Christianson v. Conrad-Houston Insurance

CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 2014
Docket6868 S-14305
StatusPublished

This text of Christianson v. Conrad-Houston Insurance (Christianson v. Conrad-Houston Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christianson v. Conrad-Houston Insurance, (Ala. 2014).

Opinion

Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the P ACIFIC R EPORTER . Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts, 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email corrections@appellate.courts.state.ak.us.

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

TODD CHRISTIANSON, ) individually and d/b/a GREAT ) Supreme Court No. S-14305 ALASKA LAWN AND ) LANDSCAPING, INC., ) Superior Court No. 3AN-08-09565 CI ) Appellant, ) OPINION ) v. ) No. 6868 – February 21, 2014 ) CONRAD-HOUSTON INSURANCE, ) ) Appellee. ) )

Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third Judicial District, Anchorage, Frank A. Pfiffner, Judge.

Appearances: Kevin T. Fitzgerald, Ingaldson, Maassen & Fitzgerald, P.C., Anchorage, for Appellant. Thomas A. Matthews and Kenneth G. Schoolcraft, Jr., Matthews & Zahare, P.C., Anchorage, for Appellee.

Before: Fabe, Winfree, and Stowers, Justices, and Eastaugh, Senior Justice.* [Carpeneti, Chief Justice, not participating.]

EASTAUGH, Senior Justice. FABE, Justice, dissenting.

* Sitting by assignment made under article IV, section 11 of the Alaska Constitution and Alaska Administrative Rule 23(a). I. INTRODUCTION When Keith Jones sued Todd Christianson for severe personal injuries Jones suffered while working for Christianson’s landscaping business, Christianson tendered his defense to his general liability insurer. It did not accept his tender. It instead sent him a letter that told him he should defend himself and that discussed an exclusion for claims of employees. Christianson then began to incur defense expenses. No insurer on the policies obtained by Christianson’s insurance broker, Conrad-Houston Insurance (CHI), ever defended him in Jones’s lawsuit. Nearly four years after receiving the insurer’s letter, Christianson sued CHI for malpractice. After conducting an evidentiary hearing, the superior court applied the discovery rule and dismissed the malpractice lawsuit because it was filed after the applicable three-year statute of limitations had run. The superior court ruled that because the insurer’s letter put Christianson on inquiry notice he might have a claim against CHI, the statute of limitations had begun to run more than three years before Christianson sued CHI. Because the superior court did not clearly err and committed no legal error, we affirm. II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS A. Facts Todd Christianson owns and has owned a number of past and current Alaska businesses.1 He incorporated Great Alaska Lawn and Landscaping (GALL) in

1 Because the superior court granted summary judgment after conducting an evidentiary hearing and entering findings of fact, we rely here on the parties’ evidentiary submissions, including passages from the depositions of Christianson and CHI’s broker, and the hearing testimony of Christianson and his lawyer in this case. Some facts set out in the record in this case differ immaterially from those described in Jones v. Bowie Industries, Inc., 282 P.3d 316 (Alaska 2012) (reversing defendants’ judgments in Jones’s personal injury lawsuit and remanding).

-2- 6868 1992, but it was involuntarily dissolved in 2002. He started Titan Topsoil, Inc. in 1995, and started Titan Enterprises LLC in 2002. Titan Enterprises performed many of the same services GALL had performed. At all times, Christianson was the sole owner of both Titan entities. We refer to the two Titan entities collectively as “Titan.” In 2003 Christianson approached Mike Dennis, an agent at CHI, and sought insurance. A different brokerage firm had obtained insurance for Christianson’s businesses in 2002. Christianson later testified that when he talked to Dennis, he “was looking for complete insurance on all my commercial entities that needed insurance.” He testified that he expected the broker to “get the information, find out about my business and make sure I’m covered.” He asserts in his appellate reply brief that he expected CHI to obtain insurance covering “all liabilities and potential liabilities” for his landscaping business. It appears that CHI understood that it was primarily responsible for obtaining insurance covering Titan. Christianson admitted when his deposition was taken that he owned entities that he did not insure through CHI. But he also testified that he provided Dennis with information about GALL, titles and registration on his vehicles, and “all [his] past [commercial insurance] policies,” including GALL’s. CHI’s Titan file included a list of vehicle registrations; the file listed at least two vehicles registered to GALL, including the truck pertinent here. CHI knew when the insurance was placed that Christianson’s business used a piece of equipment known as a hydroseeder or hydromulcher. We refer to it here as a “hydroseeder” for consistency with the superior court decision we are reviewing. CHI obtained three policies insuring Titan: a workers’ compensation policy from AIG, a general liability policy from Great Divide Insurance Company, and an auto policy from Cascade National Insurance Company. The three policies took effect in April and May of 2003. Christianson was an insured under the two liability policies.

-3- 6868 Keith Jones was an employee of Titan. In June 2003 Jones was severely injured in a work-related accident with the hydroseeder being used by Titan. The hydroseeder was owned by GALL, but was “on loan” to Titan. It was mounted on a truck most recently registered to GALL. Because GALL’s assets were subject to a federal tax lien at the time, Christianson had not transferred them to Titan. Titan reported the accident to CHI, and Titan’s workers’ compensation insurer, AIG, was notified. AIG then provided workers’ compensation benefits to Jones. On September 14, 2004 Jones filed a personal liability lawsuit against the manufacturer of the hydroseeder (Bowie Industries, Inc.) and Christianson individually and doing business as GALL. Titan was not a defendant. As to Christianson, the lawsuit alleged negligence in transferring the hydroseeder to Titan, loaning a defective hydroseeder to Titan, making modifications to the hydroseeder that contributed to its defects, and failing to warn Jones of the inherent dangers involved in operating the machinery. Christianson contacted his lawyer, and Christianson’s defense in Jones’s personal injury claim was tendered to Titan’s general liability insurer, Great Divide. Great Divide replied to the tender by letter dated September 24, 2004. The letter was addressed to Christianson and Titan; it stated that Great Divide was investigating the claim and that, in the interim, Christianson would have to file an appropriate response to Jones’s lawsuit and pay for his own defense. The letter stated that should Great Divide determine that it did have a duty to provide coverage or a defense, Christianson would be reimbursed for the reasonable fees and costs of his defense. The letter then referred to and quoted the policy’s exclusion of coverage for claims of bodily injury to an employee of the insured. The letter stated that “[s]hould it be determined or confirmed through the investigation . . . that Keith Jones was an employee of Titan Enterprises, LLC . . . at the time of the incident, Great Divide Insurance Company may refuse to defend or indemnify you for this matter.” Although

-4- 6868 Great Divide did not then, or ever, agree to defend Christianson or reimburse his defense costs with respect to the Jones lawsuit, the letter asserted that Great Divide was reserving all its rights under its policy. Christianson soon began personally incurring legal fees in defending himself in the Jones lawsuit.

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Christianson v. Conrad-Houston Insurance, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christianson-v-conrad-houston-insurance-alaska-2014.