CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF TOXIC V. CENTURY INDEMNITY COMPANY ( 2022 )


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  •                             FOR PUBLICATION                    FILED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                DEC 1 2022
    MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT               U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
    CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF TOXIC             No.   20-15029
    SUBSTANCES CONTROL; TOXIC SUB-
    STANCES CONTROL ACCOUNT,                   D.C. No.
    2:14-cv-00595-WBS-EFB
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    v.                                        OPINION
    JIM DOBBAS, INC., a California corpora-
    tion; CONTINENTAL RAIL, INC., a Dela-
    ware corporation; DAVID VAN OVER, in-
    dividually; PACIFIC WOOD PRESERV-
    ING, a dissolved California corporation;
    WEST COAST WOOD PRESERVING,
    LLC, a Nevada limited liability company;
    COLLINS & AIKMAN PRODUCTS, LLC,
    a Delaware limited liability company,
    Defendants,
    v.
    CENTURY INDEMNITY COMPANY;
    ALLIANZ UNDERWRITERS INSUR-
    ANCE COMPANY; CHICAGO INSUR-
    ANCE COMPANY; FIREMAN'S FUND
    INSURANCE COMPANY; THE CONTI-
    NENTAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Pro-
    posed Intervenors,
    Movants-Appellants.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of California
    William B. Shubb, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted November 9, 2021
    Pasadena, California
    Before: Daniel P. Collins and Kenneth K. Lee, Circuit Judges, and M. Miller Baker,*
    Judge.
    Opinion by Judge Baker;
    Concurrence by Judge Collins
    *
    The Honorable M. Miller Baker, Judge for the United States Court of
    International Trade, sitting by designation.
    2
    SUMMARY **
    Environmental Law / Intervention
    The panel reversed the district court’s order denying insurers’ motions to
    intervene to defend their defunct insured in an environmental tort action, dismissed
    the insurers' appeal of the denial of their motions to set aside default, and remanded.
    In 2014, the California Department of Toxic Substances Control and the Toxic
    Substances Control Account (“DTSC”) brought suit under the Comprehensive
    Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act and state law relating to
    the remediation of hazardous materials alleged to be present at a site in Elmira,
    California. In 2013, a certificate of cancellation had been filed with the Delaware
    Secretary of State, cancelling the legal existence of defendant Collins & Aikman
    Products. The Delaware Court of Chancery granted DTSC’s petition to appoint a
    receiver empowered to defend claims made against Collins & Aikman. The receiver
    declined to file an answer to DTSC’s complaint, and the district court clerk entered
    default under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 55(a). DTSC later moved for a default
    judgment. Two primary insurers and an excess insurer of Collins & Aikman moved
    to intervene as of right under Rule 24(a)(2) and also moved to set aside the entry of
    default. The district court denied the insurers’ motions.
    In Parts I and II of its opinion, the panel addressed the factual and procedural
    history and its jurisdiction to review the denial of intervention. In Part III, the panel
    held that the insurers sought relief that no existing party to the case sought and
    therefore were required to establish constitutional standing in order to intervene as
    of right. The panel concluded that the insurers satisfied the requirements of
    constitutional standing because DTSC’s suit against their insured, Collins &
    Aikman, created an imminent threat of injury, and the district court’s denial of any
    relief to DTSC would redress that injury.
    In Part IV of its opinion, the panel addressed intervention. The panel held that
    Rule 24(a)(2) requires an applicant for intervention to show that (1) it has a
    significant protectable interest as to the property or transaction that is the subject of
    the action; (2) the disposition of the action may, as a practical matter, impair or
    **
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    impede the applicant’s ability to protect its interest; (3) the application is timely; and
    (4) the existing parties may not adequately meet the applicant’s interest.
    Here, there was no dispute that the insurers timely sought to intervene, nor was
    there any dispute as to the second factor. Thus, whether the insureds could intervene
    as of right turned on whether they had an “interest” under Rule 24(a)(2). The panel
    held that, under Donaldson v. United States, 
    400 U.S. 517
     (1971), and Wilderness
    Soc’y v. U.S. Forest Serv., 
    630 F.3d 1173
     (9th Cir. 2011) (en banc), the word
    “interest” must be read in a specifically legal sense, to mean a right or other
    advantage that the law gives one person as against another person, rather than read
    more broadly to refer to anything that a person wants, whether or not the law protects
    that desire. The panel concluded that the source of any interest of the insureds must
    be state law. Under Cassirer v. Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection Found., 
    142 S. Ct. 1502 (2022)
    , the panel applied federal common law choice-of-law rules, under
    which the choice-of-law principles of the forum state, California, applied. Under
    those principles, the panel applied California substantive law to determine whether
    the insureds had a legally protected interest for purposes of Rule 24(a)(2). In Part
    IV(B)(3) of its opinion, the panel held that under California’s direct action statute,
    
    Cal. Ins. Code § 11580
    , a primary or excess insurer that seeks to timely intervene in
    a tort action for the stated purpose of defending its insured that is either unwilling or
    incapable of defending itself has a protectable interest for purposes of rule 24(a)(2),
    no matter what position, if any, the insurer has taken as to coverage. Accordingly,
    the insureds here had a protectable interest.
    In Part V, dismissing in part, the panel held that it lacked appellate jurisdiction
    over the insureds’ appeal from the district court’s denial of their Rule 55(c) motions
    to set aside the clerk’s entry of default against Collins & Aikman because the district
    court’s order was interlocutory. The panel wrote that on remand the district court
    could reconsider its denial of those motions.
    Concurring in part and concurring in the judgment, Judge Collins wrote that he
    joined Parts I, II, IV(B)(3), and V of the court’s opinion and concurred in the court’s
    judgment. Parts III, IV(A), IV(B)(1), and IV(B)(2) of the majority opinion
    addressed issues regarding standing, the development of the law leading up to the
    court’s articulation of Rule 24’s standards in the en banc opinion in Wilderness
    Society, and choice-of-law principles. Judge Collins wrote that he did not join these
    parts of the majority opinion because they discussed matters that were not raised,
    briefed, or contested by the parties on appeal.
    COUNSEL
    Nicholas M. Gedo (argued) and Thomas F. Vandenburg, Wood Smith Henning &
    Berman LLP, Glendale, California; Stratton P. Constantinides, Wood Smith
    Henning & Berman LLP, Los Angeles, California, for Movants-Appellants Century
    Indemnity Company, Allianz Underwriters Insurance Company, Chicago Insurance
    Company, and Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company.
    Sara M. Thorpe and Randall P. Berdan, Nicolaides Fink Thorpe Michaelides
    Sullivan LLP, San Francisco, California, for Movant-Appellant The Continental
    Insurance Company.
    Laura J. Zuckerman (argued), Deputy Attorney General; Dennis L. Beck Jr.,
    Supervising Deputy Attorney General; Rob Bonta, Attorney General of California;
    Office of the California Attorney General, Oakland, California; Timothy M.
    Thornton Jr., Gray Duffy LLP, Encino, California; for Plaintiffs-Appellees.
    BAKER, Judge:
    In this environmental tort action, two primary insurers and an excess insurer
    timely sought to intervene in the district court to defend their defunct insured and set
    aside its default. The district court denied their motions to intervene as of right under
    Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 24(a)(2), reasoning that they lacked any protected
    interest because the primary carriers didn’t reserve their rights and the excess insurer
    had no duty or right to defend. The court then denied their motions to set aside the
    clerk’s default for reasons that are unclear.
    We hold that under the California direct action statute, see 
    Cal. Ins. Code § 11580
    , all three insurers had a legally protected interest in defending their helpless
    insured and preventing the entry of default judgment. We therefore reverse the dis-
    trict court’s denial of intervention as of right. We lack jurisdiction, however, over
    the insurers’ appeal from the denial of their motions to set aside the default. On
    remand, the district court may reconsider that order given our decision today.
    I
    In 2014, the California Department of Toxic Substances Control and the Toxic
    Substances Control Account (collectively DTSC or the Department) filed suit in the
    district court against the current and various former owners of land in Elmira, Cali-
    fornia, as well as others who conducted operations on the site. The complaint sought
    relief under both state law and the Comprehensive Environmental Response,
    3
    Compensation, and Liability Act, 
    42 U.S.C. §§ 9601
    –75 (CERCLA), relating to the
    remediation of hazardous materials alleged to be present at the site due to business
    operations since 1972.
    A former owner of the property during the relevant time but missing from the
    suit was a defunct Delaware limited liability company, Collins & Aikman Products
    (Collins & Aikman). In 2005, Collins & Aikman filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy pe-
    tition.
    In the Collins & Aikman bankruptcy, DTSC filed a claim against the estate
    based on the Elmira site. To resolve that claim, the bankruptcy court’s final order
    approving a plan of reorganization in 2007 included a stipulation preserving the De-
    partment’s ability to sue Collins & Aikman in the future for the sole purpose of se-
    curing a judgment to “be paid from insurance proceeds.”
    Under that stipulation, the estate agreed to carve out from the bankruptcy stay
    an exception for “any action filed against [Collins & Aikman] to establish liability
    and to seek recovery of insurance proceeds.” DTSC agreed that if it obtained any
    judgment against Collins & Aikman, the former would not “collect any money or
    other forms of remuneration or relief” from the latter. The bankruptcy court’s ap-
    proval of this stipulation thus cleared a path for DTSC to sue Collins & Aikman to
    access the latter’s insurance coverage while leaving no skin in the game for the in-
    sured.
    4
    In 2013, a certificate of cancellation filed with the Delaware Secretary of State
    terminated Collins & Aikman’s legal existence. See also 6 Del. Code § 18-203(a)
    (providing for filing such a certificate “upon the dissolution and the completion of
    winding up of a limited liability company”).
    The following year, DTSC brought this litigation. Shortly after doing so, the
    Department petitioned the Delaware Court of Chancery to appoint a receiver “to
    allow DTSC to add [Collins & Aikman] as an additional defendant” in this suit.1 The
    Department explained that it wanted
    to add [Collins & Aikman] as a defendant . . . as the first step in pursu-
    ing historic insurance coverage of [Collins & Aikman] for DTSC’s
    costs of cleaning up a contaminated property in California. Under Cal-
    ifornia law, a judgment against [Collins & Aikman] is necessary before
    DTSC can pursue a direct action against the company’s historic insur-
    ers. DTSC seeks to add [Collins & Aikman] as a defendant in DTSC v.
    Dobbas to obtain such a judgment, which in turn would allow a direct
    action against the company’s historic insurers. DTSC will not seek en-
    forcement of the judgment directly against [Collins & Aikman], but
    only as a means to pursue a direct action against the company’s his-
    toric insurers. To ensure that [Collins & Aikman] has the capacity to
    be sued in DTSC v. Dobbas, DTSC requests that a receiver be appointed
    for the company under 6 Del. C. § 18-805.
    1
    See 6 Del. Code § 18-805 (allowing the Court of Chancery “on application of any
    creditor” of any cancelled LLC to appoint a “receiver[ ] . . . to take charge of the
    [LLC]’s property, and to collect the debts and property due and belonging to the
    [LLC], with the power to prosecute and defend, in the name of the [LLC] . . . all
    such suits as may be necessary or proper . . . for the final settlement of the unfinished
    business of the” LLC).
    5
    (Emphasis added).2 Because Collins & Aikman had no known assets, DTSC pro-
    posed “to pay the reasonable costs of the receiver appointed by the Court, unless and
    until an insurer of [Collins & Aikman] begins defending the company.”
    On December 8, 2014, the Court of Chancery granted the Department’s peti-
    tion and appointed a receiver with “the power, but not the obligation, to defend, in
    the name of [Collins & Aikman], any claims made against it in DTSC v. Dobbas.”
    In re: Collins & Aikman Prods., LLC, C.A. No. 10348-CB, 
    2014 WL 6907689
    , at
    *1 (Del. Ch.) (emphasis added). The order (drafted by DTSC) further provided that
    the Department would pay the receiver, “unless and until [DTSC] shows good cause
    why [it] should no longer be required to pay that cost.” 
    Id.
    Three days later, DTSC amended its complaint to add Collins & Aikman as a
    defendant. After being served, the receiver—unsurprisingly as he was appointed at
    the behest of, and paid by, the Department—declined to file an answer or otherwise
    defend the suit on behalf of Collins & Aikman. DTSC promptly moved under Fed-
    eral Rule of Civil Procedure 55(a) for entry of default. The clerk entered the default
    on March 26, 2015.
    2
    The California direct action statute referenced in the Department’s petition pro-
    vides that when a “judgment is secured against the insured . . . in an action based
    upon bodily injury, death, or property damage, then an action may be brought against
    the insurer on the policy and subject to its terms and limitations, by such judgment
    creditor to recover on the judgment.” 
    Cal. Ins. Code § 11580
    (b)(2).
    6
    More than four years later—and after settling with the other defendants in the
    meantime—DTSC moved for a default judgment of around $3.2 million against Col-
    lins & Aikman on August 21, 2019. In so doing, DTSC also asked the district court
    to enter a declaratory judgment that Collins & Aikman “is jointly and severally liable
    . . . for all [remediation] costs incurred after May 31, 2019, and future response costs
    incurred by [the Department]” in cleaning up contamination at the site.
    A few weeks later, the Department’s insurance consultant and agent, the
    Arcina Risk Group, notified the three liability insurers involved in this appeal—Al-
    lianz,3 Century, and Continental—that the Department had applied for a default
    judgment “against your insured [Collins & Aikman].” This notice ostensibly re-
    quested that the insurers “defend and indemnify your insured immediately” and di-
    rected them to respond to both the receiver and DTSC. It was only then—over four
    years after DTSC filed its initial complaint—that the insurers learned that the De-
    partment had sued Collins & Aikman in this case.
    The insurers immediately moved to intervene as of right under Rule 24(a)(2)
    on the theory that they had an “interest” in the case—preventing the entry of default
    judgment as to their insured—that would likely be impaired by their absence. Fed.
    3
    This opinion refers to Appellees Allianz Underwriters Insurance Company, Chi-
    cago Insurance Company, and Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company collectively as
    “Allianz.”
    7
    R. Civ. P. 24(a)(2).4 They also moved to set aside the district court clerk’s entry of
    default as to Collins & Aikman. DTSC opposed these motions, all of which the dis-
    trict court denied. See generally Cal. Dep’t of Toxic Substances Ctrl. v. Jim Dobbas,
    Inc., No. 2:14-CV-00595 WBS EFB, 
    2019 WL 6528954
     (E.D. Cal. Dec. 4, 2019).
    In denying intervention as of right, the district court first observed that it had
    previously denied intervention by another of Collins & Aikman’s insurers, Travel-
    ers, after finding that the latter’s disclaimer of coverage and “refusal to defend [Col-
    lins & Aikman] under a reservation of rights forfeited its interest in the litigation”
    for purposes of intervention as of right under Rule 24(a)(2). 
    Id.
     at *1 (citing Cal.
    Dep’t of Toxic Substances Ctrl. v. Jim Dobbas, Inc., No. 2:14-CV-00595 WBS EFB,
    
    2019 WL 5390551
    , at *1–2 (E.D. Cal. Oct. 22, 2019)).5
    The district court then noted that in moving to intervene, Continental, Cen-
    tury, and Allianz “offer[ed] many of the same arguments Travelers did in its
    4
    The insurers also moved to intervene permissively on the theory that they had a
    “defense that shares with the main action a common question of law or fact.” Fed.
    R. Civ. P. 24(b)(1)(B). The district court denied intervention on that ground as well,
    which the insurers have also appealed. Because we reverse the district court’s denial
    of intervention as of right, we have no need to consider this question, including our
    jurisdiction to do so.
    5
    The district court also denied Travelers’ bid for permissive intervention, reasoning
    that the insurer did not “have an interest in this litigation and its intervention would
    only serve to prolong the action.” Id. at *2.
    8
    motion.” Id. The court then rejected Continental’s and Century’s arguments for
    largely the same reasons that it rejected those made by Travelers.
    As to Continental—which, unlike Travelers, did not disclaim coverage—the
    district court found it critical that DTSC “offered to stipulate to Continental’s inter-
    vention” if Continental either accepted coverage or agreed to defend Collins & Ai-
    kman under a reservation of rights, but Continental did neither and “failed to respond
    to plaintiffs’ offer.” Id.
    As to Century, the district court noted that it, like Travelers, had disclaimed
    coverage based on a prior settlement agreement; the court found that “by implication
    [Century] refuses to offer a defense under a reservation of rights.” Id. at *2.
    Finally, the district court turned to Allianz, which had reserved its rights. Id.6
    The court observed that Allianz had only issued excess policies. Id. The court then
    noted that under California law, the policy limits of an underlying primary policy
    must be exhausted before an excess carrier has the right or duty to defend. Id. Be-
    cause DTSC had not determined which primary carrier(s) would be responsible, “the
    court [could not] conclude that primary coverage is exhausted and that excess insur-
    ers can properly intervene,” and so the court denied Allianz’s motion as well. Id.
    6
    The Department disputes whether Allianz properly reserved its rights. We express
    no view on this question.
    9
    The district court also denied the insurers’ motions to set aside the entry of
    default. Id. at *3. Its reasoning as to Century and Allianz was not entirely clear,
    although the court’s order at one point suggested that Century’s motion to set aside
    default was denied “[b]ecause it has both disclaimed coverage and refused to defend
    [Collins & Aikman] under a reservation of rights. Id. at *2. As to Continental, the
    district court’s reasoning was limited to stating that the company “does not advance
    any new argument to establish good cause . . . .” Id. at *1.
    The insurers timely appealed both the denial of their motions to intervene and
    the denial of their motions to set aside the entry of default.
    II
    The district court had federal question jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1331
    .
    As to our appellate jurisdiction, “[a] district court’s denial of a motion for interven-
    tion as of right is an appealable ‘final decision.’ Therefore, we have jurisdiction to
    review such a denial pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    .” Donnelly v. Glickman, 
    159 F.3d 405
    , 409 (9th Cir. 1998) (cleaned up).
    We review de novo a district court’s denial of a motion for intervention as of
    right except for the district court’s determination of timeliness, which we review for
    an abuse of discretion. See 
    id.
    10
    III
    Before turning to the merits, we first pause to consider the jurisdictional ques-
    tion of the insurers’ standing to intervene. Intervenors that seek relief that is broader
    than or different from the relief sought by existing parties to the case must possess
    constitutional standing, Town of Chester, N.Y. v. Laroe Estates, Inc., 
    137 S. Ct. 1645
    ,
    1651 (2017), but intervenors that seek the same relief sought by at least one existing
    party to the case need not do so. Little Sisters of the Poor Saints Peter & Paul Home
    v. Pennsylvania, 
    140 S. Ct. 2367
    , 2379 n.6 (2020); McConnell v. FEC, 
    540 U.S. 93
    ,
    233 (2003) (“It is clear . . . that the [defendant agency] has standing, and therefore
    we need not address the standing of the intervenor-defendants, whose position here
    is identical to the [agency’s].”), overruled in part on other grounds, Citizens United
    v. FEC, 
    558 U.S. 310
     (2010).
    Here, the insurers seek to intervene to defend Collins & Aikman, which (being
    controlled by the Department) is not defending itself. As they seek relief that no
    existing party to the case seeks, the insurers must establish constitutional standing.
    Town of Chester, 
    137 S. Ct. at 1651
    ; Little Sisters of the Poor, 
    140 S. Ct. at
    2379
    n.6; McConnell, 
    540 U.S. at 233
    .
    In this context, where the insurers seek to intervene as defendants, they must
    show that the relief sought by the plaintiff, DTSC, threatens them with “injury in
    fact . . . that is concrete and actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.”
    11
    Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env’t, 
    523 U.S. 83
    , 103 (1998) (cleaned up). They
    must also show “causation—a fairly traceable connection between [their threatened]
    injury” and the relief sought by the Department. 
    Id.
     Finally, they must demonstrate
    “redressability—a likelihood that [their] requested relief will redress the [asserted]
    injury.” 
    Id.
    We conclude that the insurers easily satisfy the requirements of constitutional
    standing. DTSC seeks relief in form of a money judgment against their insured, and
    insofar as the California direct action statute applies, the Department could then sue
    the insurers for recovery under the policies, which DTSC has stated its intention to
    do. This contingent liability and its attendant costs (defending against the threatened
    direct action suit) creates injury in fact for standing purposes. See Protocols, LLC v.
    Leavitt, 
    549 F.3d 1294
    , 1299 (10th Cir. 2008) (explaining that a contingent liability
    may constitute “injury in fact” when the “consequences” of that contingent liability
    are “actual or imminent”). DTSC’s suit against their insured, Collins & Aikman,
    creates an imminent threat of injury, and the district court’s denial of any relief to
    the Department would redress that injury. Standing, therefore, is no impediment to
    the insurers’ intervention.
    IV
    As relevant here, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 24(a) provides that, “[o]n
    timely motion,” a district court must permit an outsider to intervene who
    12
    claims an interest relating to the property or transaction that is the sub-
    ject of the action, and is so situated that disposing of the action may as
    a practical matter impair or impede the movant’s ability to protect its
    interest, unless existing parties adequately represent that interest.
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 24(a)(2) (emphasis added).7
    In this circuit, Rule 24(a)(2) requires the outsider to show that (1) it has a
    significant protectable interest as to the property or transaction that is the subject of
    the action; (2) the disposition of the action may, as a practical matter, impair or im-
    pede the applicant’s ability to protect its interest; (3) the application is timely; and
    (4) the existing parties may not adequately meet the applicant’s interest. Donnelly,
    
    159 F.3d at 409
    . A putative intervenor has the burden of establishing all four require-
    ments. United States v. Alisal Water Corp., 
    370 F.3d 915
    , 919 (9th Cir. 2004).
    Here, there is no dispute that the insurers timely sought to intervene. Nor is
    there any dispute that the existing parties do not represent the insurers’ interests, if
    any such interests exist, or that their absence from the litigation “may as a practical
    7
    An outsider moving to intervene, whether as of right under Rule 24(a) or permis-
    sively under Rule 24(b), “must” attach to its motion “a pleading that sets out the
    claim or defense for which intervention is sought.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 24(c); see also
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 7(a) (defining “pleadings” for purposes of the Federal Rules of Civil
    Procedure). In this case, the insurers’ intervention motions failed to proffer the re-
    quired pleadings. On remand, the district court should require the insurers to correct
    this technical defect in their respective motions. Cf. Westchester Fire Ins. Co v. Men-
    dez, 
    585 F.3d 1183
    , 1188 (9th Cir. 2009) (stating that a putative intervenor’s failure
    to comply with Rule 24(c) pleading requirement “is a ‘purely technical’ defect which
    does not result in the ‘disregard of any substantial right’ ”) (quoting Shores v. Hendy
    Realization Co., 
    133 F.2d 738
    , 742 (9th Cir. 1943)).
    13
    matter impair or impede [their] ability to protect [those assumed] interest[s].” Fed.
    R. Civ. P. 24(a)(2). Thus, whether the insurers can intervene as of right turns on
    whether they have an “interest” under Rule 24(a)(2).
    A
    “The Supreme Court has yet to provide any clear definition of the nature of
    the ‘interest relating to the property or transaction which is the subject of the ac-
    tion.’ ” Arakaki v. Cayetano, 
    324 F.3d 1078
    , 1084 (9th Cir. 2003) (quoting 7C
    Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Mary Kay Kane, Federal Practice and
    Procedure: Civil 2d § 1908, at 21 (Supp. 2002)). This question—“What kind of in-
    terest is required?,” New Orleans Pub. Serv., Inc. v. United Gas Pipe Line Co., 
    732 F.2d 452
    , 463 (5th Cir. 1984) (en banc) (NOPSI) (emphasis in original)—has bedev-
    iled the lower federal courts since Rule 24(a) was last substantively amended in
    1966. See Caleb Nelson, Intervention, 
    106 Va. L. Rev. 271
    , 275 n.10 (2020) (col-
    lecting authorities).
    In general, the word “interest” in Rule 24(a)(2) is susceptible of two very dif-
    ferent readings. It can be read “in a specifically legal sense, to mean a right or other
    advantage that the law gives one person as against another person.” Id. at 275. Or it
    can be read more broadly and “in a less technical sense to refer to anything that a
    person wants, whether or not the law protects that desire.” Id. at 275–76.
    14
    The only Supreme Court case that sheds any meaningful light on this question
    is Donaldson v. United States, where a taxpayer sought to intervene in district court
    actions brought by the IRS against his former employer and its accountant seeking
    to compel production of their financial records related to his potential tax liability.
    
    400 U.S. 517
     (1971). The Court identified the taxpayer’s asserted “interest” as a
    “desire . . . to counter and overcome” the former employer’s and accountant’s “will-
    ingness . . . to comply and to produce records,” 
    id. at 531
    , and observed that “[t]he
    nature of the ‘interest’ . . . is apparent from the fact that the material in question . . .
    would not be subject to suppression if the Government obtained it by other routine
    means,” such as the defendants’ voluntary disclosure or through the taxpayer’s own
    income tax returns, 
    id.
    The Court then cryptically announced that “[t]his interest cannot be the kind
    contemplated by Rule 24(a)(2),” 
    id.,
     because “[w]hat is obviously meant there is a
    significantly protectable interest,” 
    id.
     (emphasis added). As examples of “such a
    protectable interest,” the Court identified claims of an asserted privilege or abuse of
    process. Id.8
    8
    In two recent cases, the Supreme Court touched in passing upon the nature of Rule
    24(a)(2)’s “interest” requirement. In Cameron v. EMW Women’s Surgical Center,
    P.S.C., the Court characterized Rule 24(a)(2) as referring to a “legal ‘interest.’ ”
    142 S. Ct. 1002
    , 1010 (2022) (emphasis added). And in Berger v. North Carolina State
    Conference of the NAACP, the Court recognized that “States possess a legitimate
    15
    As these examples of “protectable interests” were legally cognizable—unlike
    the taxpayer’s asserted interest, which was not protected by any law—it seems “that
    the Supreme Court in Donaldson used ‘protectable’ in the sense of legally protecta-
    ble, and it is difficult to conceive of any other sense in which the Court might have
    been employing ‘protectable’ in that context.” NOPSI, 
    732 F.2d at 464
    .
    Although the Supreme Court decided Donaldson in 1971, with one minor ex-
    ception9 the Ninth Circuit’s intervention cases didn’t acknowledge it for almost
    twenty years, and instead generally followed an older line of authority recognizing
    the more expansive concept of “interest.” See, e.g., Cnty. of Fresno v. Andrus, 
    622 F.2d 436
    , 438 (9th Cir. 1980) (“We have rejected the notion that Rule 24(a)(2) re-
    quires a specific legal or equitable interest.”). Under that line of authority, “the ‘in-
    terest’ test is primarily a practical guide to disposing of lawsuits by involving as
    many apparently concerned persons as is compatible with efficiency and due pro-
    cess.’ ” 
    Id.
     (quoting Nuesse v. Camp, 
    385 F.2d 694
    , 700 (D.C. Cir. 1967)).
    interest in the continued enforcement of their own statutes.” 
    142 S. Ct. 2191
    , 2201
    (2022) (cleaned up).
    9
    See Garrett v. United States, 
    511 F.2d 1037
    , 1038 (9th Cir. 1975) (per curiam)
    (applying the “significantly protectable” test to affirm the district court’s denial of
    an intervention as of right by a taxpayer in a case factually “on all fours with Don-
    aldson”). In Dilks v. Aloha Airlines, Inc., the court indirectly relied on Donaldson
    by citing out-of-circuit authority to hold that Rule 24(a)(2) requires an “interest” that
    “is direct, non-contingent, substantial and legally protectable.” 
    642 F.2d 1155
    , 1157
    (9th Cir. 1981) (citing Heyman v. Exch. Nat’l Bank of Chicago, 
    615 F.2d 1190
    , 1193
    (7th Cir. 1980)). Heyman, in turn, followed Donaldson. See 
    615 F.2d at 1193
    .
    16
    In 1989, we recognized that Donaldson had “modified” “our circuit doctrine”
    by construing Rule 24(a)(2) to “require a ‘significantly protectable interest.’ ” Port-
    land Audubon Soc’y v. Hodel, 
    866 F.2d 302
    , 309 (9th Cir. 1989), abrogated on other
    grounds by Wilderness Soc’y v. U.S. Forest Serv., 
    630 F.3d 1173
     (9th Cir. 2011) (en
    banc). In Portland Audubon Society, we held that private entities with financial in-
    terests in logging on federal land and sympathetic local governments had no “signif-
    icantly protectable interest” in the government’s defense against a National Envi-
    ronmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA), 
    42 U.S.C. § 4321
     et seq., challenge to the
    Bureau of Land Management’s approval of such logging. 866 F.2d at 309. We rea-
    soned that “NEPA provides no protection for the purely economic interests that they
    assert.” Id.
    Wilderness Society abrogated Portland Audubon Society’s conclusion that pri-
    vate parties could never have a protectable interest under NEPA, explaining “that
    private parties seeking to intervene in NEPA cases may, in certain circumstances,
    demonstrate an interest ‘protectable under some law,’ and a relationship between
    that interest and the claims at issue.” Wilderness Soc’y, 
    630 F.3d at 1179
     (emphasis
    added) (quoting Sierra Club v. U.S. EPA, 
    995 F.2d 1478
    , 1484 (9th Cir. 1993), ab-
    rogated on other grounds by Wilderness Soc’y, 
    630 F.3d at
    1179–80).
    Thus, Wilderness Society did not overrule Portland Audubon Society’s recog-
    nition that Donaldson “modified” our circuit’s expansive reading of “interest” under
    17
    Rule 24 by cabining “interest” to legally protected interests. Far from it—the en banc
    court summarized the “operative inquiry” as being, “as in all cases, whether ‘the
    [asserted] interest is protectable under some law,’ and whether ‘there is a relation-
    ship between the legally protected interest and the claims at issue.’ ” 
    Id. at 1176
    (emphasis added) (quoting Sierra Club, 
    995 F.2d at 1484
    ).10
    We therefore read Wilderness Society to mean that, despite our pre-Donaldson
    “liberal policy in favor of intervention,” which “ ‘follow[s] practical and equitable
    considerations,’ ” id. at 1179 (quoting United States v. City of Los Angeles, 
    288 F.3d 391
    , 397 (9th Cir. 2002)), at an irreducible minimum Rule 24(a)(2) requires that the
    asserted interest be “protectable under some law” and that there exist “a relationship
    between the legally protected interest and the claims at issue,” 
    id.
     If these two core
    elements are not satisfied, a putative intervenor lacks any “interest” under Rule
    24(a)(2), full stop.
    Here, there is no dispute that if the insurers have an interest “protectable under
    some law,” there exists “a relationship between the legally protected interest and the
    claims at issue.” We therefore turn to whether the insurers have any such interest.
    10
    This means that “a prospective intervenor’s asserted interest need not be protected
    by the statute under which the litigation is brought . . . .” 
    Id.
     at 1179 (citing Sierra
    Club, 
    995 F.2d at 1481, 1484
    ).
    18
    B
    1
    The insurers’ briefing does not claim that federal law protects any interest of
    theirs in this litigation.11 Thus, if any legal protection extends to their asserted inter-
    est, the source must be state law.12 That in turn leads to an antecedent question—we
    must ascertain which choice-of-law rules to use to determine which state’s substan-
    tive law governs in this case grounded on federal-question jurisdiction.
    In diversity cases, we apply the choice-of-law rules of the forum state to de-
    cide state-law questions. Patton v. Cox, 
    276 F.3d 493
    , 495 (9th Cir. 2002) (citing
    Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co., 
    313 U.S. 487
    , 496 (1941)). But in federal
    question (such as this one) and other cases in which our jurisdiction is not grounded
    in diversity, our decisions have been inconsistent—sometimes we have applied the
    federal common law to the “choice of choice-of-law principles,” Cassirer v.
    11
    At oral argument, the insurers’ counsel asserted that CERCLA protects the insur-
    ers’ interests. We disagree. That statute gives the Department a cause of action
    against their insured, Collins & Aikman, but we cannot discern how it protects any
    interest of a CERCLA defendant’s insurers.
    12
    Whether a putative intervenor possesses an interest under Rule 24(a)(2) is a ques-
    tion of federal law. See 7C Wright, Miller & Kane, Federal Practice & Procedure:
    Civil § 1905 (3d ed. Apr. 2022 update) (“[T]he right to intervene in a civil action
    pending in a United States District Court is governed by Rule 24 and not by state
    law.”). Necessarily subsumed within that federal question is whether a putative in-
    tervenor’s asserted interest is “protectable under some law,” i.e., protectable under
    either federal or state law.
    19
    Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection Found., 
    142 S. Ct. 1502
    , 1507 (2022), and in other
    cases we have applied forum state rules, see Berman v. Freedom Fin. Network, LLC,
    
    30 F.4th 849
    , 862 (9th Cir. 2022) (Baker, J., concurring) (collecting cases).
    The Supreme Court’s recent decision in Cassirer dispels this uncertainty and
    establishes a clear rule of decision governing choice of choice-of-law in federal
    question and other cases in which our jurisdiction is not grounded in diversity. “Ju-
    dicial creation of federal common law to displace state-created [choice-of-law] rules
    must be ‘necessary to protect uniquely federal interests.’ ” Cassirer, 142 S. Ct. at
    1509 (quoting Tex. Indus., Inc. v. Radcliff Materials, Inc., 
    451 U.S. 630
    , 640 (1981)).
    Where, as here, state law supplies the “the substantive rule of decision,” there is no
    federal interest in “supplant[ing] the otherwise applicable choice-of-law rule.” 
    Id.
    We therefore apply the choice-of-law principles of the forum state, California, to
    determine whether the insurers have a legally protected interest under state law for
    purposes of Rule 24(a)(2).
    2
    California courts apply two sets of choice-of-law rules. Insofar as the state
    law question at issue involves the interpretation of contracts, state courts look to
    Civil Code § 1646, which provides that if a contract “indicates a place of perfor-
    mance,” it “is to be interpreted according to the law and usage of the place where it
    is to be performed,” but if it “does not indicate a place of performance,” it “is to be
    20
    interpreted according to the law and usage of the place where it was made.” Frontier
    Oil Corp. v. RLI Ins. Co., 
    63 Cal. Rptr. 3d 816
    , 826 (Ct. App. 2007) (cleaned up);
    see also 
    Cal. Civ. Code § 1646
    . In all other contexts, California courts “analyze the
    governmental interests of the various jurisdictions involved to select the most appro-
    priate law.” Wash. Mut. Bank, FA v. Super. Ct., 
    15 P.3d 1071
    , 1077 (Cal. 2001).
    Under both approaches, when (as here) the parties have not suggested that
    some other state’s law applies, California courts will apply their own state’s law. Cf.
    Ace Am. Ins. Co. v. Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co., 
    206 Cal. Rptr. 3d 176
    , 181 n.1 (Ct.
    App. 2016) (applying California law in insurance coverage dispute involving the
    interpretation of contracts because the parties did not address choice of law); Hur-
    tado v. Super. Ct., 
    522 P.2d 666
    , 670 (Cal. 1974) (under the governmental interests
    analysis, “generally speaking the forum will apply its own rule of decision unless a
    party litigant timely invokes the law” of another jurisdiction). We therefore apply
    California substantive law to determine whether the insurers have a legally protected
    interest for purposes of Rule 24(a)(2).
    3
    The insurers contend that the California direct action statute, 
    Cal. Ins. Code § 11580
    , supplies them with a legally protected “interest” under Rule 24(a)(2). The
    Supreme Court of California recognized such an interest in Clemmer v. Hartford
    Insurance Co., 
    587 P.2d 1098
     (Cal. 1978), overruled on other grounds by Ryan v.
    21
    Rosenfeld, 
    395 P.3d 689
     (Cal. 2017). In Clemmer, the court held that an insurer had
    an interest under the direct action statute in preventing its noncooperating incarcer-
    ated insured’s default, and its failure to take any available steps to protect that inter-
    est estopped it from contesting a default judgment entered against its insured. See id.
    at 1109 (the insurer “knew or should have known that judgment against its insured
    would form the basis for a later claim against it under Insurance Code section
    11580,” and “[h]aving failed to pursue remedies thus available to it, it cannot now
    claim prejudice or lack of opportunity to litigate damages”).13 Section 11580 thus
    protected the insurer’s interest in preventing entry of default judgment against its
    insured, notwithstanding that the former had “disclaimed coverage.” Id. at 1108.
    The California Court of Appeal has since consistently followed Clemmer and
    repeatedly held that insurers have a protectable interest under § 11580 in preventing
    defaults by their insureds that are incapable of defending themselves or otherwise
    unwilling to do so.14
    13
    The court identified those remedies as intervention, id. at 1108, or, absent suffi-
    cient notice to intervene, an application to set aside the entry of default judgment,
    id. at 1109.
    14
    See, e.g., Jade K. v. Viguri, 
    258 Cal. Rptr. 907
    , 912–13 (Ct. App. 1989) (holding
    that liability insurer had a cognizable interest in preventing the default of its insured)
    (citing Clemmer); Reliance Ins. Co. v. Super. Ct., 
    100 Cal. Rptr. 2d 807
    , 810 (Ct.
    App. 2000) (“Thus, where the insurer may be subject to a direct action under Insur-
    ance Code section 11580 by a judgment creditor who has or will obtain a default
    judgment in a third party action against the insured, intervention is appropriate.”)
    22
    In response to the insurers’ argument that § 11580 protects their interest in
    defending Collins & Aikman against default, DTSC argues—echoing the district
    court’s reasoning—that they forfeited that interest by refusing to admit coverage. In
    support of this proposition, the Department relies primarily upon Gray v. Begley,
    
    106 Cal. Rptr. 3d 729
     (Ct. App. 2010); Hinton v. Beck, 
    98 Cal. Rptr. 3d 612
     (Ct.
    App. 2009); and Noya v. A.W. Coulter Trucking, 
    49 Cal. Rptr. 3d 584
     (Ct. App.
    2006).15
    In Gray, an insurer providing a defense under a reservation of rights sought to
    intervene when its insured settled without the insurer’s consent. The Court of Appeal
    held that the insurer had a protectable interest for intervention purposes, reasoning
    that “the key factor . . . is whether the insurer provided the insured with a defense,
    (citing Clemmer); Garamendi v. Golden Eagle Ins. Co., 
    10 Cal. Rptr. 3d 724
    , 738
    (Ct. App. 2004) (same) (citing Reliance); Kaufman & Broad Cmtys., Inc. v. Perfor-
    mance Plastering, Inc., 
    39 Cal. Rptr. 3d 33
    , 34 (Ct. App. 2006) (“In this case we
    hold when an insurance company seeks to provide a defense in pending litigation for
    a corporation that has been suspended for nonpayment of its taxes, the insurance
    company must intervene in the action to protect its own interests and those of its
    insured.”); see also Nasongkhla v. Gonzalez, 
    34 Cal. Rptr. 2d 379
    , 381 (App. Dep’t
    Super. Ct. 1994) (“We are satisfied that under Clemmer, unless State Farm is allowed
    to intervene, it may have no other opportunity to litigate fault or damage issues in
    any action brought by plaintiff on its judgment under Insurance Code section
    11580.”).
    15
    The Department also relies on various federal cases applying state law other than
    California’s. See, e.g., Travelers Indem. Co. v. Dingwell, 
    884 F.2d 629
     (1st Cir.
    1989). These authorities are not germane to whether the insurers have a protectable
    interest under California law.
    23
    not whether the insurer denied coverage.” 106 Cal. Rptr. 3d at 740 (emphasis added).
    Like the insurer in Gray—and unlike the insurers in Hinton, who refused to provide
    a defense, see 98 Cal. Rptr. 3d at 616, and in Noya, who denied coverage and refused
    to provide a defense, see 49 Cal. Rptr. 3d at 588—the insurers here seek to provide
    a defense. The insurers explained to the district court that, if allowed to intervene,
    they would defend Collins & Aikman’s interests by challenging its alleged liability
    for site contamination and whether DTSC’s remediation actions are consistent with
    the statutory requirements for a CERCLA action, as well as by arguing “that DTSC
    is not entitled to recover prejudgment interest” or “fixed costs” that have “no relation
    to the site.”
    We emphasize here that none of the insurers had previously denied a defense
    to their insured. The insurers only received notice of the litigation against Collins &
    Aikman from DTSC’s agent, Arcina Risk Group, more than four years after it com-
    menced and after the clerk’s entry of default. During that time, the court-appointed
    and DTSC-paid receiver for Collins & Aikman never notified the insurers of DTSC’s
    claims, let alone sought a defense from them. The insurers timely sought to defend
    Collins & Aikman through the only practical means by which they could do so—by
    intervention directly into the case.
    Under our reading of Clemmer and its progeny, what is dispositive here is that
    the insurers timely sought to intervene to defend their helpless insured and prevent
    24
    a default judgment. An insurer’s coverage position is irrelevant under the direct ac-
    tion statute so long as the insurer timely acts to defend a helpless insured and prevent
    its default. See Clemmer, 
    587 P.2d at 1106, 1109
    ; Gray, 106 Cal. Rptr. 3d at 740.
    We therefore hold that under the California direct action statute, a primary or
    excess insurer16 that seeks to timely intervene in a tort action for the stated purpose
    of defending its insured that is either unwilling or incapable of defending itself has
    a protectable interest for purposes of Rule 24(a)(2), no matter what position, if any,
    the insurer has taken as to coverage.17 In this case, the insurers promptly moved to
    intervene to defend their insured and prevent the entry of default judgment upon
    16
    We read the rule of Clemmer and its progeny as extending to excess insurers such
    as Allianz. The rationale of Clemmer is that under § 11580, an insurer has an interest
    in preventing the entry of default judgment against its insured. Excess insurers have
    such an interest as much as primary insurers, especially given the facts in this case.
    Excess insurers ordinarily have no right to participate in the defense of their insured
    (absent contractual language to the contrary) because we assume that excess carriers’
    interests are protected by the primary insurers who will vigorously defend against
    liability. Cf. Ticor Title Ins. Co. v. Employers Ins. of Wausau, 
    48 Cal. Rptr. 2d 368
    ,
    373 (Ct. App. 1995). Not so here. The receiver for the insured, Collins & Aikman,
    apparently colluded with DTSC and declined to defend the lawsuit, leading to the
    entry of default. Allianz thus has an interest in challenging the clerk’s default and
    preventing the entry of default judgment.
    17
    We express no view on the coverage implications, if any, of Continental’s failure
    to reserve its rights, Century’s disclaimer of coverage, and Allianz’s self-described
    reservation of rights in conjunction with their respective intervention motions taken
    for the purposes of defending their insured. Cf. Kaufman & Broad, 39 Cal. Rptr. 3d
    at 40 (“[A]n insurer who seeks to intervene and protect its coverage defenses may
    provide an explicit reservation of rights to its client and allege that reservation of
    rights within its pleading to put the plaintiff on notice that the insurance company is
    reserving those rights and asserting coverage defenses.”).
    25
    learning of the Department’s suit. In denying their motions to intervene as of right
    for lack of a protectable interest, the district court erred as a matter of law, and we
    reverse.
    V
    Finally, the insurers appeal the district court’s denial of their Rule 55(c) mo-
    tions to set aside the clerk’s entry of default against Collins & Aikman. See Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 55(a), (c).
    DTSC asserts that we lack appellate jurisdiction because such an order is in-
    terlocutory. We agree. “Whereas we have jurisdiction to review a district court’s
    order denying a motion to set aside the entry of a default judgment, we lack jurisdic-
    tion over an appeal from an order denying a motion to set aside the entry of default
    alone.” Symantec Corp. v. Global Impact, Inc., 
    559 F.3d 922
    , 923 (9th Cir. 2009)
    (cleaned up); see also Haw. Carpenters’ Tr. Funds v. Stone, 
    794 F.2d 508
    , 512 (9th
    Cir. 1986) (noting, in case involving review of entry of default judgment, rather than
    clerk’s default as here, that “[o]ur review necessarily encompasses the entry of de-
    fault and the conditional order setting the default aside, as neither of those orders
    constituted appealable final orders”) (emphasis added); Baker v. Limber, 
    647 F.2d 912
    , 916 (9th Cir. 1981) (characterizing appellee as “correct” that appeal was prem-
    ature where district court entered default but had not yet issued default judgment).
    26
    Thus, we dismiss the insurers’ appeal of the denial of their motions to set aside
    the clerk’s default. That said, on remand the district court may reconsider its denial
    of those motions.18
    REVERSED in part, DISMISSED in part, and REMANDED. The parties
    shall bear their own costs.
    18
    As noted above, the reasons for the district court’s denial of the insurers’ motions
    to set aside the default are unclear at best. Insofar as the predicate for that order was
    the intervention denial, our decision today reverses that predicate.
    27
    Cal. Dep’t Toxic Substances Control v. Century Indemnity Co., et al., 20-15029
    COLLINS, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment:
    As the majority correctly notes, whether the insurers in this case should have
    been permitted to intervene as of right under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
    24(a)(2) “turns on whether they have an ‘interest’ under” that rule. See Opin. at
    14. We have held that, in order for a putative intervenor to establish that it has a
    “significantly protectable” interest sufficient to support intervention as of right
    under Rule 24(a)(2), it must show that its asserted interest “is protectable under
    some law, and that there is a relationship between the legally protected interest and
    the claims at issue.” Wilderness Soc’y v. U.S. Forest Serv., 
    630 F.3d 1173
    , 1179
    (9th Cir. 2011) (en banc) (quoting Sierra Club v. U.S. EPA, 
    995 F.2d 1478
    , 1484
    (9th Cir. 1993)). Here, there is no dispute that if the insurers have an interest
    “protectable under some law,” then there exists “a relationship between the legally
    protected interest and the claims at issue.” For the reasons stated in Part IV(B)(3)
    of the majority opinion, I agree that the insurers here have established such a
    significantly protectable interest and that the district court therefore erred in
    denying intervention as of right. And for the reasons set forth in Part V of the
    majority opinion, I also agree that we lack jurisdiction over the insurers’ appeal
    from the denial of their motions to set aside the default of their insured.
    1
    Accordingly, I join Parts I, II, IV(B)(3), and V of the court’s opinion, and I concur
    in the court’s judgment.
    Sections III, IV(A), IV(B)(1), and IV(B)(2) of the majority opinion
    respectively address additional issues regarding standing, the development of the
    law leading up to our articulation of Rule 24’s standards in our en banc opinion in
    Wilderness Society, and choice-of-law principles. The matters discussed in these
    sections were not raised, briefed, or contested by the parties on appeal. While it is
    certainly appropriate for a court to raise a jurisdictional issue of standing sua
    sponte when the issue is close or difficult, that is not the case here. Because I
    therefore perceive no reason for us to discuss any of these additional points, I do
    not join Parts III, IV(A), IV(B)(1), and IV(B)(2) of the majority opinion.
    2