners, it too is predicated on a tortured reading of the actual language used and would require us to ignore the express mandate the policy “in its entirety shall be void” if a signer misrepresents a material fact.
The provision at issue in Watts v. Farmers Ins. Exchange, supra, 98 Cal.App.4th at pages 1260-1261, stated, “ ‘This entire policy shall be void if, whether before or after a loss, the insured has willfully concealed or misrepresented any material fact or circumstance concerning this insurance or the subject thereof, or the interest of the insured therein, or in case of any fraud or false swearing by the insured relating thereto.’ ”
Homestore and the Appellant Insureds contend indicia of severability in other provisions of the policy support the conclusion section VIII, paragraph C(2) is reasonably susceptible to the interpretation they urge. For example, the policy excludes claims involving illegal profit or advantage, dishonest or criminal acts or fraud on the part of directors or officers, but specifies in boldface, capital letters that “the actual or alleged conduct of any director, officer or the company shall not be imputed to any other director or officer for the purpose of determining the applicability of the above exclusions.” While we agree with Homestore and the Appellant Insureds an insured would reasonably believe the coverage to be severable with respect to these exclusions, we disagree an insured could reasonably interpret paragraph C(2) in the same manner. To the contrary, that the policy explicitly and conspicuously states the crime-fraud exclusions are severable as to innocent officers and directors demonstrates TIG drafted policy language unambiguously limiting the imputation of wrongful conduct when that was intended by the parties. Accordingly, an insured would reasonably interpret the absence of such language in the provision voiding the policy if there was a knowing misrepresentation by the officer who signed the application to mean that any such wrongful conduct will in fact be imputed to the innocent officers and directors. Additionally, nothing in the extrinsic evidence or other policy indicia identified by Homestore and the Appellant Insureds concerning the parties’ intentions supports the conclusion section VHI, paragraph C(2) is reasonably susceptible to the interpretation they urge. (See
Winet
v.
Price
(1992)
“Most courts hold that material misrepresentations by
any
applicant justify the insurer’s rescission of the policy as a whole. The insurer can thus avoid responsibility for losses claimed even by officers and directors who knew nothing of the misrepresentation. [Citations.]” (Croskey et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Insurance Litigation,
supra,
17.1563, p. 7F-4; see
National Union Fire Ins. v. Sahlen
(S.D.Fla. 1992)
“Courts have invalidated exclusions as not conspicuous where not in a section labeled exclusions and placed on an overcrowded page [citations], or in a section labeled * “General Limitations” ’ but in a ‘ “dense pack” ’ format [citation], or hidden in a subsequent section of the policy bearing no clear relationship to the insuring clause and concealed in fine print.”
(Cal-Farm Ins. Co. v. TAC Exterminators, Inc.
(1985)
To the extent section VIH, paragraph C(2) is inconsistent with the Insurance Code, it appears to provide officers and directors greater protection than the Insurance Code itself: Officers and directors retain coverage notwithstanding material misrepresentations or concealment in the application if they—and the person or persons who signed the application—were unaware of the misrepresentations or concealment.
Statutory rescission also requires a showing the misrepresentation had a material effect on the insurer’s acceptance of the risk. (Ins. Code, §§ 334 [“Materiality is to be determined not by the event, but solely by the probable and reasonable influence of the facts upon the party to whom the communication is due, in forming his estimate of the disadvantages of the proposed contract, or in making his inquires.”], 360 [“The materiality of a representation is determined by the same rule as the materiality of a concealment.”].)
Homestore and the Appellant Insureds only assert the trial court “disregarded evidence” and that it granted the motion to strike Bendure’s declaration without explanation or argument.
We need not address whether the misrepresentations were made with the actual intent to deceive because a misrepresentation material to the risk assumed by TIG provided a sufficient basis for rescission pursuant to section VIII, paragraph C(2). (See generally
Cummings
v.
Fire Ins. Exchange, supra,
