June 23 2015
DA 14-0686
Case Number: DA 14-0686
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
2015 MT 165
F.H. STOLTZE LAND & LUMBER CO., and
MAXUM SPECIALTY INSURANCE GROUP,
Plaintiffs and Appellants,
v.
AMERICAN STATES INSURANCE COMPANY,
WHITNEY SHANKS, ANNA SHANKS, LES SCHLEGEL
ENTERPRISES, INC. and DOES 1-10,
Defendants and Appellees.
_____________________________________________
WHITNEY SHANKS and ANNA SHANKS,
Cross-Claim Defendants and Appellants,
v.
AMERICAN STATES INSURANCE COMPANY, LES
SCHLEGEL ENTERPRISES, INC., and DOES 1-10,
Defendants and Appellees.
APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Eleventh Judicial District,
In and For the County of Flathead, Cause No. DV 12-1324B
Honorable Robert B. Allison, Presiding Judge
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For Appellants:
Todd A. Hammer, Angela K. Jacobs, Hammer, Jacobs & Quinn, PLLC,
Kalispell, Montana (for F.H. Stoltze Land & Lumber Co.)
Garry D. Seaman, Seaman Law Firm, Kalispell, Montana
(for Whitney and Anna Shanks)
For Appellees:
Jeffrey D. Ellingson, Kaufman Vidal Hileman Ellingson PC,
Kalispell, Montana (for Les Schlegel Enterprises, Inc.)
Mark S. Williams, Nicholas J. Pagnotta, Williams Law Firm, P.C.,
Missoula, Montana (for American States Insurance Company)
Submitted on Briefs: May 6, 2015
Decided: June 23, 2015
Filed:
__________________________________________
Clerk
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Justice Beth Baker delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 F.H. Stoltze Land & Lumber Company and Maxum Specialty Insurance Group
(collectively, “Stoltze”) filed a complaint against American States Insurance Company
(ASI), seeking an order that ASI must defend and indemnify Stoltze against a lawsuit
brought by Whitney and Anna Shanks (collectively, “Shanks”). The Eleventh Judicial
District Court, Flathead County, entered summary judgment in ASI’s favor. Stoltze and
Shanks appeal. The issue on appeal is whether the District Court correctly determined
that ASI’s insurance policy with Les Schlegel Enterprises (“Schlegel”) does not require
ASI to defend and indemnify Stoltze in an action in which Schlegel could not be held
liable. We affirm.
PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND
¶2 In 2003, Schlegel and Stoltze contracted for Schlegel to log Stoltze’s property.
The logging contract contains a provision in which Schlegel agreed to procure liability
insurance indemnifying Stoltze from liability for any loss or injury arising from the
logging operations. Schlegel also agreed that indemnification “shall not be limited . . . by
immunity of suit of [Schlegel], [Schlegel] having waived such immunity as a defense
against [Stoltze].” Schlegel in turn obtained liability insurance from ASI. The insurance
policy (Policy) ran between January 20, 2004, and January 20, 2005. It lists Schlegel as
the only named insured. The liability plus endorsement section of the Policy extends
coverage to “any person or organization . . . for whom [Schlegel is] required by written
contract, agreement or permit to provide insurance” to the extent that Schlegel is held
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liable due to its “ongoing operations for that Insured, whether the work is performed by
[Schlegel] or for [Schlegel].” Another clause modifies this extension of coverage,
stating, “No Coverage will be provided if, in the absence of this endorsement, no liability
would be imposed by law on [Schlegel]. Coverage shall be limited to the extent of
[Schlegel’s] negligence or fault according to the applicable principles of comparative
fault.”
¶3 Shanks, a worker for Schlegel, injured himself during logging operations on
Stoltze’s property in February 2004. Although Schlegel covered Shanks for workers’
compensation benefits, Shanks filed a personal injury lawsuit against both Schlegel and
Stoltze. Stoltze tendered defense and indemnity of Shanks’s suit to ASI. ASI accepted
the tender, stating that it was affording a defense to Stoltze under the Policy with
Schlegel, but reserved the right to withdraw the defense if it determined that Stoltze was
not covered under the Policy.
¶4 In 2010, Schlegel moved to dismiss the case against it, arguing that the Montana
Workers’ Compensation Act’s exclusive remedy provision, § 39-71-411, MCA, rendered
it immune to Shanks’s suit. The district court in that case granted Schlegel’s motion.
After Schlegel’s dismissal, ASI withdrew its defense of Stoltze, stating in a letter to
Stoltze that the Policy covered Stoltze only to the extent that Schlegel was liable, and that
the court determined in its dismissal order that Schlegel was not liable.
¶5 In November 2012, Stoltze filed a complaint against ASI, seeking declaratory
judgment that ASI is required to defend and indemnify Stoltze against Shanks’s suit. In
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2013, the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, and, in 2014, the District
Court entered summary judgment in favor of ASI. The District Court determined that,
under the terms of the Policy, ASI covers Stoltze to the extent that Schlegel is liable in
the underlying action. Because the court in the underlying action concluded that Schlegel
was immune and not liable, the District Court further concluded that ASI has no duty to
defend or indemnify Stoltze. Stoltze and Shanks appeal.
STANDARDS OF REVIEW
¶6 We review an entry of summary judgment de novo. Albert v. City of Billings,
2012 MT 159, ¶ 15, 365 Mont. 454, 282 P.3d 704. Summary judgment is appropriate
when the moving party demonstrates the absence of a genuine issue of material fact and
entitlement to judgment as a matter of law. M. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(3); Albert, ¶ 15. We
review the interpretation of an insurance policy for correctness. Plum Creek Mktg., Inc.
v. Am. Econ. Ins. Co., 2009 MT 264, ¶ 31, 352 Mont. 56, 214 P.3d 1238.
DISCUSSION
¶7 An insurer’s duty to defend or indemnify a party depends on whether an insurance
policy establishes such a duty. Travelers Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Ribi Immunochem Research,
Inc., 2005 MT 50, ¶ 40, 326 Mont. 174, 108 P.3d 469. In arguing that ASI has such a
duty, the only insurance policy Stoltze and Shanks identify is the policy between Schlegel
and ASI. Like any other contract, we construe an insurance policy in an effort to give
effect to the mutual intent of the contracting parties as reflected in the contract’s terms.
Sections 28-3-301, -401, MCA. “An insurer must defend unless there is an unequivocal
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demonstration that the claim against the insured does not fall under the policy’s
coverage.” Famers Union Mut. Ins. Co. v. Rumph, 2007 MT 249, ¶ 14, 339 Mont. 251,
170 P.3d 934; see Scentry Biologicals Inc. v. Mid-Continent Cas. Co., 2014 MT 39, ¶ 44,
374 Mont. 18, 319 P.3d 1260.
¶8 Stoltze acknowledges that it is not a named insured in the Policy but argues that,
because the logging contract is an insured contract, the liability plus endorsement section
of the Policy extends coverage to Stoltze. As mentioned, however, the liability plus
endorsement section includes a limiting clause, stating, “No Coverage will be provided if,
in the absence of this endorsement, no liability would be imposed by law on [Schlegel].
Coverage shall be limited to the extent of [Schlegel’s] negligence or fault according to
the applicable principles of comparative fault.”
¶9 In Plum Creek, we examined identical limiting clause language in a liability plus
endorsement section of a policy. As in this case, in Plum Creek, two parties (Plum Creek
and Garage Doors) entered a contract, with one party (Garage Doors) agreeing to
indemnify the other (Plum Creek). Plum Creek, ¶ 2. Garage Doors obtained liability
insurance that included a liability plus endorsement section and a clause stating, as here,
“No coverage will be provided if, in the absence of this endorsement, no liability would
be imposed by law on you. Coverage shall be limited to the extent of your negligence or
fault according to the applicable principles of comparative fault.” When a Garage Doors
employee was injured on the job, he sued Plum Creek. Plum Creek, ¶ 6. Garage Doors’s
insurer, however, refused to defend Plum Creek, pointing to the limiting clause in the
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liability plus endorsement section. Plum Creek, ¶ 8. Pinning our analysis to the terms of
the limiting clause, we concluded that Garage Doors “could not be held liable in this
case” because the employee’s “complaint alleged negligence against Plum Creek, not
Garage Doors.” Therefore, it was “unequivocally clear that [the insurer] was not required
to defend or indemnify Plum Creek.” Plum Creek, ¶ 32 (emphasis in original).
¶10 ASI argues that Schlegel is like Garage Doors in Plum Creek, in that Schlegel
cannot be held liable in the underlying personal injury case. As noted, a district court
determined that Schlegel is immune and dismissed it from the underlying action. The
Policy extends coverage to additional insured parties that enter into contracts with
Schlegel and incur liability due to Schlegel’s negligence, but only if Schlegel also is
subject to liability. The Policy states, “No coverage will be provided” to a third party if
“no liability would be imposed by law” on Schlegel. The limiting language in the Policy
shows that determining whether the Policy covers an additional insured turns not on why,
but on whether, the named insured would be liable in the absence of the endorsement. If
no liability can be imposed by law on Schlegel, then no coverage is provided to Stoltze.
¶11 Stoltze argues that the second sentence in the limiting clause—“Coverage shall be
limited to the extent of your negligence or fault according to the applicable principles of
comparative fault”—renders the limiting clause ambiguous about whether coverage
depends on liability or on negligence and fault, and that the clause therefore should be
interpreted against ASI. See Leibrand v. Nat’l Farmers Union Prop. & Cas. Co., 272
Mont. 1, 6, 898 P.2d 1220, 1223 (1995) (“Ambiguities in an insurance policy are
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construed against the insurer and exclusions or words of limitation in a policy must be
strictly construed against the insurer.”). Stoltze argues that the only way to reconcile the
two sentences in the clause is to conclude that the second sentence applies to employees
of Schlegel. We conclude that the plain language of the Policy does not require that
construction. The first sentence of the clause states that ASI will not cover an additional
insured in situations in which the named insured cannot be held liable. The second
sentence states that, in situations in which the named insured can be held liable, ASI’s
coverage of an additional insured is limited to the extent of the named insured’s
proportional negligence or fault.
¶12 Stoltze cites two cases in which the United States District Court for the District of
Oregon concluded that the same limiting language was ambiguous, see Clarendon Nat’l
Ins. Co. v. Am. States Ins. Co., 688 F. Supp. 2d 1186, 1191 (2010); Richardson v.
Howard S. Wright Constr. Co., No. CV-05-1419-ST, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 37011, at
*23-25, but we are not persuaded by the analysis of the policy language in these cases.
We follow our reasoning in Plum Creek that the “terms of the Policy and [e]ndorsement
taken together are clear and unambiguous.” Plum Creek, ¶ 32.
¶13 Stoltze next argues that, even if the Policy states that ASI covers third parties only
if Schlegel is liable, ASI must cover Stoltze in this case because Schlegel is liable.
Stoltze argues that Schlegel is liable because, in the contract between the two, Schlegel
agreed that its indemnification of Stoltze “shall not be limited . . . by immunity of suit of
[Schlegel], [Schlegel] having waived such immunity as a defense against [Stoltze].” An
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insurer’s duty to defend or indemnify, however, depends on the four corners of the
invoked insurance policy—not on an agreement between an insured and a third party.
Ribi Immunochem Research, ¶ 40; Plum Creek, ¶ 31. Further, Schlegel was dismissed
from the underlying case on the basis of § 39-71-411, MCA. To the extent that Stoltze
now argues that Schlegel could be held liable in the underlying suit on the basis of the
logging contract, the order dismissing the case against Schlegel is not before the Court on
appeal.
¶14 Shanks argues that Schlegel remains liable because one of the remaining claims
against Stoltze concerns whether Stoltze delegated an inherently dangerous and
non-delegable operation to Schlegel and thus is vicariously liable for Schlegel’s
negligence. But Schlegel cannot be held liable under this claim—Schlegel has been
dismissed from the underlying action due to immunity. Stoltze’s liability for Schlegel’s
actions is not the same as Schlegel’s liability, which is what the Policy requires for
coverage to extend to Stoltze in this case. Stoltze’s liability for its own acts or omissions
also is not within the scope of Schlegel’s policy with ASI.
¶15 Shanks further argues the question whether § 39-71-411, MCA, precludes Stoltze
from being covered as an additional insured. But, given our determination that Stoltze is
not an additional insured under the terms of the Policy, we do not reach this argument.
We conclude that, under the plain terms of the Policy, Stoltze is not covered by ASI
unless Schlegel is liable. Schlegel is not liable. Therefore, Stoltze is not covered.
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CONCLUSION
¶16 We affirm.
/S/ BETH BAKER
We concur:
/S/ MIKE McGRATH
/S/ LAURIE McKINNON
/S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA
/S/ JIM RICE
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