Specialty National Insurance v. OneBeacon Insurance

486 F.3d 727, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 12037, 2007 WL 1491891
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMay 23, 2007
Docket06-2036
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 486 F.3d 727 (Specialty National Insurance v. OneBeacon Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Specialty National Insurance v. OneBeacon Insurance, 486 F.3d 727, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 12037, 2007 WL 1491891 (1st Cir. 2007).

Opinion

HOWARD, Circuit Judge.

Specialty National Insurance Company appeals the district court’s decision, reached on cross-motions for summary judgment, that Specialty, rather than ap-pellee OneBeacon Insurance Company, has the duty to indemnify a policyholder for liability arising out of a catastrophic accident. We reverse and remand for entry of judgment in favor of Specialty.

I.

The accident caused serious and permanent injuries to Marcia Rhodes, whose car was rear-ended by a tractor trailer on Route 109 in Medway, Massachusetts. Rhodes had brought her vehicle to a stop at the command of a Medway police officer directing traffic through an area where Jerry McMillan Professional Tree Service, Inc., was working to remove stumps along the northerly side of the road. 1 McMillan was using a stump grinder attached to a pickup truck in the fashion of a trailer, driving the truck past each stump before backing the grinder up to it to begin the process. McMillan had been grinding a stump for about three or four minutes at the time the accident occurred.

According to the police report, “[t]he vehicle being used ..., a tree stump grinder on a trailer pulled by a pick-up truck, was straddling the Eastbound fog line, leaving a portion of the truck on the roadway. As a result of this, [the officer] was directing traffic through the work area, which had squeezed the traffic area of the road down to one lane.” Because of this, the officer stopped Rhodes in the eastbound lane to allow westbound traffic to proceed. But the driver of the tractor trailer, Carlo Zalewski, was distracted as he approached in the eastbound lane and did not see the officer’s signal or Rhodes’s car in enough time to stop his vehicle. The collision ensued.

In due course, counsel for Rhodes wrote to the tractor trailer’s lessee, Building Ma *730 terials Corporation of America, to notify it of a claim against it for her injuries. Counsel for BMCA forwarded this letter to McMillan, asserting that its operations may have contributed to the accident. McMillan, in turn, contacted its insurance agent, which notified Network Adjusters, the claims administrator for Specialty. McMillan had a general commercial liability policy with Specialty, providing indemnification for “those sums that the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as damages because of personal injury or property damage ...” and imposing the “duty to defend the insured against any suit seeking those damages.” Excluded from this coverage, however, were any such damages “arising out of the ownership, maintenance, [or] use ... of any ... auto ... owned or operated by or rented or loaned to any insured. Use includes operation....”

Network Adjusters acknowledged receipt of McMillan’s claim on March 13, 2002. Though Network Adjusters engaged in some preliminary investigation, it did so under the impression that McMillan probably did not have any liability for the accident. In the meantime, Rhodes and her husband filed suit in Massachusetts state court against BMCA, Zalewski, and Driver Logistics, Inc., the agency that employed Zalewski to drive the truck, seeking damages suffered as a result of the accident. 2 Network Adjusters learned of this development on September 17, 2002, from counsel for Rhodes, who also offered his prediction that McMillan would be named as a third-party defendant. Network Adjusters prepared an initial “Major Loss Report” for its files that same day indicating that, based on the information then in hand, coverage for such a claim would apparently lie under Specialty’s policy.

On October 2, 2002, Network Adjusters reported the accident to OneBeacon, McMillan’s auto insurer, by telephone. McMillan’s policy with OneBeacon provided indemnification for “all sums an insured legally must pay as damages because of bodily injury or property damage ... caused by an accident and resulting from the ownership, maintenance or use of a covered auto” and the duty to defend against a suit seeking such damages (internal quotation marks omitted). 3 The pickup truck was a “covered auto” under the policy-

As predicted, Zalewski and Driver Logistics served McMillan with a third-party complaint on September 23, 2003. They alleged that McMillan had failed in his “duty to provide markers, warning signs, and traffic control devices on the worksite adjacent to Route 109,” making him a joint tortfeasor responsible for contribution to the third-party plaintiffs in the event they were found liable for the Rhodeses’ injuries. The third-party complaint did not allege that McMillan’s use of the pickup truck had contributed to the accident.

By November 2003, Specialty hired counsel to defend McMillan against the third-party claim. Several months later, this attorney wrote to OneBeacon, noting that allegations had surfaced during discovery in the lawsuit that his client had “contributed to cause the accident by fail[ing] to pull his pickup truck completely off the side of Route 109.” Counsel for McMillan therefore asked OneBeacon to participate in defending the third-party action under the auto policy. Ten days later, on June 25, 2004, Network Adjusters *731 wrote to McMillan, asserting that, despite Specialty’s participation in the defense to date, its policy did not cover the liability at issue. The letter explained that, because McMillan’s pickup “was parked along Route 109 and was partially obstructing traffic ... a causal connection is reasonably apparent between the use to which the vehicle was being put and the alleged injury,” placing it within the ambit of One-Beacon’s auto policy.

Network Adjusters sent a similar letter to OneBeacon, asking it to assume the obligation to defend McMillan. In response, OneBeacon agreed to participate in, and to pay one half of the further costs of, McMillan’s defense, but denied any responsibility to defend or indemnify him. OneBeacon argued that, because the third-party complaint alleged only a failure to warn on McMillan’s part, “providing a defense or indemnity would be tantamount to converting ... OneBeacon’s policy into a general liability policy.”

At this point, the trial of the Massachusetts state court action was scheduled to commence on September 7, 2004. Before then, however, McMillan reached a settlement with the Rhodeses, which had the effect of extinguishing the third-party contribution claims. See Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 231B, § 4(b) (2000). The settlement called for the Rhodeses to receive $550,000, with Specialty and OneBeacon each paying half of that amount. Each insurer, however, reserved its right to claim that the other was solely responsible for defending and indemnifying McMillan and, therefore, for the entire cost of the settlement. The Rhodeses’ claims against the remaining defendants proceeded to trial, resulting in verdicts against the remaining defendants in the sum of $9.4 million — exclusive of interest and costs, which brought the figure to nearly $12 million.

Specialty then sued OneBeacon in federal district court, seeking to recover the expense of defending and indemnifying McMillan on a theory of equitable subrogation. 4

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Bluebook (online)
486 F.3d 727, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 12037, 2007 WL 1491891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/specialty-national-insurance-v-onebeacon-insurance-ca1-2007.