In Re: San Juan v. American Internation ( 1995 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ____________________


    No. 93-2352
    IN RE SAN JUAN DUPONT PLAZA HOTEL FIRE LITIGATION.
    __________


    AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY OF PUERTO RICO
    and INSURANCE COMPANY OF THE STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA,

    Cross-Claimants, Appellants,
    v.

    AMERICAN NATIONAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Cross-Defendant, Appellee.

    ____________________
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO
    [Hon. Raymond L. Acosta, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________
    Before

    Boudin, Circuit Judge, _____________
    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Stahl, Circuit Judge. _____________
    ____________________

    Robert S. Frank, Jr. with whom Mark D. Cahill, Bret A. Fausett, ____________________ ______________ _______________
    Jeffrey A. Levinson, Choate, Hall & Stewart, William R. Kardaras, ___________________ ______________________ ___________________
    Louise A. Kelleher and Cooper, Brown, Kardaras & Scharf were on __________________ ________________________________
    briefs for American International Insurance Company of Puerto
    Rico and Insurance Company of the State of Pennsylvania.
    Kent R. Keller with whom William A. Kurlander, John C. Holmes, _______________ ____________________ ______________
    J. Steven Bingman and Barger & Wolen were on brief for American _________________ _______________
    National Fire Insurance Company.


    ____________________
    January 27, 1995
    ____________________
















    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge. This appeal is a companion to _____________

    Lyon v. Pacific Employees Insurance Co., Nos. 93-2115, 93- ____ ________________________________

    2116, which is decided today in a separate opinion. Here,

    appellants American International Insurance Company of Puerto

    Rico ("AIIC") and Insurance Company of the State of

    Pennsylvania ("ISOP") challenge the district court's sua ___

    sponte grant of summary judgment for American National Fire ______

    Insurance Company ("ANFIC") on AIIC/ISOP's cross-claim for

    defense costs. The appellants contend that the district

    court's action in granting summary judgment sua sponte was ___________

    procedurally flawed because they had no notice and no

    opportunity to present a defense. AIIC and ISOP were the

    primary general liability insurers for the Dupont Plaza and

    related entities when the hotel fire occurred on December 31,

    1986. Their insureds included the San Juan Dupont Plaza

    Corporation, Holders Capital Corporation ("Holders"), Hotel

    Systems International ("HSI"), Hotel Equipment Leasing

    Associates ("HELA") and William Lyon, in his capacity as a

    shareholder and director of the various Dupont Plaza

    entities.1 As the primary insurers for the hotel, AIIC and




    ____________________

    1Holders, in which Lyon and others had an ownership
    interest, was the holding company for various hotel
    operations. HSI, a subsidiary of Holders, owned and operated
    the Dupont Plaza. HELA is a limited partnership, in which
    Lyon was a limited partner, that leased hotel equipment to
    various hotels including the Dupont Plaza.

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    ISOP financed the hotel's defense of the massive fire

    litigation, expending over $40,000,000 in defense costs.

    At the time of the fire, ANFIC was the primary general

    liability insurer for the William Lyon Company, a California

    residential construction and development company, and related

    entities, including William Lyon individually. As Lyon ____

    explains in detail, Pacific Employers Insurance Company

    ("PEIC") and First State Insurance Company ("FSIC") were

    among several excess insurers for the William Lyon Company

    and its related insureds at the time of the fire, and their

    coverage provided additional layers of protection over and

    above ANFIC's primary coverage.

    In general, as is typical in excess insurance cases,

    PEIC and FSIC provided coverage similar to ANFIC's primary

    coverage. Like the PEIC and FSIC policies, the ANFIC

    policy's only direct link to the Dupont Plaza was Lyon's

    status as a named individual insured; no Dupont Plaza entity

    was listed as an insured, and no listed insured other than

    Lyon was involved in the hotel business. In addition, like

    the PEIC and FSIC policies, the ANFIC policy limited Lyon's

    individual coverage to the conduct of businesses of which he

    was the "sole proprietor."

    Soon after the fire-injury suits began, Lyon and Holders

    tendered their defenses to ANFIC. ANFIC agreed to defend

    Lyon, but reserved its rights to deny coverage on the ground



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    that Lyon had not been sued in an insured capacity. ANFIC

    declined to defend Holders on the basis that it was not an

    insured. In April 1988, ANFIC filed a declaratory judgment

    action in a California federal court against Lyon and others

    to resolve the coverage issues. This action was subsequently

    consolidated with the multi-district litigation in Puerto

    Rico and eventually dismissed without prejudice.

    AIIC, ISOP and ANFIC were all eventually joined as

    defendants in the first phase of the fire-injury litigation--

    AIIC and ISOP in September 1987 and ANFIC in January 1989.

    In February 1989, AIIC and ISOP filed a cross-claim against

    ANFIC, seeking contribution for their costs for defending

    Lyon and the other Dupont Plaza entities related to him. In

    May 1989, when phase I was resolved by settlement, AIIC, ISOP

    and ANFIC all contributed their coverage limits as damages to

    the victims' settlement fund--a combined $1 million for AIIC

    and ISOP and $1 million for ANFIC--with ANFIC expressly

    reserving its rights later to dispute its obligation to

    contribute to defense costs.

    In phase III of the litigation, the district court

    undertook the unenviable task of sorting out the contractual

    liabilities of the various insurers. On December 7, 1992, in

    Order No. 469, the district court ruled that the PEIC and

    FSIC policies did not cover the fire-related obligations of

    Lyon or any of the Dupont Plaza entities connected to him, a



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    result that we have today affirmed in Lyon. Since its policy ____

    largely paralleled the PEIC and FSIC policies, ANFIC was

    encouraged by Order No. 469 to move for summary judgment on

    AIIC/ISOP's cross-claim for defense costs.

    Because the district court's deadline for the filing of

    pre-trial motions had long since passed, ANFIC was first

    required to obtain the court's permission to file the motion

    out of time. On February 25, 1993, ANFIC filed a twelve-page

    motion seeking leave to file for summary judgment,

    predicating its request on the identity of the issues decided

    in Order No. 469. The motion outlined the substance of

    ANFIC's proposed summary judgment arguments and presented

    procedural arguments why the court should allow the belated

    summary judgment filing. ANFIC also requested that the court

    establish an appropriate briefing schedule for summary

    judgment filings.

    On March 9, 1993, AIIC and ISOP filed a seven-page

    opposition to ANFIC's motion for leave, setting forth both

    procedural and substantive grounds for denial. The

    opposition briefly urged differences between a primary

    insurer's defense obligation and an excess insurer's coverage

    obligation, hoping to distinguish AIIC/ISOP's contribution

    claim against ANFIC from the liability coverage claims

    asserted by Holders and Lyon against PEIC and FSIC. The





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    opposition did not contain any analysis or discussion of

    California law on the duty to defend.

    In the event the court granted ANFIC's motion for leave

    to file, AIIC and ISOP requested similar permission to file a

    cross-motion for summary judgment to affirm ANFIC's duty to

    contribute to Lyon's defense. AIIC and ISOP also filed a

    motion seeking production of ANFIC's underwriting files,

    claiming that those files contained admissions relating to

    ANFIC's obligation to defend Lyon. Although the motion did

    not identify the supposed admissions, on appeal AIIC and ISOP

    suggest only that the files might help establish that ANFIC

    was responsible for including an allegedly ambiguous omnibus

    clause in its policy.

    On September 2, 1993, the district court entered Order

    No. 495, granting summary judgment for ANFIC on AIIC/ISOP's

    cross-claim for defense costs. Treating ANFIC's motion for

    leave to file as a request for summary judgment, the district

    court ruled that ANFIC's primary policy, like the parallel

    PEIC and FSIC policies, did not cover Lyon or any of the

    Dupont Plaza entities. Because AIIC/ISOP's cross-claim was

    "distinct and separate from any remaining claims" in the fire

    litigation, the court entered Final Judgment No. 12

    dismissing the cross-claim in its entirety. The court also

    dismissed AIIC/ISOP's request for production of documents as

    moot. On October 8, 1993, in Order No. 506, the court denied



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    AIIC/ISOP's timely motion to reconsider, and this appeal

    followed.

    As a preliminary matter, ANFIC argues that this appeal

    is limited to a review of Order No. 506, which is the

    district court's denial of the motion for reconsideration,

    and that our inquiry is therefore for abuse of discretion

    only. See, e.g., Mariani-Giron v. Acevedo-Ruiz, 945 F.2d 1, ___ ____ _____________ ____________

    3 (1st Cir. 1991). ANFIC points to the fact that appellants'

    notice of appeal is entitled, "Notice of Appeal to the First

    Circuit Court of Appeals From Order No. 506 of District Court

    Judge Raymond L. Acosta Dated October 8, 1993." AIIC and

    ISOP contend Order No. 495, the district court's summary

    judgment ruling, is also before this court.

    An appeal from the denial of a motion for

    reconsideration is not an appeal from the underlying

    judgment. LeBlanc v. Great American Ins. Co., 6 F.3d 836, _______ ________________________

    839 (1st Cir. 1993), cert. denied, 114 S. Ct. 1398 (1994) _____ ______

    (collecting cases). But we have allowed "a timely appeal

    from the denial of a timely Rule 59(e) motion to serve as

    notice of an appeal from the underlying judgment in cases

    where the appellant's intent to appeal from the judgment is

    clear." Id. A mistake in designating a judgment in the ___

    notice of appeal will not ordinarily result in a loss of the

    appeal "as long as the intent to appeal from a specific

    judgment can be fairly inferred from the notice, and appellee



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    is not misled by the mistake." Kelly v. United States, 789 _____ _____________

    F.2d 94, 96 n.3 (1st Cir. 1990).

    AIIC/ISOP's notice of appeal manifests AIIC/ISOP's

    intent to appeal the summary judgment ruling. The body of

    the notice referred to Order No. 469 and Final Judgment No.

    12. The notice, filed on November 1, 1993, following the

    district court's denial of the motion to reconsider on

    October 8, 1993, was timely for an appeal of Order No. 469

    and Final Judgment No. 12. See Fed. R. App. 4(a). The title ___

    of the notice, which refers only to the motion to reconsider,

    is not dispositive, and there is no claim that ANFIC was

    prejudiced in any way by the mislabeled notice. See Kotler ___ ______

    v. American Tobacco Co., 981 F.2d 7, 11-12 (1st Cir. 1992). ____________________

    We turn now to the district court's decision to grant

    summary judgment in favor of ANFIC. When the district court

    granted summary judgment, there was no formal motion for

    summary judgment pending before it; it had only the ANFIC's

    motion requesting leave to file and the AIIC/ISOP's

    opposition. These filings did outline the substance of the

    parties' respective positions on the merits. Still, in

    formal terms, the district court's ruling was "the functional

    equivalent of a sua sponte grant of summary judgment." ___________

    Stella v. Town of Tewksbury, 4 F.3d 53, 55 (1st Cir. 1993). ______ _________________

    In Stella, we recognized that a district court can grant ______

    summary judgment on its own initiative so long as the



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    parties' procedural interests are protected. 4 F.3d at 55.

    In particular, discovery must be far enough examined to let

    the court accurately decide whether there are genuine issues

    of material fact and to make the parties aware of the

    evidence that they can adduce. Id. Further, the litigants ___

    need notice from the district court of its intention to

    consider a grant of summary judgment, so that the litigants

    can present their arguments and their evidence. Id. _______ ___

    In this case, there was on the one hand no notice that

    the district court was considering a grant of summary

    judgment, for the only issue pending was whether the court

    would grant permission to file such a motion. On the other

    hand, the parties in the course of presenting their positions

    on the latter issue also revealed much of what they had to

    say on the substance of the merits of summary judgment. The

    matter is further complicated because AIIC/ISOP also took the

    position that, before responding to a summary judgment

    motion, they needed additional discovery in order to

    illuminate the question who drafted the omnibus clause in the

    ANFIC policy.

    If we were completely certain that the merits of the

    summary judgment issue had been fully presented to the _____

    district court, it might be reasonable to conclude either

    that the essence of the Stella notice requirement had been ______

    satisfied or that the failure to satisfy it was harmless.



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    See Stella, 4 F.3d at 56 n.4. Further, our own opinion today ___ ______

    in the companion case significantly limits the arguments left

    open to AIIC/ISOP and also appears to render its discovery

    request irrelevant. But there does remain unresolved a

    significant legal issue, not squarely addressed by the

    district court, so we are persuaded that a remand is the most

    appropriate solution.

    Broadly speaking, as to coverage for liability, ANFIC's

    position appears to be materially identical to that of PEIC

    and FSIC decided in the companion Lyon case. The reasons we ____

    have given in that case for exculpating PEIC and FSIC make

    clear that claims of liability coverage by Lyon or Holders

    against ANFIC would also fail. The sole proprietor

    endorsement appears in the ANFIC policy, and we have held in

    Lyon that this endorsement limits claims under the omnibus ____

    clause without regard to who drafted the provisions. Yet,

    there is a further argument, vigorously pressed by AIIC/ISOP,

    that the duty to defend under California law is broader than

    the duty to indemnify and applies wherever a liability

    coverage claim has "potential" validity even though it

    ultimately fails.

    There is apparently no dispute that under California law

    the duty to defend is broader than the duty to indemnify.

    Horace Mann Ins. Co. v. Barbara B., 846 P.2d 792, 795 (Cal. ____________________ __________

    1993). AIIC/ISOP say that wherever there is potential



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    coverage under a policy--by potential they appear to mean

    "arguable"--the duty to defend exists. All parties also seem

    to assume that, if there was a duty on the part of ANFIC to

    defend at the outset, then it is liable for contribution to

    the defense costs even if the potential claim of liability

    coverage is later resolved in the negative. Montrose Chem. ______________

    Corp. of Cal. v. Superior Court, 861 P.2d 1153, 1157 (Cal. ______________ _______________

    1973); Continental Casualty Co. v. Zurich Ins. Co., 366 P.2d ________________________ ________________

    455, 461 (Cal. 1961).

    ANFIC, however, says that the duty to defend in arguable

    cases does not extend to those in which the dispute is about

    whether the putative insured is actually insured under the

    policy; and ANFIC cites California cases that it thinks

    support its position. Wint v. Fidelity & Cas. Co., 507 P.2d ____ ___________________

    1383, 1388 (Cal. 1973); McLaughlin v. National Union Fire __________ ____________________

    Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, Pa., 29 Cal. Rptr. 2d 559, 570 (Cal. ____________________________

    Ct. App. 1994). ANFIC also seems to think that it matters

    that (in its view) the burden of proof to establish that an

    individual or company is protected by a policy is upon the

    claimant, whereas proving that a restriction or exclusion

    applies is upon the insurer.

    We are doubtful whether this supposed difference in

    burden of proof matters in a case in which the facts are not

    in dispute, but the extent of the duty to defend under

    California law may be a debatable point. While law on the



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    duty to defend in potential coverage cases might be limited

    in the fashion that ANFIC suggests, it is also possible that

    the duty to defend exists in any case in which there is

    arguably coverage, regardless of what policy language is in

    dispute. In the alternative, perhaps the duty to defend

    exists at least where the defendant in the underlying

    liability litigation is a named insured, and the dispute as

    to coverage turns on whether the insured is sued in a covered

    "capacity."

    Assuming there is a duty to defend in arguable cases and

    that ANFIC's distinction between types of disputes does not

    wash, the question would remain whether coverage here was

    arguable. While our reading of the policy language in Lyon ____

    may somewhat impair AIIC/ISOP's position, nevertheless under

    California law the duty to defend is evaluated in terms of

    likelihoods at the outset of litigation. See, e.g., Horace ______ ___ ____ ______

    Mann, 846 P.2d at 795. A court's later conclusion that a ____

    provision should be read one way, and that extrinsic evidence

    is beside the point, does not necessarily mean that the

    contrary view was inarguable. The standard of what is

    arguable is itself a matter of California law.

    Although the issues as we have posed them are

    essentially legal ones, there are numerous reasons why a

    remand is appropriate so the district court can consider the

    matter in the first instance. Discovery aside, it is not



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    completely clear that the parties have said everything they

    can about the "merits," since much of the briefing in this

    court has been directed to the procedural propriety of

    summary judgment and not to the merits. Since the reach of

    California law on the duty to defend is disputed, our concern

    that the parties may not have mustered all of their merits

    arguments and citations is not a formality.

    Further, we are not wholly certain that our narrowing of

    the issues is justified. Although our companion opinion in

    Lyon probably eliminates any basis for concern about who ____

    drafted the omnibus clause in the ANFIC policy, none of the

    litigants has had an opportunity to address this issue in

    light of Lyon. Similarly, we are skeptical that ANFIC's ____

    willingness to assume Lyon's defense in the underlying

    litigation is much of an admission vis-a-vis the AIIC/ISOP

    claim; as ANFIC points out, it could be subject to harsh

    penalties under California law if it breached the duty to

    defend. Still, the presence of this kind of dangling dispute

    shows why the wiser course is to remand.

    Finally, although we are reluctant to prolong what has

    been extraordinarily burdensome litigation, no judge on this

    panel compares to the presiding district judge in his

    familiarity with the facts, the procedural history, and the

    possible ramifications of California law in relation to the

    dispute. The district court did not in its grant of summary



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    judgment discuss the asserted distinctions between the duty

    to indemnify and a duty to defend or their connection to the

    claims of contribution pressed by AIIC/ISOP in this case.

    This is one more reason why a remand is the wiser outcome.

    On remand, we think that the proper course would be for

    the district court to invite ANFIC to file a formal motion

    for summary judgment and to allow AIIC/ISOP to file papers in

    opposition, or a cross-motion in their own favor, or both.

    If any party wishes to claim that additional discovery is

    necessary, it is free to do so. As already noted, we have

    not discerned any obvious factual issues requiring further

    discovery but the district court is free to determine

    otherwise after the parties have had an opportunity to

    present their positions.

    The judgment is vacated and the case remanded for _______ ________

    further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.





















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