January 12 2016
DA 14-0278
Case Number: DA 14-0278
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
2016 MT 6
WESTCHESTER SURPLUS LINES INSURANCE COMPANY,
Plaintiff and Appellant,
v.
KELLER TRANSPORT, INC.; WAGNER ENTERPRISES, LLC;
THOMAS F. JONES and RITA A. JONES, husband and wife;
DEBRA L. SYKES; RONALD L. KOHLER
and BARBARA J. KOHLER, husband and wife;
and DENNIS A. ARNOLD and GERALDINE N. ARNOLD,
husband and wife,
Defendants and Appellees.
APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Fourth Judicial District,
In and For the County of Missoula, Cause No. DV-10-1133
Honorable Edward P. McLean, Presiding Judge
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For Appellant:
Jonathan D. Hacker (argued), O’Melveny & Myers LLP; Washington,
District of Columbia
Allan H. Baris, Moore, O’Connell & Refling, P.C.; Bozeman, Montana
Robert J. Slavik, Cozen O’Connor; Seattle, Washington
For Appellee Debra L. Sykes:
Trent N. Baker, Datsopoulos, MacDonald & Lind, PC; Missoula, Montana
For Appellees Tom and Rita Jones, Ronald and Barbara Kohler, and Dennis and
Geraldine Arnold:
Roger M. Sullivan (argued), McGarvey, Heberling, Sullivan & Lacey, PC;
Kalispell, Montana
Timothy M. Bechtold, Bechtold Law Firm, PLLC; Missoula, Montana
Alan J. Lerner, Lerner Law Firm; Kalispell, Montana
For Amici Montana Trial Lawyers Association:
John L. Amsden, Justin P. Staples, Beck & Amsden, PLLC; Bozeman,
Montana
Argued: September 11, 2015
Submitted: September 16, 2015
Decided: January 12, 2016
Filed:
__________________________________________
Clerk
2
Justice Jim Rice delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Westchester Surplus Lines Insurance Company (Westchester) appeals from orders
entered by the Fourth Judicial District Court, Missoula County, in this declaratory action
that granted summary judgment against Westchester and in favor of its insureds, Keller
Transport, Inc. (Keller), and Wagner Enterprises, LLC (Wagner). We affirm in part and
reverse in part. We address the following issues on appeal:
1. Did the District Court err by determining that Westchester’s policy was
ambiguous and that it provided an additional $4 million in coverage under the “general
aggregate” limit?
2. Did the District Court err by holding that Westchester breached its duty to
defend the insureds under its policy?
PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND
¶2 In April 2008, Keller leased a tanker truck from Wagner to transport gasoline to
Kalispell, Montana. On Highway 35, adjacent to Flathead Lake, the truck’s trailer
traveled off the road, overturned, and spilled 6,380 gallons of gasoline. The gasoline
flowed underneath the highway and beneath several homeowners’ (Homeowners)
properties.
¶3 Keller and Wagner were both insured under a Commercial Transportation Policy
issued by Carolina Casualty Insurance Company (CCIC), which provided two distinct
coverages: commercial automobile (Auto), and commercial general liability (CGL). The
stated limit for the Auto coverage was $1 million per accident, while the stated limit for
the CGL coverage was $1 million for each occurrence, as well as a $2 million “General
3
Aggregate.” The CGL provisions stated that its “General Aggregate” limit was the most
that would be paid under the CGL coverage regardless of the number of insureds or
persons making claims. CCIC’s policy stated that CCIC had the duty to defend its
insureds against any lawsuit that might implicate the policy, but that such duty terminated
when the coverage limits had “been exhausted by payment of judgments or settlements.”
¶4 Westchester insured both Keller and Wagner under an excess liability policy,
which covered those losses exceeding the coverage limits of CCIC’s policy. Stated limits
of the Westchester excess policy were $4 million for each “occurrence” as well as a
$4 million “General Aggregate.” The term “General Aggregate” was not defined. The
Westchester policy incorporated the CCIC policy, stating, “[e]xcept as otherwise stated
herein, and except with respect to (1) any obligation to investigate or defend any claim or
suit, or (2) any obligation to renew, the insurance afforded by this policy shall apply in
like manner as the underlying insurance described in the Declarations.” The Declarations
in turn referenced the coverages of the CCIC policy. Regarding the duty to defend, the
Westchester policy stated that Westchester “shall not be called upon to assume charge of
the settlement or defense of any claim made or proceeding instituted against the insured;
but the company shall have the right and opportunity to associate with the insured in the
defense and control of any claim or proceeding reasonably likely to involve the
company.”
¶5 The Westchester policy contained a federally-mandated endorsement, known as
the “MCS-90,” as a protection for third parties injured in motor carrier vehicle accidents.
The MCS-90 endorsement was created by the Motor Carrier Act of 1980 as a means to
4
guarantee recovery for injured third parties when insurance coverage was lacking. The
MCS-90 required Westchester to pay up to the prescribed limit for each motor carrier
vehicle accident regardless of whether covered by the policy. The insured motor carrier
may be required to reimburse the insurer for any payout the insurer would not otherwise
have been obligated to make. The MCS-90 attached to Westchester’s policy stated
“[t]his insurance is excess and the company shall not be liable for amounts in excess of
$4,000,000 for each accident in excess of the underlying limits of $1,000,000 for each
accident.”
¶6 Following the accident, CCIC initiated payments for related clean-up expenses
and litigation costs. Late in 2008, CCIC exhausted the $1,000,000 Auto coverage limit of
its policy. Shortly before reaching the limit, CCIC notified Keller and Wagner that its
duty to defend would end once the Auto coverage had been exhausted, citing the duty to
defend provision of its policy. In January 2009, the Homeowners initiated suit against
Keller and Wagner in the Twentieth Judicial District Court, Lake County, alleging
negligence for causing the accident and in the manner that clean-up efforts had been
implemented, which Homeowners asserted had caused further damage (hereinafter “the
tort action.”). Because the limits of its Auto coverage had been exhausted, CCIC referred
the matter to Westchester. Westchester undertook defense of the suit on behalf of Kohler
and Wagner pursuant to a reservation of rights, noting the provision of its policy that
disavowed a duty to defend and, like CCIC, Westchester stated it would continue
defending only until “the applicable Westchester Policy Limit has been exhausted.”
Westchester did not seek to withdraw from the defense pursuant to the reservation of
5
rights, and continued defending Keller and Wagner until December 2009, by which time
it had paid $4 million in clean-up expenses and litigation costs. On the ground that the
limit of its excess coverage for Auto liability had been exhausted, Westchester referred
the defense back to CCIC in early 2010. Keller and Wagner did not challenge
Westchester’s assessment that the limits of its policy had been reached.
¶7 In response to Westchester’s referral, CCIC made assurances to Keller and
Wagner in February 2010 that it would continue to provide a defense despite having
previously exhausted the limits of its policy’s Auto coverage. CCIC’s payments for
defense costs resumed in May 2010. Despite the delay in re-initiation of payments,
Keller and Wagner remained represented by counsel at all times.
¶8 In August 2010, CCIC initiated this action (hereinafter “the declaratory action”) in
the Fourth Judicial District Court, Missoula County, seeking a declaration of CCIC’s and
Westchester’s responsibilities for Keller’s and Wagner’s defense and costs, naming
Westchester, Keller and Wagner. Thereafter, Homeowners made a claim that the CCIC
policy provided an additional $1 million pursuant to the CGL coverage, and that the
Westchester policy likewise provided an additional $4 million in excess limits under the
CGL coverage. On the premise that the post-rollover negligent conduct of Keller and
Wagner constituted a separate occurrence under the CGL coverage, Homeowners
demanded an additional $5 million to settle their claims. In response to these claims,
CCIC amended its complaint in this declaratory action, seeking a ruling on whether
separate CGL coverage was implicated by the Homeowners’ claims in the underlying
litigation, in addition to the Auto coverage. Westchester likewise sought a declaration
6
that the limit under its excess policy was $4 million in total, regardless of the coverages
that applied, and that the limit had already been exhausted. CCIC and Westchester thus
opposed Homeowners’ contention that the policies provided an additional $5 million in
coverage.
¶9 Keller and Wagner, on the premise they had been prejudiced by the delay in the
re-initiation of defense payments by CCIC earlier in the year, entered settlement
negotiations with Homeowners, excluding CCIC and Westchester. In January 2011,
eight months after their defense payments had resumed, Keller and Wagner filed
confessions of judgment in the tort action in favor of Homeowners that stipulated
Homeowners had suffered $13,066,474 in damages. This amount was to be offset by $3
million that Homeowners had received from a settlement with another defendant. Keller
and Wagner assigned their rights under the policies to Homeowners, who agreed to
collect the remainder of the judgments “by any legal means only upon and against” CCIC
and Westchester. Between them, CCIC and Westchester fully paid Keller’s and
Wagner’s defense costs from the commencement of the underlying tort action through the
entry of their confessions of judgment.
¶10 Shortly before the confessions of judgment were filed in the tort action, CCIC and
Westchester moved to intervene in that case. CCIC and Westchester asserted a right to a
determination establishing the reasonableness of any damages judgment, and the right to
participate in that determination. The Lake County District Court issued an order stating
it would not rule on CCIC’s and Westchester’s motion to intervene until the coverage
issue had been determined in the Missoula County declaratory action.
7
¶11 All parties moved for partial summary judgment on two issues in the declaratory
action: 1) whether there was additional coverage under CCIC’s CGL coverage and
Westchester’s excess insurance, and 2) whether CCIC and Westchester had breached
their duty to defend Keller and Wagner.
¶12 On the first issue, the Missoula County District Court determined that an
additional $1 million in limits under CCIC’s CGL coverage were implicated by
Homeowners’ claims.1 Regarding Westchester’s excess policy, the District Court held
that an additional $4 million was available, reasoning that the phrase “general aggregate”
limit was undefined and ambiguous, and could be read as establishing a “general
aggregate” limit for excess payments for each coverage in the underlying policy, rather
than only establishing a “general aggregate” limit for the entire policy. Regarding the
second issue, the District Court held that CCIC and Westchester had both breached their
duties to defend. Regarding Westchester, the District Court held that Westchester had
assumed a duty to defend, despite the language disavowing a duty in its policy, by
engaging to pay Keller’s and Wagner’s defense costs, and, in light of the court’s
determination that an additional coverage amount was available, had violated that duty by
withdrawing from the defense before such additional amounts were expended.
¶13 Westchester filed a Rule 60(b) motion, seeking reconsideration of the District
Court’s rulings on coverage and the duty to defend. Homeowners then filed a second
motion for partial summary judgment, seeking a determination from the court that the
1
Homeowners and CCIC have settled all claims and the District Court’s decision regarding the
CCIC policy is not before the Court.
8
stipulated damages were reasonable, and that Westchester was required to pay the
judgments of $13,066,477, less the $3 million Homeowners had received in another
settlement, but in addition to the $4 million Westchester had already paid. The District
Court denied Westchester’s Rule 60(b) motion, slightly altering its first order granting
summary judgment to Homeowners. The District Court held that Westchester’s policy
was not only ambiguous on its face, but particularly so in light of the MCS-90
endorsement attached to the policy. The District Court reasoned that because the
MCS-90 endorsement stated that Westchester was not liable for amounts in excess of
$4 million “for each accident,” this statement conflicted with the $4 million “general
aggregate” limit, and required resolution in favor of the insured. The District Court
rejected Westchester’s arguments on the duty to defend and reaffirmed its ruling that the
duty had been breached, and that Westchester was liable for the stipulated judgments.
The District Court granted Homeowners second motion for partial summary judgment,
ruling that Westchester was not entitled to a reasonableness hearing, but that undisputed
facts raised to the court in the summary judgment hearing were sufficient to establish that
the stipulated judgments were reasonable as a matter of law.
¶14 Westchester appeals the orders granting summary judgment to Homeowners on
the interpretation of the policy, the duty to defend, and denial of a hearing on the
reasonableness of the stipulated damages.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶15 We review the interpretation of insurance contracts de novo. Tidyman’s Mgmt.
Servs. v. Davis, 2014 MT 205, ¶ 13, 376 Mont. 80, 330 P.3d 1139.
9
DISCUSSION
¶16 1. Did the District Court err by determining that Westchester’s policy was
ambiguous and that it provided an additional $4 million in coverage under the “general
aggregate” limit?
¶17 The parties both acknowledge that the $4 million “general aggregate” limit in the
Westchester policy represents a maximum dollar liability. The disagreement, and alleged
ambiguity, concerns the question: to what does this maximum apply? According to
Westchester, the term “general aggregate” is commonly used in policies and means the
maximum that applies to all coverages under the entire policy. According to
Homeowners, because the term was undefined in the policy, and given the structure of
the excess and underlying policies here, the maximum must apply individually to each of
the underlying coverages, or at least create an ambiguity that makes it so. We agree with
Homeowners.
¶18 We first dispense with the notion the MCS-90 endorsement is a basis to conclude
the policy is ambiguous. The federally-mandated MCS-90 endorsement is a surety
provision, not a modification of the policy to which it is attached. Carolina Cas. Ins. Co.
v. Yeates, 584 F.3d 868, 878 (10th Cir. 2009) (“The insurer’s obligation under the
MCS-90 endorsement [is] one of a surety rather than a modification of the underlying
policy.”). It operates as a safety net to protect the public when coverage for motor carrier
vehicle accidents is lacking. Canal Ins. Co. v. Carolina Cas. Ins. Co., 59 F.3d 281, 283
(1st Cir. 1995). The MCS-90 obligates an insurer to guarantee a source of coverage for
third parties injured by a negligent motor carrier, but only after it is determined that
(1) the policy to which the endorsement is attached does not otherwise provide coverage
10
and (2) either no other insurer is available to satisfy the judgment against the motor
carrier, or the motor carrier’s insurance coverage is insufficient to satisfy the federally-
prescribed minimum levels of financial responsibility. Yeates, 584 F.3d at 878. The
language of the endorsement demonstrates that it is not intended to affect the terms of the
policy’s coverage: “all terms, conditions, and limitations in the policy to which the
endorsement is attached shall remain in full force and effect as binding between the
insured and the company.” Further, because a court must first determine whether the
policy provides coverage before considering the applicability of the MCS-90, the
endorsement necessarily is not a part of the policy for interpretational purposes. The
District Court erroneously considered the provisions of the MCS-90 in analyzing the
coverage question at issue here.
¶19 The terms in an insurance contract are to be interpreted according to their common
sense meaning, viewed from the perspective of a reasonable insurance consumer. Am.
States Ins. Co. v. Flathead Janitorial & Rug Servs., 2015 MT 239, ¶ 12, 380 Mont. 308,
355 P.3d 735. A policy provision is ambiguous when, in light of the contract as a whole,
it is reasonably susceptible to two different interpretations. Farmers Alliance Mut. Ins.
Co. v. Holeman, 1998 MT 155, ¶ 25, 289 Mont. 312, 961 P.2d 114; Fisher v. State Farm
Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 2013 MT 208, ¶ 15, 371 Mont. 147, 305 P.3d 861. Because insurers
draft the language of insurance contracts and the object of an insurance contract is to give
protection to the insured, we construe ambiguous provisions “against the insurer and in
favor of extending coverage.” Fisher, ¶ 15 (citation omitted).
11
¶20 “Item 5” of Westchester’s Policy Declarations addresses “Underlying Insurance”
and states “See Schedule A – Schedule of Underlying Insurance.” In turn, Schedule A
sets forth the coverages and financial limits of the coverages within the underlying CCIC
policy that was issued to Keller and Wagner:
SCHEDULE A – SCHEDULE OF UNDERLYING INSURANCE
(A) Automobile “Bodily Injury” & “Property Carolina Casualty
Liability Damage” Insurance Co.
Combined Single Limit 02/15/08 - 02/01/09
$1,000,000 Each Occurrence
(B) Commercial $1,000,000 Each Occurrence Carolina Casualty
General $2,000,000 General Aggregate Insurance Co.
Liability ( ) Per Project/Location 02/15/08 - 02/01/09
$2,000,000 Products/Completed
Operations Aggregate
$1,000,000 Personal & Advertising
Injury
¶21 Item 6 of the Westchester Declarations addresses “Limits of Insurance,” as
follows:
LIMITS OF INSURANCE
$4,000,000 Each Occurrence; $4,000,000 General Aggregate
$4,000,000 Products/Completed Operations Aggregate excess of the limits
indicated in Item 5 of the Declarations. [Underlining in original.]
¶22 The District Court reasoned that, given that Schedule A makes clear that the
Westchester policy provides excess insurance for both the Auto and CGL coverages, and
that Item 6 makes clear there is a $4 million aggregate limit on something, a reasonable
insurance consumer might draw two different, but plausible, interpretations. On one
hand, the $4 million general aggregate limit might represent the maximum liability of the
entire excess policy, so that $4 million exhausted under one coverage would mean there
12
was nothing available under the other coverage. On the other hand, the $4 million
general aggregate limit might represent the maximum liability under each coverage, so
that $4 million exhausted under one coverage had no bearing on the limits available
under the other coverage. The District Court stated that Westchester’s failure to define
“general aggregate” makes one no more plausible than the other.
¶23 The District Court correctly noted that the fundamental interpretational problem is
caused by Westchester’s failure to define the term “general aggregate” in a policy that
provides excess coverage for an underlying policy with more than one coverage and more
than one stated limit.2 A reasonable consumer is faced with applying the “follow-form”3
language of the excess policy: “the insurance afforded by this policy shall apply in like
manner as the underlying insurance described in the Declarations.” The phrase “in
like manner” creates an apparent symmetry between the two policies that supports
Homeowners’ ambiguity argument. Schedule A lists two aggregates under
the CGL coverage of the CCIC policy, including “GENERAL AGGREGATE
( ) PER PROJECT/LOCATION” and “PRODUCTS/COMPLETED OPERATIONS
AGGREGATE” (PCO), and lists the amount of $2 million for each of these aggregates
within a column headed with the oxymoronic “COMBINED SINGLE LIMIT.” The
Auto coverage contains only the term “occurrence,” with no reference to an “aggregate,”
and lists a “Combined Single Limit” of $1 million. A reasonable consumer attempting to
2
Notably, CCIC’s insurance policy defined the term “general aggregate” as used for its policy.
3
See Olin Corp. v. American Home Assurance Co., et al., 704 F.3d 89, 93-94 (2d. Cir. 2012)
(“Each policy also ‘follows form’ to lower-level excess policies, which means that it adopts their
terms and conditions.”).
13
apply the excess insurance “in like manner” could reasonably conclude that the Limits of
Insurance stated in Item 6 of the excess policy are meant to correspond to the identically
stated counterparts in Schedule A. Thus, the $4 million “General Aggregate” and $4
million “PCO Aggregate” are applicable only to the CGL coverage because that is the
only coverage for which those terms are used in the underlying insurance stated in
Schedule A. Then, the “$4,000,000 Each Occurrence” stated in the excess policy’s
Limits of Insurance provision would likewise appear to correspond to the Auto
coverage’s “$1,000,000 Each Occurrence” stated in Schedule A. Under this reasonable,
logical reading, a consumer could expect to have $4 million in excess insurance per
occurrence under the Auto coverage, with no aggregate, and $4 million in excess
insurance, with a $4 million aggregate, under the CGL coverage, or a total of $8 million
in excess limits for the two coverages in this case.
¶24 Westchester cites Weyerhaeuser Co. v. Commercial Union Ins. Co., 15 P.3d 115,
123 (Wash. 2000), and similar authority, for the proposition that, because the term
“general aggregate” as used in the excess policy is not expressly tied to a specific
coverage, it must convey the total limit of excess coverage for the entire underlying
policy. However, reliance on Weyerhaeuser is flawed here. First, it should be noted that
we look to the four corners of a contract to ascertain the parties’ intent, because context
can provide meaning. K&R P’ship v. City of Whitefish, 2008 MT 228, ¶ 26, 344 Mont.
336, 189 P.3d 593. Therefore, the manner in which the Weyerhaeuser policy applied its
aggregates is not necessarily relevant or instructive to the manner in which the
Westchester policy is applied. But, further, the Weyerhaeuser policy was well-defined
14
and left no confusion regarding the applicability of the aggregate limits. It avoided the
confusion present here by explicitly identifying the underlying coverages that had
aggregate limits, leaving little ambiguity that the named coverages had aggregate limits
while the unnamed coverages did not. See Weyerhaeuser, 15 P.3d at 123 (finding policy
language unambiguous). The Weyerhaueser Court could quite confidently state that the
application of the aggregate limit was unambiguous due to the precision of the policy
language. In contrast, the Westchester policy does not define the term “general
aggregate” or give any explicit indication as to how its “general aggregate” limits are to
be applied.
¶25 We conclude that Westchester’s policy with regard to application of the general
aggregate is ambiguous because, taken as a whole, it is reasonably susceptible to at least
two interpretations. Such an ambiguity must be construed in favor of coverage. Fisher,
¶ 15. Therefore, we affirm the District Court’s holding that Westchester’s policy
provides an additional $4 million in CGL coverage.
¶26 “[T]he contractual duty to indemnify is breached when an ‘insurer has wrongfully
refused to provide coverage to an insured.’” State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Freyer,
2013 MT 301, ¶ 27, 372 Mont. 191, 312 P.3d 403. Westchester incorrectly interpreted its
policy and therefore breached its duty to indemnify Keller and Wagner to the proper
limits of its policy. “[A]n insurer’s wrongful refusal to indemnify entitles its insured to
recover consequential damages,” including attorney fees. Freyer, ¶ 42. Homeowners
requested and were granted these damages by the District Court, and we likewise affirm
that award.
15
¶27 Did the District Court err by holding that Westchester breached its duty to defend
the insureds under its policy?
¶28 Westchester argues at length that its policy did not impose a duty to defend, but
nonetheless acknowledges that it agreed to pay for Keller’s and Wagner’s defense upon
exhaustion of CCIC’s primary coverage limits “until the limits of [Westchester’s] excess
policy were exhausted,” under a reservation of rights. It further argues that once its
“policy limits were exhausted, the [tort] proceeding would no longer ‘involve the
company’” as that term is used in Condition E of the policy, and at that point
Westchester “was unambiguously authorized to withdraw.” Given Westchester’s
assumption of the defense by agreement until the policy limits were exhausted, and our
holding above that additional policy limits were implicated by Homeowners’ claims, we
hold that Westchester had a continuing duty to defend its insureds herein, and decline to
further address Condition E regarding Westchester’s options in undertaking a defense.
We thus turn to the question whether Westchester breached that duty to defend.
¶29 Homeowners argue that Westchester breached its duty by withdrawing from the
defense before the additional policy limits were exhausted because that created a delay in
defense payments that prejudiced Keller’s and Wagner’s defenses. Westchester argues
that it did not breach the duty because the insureds continued to be represented by
counsel at all times, Westchester and CCIC paid all of the insureds’ defense costs through
the entry of the confessional stipulated judgments, including for expert witnesses, and the
stipulated judgments were entered long after any delay in defense payments. For the
reasons set forth below, we agree with Westchester.
16
¶30 “Where the insurer refuses to defend a claim and does so unjustifiably, that insurer
becomes liable for defense costs and judgments.” Lee v. USAA Cas. Ins. Co., 2004 MT
54, ¶ 19, 320 Mont. 174, 86 P.3d 562 (citing Independent Milk & Cream Co. v. Aetna
Life Ins. Co., 68 Mont. 152, 216 P. 1109 (1923)). The Independent Milk rule has been
reiterated by this court multiple times in more recent years. See Lee, ¶ 19; Tidyman’s,
¶ 25; and Farmers Union Mut. Ins. Co. v. Staples, 2004 MT 108, ¶ 20, 321 Mont. 99, 90
P.3d 381. Although we are unaware of a Montana case where this rule has been applied
to an insurer that voluntarily assumed a duty to defend, other jurisdictions have done so.
See Bluestein & Sander v. Chi. Ins. Co., 276 F.3d 119, 122 (2nd Cir. 2002); United Pac.
Ins. v. Pac. Nw. Research Found., 593 P.2d 1278, 1280 (Or. App. 1979); Ging v.
American Liberty Ins. Co., 423 F.2d 115, 120 (5th Cir. 1970). We find these authorities
persuasive, and hold that Independent Milk applies to a breach of an assumed duty to
defend.
¶31 At the time Westchester withdrew from Keller’s and Wagner’s defense, there had
been no suggestion that additional coverage was implicated by Homeowners’ claims.
Indeed, Keller and Wagner, although desiring that Westchester would continue to provide
a defense, also understood that Westchester’s policy limits had been exhausted.
Homeowners’ claim for additional coverage came eight months later, after CCIC had
initiated this declaratory action for a determination of CCIC’s and Westchester’s
respective duties, which Westchester joined. Unlike Tidyman’s, where the insured
confessed judgment during a time his insurer declined to provide a defense, Tidyman’s,
¶ 9, Wagner and Keller were not declined a defense. Although there was a short delay in
17
payments after the defense was tendered back by Westchester, CCIC promptly agreed to
provide a defense and re-initiated payments. All defense expenses incurred up to the
entry of the stipulated judgments were paid. It was some eight months after defense
payments resumed that Keller and Wagner confessed judgment. They were continually
represented by counsel up to that point, evidenced by their counsel’s numerous filings in
the underlying action, even during the period of delayed payment.
¶32 Homeowners argue the delay in defense payments hindered Wagner’s efforts to
retain experts, but the record reveals that this was a matter of case management on the
part of Wagner. Wagner waited until one month before its expert disclosure deadline in
September 2010—seven months after CCIC agreed to resume its defense and four
months after defense payments re-started—before asking Keller if Wagner could share
Keller’s experts at trial. When Keller declined, Wagner scrambled to locate its own
experts in the remaining time. There is scant indication in the record that the delay in
Wagner’s retention of experts had anything to do with the delay in defense payments,
particularly in light of the fact that Keller’s experts were obtained at the insurer’s expense
as a defense cost. Notably, Wagner was still able to timely obtain experts, at the insurer’s
expense.
¶33 The stipulated judgments here were entered eight months after defense payments
resumed. A defense was being provided and all defense costs were being covered. The
facts of this case demonstrate that the insureds were not “improperly abandon[ed]” by
their insurers and left without a defense such that they would be “justified in taking steps
to limit [their] personal liability” by entering a stipulated judgment. Freyer, ¶ 34
18
(citations omitted); Tidyman’s, ¶ 25 (citations omitted). The authority upon which we
have relied for these principles holds that a stipulated judgment will not be enforced
“against an insurer where the insurer has conceded coverage and defended its insured,
and where there has been no finding of bad faith against the insurer.” Freyer, ¶ 34
(citations omitted). Therefore, the District Court’s order that Westchester is liable for the
stipulated judgments must be reversed. This being so, it is unnecessary for us to address
Westchester’s appeal of the District Court’s denial of a hearing on the reasonableness of
the stipulated damages.
CONCLUSION
¶34 The Westchester policy provides an additional $4 million in excess insurance
pursuant to the CGL coverage. Westchester thus breached its duty to indemnify Keller
and Wagner, and the District Court’s order in this regard, including assessment of
consequential damages, is affirmed. Westchester’s assumed duty to defend continues at
least until these policy limits are exhausted. However, Westchester did not breach the
duty to defend and is not liable for the stipulated judgments. To this extent, the District
Court is reversed.
¶35 Affirmed in part and reversed in part.
/S/ JIM RICE
We concur:
/S/ MIKE McGRATH
/S/ BETH BAKER
/S/ PATRICIA COTTER
/S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA
/S/ MICHAEL E WHEAT
19
Justice Laurie McKinnon, dissenting.
¶36 The Court fundamentally errs when it fails to consider the insurance contract as a
whole and the plain language of the Insuring Agreement. We have repeatedly held that
when we look at an insurance contract to ascertain its purpose and intent, we will
examine the contract as a whole, giving no special deference to any specific clause.
Mitchell v. State Farm, 2003 MT 102, ¶ 26, 315 Mont. 281, 68 P.3d 703 (quotation and
citation omitted).
¶37 Keller and Wagner’s excess liability policy with Westchester unambiguously
provides, under “Insuring Agreement,” that “the Company’s obligation hereunder shall
not exceed the limit of liability stated in [Item] 6.”1 The limits of insurance are
determined by Item 6, rather than Item 5 as the Court erroneously concludes. Item 6, as
contrasted with Item 5 relating to “underlying insurance,” clearly provides that the “limits
of [Westchester’s] insurance” is “$4,000,000 Each Occurrence; $4,000,000 General
Aggregate.” Item 6 is again referenced as setting the upper limits of insurance in the
“Appeals” section of the Westchester policy, which unambiguously provides “but in no
event shall the liability of the company for excess loss exceed the amount set forth in
[Item] 6.” Item 5, relating to the schedule of underlying insurance provided by CCIC,
does not conflict or render ambiguous these clear provisions of the Westchester policy,
which incorporates Item 6 and thus limits Westchester’s insurance to $4 million for each
occurrence, not to exceed $4 million general aggregate. Nowhere in the Court’s decision
1
The declarations page of the Westchester policy lists the various provisions as Items while its
Insuring Agreement refers to them as Declarations. For the sake of consistency, I use the term
Item.
20
have we recognized or acknowledged the existence of the Insuring Agreement, which
clearly incorporates the provisions of Item 6—and not Item 5—as setting the limits of
insurance. The Insuring Agreement’s “shall not exceed the limit” clause does not, as the
Court erroneously concludes, refer to or depend on Item 5 or CCIC’s coverage.
¶38 Moreover, the Court’s reliance on the “follow-form” language of the Westchester
policy is legally unsound and misconstrues the provisions of the policy.2 The
“follow-form” provision states that, “[e]xcept as otherwise stated herein,” the CCIC
policy “shall apply in like manner.” This provision makes clear that where the
Westchester and CCIC policies diverge, the distinct terms of the Westchester policy
control. As the Westchester policy’s Insuring Agreement clearly specifies policy limits
that are different from those set forth in the CCIC policy, Westchester’s terms apply
without reference to the CCIC policy limits. The Court errs in concluding Item 5 creates
an ambiguity regarding the limits of insurance, as nothing in the insurance documents
incorporates Item 5 to establish the limits of insurance. The CCIC policy terms apply
only where the Westchester policy terms have not provided otherwise. The incorporation
of Item 6 as Westchester’s limit of insurance is expressly provided for in the Westchester
policy. I cannot subscribe to manufacturing an ambiguity, as the Court does, when a
simple and careful review of the insurance documents does not support coverage beyond
the general aggregate amount of $4 million for each occurrence.
2
I agree with the Court that the federally mandated MCS-90 endorsement is a surety provision,
not a modification of the policy to which it is attached. Opinion, ¶ 18.
21
¶39 The term “general aggregate” is unambiguous: “The aggregate dollar liability
represents the insurer’s maximum total dollar liability. The fact is clear both from the
ordinary everyday meaning of the word aggregate, and from case law.” 3 Allan D.
Windt, Insurance Claims & Disputes: Representation of Insurance Companies &
Insureds § 11:32, 11-501 (5th ed. 2010) (italics omitted); Weyerhaeuser, 15 P.3d at 122
n. 5 (“An aggregate limit defines an insurer’s total liability under a policy.”). The word
“general” means “involving or belonging to the whole of a body, group, class, or type:
applicable or relevant to the whole rather than to a limited part, group, or section.”
Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 944 (Philip Babcock Gove ed. 1971). The
phrase “general aggregate;” therefore, clearly refers to Westchester’s maximum liability
for the whole insurance policy rather than individual sections of the underlying CCIC
policy. Under the provisions of the Westchester policy, the plain and ordinary meaning
of “general” and “aggregate” do not require that “general aggregate” be defined in order
to avoid an ambiguity within the policy as the Court offers.
¶40 I dissent from our conclusion that the policy is ambiguous and that an additional
$4 million in excess insurance coverage is available. As Westchester paid out $4 million
in coverage before withdrawing from the defense and tendering it back to CCIC, I would
not address the remaining issues.
/S/ LAURIE McKINNON
22