San Jose Sharks, LLC v. Super. Ct.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 21, 2023
DocketH050441
StatusPublished

This text of San Jose Sharks, LLC v. Super. Ct. (San Jose Sharks, LLC v. Super. Ct.) 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
San Jose Sharks, LLC v. Super. Ct., (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 12/21/23 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

SAN JOSE SHARKS, LLC, et al., H050441 (Santa Clara County Petitioners, Super. Ct. No. 21CV383780)

v.

THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SANTA CLARA COUNTY,

Respondent;

FACTORY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY,

Real Party in Interest.

The parties to the underlying action dispute whether losses plaintiffs1 incurred as a consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic are covered by a commercial insurance policy issued by defendant Factory Mutual Insurance Company. Plaintiffs’ petition for writ review of a trial court order striking the majority of their coverage theories calls for us to

1 Plaintiffs are the National Hockey League; NHL Enterprises L.P.; NHL Enterprises Canada, L.P.; NHL Enterprises B.V.; San Jose Sharks LLC; Sharks Sports & Entertainment LLC; Anaheim Ducks Hockey Club, LLC; IceArizona Holdings LLC; Hockey Western New York, LLC; DCP HH LLC; Dallas Sports & Entertainment, L.P.; Sunrise Sports & Entertainment LLC; Minnesota Hockey Ventures Group, LP; Club de Hockey Canadien, Inc.; Predators Holdings LLC; Devils Holdco LP; NY Hockey Holdings LLC; Capital Sports Holdings Inc.; Team Lemieux LLC; SLB Acquisition LLC; Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment LTD.; Aquilini Investment Group Limited Partnership; Black Knight Sports and Entertainment LLC; Megill-Stephenson Company Limited; and Osmington Inc. assess whether plaintiffs adequately pleaded “covered physical loss or damage to property due to COVID-19” and to interpret the terms of the operative insurance agreements. We conclude that the policies’ contamination exclusion, which the trial court did not reach, unambiguously operates to exclude viral contamination such that the trial court’s ultimate determination that plaintiffs cannot allege covered physical loss or damage to property is correct. Accordingly, we deny plaintiffs’ petition. I. BACKGROUND A. Plaintiffs’ Allegations in the Operative Second Amended Complaint2 Factory Mutual insured various of plaintiffs’ properties, including hockey arenas, “against ALL RISKS OF PHYSICAL LOSS OR DAMAGE” except as excluded. The “all risks” policies cover “TIME ELEMENT loss”—business interruption losses “directly resulting from physical loss or damage of the type insured” subject to certain conditions, including either gross earnings or gross profits and “expenses reasonably and necessarily incurred . . . to reduce the loss otherwise payable” under the time element coverage. The policies contain “additional time element coverage extensions” for “interruption by communicable disease,” which, subject to exclusions, are triggered when “a location owned, leased or rented by the Insured has the actual not suspected presence of communicable disease and access to such location is limited, restricted or prohibited by [¶] [(1)] an order of an authorized governmental agency regulating the actual not suspected presence of communicable disease; or [¶] [(2)] a decision of an Officer of the

2 In an amicus brief, the California Medical Association cautions against our perpetuating “dangerous misinformation” about the virus. To be clear, in a challenge to a complaint for failure to state a claim we are obliged to treat as true “ ‘ “ ‘ “all material facts properly pleaded, but not contentions, deductions or conclusions of fact or law.” ’ ” ’ ” (Mathews v. Becerra (2019) 8 Cal.5th 756, 768 (Mathews); see also Blank v. Kirwan (1985) 39 Cal.3d 311, 318.) We take no position as to the merits of plaintiffs’ factual allegations.

2 Insured as a result of the actual not suspected presence of communicable disease.” (Capitalization & boldface omitted.) The interruption by communicable disease coverage extension “covers the Actual Loss Sustained and EXTRA EXPENSE incurred . . . during the PERIOD OF LIABILITY at such location with the actual not suspected presence of communicable disease.” (Boldface omitted.) Further, the policies contain time element coverage extensions for “civil or military authority.” The civil authority extensions cover “the Actual Loss Sustained and EXTRA EXPENSE incurred by the Insured during the PERIOD OF LIABILITY if an order of civil . . . authority limits, restricts or prohibits partial or total access to an insured location provided such order is the direct result of physical damage of the type insured at the insured location or within five statute miles/eight kilometres of it.” (Boldface omitted.) Unless “directly resulting from other physical damage not excluded,” the policies exclude “contamination, and any cost due to contamination including the inability to use or occupy property or any cost of making property safe or suitable for use or occupancy. If contamination due only to the actual not suspected presence of contaminant(s) directly results from other physical damage not excluded . . . , then only physical damage caused by such contamination may be insured,” although the policies include additional coverage for specified decontamination costs. (Boldface omitted.) Contamination is defined as “any condition of property due to the actual or suspected presence of any foreign substance, impurity, pollutant, hazardous material, poison, toxin, pathogen or pathogenic organism, bacteria, virus, disease causing or illness causing agent, fungus, mold or mildew.” COVID-19 is a potentially deadly communicable disease caused by a coronavirus. Throughout 2020, the virus was presumed to be present or imminently present everywhere. As of March 22, 2022, there had been over 83 million cases of COVID-19 in the United States and Canada and over 6.1 million deaths worldwide. Many of these 3 illnesses were caused when people were exposed to “air and surfaces[ ]that had been physically . . . altered by the COVID-19 virus.” People infected with COVID-19 expel the virus when they exhale. Viral droplets may remain suspended in the air or adhere to surfaces. Viral droplets are also transferred to surfaces when an infected individual touches a surface after touching their eyes or nose. Plaintiffs further allege that the virus “changes the chemical composition of air . . . amount[ing] to physical damage” and “alter[s] the molecular structure of . . . otherwise inert property”: “The COVID-19 virus damages property . . . by adhering to and altering the structure of its surfaces. Specifically, . . . it has been reported that the virus changes the surfaces of that property as its spike proteins become entangled with, bound to, and part of the molecular surface of the materials with which it comes into contact. When that happens, the surfaces change in scientifically measurable and quantifiable ways. Moreover, as studies have shown, these materials then become infectious when touched and unfit for use.” “[B]ecause the virus renders otherwise inert materials dangerous, viral contact with property, and the air within the property, means significant damage and loss.” The virus was present in each of plaintiffs’ insured locations. As a result, the virus “physically damage[d]” plaintiffs’ insured property by “chang[ing] the chemical composition of air” and “altering the molecular structure of the physical surfaces of otherwise inert property.” In March 2020, plaintiffs closed their hockey arenas prior to the issuance of any relevant government orders because “of the presence of the COVID-19 virus at insured arenas, and the resulting physical damage to the arenas,” including the “air and surfaces” of those properties, and because of “the external peril of [the virus].” During certain other time periods, government orders required either the closure of hockey arenas or limited fan access to games. Plaintiffs lost earnings as a result of canceled hockey games and limited fan access to games.

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