Seto v. CSAA Insurance Group CA1/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 10, 2024
DocketA166351
StatusUnpublished

This text of Seto v. CSAA Insurance Group CA1/2 (Seto v. CSAA Insurance Group CA1/2) 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
Seto v. CSAA Insurance Group CA1/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 9/10/24 Seto v. CSAA Insurance Group CA1/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

SHACUAN SHARON SETO, Individually and as Successor in Interest, etc., et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, A166351 & A166573

v. (San Francisco County CSAA INSURANCE GROUP et al., Super. Ct. No. CGC16554402) Defendants and Respondents.

These consolidated appeals1 arise from an action filed against an insurer and an attorney by several related parties: Stephen K. Lee (Father), the three eldest of Father’s six children, and two family-owned property management companies: Stephen K. Lee Enterprises (SKLE) and Golden Prosperities Management Company, LLC (GPMC).2 Plaintiffs claimed the insurer and attorney engaged in bad faith, malpractice, and other wrongs

1 Plaintiffs filed two notices of appeal: one from the judgment (A166351), and one from a postjudgment order denying a motion to tax costs (A166573). We granted a request to consolidate the appeals under docket No. A166351. Because we reverse the judgment, we vacate the costs order as a matter of course and dismiss the appeal of the motion to tax costs as moot. 2 Father died while this action was pending. The trial court accepted the parties’ stipulation to substitute his eldest child, Shacuan Sharon Seto— already a plaintiff in her own right—as a plaintiff in her capacity as Father’s successor in interest.

1 while defending them in a personal injury action by Marthe Schreiber. Schreiber was a tenant of a property originally developed by Father, jointly owned at the time of the accident by all six of his children, and formerly or presently managed by SKLE and GPMC. Plaintiffs claim the insurer and attorney entered into a partial settlement of the Schreiber action over their objection that secured the release of all six Lee siblings and SKLE but left Father and GPMC, whom the insurer did not consider to be covered by its policies, exposed to liability. That ongoing exposure harmed the elder siblings by obliging them to pay for Father’s and GPMC’s ongoing defense. The trial court granted summary judgment on three bases: Father and GPMC’s exclusion from the settlement did not cause the siblings or GPMC any harm; Father and GPMC were not insureds, so they had no standing to pursue claims against CSAA; and the release included in a family settlement agreement (FSA) concerning various intrafamilial property disputes bars plaintiffs’ claims. We reverse as to all plaintiffs except SKLE, which plaintiffs’ complaint alleges is “dissolved,” and which is thus unable to file suit. As for the still- existent parties, we conclude that defendants failed to establish as a matter of law that the reference in the release to the “related persons and entities” of the younger siblings includes the insurer and attorney that represented all six siblings in the Schreiber action. We further conclude that there are triable factual disputes as to whether the elder siblings’ claimed obligation to pay for GPMC’s defense amounts to cognizable harm and that, while plaintiffs did not raise a triable dispute as to whether Father or GPMC were insureds under the policies as written, the insurer’s motion failed to address plaintiffs’ causes of action for policy reformation and negligence by the insurer’s captive agent in failing to procure a policy covering Father and

2 GPMC, which could establish standing. We therefore reverse the summary judgments except as to SKLE. BACKGROUND This appeal involves three distinct sets of facts or proceedings: (1) the personal injury action Schreiber filed in 2013 against Father, his six children, GPMC, and SKLE; (2) the 2015 FSA resolving disputes between the six siblings, which contains the release at issue; and (3) this action, filed in 2016 by the three elder siblings (Shacuan Sharon Seto, Gordon Lee, and Patricia Lum), Father, GPMC, and SKLE against David Samuelson and CSAA, the attorney and insurer responsible for representing the siblings and related parties in connection with the partial settlement in the Schreiber action.3 We summarize the relevant aspects of each below. I. The Schreiber Action Schreiber’s personal injury action led to an appeal decided in 2020 by our colleagues in Division One. (Schreiber v. Lee (2020) 47 Cal.App.5th 745 (Schreiber).) As that opinion details, Schreiber was seriously injured in 2013 when she fell through a skylight Father had built in her apartment’s deck. (Id. at p. 748.) Father had originally owned and developed the property but transferred ownership to his six children in the 1980s. (Id. at p. 749.) Beginning in the 1980s, SKLE managed the property. (Id. at pp. 749–750.) In 2005, GPMC took over that function. (Ibid.) GPMC was a member-owned

3 This action involves two policies, one issued by CSAA Fire & Casualty

Insurance Company and one by CSAA Insurance Exchange. To defend the Schreiber action, CSAA retained Samuelson and his law firm, Bennett, Samuelson, Reynolds, Allard, Cowperthwaite & Gelini PC. No distinction between the CSAA entities, or between Samuelson and his firm, is relevant on appeal. For simplicity, we refer to the insurers collectively as CSAA and the attorney defendants collectively as Samuelson.

3 management company; Father and the six siblings served as board members, while siblings Gordon and Peter Lee handled day-to-day operations. (Ibid.) As of the filing of Schreiber’s initial complaint in September 2013, the property was insured by two CSAA policies: a primary policy with a limit of $1,000,000 that, as written, covered only Peter Lee, but which CSAA agreed was meant to cover all six siblings and SKLE, and an umbrella policy with a limit of $3,000,000 that covered only Peter Lee. Schreiber’s initial complaint named Father and SKLE as alleged owners of the property and Peter Lee as its manager. CSAA retained Samuelson to defend its insureds Peter Lee and SKLE and to provide Father a “courtesy defense.” Samuelson induced Schreiber’s counsel to file an amended complaint in November 2013 that removed Father as a defendant, given his transfer of the property to his children in the 1980s. The amended complaint added the remaining siblings as defendants in their roles as property owners and corrected pleading errors not relevant here. In September 2014, Schreiber offered, pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure4 section 998, to settle the entire action for the $4 million combined limit of the two insurance policies. Two months later, Schreiber filed a second amended complaint (SAC) renaming Father as responsible for the property’s design, build, and management and substituted GPMC for a Doe defendant. CSAA agreed to defend all six siblings and SKLE but declined to defend GPMC or to provide a further courtesy defense to Father. Father demanded litigation indemnification from GPMC based on a provision in GPMC’s operating agreement. In July 2015, Schreiber moved for leave to file a third amended complaint (TAC) that was to add allegations that Father and the siblings had

4 All undesignated references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.

4 failed to insure or capitalize GPMC and ignored its corporate formalities, making it their alter ego.5 Schreiber extended the deadline to accept her section 998 offer until September 10, 2015—the date set for a mediation of the case. The elder siblings allege they urged Samuelson to accept the section 998 offer or otherwise arrange a global settlement covering all defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
Seto v. CSAA Insurance Group CA1/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seto-v-csaa-insurance-group-ca12-calctapp-2024.