James 3 Corp. v. Truck Insurance Exchange

111 Cal. Rptr. 2d 181, 91 Cal. App. 4th 1093
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 23, 2001
DocketH020687
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 111 Cal. Rptr. 2d 181 (James 3 Corp. v. Truck Insurance Exchange) 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
James 3 Corp. v. Truck Insurance Exchange, 111 Cal. Rptr. 2d 181, 91 Cal. App. 4th 1093 (Cal. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Opinion

WUNDERLICH, J.

James 3 Corporation and its president, James R. Stanclift, were sued by a competitor in federal court. They tendered the defense of the lawsuit to their business liability insurer, Truck Insurance Exchange (Truck), which accepted the tender subject to a reservation of rights. Truck then retained counsel to provide the insureds with a defense. The insureds objected to being represented by retained defense counsel and, citing an alleged conflict of interest, demanded that Truck allow them to choose their own counsel. Truck refused, and the insureds filed the instant declaratory relief action in the superior court. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Truck, finding that there was no actual conflict of interest. The insureds appeal from the ensuing judgment and from an earlier discovery order. We shall affirm the judgment.

Facts

Plaintiffs James 3 Corporation, doing business as Sugar Sweet Syrup Company, Inc., and Sugar Sweet’s president, James R. Stanclift, manufactured and sold beverage syrups to 7-Eleven and other stores for use in frozen carbonated beverages, more commonly known as “Slurpees.” From December 28, 1992, to December 15, 1996, plaintiffs were insured by Truck under various commercial general liability insurance policies.

On August 13, 1997, Coca-Cola Company, which competed with plaintiffs in supplying soft drink syrups to 7-Eleven franchises in the Bay Area, filed suit against plaintiffs in the United States District Court. In its lawsuit, Coca-Cola alleged that Sugar Sweet was dispensing its generic syrup through dispensers owned by Coca-Cola, thereby misleading the public into believing they were receiving genuine Coca-Cola products, and based on these allegations it asserted the following eight causes of action against plaintiffs: (1) trademark infringement under the Lanham Act, (2) contributory infringement, (3) false designation of origin, (4) California trademark infringement, (5) California statutory unfair competition, (6) common law *1098 unfair competition, (7) fraud, and (8) accounting. The following month, Coca-Cola filed a first amended complaint.

Plaintiffs retained an attorney who filed an answer to Coca-Cola’s complaint on September 22, 1997. Two months later, that attorney tendered defense of the Coca-Cola action to Truck. Truck accepted the tender and retained Attorney David Miclean of the Ropers, Majeski, Kohn & Bentley law firm to defend the insureds.

On February 6, 1998, Truck notified the insureds that it would provide a defense “ ‘based on the potential that [Coca-Cola’s] complaint seeks damages within the Advertising Liability definition,’ ” subject to a reservation of rights to deny coverage in the event Coca-Cola’s damages were not sustained as a result of plaintiffs’ advertising activities. Truck denied coverage for any breach of contract or punitive damages and reserved its right to seek reimbursement of attorney’s fees and costs paid to defend noncovered claims. Truck also informed the insureds that there was no “conflict of interest between you and Truck” and that consequently it would not pay for independent defense counsel.

Subsequently, Miclean, Truck’s retained counsel, sent Truck an “initial” evaluation of the case identifying various affirmative defenses, including one for antitrust violations. Miclean noted that it might be in the insureds’ best interest to file an affirmative counterclaim alleging Coca-Cola’s violation of antitrust laws. Later, however, Miclean told the insureds that he had “only been retained to represent [their] interests as a defendant in this lawsuit and would probably not be able to perform work on an affirmative counterclaim (other than perhaps an indemnity claim.)”

In April 1998, the insureds retained independent counsel (the Wineberg, Simmonds & Narita law firm) to codefend the underlying action and to pursue an affirmative counterclaim against Coca-Cola. In May 1998, independent counsel wrote to Truck, demanding that Truck pay their fees and costs because of a conflict of interest. Independent counsel explained, “Truck has reserved its rights on several issues, the outcome of which can be controlled by counsel first retained by Truck for the defense of the claims asserted, raising potential conflicts of interest between Truck and the insured which require Truck to pay for independent counsel. Those issues include, but are not limited to: the fraud claim asserted by The Coca-Cola Company against the insured; Truck’s reservation of the right to allocate any payment between covered and non-covered claims and/or to seek contribution or reimbursement from the insured for any costs, fees or indemnity payments made on non-covered claims; Truck’s reservation of rights as to contractual damages; and Truck’s reservation of rights as to ‘advertising activities.’ ”

*1099 In response to the insureds’ demand, Truck retained a second attorney, Arthur Schwartz of the Fisher & Hurst law firm, to evaluate and advise whether a disqualifying conflict of interest existed. On June 4, 1998, Schwartz responded to independent counsel, stating that Truck “must respectfully decline [to appoint you as Cumis 1 counsel]. ... In our opinion, no conflict is created by some of the reservations you’ve cited. As to the remaining reservations, Truck will waive them.” Truck then explained that it would waive its advertising activities reservation, thereby agreeing to indemnify the insureds for compensatory damages arising out of the trademark infringement, unfair competition, and related causes of action. It would also waive its reservation of rights as to damages for breach of contract. Truck, however, reiterated that there was no coverage under the policy for Coca-Cola’s fraud claim, its claim for restitution and disgorgement of the insureds’ allegedly wrongfully obtained profits, or its request for attorney fees under the Lanham Act. Finally, Truck stated it would defer until after the underlying action was resolved any decision to exercise its right to seek reimbursement of indemnity payments or defense costs allocable to noncovered claims.

On June 17, 1998, plaintiffs filed the instant declaratory relief action, requesting a judicial determination that Truck is obligated to pay for Cumis counsel because “Truck has reserved its rights on several issues, the outcome of which can be controlled by” defense counsel and because of Truck’s refusal to pay for prosecuting the insureds’ antitrust counterclaim. Plaintiffs filed a motion for summary judgment in October 1998, but that motion was denied.

In April 1999, the insureds filed a motion to compel further responses from Truck to requests for production of Truck’s claims files, correspondence, bills, invoices, reports, coverage evaluations, and claim or billing procedures that in any way referred or related to the Coca-Cola action. The trial court denied the insureds’ motion, noting that “plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate that the discovery is reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence in this case, which is a limited declaratory *1100 relief case. [H] . . . [H] . . . In this declaratory relief action, it’s . . . limited [to] whether or not Cumis

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Bluebook (online)
111 Cal. Rptr. 2d 181, 91 Cal. App. 4th 1093, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-3-corp-v-truck-insurance-exchange-calctapp-2001.