Opinion
We are here presented with a familiar script. In
American Employer’s Ins. Co.
v.
Smith
(1980)
Respondent herein, United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company (USF & G), the insurer of a homeowner’s policy under which Michael Smith was an admitted insured, then filed the present action seeking a declaration it was not obligated to indemnify Michael Smith for the fire damages or to defend him in the prior suit. This case was submitted to the trial court on the reporter’s transcript and exhibits of the former action. On the basis of this evidence, the trial court found Smith’s conduct was not negligent, “but was a malicious, intentional act done with a conscious disregard of the rights and safety of others and with a preconceived design to inflict injury,” and “as a proximate result of willfully, wrongfully, and maliciously igniting said fire, Smith caused the . . . property insured by defendants ... to be burned and damaged.” The court declared that pursuant to the provisions of Insurance Code section 533 and Civil Code section 1668, USF & G had no obligation to afford coverage to, or defend. Smith.
On appeal American and First State pursue a number of contentions concerning the sufficiency of the evidence and the one “Intentional Tort” exclusion. On the latter issue, the exclusionary provisions of Insurance Code section 533, of Civil Code section 1668, an express exclusion clause of *281 USF & G’s policy and the public policy which negates indemnification to an insured who intentionally causes damage are equated as being indistinguishable. This sweeping assertion, like most generalizations, is faulty, and we perceive that even facially there are distinctions between the provisions of Insurance Code section 533 and the express exclusion of the insurance policy of USF & G. 1
Moreover, USF & G did not urge in the trial court that noncoverage under its policy was predicated on the express exclusion in the policy. It urged and the trial court so found that Michael Smith’s arsonous conduct was wilful within the meaning of Insurance Code section 533 and his insurer, USF & G, was not liable. We address this as the essential issue on this appeal.
I
There is no purpose in serving up a new set of facts, as they have remained constant. Accordingly, we adopt the statement of facts from our opinion in American Employer’s Ins. Co. v. Smith, supra, 105 Cal.App.3d at pages 96 through 98, with appropriate changes in references to the parties to reflect their status in the present appeal.
“[Michael Smith] set a series of fires in the City of Woodland during the evening hours of October 7, 1974. First, at 7:45 p.m. he ignited a fire in the trash bin at a Value Giant, then 25 minutes later he set fire to the papers on a bulletin board at the post office. A few minutes thereafter papers and wood behind a shed near the Four Seasons were set aflame by [Smith]. Finally, at 9:17, [Smith] set his last fire for the evening, the burning of a storage shed at Aunt Lila’s Antique Shop.
“This litigation arises from the fire at the Four Seasons. [Smith] was 16 years, 10 months of age at that time. He testified that he took some boards and leaned them over trash near a shed and then set fire to the trash. He got into a car and went around the block to a vantage point and observed that the roof of the shed was on fire. [Smith] was surprised and scared when he saw that the roof of the shed was on fire, and he called the fire department so that the building would not burn down.[ 2 ] [Smith] proceeded to Aunt Lila’s and set a storage shed on fire. [Smith] subsequently pleaded guilty to *282 arson. The corrugated steel material of which the shed at the Four Seasons was composed heated. The fire spread from the shed to the adjacent buildings. As the result of the spreading of the fire Emil and Edward Schmauderer (doing business as Emil’s Quality Shoes) were damaged in the amount of $10,110. Theodore C. Muegge was damaged in the amount of $31,423.59. Jack Carter, Harold Sedgwick and Mary Burton (doing business as Burton’s Shoes) were damaged in the amount of $131,036.
“At the time of the fire . . . American Employers Insurance Company [American] was the insurer of Emil’s Quality Shoes and Theodore C. Muegge. . . . First State Insurance Company [First State] was the insurer of Burton’s Shoes. Pursuant to the contracts of insurance [they] paid to their respective insureds the total sums by which they were damaged due to the fire.
“At the time of the fire, [Smith’s] parents, Clyde R. and Margaret Smith, maintained a policy of homeowner’s insurance with the [plaintiff] United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company [USF & G]. [Smith], as a resident relative of the named insureds, was also insured by the policy. Under the policy [USF & G] is obligated to pay to the insureds all sums they are required to pay to others by reason of liability imposed upon them as the result of damage to property, up to the policy limit of $25,000.
“[USF & G] believed that it was not obligated to indemnify or defend [Smith] since his acts were intentional. Accordingly, it filed a complaint for declaratory relief. The action for declaratory relief and the action by [defendants] against Michael Smith were subsequently consolidated for trial.
“All defendants who had been sued initially, other than Michael Smith, were dismissed from the action during pretrial proceeding. When the matter was set for trial [defendants] dismissed all causes of action against Michael Smith except the negligence cause of action. The matter then proceeded to trial.
“After plaintiffs [American and First State] rested [Smith] moved for a nonsuit on the ground that the evidence clearly showed that his tort was intentional and that evidence showing an intentional tort cannot support a verdict on a negligence cause of action. The trial court agreed and granted the motion. [USF & G] then moved for dismissal of the declaratory relief action without prejudice, stating that in view of the nonsuit the declaratory relief action became moot. The dismissal was granted.
“[American and First State] filed a notice of appeal . . . from both the judgment of nonsuit and the dismissal of the declaratory relief action. [USF *283 & G] moved for an order dismissing the appeal as to it. . . . [T]his court granted the motion and dismissed the appeal as moot, with the provision that the dismissal as to [USF & G] would not affect the appeal as to Michael Smith.”
We concluded that under the circumstances of that case it is not a defense to a negligence cause of action that the evidence showed the tortious conduct of Smith was intentional or wilful. (At p. 102.) We stated that the only issue then before us was Smith’s liability for the damages caused by the fire; we expressly refrained from considering the issue of whether or not the occurrence was covered by the insurance policy issued by plaintiff. (At pp. 101-102.) That issue is now before us. 3
II
Insurance Code section 533 provides: “An insurer is not liable for a loss caused by the wilful act of the insured; but he is not exonerated by the negligence of the insured, or of the insured’s agents or others.”
As this court held in
Evans
v.
Pacific Indemnity Co.
(1975)
“Section 533 . . . reflects the very sound and long standing public policy (also contained in Civ. Code, § 1668) which disapproves of contracts which directly or indirectly exempt anyone from personal responsibility for his own wilful injury to another. The essence of this policy, ... is found in the following statement of our Supreme Court: ‘Section 1668 of the Civil Code[
4
] and section 533 of the Insurance Code establish a public policy to prevent insurance coverage from encouragement of wilful tort.’
(Tomerlin
v.
Canada Indemnity Co., supra,
61 Cal.2d [638] at p. 648 [39 Cal.Rptr.
*284
731,
The basic premise of American and First State that section 533 and the express exclusion in USF & G’s policy are identical appears to be based on a misperception of the holding of Evans, supra, that section 533 is equivalent to an exclusionary clause in the policy itself. This does not mean that section 533 is the same as the express policy exclusion but rather that it is itself an implied exclusionary clause which by statute is to be read into all insurance policies.
American and First State rely on a number of cases, both California and foreign. However, the California cases are not controlling and the foreign cases are concerned with the applicability of express policy exclusions identical or similar to that in USF & G’s policy. The coverage issue before the trial court and this court is not the express exclusion in the policy but the implied exclusion of Insurance Code section 533. In interpreting the language of the express exclusions in the cases cited by American and First State, the courts have distinguished between an intentional act and an intentionally caused injury. The focus of Insurance Code section 533 is on the intention to do the act which causes the damage rather than the intention to cause the resulting damage, a significant distinction, emphasized in
Cincinnati Ins. Co.
v.
Mosley
(1974) 41 Ohio.App.2d 113 [
At issue herein is not whether Michael Smith specifically intended to cause all the damage which actually ensued from his firelighting activity, as asserted by American and First State, but whether the damage was caused by Michael Smith’s wilful act of setting fire to the shed. To avoid coverage for the fire damage at issue, USF & G was required to prove two things pursuant to Insurance Code section 533: (1) causation—that Michael Smith’s act in setting fire to the shed caused the fire damage to the buildings in question, and (2) that the act of Michael Smith which caused the buildings to bum was wilful within the meaning of section 533.
*285 The evidence of causation was direct and virtually undisputed. In addition to the factual summary contained in this court’s prior opinion in American Employer’s Ins. Co. v. Smith, supra, 105 Cal.App.3d at pages 96-98, the stipulated record contains the testimony of Gale Hawthorne of the Arson and Bomb Investigation Unit of the State Fire Marshall’s Office. Investigator Hawthorne determined the point of origin of the fire which damaged the property at issue was at the corrugated metal shed in the alley behind the Four Seasons building. This is the shed where Smith started one of his fires.
“[0]ne may be guilty of having ‘caused’ a building to be burned even though he actually sets fire only to a different structure.” (1 Witkin, Cal. Crimes, § 465.) In
People
v.
Hiltel
(1901)
The critical question as to causation in intentional torts is whether the actor’s conduct is a substantial factor in bringing about the type of harm which he intended from his original act. (See
Tate
v.
Canonica
(1960)
The evidentiary factual chain of causation in the case before us is overwhelming that Smith’s act of setting fire to the shed was not only a substantial factor but the only factor in the fire damage to the adjoining structures.
On the issue of wilfulness, it is undisputed that Michael Smith intentionally set fire to the trash behind the shed of the Four Seasons building.
A “wilful act” under section 533 is more than a mere volitional act divorced from its motivation and more than the meaning of that term under traditional tort principles
(Clemmer
v.
Hartford Insurance Co.
(1978)
The meaning of “wilful act” is analyzed in
Russ-Field Corp.
v.
Underwriters at Lloyd’s
(1958)
“ ‘To set at rest questions involving the different degrees of negligence, and the results following therefrom, we may reasonably suppose was the object of the framers of our Civil Code.
“ ‘Under section 2629 of the Civil Code [now Ins. Code, § 533] the nice distinctions often made necessary are dispensed with, and the general proposition is established that no form of negligence on the part of the insured, or his agents or others, leading to a loss avoids the policy, unless it amounts to a willful act on the part of the insured. The code thereby sets at rest a fruitful cause of litigation.’ (Emphasis added.)
“A ‘wilful act’ as used in this statute connotes something more blameworthy than the sort of misconduct involved in ordinary negligence, and something more than the mere intentional doing of an act constituting such negligence.”
California courts which have considered Insurance Code section 533 in a factual context dissimilar to that present here have likened a “wilful act” under that section to the intentional commission of a
wrongful act
with “ ‘a preconceived design to inflict injury.’”
(Clemmer
v.
Hartford Insurance Co., supra,
In the instant case, the trial court found Smith ignited the fire at the Four Seasons “wilfully, wrongfully, and maliciously” with “a precon *287 ceived design to inflict injury.” Substantial evidence supports this finding. Smith intentionally ignited the trash behind the building. He placed the trash under boards which were leaning against a shed, indicating an intent to do more than merely start a small trash fire. The shed was attached directly to the buildings which burned. Smith knew what he was doing was wrong. He intended to start a fire and he knew that damage was likely to result. Smith ignited several other damaging fires that same day. Smith pleaded guilty to arson, a crime in which one “willfully and maliciously sets fire to or burns or causes to be burned . . . any structure ... or property.” (Pen. Code, § 451.)
Clearly, Michael Smith’s act in causing the fire was well beyond the sort of intentional misconduct involved in ordinary negligence and was wilful within the meaning of Insurance Code section 533.
The California cases upon which defendants rely are not controlling. In
Clemmer
v.
Hartford Insurance Co., supra,
Congregation of Rodef Shalom
v.
American Motorists Ins. Co.
(1979)
In gratuitous dicta, the court stated the policy exclusion was only applicable if the intent was to cause damage
beyond
the point of origin of the fire. (At p. 695.) No authority was cited for this statement though an inexplicable reference was made to
Meyer
v.
Pacific Employers Ins. Co.
(1965)
*288
In
Meyer
v.
Pacific Employers Ins. Co., supra,
In construing a policy exclusion identical to the one in this case, the court in
Mullen
v.
Glens Falls Ins. Co.
(1977)
Escobedo
v.
Travelers Ins. Co.
(1964)
Walters
v.
American Ins. Co., supra,
Ill
As noted, the trial court in this case based its decision solely on statutory exclusions. However, the policy exclusion has been repeatedly urged by appellants as controlling. We therefore consider the policy exclusion and conclude that it also precludes coverage. Defendants have cited many foreign cases determining the applicability of exclusionary clauses with language similar to that in the U.S.F. & G’s policy. However, the cited cases are generally concerned with intentional acts, or even wrongful acts, com *289 mitted without any intent to cause harm or without intent to harm the person actually injured. 5
There is some split of authority as to whether the intentional injury policy exclusion which exempts from coverage expected or intended damage requires a specific intent on the part of the insured to cause all the resultant damage. 6 We perceive the better and majority view to be that such a specific intent is not required.
A case factually similar to the one at bar is
Unigard Mut. Ins. Co.
v.
Argonaut Ins. Co.
(1978)
As summarized by the court, William testified: . . he did not intend or expect to cause damage to the school building but that he did intend to light the fire. At the time of the blaze he knew that fire could spread, and he had previously been involved in a fire-starting venture between two neighborhood garages.”
*290
The policy contained an exclusion for property damage “ ‘which is either expected or intended from the standpoint of
the insured.
’ ” (
In affirming a judgment declaring the exclusion precluded coverage, the court stated: “There is a definite split of authority as to whether the intentional injury exclusion clause which exempts expected or intended damage requires specific intent on the part of the insured to cause the resultant damage. Here, though, there is substantial evidence from which the court could have found that the damage to the school building was expected or intended on the part of the boy despite his in-court declarations to the contrary. Thus, as to William Winkler, the fire damage to the building was the expected or intended result of a clearly intentional act.” (At p. 1018.)
In
Butler
v.
Behaeghe
(1976)
As stated in another case, the policy exclusion applies where the “insured acted (whether willfully, intentionally or maliciously) for the purpose of causing injury in the person or property in which it resulted. So long as the injury was intended, willed, or maliciously sought,
it is immaterial that an injury of a different nature from that actually contemplated in fact resulted.
”
(Farmers Insurance Group
v.
Sessions
(1980)
*291 As stated, Smith clearly acted with the wrongful intent to cause damage to the property against which he set the fire. It is immaterial that he subjectively did not expect or intend to cause the extent of damage which actually occurred. 9
Accordingly, under the exclusionary clause of Smith’s insurance policy, there is no coverage for the damages caused by Smith’s actions. Our conclusion is “consistent with the reasonable expectations of the parties to the insurance contract and the public policy against ‘licensing’ intentional and unlawful harmful acts.”
(Iowa Kemper Ins. Co.
v.
Stone, supra,
The judgment is affirmed.
Evans, Acting P. J., and Blease, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied October 25, 1984.
Notes
This clause provided: “This policy does not apply: 1(f) to bodily injury or property damage which is either expected or intended from the standpoint of the insured.”
“At the time of the trial [Smith] was not certain whether he called the fire department before he set the fire to Aunt Lila’s storage shed or after that incident. He was sure, however, that he called about the Aunt Lila’s fire.”
Which illustrates that undecided issues in appeals do not die; they simply reappear in a new appeal.
Civil Code section 1668 provides: “All contracts which have for their object, directly or indirectly, to exempt anyone from responsibility for his own fraud, or willful injury to the person or property of another, or violation of law, whether willful or negligent, are against the policy of the law.”
American Ins. Co.
v.
Saulnier
(D.Conn. 1965)
See collected cases in Annotation, Liability Insurance: Specific Exclusion of Liability For Injury Intentionally Caused By Insured (1965)
William was admittedly also an insured within the policy.
See, e.g.,
Colonial Penn Ins. Co.
v.
Hart
(1982)
These cases deal with two forms of exclusionary clauses which typically appear in policies: (1) as in this case, where coverage is excluded for damages “expected or intended from the standpoint of the insured”; or (2) where coverage is excluded for damages “caused intentionally by or at the direction of the insured.” The cases make no distinction between these forms for the purpose of determining coverage. (See, e.g.,
Iowa Kemper Ins. Co.
v.
Stone, supra,
The irrelevancy of the extent of damage where some damage was wrongfully intended is not an expression of the tort principal that one is deemed to have intended the natural and ordinary consequences of one’s voluntary act. This rule has been rejected as a basis upon which to deny coverage under the type of exclusionary clause in this case.
(Meyer
v.
Pacific Employers Insurance Co., supra,
