Endeavor Operating Company, LLC v. HDI Global Insurance Company

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 19, 2023
DocketB323865M
StatusPublished

This text of Endeavor Operating Company, LLC v. HDI Global Insurance Company (Endeavor Operating Company, LLC v. HDI Global Insurance Company) 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
Endeavor Operating Company, LLC v. HDI Global Insurance Company, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 10/19/23 (unmodified opn. attached) CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

ENDEAVOR OPERATING B323865 COMPANY, LLC, (Los Angeles County Plaintiff and Appellant, Super. Ct. No. 21STCV23693) v. ORDER MODIFYING HDI GLOBAL INSURANCE OPINION AND DENYING COMPANY et al., REHEARING

Defendants and NO CHANGE IN THE Respondents. JUDGMENT

THE COURT:

It is ordered that the opinion filed herein on September 21, 2023, be modified as follows:

1. On page 2, line 3 of the first full paragraph, insert the word “specific” before the word “global” and insert the phrase “had yet to occur and hence” before the phrase “was most assuredly” so the full sentence reads:

This appeal involves a poorly drafted commercial property insurance policy, and whether the parties intended that policy to cover economic losses stemming from a specific global pandemic that had yet to occur and hence was most assuredly outside the parties’ contemplation when they drafted the policy.

2. On page 4, immediately after the heading entitled “The insurance policy” add as footnote 1 the following footnote, which will require renumbering of all subsequent footnotes:

1 In its petition for rehearing, Endeavor accuses the court of misleadingly omitting language from the policy provisions cited below. We have reviewed its accusations, and conclude that the omitted language in no way affects our analysis.

3. On page 21, line 7, insert the phrase “any outbreak of” before the phrase “the COVID-19 pandemic.”

4. On page 21, line 9, immediately after the sentence ending with “no direct physical loss or damage to property” add as footnote 11 the following footnote, which will require renumbering of all subsequent footnotes:

2 11 In its petition for rehearing, Endeavor takes issue with our decision to address its “event” argument as part of our examination of whether Endeavor needs to establish any “physical loss or damage.” Specifically, Endeavor claims that this analytical approach “improperly” “refashions” its argument. We are unpersuaded. Appellate courts are not obligated to organize opinions to track the parties’ briefs, particularly when the court has a more efficient and logical way to do so. More to the point, Endeavor’s “event” argument would—if valid— obviate the need to show any “physical loss or damage,” which is precisely why we view it as a subset of the broader issue of whether the policy requires “physical loss or damage” as a prerequisite to coverage.

5. On page 22, at the end of the paragraph ending with “(Id. at p. 662, italics added.)” add the following sentence and footnote as footnote 13, which will require renumbering of all subsequent footnotes:

In its petition for rehearing, Endeavor argues that the “loss or damage” need not be a “physical loss or damage” (such that a monetary loss will suffice), but this argument ignores our analysis—set forth above—that the policy covers monetary losses only if they are predicated on “physical loss or damage.”13

3 13 Endeavor also lodges an overarching objection to our reliance on the policy’s definition of “occurrence” because the parties did not rely on that definition in their briefing; Endeavor urges that we should have sought supplemental briefing regarding that term, and that our failure to do so entitles it to the grant of rehearing. Endeavor is wrong. Supplemental briefing—either before or after an opinion is rendered—is required only when a court addresses “an issue which was not proposed or briefed by any party to the proceeding.” (Gov. Code, § 68081, italics added.) The issue before us is whether the policy requires a showing of “physical loss or damage,” and that issue calls upon us to engage in a de novo review of the terms of the policy. Endeavor cites no authority for the proposition that a court—on pain of rehearing—must seek supplemental briefing from the parties merely because it develops a rationale, cites a contract provision, or cites a case pertinent to the issue the parties have briefed. The parties’ failure to fully analyze an issue they squarely presented is not a basis for rehearing.

6. On page 24, line 13 of the first full paragraph, immediately after the sentence ending with “the trial court sustained the insurers’ demurrer” add as footnote 15 the following footnote, which will require renumbering of all subsequent footnotes:

4 15 In its petition for rehearing, Endeavor argues that it articulated its “event” theory earlier. We disagree. Although the operative complaint cites the language in the policy regarding an “event” and Endeavor’s opposition to the demurrer sprinkled in the word “event” a handful of times, neither filing actually articulated the “event” theory Endeavor espouses on appeal. Endeavor’s reference to its “triple trigger” coverage at the initial demurrer hearing still does not constitute development of the “event” theory it advances on appeal.

7. On page 29, line 9 of footnote 13 (which subsequently will be renumbered footnote 17), delete the word “equating” and replace it with the phrase “declining to equate.”

* * *

There is no change in the judgment.

Appellant’s petition for rehearing is denied.

—————————————————————————————— LUI, P. J. CHAVEZ, J. HOFFSTADT, J.

5 Filed 9/21/23 (unmodified opinion) CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

ENDEAVOR OPERATING B323865 COMPANY, LLC, (Los Angeles County Plaintiff and Appellant, Super. Ct. No. 21STCV23693) v.

HDI GLOBAL INSURANCE COMPANY et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Elaine Lu, Judge. Affirmed.

Latham & Watkins, Kirsten C. Jackson, Robert J. Gilbert, David A. Barrett, Roman Martinez, Eric J. Konopka, Alexader G. Siemers; The Law Offices of Dorn G. Bishop and Dorn G. Bishop for Plaintiff and Appellant. Zelle, Thomas J. D’Antonio, Kristin C. Cummings; Greines, Martin, Stein & Richland, Laurie J. Hepler and Stefan C. Love for Defendant and Respondent HDI Global Insurance Company.

Clyde & Co, Susan Koehler Sullivan, Douglas J. Collodel and Gretchen S. Carner for Defendant and Respondent ACE Insurance Company.

Clyde & Co and Kathryn C. Ashton for Defendant and Respondent Interstate Fire & Casualty Company.

Dentons, Julia M. Beckley, Erin E. Bradham and Douglas Janicik for Defendant and Respondent AIG Specialty Insurance Company.

****** This appeal involves a poorly drafted commercial property insurance policy, and whether the parties intended that policy to cover economic losses stemming from a global pandemic that was most assuredly outside the parties’ contemplation when they drafted the policy. This appeal squarely presents two questions. First, can the policy holder in this case—an entertainment conglomerate that operates sports and other entertainment ventures at venues around the globe—recover the economic losses it suffered when the COVID-19 pandemic shut down many of those venues without first establishing that there was “direct physical loss or damage to property”? This question is one on which the Courts of Appeal have split, and is pending before our Supreme Court in John’s Grill, Inc. v. The Hartford Financial

2 Services Group, Inc. (2022) 86 Cal.App.5th 1195 (John’s Grill), review granted Mar. 29, 2023, S278481, and Another Planet Entertainment, LLC v. Vigilant Ins. Co. (9th Cir. 2022) 56 F.4th 730, request for certification granted Mar. 1, 2023, S277893. Until that Court provides guidance, we side with the vast majority of cases holding that direct physical loss or damage to property, rather than mere loss of the property’s use, is a prerequisite for coverage.

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Endeavor Operating Company, LLC v. HDI Global Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/endeavor-operating-company-llc-v-hdi-global-insurance-company-calctapp-2023.