Scottsdale Insurance v. Homestead Land Development Corp.

145 F.R.D. 523, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19287, 1992 WL 378820
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedMay 18, 1992
DocketNo. C 90 3144 SBA (WDB)
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 145 F.R.D. 523 (Scottsdale Insurance v. Homestead Land Development Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scottsdale Insurance v. Homestead Land Development Corp., 145 F.R.D. 523, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19287, 1992 WL 378820 (N.D. Cal. 1992).

Opinion

REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION

BRAZIL, United States Magistrate Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

This Report and Recommendation is responsive to an order by the Honorable D. Lowell Jensen instructing us to “allocate costs between those which are reasonably related to defense of the slander claim and those which relate to uncovered claims.” Order filed April 11, 1991.

The lawsuit in this court that gives rise to this assignment is a declaratory relief action in which an insurer, Scottsdale Insurance Company (Scottsdale), is asking the court to fix the extent of its responsibility to its insured, Homestead Land Development Corporation (HLDC or Homestead).

Scottsdale concedes that it is obligated to pay for a portion of legal expenses that Homestead incurred in the underlying state court action, but that its obligation is limited to the relatively small percentage of the overall litigation bill that, in Scottsdale’s view, can reasonably be attributed to defense of the only cause of action that Scottsdale’s policy covered, i.e., the cause of action for slander. Homestead, by contrast, insists that it was necessary to litigate a wide range of matters that sounded nominally in contract and business tort theories in order to defend the slander claim, and therefore that Scottsdale is responsible for the vast majority of the fees and costs Homestead incurred in the state court action. Judge Jensen assigned us the task of determining, in the first instance, how much of the fees and costs that the insured says it incurred in the underlying state court action are fairly attributable to the defense of the slander claim. See Amended Order of April 11, 1991 and Order of August 1, 1991, attached as Exhibits A and B to the Declaration of John A. Belcher filed December 6, 1991.

On grounds that we elaborate in detail in the pages that follow, we find that the total expense universe in issue here is $542,-010.29 and we recommend that the court declare that Scottsdale is liable to Homestead for 10% of that amount ($54,201.03).

We organize this Report and Recommendation as follows. In the next section, Section II, we describe briefly the procedural history of both the underlying state court action and the suit in this court. In Section III we set forth our understanding of the legal principles (under California law) which govern the apportionment we undertake. Then, in Section IV, we describe what the evidence shows about how much of the legal work undertaken on behalf of the insureds is fairly attributable to the defense of the slander claim. We consider, in that section, (1) the structure of the case (viewed primarily through the pleadings) during the relevant period, (2) evidence from pretrial records such as deposition summaries, responses to interrogatories, memoranda submitted in connection with a demurrer to Jacobson’s amended cross-complaint, and settlement conference statements, (3) the billing documents generated by Homestead’s outside counsel, and (4) declarations submitted in this proceeding by some of the lawyers who worked on the [526]*526underlying litigation. In the end, our recommendation about the actual dollar amount for which Scottsdale should be liable builds simultaneously from both our detailed consideration of the specific evidence that is available and from a detached consideration of the structure of the underlying state court action.

Given the imperfect nature of the evidence with which we are working (as described more particularly below), it is inevitable that the intellectual movement that we make from data to conclusion is not as tight and linear as we would like. We concede some modest margin of error. We agree strongly with Judge Jensen, however, that this is a case in which California law and policy compel that an apportionment be made and that the reliability of the method by which the final figures are calculated here is well within the range of what should be acceptable under the circumstances. This is an instance, in other words, where the courts should refuse to permit the impossibility of scientific exactitude to compel a fundamentally unfair result.

II. BACKGROUND AND HISTORY OF THE CASE

In 1986 HLDC launched development of an apartment complex called the Fairways in Citrus Heights, California. Scottsdale issued Homestead a general liability policy covering April 1, 1986 through October 1, 1986 (the coverage eventually was extended through November 15, 1987). The policy covered accidental property and personal injury damage, as well as libel and slander.

HLDC contracted with Karl F. Jacobson (Jacobson) of KFJ Construction to construct the wood frames for the Fairways development. Construction, however, did not progress well, and the job site grew tense. Disputes began surfacing about the quality of materials and workmanship, timeliness of performance, prices, contract responsibilities, and billing cycles. These disputes involved not only HLDC and its general contractor, Jacobson, but also the lumber supplier for the framing, Canfor U.S.A. (Canfor).

On May 10, 1987, Homestead sued Jacobson in Superior Court in Sacramento for breach of contract, fraud, misrepresentation, and negligence, praying for some $300,000 in compensatory damages and $500,000 in punitive damages. The law firm that HLDC hired to prosecute this action was Weintraub, Genshlea, Hardy, Erich & Brown (Weintraub). HLDC did not claim when it initiated that state court action that Scottsdale had any obligation to reimburse HLDC for any of the litigation expenses it incurred in that matter.

Canfor also sued Jacobson over a dispute relating to the same site. Eventually (in early 1990) the cases were consolidated into the Fairways Construction Cases II, in Yolo County Superior Court, as Judicial Counsel Coordination Proceeding No. 2433.

Well before that consolidation, Jacobson had filed a cross-complaint in the action Homestead had initiated. This pleading, filed on December 14, 1987, contained six causes of action, in five of which Homestead was named as a cross-defendant (Jacobson also sued Martin D. McGinnis, a former Canfor and Jacobson employee, in this cross-action). The gravamen of the cross action was breach of contract and tortious interference with prospective business advantage. While one of the causes of action (conspiracy to interfere with Jacobson’s performance of the contract and to deny him the benefits of his bargain) included, among many other allegations, an assertion that both McGinnis and Homestead made unspecified “false representations to cross-complainant [sic] workers,” notably absent was any cause of action sounding in slander (or any other defamation). See Cross-Complaint, Exhibit A attached to Declaration of Roger A. Brown filed January 10, 1992.

Initially, Jacobson represented himself. Subsequently, his insurer provided him with an attorney. In August of 1989, in the face of Cumis problems, Jacobson retained independent counsel, Wohl and Eggleston. See Declaration of Steve Eggleston, filed January 24, 1992, H 3-6.

[527]*527While there had been vague references earlier in the case development process to allegedly inaccurate disparaging remarks about Jacobson and his work,1 it was not until early March of 1990, during a deposition of Martin McGinnis, that specific factual bases for a slander cause of action surfaced.

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Bluebook (online)
145 F.R.D. 523, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19287, 1992 WL 378820, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scottsdale-insurance-v-homestead-land-development-corp-cand-1992.