Great American Insurance v. Superior Court

178 Cal. App. 4th 221, 100 Cal. Rptr. 3d 258, 2009 Cal. App. LEXIS 1658
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 9, 2009
DocketB203121
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 178 Cal. App. 4th 221 (Great American Insurance v. Superior Court) 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
Great American Insurance v. Superior Court, 178 Cal. App. 4th 221, 100 Cal. Rptr. 3d 258, 2009 Cal. App. LEXIS 1658 (Cal. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion

CROSKEY, J.

When a liability insurer providing a defense to its insured believes there is no longer a potential for coverage and, therefore, it is no longer required to defend, it may bring a declaratory relief action to obtain a judicial declaration that it need no longer do so. The insured, however, may seek to stay the insurer’s declaratory relief action if proceeding on that action could prejudice its defense of the underlying liability action. In this case, we consider the circumstances in which the trial court must grant a stay, and when the court may exercise its discretion on the issue.

Petitioner Great American Insurance Company (Great American) insured Angeles Chemical Company, Inc. (Angeles), and its officers and directors. Angeles and a neighboring property owner, McKesson Corporation (McKesson), sued each other for cleanup costs relating to environmental contamination of the groundwater beneath both sites. The complaints also named officers and directors of each company. Various cross-complaints were filed; the subsequent owner of the Angeles site sued some, but not all, of the Angeles owners and directors; those owners and directors sued Angeles.

Great American settled the lawsuits filed against its insureds by McKesson and McKesson-related individuals, leaving actions among the Angeles-related parties still pending. Great American then brought the instant declaratory relief action, seeking a declaration that those settlements had exhausted its policy limits and that it was therefore no longer obligated to defend its insureds in the still-pending litigation. The insureds sought a stay of the *226 declaratory relief action, on the basis that resolution of the issues raised in the declaratory relief action would prejudice it in the still-pending underlying litigation. The trial court agreed and granted the stay. Great American sought relief by a petition for writ of mandate. We issued an order to show cause and, for the reasons stated below, now grant that petition.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

1. The Parties and the Property

From 1976 to 2001, Angeles operated a chemical repackaging plant on its property (the Angeles site). The Angeles site was not originally owned by Angeles; instead, in 1975, it was leased 1 to Angeles by John & Janyce Locke (the Lockes), Robert and Donna Berg (the Bergs), and Pearl and Arnold Rosenthal (the Rosenthals). 2 In 1994, the Lockes, Bergs, and Rosenthals transferred the property outright to Angeles. In addition to initially owning the property, the Lockes, Bergs, and Rosenthals were all officers of Angeles. As will become apparent, there is now a schism between Angeles and the Lockes on one side, and the Bergs and Rosenthals on the other. The Angeles site is no longer owned by Angeles. In 2001, Angeles sold the Angeles site to Greve Financial Services, Inc. (Greve). Greve appears to have aligned itself with Angeles and the Lockes against the Bergs and Rosenthals. Greve, Angeles and the Lockes are all represented by the same counsel.

Great American is one of many insurers that wrote policies covering Angeles. The policy at issue (the policy) identifies the policy period as November 1, 1976, through November 1, 1977—this latter date was later changed by interlineation to read January 1, 1978. Whether these additional two months of coverage constitute a second policy period or merely an extension of a single policy period is an issue which will be resolved in this declaratory relief action.

Under the policy, Great American covered not only Angeles, but “any executive officer thereof and the spouse of such executive officer, while acting within the scope of his duties as such.” We therefore use “the insureds” to refer to Angeles, the Lockes, the Bergs, and the Rosenthals collectively; Greve is not an insured. The policy provides for an aggregate limit of $500,000; the language of the policy also provides, however, that the aggregate limit applies separately to property damage arising out of operations and “property damage for which liability is assumed by the named *227 insured under contracts covered by this policy.” The nature and extent of the covered claims and whether the policy’s aggregate limit has been reached are also issues to be resolved in this declaratory relief action.

Angeles had other insurance policies with other carriers, both primary and excess, which also provide coverage for the claims at issue. Angeles and the Lockes believe that there is an additional $32 million in coverage available, while the Bergs and Rosenthals state that the amount is in excess of $20 million. In our consideration of the issues, we will assume the more conservative figure.

Next to the Angeles site is the property owned by McKesson, which also operated a chemical repackaging facility on its property. The McKesson site is alleged to be owned by Harvey Sorkin, Seymour Moslin, Joseph Sorkin, and the Estate of Paul Maslin (the McKesson owners).

It is undisputed that there has been significant environmental contamination of both the Angeles site and the McKesson site, specifically affecting the groundwater beneath the sites. What is unknown is whether the contamination is due: (1) solely to activities on the Angeles site; (2) solely to activities on the McKesson site; or (3) a combination of activities on both sites. 3 The federal and state governments sought substantial cleanup costs for the contamination on both sites.

2. The Lawsuits

The initial complaint was filed in federal court by Angeles, Greve, and John Locke against McKesson and the McKesson owners. The operative pleading is the fourth amended complaint, which alleges 13 causes of action, including liability under CERCLA, 4 and related state law causes of action. The complaint also names the Bergs and Rosenthals as defendants. While the general allegations of the complaint seek a declaration that McKesson, the McKesson owners, the Bergs, and the Rosenthals are “jointly and severally *228 liable for the presence of hazardous substances contamination” at the McKesson site and the Angeles site, the only causes of action against the Bergs and Rosenthals are those alleged by Greve alone. 5

This complaint resulted in a counterclaim by McKesson against Angeles, Greve, the Lockes, Bergs, and Rosenthals. The operative pleading was the fourth amended counterclaim. In it, McKesson alleged 12 causes of action, including liability under CERCLA, and related state causes of action. McKesson alleged that the Angeles site “is hydrogeologically upgradient of the McKesson [s]ite,” and that chemicals released by Angeles’s operations migrated from the Angeles site to the McKesson site. While McKesson’s causes of action were concerned with the eventual contamination of the McKesson site, they relied on Angeles’s initial contamination of its own site.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 Cal. App. 4th 221, 100 Cal. Rptr. 3d 258, 2009 Cal. App. LEXIS 1658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-american-insurance-v-superior-court-calctapp-2009.