Church Mutual Ins. Co. v. GuideOne Specialty Mutual Ins. Co.12/17/21 CA3 Case Details

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 17, 2021
DocketC088373
StatusPublished

This text of Church Mutual Ins. Co. v. GuideOne Specialty Mutual Ins. Co.12/17/21 CA3 Case Details (Church Mutual Ins. Co. v. GuideOne Specialty Mutual Ins. Co.12/17/21 CA3 Case Details) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Church Mutual Ins. Co. v. GuideOne Specialty Mutual Ins. Co.12/17/21 CA3 Case Details, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 12/17/21 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Shasta) ----

CHURCH MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, C088373 S.I., (Super. Ct. No. 181887) Plaintiff and Appellant,

v.

GUIDEONE SPECIALTY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Shasta County, Tamara L. Wood, Judge. Affirmed.

Hirsch Closson, Clifford Hirsch, Barrett Braun, and Christopher T. Hicks for Plaintiff and Appellant.

Gordon Rees Scully Mansukhani, Matthew S. Foy, and Matthew G. Kleiner for Defendant and Respondent.

1 In this case, a local congregation of the hierarchical Church of God purchased an insurance policy from GuideOne Specialty Mutual Insurance Company (GuideOne) covering the risk of fire damage to a church building that was held by the local congregation, as agent of the greater church, in trust for the benefit of the larger church body. After the local congregation voted to sever its relationship with the Church of God, a regional oversight authority took over as the agent/trustee holding the property on behalf of the greater church, after which the previously affiliated local congregation moved out and the new agent added the property to its own insurance policy, with Church Mutual Insurance Company (Church Mutual), covering the same risk. Fire destroyed the building while both policies were in effect. Church Mutual paid the claim. GuideOne denied coverage on the ground that the former local congregation no longer had an insurable interest in the property. We must determine whether Church Mutual is entitled to contribution from GuideOne. The trial court concluded the answer was no. While we disagree with certain aspects of the trial court’s statement of decision, we conclude it reached the correct result. We also conclude the trial court correctly determined Church Mutual was not entitled to prevail against GuideOne on a separate subrogation cause of action. We shall therefore affirm the judgment. BACKGROUND Relevant Historical and Ecclesiastical Facts The relevant historical and ecclesiastical facts are relatively straightforward and largely undisputed. Mountain Lakes House of Prayer (Mountain Lakes) was founded in 1995 as a local congregation of the Church of God, serving congregants in the Shasta Lake area. Later that year, Mountain Lakes bought property in the City of Shasta Lake, including a church building. The grant deeds conveying the property designated the grantee: “California-Nevada Church of God, a California non-profit religious corporation dba

2 Mtn. Lakes House of Prayer.” In order to make sense of this designation, we must take a brief detour into the structure of the Church of God. The Church of God is a hierarchical church with its headquarters located in Cleveland, Tennessee. The highest governing bodies of the church are the International General Assembly, “composed of all members and ministers of the Church of God 16 years of age and above,” the International General Council, “composed of all ordained bishops,” and the International Executive Council, composed of various church executives. We need not set out their respective duties, except to note that the International General Assembly meets every two years to consider recommendations from the International General Council, which in turn meets every two years to consider recommendations from the International Executive Council. Recommendations that make their way to the International General Assembly are voted upon “for final disposition” and become part of the governing law of the church, published in a book titled “the Minutes of the Church of God International General Assembly” (the Minutes). The Church of God, through another executive body, appoints “state overseers” for the various states or multistate regions in the United States. These state overseers have the power to appoint and remove district overseers and local pastors, as well as to “[a]pprove the selection, purchase, and construction of all church . . . properties, together with the respective district overseers.” The office of the state overseer for the California- Nevada region is incorporated under the name: “California-Nevada Church of God” (California-Nevada). Local congregations are subordinated to both the state overseer and the International General Assembly. Section 46 of the Minutes provides, in relevant part, that the International General Assembly has “full power and authority to designate the teachings, principles, and practices of all the local churches composing said Assembly” and “governs the operation (including ownership of all real and personal property) of the Church of God . . . at all structural levels: international, national, state/territorial, district,

3 and local.” This section goes on to provide: “The International General Assembly has vested in the office of the state overseer authority over the local churches.” This section further requires “all real estate owned by the local congregation” to “be used, managed, and controlled for the sole and exclusive use and benefit of the Church of God.” More specific property provisions will be set forth later in this opinion. For now, we have said enough to place in context the grantee designation on the 1995 grant deeds: “California-Nevada Church of God, a California non-profit religious corporation dba Mtn. Lakes House of Prayer.” Leonard Jackson was the Mountain Lakes pastor when the property was purchased in September 1995. Prior to execution of the grant deeds, California-Nevada approved the purchase in a resolution signed by the administrative bishop then serving as state overseer, Dan Callahan. Thereafter, Pastor Jackson secured an insurance policy from GuideOne covering, among other things, the risk of fire damage to the property. The insured’s name was listed on the application and the policy as: “Mountain Lakes House of Prayer Church of God.” The application included a checked box indicating the insured was the owner of the property. Pastor Jackson testified that he mistakenly believed the congregation owned the property at the time. He explained: “I simply was not aware at that time of the policies that the Church of God did this under. I’m not blaming anybody. It was just a misunderstanding, but they owned it from the time that I signed my name on the deed. You are signing for the Church of God as one of their ministers.” The GuideOne policy was renewed by Mountain Lakes each year for the next 18 years. The policy period applicable to this case was September 15, 2013, to September 15, 2014. By this time, Jay Spinks was Mountain Lakes’s lead pastor and Charles Fischer was the administrative bishop serving as state overseer for the California-Nevada region. In April 2014, Mountain Lakes voted to disaffiliate from the Church of God and instead join the Central Valley Assembly of God. Of the 20-member congregation, the

4 vote was 18 votes in favor and 2 votes opposed, with Pastor Jackson and his wife casting the only votes opposing the motion. In late April or early May, Pastor Spinks informed Bishop Fischer of Mountain Lakes’s decision to leave the Church of God. Bishop Fischer testified that after he learned Mountain Lakes was leaving the Church of God, he knew the local congregation could not take the property with them, but he was unsure whether or not the property was insured properly, so he directed the California-Nevada treasurer to add that property to California-Nevada’s insurance policy with Church Mutual. A change endorsement effective May 9, 2014, added the property to the Church Mutual policy. This policy also covered, among other things, the risk of fire damage to the property. On May 23, 2014, a corrective grant deed was executed conveying the property from “CALIFORNIA-NEVADA CHURCH OF GOD, a California Non-Profit Religious Corporation dba Mtn.

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Church Mutual Ins. Co. v. GuideOne Specialty Mutual Ins. Co.12/17/21 CA3 Case Details, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/church-mutual-ins-co-v-guideone-specialty-mutual-ins-co121721-ca3-calctapp-2021.