Marina Pacific Hotel and Suites, LLC v. Fireman's Fund Ins. Co.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 13, 2022
DocketB316501
StatusPublished

This text of Marina Pacific Hotel and Suites, LLC v. Fireman's Fund Ins. Co. (Marina Pacific Hotel and Suites, LLC v. Fireman's Fund Ins. Co.) 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
Marina Pacific Hotel and Suites, LLC v. Fireman's Fund Ins. Co., (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 7/13/22 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SEVEN

MARINA PACIFIC HOTEL B316501 AND SUITES, LLC, et al., (Los Angeles County Plaintiffs and Super. Ct. No. Appellants, 20SMCV00952)

v.

FIREMAN’S FUND INSURANCE COMPANY,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Craig D. Karlan, Judge. Reversed and remanded with directions. Barnes & Thornburg, David P. Schack, Matthew B. O’Hanlon and Jonathan J. Boustani for Plaintiffs and Appellants Marina Pacific Hotel & Suites, LLC, Venice Windward, LLC, Larry’s Venice, L.P. and Erwin H. Sokol. DLA PIPER, John P. Phillips, Joseph Davison and Brett Solberg for Defendant and Respondent. _____________________ For more than two years our understanding of COVID-19, the infectious disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus and its many variants, has evolved.1 Today we think we know how it spreads, how to protect against it and how best to treat those who have it. Perhaps we do. But even so, when a pleading alleges facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, what we think we know—beliefs not yet appropriately subject to judicial notice— has never been a proper basis for concluding, as a matter of law, those alleged facts cannot be true and, on that ground, sustaining a demurrer without leave to amend. Yet that is precisely what occurred here. The owners of Hotel Erwin and Larry’s (a restaurant adjacent to the hotel) in Venice Beach—Marina Pacific Hotel & Suites, LLC; Venice Windward, LLC; Larry’s Venice, L.P.; and Erwin H. Sokol, as trustee of the Frances Sokol Trust (collectively insureds)—sued Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company alleging the COVID-19 virus was present on, and had physically transformed, portions of the insured properties—“direct physical loss or damage” within the meaning of Fireman’s Fund’s first- party commercial property insurance policy—but Fireman’s Fund refused to pay policy benefits for covered losses incurred as a result. The trial court sustained Fireman’s Fund’s demurrer to the insureds’ first amended complaint without leave to amend and dismissed the lawsuit, ruling the COVID-19 virus cannot cause direct physical loss or damage to property for purposes of

1 For ease of reference we refer, as do the parties, to the “COVID-19 virus.”

2 insurance coverage. That might be the correct outcome following a trial or even a motion for summary judgment. It was error at this nascent phase of the case. We reverse. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 1. The Fireman’s Fund (Allianz) Policy2 As alleged in the operative first amended complaint, Fireman’s Fund issued its commercial property insurance policy no. USC007058190 for the period July 1, 2019 to July 1, 2020 to provide coverage for Hotel Erwin and Larry’s. Marina Pacific Hotel & Suites, LLC; Venice Windward, LLC; Larry’s Venice, L.P.; and Erwin H. Sokol, as trustee of the Frances Sokol Trust— plaintiffs in this litigation—were named insureds. A copy of the policy was attached as Exhibit A to the pleading. The policy’s general property coverage provision states, “[W]e will pay for direct physical loss or damage to [the insured property] caused by or resulting from a covered cause of loss during the Policy Period.” The policy provided business interruption coverage (with a $22 million limit) for “the actual loss of business income and necessary extra expense you sustain due to the necessary suspension of your operation during the period of restoration arising from direct physical loss or damage to [covered] property.” The terms printed in boldface type were separately defined. As pertinent here, “covered cause of loss” was defined as “risk of direct physical loss or damage not excluded or limited in the Coverage Form”; “business income” was defined as the net profit or loss before

2 The policy attached to the first amended complaint and cited by both the insureds and Fireman’s Fund is identified as “Allianz Global Corporate & Specialty® Allianz Insurance Policy.” Fireman’s Fund is a member of the Allianz Group.

3 income taxes from the business’s operations; “suspension” as “the slowdown or cessation” of operations and also meant that part or all of the premises had been rendered untenable. “Period of restoration” meant “the period of time that begins immediately after the time of direct physical loss or damage caused by or resulting from a covered cause of loss to the property” and ends when the property “should be repaired, rebuilt, or replaced with reasonable speed and like kind or quality.” The policy also included “communicable disease coverage” (with a policy limit of $1 million), providing the insurer would pay “for direct physical loss or damage” to insured property “caused by or resulting from a covered communicable disease event,” including costs necessary to repair or rebuild insured property damaged or destroyed by the communicable disease and to “[m]itigate, contain, remediate, treat, clean, detoxify, disinfect, neutralize, cleanup, remove, dispose of, test for, monitor and assess the effects [of] the communicable disease.” In addition, business interruption coverage was provided for suspension of operations during a period of restoration, provided the suspension was “due to direct physical loss or damage to property at a location caused by or resulting from a covered communicable disease event.” “Communicable disease” was defined as “any disease, bacteria, or virus that may be transmitted directly or indirectly from human or animal to a human.” “Communicable disease event” was defined as “an event in which a public health authority has ordered that a location be evacuated, decontaminated, or disinfected due to the outbreak of a communicable disease at such location.” As one of the exclusions applicable to all coverages (property coverage, business income and extra expense coverage

4 or any extensions of coverage), the policy, under the heading “Mortality and Disease,” provided the insurer would not pay for any loss, damage or expense caused directly or indirectly by, or resulting from, “[m]ortality, death by natural causes, disease, sickness, any condition of health, bacteria, or virus.” 2. The First Amended Complaint The insureds filed their complaint against Fireman’s Fund on July 21, 2020—four months after the COVID-19 pandemic first gripped the United States and three weeks after the end of the policy period—and the operative first amended complaint on August 31, 2021, alleging causes of action for breach of contract, tortious breach of contract, elder abuse and unfair competition. All four causes of action were based on Fireman’s Fund’s denial of coverage and refusal to pay (or to advance) policy benefits for losses claimed by the insureds as a result of the pandemic. The first amended complaint alleged, in part, the insureds, beginning in March 2020, had suffered loss arising from direct physical loss or damage to covered property based on the existence of COVID-19. They asserted that “COVID-19 is a covered cause of loss under the Policy because it is not excluded or limited thereunder” and, on information and belief, that “the presence of COVID-19 on property, including on and within Insured Properties (i.e., an external force), caused and continues to cause physical loss and/or damage to property by causing, among other things, a distinct, demonstrable or physical alteration to property” and “by transforming the physical condition of property at Insured Properties and within the covered radius,” causing the properties to remain in an unsafe and hazardous condition.

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Marina Pacific Hotel and Suites, LLC v. Fireman's Fund Ins. Co., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marina-pacific-hotel-and-suites-llc-v-firemans-fund-ins-co-calctapp-2022.