Opinion
VOGEL (Miriam A.), J.
In this declaratory relief action brought by an insurance company against two third party claimants that had obtained a liability judgment against the carrier’s insured, the trial court held that the claimants, having been dragged into this coverage dispute by the carrier, had no standing to litigate the carrier’s waiver of its right to deny coverage. We reverse.
Background
Rusty’s Island Chip Company (a partnership comprised of Rusty Vaster-ling and Carol Mersch) distributes potato chips under its registered trademarks, “Rusty’s Island Chips” and “Island Chips.” Aloha Pacific, Inc., is Rusty’s exclusive licensee. In 1989, Rusty’s was having some financial problems and it suspended its operations (but it did not abandon or otherwise dispose of its trademarks). At about that time, Jay Feinberg and Gary Quick, having failed in their efforts to buy Rusty’s, started a new potato chip company, Island Industries, Inc. Island then made various offers to Vaster-ling to purchase or obtain by assignment all of Rusty’s trademarks but Vasterling refused to sign anything. Island nevertheless started using Rusty’s trademarks and, when asked to stop, refused.
In November 1989, Rusty’s and Aloha filed a federal court action against Island, asking for preliminary and permanent injunctions to stop Island’s infringements. Island, which was insured under a comprehensive general liability policy issued by the Canadian Insurance Company of California, tendered defense of that action to its insurer. Canadian determined that a provision excluding coverage for trademark infringement claims did
not
apply, but nevertheless refused to provide a defense—on the ground that no money damages were sought in the federal action.
Island then retained its own attorneys and answered the complaint, contending Vasterling had assigned Rusty’s trademarks to Island.
In February 1990, the federal district court issued a preliminary injunction prohibiting Island from using Rusty’s protected marks or any confusingly
similar mark.
Undeterred, Island continued to infringe on Rusty’s trademarks in direct violation of the injunction and, in addition, attempted to liquidate its inventory by selling large quantities of discounted chips in packages which infringed on Rusty’s licensed marks. As a result, Rusty’s and Aloha asked for and were granted permission to amend their complaint to add a claim for damages.
Island, in turn, again tendered defense of the federal action to Canadian. Subject to a reservation of specified rights, Canadian agreed to provide a defense.
In August 1992, the federal district court determined the liability issues in favor of Rusty’s, finding (by means of a partial summary judgment) that Rusty’s was entitled to recover from Island its actual damages, plus Island’s wrongfully obtained profits, prejudgment interest, treble damages, and reasonable attorney fees and costs, all as thereafter proved. Meanwhile (in October 1990), Island had filed a voluntary bankruptcy proceeding. To avoid the automatic stay, Rusty’s agreed (with the consent of the bankruptcy trustee and Island) to limit its recovery in the federal action to the coverage provided by Canadian. In addition, Rusty’s agreed to dismiss its claims against Feinberg and Quick. The net result of all this is that Rusty’s can recover only if there is coverage under the CGL policy Canadian issued to Island.
In November 1992, Canadian filed the action now before us, a complaint for declaratory relief against Rusty’s alleging that a controversy “exists regarding the duty and obligation of Canadian to pay any judgment that Rusty’s . . . might receive in the [federal] action.” Rusty’s answered and
cross-complained against Canadian alleging, among other things, that Canadian had waived all coverage defenses not set out in its reservation of rights letter. Canadian answered the cross-complaint.
During a three-day court trial, Canadian attempted to prove (1) that there is no coverage because Rusty’s damages were caused by Island’s willful acts; (2) that the claims asserted by Rusty’s in the federal action were all based on excluded trademark infringements; (3) that Rusty’s had no standing in this action to assert coverage by waiver or estoppel because it is not Canadian’s insured or the insured’s assignee; and (4) that no coverage exists because Island breached the policy’s cooperation clause. Rusty’s disputed all of these claims.
Almost three months after taking the matter under submission,
the trial court issued a minute order indicating its intent to enter judgment for Canadian for the following (and only the following) reasons: “Court finds that the contract was one to indemnify the policy holder and was not a third party beneficiary. [‘JD Further, the policy holder never assigned any rights he may have under the p[o]licy to [Rusty’s].” The judgment prepared by Canadian and signed by the court goes far beyond the court’s actual ruling. Among other things, it provides (1) that Insurance Code section 533
prohibited Canadian from indemnifying Island for the consequences of its willful wrongdoing; (2) that all of the damage claims asserted by Rusty’s in the federal action arose from Island’s willful conduct; (3) that Island’s CGL policy excluded coverage for the trademark infringement claims involved in the federal action; and (4) that Rusty’s has no standing to assert coverage by waiver or estoppel because they are third party claimants, not Canadian’s insureds.
This appeal followed the denial of Rusty’s posttrial motions.
Discussion
We reduce Rusty’s claims of errors to the two dispositive issues. First, we explain that, contrary to the trial court’s finding on the legal issue,
Rusty’s
does have “standing”
in this litigation. Second, we explain that, consistent with the trial court’s factual finding,
there was a waiver by Canadian
of all rights not asserted in its reservation of rights letter. For these reasons (and because Canadian does not suggest there is any other basis to affirm the trial court’s order), we reverse.
I.
Canadian’s position, accepted by the trial court, is that Rusty’s, as its insured’s adversary, must have an assignment from the insured in order to “bring an action upon a duty owed to the insured by [its] insurer.” (See
Clemmer v. Hartford Insurance Co.
(1978) 22 Cal.3d 865, 889 [151 Cal.Rptr. 285, 587 P.2d 1098];
Murphy
v.
Allstate Ins. Co.
(1976) 17 Cal.3d 937, 942-944 [132 Cal.Rptr. 424, 553 P.2d 584
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Opinion
VOGEL (Miriam A.), J.
In this declaratory relief action brought by an insurance company against two third party claimants that had obtained a liability judgment against the carrier’s insured, the trial court held that the claimants, having been dragged into this coverage dispute by the carrier, had no standing to litigate the carrier’s waiver of its right to deny coverage. We reverse.
Background
Rusty’s Island Chip Company (a partnership comprised of Rusty Vaster-ling and Carol Mersch) distributes potato chips under its registered trademarks, “Rusty’s Island Chips” and “Island Chips.” Aloha Pacific, Inc., is Rusty’s exclusive licensee. In 1989, Rusty’s was having some financial problems and it suspended its operations (but it did not abandon or otherwise dispose of its trademarks). At about that time, Jay Feinberg and Gary Quick, having failed in their efforts to buy Rusty’s, started a new potato chip company, Island Industries, Inc. Island then made various offers to Vaster-ling to purchase or obtain by assignment all of Rusty’s trademarks but Vasterling refused to sign anything. Island nevertheless started using Rusty’s trademarks and, when asked to stop, refused.
In November 1989, Rusty’s and Aloha filed a federal court action against Island, asking for preliminary and permanent injunctions to stop Island’s infringements. Island, which was insured under a comprehensive general liability policy issued by the Canadian Insurance Company of California, tendered defense of that action to its insurer. Canadian determined that a provision excluding coverage for trademark infringement claims did
not
apply, but nevertheless refused to provide a defense—on the ground that no money damages were sought in the federal action.
Island then retained its own attorneys and answered the complaint, contending Vasterling had assigned Rusty’s trademarks to Island.
In February 1990, the federal district court issued a preliminary injunction prohibiting Island from using Rusty’s protected marks or any confusingly
similar mark.
Undeterred, Island continued to infringe on Rusty’s trademarks in direct violation of the injunction and, in addition, attempted to liquidate its inventory by selling large quantities of discounted chips in packages which infringed on Rusty’s licensed marks. As a result, Rusty’s and Aloha asked for and were granted permission to amend their complaint to add a claim for damages.
Island, in turn, again tendered defense of the federal action to Canadian. Subject to a reservation of specified rights, Canadian agreed to provide a defense.
In August 1992, the federal district court determined the liability issues in favor of Rusty’s, finding (by means of a partial summary judgment) that Rusty’s was entitled to recover from Island its actual damages, plus Island’s wrongfully obtained profits, prejudgment interest, treble damages, and reasonable attorney fees and costs, all as thereafter proved. Meanwhile (in October 1990), Island had filed a voluntary bankruptcy proceeding. To avoid the automatic stay, Rusty’s agreed (with the consent of the bankruptcy trustee and Island) to limit its recovery in the federal action to the coverage provided by Canadian. In addition, Rusty’s agreed to dismiss its claims against Feinberg and Quick. The net result of all this is that Rusty’s can recover only if there is coverage under the CGL policy Canadian issued to Island.
In November 1992, Canadian filed the action now before us, a complaint for declaratory relief against Rusty’s alleging that a controversy “exists regarding the duty and obligation of Canadian to pay any judgment that Rusty’s . . . might receive in the [federal] action.” Rusty’s answered and
cross-complained against Canadian alleging, among other things, that Canadian had waived all coverage defenses not set out in its reservation of rights letter. Canadian answered the cross-complaint.
During a three-day court trial, Canadian attempted to prove (1) that there is no coverage because Rusty’s damages were caused by Island’s willful acts; (2) that the claims asserted by Rusty’s in the federal action were all based on excluded trademark infringements; (3) that Rusty’s had no standing in this action to assert coverage by waiver or estoppel because it is not Canadian’s insured or the insured’s assignee; and (4) that no coverage exists because Island breached the policy’s cooperation clause. Rusty’s disputed all of these claims.
Almost three months after taking the matter under submission,
the trial court issued a minute order indicating its intent to enter judgment for Canadian for the following (and only the following) reasons: “Court finds that the contract was one to indemnify the policy holder and was not a third party beneficiary. [‘JD Further, the policy holder never assigned any rights he may have under the p[o]licy to [Rusty’s].” The judgment prepared by Canadian and signed by the court goes far beyond the court’s actual ruling. Among other things, it provides (1) that Insurance Code section 533
prohibited Canadian from indemnifying Island for the consequences of its willful wrongdoing; (2) that all of the damage claims asserted by Rusty’s in the federal action arose from Island’s willful conduct; (3) that Island’s CGL policy excluded coverage for the trademark infringement claims involved in the federal action; and (4) that Rusty’s has no standing to assert coverage by waiver or estoppel because they are third party claimants, not Canadian’s insureds.
This appeal followed the denial of Rusty’s posttrial motions.
Discussion
We reduce Rusty’s claims of errors to the two dispositive issues. First, we explain that, contrary to the trial court’s finding on the legal issue,
Rusty’s
does have “standing”
in this litigation. Second, we explain that, consistent with the trial court’s factual finding,
there was a waiver by Canadian
of all rights not asserted in its reservation of rights letter. For these reasons (and because Canadian does not suggest there is any other basis to affirm the trial court’s order), we reverse.
I.
Canadian’s position, accepted by the trial court, is that Rusty’s, as its insured’s adversary, must have an assignment from the insured in order to “bring an action upon a duty owed to the insured by [its] insurer.” (See
Clemmer v. Hartford Insurance Co.
(1978) 22 Cal.3d 865, 889 [151 Cal.Rptr. 285, 587 P.2d 1098];
Murphy
v.
Allstate Ins. Co.
(1976) 17 Cal.3d 937, 942-944 [132 Cal.Rptr. 424, 553 P.2d 584].) Whatever truth there may be to that rule in the abstract or where a third party attempts to sue a tortfeasor’s insurer for damages for bad faith, it has no application where, as here, “standing” was conferred on Rusty’s by
Canadian—because it was Canadian that filed this lawsuit and named Rusty’s as a defendant.
As Rusty’s correctly points out, an injured third party (such as Rusty’s) is a proper defendant in an insurer’s action for declaratory relief to determine the scope of coverage under its policy. (See, e.g.,
General Ins. Co. of America
v.
Whitmore
(1965) 235 Cal.App.2d 670, 674-676 [45 Cal.Rptr. 556].) Simply put, it is absurd to suggest that Canadian is free to file a coverage lawsuit
against
Rusty’s and then,
in that lawsuit,
claim that Rusty’s cannot defend itself because it lacks standing to litigate a coverage issue (e.g., whether Canadian’s failure to reserve certain rights constitutes a waiver of those rights).
The Third District rejected a similarly spurious argument in
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.
v.
Crane
(1990) 217 Cal.App.3d 1127 [266 Cal.Rptr. 422]. There, the insurer sued a third party claimant, then insisted the claimant had no “standing” to contend the carrier’s tender of the amount due under the policy was invalid and thus insufficient to stop the Civil Code “section 3291 interest clock from running.”
(State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.
v.
Crane, supra,
217 Cal.App.3d at p. 1134.) The court disagreed, explaining the injured third party had simply accepted the insurer’s invitation—conveyed in a lawsuit initiated by the carrier—to comment upon whether the policy covered the judgment in the underlying action and was, therefore, a “proper party [to] raise any and all arguments bearing upon the proper interpretation of the policy.”
(Id.
at p. 1135.) Moreover, since the insurer’s refusal to pay a final judgment entered in the underlying action would subject it to suit by the third party claimant, it is silly to suggest that issues
subject to later litigation cannot be raised in an earlier lawsuit initiated by the carrier.
(Ibid.)
At oral argument, Canadian claimed the waiver issue could not be litigated by the third party claimants in an action brought pursuant to section 11580 or pursuant to policy language included to comply with the statute. We disagree.
(Murphy
v.
Allstate Ins. Co., supra,
17 Cal.3d at pp. 942-943 [§ 11580, subd. (b)(2) makes the judgment creditor a third party beneficiary of the insurance contract between the insurer and the insured, and thereby permits him to enforce those promises made for his benefit];
Barrera
v.
State Farm Mut. Automobile Ins. Co.
(1969) 71 Cal.2d 659, 662-663, 670-673 [79 Cal.Rptr. 106, 456 P.2d 674] [the third party claimant’s rights may extend beyond third party beneficiary principles and thus may preclude a carrier from relying on the insured’s misrepresentations in an action by the third party claimant against the carrier].) The fact that the insurer’s implied duty to attempt in good faith to settle a claim against its insured inures only to the benefit of the insured and cannot be enforced by a third party absent an assignment
(Murphy
v.
Allstate Ins. Co., supra,
17 Cal.3d at p. 944) has nothing to do with this case. Rusty’s did not contend that Canadian’s inadequate reservation of rights letter gave Rusty’s the right to sue Canadian for a breach of Canadian’s duty to defend Island, its insured. As explained above, Rusty’s claimed only that Canadian’s waiver (accomplished by what it knowingly failed to include in that letter) prevents Canadian from denying its indemnity obligations as to those items not subject to its reservation of rights—and that the waiver applies to any action on the contract, including one by or against Rusty’s.
(Miller
v.
Elite Ins. Co.
(1980) 100 Cal.App.3d 739, 755 [161 Cal.Rptr. 322] [a carrier’s decision to provide an unconditional (or only partially conditional) defense constitutes a waiver of the limitations of the policy and prevents the insurer from asserting those limitations in an “action on the policy”].)
It follows that the trial court erred in concluding that Rusty’s has no “standing” to assert waiver in this action. (Croskey & Kaufman, Cal. Practice Guide: Insurance Litigation (The Rutter Group 1995) § 15:726, pp. 15-137 to 15-138.)
n.
As noted above (fn. 6,
ante),
the trial court expressly found that Canadian’s reservation of rights letter is limited to the points listed in that
letter and it “did not properly advise its insured of the reservation of rights” as to any point not mentioned in the letter. This factual finding is binding on this appeal.
(Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.
v.
Richmond
(1977) 76 Cal.App.3d 645, 652 [143 Cal.Rptr. 75] [waiver is a question of fact];
Bowers
v.
Bernards
(1984) 150 Cal.App.3d 870, 873-874 [197 Cal.Rptr. 925] [on appeal, the trial court’s factual findings will be upheld unless they are unsupported by any substantial evidence].)
Stated otherwise, Canadian’s failure to reserve its right to contest coverage under the policy’s exclusions of coverage for willful acts or trademark infringement waived its right to assert those exclusions as a basis for denying coverage in the federal action.
(Foremost Ins. Co.
v.
Wilks
(1988) 206 Cal.App.3d 251, 258 [253 Cal.Rptr. 596];
Insurance Co. of the West
v.
Haralambos Beverage Co.
(1987) 195 Cal.App.3d 1308, 1319 [241 Cal.Rptr. 427];
Miller
v.
Elite Ins. Co., supra,
100 Cal.App.3d at p. 754 [if a carrier assumes the defense of its insured without giving notice of a reservation of rights, “it is thereafter precluded
in an action upon the policy
from setting up such ground of forfeiture or noncoverage”];
Tomerlin
v.
Canadian Indemnity Co.
(1964) 61 Cal.2d 638, 648 [39 Cal.Rptr. 731, 394 P.2d 571] [although a carrier may not insure against willful misconduct, coverage is available when it is based not on the willful conduct itself but rather on an estoppel occurring after the misconduct].)
Since coverage was not contested on any other ground,
and since Canadian does not suggest the factual finding about the reservation of rights is unsupported by the evidence, and since Rusty’s has the same standing in this action on the policy as it would in an action to collect from Canadian after a final judgment is rendered in the federal action, Canadian has no present basis for denying coverage and the judgment must be reversed.
Disposition
The judgment is reversed and the matter is remanded to the trial court with directions to enter a new judgment in favor of Rusty’s and Aloha and against Canadian. Rusty’s and Aloha are awarded their costs of appeal.
Spencer, P. J., and Ortega, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied July 21, 1995.