Portrait Homes v. Pennsylvania National Mutual

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 13, 2023
Docket2020-000735
StatusPublished

This text of Portrait Homes v. Pennsylvania National Mutual (Portrait Homes v. Pennsylvania National Mutual) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Portrait Homes v. Pennsylvania National Mutual, (S.C. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Court of Appeals

Portrait Homes - South Carolina, LLC and Portrait Homes - Persimmon Hill, LLC, Plaintiffs,

v.

Pennsylvania National Mutual Casualty Insurance Company and The Persimmon Hill Homeowners Association, Inc., Defendants,

AND

The Persimmon Hill Homeowners Association, Inc., Third-Party Plaintiff,

Jose Castillo d/b/a JJA Framing and JJA Construction, Inc. d/b/a JJA Framing, Third-Party Defendants,

of which Pennsylvania National Mutual Casualty Insurance Company is the Appellant,

Portrait Homes - South Carolina, LLC, Portrait Homes - Persimmon Hill, LLC, and The Persimmon Hill Homeowners Association, Inc. are the Respondents.

Appellate Case No. 2020-000735

Appeal From Berkeley County Roger M. Young, Sr., Circuit Court Judge

Opinion No. 6038 Heard May 2, 2023 – Filed December 13, 2023

AFFIRMED

David L. Brown and John Irvin Malone, Jr., both of Greensboro, North Carolina, for Appellant.

Phillip Ward Segui, Jr., of Segui Law Firm, of Mount Pleasant, and John T. Chakeris and Alicia Denise Pullano, both of Chakeris Law Firm, of Charleston, all for Respondent The Persimmon Hill Homeowners Association, Inc.

Stanley Clarence Rodgers, of Law Office of Stanley C. Rodgers, LLC, of Charleston, for Respondents Portrait Homes - SC, LLC and Portrait Homes - Persimmon Hill, LLC.

KONDUROS, J.: This very complicated case concerns insurance coverage under commercial general-liability (CGL) insurance policies, including claims of bad faith, arising out of underlying construction defect lawsuits when Penn National Mutual Casualty Insurance Company (Penn National) asserts its insured, a subcontractor, did not notify it of the lawsuits and declined coverage. We affirm.

FACTS/PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Persimmon Hill is made up of 388 townhome units contained in 74 buildings located in Goose Creek, South Carolina. The Persimmon Hill community is governed by recorded covenants and restrictions that impose rights and obligations on the Persimmon Hill Homeowners Association, Inc. (the HOA), including the duty to repair and maintain the exteriors of the townhomes and common areas. Portrait Homes 1 was the developer and general contractor of Persimmon Hill. JJA

1 Portrait Homes is structured as various limited liability companies (LLCs). Portrait Homes - SC, LLC and Portrait Homes - Persimmon Hill, LLC (collectively, Portrait Homes) are the two named in this lawsuit. All of the Portrait Homes entities are subsidiaries of Pasquinelli Construction Company. Pasquinelli Framing was the primary framer for Persimmon Hill and framed the vast majority of the units there; it installed wooden framing components, windows and doors, window and door flashings, and weather barriers in approximately 85% of the units. Jose Castillo owned and operated JJA Framing. JJA Framing worked as a subcontractor for several Portrait Homes projects in the Charleston area.

While JJA Framing was working on the Persimmon Hill project, articles of incorporation for JJA Construction, Inc. were filed with the North Carolina Secretary of State's Office. According to Castillo, the sole proprietorship known as JJA Framing and JJA Construction, Inc. were the same business and entity, having "the same location, same employees, same trucks, same telephone number[,] and same federal ID number."

Portrait Homes relied exclusively on subcontractors to construct its projects. To reduce the risk of exposure to lawsuits arising from a subcontractor's defective work, Portrait Homes (1) required each subcontractor to defend and indemnify Portrait Homes for claims arising from the subcontractor's work and (2) required each subcontractor to have Portrait Homes named as an additional insured on their liability insurance policies.

Portrait Homes accomplished this by entering into two types of contracts with subcontractors. The first, called a Master Agreement, was a gateway document that qualified a subcontractor to work for Portrait Homes on any project. The second, called a Housing and Purchase Order Contract, was specific to a particular project, such as Persimmon Hill. Both of the contracts had to be in place before a subcontractor could work on a project. While the form of the contracts was periodically updated, the substance of the hold harmless and insurance requirements did not change; the two agreements each required a subcontractor to defend and indemnify Portrait Homes. Both contracts governed a subcontractor's work at a particular project, and the hold harmless and insurance obligations in the two contracts were intended to be complementary. In 2002, Portrait Homes and JJA Framing signed a Housing and Purchase Order for the Persimmon Hill project as well as a Master Agreement.

Penn National issued policies to JJA Framing and JJA Construction, Inc. through the W. Lee Taylor Agency. Two policies, policy period 2003-04 and 2004-05,

Management, LLC and Pasquinelli Homebuilding, LLC are other Pasquinelli entities not parties to this appeal but appearing on some of the documents in this case. provided Jose Castillo d/b/a JJA Framing Company as the named insured and listed Pasquinelli Construction Company; Pasquinelli Management, LLC; and Portrait Homes Construction Company as additional insured under endorsement CG 20 37 entitled Additional Insured - Owners, Lessees or Contractors - Completed Operations. On March 2, 2005, the named insured for the 2004-05 policy was changed to JJA Construction, Inc. Three policies, 2005-06, 2006-07, and 2007-08, listed JJA Construction, Inc. as the named insured and contained the additional insured endorsement 71 11 45 entitled Automatic Additional Insureds - Owners, Contractors and Subcontractors (Completed Operations).

In 2005, Portrait Homes received a certificate of insurance prepared by the W. Lee Taylor Agency relating to the 2005-06 Penn National Policy. It listed JJA Construction, Inc. and Jose Castillo as the insureds and Portrait Homes and Pasquinelli Management, LLC as additional insureds.

At some point, the Persimmon Hill townhomes began having issues with water intrusion. The professional engineer hired to investigate the issues believed the issues began two months after the certificate of occupancy was issued. In October 2012, a homeowner, on behalf of herself and other homeowners, and the HOA each brought suit against Portrait Homes. Both complaints were later amended to include Portrait Homes' subcontractors, including Jose Castillo d/b/a JJA Framing and JJA Construction, Inc. (collectively, JJA). Litigation continued for several years.

During the underlying Persimmon Hill litigation, Portrait Homes' insurance carrier, Admiral Insurance Company, agreed to defend it and retained Hood Law Firm to lead the defense. In June 2013, Hood Law Firm notified Penn National it believed JJA Framing's work contributed to the damages alleged in the lawsuits and demanded a defense and indemnification for Portrait Homes as an additional insured, referencing the 2005-06 Penn National policy.

On April 24, 2014, the HOA's counsel wrote Penn National transmitting both amended complaints and advising it if no answer were filed within fifteen days, an order of default and judgment would be sought against its insured, JJA.

In May 2014, after Hood Law Firm received no response from Penn National, it sent it another letter, this time referencing the 2004-05 Penn National policy, and repeated its demand for a defense and indemnification for Portrait Homes as an additional insured. On September 30, 2014, Greg Gross responded to Hood Law Firm on behalf of Penn National and provided Penn National's coverage determination for Portrait Homes and the rationale for the decision:

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