In an action, inter alia, to recover damages for breach of contract, the defendant Sharp Details, Inc., incorrectly sued herein as Sharp Detailing, Inc., appeals (1) from so much of an order of the Supreme Court, Westchester County (Barone, J.), entered December 5, 2005, as granted the motion of the defen
Ordered that the appeal by the defendant Sharp Details, Inc., incorrectly sued herein as Sharp Detailing, Inc., from the order entered December 5, 2005, is dismissed, without costs or disbursements, as the portion of the order appealed from was superseded by the order entered March 1, 2006, made upon re-argument; and it is further,
Ordered that the order entered March 1, 2006 is modified, on
The Supreme Court correctly determined that, after all of the causes of action asserted by the plaintiff against the defendant Signature Flight Support Corp. (hereinafter Signature), except the first cause of action sounding in breach of contract, were dismissed in a prior order, the defendant Sharp Details, Inc., incorrectly sued herein as Sharp Detailing, Inc. (hereinafter Sharp), had no obligation to indemnify Signature. Moreover, with respect to plaintiff’s remaining cause of action alleging Signature’s breach of contract, the terms of the indemnification clause in the contract entered into by Sharp and Signature did not obligate Sharp to indemnify Signature for Signature’s own breach of its contract with the plaintiff.
However, Sharp does not dispute that its insurance policy failed to name Signature as an additional insured. Sharp’s agreement with Signature specified the nature of the insurance coverages Sharp was supposed to maintain, and further specified that Sharp was to name Signature as an additional insured. Such coverages included Sharp’s liability for its “acts or omissions while operating on the Airport and Signature’s entire leasehold.” Pursuant to Sharp’s obligation to procure appropriate insurance naming Signature as an additional insured, Sharp’s insurer would have had the duty to defend Signature in this action, to the same extent that a properly named additional insured would have been entitled to a defense in this action (see City of New York v Evanston Ins. Co., 39 AD3d 153 [2007]; cf. Automobile Ins. Co. of Hartford v Cook, 7 NY3d 131, 137 [2006]). Instead, due to Sharp’s failure in this regard, Signature’s own insurer was required to carry on Signature’s defense.
Signature’s damages for Sharp’s breach were limited to Signature’s out-of-pocket expenses in obtaining and maintaining its own separate insurance underwritten by its own insurance carrier, Global Aerospace, as well as the costs of “the premiums and any additional costs it incurred such as deductibles, co-payments and increased future premiums” (Inchaustegui v 666 5th Ave. Ltd. Partnership, 96 NY2d 111, 114 [2001]; see American Ref-Fuel Co. of Hempstead v Resource Recycling, 307 AD2d 939, 941 [2003]).
However, the Supreme Court prematurely awarded Global
