Opinion
This appeal involves the esoteric subject of reinsurance. We resolve it on well-known principles of appellate review.
Appellant Transport Insurance Company (Transport) insured AerojetGeneral Corporation (Aerojet) under a liability policy issued in 1973, and that
Years went by without resolution, and in 2006 Transport filed separate lawsuits against each reinsurer, which lawsuits were consolidated. Following a 17-day trial, the jury quickly answered “No” to special verdict questions whether the lawsuits were timely filed, and judgment was entered against Transport.
Transport appeals, an appeal that has generated over 8,000 pages of appendices, 35 volumes of reporter’s transcripts, and 425 pages of well-written briefing, including a 180-page appellant’s reply brief. And, Transport tells us, the appeal presents two issues of first impression in California, issues “that when decided by this court, will have an impact far beyond the confines of the specific dispute in this case. . . . [T]his court’s opinion is likely to become the lead authority on issues involving the statute of limitations in reinsurance claims, not only in California, but possibly throughout the nation”—apparently inviting us to publish some lengthy opinion addressing the claimed issues. We decline the invitation, and resolve the appeal under well-settled principles of appellate review, most fundamentally the doctrine of invited error. And we affirm.
BACKGROUND
The Insurance Contracts
In July 1973, Transport’s predecessor, Transport Indemnity Company, issued to Aerojet a blanket excess liability insurance policy, providing coverage from July 15, 1973, to July 15, 1976. The pertinent limit of liability was “the difference between $1,000,000.00 as a result of any one occurrence or in the aggregate and underlying self-insured retention of $50,000.00 each occurrence.” Transport also agreed to defend Aerojet and pay litigation expenses, a defense obligation that had no policy limit.
“Reinsurance contracts are classified as either ‘facultative’ or ‘treaty.’ Reinsurance is facultative if it covers the reinsured’s risk on an individual policy. The majority of reinsurance contracts are placed under a treaty, which covers the reinsured’s risk for an entire class of policies.” (Prudential Reinsurance Co. v. Superior Court (1992)
The coverage details of the reinsurance contracts are not germane to our discussion and will not be set forth in detail. Suffice it to say that the classification of coverage as “pro rata” or “excess of loss” was germane to some of the issues between Transport and the reinsurers, and the subject of much testimony at trial.
One provision in each of the reinsurance contracts is germane, however: when loss was to be paid. As to this, the TIG contracts stated that “Payment of its proportion of loss and expense paid by [Transport] will be made by [TIG] to [Transport] promptly following receipt of proof of loss.” The Seaton contract stated that “[p]ayment of [Seaton’s] proportion of loss and expense incurred by [Transport] will be made to [Transport] promptly upon receipt and approval by [Seaton] of proof of loss in form satisfactory to [Seaton].”
Transport represents that “reinsurance issues ... are rarely seen in appellate courts,” and its lengthy briefing refers to the claimed dearth of authority pertinent to what it claims are the issues here. We thus digress to discuss reinsurance, and some of the features attendant to it.
Reinsurance is defined in Insurance Code section 620: “A contract of reinsurance is one by which an insurer procures a third person to insure him against loss or liability by reason of such original insurance.” As described in a leading insurance treatise, reinsurance is a contract by which one insurer transfers to another insurer “all or part of the risk it has assumed under a separate . . . policy or group of policies in exchange for a portion of the premium. In essence, reinsurance is insurance for insurance companies. Reinsurance provides insurers with the ability to spread the risk that they have assumed, thereby preventing any one insurer from suffering a catastrophic loss.” (1A Couch on Insurance 3d (2010 rev. ed.) Reinsurance, § 9.1, pp. 9-3 to 9-5, fns. omitted (Couch).) The insurer obtaining the reinsurance is called the “ceding insurer.”
Our colleagues in Division Four described it this way: “ ‘Reinsurance is a special form of insurance obtained by insurance companies to help spread the burden of indemnification. A reinsurance company typically contracts with an insurance company to cover a specified portion of the insurance company’s obligation to indemnify a policyholder in the event of a valid claim. . . . When a valid claim is made, the insurance company pays the first level insured, and the reinsurance company pays the insurance company. The reinsurance company’s obligation is to the insurance company, and the insurance company vis-[à]-vis the reinsurer is thus the insured, or more appropriately the “reinsured.” ’ ” (Ascherman v. General Reinsurance Corp. (1986)
One aspect of reinsurance that distinguishes it from other insurance is that reinsurance contracts have no limitation provision, no reference to when suit has to be brought on the reinsurance contract. According to Couch, “As there is typically no special statute of limitations for reinsurance contracts, the statute of limitations for contracts generally will apply.” (Couch, supra, § 9.33, p. 9-135.)
Among the other distinguishing attributes of reinsurance are the sophistication and expertise of the insured—more accurately, reinsured—which are themselves insurance companies. Another is that the reinsurer does not itself investigate or adjust claims, but relies on the ceding insurer to do that. So, as Transport’s briefing repeatedly tells us, the parties are essentially aligned— not adverse. This passage is illustrative: “[Reinsurers must treat their reinsureds with ‘utmost good faith.’ [Citation.] This duty of extreme good faith arises out of ‘the traditional mores of the industry’ under which reinsurance is
Apparently alluding to this concept in her closing argument at trial, Transport’s counsel quoted a “statement that [she] saw written in a reinsurance book, a book that was a whole catalog of cases about reinsurance and how reinsurance works .... The quote goes like this: ‘Reinsurance is insurance between consenting adults.’ ”
Seemingly based on the above principles, Transport infers that it is unseemly, if not downright inappropriate, for reinsurers to even think of asserting such a thing as a limitations defense. What might have been, might have been. It is no longer.
The introduction to the chapter on reinsurance in the most recent edition of the other leading insurance treatise makes the point this way: “Reinsurance has emerged from the shadows in the last 20 years. At the time of the publication of the prior edition of this volume and for many decades before that, the reinsurance relationship was a quiet, low-profile backstage business transaction between insurers and their reinsurers. That transaction was carried out as an ‘honorable undertaking’ or a handshake-based ‘gentleman’s agreement.’ Policyholders and their attorneys saw no reason to probe those relationships, and courts had few occasions to interpret reinsurance contracts or adjudicate responsibility for the payment of losses. For a variety of reasons, including the sheer enormity of actual and potential liability for environmental and other claims and a series of insolvencies hitting both insurers and reinsurers, all that now has changed.” (14 Appleman on Insurance 2d (Holmes ed. 2000) § 102.1, pp. 2-3, fns. omitted (Appleman).)
In other words, all issues are fair game, including statutes of limitations, which brings us to the case at the heart of much discussion below, and here: Continental Casualty Co. v. Stronghold Ins. Co., Ltd. (2d Cir. 1996)
Stronghold, decided in 1996 by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, was an action by Continental Casualty Co. (Continental), a reinsured, against several reinsurers that had refused to pay based on the statute of limitations. The district court ruled against the reinsurers, and they appealed. The Second Circuit affirmed, holding that the causes of action accrued when Continental notified the “reinsurers of its losses under the reinsurance policies and the reinsurers subsequently denied coverage.” (Stronghold, supra,
Finally, and apropos Transport’s “utmost good faith” assertions here, the court said this: “Although it has been said that the relationship between a reinsured and its reinsurer is not technically a fiduciary one [citation], centuries of history have treated both as allies, rather than adversaries. [Citation.] It is customary, for example, for both to share the premium paid by the underlying insured for coverage. [Citation.] Often they jointly prepare and defend unfounded claims by overreaching insureds. [Citation.] [¶] Because custom and usage have established a gentility and unity of interest between the reinsured and its reinsurer, [citation], a generation ago, we doubt that the defendants would even have considered asserting a statute of limitations defense. [Citation.] With the collapse of prominent British reinsurers, and the financial distress of Lloyd’s of London, times may have changed. [Citations.] As Francois Villon sighed: Oú sont les neiges d’antanl (‘Where are the snows of yesteryear?’).” (Stronghold, supra, 77 F.3d at pp. 21-22.)
As noted, Stronghold was decided in 1996. This is how Appleman described the case in 2000: “The Second Circuit held that, where a reinsurance contract required that losses be reported to a reinsurer, the loss did not become due and payable by the reinsurer and the statute of limitations on an action against the reinsurer did not commence to run until a reasonable time
That, then, was the setting when the state of affairs between Transport and its reinsurers reached some significant milestones arising out of Aerojet’s claims against Transport.
The Claims
Aerojet’s primary business was the development and production of missile and rocket motors for NASA and the armed forces. Aerojet was sued in a number of actions alleging damages caused by toxic contamination of groundwater involving pollution at Aerojet sites in Rancho Cordova and Azusa, California, and began submitting claims to Transport as early as 1980, including for both loss and expense. Though Transport did start paying some expenses, it denied the claims for loss based upon a pollution exclusion. This ultimately led to much litigation, including, most significantly, the case leading to the opinion filed by the Supreme Court on December 29, 1997: Aerojet-General Corp. v. Transport Indemnity Co. (1997)
Following a mediation, in September 1999 Aerojet and Transport entered into a settlement by which Transport agreed to pay $26,655,000 in exchange for a release of all claims under the Aerojet policy, including for both Rancho Cordova and Azusa. The settlement agreement did not allocate the amount between loss and expense, or between Rancho Cordova and Azusa.
According to Transport’s brief, with this settlement “the reinsurers’ contractual obligation to pay for their proportionate share of the Aerojet claims arose.” And “[b]y letter dated December 20, 1999, Transport submitted its final billing in the Aerojet matter to TIG, seeking the fiill amount of its
As to Seaton, Transport says that “On or about December 20, 1999, Mr. Peraino initiated the claims process with Seaton by submitting Transport’s initial proof of loss,” which proof of loss was accompanied by a letter with language identical to that quoted above. And, Transport says, “As with the TIG claim, it is this final billing that is controlling for the purpose of the causes of action asserted here.”
Much of the testimony at trial focused on the numerous communications between Transport and the reinsurers that ensued, and hundreds of exhibits were introduced. Similarly, much of the parties’ briefing sets out these communications in great detail.
In 1994, Chet Nalepa, senior vice-president at Transport’s sister company, American Empire Surplus Lines Insurance Company, began to assist in Transport’s collection efforts, and brought in outside counsel at Lord, Bissell & Brook, seeking advice regarding TIG’s “consistent denials of liability.” Nalepa also sought an update from Transport regarding its earlier threat of litigation, emphasizing that because of its size, the claim “is a matter of substance and requires attention to detail.” Transport did not respond, and Nalepa ultimately closed his collection file.
In late 1996, Nalepa retained counsel at a second law firm, Deborah Cohen of Pepper Hamilton & Scheetz (Pepper Hamilton), which had assisted Transport in another matter. As his letter to Ms. Cohen put it: “We are getting
By November 1996, Pepper Hamilton had drafted a complaint against another of Transport’s reinsurers, and a note on the front of the draft asked whether other reinsurers, such as Unigard, Seaton’s predecessor, should be added as a defendant.
Ms. Cohen communicated with Transport several times about the statute of limitations, including, for example, in a July 1997 memorandum where she expressed concern about the possible application of the statute of limitations, and advised that the issue could “not sit.” A November 19, 1997 letter from Ms. Cohen was similar, expressing “concern about the statute of limitations on some of these billings.”
Following the December 1997 Supreme Court decision in Aerojet, supra,
In June 1999, Transport sent another bill to TIG, accompanied by a cover letter drafted by Ms. Cohen, which letter she described as follows: “I have tried to ‘wordsmith’ the letter to set this up for litigation.”
Following the September 1999 settlement with Aerojet, Transport brought in a third law firm, Luce Forward, Hamilton & Scripps (Luce Forward), to allocate the settlement between the Aerojet sites and between loss and expense, in order to bill the reinsurers. Some issues arose as to just how to apportion, and one attorney at Luce Forward told Transport that “it is unlikely that anyone is just going to write a check” regarding the proposed allocation, and another that his “expectation was that the matter was likely to go to litigation at the end of the day.” They also warned Transport regarding the
It was not until many years later that Transport filed any lawsuit.
Transport’s Lawsuits
On January 26, 2006, Transport filed a complaint against TIG, followed four days later by a complaint against Seaton. Both complaints alleged two causes of action, for declaratory relief and breach of contract, based on the respective reinsurer’s failure to pay its proportionate share of the Aerojet settlement.
TIG filed its answer on March 7, 2006, Seaton on April 10. Both asserted the affirmative defense that Transport’s claims were barred by the four-year statute of limitations applicable to breach of contract claims. (Code Civ. Proc., § 337, subd. 1.) The actions were later consolidated.
The Motions for Summary Adjudication and Summary Judgment
On April 27, 2007, Transport filed motions for summary adjudication, the first against TIG, the second against Seaton. The motions were addressed to the affirmative defenses, and argued that as a matter of law Transport’s claims were not barred by the four-year statute of limitations for contract claims. Transport’s brief describes its motions this way: “As authority, Transport cited (and quoted extensively from) Prudential-LMI Com. Insurance v. Superior Court (1990)
Significantly, in its motions below Transport also cited Stronghold, a citation not mentioned in its brief to us. And as to Stronghold, Transport said that the court there observed “that, as a general matter, New York law requires both (a) a demand for payment and (b) either a ‘rejection’ of that demand or lapse of a reasonable time for payment.”
Transport’s reply on its own motion asserted that “The custom and practice of the industry confirm that the claims did not accrue until a final offer or denial was communicated. The only reinsurance case on point, Stronghold, confirms this. Further, California coverage law comes to the same result via the Prudential-LMI line of cases where the statute is tolled while the insurer investigates and negotiates the claim.”
The four motions were heard on March 7, 2008, before the Honorable Charlotte Woolard, who began by announcing her rulings on the numerous evidentiary objections. She then turned to announcement of the “tentative rulings regarding the motions that bring us here today,” and in connection with Transport’s motions referred to “equitable tolling” and “equitable estoppel.”
On April 4, 2008, Judge Woolard issued two orders, each addressing Transport’s motion against the particular reinsurer and that reinsurer’s motion
From there, and addressing, for example, the Seaton-related motions, Judge Woolard went on to note that “[A]fter Transport submits a proof of loss, Seaton allegedly breaches the contract, and Transport’s causes of action accrue, where (1) Seaton denies a covered claim; or (2) Seaton takes an unreasonable amount of time to communicate its coverage decision. From that point, Plaintiff has four years in which to file its action against Defendant.” And from there, Judge Woolard went on to deny the motions on the ground that “triable issues exist as to whether Seaton ever formally denied Transport’s claims reflected in the 1999 [proofs of loss] and when the causes of action nonetheless accrued after a reasonable amount of time passed for Seaton to have evaluated the claims.” The analysis in the order as to the TIG-related motions was similar.
The Trial
The case proceeded to a jury trial, which began on May 12, 2008. As that trial is described by Transport: “The coverage dispute here included the defendant reinsurers’ contentions that: (1) the facultative reinsurance certificates did not mean what they stated and are ‘excess of loss’ certificates as opposed to pro rata; (2) Transport suffered no loss to be reinsured; and (3) Transport allegedly made a bad faith allocation to the reinsurers of the underlying settlement.” And, of course, there was the issue of the statute of limitations.
The parties had submitted trial briefs, and as to the statute of limitations issue Transport’s brief said this: “The Defendants’ first stated defense focused
Transport had also filed its objections to TIG’s special instructions, which as pertinent here, included the following: “Special Instruction No. 2: Violates this Court’s Orders on the statute of limitations affirmative defense. The issue is when the claims accrued: the four year time period accrued either when TIG definitively denied the claim; or when a reasonable period passed after submission of the final proofs of loss.” (Italics added.)
Prior to trial Judge Woolard dealt with in limine motions, one of which was TIG’s motion to bifurcate, to try first the statute of limitations defense. Judge Woolard indicated her inclination to deny the motion, following which counsel for TIG attempted to convince her to change her mind. Replying, counsel for Transport argued as follows: “Your Honor, that completely misstates the issue in a reinsurance context. It’s a rehash of their failed summary judgment motion. That was one of the arguments that they made in their motion, and it was rejected by this Court in favor of applying the holding of Stronghold which the Court found the persuasive authority as the only authority relevant to the issue of accrual, [f] . . . [][] Our claim is a breach of contract claim which under the holding of Stronghold and this Court’s adoption of that holding in this case as the law in the case, it accrues when TIG or Seaton denied the claim. And that’s when the four years start, or a reasonable time after submission of the final proofs of loss, which goes into, of course, custom and practice on all fronts including supplementing proofs of loss.”
The jury instruction ultimately given on the statute of limitations was as follows: “Affirmative defense statute of limitations, [f] In this case, Transport’s claims against the defendant accrued after Transport submitted its claims to defendants and when, one, defendants denied the claims, or, two, a reasonable period of time elapsed after the submission of the claims without a decision by the defendants. [j[] If Seaton either denied the claims or a reasonable period of time elapsed following submission of the claims by January 30, 2002, Transport’s claims against Seaton were filed too late and are time barred, [f] If TIG either denied the claims or a reasonable period of
The genesis of this instruction is central to the issue here and will be discussed in detail below. Suffice it to say here that at the least Transport agreed to this instruction—if it did not propose it.
The parties agreed to submit the matter with special verdict forms as to each reinsurer, asking the jury to answer specific questions, the first of which was, “Do you find that Transport timely filed its lawsuit against [the particular reinsurer]?”
Transport’s closing argument was late in the afternoon of June 5, following which Judge Woolard gave her concluding instructions, instructed the clerk to swear the bailiff, and the matter was then in the hands of the jury. It was “close to 4:30.” At 11:16 a.m. the next morning, the jury returned with the verdicts, answering “No” to the two questions numbered 1.
Judgment was entered on June 9.
The Motion for New Trial
On June 27, Transport filed a motion for new trial, asserting two grounds: (1) insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict and (2) instructional error, the inclusion of “the second prong of Stronghold’ and failure to instruct on equitable estoppel. On the second ground, the motion contended that “the Court erred because nowhere in Prudential—controlling California Supreme Court precedent—does the court peg the length of the statutory limitations period to something as vague as a ‘reasonable time’ after the insured submits a claim. For that matter, neither does the holding in Stronghold. To the contrary, it is consistent with Prudential in requiring a denial before the statute can expire.”
Following opposition and reply, the motion came on for hearing on July 25, and on July 30, Judge Woolard denied it. On August 19, Transport filed its notice of appeal.
ANALYSIS
Transport Agreed to the Statute of Limitations Instruction, If It Did Not Propose It, and Any Claim That It Was Erroneous Is Barred By the Invited Error Doctrine
Transport’s first argument is that “the trial court’s instructions regarding the statute of limitations was prejudicially erroneous because it contained
“Under the doctrine of invited error, when a party by its own conduct induces the commission of error, it may not claim on appeal that the judgment should be reversed because of that error.” (Mary M. v. City of Los Angeles (1991)
We have described the doctrine this way: it is “ ‘an “application of the estoppel principle”: “Where a party by his conduct induces the commission of error, he is estopped from asserting it as a ground for reversal” on appeal. [Citation.] ... At bottom, the doctrine rests on the purpose of the principle, which is to prevent a party from misleading the trial court and then profiting therefrom in the appellate court. [Citations.] ....’” (Munoz v. City of Union City (2007)
It has been said that the invited error doctrine “applies ‘with particular force in the area of jury instructions. . . .’ ” (Stevens v. Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp. (1996)
Claiming to describe what occurred before Judge Woolard, Transport’s brief asserts that “[p]rior to closing arguments, the court and counsel discussed the various jury instructions the parties had submitted. [Citation.] Seaton’s trial counsel submitted a statute of limitations instruction (on its own caption) which tracked the trial court’s prior ruling on the summary adjudication motions. [Citations.] The court accepted this and instructed the jury.”
The instruction was the subject of lengthy argument below, 10 pages to be exact. It arose in the context of, as Judge Woolard described it, “Jury Instructions Disputed by Transport,” and specifically in Transport’s argument that TIG had “agreed” to a different instruction than the one it proposed. The claimed “agreed” to instruction was the one to which Transport and Seaton had agreed—the instruction Transport now complains of here.
So, to set the stage for that discussion, counsel for Seaton advised Judge Woolard that “[ajlthough [the instructions] are on my caption, . . . [t]hey are basically there because they are the result of our conference. And we have retyped some of them and some of these have mine on the side because they basically are on my letterhead, but not necessarily proposed by me.” (Italics added.) Judge Woolard thanked Seaton’s counsel for being “kind enough to take the laboring oar on having all of this produced so that we could address it in a reasonable fashion,” and then went to the argument: “The first one is Special Instruction Number 2, Affirmative Defense Statute of Limitations.”
The next person to talk was counsel for Transport, who asserted that TIG’s proposed instruction “does not track the Court’s ruling or the case law in Stronghold. And, in fact, we have an agreed instruction, ... if you look at the last document, there is an agreed instruction on an affirmative defense statute of limitations which specifically tracks the court’s ruling. That’s why it’s agreed. This one [(the instruction proposed by TIG)] does not and should not be given.”
Lengthy argument ensued, with counsel for TIG urging that its proposed instruction be given.
Counsel for TIG reiterated that “he quoted from Stronghold”-, Transport’s counsel responded briefly, followed by more argument from counsel for TIG. Then, Transport’s counsel said this: “The standard has to do with when does a breach of contract claim accrue, not when could you sue. When does the breach of contract claim accrue. And what Stronghold was looking at was [a] different set of factual circumstances. ... [f] So then the opinion in Stronghold, the actual holding in Stronghold is just the first standard. . . . And that is actually consistent with the custom and practice testimony we received in this trial. What the Court did in ruling on the adjudication motions [it] used Stronghold as a guide, but adapted the Stronghold decision to the facts as presented in the cross-motions for summary judgment. And that’s why on page 3 ... of the ruling, the court specifically found that the cause of action starts to accrue when the claims are denied or when a reasonable period of time has elapsed after submission of the claim without a decision by the defendants.”
Following a brief interchange, counsel for Transport went on with more references to Stronghold: “Your Honor, if we were going to go purely on the Stronghold decision and not the Court’s orders, which is the law of the case, the[n] we have to only have the first standard, which is the statute only begins to accrue when the defendants denied the claims because that was literally the holding. The rest of the language in the opinion is really dicta, explaining the circumstances of . . . Stronghold in [the] particular situation which is not our situation. . . .”
To this Judge Woolard replied as follows: “But I found the dicta to be persuasive. I am just wondering if I misspoke in my writing of these orders.”
Judge Woolard then ruled: she would “give the affirmative defense statute of limitations ... as what I thought to be the agreed-upon jury instruction, [f] Regarding the special instructions that TIG has submitted for statute of limitations, the Court is not going to give that.”
Seeking to avoid application of the invited error rule, Transport quotes language from Mary M., supra,
The issue in Mary M. concerned the possible vicarious liability of the City of Los Angeles for the conduct of Police Sergeant Schroyer who while on duty raped a woman he had detained. As of the time of trial one case had held that the plaintiff had stated a valid cause of action against the county for the intentional misconduct of a deputy sheriff, that the sexual misconduct “ ‘flowed from the very exercise of [his] authority.’ ” (Mary M., supra,
“[Bjecause the record indicated that the City had requested the instruction, [the Supreme Court] solicited briefing from the parties to determine whether the doctrine of invited error should bar the City from contending that, as a matter of law, Sergeant Schroyer was acting outside the scope of his employment when he raped plaintiff.” (Mary M., supra, 54 Cal.3d at pp. 211-212.) The Supreme Court held for the City, that the doctrine should not apply, but not on any basis providing solace to Transport. Rather, it was because of the City’s position throughout, which the Supreme Court described as follows:
*1004 “The record shows that the instruction was proposed under the following circumstances. Throughout the proceedings in this matter, the City challenged the decision in White v. County of Orange, supra,166 Cal.App.3d 566 . The trial court correctly considered itself to be bound by the appellate court’s decision in White. [Citation.] At the instruction conference, the court told the parties that notwithstanding the City’s objections, it would instruct the jury in accordance with White, and that unless the City proffered an alternative instruction it would give plaintiff’s proposed instruction, which was based on White. The City then submitted, and the court gave, the instruction quoted above.
“Immediately after the case was submitted to the jury, the trial court gave the parties an opportunity to ‘tie up any loose ends’ relating to any matter that had not yet been ‘put on the record.’ Counsel for the City then explained the circumstances which led it to submit the instruction at issue: ‘[Djuring our many, many hours of discussions concerning jury instructions, I did indicate to the court that we did not believe that White was an appropriate case with which the jury should be instructed as it was . . . not an appropriate statement of the law. [][] The court indicated that it would follow White and unless I wanted Plaintiff’s instructions to be the ones to go to the jury, I would be requested to draft an instruction based upon the language in White, [f] In response to that, the defense submitted an instruction based upon White which the court. . . read to the jury, [f] For the record, I would like it to be clear that we do not believe that White is the authority that should be followed and that we objected to giving any instructions in accordance with the White case, albeit, we did submit an instruction based upon the court’s request.’ The trial court agreed with counsel’s account, but pointed out that the precise wording of the instruction was the City’s.” (Mary M., supra,54 Cal.3d at p. 212 .)
After reciting the doctrine of invited error, the Supreme Court went on with the language quoted above on which Transport relies. And then it went on further: “Here, the City did not invite the trial court to instruct the jury that liability for a sexual assault can arise from a police officer’s exercise of official authority. To the contrary, it took the opposite position throughout the case, including the instruction conference. The City never induced the trial court to follow White . . . ; it merely acquiesced—after objecting—to the court’s decision to instruct in accordance with White, and submitted an instruction in accordance with that decision. Although the City would be barred from attacking the specific language of the jury instruction it submitted, it is, under the circumstances of this case, not precluded from asserting that White . . . was erroneously decided . . . .” (Mary M., supra, 54 Cal.3d at pp. 212-213, fn. omitted.)
In Electronic Equipment Express Inc. v. Donald H. Seiler & Co., supra,
Transport’s opening brief, referring generally to arguments made in reply to the opposition to its new trial motion, essentially asserts that it “acquiesced” in the agreed-to instruction that Judge Woolard virtually “insisted” on giving, at one point describing the instruction as one she “craftfedj.” As Transport’s counsel acknowledged at oral argument, Judge Woolard did not craft the instruction. And the only insistence was by Transport’s counsel.
A May 25, 2008 e-mail from Transport’s counsel to opposing counsel dealing with the proposed jury instructions was put before Judge Woolard in TIG’s opposition to Transport’s new trial motion. The e-mail reads in pertinent part as follows: “Per our discussions on Friday, I would appreciate a copy of the list of instructions to which we agreed . . . and I would appreciate any revisions of the specials that Defendants might want to offer . ... As to the ‘affirmative defense’ of statute of limitations, we must insist that the specific language of the court’s order (derived from the Stronghold decision) be used and suggest the following wording should be used,” going on to propose language essentially identical to that in fact contained in the instruction given. (Italics added.)
In its reply brief, Transport asserts that “When this court applies the actual invited error doctrine to the actual facts of this case—where it is clear Transport in fact objected to the ‘reasonable time’ prong (5 AA 1194)—the
The sole record reference—AA 1194—is Transport’s brief attempt in its reply to Seaton’s opposition to its motion for summary adjudication to distinguish Stronghold. That brief attempt was in its reply memorandum, quoted above, a memorandum of November 28, 2007. Transport cites to nothing between then and the June 5, 2008 court session when the instructions were settled in any way objecting to the language.
At another place Transport’s reply asserts that its counsel agreed to the instruction “because the trial court had already ruled on the pertinent legal issues . . . and the instruction accurately tracked the court’s prior (albeit erroneous) legal ruling on the law.” And, Transport goes on, its “counsel had little to gain by continuing to dispute a legal issue the court had already decided . . . and possibly something to lose (aggravating the trial judge, who was still conducting the trial).”
We offer two observations. First, the claim that advocating a position with an experienced judge would somehow “aggravate” her is sheer speculation— not to mention demeaning. Beyond that, as the Supreme Court confirmed in Le Francois v. Goel (2005)
In its reply brief Transport cites to some invited error cases that refer to the doctrine as one involving a decision made for “tactical reasons,” with the following authority: “[c]f. People v. Dunkle [(2005)] 36 Cal.4th [861,] 924 [
Putting aside that these cases were first cited in the reply brief, we have two responses. First, and as set forth above, the doctrine is generally described as being based on the concept of estoppel. (See generally 9 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (5th ed. 2008) Appeal, §§ 389-391, pp. 447-450.) Second, as is apparent from the lengthy argument described above, Transport fought tooth and nail to keep Judge Woolard from giving TIG’s proposed instruction, an instruction that, as described at oral argument, was “worse for Transport.” (See fn. 7, ante) Put otherwise, Transport made a strategic reason to vigorously argue for the instruction Judge Woolard gave, especially as there had to be some instruction on the subject—as Transport expressly admits. Specifically: Transport’s belated objection to the instruction notwithstanding, its brief admits that it agrees “with the trial court that there must be some alternative event (other than the reinsurer’s unconditional denial) to trigger accrual of a cause of action for breach of a reinsurance contract. A contrary rule would lead to the anomalous result that a reinsurer could prevent a reinsured from filing suit simply by refusing to deny a claim. . . . [f] The question here is not whether there must be some alternative trigger (other than the reinsurer’s unconditional denial) that gives rise to a right to sue, but what that trigger should be.” To this admission, we add only the language of Civil Code section 1657: “If no time is specified for the performance of an act required to be performed, a reasonable time is allowed.” (See also Consolidated World Investments, Inc. v. Lido Preferred Ltd. (1992)
It is probably enough to note that the argument fails because of the invited error doctrine as, to the extent the instruction is claimed to be incomplete, it was agreed to by Transport. The argument also fails because Transport did not request any instruction on equitable tolling.
The well-settled law was confirmed in Metcalf v. County of San Joaquin (2008)
Null v. City of Los Angeles (1988)
Transport’s claimed justification for not requesting such an instruction is “that the trial court had already ruled against Transport on this issue and it would have been futile—and might have aggravated the trial court—to request such an instruction. This is not the kind of ‘strategic’ decision that invites error.” Or, as Transport puts it at another point: “having lost at the summary adjudication motions on the legal issue of whether the trial court would apply Prudential equitable tolling to this case [citation], Transport was not required to offer an instruction on that issue—in direct contravention of the trial court’s ruling—in order to preserve the issue for appeal. [Citation.]”
Transport’s contention that Judge Woolard “ruled against Transport” that equitable tolling did not apply is not shown by the record here, certainly not by pointing to the mere nonmention of it in Judge Woolard’s orders denying the motions. All that is needed in an order denying a motion for summary judgment or adjudication is (1) specification of one or more material facts in controversy and (2) specific reference to the conflicting evidence indicating that such triable issue exists. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (g); see Tera Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v. Superior Court (1985)
Transport’s claimed justification for its failure to request an instruction on equitable tolling also ignores the rule that oral remarks or comments made by a trial court may not be used to attack a subsequently entered order or judgment. (Farwell v. Sunset Mesa Property Owners Assn., Inc. (2008)
Transport asserts that “[a] trial court has a duty to instruct on the tolling of the statute of limitations (in addition to accrual) in an appropriate case”— apparently, though Transport does not say this, sua sponte. None of the four cases cited by Transport supports the contention. Migliore v. Mid-Century Ins. Co. (2002)
Transport’s Losing Motions Cannot Succeed Here
Transport’s second argument is that “because Transport’s lawsuits were timely as a matter of law, the trial court erred by denying Transport’s motions for summary adjudication on the statute of limitations defense.” The argument fails.
To begin with, there is a real question whether Transport can even make the argument here, with some authority, including Sierra Craft, Inc. v. Magnum Enterprises, Inc. (1998)
The leading practical treatise states the rule this way: “An order denying summary judgment or granting or denying summary adjudication is reviewable only by a petition for writ of mandamus. [CCP § 437c(m); [citations]] [][] There is generally no basis for appeal after trial; erroneous denial of summary judgment is generally harmless error after a full trial covering the
Transport’s argument also runs afoul of the general rule that denial of their motions may not be challenged here because the parties litigated the same issues at trial. (See California Housing Finance Agency v. Hanover/California Management & Accounting Center, Inc. (2007)
Transport attempts to get around these problems by urging that the principles do not pertain if the trial court applied the wrong law in denying the motions, citing four cases: Lackner v. LaCroix (1979)
But even if Transport’s argument were not barred procedurally, it would fail on the merits.
Embellishing on its argument, Transport asserts that Judge Woolard “was required to grant summary adjudication in Transport’s favor if there were no triable issues of material fact as to the statute of limitations defense and Transport was entitled to judgment on that defense as a matter of law.” And,
Assuming without deciding that tolling even applies here,
Refusal of the Estoppel Instruction Was Not Error, Let Alone Reversible Error
Transport’s last argument is that the trial court prejudicially erred by rejecting its equitable estoppel instruction. The argument is brief, barely over three pages, a significant portion of which is devoted to quotation of the proposed instruction. Transport’s reply brief devotes only three pages as well, this out of its 180 pages.
A party is entitled to “correct” instructions on “every theory of the case advanced by [it] which is supported by substantial evidence.” (Soule v. General Motors Corp. (1994)
The general rule is that estoppel must be specifically “pleaded in the complaint with sufficient accuracy to disclose [the] facts relied upon.” (Chalmers v. County of Los Angeles (1985)
“A valid claim of equitable estoppel consists of the following elements: (a) a representation or concealment of material facts (b) made with knowledge, actual or virtual, of the facts (c) to a party ignorant, actually and permissibly, of the truth (d) with the intention, actual or virtual, that the ignorant party act on it, and (e) that party was induced to act on it.” (13 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (10th ed. 2005) Equity, § 191, pp. 527-528; see Hydro-Mill Co., Inc. v. Hayward, Tilton & Rolapp Ins. Associates, Inc. (2004)
As to Seaton, Transport argues that its willingness to receive information “strongly suggested [Seaton] did not believe Transport’s claims were (or were about to be) barred by the statute of limitations, and Transport reasonably relied on the message this conduct conveyed by not filing suit earlier.” Transport cites no evidence that it reasonably relied on this willingness in delaying this action, with its only record references to its counsel’s arguments.
As to TIG, Transport asserts that it “pressed Transport to delay filing suit.” The evidence cited is less than compelling. What is compelling is the
Moreover, and as indicated above, Transport’s lawyers had advised it that the statute of limitations might be a factor, a fact that militates against a claim of estoppel. (See Mills v. Forestex Co., supra,
Transport’s brief argument does cite, without discussion, to 192 pages in its appellant’s appendix and 34 trial exhibits. While Transport’s reference does not explain why the correspondence helps it, some of the correspondence demonstrably cannot. Thus, for example, several of the letters to which Transport refers are letters reaffirming TIG’s position that it would not pay on the proofs of loss before it. Such denials cannot create an estoppel. (Lantzy v. Centex Homes, supra,
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
Kline, P. J., and Haerle, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied February 2, 2012, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied March 28, 2012, S200113.
Notes
Ario v. Underwriting Members of Lloyd’s of London (Pa.Commw.Ct. 2010)
In fact, the claimed reasons for Transport’s overlength reply brief are that the reinsurers’ respondent’s briefs do not accurately recite the evidence and cite “irrelevances,” and that because the primary issue is “whether the trial court committed instructional error, Transport is entitled to view and present the trial evidence in the light most favorable to the claim of instructional error.”
At trial, Nalepa testified as follows: “I, quite frankly, to this day don’t know what Transport was doing with [its collection efforts] and who had the responsibility at their end.”
Seaton requests judicial notice of material it asserts might be germane, and TIG’s brief also mentions this. We deny the request for judicial notice.
According to Transport, this and the earlier draft complaint are of no significance because they were for declaratory relief only and did not contain a cause of action for breach of contract.
Focusing on Judge Woolard’s comments in her tentative ruling, and that her subsequent order did not contain what she said, Transport’s brief says things such as this: “[T]he trial court did not expressly address the equitable tolling issue in its written rulings, but clearly ruled against Transport on this issue because it did not include equitable tolling in the rule it ultimately adopted, despite Transport’s detailed argument on this point in its moving papers. [Citations.] . . . Given that, in its tentative ruling, the trial court indicated it would apply equitable tolling [citation] but, after hearing TIG’s arguments on this issue [citations], it excluded equitable tolling from its written ruling, we would . . . argue that the trial court unquestionably ‘determined that equitable tolling should not apply.’ ” As will be shown, this is an overstatement.
TIG’s proposed instruction would have told the jury: “TIG contends that Transport filed this lawsuit too late. To establish this defense, TIG must prove that this action was not commenced within four years of the date on which the claim sued on arose. You must decide when the claim arose, that is when TIG failed to pay the amounts allegedly due under the terms and conditions of [policies] FR 297 and FR 298. If TIG’s failure to pay the alleged amounts due took place before January 26, 2002, Transport’s lawsuit was filed too late and is barred by the statute of limitations.”
As indicated, Transport’s opening brief referred to its reply in support of its new trial motion, which contained an argument that Judge Woolard’s ruling was “law of the case.” TIG took issue with this, and Transport’s reply brief concedes that law of the case could not pertain,
The treatise goes on to note that “review on appeal from the final judgment has been allowed in exceptional cases,” citing Gackstetter v. Frawley (2006)
This may be problematic, in light of the lengthy statute of limitations involved. (See Lantzy v. Centex Homes (2003)
