Duarte v. Pac. Specialty Ins. Co.

220 Cal. Rptr. 3d 170, 13 Cal. App. 5th 45, 2017 WL 2537241, 2017 Cal. App. LEXIS 593
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal, 5th District
DecidedJune 12, 2017
DocketA143828
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 220 Cal. Rptr. 3d 170 (Duarte v. Pac. Specialty Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal, 5th District primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duarte v. Pac. Specialty Ins. Co., 220 Cal. Rptr. 3d 170, 13 Cal. App. 5th 45, 2017 WL 2537241, 2017 Cal. App. LEXIS 593 (Cal. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Miller, J.

*47Not long after Victor Duarte bought an insurance policy from Pacific Specialty Insurance Company (Pacific) to cover a rental property he owned, he was sued by his tenants. When Pacific refused to defend him against the tenants' claims, Duarte sued Pacific, seeking, among other things, a declaration that Pacific was required to defend him in the tenant suit. The trial court granted Pacific's motion for summary judgment, ruling that Pacific was entitled to rescind the policy because Duarte "made material misrepresentations and/or concealed material facts" when he applied for the policy and that rescission rendered the policy unenforceable from the outset, and therefore Duarte never had any coverage and was not entitled to any benefits from the policy. The "misrepresentations" at issue here concern Duarte's responses of "no" to questions 4 and 9 in the insurance application. Question 4 is, at best, ambiguous: "Has damage remained unrepaired from previous claim and/or pending claims, and/or known or potential (a) defects, (b) claim *48disputes, (c) property disputes, and/or (d) lawsuits?" Question 9 is more straightforward: "Is there any type of business conducted on the premises?"

Duarte appeals, arguing that Pacific did not establish as a matter of law that it was entitled to rescind the policy. We agree with Duarte, and therefore we reverse and remand.

*173FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The following facts are undisputed. In 2001, Victor Duarte bought property at 1825 East 19th Street in Oakland (the property). Steven Bowers, who occupied the house on the property at that time, entered a rental contract with Duarte and remained at the property as a tenant. At some point, Bowers's daughter, Jennifer Pleasants, moved into the property, and she remained there after Bowers died in about 2010. In February 2012, Duarte gave Pleasants a 45-day notice to quit, but she did not leave.1 On April 19, just two months later, Duarte applied for landlord-tenant insurance coverage for the property with Pacific through Yin Tang Insurance.2 The application was submitted electronically, and the same day, Pacific issued Duarte a policy on the property that included "Owners, Landlords & Tenants Liability Coverage," effective April 19, 2012 to April 19, 2013 (the policy).

In June 2012, Pleasants and Jeremy Mueller filed a lawsuit against Duarte in superior court (tenant suit), setting out 10 causes of action arising from habitability defects that had allegedly existed throughout their tenancy, which began in 2009. Claiming that they had notified Duarte about the defects, and that they suffered emotional distress and physical injury, overpayment of rent and out-of-pocket expenses, they sought to recover damages, attorneys' fees and costs.

In August 2012, Duarte tendered defense of the tenant suit to Pacific, which denied coverage and refused to defend the suit. In July 2013, after several months of correspondence with Pacific, Duarte sued Pacific in superior court seeking a declaration that the policy required Pacific to defend Duarte in the tenant suit and also seeking damages for breach of contract and tortious breach of insurance contract, on the grounds that Pacific not only failed to defend the tenant suit, but also "wrongfully cancelled" his policy. Pacific answered with a general denial, and alleged a number of affirmative *49defenses, including its "right to rescind the policy in its entirety since inception because of material misrepresentations, fraud and/or concealment of material facts made by plaintiff on the application."

In March 2014, Duarte filed a motion for summary adjudication on his claim for declaratory relief, arguing he was entitled to a ruling that Pacific owed him a duty to defend the tenant lawsuit. On the same day, Pacific filed a motion for summary judgment or, in the alternative, summary adjudication, arguing it was entitled to rescind the policy because Duarte made material misrepresentations in his application for insurance. Pacific argued that when Duarte applied for coverage in April 2012 he answered "no" to question 4, thereby representing that there were no disputes concerning the property even though he knew there was a dispute with the tenants about the property as evidenced by his responses the previous month to a complaint made by tenants to the City of Oakland, and he answered "no" to question 9, thereby representing to Pacific that there was no business conducted on the property even though just a month earlier "he advised the City of Oakland that the *174tenants had 'opened a shop,' were conducting 'dangerous' welding activities, and were selling goods in connection therewith." Pacific also argued that Duarte's contract claim failed because the tenant suit did not give rise to coverage under the policy, that Duarte's tort claim failed because there was no coverage for the tenant suit and it had acted reasonably in denying Duarte's tender, and that Duarte had no tort claim for the non-renewal of the policy.3 The motions were scheduled for hearing on May 21, 2014. The parties filed opposition papers on May 7 and replies on May 16.

Duarte's opposition to Pacific's motion and his reply to Pacific's opposition rested in part on arguments that Pacific impermissibly relied on documents subpoenaed from the City of Oakland (Oakland records) to prove its rescission defense. Duarte objected that the Oakland records, which were attached as an exhibit to a declaration from Pacific's attorney, were unauthenticated and constituted inadmissible hearsay.

In advance of the scheduled hearing, the trial court published a tentative ruling that continued the hearing on Pacific's motion "because [Pacific] filed the motion prematurely." The court stated that Pacific could not "establish that [Duarte] concealed material facts or made material misrepresentations in his insurance application by submitting unauthenticated records." The court ordered Pacific to "conduct additional discovery and file supplemental papers in support" of its motion by September 8, 2014, set a schedule for the parties to file supplemental opposition and reply papers, and continued the hearing to *50October 8, 2014. The trial court also published a tentative ruling continuing Duarte's motion to October 8 without explanation, but presumably because the motions were related and Pacific's opposition to Duarte's motion relied in part on the same records as Pacific's own motion. The tentative rulings were not contested and became orders of the court on May 21, 2014.4 *175Pacific and Duarte filed their supplemental papers on Pacific's motion in September. This time, Pacific's papers included a declaration from Connie Taylor, a manager of the Rent Adjustment Program (the Rent Program) in City of Oakland's Department of Housing and Development.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
220 Cal. Rptr. 3d 170, 13 Cal. App. 5th 45, 2017 WL 2537241, 2017 Cal. App. LEXIS 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duarte-v-pac-specialty-ins-co-calctapp5d-2017.