Opinion
Having concluded a general contractor was not entitled to coverage as an additional insured under a policy held by one of its subcontractors, the trial court granted summary judgment in this subrogation action in favor of the subcontractor’s insurer, Pacific Insurance Company (Pacific). In so doing, the court distinguished our decision in
Acceptance Ins. Co.
v.
Syufy Enterprises
(1999)
BACKGROUND
Vitton Construction Company, Inc. (Vitton) agreed to serve as the general contractor on a project to construct a warehouse for Catalytica Bay View, Inc. (Catalytica) in East Palo Alto. Vitton entered a subcontract agreement with Pacific Erectors, Inc. (PEI) for, among other things, the “[cjutting and installation of roof opening frames.” The subcontract required PEI to carry general liability insurance “covering all operations by or on behalf of [PEI] ... and including coverage for: (1) premises and operations; (2) products and completed operations; (3) contractual liability ...; (4) broad form property damage (including completed operations); (5) explosion, collapse and underground hazards; and (6) personal injury liability.” The subcontract further required that the general liability policy obtained by PEI name Vitton and the project owner as additional insureds.
A division of CNA Insurance Companies (CNA)
1
issued PEI a commercial general
PEI also obtained an umbrella insurance policy with a $5 million per-occurrence limit from Pacific. In this policy, Pacific agreed to pay damages its insured became liable to pay after the limits of the insured’s underlying insurance were exhausted. The policy included in the definition of “Who Is An Insured” parties who were covered by the underlying insurance policy. Specifically, the Pacific policy defined as an “insured”: “[a]ny ... person or organization who is an insured under any policy of ‘underlying insurance’ ..., subject to all the limitations upon coverage and all other policy terms and conditions of such ‘underlying insurance’ and this policy.”
Pursuant to its subcontract, PEI laid decking for the roof structure of the Catalytica warehouse and cut holes in the decking for skylights and HVAC equipment (both of which would be installed by another contractor). PEI completed its work and left the jobsite on February 5, 1997. After PEI left, Vitton employees attached “wood nailers” and “curbs” to the roof openings but did not cover the openings themselves. On February 12, 1997, Aaron Anderson, an employee of a roofing subcontractor, was working on the roof of the Catalytica warehouse when he fell through one of the uncovered holes PEI had cut in the roof decking. Anderson sustained serious injuries in the fall and sued Vitton, PEI and Catalytica. Anderson’s expert witnesses testified in deposition that the general contractor is responsible for maintaining a safe construction site, and they faulted Vitton for failing to cover the roof openings, or make PEI cover the roof openings, at the Catalytica site. In addition, Vitton’s president (Howard Fuchs) acknowledged that Vitton, as general contractor, had a responsibility to ensure no one was hurt on the job.
The parties agreed to settle Anderson’s case for a total sum of $6 million. CNA, as the primary insurer of PEI, agreed to pay the policy limit of $1 million, as did Gerling America Insurance Company, the primary insurer of Vitton. Vitton’s excess insurance carrier, AIU Insurance Company (AIU), funded the remainder of the settlement. Pacific did not contribute to the settlement. Vitton and AIU then brought the instant action against Pacific, seeking equitable indemnity, subrogation, contribution and declaratory relief on the ground that Vitton was an additional insured entitled to coverage under the umbrella policy Pacific issued to PEI. After Pacific answered the complaint, the parties filed cross motions for summary judgment. In addition to maintaining Vitton was an additional insured under the Pacific policy, AIU argued it was entitled to recover subrogation or contribution from Pacific as a matter of law. Pacific argued Vitton was not an additional insured covered by the policy because Vitton’s liability for the
DISCUSSION
“Summary judgment is proper only if there is no triable issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (c).) A court must ‘strictly construe the moving party’s papers and liberally construe those of the opposing party to determine if they raise a triable issue of material fact.’ [Citation.]”
(Calhoon
v.
Lewis
(2000)
Insurance policies are construed according to the same principles that govern interpretation of other contracts.
(Bank of the West v. Superior Court
(1992)
In
Syufy,
we applied these principles to interpret precisely the same contractual language at issue in the present case—i.e., an endorsement extending coverage to a party as an additional insured “ ‘but only with respect to liability arising out of “your work” for that insured by or for you’ ” (where the terms “you” and “your” referred to the named insured).
Pacific does not challenge Syufy’s holding that a minimal causal connection will suffice to trigger coverage under an “arising out of’ clause.
(Syufy, supra,
The facts of this case are not complicated. Pursuant to its subcontract, PEI created holes or openings in the roof of the Catalytica warehouse. The holes were left uncovered, and a roofer accidentally fell through one of them while he was working on the roof. Using common sense (see, e.g.,
Syufy, supra,
Nevertheless, Pacific argues the undisputed evidence shows PEI was not
The trial court read our decision in Syufy too narrowly when it distinguished the case on its facts. In Syufy, a contractor’s employee had been working on the roof of a theater. When he was descending from the roof through a hatch, on his way to run an errand on a break from work, he fell and injured himself. (Syufy, supra, 69 Cal.App.4th at p. 324.) He sued the theater’s owner, which was responsible for maintaining the roof hatch in a safe condition and which sought coverage under an additional insured endorsement in the contractor’s insurance policy. (Id. at pp. 324-325.) Under these facts, we concluded the roofer’s injury “clearly ‘arose out of’ the work he was performing on the roof of Syufy’s building.” (Id. at p. 328.) We observed, “[t]he relationship between the defective hatch and the job was more than incidental, in that Weber could not have done the job without passing through the hatch.” (Ibid.)
At a hearing on the summary judgment motions, the trial court distinguished
Syufy
because the injured party’s job required him to use the defective hatch, whereas Anderson was by no means required to pass through a roof opening. But this distinction misses the point. Certainly Anderson was not required to fall through a hole, but his job
did
require him to be on the warehouse roof, in close proximity to the dangerous condition (created by PEI’s work) that caused his injury. The trial court ignored this point in concluding there was “no evidence of any relationship between the roof opening and Mr. Anderson’s performance of his duties.” The court also distinguished
Syufy
on the grounds that: (1) the accident occurred after PEI
had completed its work on the project, and (2) the injured party was not an employee of PEI. These are not meaningful differences considering that the language of the insurance policy does not
The parties suggest Division Three of the Second District Court of Appeal adopted a contrary position in the
St. Paul
case.
(St. Paul, supra,
The
St. Paul
case thus construed different contractual and policy language than we face here. The subcontract required PEI to name Vitton as an additional insured on general liability insurance “covering all operations by or on behalf of [PEI] ... including ... completed operations.” More importantly, unlike the endorsement in
St. Paul,
the additional insured endorsement here did not limit coverage to liability arising out of the subcontractor’s “ ‘ongoing operations performed for’ ” the general contractor. (See
St. Paul, supra,
Nor does
Hartford v. State of California
(1996)
DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed. Pacific shall bear costs of the appeal.
Corrigan, Acting P. J., and Poliak, J., concurred.
On July 18, 2003, the opinion was modified to read as printed above.
Notes
The policy, printed on a CNA form, states that coverage will be provided by “Transcontinental Insurance Co.,” a corporate entity that would appear to be related to CNA. Because the parties later refer to CNA, and not Transcontinental Insurance, as PEI’s primary insurance carrier, we shall also refer to this policy as a CNA policy.
In view of its decision that the Pacific policy did not cover Vitton, the lower court had no reason to address, and did not address, the extent of Pacific’s obligation to contribute to the Anderson settlement. Because the trial court rendered no decision on the issue, it is not properly before us in this appeal. Thus, despite the parties’ lengthy discussions of subrogation and contribution, we express no opinion on AIU’s right to recover under these doctrines.
Moreover, to the extent Pacific maintains the negligence of Vitton was an intervening cause of Anderson’s injury, the standard of causation required is clearly something
less
than proximate cause. (See
Syufy, supra,
