Target Media Partners v. Hartford Financial Services CA2/8

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 25, 2014
DocketB248293
StatusUnpublished

This text of Target Media Partners v. Hartford Financial Services CA2/8 (Target Media Partners v. Hartford Financial Services CA2/8) 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
Target Media Partners v. Hartford Financial Services CA2/8, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 4/25/14 Target Media Partners v. Hartford Financial Services CA2/8 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

TARGET MEDIA PARTNERS, LLC, B248293

Cross-complainant and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BC456150) v.

HARTFORD FINANCIAL SERVICES GROUP, INC.,

Cross-defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Teresa Sanchez-Gordon, Judge. Affirmed.

Hathaway Perrett Webster Powers Chrisman & Gutierrez, Joel Mark and Brook J. Carroll for Cross-complainant and Appellant.

Berger Kahn, Ann K. Johnston and Ted A. Smith for Cross-defendant and Respondent.

****** Defendant and Cross-complainant Target Media Partners, LLC (Target Media) appeals a judgment following the granting of a demurrer and dismissal of its cross- complaint against The Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc. (Hartford Financial Services), without leave to amend. We affirm. BACKGROUND At all relevant times, Trend Offset Printing Services, Inc. (Trend Offset) (a Texas company, and not a party to the current litigation or appeal) operated a printing business. Trend Offset purchased a liability insurance policy from Hartford Insurance Company of the Midwest (Hartford of the Midwest). Specialty Marketing Corporation, Inc. (Specialty Marketing), doing business as Truck Market News (not a party to the current litigation or appeal) produces a monthly “magazine” publication distributed for free in racks at truck stops throughout the central and eastern parts of the United States. Specialty Marketing entered a contract with Trend Offset to print thousands of copies of Truck Market News at Trend Offset’s printing facility in Texas. Specialty Marketing also entered into a contract with Target Media, a Nevada corporation with its principal place of business operations in Southern California, to physically distribute copies of Truck Market News (printed by Trend Offset) to truck stops. In 2007, Specialty Marketing sued Target Media in Alabama state court. In that action, Specialty Marketing alleged that Target Media, instead of distributing copies of Truck Market News, simply threw the printed copies of the publication in the trash. Tort and contract-related claims were alleged. An Alabama jury awarded roughly $1 million in compensatory damages and a like amount in punitive damages in favor of Specialty Marketing and against Target Media. The Alabama Supreme Court eventually affirmed the judgment in part (as to the contract claims) and reversed in part (as to tort claims). Meanwhile, in 2009, Specialty Marketing filed an action against Trend Offset in the Orange County Superior Court. In its California state action, Specialty Marketing alleged claims paralleling those it had alleged in its Alabama state action against Target

2 Media. In broad terms, Specialty Marketing alleged that Trend Offset failed to ensure that Target Media properly distributed Truck Market News. In October 2010, Specialty Marketing and Trend Offset settled the Orange County action for a confidential amount. In February 2011 (as amended April 2012), Hartford of the Midwest filed the lead action giving rise to Target Media’s cross-complaint here, asserting claims against Target Media for comparative equitable indemnity and comparative contribution (the subrogation action). Hartford of the Midwest alleged it paid the settlement to Specialty Marketing on behalf of Trend Offset in the Orange County action, but that all or part of that money should be shared by Target Media because Target Media had been the one that threw the copies of Truck Market News in the trash. Target Media sought to file a cross-complaint in the subrogation action against “The Hartford Insurance Company” for breach of contract and breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing based on an insurance policy it had with that Hartford entity. Hartford of the Midwest opposed the motion in part because the cross-complaint against “The Hartford Insurance Company” was not seeking recovery from the proper party. Based on the declarations page from Target Media’s insurance policy, Hartford of the Midwest argued Target Media was insured by Hartford Fire Insurance Company (Hartford Fire), a related, but distinct entity. In response, Target Media argued it purchased insurance from “The Hartford Insurance Group,” designated with the trade name “The Hartford.” The trial court granted the motion and permitted Target Media to file the cross-complaint against “The Hartford Insurance Company.” Hartford Fire moved to quash service of the summons for the cross-complaint because no entity named “The Hartford Insurance Company” existed and Hartford Fire issued Target Media’s insurance policy.1 The trial court granted the motion and Target Media filed its operative first amended cross-complaint.

1 In this motion, Hartford Fire acknowledged the attorney for Hartford of the Midwest inadvertently omitted “of the Midwest” in the name of the plaintiff bringing the subrogation action. The error was corrected to name “Hartford Insurance Company of the Midwest” as the plaintiff.

3 In the first amended cross-complaint, Target Media maintained its claims for breach of contract and breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, but named the following Hartford-related entities as cross-defendants: Hartford Financial Services, Hartford Fire, and Hartford of the Midwest. The cross-complaint alleged Hartford Financial Services was “a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Connecticut and authorized through various of its subsidiaries to transact, and transacting, business in the State of California as a liability insurer.” Target Media alleged it was insured by Hartford Financial Services’ subsidiary Hartford Fire, and Trend Offset was insured by Hartford Financial Services’ subsidiary Hartford of the Midwest. But “[d]ue to the unity of interest among all three of the Hartford-related insuring entities, and due to the fact that all three owed the same duties to an insured of their related entities and collective enterprise, [Target Media], the three Hartford-related cross-defendants are collectively hereinafter referred to as ‘Hartford.’” Likewise, “at all times herein mentioned each of the cross-defendants was the agent and employee of each of the remaining cross-defendants, and in doing the things alleged herein, was acting within the scope and course of such agency and employment.” By alleging all these Hartford companies were subsidiaries acting together, Target Media set up its primary allegations that “Hartford,” Trend Offset, and Specialty Marketing entered into secret settlement negotiations in the Orange County action to set up the subrogation claim by “Hartford” against its own insured, Target Media. Target Media also alleged “Hartford” wrongfully refused to defend it in the subrogation action and wrongfully denied insurance coverage for that action. Hartford Fire answered the cross-complaint, while Hartford Financial Services and Hartford of the Midwest filed demurrers, arguing neither was a party to Target Media’s insurance policy and the factual allegations regarding the interrelationship of the Hartford companies were insufficient to create liability. The trial court sustained the demurrers without leave to amend and entered judgment in favor of those parties. Target Media

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Bluebook (online)
Target Media Partners v. Hartford Financial Services CA2/8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/target-media-partners-v-hartford-financial-services-ca28-calctapp-2014.