Southwick v. City of Rutland

Johnson, J.

¶ 1. This action stems from a written agreement between the City of Rutland and Vermont Swim Association (VSA) granting use of a City facility to VSA for its annu'al swim meet. A child attending the swim meet was injured when she fell from a piece of playground equipment in the park where the swim meet was held. The child’s parents, plaintiffs, filed a complaint against the City, which then filed a third-party complaint against VSA asserting a claim for indemnity pursuant to the written agreement. VSA appeals the trial court’s order granting the City’s motion for summary judgment and entering judgment for the City in the amount of $700,000 on the indemnity claim. On appeal, VSA argues that the trial court erred because (1) the indemnity clause in the use agreement includes no express intent to indemnify the City for the City’s own negligence as required by Tateosian v. State, 2007 VT 136, 183 Vt. 57, 945 A.2d 833; and (2) the circumstances surrounding the use agreement demonstrate the need for express intent language to provide indemnity for the City’s own negligence. We affirm.

¶ 2. In July 2005, the City and VSA executed a -written agreement that granted VSA use of Whites Pool, located in *108Whites Park, for VSA’s annual swim meet, scheduled for August 5 and 6, 2005. The agreement between the City and VSA included an indemnification clause stating that VSA “agree[d] to defend, indemnify and hold harmless Rutland . . . from all claims for bodily injury or property damage arising from or out of the presence of [VSA], including its . . . guests and others present because of the event or [VSA’s] activities in or about Whites Park.” The agreement also required VSA to procure liability insurance for the meet and to name the City as an additional insured entity.

¶ 3. During the swim meet, Addie Southwick fell from a piece of playground equipment in Whites Park and sustained various injuries. Plaintiffs’ complaint against the City on her behalf alleged that the City had negligently installed and maintained the equipment. After the City asserted its claim against VSA for indemnity and plaintiffs added a claim against VSA, the City moved for summary judgment against VSA on two grounds: for enforcement of the indemnity clause in the agreement and for breach of contract for failing to procure insurance naming the City as an additional insured, as required by the agreement. VSA cross-moved for summary judgment against the City, arguing that the indemnification clause was inapplicable as a matter of law. The trial court granted the City summary judgment on its indemnity claim and denied VSA’s cross-motion. The court also granted the City summary judgment on its breach of contract claim against VSA.* Prior to trial, the City reached a settlement agreement with plaintiffs, and the trial court dismissed with prejudice plaintiffs’ claims against the City and VSA. Based on the summary judgment ruling for the City’s indemnity claim against VSA, the court entered judgment for the City against VSA in the amount of $700,000. This appeal followed.

¶4. We review an award of summary judgment de novo, construing all doubts and inferences in favor of the nonmoving party. Collins v. Thomas, 2007 VT 92, ¶ 6, 182 Vt. 250, 938 A.2d 1208. We must determine whether there are any genuine issues of material fact and, in their absence, whether either party deserves judgment as a matter of law. V.R.C.P. 56(c)(3); Collins, 2007 VT *10992, ¶ 6. VSA does not allege that there are genuine issues of material fact. Rather, it argues that the lower court incorrectly interpreted and applied the indemnity provision contained in the agreement between the City and VSA. We interpret the indemnification provision of this agreement as we do all contracts; our goal is to give effect to the intent of the parties as it is expressed in their writing. Hamelin v. Simpson Paper (Vt) Co., 167 Vt. 17, 19, 702 A.2d 86, 88 (1997). When the contract language is unambiguous, we take these words to represent the parties’ intent, id., and the plain meaning of this language governs its interpretation. In re West, 165 Vt. 445, 450, 685 A.2d 1099, 1103 (1996). ‘We assume that parties included contract provisions for a reason, and we will not embrace a construction of a contract that would render a provision meaningless.” Id. We must instead enforce the contract as it is written. Id.

¶ 5. The indemnification clause in the agreement signed by the City and VSA reads:

Permittee [VSA] hereby agrees to defend, indemnify and hold harmless Rutland, ... its officers, trustees, agents, and employees, from all claims for bodily injury or property damage arising from or out of the presence of Permittee, including its employees, agents, representatives, guests and others present because of the event or Permittee’s activities in or about Whites Park, including the entrances, lobbies and exits thereof, the sidewalks, streets and approaches adjoining the property or any portion of the property used by Permittee or any of the above stated. Permittee shall be responsible for all costs of defense, including reasonable attorney’s fees, and shall pay all fines or recoveries against Rutland. Permittee acknowledges that as a condition precedent to the execution of this Agreement by Rutland, Permittee agrees that it shall have no cause of action against Rutland for any damage, injury or loss to person or property, from cause [sic] whatsoever, except that which may result from the willful acts of Rutland.

The trial court held that the plain meaning of this language “unambiguously” stated that VSA agreed to indemnify the City for all claims for bodily injury made by guests of VSA and others present because of VSA’s swim meet or VSA’s activities in or *110about Whites Park. The court emphasized that because there is no ambiguity in the language of the indemnification provision or the agreement as a whole, it did not need to look to technical rules of construction to interpret the parties’ indemnification provision. Rather, it determined that the agreement should be read to mean exactly what it stated. The court rejected VSA’s argument that this clause indemnified the City only for VSA’s negligence, concluding that there would have been no reason to include this provision at all if the parties’ intention had been that VSA was to be liable for its own conduct only and not for the City’s. The court also rejected VSA’s reliance on Tateosian for its claim that the indemnity provision does not cover claims arising from the City’s own negligence without express language to that effect, finding the agreement and the circumstances at hand very dissimilar to those in Tateosian.

¶ 6. On appeal VSA again argues that — contrary to its plain language — the indemnity clause does not cover claims that stem from the City’s negligence; thus, it contends the trial court erred in granting judgment as a matter of law to the City. VSA suggests that the language “claims . . . arising from or out of the presence of [VSA]” does not cover an accident that resulted because of the City’s negligence. It argues that this language is ambiguous and does not express a clear intent that VSA would indemnify the City for such injuries, as required by the circumstances surrounding the agreement’s formation. VSA relies on our decision in Tateosian, in which we held that a vague indemnification as to the “performance” of a contract did not indemnify the State against its own negligence without a clearer expression of the parties’ intent. 2007 VT 136, ¶¶ 22-23. VSA argues that the purpose of the indemnification clause is merely to protect the City from claims by third parties caused by VSA’s negligence and to protect the City from claims VSA might have against it caused by the City’s willful acts.

¶ 7. VSA cannot escape the plain language of its agreement with the City. The indemnification clause allocated responsibility to VSA for any negligence claims directly arising out of VSA’s event at the City’s park and pool facility. The clause is expressly limited to causes of action arising out of the presence of VSA and its guests or employees and agents. It extended to any part of the park, not just the pool area, including sidewalks, streets, and approaches to the property. It barred actions by VSA against the *111City, unless the City committed a willful act. The intent of the parties could not be more apparent — the City was willing to allow VSA to use Whites Park as long as it was completely insulated from liability due to VSA’s use. Indeed, the agreement allocated responsibility to VSA to purchase insurance to cover such losses. As the trial court found, the most basic rule of contract construction — that the plain meaning of unambiguous language prevails — determines the outcome of this case because the provision’s words are clear.

¶ 8. If we were to read the contract as VSA urges, the City gains nothing by this detailed clause in the contract. VSA is already liable for its own negligence; if VSA is not indemnifying the City for the City’s negligence, the clause has no purpose except to allocate the burden of buying insurance. The trial court correctly concluded that VSA’s desired reading of the clause would render it a nullity.

¶ 9. Contrary to VSA’s argument, Tateosian does not compel a different result from that reached by the trial court. Tateosian arose out of an accident caused when a steel chain cover flew off a state snowplow truck and shattered the windshield of a car, causing injuries. After the car’s occupants sued the State in negligence, the State sought indemnification from the contractor who had supplied and installed the steel chain cover for the state snowplow truck four years earlier. The indemnification clause in the standard form contract prepared by the State and applicable to any vendor doing business with the State specified that the contractor promised to defend the State against claims “arising as a result of the Contractor’s performance of this contract.” 2007 VT 136, ¶ 2. The State argued that the contractor’s “act of selling the installed chain guard to the State was the ‘performance’ referenced in the contract, and the obligation to defend and indemnify encompassed any injury that resulted from the chain guard any time after the sale.” Id. ¶ 16. We refused to stretch what we saw as an “extremely broad and vague” provision, one that raised more questions as to its scope than it answered, to cover the claimed indemnification, particularly where the State was in a much stronger bargaining position than the contractor. Id. ¶¶ 13, 17, 22. In the absence of the parties’ clear intent, we resorted to a rule of construction that an indemnity provision covers the sole negligence of the indemnitee only if its language clearly expresses that intent. Id. ¶ 17. Subsequently, in Stamp Tech, Inc. v. Lydall/ *112Thermal Acoustical, Inc., we emphasized that, following Tateosian, “[t]he issue in Vermont is not whether commercial parties may allocate liability among themselves, including indemnification of one party for its own negligence, but under what circumstances the agreement has to expressly disclose that fact.” 2009 VT 91, ¶ 22, 186 Vt. 369, 987 A.2d 292.

¶ 10. The decision in Tateosian was grounded in the rule first announced by the United States Supreme Court in United States v. Seckinger, 397 U.S. 203 (1970). Seckinger, like Tateosian, involved government contractors and unequal bargaining power. Id. at 212. The Seckinger Court held that language in a contract between a contractor and the United States stating that the contractor shall be responsible for all damages to persons or property that shall occur as a result of the contractor’s fault or negligence did not encompass the negligence of the United States. Id. at 208 n.9, 211. The Court concluded “that a contractual provision should not be construed to permit an indemnitee to recover for his own negligence unless the court is firmly convinced that such an interpretation reflects the intention of the parties.” Id. at 211. The Court noted that the “reluctance of courts to cast the burden of negligent actions upon those who were not actually at fault is particularly applicable to a situation in which there is a vast disparity in bargaining power and economic resources between the parties, such as exists between the United States and particular government contractors.” Id. at 212. The Court further stated:

if the United States expects to shift the ultimate responsibility for its negligence to its various contractors, the mutual intention of the parties to this effect should appear with clarity from the face of the contract. We can hardly say that this intention is manifested by the formulation incorporated into the present contract. . . . [T]he contractual language cannot readily be stretched to encompass the Government’s negligence as well.

Id. at 212-13. According to the Court, the contract — which had only a clause stating that the contractor would be responsible for all damages resulting from its negligence — was so broad that it could not be read to indicate clearly that both parties intended the contractor to indemnify the United States for its own negligence. Id. Further, the Court relied on the rule that a contract’s *113language should be interpreted most strongly against the drafter, here, the United States. Id. at 216. The Court declined, however, to hold that a clause intended to indemnify for the indemnitee’s own negligence “must explicitly state that indemnification extends to injuries occasioned by the indemnitee’s negligence.” Id. at 213 n.17. It emphasized that contract interpretation remains an individualized process; the conclusion in a particular case must stem from the particular language used in conjunction with the background provided by other indications of the parties’ intent. Id.

¶ 11. In Tateosian, 2007 VT 136, ¶ 23, we emphasized that our earlier holdings in Furlon v. Haystack Mountain Ski Area, Inc., 136 Vt. 266, 388 A.2d 403 (1978), and Hamelin, in which we had reserved adoption of the express-disclosure rule, remained good law. In Furlon, an employee of a ski area was injured while fixing a ski lift. He sued the ski lift manufacturer and obtained a judgment against it based on its negligent design and manufacture of the ski lift. The employee then sued to collect the judgment from the ski area based on an indemnity agreement between the manufacturer of the ski lift and the ski area. The contract language stated: “The Buyer [ski area] assumes all legal responsibility for any personal injuries, deaths or property damage that may result from the erection or operation of the Chattels [ski lifts], and for this purpose, he shall take out the necessary insurance coverage at his expense.” 136 Vt. at 268, 388 A.2d at 404 (quotation marks omitted). We declined to apply the express-disclosure rule, concluding that its aid as a tool of statutory construction was unnecessary in these circumstances. Id. at 269, 388 A.2d at 405. Not only was the provision’s language unambiguous, but also applying the rule would nullify the purpose of the indemnity provision as there would be no reason to include the clause if it merely indemnified the indemnitee, the ski lift manufacturer, against liability for the negligent acts of the indemnitor, the ski area. Id. at 268-69, 388 A.2d at 405. Furthermore, there was no disparity in bargaining power between the parties, and the effect of the provision was to give the indemnitor the burden of purchasing insurance, an obligation that was also specifically created in the contract. Id. at 269-70, 388 A.2d at 405.

¶ 12. In Hamelin, we held that Furlon controlled and again saw no reason to apply the express-disclosure rule, concluding that commercial parties with equal bargaining power may allocate the risk of liability among themselves regardless of negligence. 167 Vt. *114at 20-21, 702 A.2d at 89-90. A security guard working as an employee of a contractor brought a negligence action against the owner of the facility where he was posted after injuring himself on a faulty stair in the facility. The facility’s owner brought a third-party action against the contractor, claiming that the contractor was required to indemnify it under their contract, even if the damaged stair was caused by the owner’s own negligence. The contract at issue stated that the indemnitor, the contractor, agreed to:

assume all risk of injury to persons, including himself, his employees and agents, and or damage to property in any manner resulting from or arising out of or in any manner connected with [the indemnitor’s] operations hereunder, and [the indemnitor] agrees to indemnify and save [the indemnitee] harmless from any and all loss caused by or resulting from any such injury or damage.

Id. at 19, 702 A.2d at 88 (quotation marks omitted). The contractor argued that requiring it to indemnify the facility’s owner for the owner’s negligence offended the public policy underlying premises liability law: placing responsibility for maintenance of land on those who own or control supports the ultimate goal of reducing accidents. We determined, however, that the indemnity agreement directly contemplated the circumstances of the accident and “used expansive and unambiguous language to define [the indemnitor’s] obligation.” Id. at 20, 702 A.2d at 88. We concluded that, as in Furlon, the contract reflected an arm’s-length business deal in which the parties were not marked by a disparity in bargaining power and instead had merely divided risks and responsibilities. Id. at 21, 702 A.2d at 89. We noted that the contract’s requirement that the indemnitor purchase insurance reflected this. Id. Thus, the public policy concerns of unequal bargaining power, fairness, and risk-spreading were not present. Id. In addition, we noted that allocating liability to the indemnitor did not “significantly undermine” the indemnitee’s incentives to keep its premises reasonably safe because it remained liable for injuries suffered by others unrelated to the contractor’s presence. Id.

¶ 13. The contract language and circumstances before us now are far removed from those at issue in Tateosian and are more closely related to Hamelin. Most importantly, the language *115of the indemnity clause is unambiguous. Cf. Batson-Cook Co. v. Indus. Steel Erectors, 257 F.2d 410, 412 (5th Cir. 1958) (highlighting that intention to indemnify indemnitee against consequences of its own negligence must be “unequivocally expressed in the plainest of words”). Unlike the words “contractor’s performance” in Tateosian, the indemnification language in the instant contract is deliberately broad enough to cover all injuries and damages that might occur — as a result of either party’s negligence — to those present because of VSA’s swim meet in Whites Park without being so broad as to lose meaning altogether. See Hamelin, 167 Vt. at 19, 702 A.2d at 88 (‘When the contract language is clear, the intent of the parties is taken to be what the agreement declares.”). Contrary to VSA’s contention, this language does not “at most” provide indemnity for claims caused by VSA and its guests, rather than claims made by them. No interpretive gymnastics are required to conclude that the indemnification clause language covers an accident of a child playing on the playground at Whites Park while attending the swim meet, even if the accident resulted from the City’s negligence, because her claims arose out of her presence in Whites Park for VSA’s swim meet.

¶ 14. Moreover, the agreement was the result of an arm’s-length deal between the City and VSA, in which the facts suggest equal bargaining power, another distinguishing feature from the facts in Tateosian, where the State sought to impose an ambiguous clause in a form contract that it had drafted. 2007 VT 136, ¶ 13. VSA gave the City representative a copy of an agreement used by VSA for its annual swim meet held at Dartmouth College in 2004. The City’s representative used this agreement to prepare the agreement signed by VSA and the City, maintaining the Dartmouth agreement’s wording for both the indemnification clause and the requirement that VSA purchase liability insurance and name the City as an additional insured party. Furthermore, there was no true disparity in bargaining power between the two contracting parties: not only did VSA bring a model contract to the City, but it also could have chosen to host its event elsewhere or to postpone the event. VSA had held its annual swim meet at other locations in previous years, and the City did not control all contracts with suitable local pool facilities. Lastly, the City has many other incentives to keep its playgrounds safe for children, so that allocating liability to VSA for claims arising out of the event it hosted at the park does not undermine other public policies related to premises liability.

*116¶ 15. As the trial court found, the terms and circumstances of the agreement between the City and VSA demonstrate that VSA contracted to indemnify the City for claims such as the ones resulting from this child’s injury. We therefore hold that the trial court properly granted summary judgment to the City, denied it to VSA, and entered judgment for the City in the amount of $700,000 on the City’s indemnity claim against VSA.

Affirmed.

VSA has not appealed the trial court’s ruling with regard to the breach of contract for failure to purchase insurance and list the City as an additional insured party.