McMillin Homes Construction v. Natl. Fire & Marine Ins. Co.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 5, 2019
DocketD074219
StatusPublished

This text of McMillin Homes Construction v. Natl. Fire & Marine Ins. Co. (McMillin Homes Construction v. Natl. Fire & Marine 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
McMillin Homes Construction v. Natl. Fire & Marine Ins. Co., (Cal. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed 6/5/19

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

MCMILLIN HOMES CONSTRUCTION, D074219 INC.,

Plaintiff and Appellant, (San Diego County Super. Ct. v. No. 37-2016-00007136-CU-IC-CTL)

NATIONAL FIRE & MARINE INSURANCE COMPANY,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County,

Timothy B. Taylor, Judge. Reversed.

Ryan & Associates and Greg J. Ryan for Plaintiff and Appellant.

Summers & Shives, Martin L. Shives, and Peter B. Lightstone for Defendant and

Respondent.

A general contractor was covered as an additional insured on a commercial

general liability (CGL) policy issued to its roofing subcontractor. The insurer refused to

defend the general contractor after it was sued by homeowners for construction defects concerning roofing, prompting this lawsuit. After a bench trial, the trial court concluded

the insurer owed no duty to defend. It believed the exclusion in the additional insured

endorsement for damage to "property in the care, custody or control of the additional

insured" precluded any duty to defend the general contractor in construction defect

litigation.

The general contractor disputes the insurer's interpretation of the policy and asserts

there was a duty to defend. We agree and reverse the judgment.1 As judicially

construed, the care, custody, or control exclusion requires exclusive or complete control.

(Home Indem. Co. v. Leo L. Davis, Inc. (1978) 79 Cal.App.3d 863, 872 (Davis).) The

facts indicate only shared control between the general contractor and its roofing

subcontractor. Because the insurer did not prove coverage for the underlying

construction defect litigation was impossible, it owed the general contractor a duty to

defend the homeowner claim.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

McMillin Homes Construction, Inc. acted as the developer and general contractor

on the Auburn Lane housing community project in the city of Chula Vista. It hired

Martin Roofing Company, Inc. to "render a complete roofing job." The subcontract

required Martin to obtain general liability insurance naming McMillin as an additional

insured.

1 After oral argument, the parties stipulated to a dismissal of this case. We elected to proceed with the opinion given because the appeal was fully briefed and raised important issues. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.244(c)(2); Greb v. Diamond Internat. Corp. (2013) 56 Cal.4th 243, 247, fn. 3.) 2 National Fire and Marine Insurance Company issued a CGL policy to Martin.

Effective from November 12, 2003 to November 12, 2004, the policy covered " 'property

damage' " or " 'bodily injury' " caused by an " 'occurrence' " during the policy period.

McMillin was covered as an additional insured under ISO endorsement form CG 20 09

03 97 (hereafter CG 20 09).2 National Fire broadly agreed to cover property damage or

bodily injury during the policy period arising out of Martin's ongoing operations at

Auburn Lane, or out of McMillin's general supervision of those operations. Central to

this appeal is the "care, custody or control exclusion" (hereafter CCC exclusion):

National Fire excluded coverage for damage to property in McMillin's "care, custody, or

control."3

In 2014, homeowners in seven projects developed and built by McMillin,

including Auburn Lane, sued McMillin for construction defects. (Gabriel Galvan, et al.

v. McMillin Auburn Lane II, LLC, et al. (Super. Ct. San Diego County, 2014, No. 37-

2014-00007987-CU-CD-CTL) (Galvan).) The complaint alleged water intrusion and

damage caused by roofing defects. Two homes that Martin worked on were at issue in

Galvan.

2 The Insurance Services Office, or ISO, "is a nonprofit trade association that provides rating, statistical, and actuarial policy forms and related drafting services to approximately 3,000 nationwide property or casualty insurers. Policy forms developed by ISO are approved by its constituent insurance carriers and then submitted to state agencies for review. Most carriers use the basic ISO forms, at least as the starting point for their general liability policies." (Montrose Chemical Corp. v. Admiral Ins. Co. (1995) 10 Cal.4th 645, 671, fn. 13.)

3 Most other subcontractors added McMillin to their policies under CG 20 10 endorsements or their equivalents, which lack the CCC exclusion. 3 McMillin tendered its defense of the Galvan action to National Fire in June 2014,

attaching a subcontract addendum for Martin's work; the additional insured endorsement;

the Galvan complaint; a matrix of homes at issue in Galvan; and a matrix of insurance

carriers McMillin believed owed a defense duty. National Fire refused coverage, noting

McMillin had not provided a copy of the McMillin-Martin subcontract. McMillin

submitted the subcontract and sought reconsideration. National Fire again denied owing

McMillin a duty to defend.

McMillin sued National Fire in 2016 for declaratory relief, breach of contract, and

breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. With respect to each cause

of action, the operative Third Amended Complaint alleged that National Fire breached its

duty to defend McMillin in Galvan.

The parties agreed to bifurcate proceedings. (Code Civ. Proc., § 598.) Phase one

was a bench trial on the papers to decide whether National Fire owed McMillin a duty to

defend under the additional insured endorsement. Jointly submitted exhibits included

policy documents, the subcontract, Galvan pleadings, and communications between

McMillin and National Fire regarding coverage. National Fire also submitted deposition

excerpts and discovery responses, but the court sustained McMillin's objections to these

4 on relevancy grounds because they were not known to National Fire when any defense

duty was triggered.4

The parties offered competing interpretations of the CCC exclusion. Citing Davis,

supra, 79 Cal.App.3d 863, McMillin argued it applied only where control over the

damaged property was complete or exclusive. Disagreeing, National Fire noted those

words were missing from the text of the exclusion. It also claimed a separate

endorsement (CG 21 39 10 93 (hereafter CG 21 39)) intended to " 'close the loop' " by

eliminating indirect indemnity coverage to McMillin for construction defect litigation

pursuant to the subcontract.

The court entered judgment in favor of National Fire. It acknowledged decisions

broadly construing the duty to defend for general contractors covered as additional

insureds. (Pulte Home Corp. v. American Safety Indemnity Co. (2017) 14 Cal.App.5th

1086 (Pulte); McMillin Management Services, L.P. v. Financial Pacific Ins. Co. (2017)

17 Cal.App.5th 187 (McMillin).) But those cases did not involve the CG 20 09

endorsement with its CCC exclusion. As the first to construe that exclusion in the GC 20

09 form, the court declined to require exclusive or complete control.

The court stated the GC 20 09 endorsement was "specifically drafted to avoid

affording insurance to a general contractor in a construction defect setting where the

4 National Fire argues the court erred in sustaining McMillin's evidentiary objections.

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