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Filed
1/3/01 CERTIFIED
FOR PUBLICATION IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF
THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION FOUR
APPEAL
from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Harvey A.
Schneider, Judge. Affirmed. Zevnik
Horton Guibord McGovern Palmer & Fognani, Paul Anton Zevnik, Michel Y.
Horton, Meredith Newton, John K. Grossman and Elizabeth Miller for Plaintiffs
and Appellants Golden Eagle Refinery Company, Inc., and American Ultramar
Limited. O’Melveny
& Myers, John W. Stamper, Lori E. Romley and Michael M. Maddigan for
Defendants and Respondents Century Indemnity Company and Central National
Insurance Company of Omaha; Barton, Klugman & Oetting and Charles J.
Schufreider for Defendant and Respondent Pennant Insurance Company, Ltd.;
Lewis, D’Amato, Brisbois & Bisgaard, James D. Fraser, Jonathon Kaplan, Raul
M. Martinez and Jeffry A. Miller for Defendant and Respondent Gerling-Konzern
General Insurance Company; and Thelen Reid & Priest, Brooks P.
Marshall; Hancock Rothert & Bunshoft, Yvette D. Roland and Gina P. Mark for
Defendant and Respondent The Yasuda Fire and Marine Insurance Company of Europe
Limited. I INTRODUCTION This
is an action by plaintiff and appellant Golden Eagle Refinery Company against
defendants and respondents, its third party liability insurance carriers.[1] The action is for indemnity for the millions of
dollars Golden Eagle spent for the cleanup of environmental contamination at
one of its refinery sites, and for the attendant economic losses resulting from
its inability to develop or market that property. The trial court granted the insurers’ various motions for summary
adjudication upon the grounds that Golden Eagle failed to demonstrate a prima
facie case for indemnity. The trial
court subsequently denied Golden Eagle’s timely motion for reconsideration. The
dispositive question of law in this appeal is whether, in an action for indemnity under a third party general
liability insurance policy, proof of causation and the amount of damages
incurred during each policy period are essential elements of the plaintiff’s
prima facie case? We conclude in the affirmative. Because Golden Eagle failed to present
evidence demonstrating an ability to allocate between covered acts and
non-covered and among the various different insurers, we affirm. II THE MATERIAL FACTS The
contaminated property which is the subject of this action is a 76-acre tract of
land (the Site) located at 21000 South Figueroa Street, Carson,
California. The Site was utilized as a
crude oil storage tank farm and refinery from at least 1947. Golden Eagle acquired the Site in 1958 and
operated the existing oil refinery until 1984.
Operation by Golden Eagle and its predecessor Sunset Oil at the Site
included the processing and attendant storage of crude oil and crude oil products
(petroleum hydrocarbon constituents or PHC) including unfinished naphtha to
produce jet fuel, diesel, bunker fuel and kerosene, and in the 1960’s leaded
gasoline. Refining operations ceased in
1984 and the refinery was dismantled by 1986.
Throughout the entire period from 1947 to 1984, the crude oil and crude
oil products were routinely and repeatedly discharged and released upon and
into the ground. All the events of
discharge fell into one of two categories:
(1) those which were sudden and accidental; and, (2) those which were
not sudden or accidental including some which were intentional.[2] All of the events were either foreseeable or
unforeseeable. Commencing
in 1985 the State of California through its various environmental agencies made
a series of orders requiring Golden Eagle to investigate, determine, and
finally remediate the substantial toxic contamination at the Site. Thereupon Golden Eagle retained a retinue of
experts who investigated and evaluated the suspected contamination. In March 1990 Golden Eagle entered into a
consent order with the state by which it agreed to remediate the
contamination. The removal and
treatment of the contaminated soil commenced in March 1991 and continued over
the next two years. Respondent
insurers issued third party general liability policies insuring Golden Eagle
from 1976 through June 30, 1985. The
policies provided limited pollution coverage for claims resulting from sudden
and accidental events, and some contained an endorsement entitled “Insurance of
Environmental Pollution Risks” (Environmental Impairment Liability, EIL
endorsement), extending coverage for pollution risks to damages caused by
discharges or releases which were unforeseeable (whether or not sudden and
accidental), and broadened the definition of property damage to include pure
financial losses arising from environmental pollution. The EIL policies excluded damage to the
insured’s own property. Golden Eagle
did not notify any of the insurers of the consent order or its remediation expenditures
until it filed this action in June 1995, well after it had completed the
cleanup. Golden Eagle’s claim for its
“pure financial loss” resulting from its inability to market and sell the Site
did not emerge until one and one-half years after the filing of this action. III THE MOTION FOR SUMMARY ADJUDICATION RE: PURE FINANCIAL LOSSES The “pure financial losses” claimed by Golden Eagle are
losses of approximately $150 million it claimed to have suffered as a result of
its inability to market and sell the refinery site. The loss was first raised in the second amended complaint filed
December 18, 1996, where it was alleged that Golden Eagle first suffered the
loss “in or around 1986-87.” Later, the
date reverted to 1984, the year that the last policy was effective. The
pertinent language of the EIL endorsement is as follows: “1.
Notwithstanding anything contained in this Policy to the contrary the
cover provided by this Policy is extended to include legal liability for the
consequences of a pollution of the environment (earth air water) provided
always that this pollution was unforeseeable from the stand-point of the
insured or his representatives who are responsible for environmental
protection. “It is understood that pure financial losses arising
from an environmental pollution shall be deemed to fall within the property
damage definition.” “3. No cover [sic] is provided for damage to own property, machinery, etc,
arising out of or in connection with Environmental Impairment Liability.” The
insurers brought motions for summary adjudication upon the grounds that the
policies containing an EIL endorsement clearly excluded coverage for any loss
or damage to the insured’s own property. In
opposition to the insurers’ motion, Golden Eagle asserts the EIL endorsement is
ambiguous and must be construed according to its expectations of coverage for
this type of loss. In support Golden
Eagle relies on the testimony of Charles Hess, the individual who negotiated
the policies in question, and the testimony of two other risk managers employed
at the time the policies were purchased.
Hess testified that when he negotiated the policies he was directed to
obtain “as much liability coverage, especially environmental, as possible,”
(emphasis added) and that this coverage “was necessary to secure to protect [sic] the corporate assets.” He went on to testify that he understood
this coverage “was third-party [coverage], but protecting first party
exposure.” The risk managers merely testified
as to their understanding that the “pure financial losses” language in these
third party liability policies were somehow first party policies as to pure
financial loss. None of these witnesses
testified that any of their respective intentions or understandings were ever
revealed to any agent or representative of any of the insurers. One of them, Daniel Smith, admitted that
this first party coverage would not have been accepted by the carriers, Golden
Eagle thereby admitting that it was aware that its unexpressed understanding
was contrary to the insurers’ understanding and intention. The
motions were brought, heard, and decided several months before the motions
regarding the pollution exclusion discussed below. The trial court found that the language of the subject policies
excluding coverage for loss or damage to the insured’s own property was clear
and unambiguous subject to only one reasonable interpretation, that coverage
did not exist, and it granted the motions.
We agree with the trial court. Golden
Eagle cites Parsons v. Bristol
Development Co. (1965) 62 Cal.2d 861, for the proposition that this court
is not bound by the trial court’s construction of the policies and that
undisputed extrinsic evidence is admissible in order to construe a contract.[3] Parsons
also holds that interpretation and construction of a contract is for the
court. “The interpretation of a written
instrument, even though it involves what might properly be called a question of
fact [citation], is essentially a judicial function to be exercised according
to the generally accepted canons of interpretation so that the purposes of the
instrument may be given effect.” (Parsons v. Bristol Development Co., supra,
62 Cal.2d at p. 865.) In
our de novo review (Krieger v. Nick Alexander Imports, Inc.
(1991) 234 Cal.App.3d 205, 212, fn. 3 ), we consider all this testimony in
the context of the language and character of the policies and conclude that the
term “pure financial losses” is not excepted from the overriding exclusion of
owned property. The
unexpressed understanding or intention of one of the parties to a contract is
never sufficient to establish ambiguity.
(City of Mill Valley v.
Transamerica Ins. Co. (1979) 98 Cal.App.3d 595.) Golden Eagle argues that this canon of insurance contract law is
limited only to testimony inconsistent with the contract provisions pointing
out that Hess’s testimony is consistent with the policy provision. The argument relies on Golden Eagle’s own
self-serving construction of the policies in order to render Hess’s testimony
consistent with them. The argument is a
paradigm of a “bootstrap” argument. Hess’s
entire testimony viewed in the context of his asserted understanding, does not
establish any ambiguity or undermine the clear meaning of the terms of the EIL
endorsement. Hess testified that he
understood he was negotiating third party liability policies, and that he was
seeking to protect corporate assets and Golden Eagle’s bottom line, all
perfectly consistent with such liability policies. Golden Eagle’s assets and its bottom line are in fact protected
by the policies from judgments obtained by third party plaintiffs. Finally,
we do not agree with Golden Eagle’s assertion that “Reading the phrase [‘pure
financial losses’] to refer only to
losses incurred by a third party in connection with third party property fails
to provide coverage beyond what is already provided in the preceding sentence
in the endorsement, etc.” and therefore renders the provision “mere
surplusage.” The preceding sentence of
the endorsement provides that “the cover provided by this policy is extended to
include legal liability for the
consequences of pollution of the environment, etc.” (Emphasis added.) The
“cover provided by this policy” refers to third party liability coverage; the
phrase survives the period at the end of the sentence. Furthermore the insurers correctly point out
that there exist claims which might arguably be excluded from the definition of
“property damage” such as loss of good will, diminution of sale value, etc., suffered
by a third party. Even if there were
some arguable confusion in the first section of the EIL endorsement providing
pollution coverage and the inclusion of “pure financial losses” in the
definition of “property damage”, it is swept up and eliminated in section 3 by
a crystal clear, unequivocal exclusion which states in no uncertain terms that
“No cover [sic] is provided for
damage to own property, machinery, etc., arising out of or in connection with
Environmental Impairment Liability.”
This exclusion clearly applies to each and every provision in the entire
EIL endorsement, as counsel for Golden Eagle so aptly put it, “Period.” We
find that the “clear and explicit” meaning of the terms of the policies, as used in their “ordinary and popular sense”
by a “layperson” exclude coverage of damage to Golden Eagle’s own
property. (AIU Insurance Co. v. Superior Court (1990) 51 Cal.3d 807, 822; Bank of the West v. Superior Court
(1992) 2 Cal.4th 1254.) Although
we affirm the trial court’s order granting the insurers’ motion on the above
grounds, it is worthy of note that Golden Eagle’s claim for damages for pure
financial loss also runs afoul of its inability to differentiate, quantify and
allocate these damages as explained below. IV THE MOTIONS
FOR SUMMARY ADJUDICATION RE: POLLUTION
EXCLUSION A. Grounds for the Motions The
insurers brought these motions for summary adjudication upon the ground that
Golden Eagle’s claims for indemnity arose from pollution and were therefore
excluded under their policies’ “qualified” pollution exclusions. The qualified pollution exclusions, in
effect, limit any pollution coverage afforded by the policies to damages caused
by “sudden and accidental” or “sudden, unintended and unexpected” events. The
insurers presented evidence of forty years of routine, repeated and intentional
release of crude oil and crude oil products onto and into the ground which, at
least in substantial part, contributed to the contamination. The
insurers reasoned that if all of the contamination at the Site was caused by
the release of petroleum hydrocarbon constituents, some covered and some not,
that Golden Eagle having admitted in its answers to interrogatories that it
could not differentiate between the damages caused by either, Golden Eagle would
be unable to prove a prima facie case for indemnity. This, they argue, because a claim under a
policy of insurance for indemnity only, is a contract claim and the proximate
cause and amount of damages are essential elements of a cause of action for breach
of contract which must be proven as part of a prima facie case. The essential elements include proof of the contract (which
policy), breach, and, the precise amount of damage caused by that breach. Golden Eagle’s failure to prove any one as
part of its prima facie case would result in a judgment for the insurers at
trial. B. Opposition to the Motions Golden
Eagle opposed the insurers’ motions on the grounds that the insurers had failed
to carry their initial burden of proof because they failed to present any
evidence establishing what caused the contamination (in contradistinction to
evidence of the release of petroleum hydrocarbon constituents to the ground),
and that in order to demonstrate that Golden Eagle would be unable to prove a
prima facie case, the insurers were required to negate each and every sudden
and accidental event of discharge on the Site, and they had failed to do so. C. Analysis 1. The insurers carried their initial burden
establishing the applicability of the pollution exclusions. The
insurers presented voluminous and largely undisputed evidence of the release of
PHC to the ground at the Site. Neither
side has ever suggested that the pollution at the Site was caused by the
release of any other substance. In this
day and age, this evidence alone is sufficient to establish that the pollution
was caused by the release of the
PHC. Golden Eagle asserts this is an
“assumption” and constitutes an
inference in favor of the insurers inappropriately drawn from competing
inferences by the trial court. We
find no competing inferences, but, rather, a simple syllogism. Golden Eagle concedes that irrespective of
the character of the release, PHC were the only substances released to the
ground, and that PHC and no other substances comprised the contamination. It follows that any release, minute or
gross, caused some part of the contamination.
Golden Eagle’s argument to the contrary implies that upon evidence of
the occurrence of two events releasing the same substance, it would be reasonable
for the court, without more, to infer that one as opposed to the other caused
100 percent or any other proportion of the contamination. In any event, there is no dispute whatsoever
that all of Golden Eagle’s claimed damages result from pollution. The establishment of this fact by
uncontroverted evidence is sufficient to invoke the pollution exclusions of the
policies without regard to whether or not a covered event caused all or part of
the damages. In doing so the insurers
have carried their initial burden of proof.
It would be the insured’s burden at trial to prove that all of the
damages it seeks to recover were caused by a covered event of discharge,
failing which, Golden Eagle will recover nothing. 2. The insurers carried their burden pursuant
to Code of Civil Procedure section 437c, subdivision (o)(2). Golden
Eagle’s claim is a claim for indemnity.
It is essentially a contract claim. “While insurance contracts have
special features, they are still contracts to which the ordinary rules of
contractual interpretation apply.” (Bank of the West v. Superior Court, supra,
2 Cal.4th at p. 1264; Bluehawk v.
Continental Insurance Co. (1996) 50 Cal.App.4th 1126.) By presenting uncontradicted evidence that
Golden Eagle could not prove what part of its damages were under the coverage
and what part were not, nor which policy applied, the insurers made a
sufficient showing shifting the burden to Golden Eagle as contemplated by Code
of Civil Procedure section 437c, subdivision (o)(2). The
insurers relied on Golden Eagle’s repeated answers to defendant’s
interrogatories to the effect that: “Golden Eagle is unable to assign or
attribute any particular portion or item of this property damage to any
particular single event. Put another
way, this damage to the groundwater and soils at the site is indivisible as to
any particular causal event. . . .” These responses constitute an admission that Golden
Eagle would not be able to establish breach of any of its particular policies
(contracts to indemnify), or the amount of damages caused by a particular
asserted breach by any of the insurers, and are sufficient to support the
insurers’ motions. (Union Bank v. Superior Court (1995) 31
Cal.App.4th 573.) Nor does its
convenient qualification that its “discovery is continuing, and Golden Eagle
reserves its right to add or amend information according to the results of this
continuing investigation and discovery, or as Golden Eagle’s understanding of
the significance of previously discovered or obtained information changes”
insulate Golden Eagle from that admission. The
effect of this saving qualification of Golden Eagle’s interrogatory answers was
to allow it to do whatever was necessary to avoid the otherwise fatal effect of
its admission that its damages were “indivisible.” Golden Eagle failed to avail itself of the opportunity it
created. To this day Golden Eagle has
not produced evidence sufficient to overcome its admission,[4]
in spite of the fact that it has had over a decade of investigation and
remediation by a phalanx of experts, and over four years of litigation and
attendant discovery to develop that evidence.[5] Nor did Golden Eagle make any effort
whatsoever to avail itself of the provisions of Code of Civil Procedure
section 437c, subdivision (h) enacted precisely for such eventuality. It would appear that just as Golden Eagle
admitted, the damages caused by the full spectrum of events of discharge truly are “indivisible.”[6] Properly relying on Golden Eagle’s admission
the insurers demonstrated that Golden Eagle could not reasonably be expected to
prove what proportion, if any, of the millions of dollars of alleged damages
were under the coverage of which of the various policies issued by respondents,
failing which, Golden Eagle could not recover anything. “A site might (for example) have had
two sources of pollutants, each of which had contributed to the groundwater
contamination, and while FMC could hope to prove that it had not expected one of the sources [covered event] to
cause the damage it could not reasonably expect to prove that the damage caused
by the other source was unexpected
[not covered event]. If the totality of
damage is attributable to the two sources were considered a single occurrence,
then FMC’s inability to establish the ‘unexpectedly’ element as to one of the
sources would jeopardize its prospects for coverage as to either source.” (FMC
Corp. v. Plaisted & Companies (1998) 61 Cal.App.4th 1132, 1161, italics
in original.) The FMC
court’s ruling constitutes an implicit recognition of what is required to prove contract claim for damages. Golden
Eagle did not dispute, and in fact admitted the occurrence of a number of not sudden or not accidental events of
discharge over the relevant time period.
The parties only disagreed as to the number of events of both types and
how such events were properly characterized.
Having presented uncontroverted and undisputed evidence establishing
events of the release of crude oil and crude oil products onto the ground which
were not sudden or accidental, the insurers demonstrated that, at best, they
might be contractually bound to indemnify Golden Eagle, if at all, only for
some part of its claimed damages, and a failure to indemnify Golden Eagle for
100 percent of its claimed damages
would not constitute a breach of their insurance contracts. 3. Golden Eagle failed
to carry its burden pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 437c, subdivision
(o)(2). Golden Eagle argues that in order to shift the burden of
proof pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 437c, subdivision (o)(2),
respondents were required to produce undisputed evidence that not a single
sudden and accidental event of discharge occurred. “In order to shift the summary adjudication burden to Golden
Eagle, the Insurers had to establish that Golden Eagle could not reasonably be
expected to make a prima facie
showing that sudden and accidental events happened at the Golden Eagle
refinery.” And further “[e]ven if the
Insurers had shown that non-sudden events caused property damage and that such
damage was indivisible from damage caused by sudden and accidental events
[which the insurers did show], such a showing would be insufficient to
demonstrate that Golden Eagle could not make a prima facie showing that an appreciable amount of damage was
caused by sudden and accidental events.”
This argument suggests that if Golden Eagle proved at trial a sudden and
accidental event of discharge occurred and caused an “appreciable amount of
damage”, i.e. some amount between $1 and $100 million, it would have proved a
prima facie case, could have rested
and required the insurers to prove the actual amount of damages under the
coverage in defense, failing which the jury could award any amount up to the
$100 million. There is no authority for
this nuance in the burden and order of proof in a contract action for
indemnity. Golden Eagle misperceives
the focus of the insurers’ motions. Its
assertions are completely beside the point. For
this proposition, Golden Eagle relies on Travelers
Casualty & Surety Co. v. Superior Court (1998) 63 Cal.App.4th 1440, and
Montrose Chemical Corp. v. Superior Court
(1993) 6 Cal.4th 287. Neither case is
apposite on the point. In Travelers the insurers brought motions
for summary adjudication invoking pollution exclusions against their insured
Lockheed, similar to the motions here.
In order to shift the burden of proof to Lockheed the insurers pointed
to Lockheed’s answers to interrogatories.
When asked to “identify any releases and discharges at OII that were not
gradual and continuous” (thereby covered), Lockheed’s responses cataloged only
sudden events which could or might have contributed to the
contamination. (Travelers, supra, 63 Cal.App.4th at p. 1461.) Lockheed thereby admitted that it could not
affirmatively prove any sudden and
accidental (covered) event caused any part of the contamination, and thereby
admitted it could not make a prima facie case. The court held this to be a sufficient
showing to shift the burden to Lockheed.
Here Golden Eagle’s admission was not that it could not prove any sudden and accidental (covered)
event, but rather that Golden Eagle could not prove what proportionate amount
of its damages were caused by a covered event, to the exclusion of any amount
caused by any not covered event. The Travelers court went on to observe that
the trial court ought not and need not engage in any “micro-analysis” to
determine if some of the pollution may have resulted from a covered event of
discharge. The
trial court correctly distinguished Montrose
on the basis that it involved the duty to defend rather than duty to
indemnify. In a duty to defend context
it matters not whether the amount of damages claimed is one dollar or a million
dollars. The insured need demonstrate
only that some part of the claim may fall under the coverage, but the
insurer must demonstrate that under no circumstance can any part of the claim
fall under the coverage. (Montrose Chemical Corp. v. Superior Court,
supra, 6 Cal.4th 287, 300.) When
the action subsequently goes to trial, the indemnity claim must be reduced to a
judgment which requires an adjudication of the precise amount of the damages
claimed. The cause of the damages must
be adjudicated in order to establish whether or not the claim is under the
coverage. The burden of proof to
support these adjudications is on the plaintiff. “Unlike the obligation to indemnify, which is only determined
when the insured’s underlying liability is established the duty to defend must
be assessed at the very outset of a case.
An insurer may have a duty to defend even when it ultimately has no
obligation to indemnify, either because no damages are awarded in the
underlying action against the insured or because the actual judgment is for
damages not covered under the policy.”
(Borg v. Transamerica Ins. Co.
(1996) 47 Cal.App.4th 448, 454; Montrose
Chemical Corp. v. Admiral Ins. Co. (1995) 10 Cal.4th 645, 659, fn. 9.) Here Golden Eagle is effectively in the
indemnity phase and would have to prove the amount and cause of its damages in
order to obtain a judgment against the insurers.[7]
In Traveler’s, had Lockheed positively identified and proved any sudden and
accidental event of discharge had caused an appreciable amount of the
contamination, the parties would have found themselves in the same posture as
the parties here, and squarely within the purview of FMC. This case, like FMC is the next logical step following Traveler’s, a step which adds the
elements of the cause and amount of damages to Golden Eagle’s prima facie case. The
insurers have not negated the occurrence of all sudden and accidental
events. In fact they concede that they
occurred, and tacitly admit that some portion of the contamination resulted
from those events. If we assume
arguendo that one half of the substances in the ground were the result of
covered events, and one half the result of not covered events, in the context
of a breach of contract/indemnity claim, the insurers would be required to
indemnify no more than the one half of Golden Eagle’s damages caused by the
covered events. Furthermore, if the
soil was contaminated to a level requiring its removal prior to the inception
of the first policy, Golden Eagle would be unable to prove any contract damages
resulting from a breach on the part of the insurers. The same reasoning applies to the identification of the policy
period in which any covered event occurred.
The insurers are not required to indemnify for any damages not caused by
a covered event. It is
axiomatic that in order to prove a cause of action for breach of contract the
plaintiff must prove a breach by the defendant and the amount of damages caused by the breach. (Reichert
v. General Ins. Co. (1968) 68 Cal.2d 822, 830; BAJI No. 10.85.) Relying on Golden Eagle’s admission that it
could not differentiate any of its damages as to cause and time the insurers
thereby presented undisputed evidence that Golden Eagle would be unable to make
a prima facie case for breach of
contract. FMC, supra, 61 Cal.App.4th 1132, is
squarely on point. Golden Eagle’s
effort to distinguish and dismiss its significance on the basis that the appeal
was from a judgment after trial rather than summary judgment, and that the
court failed to specifically hold that proof of the contract, breach, causation
and damages were part of a prima facie case, amounts to no more than a
procedural quibble. Although under its
facts the court’s holding is arguably dicta,
FMC stands for the proposition that where both covered and not covered
events cause damages a failure to differentiate and allocate is fatal to a
claim for indemnity. It makes no
difference whether the lack of proof is demonstrated on summary judgment or at
trial. The whole point of Code of Civil
Procedure section 437c, subdivision (o)(2) is that once the burden of proof has
been shifted to plaintiff, he is required to produce the evidence by which he
will, some day, when the time comes, at
the time of trial, eventually, be able to make a prima facie case.[8] Golden
Eagle submitted the declaration of their expert, William Stone. Stone opined that petroleum hydrocarbon
constituents got to the ground, that they remained there and comprised the
contamination the state required Golden Eagle to remove.[9] Stone also testified that “[t]here may have
been other events or happenings other than those listed above which resulted in
petroleum hydrocarbon constituents getting to the ground at the Site. It is possible that some or all of the crude
oil or petroleum hydrocarbon products released in these other events or happenings
may have necessitated some of the remedial action Golden Eagle took at the
Site. . . . I do not
have reliable evidence with which to quantify any damage caused by any such
other event or happening.”
Significantly this testimony is not limited only to sudden and
accidental events or happenings, although Stone later concludes, without
explanation or revealing his reasons, that the events which were not sudden or
accidental but released the same petroleum hydrocarbon constituents somehow did
not contribute to, or cause any of the contamination at the Site.[10] Stone’s testimony that sudden and accidental
events of discharge were the exclusive cause of the contamination amounts to no
more than a self-serving conclusions devoid of any basis, explanation, or
reasoning. It was properly excluded by
the trail court. “[A]n expert opinion
is worth no more than the reasons upon which it rests.” “[A]n opinion unsupported by reasons or
explanations does not establish the absence of a material fact issue for trial,
as required for summary judgment.” (Kelley v. Trunk (1998) 66 Cal.App.4th
519, 524.) Even
if Stone’s declaration were admitted in evidence and considered, it is not
sufficient to overcome the admission of Golden Eagle’s answers to
interrogatories; if anything, it confirms it.
The insurers did not take the position that the sudden and accidental
events upon which Stone relied did not occur or that they did not result in the
release of some PHC to the ground. They
correctly point out that Stone’s declaration does not refute Golden Eagle’s
admission that its damages were “indivisible.”
Simply put, the establishment that some sudden and accidental events
occurred and that they caused an
“appreciable amount” of damages does not overcome an admission that those very
damages are indivisible from any other damages. (D’Amico v. Board of
Medical Examiners (1974) 11 Cal.3d 1; Leasman
v. Beach Aircraft Corp. (1975) 48 Cal.App.3d 376.) Golden
Eagle’s argument that it need only prove that a sudden and accidental event
caused an appreciable amount of the contamination is wrong because it is
essentially a tort approach. Golden
Eagle’s claim is for indemnity and sounds in contract. To prove a claim for breach of contract,
more is required than evidence that a covered cause was a “substantial
contributing cause” of its damage.
“Substantial cause” may be sufficient to make a prima facie case in a tort action in order to
support a joint and several judgment, but in the context of a coverage dispute
relating only to the duty to indemnify, the tort threshold is not sufficient. A
claim for indemnity is a contract claim and causation and the amount of damages
are essential elements of a prima facie case.
“It is essential to establish a causal
connection between the breach and the damages sought. [Citations.]” (1 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (9th ed. 1987) Contracts,
§ 814, italics added.) This rule
has been codified in Civil Code section 3300, which reads in pertinent
part: “For the breach of an obligation
arising from contract, the measure of damages, . . . is the amount
which will compensate the party aggrieved for all the detriment proximately caused thereby . . . .” (Emphasis added.) Here, there was uncontroverted evidence of years of routine,
repeated, foreseeable, sometimes intentional not sudden events of dumping,
leaks, spills, etc. of the same crude oil and crude oil products. Irrespective of the nature of the event of
discharge, neither Golden Eagle nor the insurers ever suggested that any
substance other than petroleum hydrocarbon constituents “got to the ground”, or
caused the contamination. Golden
Eagle’s expert testified these were the substances that caused the
contamination at the Site. This
presents the substantial possibility that all of the soil which Golden Eagle
was required to remove was contaminated to a threshold level requiring its
removal long before any of the policies issued to Golden Eagle incepted. Once the contamination reaches a level
requiring remediation, it does not matter what amount of additional toxic
substances reach the ground, unless, of course, increased migration or
penetration of toxic substances could
be demonstrated. Such demonstration
requires the identification, allocation, and quantification of the
contamination in relation to its source.
It follows that Golden Eagle’s admitted inability to present evidence
differentiating, quantifying, and allocating the contamination from each of the
sources would be absolutely fatal to all of its claims for indemnity. Golden
Eagle, pursuant to its misinterpretation of the insurers’ motions and its
erroneous reading of Traveler’s, elected
to limit its opposition to the insurer’s motions to one disputing whether or
not the insurers had carried their initial burden and made sufficient showing
shifting the burden of proof
regarding the exceptions to the
pollution exclusions.[11] The
trial court, however, determined that the insurers had made a sufficient
showing shifting the burden of proof , and, finding no competent evidence
demonstrating Golden Eagle could make a prima facie case without allocating the
cause and amount of its claimed damages as to any one of its insurance
policies, properly granted the insurers’ motions. V THE MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY ADJUDICATION RE: THE ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION RISKS ENDORSEMENT Some
of the policies issued by the insurers contained an “Insurance of Environmental
Pollution Risks” (EIL) endorsement which read: “Notwithstanding
anything contained in this Policy to the contrary the cover provided by this
Policy is extended to include legal liability for the consequences of a
pollution of the environment (earth air water) provided always that this
pollution was unforeseeable from the stand-point of the insured or his
representatives who are responsible for environmental protection.” The trial court granted the insurer’s motions as to
these policies finding that all the pollution at the Site was foreseeable from
the standpoint of the insured. In the
abstract what is and what is not foreseeable usually presents a disputed
question of fact preventing summary judgment.
But here, even though there is arguably conflicting evidence as to some
of the events of discharge, there remained a substantial number events of discharge
as to which the evidence is not controverted.
Golden Eagle is correct when it observes that pollution coverage under
the policies containing an EIL endorsement is broader than the policies which
have only a sudden and accidental exception to the pollution exclusion. The difficulty with this observation is that
it does not aid Golden Eagle’s position.
In supplanting the sudden and accidental exception with the
foreseeability criterion, many of the events which Golden Eagle vigorously
asserted as sudden and accidental and causing substantial contamination would
not be under the coverage because they were clearly foreseeable. This results in a substantial increase of the proportion of
the damages that do not fall under the coverage, were the ultimate proportion
susceptible of proof. In the context of
Golden Eagle’s admission regarding the indivisibility of its damages, the trial
court was correct when it observed that those policies present an a fortiori
application of Golden Eagle’s admission that its damages were indivisible. The trial court’s observation that all of
Golden Eagle’s damages resulted from events that were foreseeable is gratuitous
whether or not it constitutes a finding of fact from conflicting evidence,
because the result it reached was correct. VI PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION Upon
the granting of the insurers’ motions for summary adjudication Golden Eagle
brought its motion for reconsideration.
The court denied the motion finding that Golden Eagle had not submitted
anything new or different, and, in any event, had not made a sufficient showing
excusing its failure to present what it did present in support of its motion
for reconsideration, in the original motion.
We review the court’s denial to determine if the trial court abused its
discretion. “It is fairly deducible
from the cases that one of the essential attributes of the abuse of discretion
is that it must clearly appear to effect injustice. [Citations.] Discretion
is abused whenever, in its exercise, the court exceeds the bounds of reason,
all of the circumstances before it being considered. The burden is on the party complaining to establish an abuse of
discretion, and unless a clear case of abuse is shown and unless there has been
a miscarriage of justice a reviewing court will not substitute its opinion and
thereby divest the trial court of its discretionary power. [Citation.]” (Loomis v. Loomis
(1960) 181 Cal.App.2d 345, 348-349, cited with approval in Denham v. Superior Court (1970) 2 Cal.3d 557, 566.) We find no abuse of discretion by the trial
court. Golden
Eagle’s argument that the trial court erroneously concluded that it did not
have jurisdiction to grant reconsideration, implies that the court felt its
hands were tied, and, but for its lack of jurisdiction, was inclined to grant
the motion. The transcript of the
hearings on the original motions and the motion for reconsideration
demonstrates quite the contrary. As to
the reconsideration of the motions regarding the pollution exclusions Golden
Eagle submitted the second Stone declaration seeking to cure the deficiencies
of his earlier declaration in opposition to the summary adjudication. The trial
court left little doubt as to the basis for its exclusion of the first Stone
declaration: “I sure hope the evidence [submitted with the
motion for reconsideration] is different than that one declaration that was
submitted. I think it was by
somebody named Stone. If there was ever
a more conclusory declaration submitted in connection with the motion that I
have had in the twelve or eleven years that I’ve been doing this, that was it.” The
second Stone declaration submitted with appellant’s motion for reconsideration
was no better, and the trial court was correct when it concluded there was
nothing new. In it, Stone simply cataloged
all the material he had reviewed and once again proffered nothing but
unsupported conclusions. He testified
that he had created a computer model of some sort by which he was able to
determine that virtually all of the contamination at the Site was exclusively
the result of what he had determined
were sudden and accidental events of discharge. All of the substances released onto the ground over forty years
were the same crude oil and crude oil products. Stone would have the court believe that he could accurately
differentiate between all of the sudden and accidental events, and the not
sudden and accidental events and allocate specific cubic yards of soil removed
as result of each category, even though he repeatedly testified that as to the
sudden and accidental events “it is difficult if not impossible to separate the
damage caused by one accident from the damage caused by the other
accidents.” By way of example, Stone
admits that if two refinery employees each accidentally kicked over a bucket of
kerosene on separate occasions he would be unable to differentiate the
contamination, but if a month or more later another employee intentionally
poured a bucket of kerosene on the
ground that his program enables him to quantify and allocate the resulting
contamination between the accidental and intentional events. As preposterous as that may appear, we will
allow that such science may be available.
But Stone’s second declaration, just as his first, does not contain any
reasoning, explanation, or even identify the remarkable program capable of this
astonishing fete. The inescapable
implication of the trial court’s finding that Golden Eagle had presented
nothing new, is that it reviewed the substance of Stone’s second declaration,
and even had it granted reconsideration, it would, a fortiori, have excluded the second Stone
declaration. At
the beginning of the hearing the court did state: “[Code
of Civil Procedure section] 1008 is jurisdictional. . . . Either the requirements of 1008 have been
satisfied or they’re not. If they’re
not, then I have no alternative to deny a motion for reconsideration no matter
how meritorious your claim. I don’t
suggest that it is or isn’t at this time.” The court’s observation may be academic, but until
section 1008 is held to be an unconstitutional restriction of a court’s
inherent power to correct its own errors, it was correct. The
trial court went on to explain: “. . . plaintiffs have
failed to present any new or different facts, circumstances or law as required
by [Code of Civil Procedure] section 1008.
Even if the plaintiffs had presented new or different facts,
circumstances or law, they provided no satisfactory explanation as to why they
failed to produce these at the original hearing. And the motion is denied.” This demonstrates that it considered the substance
of the second Stone declaration finding nothing new. Having found the first Stone declaration incompetent it follows
that Golden Eagle’s showing supporting its motion for reconsideration remained insufficient
to overcome the insurers’ motions for summary adjudication. Clearly,
having found that Golden Eagle had presented nothing new or different and had
failed to present sufficient reason for its failure to present the material
asserted to be new and different at the original motion, the so called Mink Factors (Mink v. Superior Court
(1992) 2 Cal.App.4th 1338), whether or not the trial court believed that they
were jurisdictional became academic and moot.
The logic is this: Stone’s first
declaration was not sufficient to overcome the insurers’ motions; his second
declaration added nothing new; ergo, together
they were not sufficient to overcome the motions. It follows that Golden Eagle has not demonstrated a meritorious
claim and therefore the denial of its motion for reconsideration cannot
constitute an injustice, hence there is no abuse of discretion. VII ALTERNATIVE
GROUNDS AND DISPOSITION As we
have found the motions for summary adjudication were properly granted we do not
address the alternative grounds advanced by the insurers in support of their
motions. The
judgment is affirmed. CERTIFIED
FOR PUBLICATION LEWIN, J.* We concur: VOGEL (C.S.), P.J. HASTINGS, J. __________________________________________________________________ *Judge of the Los Angeles County Superior Court, assigned by
the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California
Constitution. [1] The respondent insurers include Century Indemnity Company (as
successor-in-interest to CCI Insurance Company, as successor-in-interest to
Insurance Company of North America), Century Indemnity Company (as
successor-in-interest to CIGNA Specialty Insurance Company, formerly known as
California Union Insurance Company), Central National Insurance Company of
Omaha (with respect to those polices issued by Cravens Dargan Pacific Coast as
its managing general agent), Gerling-Konzern General Insurance Company, Pennant
Insurance Company, Limited, and The Yasuda Fire and Marine Insurance Company of
Europe Limited. [2] Both sides submitted voluminous evidence of both categories of
discharge. Although the separate
statements of the opposing parties argued the significance of the others’
evidence they failed to submit competent evidence that events cataloged had not
occurred. We need not canvas and
analyze all of this evidence because Golden Eagle conceded both types of event
occurred. “In short, the evidence
before the trial court consisted of both ‘sudden and accidental’ events and non-sudden
events.” [3] Golden Eagle implies the trial court did not consider this
undisputed extrinsic evidence. There is nothing in the record to establish
whether or not the trial court considered Hess’s undisputed testimony. The court did observe that “[i]n situations
as here where the contract terms and provisions are clear and explicit, such
terms and provisions govern and nothing else needs to be considered.”
(Emphasis added.) It does not
follow, however, that the court did not read and consider Hess’s testimony
before it concluded that there was but a single reasonable interpretation of
the terms of the policies and therefore no ambiguity. [4] Golden Eagle presented the declaration of William Stone wherein
he proffers the self-serving unsupported conclusion that the not covered events
were “not a significant cause of the environmental conditions at the Site
. . . .” Stone’s second
declaration in support of Golden Eagle’s motion for reconsideration was no
better. It will be addressed in the
section dealing with that motion. [5] Golden Eagle would have to have presented details of the claimed
loss and its causes to have any hope that any of its insurers would adjust and
pay the claim. [6] This is not to say that under the circumstances an equitable
apportionment might not have been achieved by indirect circumstantial evidence,
but the record does not reveal any evidence or argument to that effect by
Golden Eagle. [7] In its brief Golden Eagles argues that “[a]s a practical matter, on motions for summary adjudication, the two burdens are the same. Potential coverage is all that is required.” Herein lies the fallacy of Golden Eagle’s argument. It simply ignores that once the potential for coverage is established any eventual indemnity will have to await trial of the underlying action wherein the claim must be proved as to cause and amount, failing which, there will be no indemnity and the insured may well be liable to the insurer for the cost of defense if furnished under a reservation of rights. [8] Many practitioners feel that the greatest utility of motions for
summary judgment is their proof producing force to eliminate meritless
claims. (Celotex Corp. v. Catrett (1986) 477 U.S. 317.) [9] It is worthy of note that Stone’s opinion that all of the pollution was caused by the release of petroleum hydrocarbon constituents supports the insurers’ “assumption” that any release of PHCs causes pollution requiring cleanup. [10] We note that Stone’s testimony is consistent with the admission
contained in Golden Eagle’s interrogatory answers to the effect that it could
not differentiate, quantify, or allocate its damages. [11] Golden Eagle would later argue on its motion for reconsideration
its counsel could not possibly conceive that any court could conclude that the
insurers had carried their burden, and therefore Golden Eagle’s admission
regarding its damages required no response.
The trial court disagreed, and so do we. |