Global Modular v. Kadena Pacific, Inc. ( 2017 )


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  • Filed 9/8/17
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    GLOBAL MODULAR, INC.,
    Cross-defendant and Appellant,
    v.
    KADENA PACIFIC, INC.
    Cross-complainant and Appellant.
    NORTH AMERICAN CAPACITY
    INSURANCE COMPANY,                                   E063551
    Plaintiff and Appellant;                    (Super.Ct.Nos. RIC1103551
    RIC1304240)
    v.
    OPINION
    KADENA PACIFIC, INC.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Daniel A. Ottolia, Judge.
    Affirmed in part; reversed in part with directions.
    Larson & Gaston, John B. Larson, and Gloria G. Medel for Cross-defendant and
    Appellant.
    1
    K&L Gates, Timothy L. Pierce, and Kate G. Hummel for Defendant, Cross-
    complainant, and Appellant.
    Grimm, Vranjes & Greer, Mark Vranjes, and Charles A. Phillips for Plaintiff and
    Appellant.
    This case arises from an insurance dispute between a general contractor, its
    subcontractor, and the subcontractor’s general liability carrier over water damage to a
    construction site caused by heavy rains. The United States Department of Veterans
    Affairs (VA) hired Kadena Pacific, Inc. (Kadena) as the general contractor to oversee
    construction of its Center for Blind Rehabilitation in Menlo Park. Kadena hired Global
    Modular, Inc. (Global) to build, deliver, and install the 53 modular units that would
    comprise the rehabilitation center. Because Kadena had hired a different subcontractor to
    install the roofing, Global agreed to deliver the units covered only by a roof deck
    substrate—a three-fourths of an inch base sheet of plywood.
    Kadena had originally scheduled delivery of the units for the summer months, but
    delivery was delayed until October and November. This meant the roofless units were
    exposed to the elements during the rainy season, equipped with only a plywood substrate.
    Despite Global’s efforts to protect the units by covering them with plastic tarps, the
    interiors suffered water damage from October through January. In February, Kadena and
    Global mutually agreed to terminate their contract and Kadena oversaw the remediation
    of the water-damaged interiors and completion of the project.
    2
    Global sued Kadena for failure to pay and Kadena countersued, alleging Global
    had breached the contract in various ways, including by failing to repair the water-
    damaged interiors. Before trial, the parties entered a partial settlement. Global paid
    Kadena $321,975 to release all of Kadena’s claims arising from the VA project except for
    claims covered by Global’s insurance policy with North American Capacity Insurance
    Company (NAC), and Global received $153,025 to dismiss its failure-to-pay claims. At
    trial, Kadena presented evidence on the scope and cost of its water remediation and
    argued Global was contractually responsible for the damage. The jury agreed and
    awarded Kadena slightly over $1 million.
    In a separate suit brought by NAC, Kadena and NAC filed competing motions for
    summary judgment on the issue of whether NAC’s policy required it to indemnify Global
    for the jury’s damage award. The trial court ruled in favor of Kadena, finding the
    damage award covered under NAC’s policy as a matter of law. The court also ruled that
    the award must be offset by the $321,975 Global paid in settlement and that Global was
    liable to Kadena for $360,000 in attorney fees.
    On appeal, NAC contends the trial court erred in finding the water damages are
    covered under its policy; Kadena argues the court erred in offsetting those damages with
    Global’s settlement payment; and Global and NAC argue the court erred in awarding
    attorney fees. We conclude the trial court properly determined NAC’s policy covers the
    water damages and Kadena is entitled to attorney fees. However, we reverse the offset
    3
    order because Global’s settlement payment did not compensate Kadena for the costs of
    its water remediation; the parties agreed to reserve that issue for litigation.
    I
    FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    A.    Trial on the Water Remediation Damages
    Global and Kadena presented the following evidence at trial. The VA’s project
    specifications called for a modular design consisting of 53 units totaling over 37,000
    square feet. In October 2009, Kadena hired Global to build, deliver, install, and partially
    finish the modular units for the project, at a contract price of about $3.5 million. Global’s
    scope of work included the units’ frame, ceiling, drywall, interior finishes, the HVAC
    and plumbing systems, and some aspects of the roof design, such as the plywood
    substrate, parapets, and hatches. The scope of work excluded flooring and roofing.
    Article XIII of the Kadena-Global contract stated Global assumed responsibility “for any
    loss or damage to the [units] . . . however caused, until final acceptance thereof by
    [Kadena].” The contract conditioned “final acceptance” upon the VA’s approval of the
    units.
    Under the overarching construction schedule, Kadena was to pour the concrete
    foundations, then Global would deliver the units partially constructed, set them in place
    on the foundation, perform the additional construction required under the contract, then
    align and fasten the units together to form one main segment and two side wings. After
    Global’s work was complete, Kadena and other subcontractors would finalize the project,
    4
    which included installing the roofs and flooring, stuccoing the exterior of the units, and
    finishing the driveways and sidewalks. The VA had selected an EPDM roof, a
    rubberized sheet that adheres to the plywood substrate. According to Kadena, the roofing
    for all 53 units had to be installed at the same time (as opposed to piecemeal, as the units
    were delivered) in order to ensure the roof manufacturer’s extended warranty.
    Initially, the project schedule called for Global to deliver and finish the units
    during the summer months of 2010. But for various reasons, the schedule shifted
    significantly and Global did not deliver the units to the site until October and November.
    The parties spent a significant amount of trial time on the reasons for the delay in the
    delivery schedule. According to Kadena’s witnesses, unexpected seismic and geological
    issues set the project back about 118 days and Global caused the rest of the delay by
    failing to timely build the units, submit designs, and install weld plates in the foundation.
    Shortly after Global delivered the first shipment of units in early October, it rained
    and the interiors suffered water damage. Kadena’s project manager emailed Global’s
    operations manager and informed him that despite Global’s use of plastic tarps, “the units
    experienced rain leakage and damage to the drywall and insulation.” Over the next four
    months, the rains continued on and off and the units suffered additional water damage.
    Kadena’s project manager sent several emails to Global’s operations manager over this
    period, directing him to remediate the water damage and reminding him Global is
    responsible for the damage under their contract. Global’s operations manager would
    respond to these emails by agreeing to address the issue. At trial, Global’s operations
    5
    manager testified that although his crew had tried to protect the units by covering them
    with heavy-duty plastic tarps, the fact the units were equipped with only a roof substrate
    made them impossible to fully waterproof and weatherproof. He said it was unusual for a
    client to exclude roofing from the scope of work and that Global was used to installing
    the roofs in their factory, prior to delivery, “to make sure that the building is protected.”
    In early January 2012, Global hired ServiceMaster, a company specializing in
    disaster response, to assist with the water intrusion remediation. Around that same time,
    the roofing contractor began installing the EPDM roof. By mid-February, Global was
    still in the process of trying to remediate the interior water damage and had not yet
    completed its work on the units. At that point, the relationship between Kadena and
    Global had deteriorated and the parties decided to terminate their contract. Kadena then
    took on the task of remediating the water damage and completing the units. Kadena used
    its own crew in addition to the services of four other companies to remove and replace
    water-damaged drywall, insulation, wood framing, and ducting.
    At trial, Kadena presented evidence on the scope and cost of this water
    remediation (the repair/replacement costs) and the number of days it delayed the project
    (the delay damages). Kadena argued Global bore the risk of loss for those damages under
    Article XIII of their contract because the units were not complete (that is, accepted by the
    VA) when they were damaged. Global argued Kadena was responsible for the water
    damage because, as the general contractor coordinating the project, it should have
    developed a plan to protect the units when it became evident rain was going to be an
    6
    issue—for example, by renting a place to store the units or having the roof installed
    piecemeal instead of all at once.
    The jury agreed with Kadena and found Global contractually liable for a total of
    $1,068,541.91 in water intrusion damages, broken down as follows: $617,332.86 for
    drywall and insulation repairs; $113,020.05 for carpentry repairs; $46,125 for mechanical
    duct repairs; and $292,064 for delay.1
    B.     Summary Adjudication of Insurance Coverage
    NAC sought a declaration it was not obligated to indemnify Global for the water
    intrusion damages because they were not covered under its commercial general liability
    (CGL) policy. That policy covers “property damage” caused by an “occurrence,” which
    is defined as “an accident, including continuous or repeated exposure to substantially the
    same general harmful conditions.” From this broad, occurrence-based coverage the
    policy carves out a variety of exclusions. Relevant to this appeal are exclusions j(5) and
    j(6) and exclusion m.
    Kadena and NAC filed competing motions for summary judgment on the issue of
    coverage. NAC argued exclusions j(5) and j(6) apply to the costs of repairing and
    replacing the wet drywall, insulation, framing, and ducting. As to the delay damages,
    NAC argued they do not fall under the policy’s insuring clause because they are not
    “property damage” and, even if they were, exclusion m applies to preclude coverage.
    1 In fact, the jury award totaled $1,168,931.08, but Kadena elected not to pursue
    two categories of damages—mold and concrete—because NAC’s insurance policy has a
    $1 million limit.
    7
    Kadena argued exclusions j(5) and j(6) do not apply or are at the very least ambiguous,
    and thus should be interpreted in favor of coverage. It argued the delay damages fall
    under the insuring clause and exclusion m is inapplicable.
    The trial court ruled both types of damages are covered under the policy and
    granted Kadena’s motion for summary judgment. As to the repair/replacement costs, the
    court held exclusions j(5) and j(6) are ambiguous and can reasonably be interpreted to
    exclude damage to only the particular component of Global’s work that was defective.
    Applying this interpretation to the undisputed facts from trial, the court found none of the
    drywall, insulation, framing, or ducting Kadena repaired or replaced was defective, and
    thus concluded exclusions j(5) and j(6) did not apply. As to delay damages, the court
    determined they were covered by the insuring clause and exclusion m did not preclude
    coverage because, like exclusions j(5) and j(6), it applied only to defective work.
    C.     Offset and Attorney Fees
    Following the jury’s verdict, Global filed a motion to offset the damage award by
    the amount of its settlement payment to Global and Kadena filed a motion for attorney
    fees. The court granted both motions. It ruled offset was appropriate because it saw no
    distinction between the claims Kadena had settled and the jury’s damage award. It found
    Kadena was entitled to attorney fees under the Kadena-Global contract and rejected
    Global’s assertion Kadena had released its right to obtain attorney fees under the
    settlement agreement.
    8
    II
    DISCUSSION
    A.     The Summary Judgment Motions
    1.      Standards of review
    “The purpose of the law of summary judgment is to provide courts with a
    mechanism to cut through the parties’ pleadings in order to determine whether, despite
    their allegations, trial is in fact necessary to resolve their dispute.” (Aguilar v. Atlantic
    Richfield Co. (2001) 
    25 Cal. 4th 826
    , 843 (Aguilar).) Summary judgment is proper when
    there are no triable issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as
    a matter of law. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (c).) A plaintiff is entitled to summary
    judgment if it establishes there is no defense to the claim, and a defendant is entitled to
    summary judgment if it establishes a complete defense to the plaintiff’s claim, or shows
    that one or more elements of the claim cannot be established. (§ 437c, subd. (o); Aguilar,
    at p. 849.) The moving party bears the burden of showing it is entitled to judgment as a
    matter of law. (Aguilar, at p. 850.)
    We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, and decide independently
    whether the facts not subject to triable dispute warrant judgment for the moving party as
    a matter of law. (Intel Corp. v. Hamidi (2003) 
    30 Cal. 4th 1342
    , 1348.) We are not bound
    by the trial court’s stated reasons for granting summary judgment. (Kids’ Universe v.
    In2Labs (2002) 
    95 Cal. App. 4th 870
    , 878.)
    9
    The interpretation of an insurance policy is a question of law we review de novo,
    applying the general principles of contract interpretation. (Clarendon America Ins. Co. v.
    General Security Indemnity Co. of Arizona (2011) 
    193 Cal. App. 4th 1311
    , 1317
    (Clarendon).) The goal of contract interpretation is to determine the mutual intent of the
    parties, “if possible, solely from the written provisions of the contract.” (Ibid.) When the
    words of an insurance contract are unambiguous, we give them their plain and ordinary
    meaning. (Ibid. [“‘If contractual language is clear and explicit, it governs’”].) “Courts
    will not strain to create an ambiguity where none exists.” (Waller v. Truck Ins.
    Exchange, Inc. (1995) 
    11 Cal. 4th 1
    , 18-19.) However, if the language is ambiguous, it
    “will generally be construed against the party who caused the uncertainty to exist.”
    (Clarendon, at p. 1317.)
    When it comes to interpreting a policy’s exclusionary provisions, the burden is on
    the insurer “to phrase exceptions and exclusions in clear and unmistakable language.”
    (Harris v. Glens Falls Ins. Co. (1972) 
    6 Cal. 3d 699
    , 701.) It is a “fundamental principle
    that an insurer cannot escape its basic duty to insure by means of an exclusionary clause
    that is unclear.” (State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Jacober (1973) 
    10 Cal. 3d 193
    , 201.)
    As a result, we resolve all “doubts, uncertainties and ambiguities” in exclusionary
    language in favor of the insured. (Producers Dairy Delivery Co. v. Sentry Ins. Co. (1986)
    
    41 Cal. 3d 903
    , 912.) This rule of interpretation applies even when another construction,
    one that would exclude coverage for the risk in question, is equally reasonable. (Smith
    Kandal Real Estate v. Continental Casualty Co. (1998) 
    67 Cal. App. 4th 406
    , 415-416.)
    10
    With these principles in mind, we turn to the language of NAC’s policy.
    2.     The repair/replacement costs
    NAC does not dispute the repair/replacement costs fall under the policy’s insuring
    clause because the wet interior components constitute property damage caused by an
    occurrence—rain. Instead, the dispute centers on whether the repair/replacement costs
    fall under exclusions j(5) and j(6).
    Before turning to the provisions, we note this case presents an issue of first
    impression. Two California decisions, Clarendon and Baroco West, Inc. v. Scottsdale
    Ins. Co. (2003) 
    110 Cal. App. 4th 96
    (Baroco), which we discuss post, involve exclusions
    j(5) and j(6), however they do not interpret the language of the provisions relevant here.
    There are, however, some federal and out-of-state cases that do. Although these
    decisions are not binding on us, we consider them insofar as we find their reasoning
    persuasive. (See Episcopal Church Cases (2009) 
    45 Cal. 4th 467
    , 490 [finding out-of-
    state decisions persuasive].)
    a.     Exclusion j(5)
    Exclusion j(5) excludes coverage for “[t]hat particular part of real property on
    which you or any contractors or subcontractors working directly or indirectly on your
    behalf are performing operations, if the ‘property damage’ arises out of those operations.”
    By its terms, the exclusion applies only if the damage arises out of Global’s operations
    and applies only to damage to the particular part of real property on which Global was
    performing operations at the time of damage.
    11
    The parties’ dispute concerns the meaning of the phrase “are performing
    operations.” NAC argues the phrase refers to works in progress and therefore exclusion
    j(5) applies when the property damage occurs before construction is complete. Kadena
    argues the phrase is more narrow, referring only to the particular component Global was
    physically working on at the time of the property damage. Under that interpretation, the
    exclusion does not apply to the water intrusion damages because the intrusion occurred
    during heavy rains when Global was not working on the units.
    We conclude the use of the active, present tense construction “are performing
    operations” indicates the exclusion applies only to damage caused during physical
    construction activities. Had the policy drafters intended the exclusion to apply more
    broadly to damage to any of the insured’s work in progress, we would expect the
    provision to say something along the lines of, “property damage to that particular part of
    real property on which your operations are not yet complete” or even “property damage
    to your work arising out of your operations.” The drafters use this kind of broad
    language elsewhere in the policy, such as in exclusion l, which excludes “‘[p]roperty
    damage’ to ‘your work’ arising out of it or any part of it and included in the ‘products-
    completed operations hazard.’” This provision precludes coverage for damage to any of
    the insured’s work once it has been completed or abandoned. We find it telling exclusion
    j(5) employs a much more narrow construction, restricting the excluded damage to only
    that particular part on which the insureds are performing operations.
    12
    Other courts that have interpreted this exclusion agree. In Mid-Continent Cas. Co.
    v. JHP Dev., Inc. (5th Cir. 2009) 
    557 F.3d 207
    (Mid-Continent), the Fifth Circuit held
    exclusion j(5) did not apply to damage that occurred during a suspension of construction
    activities before the contract work was complete. The court explained, “the use of the
    present tense ‘are performing operations’ in exclusion j(5) makes clear that the
    exclusion” applies “only to property damage caused during active physical construction
    activities.” (Id. at pp. 213, 218, italics added.)
    In Columbia Mut. Ins. Co. v. Schauf (Mo. 1998) 
    967 S.W.2d 74
    (Schauf), the
    Supreme Court of Missouri interpreted an identical exclusion to require physical
    construction operations at the time of damage. In that case, a contractor hired to paint
    cabinets accidentally started a fire in his client’s kitchen while cleaning his paint sprayer
    at the end of the day. At issue was whether he was “performing operations” when he
    started the fire. He argued he was not because his contract defined his scope of work as
    “painting” the cabinets and he was not in the middle of painting when he started the fire.
    (Id. at p. 79.) The court disagreed, stating “[i]t would not be reasonable to conclude, for
    example, that an insured is performing operations on real property when touching a paint
    brush to the wall, but is not performing operations on real property when dipping that
    brush into the can of paint. Although [the contractor] was not directly producing an
    effect on real property when he started the fire, he was, nevertheless, performing
    operations on the [client’s] house.” (Ibid.)
    13
    In rejecting such a narrow definition of “performing operations” that would
    distinguish among types of operations, the Missouri Supreme Court nevertheless adopted
    a definition that required “doing or performing . . . practical work.” 
    (Schauf, supra
    , 967
    S.W.2d at p. 78.) The court explained: “In order for the instant exclusion to apply, [the
    contractor] must have been performing operations on real property within the meaning of
    this provision. Perform means ‘to carry out or bring about: ACCOMPLISH,
    EXECUTE.’ Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 1678 (1966). Operation is
    defined as ‘a doing or performing of a practical work. . . .’ 
    Id. at 1581.
    In this context,
    on is ‘used as a function word to indicate the object of action or motion.’ 
    Id. at 1575.”
    (Ibid.) The court concluded, the exclusion bars coverage for damage to the property on
    which the insured “‘is performing operations,’ not on which the insured did perform
    operations, will perform operations, or has contracted to perform operations.” (Id. at
    p. 81.)
    Like the Missouri Supreme Court, we view the most reasonable interpretation the
    one that applies a word’s ordinary definition and gives meaning to every word in the
    provision. NAC’s interpretation would broadly apply to any period before an insured’s
    work on a project is complete—whether or not the damage occurred while the insured
    was physically present and working on the project at the time of damage. In our view,
    that interpretation overlooks the present tense of the phrase “are performing operations”
    and the active aspect of “perform” and “operate.” But, even if we were inclined to find
    NAC’s interpretation reasonable, we would be required to resolve the ambiguity in favor
    14
    of coverage. (E.g., Western Employers Ins. Co. v. Arciero & Sons, Inc. (1983) 
    146 Cal. App. 3d 1027
    , 1030 [“It is well-known that any ambiguities in an insurance policy
    will be construed against the insurer”]; Producers Dairy Delivery Co. v. Sentry Ins. 
    Co., supra
    , 41 Cal.3d at p. 912 [any doubts as to the application of insurance exclusions are
    resolved in favor of coverage].)
    NAC argues Kadena’s interpretation is irrelevant because Kadena is not a party to
    the policy and, as a result, it is improper to construe policy ambiguities in Kadena’s
    favor. NAC asserts the proper inquiry is what Global, the insured, understood the policy
    to mean and points out that Global argues on appeal the jury’s damage award is not
    covered under the policy. Contrary to NAC’s contention, our interpretation is not based
    on Kadena’s understanding of the contract. Instead, we base our interpretation on the
    objectively reasonable meaning of the policy’s plain language—in other words, what
    Global should have understood the policy to mean at the time of contracting. (See, e.g.,
    Bank of the West v. Superior Court (1992) 
    2 Cal. 4th 1254
    , 1265 [applying a policy’s
    “objectively reasonable” meaning protects the insured’s reasonable expectations over the
    “subjective beliefs of the insurer”].) Global’s position on appeal is irrelevant to that
    inquiry. We therefore affirm the court’s determination that exclusion j(5) does not apply
    to the repair/replacement costs.
    15
    b.     Exclusion j(6)
    Exclusion j(6) applies to “[t]hat particular part of any property that must be
    restored, repaired or replaced because ‘your work’ was incorrectly performed on it.” The
    parties disagree over the meaning of “that particular part” and “work . . . incorrectly
    performed.”
    NAC argues the exclusion applies to the repair/replacement costs as they are a
    result of Global’s inadequate efforts to waterproof the units. In other words, Global’s
    waterproofing is the incorrectly performed work and the units are the particular part that
    must be repaired because of that work. Kadena contends this interpretation is too broad.
    To begin with, Kadena disagrees Global’s waterproofing efforts were incorrectly
    performed and instead argues the severe weather simply overcame the plastic tarps and
    plywood substrate. Even assuming Global’s waterproofing efforts were subpar, Kadena
    argues they do not constitute incorrect work as the phrase is used in exclusion j(6).
    Kadena contends the phrase refers to a product, such as warped or uneven floors, not a
    process like covering the units with plastic tarps. Finally, assuming Global’s
    waterproofing efforts are incorrect work, the “particular part” Global performed the
    incorrect work “on” was the plywood substrate, not the interior parts of the units for
    which Kadena sought repair/replacement costs. Those parts—the drywall, insulation,
    framing, and ducting—were not defective and were not the subject of Global’s incorrect
    work, and as a result, their repair and replacement costs do not fall under exclusion j(6).
    We agree with Kadena that the exclusion applies narrowly.
    16
    Merriam-Webster defines “particular” as “of, relating to, or being a single person
    or thing,” “distinctive among other examples or cases of the same general category,” and
    “one unit or element among others.” (Webster’s 9th New Collegiate Dict. (1991) p. 858.)
    The same source defines “part” as “one of the often indefinite or unequal subdivisions
    into which something is or is regarded as divided and which together constitute the
    whole.” (Id. at p. 857.) These definitions indicate the phrase is intended to be a
    narrowing element, one that limits the provision’s application to a distinct part of a
    construction project. That the incorrect work must have been performed “on” that
    particular part is an additional narrowing element. Had the policy drafters not intended
    the exclusion to apply narrowly, they easily could have left out the prepositional phrase
    and written the exclusion to apply to “that particular part of any property that must be
    restored, repaired or replaced because ‘your work’ was incorrectly performed.” Were
    this how the exclusion read, NAC’s interpretation would be objectively reasonable. As
    written, however, the exclusion’s narrowing language demonstrates it refers to the
    specific part of the insured’s work on which the insured performed faulty workmanship
    and not, more broadly, to the general area of the construction site affected by the
    insured’s work.
    Courts of other states have also adopted this interpretation. In Schauf, the
    Missouri Supreme Court explained, “[h]ouses and buildings can be divided into so many
    parts that attempting to determine which part or parts are the subject of the insured’s
    operations can produce several reasonable conclusions.” 
    (Schauf, supra
    , 967 S.W.2d at
    17
    p. 80.) Finding the exclusion ambiguous and therefore interpreting it narrowly, the court
    concluded, “[t]he exclusion applies to the ‘property on which [the insured] is performing
    operations,’ not to the area in which the insured is performing operations.” (Id. at p. 81.)
    In Mid-Continent, the Fifth Circuit applied the narrower interpretation of
    exclusion j(6), explaining: “The narrowing ‘that particular part’ language is used to
    distinguish the damaged property that was itself the subject of the defective work from
    other damaged property that was either the subject of nondefective work by the insured or
    that was not worked on by the insured at all.” 
    (Mid-Continent, supra
    , 557 F.3d at p. 215,
    italics added.) The Sixth Circuit has also applied the narrower interpretation, stating:
    “The opening words of the exclusion—namely, ‘[t]hat particular part’—are trebly
    restrictive, straining to the point of awkwardness to make clear that the exclusion applies
    only to building parts on which defective work was performed, and not to the building
    generally.” (Fortney & Weygandt, Inc. v. Am. Mfrs. Mut. Ins. Co. (6th Cir. 2010) 
    595 F.3d 308
    , 311, italics added.)
    While no California case has interpreted the phrase “that particular part” as it
    appears in exclusion j(6), the cases interpreting the phrase in other CGL policy provisions
    reject the idea that it extends to the insured’s project as a whole or to the entire area
    affected by the insured’s defective work. In Eichler Homes, Inc. v. Underwriters at
    Lloyd’s, London (1965) 
    238 Cal. App. 2d 532
    (Eichler) and Blackfield v. Underwriters at
    Lloyd’s, London (1966) 
    245 Cal. App. 2d 271
    (Blackfield) the policies excluded “damage
    to that particular part of any property upon which the [insured] is or has been working
    18
    caused by the faulty manner in which the work has been performed.” (Eichler, at p. 534;
    Blackfield, at p. 273.) In both cases, the insured had built an entire house and an
    identifiable portion of the house turned out to be defective, causing damage to other
    portions of the house. (Eichler, at p. 535 [defective heating system]; Blackfield, at p. 272
    [defective foundation].) In both cases, the insurance company argued the exclusionary
    provision applied to the entire house as the entire house was the subject of the insured’s
    work under the construction contract. (Eichler, at p. 538; Blackfield, at pp. 275-276.)
    The Eichler and Blackfield courts rejected this argument and held the exclusion applied
    only to the particular component of the house that had been defective. (Eichler, at p. 538;
    Blackfield, at pp. 275-276.)
    Based on the above, we conclude exclusion j(6) applies only to the particular
    component of the insured’s work that was incorrectly performed and not to the insured’s
    entire project. Here, based on the undisputed facts from trial, the only arguably defective
    components or parts of Global’s work are the plastic tarps, as they failed to keep the
    water out. However, because the jury was not asked to decide whether Global’s
    waterproofing efforts were incorrect or simply overcome by heavy rains, it is by no
    means an undisputed fact the tarps were faulty or Global’s placement of them incorrect.2
    2  The issue for the jury was limited to whether Global contractually bore the risk
    of loss to the units at the time they were damaged. At trial, Kadena introduced multiple
    emails in which its project manager accuses Global of not doing enough to protect the
    units from the rain, but the purpose of these emails was not to prove Global’s
    waterproofing efforts were “incorrect” but rather to show Global had accepted
    responsibility for the damage.
    19
    But more importantly, there was no allegation the items for which Kadena sought repair
    and replacement costs—the drywall, insulation, framing, and ducting—were defective.
    Those items were acceptable until it rained and they suffered water damage. We
    therefore conclude the trial court was correct in determining exclusion j(6) does not
    preclude coverage for the repair/replacement costs as a matter of law.
    c.     NAC’s contentions
    NAC argues exclusions j(5) and j(6) unambiguously apply to the
    repair/replacement costs because the exclusions cover “faulty workmanship” and Global
    provided faulty work by failing to protect the units from the rain. NAC asserts CGL
    policies are intended to cover only the risk of damage to third-party property and are not
    meant to insure contractors against the “business risks” occasioned by their own faulty
    workmanship. According to NAC, a determination that exclusions j(5) and j(6) do not
    apply to the repair/replacement costs will “turn the insurance industry on its head.” We
    disagree.
    NAC is correct that CGL policies “are not designed to provide contractors and
    developers with coverage against claims their work is inferior or defective.” (Maryland
    Casualty Co. v. Reeder (1990) 
    221 Cal. App. 3d 961
    , 967.) “The risk of replacing and
    repairing defective materials or poor workmanship has generally been considered a
    commercial risk which is not passed on to the liability insurer . . . As one commentator
    explained: ‘This distinction is significant. Replacement and repair costs are to some
    degree within the control of the insured. They can be minimized by careful purchasing,
    20
    inspection of material, quality control and hiring policies. If replacement and repair costs
    were covered, the incentive to exercise care or to make repairs at the least possible cost
    would be lessened since the insurance company would be footing the bill for all scrap.’”
    (Ibid.) However, this is not a garden variety case of an insured seeking coverage for the
    costs of repairing its defective materials or poor workmanship. Here, Kadena contracted
    for units equipped with substrate only. Such a product is not designed to withstand heavy
    rains. Global’s finished product was in actuality an unfinished product awaiting a roof,
    the very thing that would have prevented the property damage. This is simply not a case
    where an insurance company is being asked to foot the bill for the insured’s decision to
    use cheap or defective materials.
    The problem with NAC’s argument is that it is based on its view of the underlying
    policy of commercial general liability insurance and not on an application of the policy
    language to the facts of the case. The actual text of the CGL policy does not support
    NAC’s argument. For starters, the insuring clause makes no distinction between insured
    and third-party property. It provides NAC “will pay those sums that the insured becomes
    legally obligated to pay as damages because of . . . ‘property damage,’” and property
    damage is defined as “[p]hysical injury to tangible property” with no reference to
    ownership. Similarly, nothing in the text of exclusions j(5) and j(6) indicates they are
    meant to apply broadly to any damage to the insured’s work before completion. As
    discussed above, had the policy drafters intended exclusions j(5) and j(6) to exclude
    damage to all of the insured’s work before completion, they either would have drafted
    21
    those provisions as broadly as exclusion l or would not have limited exclusion l to
    completed operations.
    Other jurisdictions have rejected similar invitations to ignore policy language in
    favor of a general principle against insuring against “business risks.” In Lamar Homes,
    Inc. v. Mid-Continent Cas. Co. (Tex. 2007) 
    242 S.W.3d 1
    , the insurance company argued
    the policy did not cover “damage to the insured’s own work” because the underlying
    purpose of a CGL policy is to bear the risk of damage to third-party property. (Id. at
    p. 12.) The Supreme Court of Texas held the CGL policy at issue made no such
    distinction: “The CGL’s insuring agreement simply asks whether ‘property damage’ has
    been caused by an ‘occurrence.’ Therefore, any preconceived notion that a CGL policy is
    only for tort liability [for damage to third-party property] must yield to the policy’s actual
    language.” (Id. at p. 13.) The court stated that coverage for so-called “business risks” of
    an insured’s faulty workmanship “depends, as it always has, on the policy’s language,”
    which, the court noted, contained an insuring clause that was “quite broad.” (Id. at p. 14.)
    The Supreme Court of Minnesota echoed this conclusion in Thommes v.
    Milwaukee Ins. Co. (Minn. 2002) 
    641 N.W.2d 877
    , where it held exclusions j(5) and j(6)
    were ambiguous and thus did not preclude coverage. (Id. at p. 884.) The court warned
    against affording the “business risk” doctrine more weight than the text of policy
    exclusions. The “first step” in determining coverage “is to examine the policy language.”
    (Id. at p. 882.) The business risk principle can be useful “as a means of illuminating the
    underlying purpose of CGL insurance,” but it should never “serve as the foundation for a
    22
    separate ‘business risk doctrine’ that operates to override the express language of policy
    exclusions.” (Id. at p. 880.)
    NAC contends case law supports its argument that exclusions j(5) and j(6)
    preclude coverage for damage to an insured’s work while construction is ongoing. NAC
    principally relies on Clarendon, Baroco, and Bituminous Cas. v. Northern Ins. Co. (2001)
    249 Ga.App. 532 (Bituminous). In Clarendon, a couple sued the contractor they had
    hired to build their home, alleging various construction defects on the contractor’s part
    had caused damage to the building’s interior and exterior. 
    (Clarendon, supra
    , 193
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1315.) The focus of the opinion was whether the “products-completed
    operations hazard” clause applied, but, as an alternate ground for finding no coverage, the
    court concluded exclusion j(6) applied to the couple’s claims of “‘defects and
    deficiencies’” in the contractor’s work. (Id. at pp. 1316, 1326.)
    In Baroco, this court held the insurer had no duty to defend the insured against
    allegations its work was defective because exclusions j(5) and j(6) applied to preclude
    coverage. 
    (Baroco, supra
    , 110 Cal.App.4th at p. 105.) The complaint apparently
    contained various allegations of defective work, but the only allegation referenced in the
    opinion is that the driveway was “cracked and slipping.” (Id. at pp. 99, 104.)
    In Bituminous, the contractor installed a defective deck and agreed to replace it.
    
    (Bituminous, supra
    , 249 Ga.App. at p. 532.) Over a weekend during the replacement
    construction, a predicted storm blew off the plastic sheets covering the contractor’s
    unfinished work, and interior portions of the house were inundated with water. (Ibid.)
    23
    The court held exclusions j(5) and j(6) applied to preclude coverage for the water damage
    because it was “caused by the defective workmanship of the insured.” (Id. at p. 534.)
    These cases are factually distinguishable because they involve the cost of
    replacing an insured’s defective—as opposed to non-defective—work. Bituminous seems
    the most analogous as it involves rain and plastic tarps, but the comparison is superficial.
    The contractor in Bituminous had acknowledged its product, the deck, was defective and
    the water intrusion occurred as it was replacing that product. Thus, the property damage
    in Bituminous can truly be said to have occurred because the contractor’s work was
    incorrectly performed. Here, on the other hand, we do not know whether Global’s rain
    protection was defective or simply overcome by heavy rain.
    More importantly, none of these decisions interpret the exclusionary language at
    issue here—“are performing operations,” “that particular part,” and “work . . . incorrectly
    performed.” And, given the case law supporting our interpretation of those phrases, even
    if NAC’s decisions did support its interpretation (and we do not think they do), the
    exclusions would be, at best, ambiguous.
    We affirm the trial court’s determination that NAC’s policy covers the
    repair/replacement costs as a matter of law.
    3.     Delay damages
    NAC argues the trial court erred in concluding the policy covers the delay
    damages the jury awarded for the 131 days Kadena spent remediating the water damage
    to the unit interiors. NAC contends damages for delay are not covered by the CGL’s
    24
    insuring clause because they do not constitute “property damage.” Even if delay were
    covered, NAC argues, exclusion m applies to Kadena’s delay damages because the
    underlying repair/replacement costs are excluded under j(5) and j(6).3 We disagree on
    both points.
    First, we reject NAC’s argument that exclusion m applies to the delay damages
    because, as just discussed in the previous section, exclusions j(5) and j(6) do not apply to
    the underlying repair/replacement costs. Second, contrary to NAC’s contention, delay
    damages arising from “property damage” fall under the insuring clause, which obligates
    NAC to “pay those sums that the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as damages
    because of . . . ‘property damage’ to which this insurance applies.” (Italics added.) The
    policy does not define damages, but courts generally interpret the term to mean payments
    made to compensate a party for direct and consequential injuries caused by the acts of
    another. (AIU Ins. Co. v. Superior Court (1990) 
    51 Cal. 3d 807
    , 826 (AIU); Powerine Oil
    Co., Inc. v. Superior Court (2005) 
    37 Cal. 4th 377
    , 385, 396-397 [“damages” in an
    insuring clause covers court-awarded “direct and consequential damages”].)
    Here, the 131 days of remediation was time Kadena could have spent completing
    the project had the units’ interiors not been damaged. That delay constitutes a
    consequential loss (a loss occasioned by the water intrusion) and as such, is part of the
    3  Exclusion m applies to property damage to “impaired property” or “property
    that has not been physically injured,” arising out of “[a] defect, deficiency, inadequacy or
    dangerous condition” in the insured’s “product” or “work,” or arising out of the insured’s
    “delay or failure . . . to perform a contract or agreement in accordance with its terms.”
    25
    damages NAC must pay “because of” property damage. (Cf. 
    AIU, supra
    , 51 Cal.3d at
    pp. 829-830 [interpreting “damages” in CGL insuring clause broadly to include all of the
    government’s “expenses” attributable to “actual cleanup, mitigation of damage, or
    investigation and monitoring”].) We therefore affirm the trial court’s determination that
    Kadena’s delay damages are covered under the policy.
    B.     Motion for Attorney Fees
    Global and NAC argue we must reverse the fee award because Kadena released its
    right to obtain attorney fees under its settlement agreement with Global.4 We conclude
    Kadena did not release attorney fees related to its water damage claim and the court’s
    ruling was correct.
    California Code of Civil Procedure sections 1033 and 1033.5 allow a party to
    “claim[]” attorney fees as costs if allowed under law or statute. Article XXXV of the
    Kadena-Global contract states that Global “expressly agrees” to pay the reasonable
    attorney fees Kadena incurs in “enforcing any provision or obligation arising under” the
    contract. California Civil Code section 1717 provides: “In any action on a contract,
    where the contract specifically provides that attorney’s fees and costs, which are incurred
    to enforce that contract, . . . the party who is determined to be the party prevailing on the
    contract . . . shall be entitled to reasonable attorney’s fees in addition to other costs.”
    4 Kadena sought attorney fees directly from Global and the trial court entered the
    award against Global, not NAC. NAC has standing to challenge the judgment, however,
    because its policy obligates it to pay attorney fees taxed against Global in any suit NAC
    defends, and NAC has represented it provided Global defense at trial.
    26
    When Kadena and Global negotiated their settlement, multiple claims involving
    the VA project were pending. Global had sued Kadena for failure to pay for its work on
    the modular units and Kadena had sued Global, alleging three breaches of contract:
    failure to provide materials on time, failure to provide materials in a workmanlike
    manner, and failure to repair the water damage to the units. The settlement agreement
    was intended to resolve all of the parties’ disputes except for claims Global’s insurance
    would cover. To accomplish this, the agreement contained two main provisions, one
    releasing “all claims” arising from the VA project and another carving out a limited
    subset of claims arising from the VA project that the parties were reserving for litigation.
    The carve-out provision states in full:
    “4.1.1 Notwithstanding the language of Civil Code section 1542 and the waiver
    provided in Section 4.2 of this AGREEMENT, it is the PARTIES’ express intent and
    they so agree that this AGREEMENT does not release claims from the Project related to
    property damage, personal injury, [loss] of use and other claims that are covered under
    the [NAC] insurance policies described in Section 4.9.1 of this AGREEMENT, true and
    accurate copies of which are attached to this AGREEMENT as Exhibits ‘A’ and ‘B.’”
    (Italics added.)
    Based on the above, we conclude the settlement agreement allows Kadena to
    pursue its water damage claim and, in turn, the Kadena-Global contract, Civil Code
    section 1717, and Code of Civil Procedure sections 1033 and 1033.5 allow Kadena, as
    the prevailing party, to seek attorney fees as part of that claim. In asserting Kadena
    27
    released its right to claim attorney fees under the settlement agreement, Global and NAC
    rely on an incomplete excerpt of the settlement’s carve-out provision. They argue the
    provision carved out only “property damage [claims] . . . that are covered by [NAC
    insurance] policies” and that a claim for attorney fees is not technically a claim for
    “property damage.”
    First, as the full text of the carve-out provision demonstrates, it applies not just to
    covered property damage claims but to claims “related to” covered property damage
    claims. Global and NAC simply ignore the relevant language in the provision. Second,
    even if it did not contain the phrase “related to,” we would conclude the carve-out
    provision encompasses a claim for attorney fees because such a claim attaches to a
    successful claim as a matter of right under Kadena and Global’s contract and California
    statutory law. Either way one interprets the carve-out provision—that attorney fees are
    part of the property damage claim or that a claim for attorney fees is related to the
    property damage claim—Kadena did not release its right to obtain attorney fees under the
    settlement agreement.
    Global and NAC argue the carve-out provision applies only to claims that are
    covered by NAC’s policy and, while the policy obligates NAC to pay all attorney fees
    taxed against the insured in any suit NAC defends on the insured’s behalf, that obligation
    is part of NAC’s defense obligation, not its indemnification obligation. Put another way,
    they contend attorney fees are not “claims,” but instead “costs taxed against the insured”
    in a lawsuit over a covered claim. How attorney fees are defined under NAC’s policy
    28
    may become relevant if Global seeks indemnification for the fees from NAC, but it is
    irrelevant to Kadena’s ability to obtain such fees from Global. For that determination, we
    look to the provisions of the Kadena-Global contract, California statutory law, and the
    settlement agreement. Under those authorities, Kadena’s claim against Global for
    attorney fees is a claim covered by the carve-out provision.
    C.      Motion for Offset
    Kadena contends the court erred when it granted Global’s motion to offset the
    jury’s damage award by $321,975—the amount Global paid Kadena under the settlement
    agreement. Global defends the trial court’s ruling by arguing Kadena pursued at trial
    every conceivable claim it had “from the beginning of the project to the end of Global’s
    involvement and beyond.” Kadena argues the record clearly establishes it litigated only
    its water damage claims because it had released its other claims under the settlement
    agreement in exchange for a payment of $321,975. We agree with Kadena that Global is
    not entitled to an offset.
    1.     Additional background
    After the parties terminated their contract, Global filed a suit in state court alleging
    Kadena breached the contract by failing to pay Global for its work, as well as a collection
    action under the Miller Act in federal court. Kadena filed a cross-complaint in the breach
    of contract action alleging Global failed to: (1) “provide the services and materials
    required under the [contract] in a timely manner”; (2) “provide modular buildings which
    were constructed in a good and workmanlike manner according to industry standards and
    29
    applicable government and building codes”; and (3) “deliver the required modular
    buildings in a manner in which they were protected from the elements.” Kadena alleged
    it suffered at least $5 million in damages as a result of these breaches.
    In August 2012, while these suits were pending, Global and Kadena executed their
    settlement agreement. As explained, they agreed to release all claims arising out of the
    VA project except claims from the project “related to” claims covered by NAC’s policy
    (the “insured claims”). Before the parties began working together on the project, Global
    had placed $500,000 in an escrow account to be released to Global on completion of the
    project or to be released to Kadena if Global breached the contract. In exchange for
    Kadena’s promise to release all claims against Global that are not covered by NAC’s
    policy (the “uninsured claims”), Global agreed to pay Kadena $321,975 from the escrow
    account. As consideration for Global’s promise to release the failure-to-pay suits, Global
    kept $153,025 of the escrow funds. Global agreed to dismiss its state and federal suits,
    but the parties agreed Kadena “need not dismiss its cross-complaint,” instead, it would
    “continue to pursue only those claims not released [in the settlement].”
    The parties proceeded to trial on Kadena’s now-limited cross-complaint and the
    court gave the jury the following instruction at the outset:
    “The project started in early 2010. Global built the units at its factory in
    Chowchilla and then transported them to the project site in Menlo Park. The units were
    delivered partially constructed. Upon delivery, they were to be set onto poured concrete
    foundations. Thereafter, Global was to finish the installation by completing interior
    30
    work, installing doors and windows, and utilities. Kadena was to install the final roof
    membrane.
    “Global delivered the first modular units in October of 2010. Shortly after the first
    units were delivered, the project experienced rain, which continued throughout the
    winter. Although Global took measures to protect the modular units from the rain, they
    experienced water damage. Kadena contends that Global is responsible for the water
    damage. Global denies responsibility and contends that Kadena could have taken action
    to prevent the water damage.
    “Kadena also claims that it was delayed in its ability to complete the project.
    Kadena claims that its damages from water damage and from delays exceed $1 million.”
    (Italics added.)
    During trial, Kadena limited its evidence of damages to how much it cost to have
    its own crew and four other companies remediate the water-damaged drywall, insulation,
    framing, and ducting, and to how much it suffered in delay damages during that
    remediation. Kadena’s owner, Scott Bailey, testified the company experienced 131 “days
    of delay that was specific to the rain [remediation].” To calculate the costs of this delay,
    Bailey multiplied Kadena’s average overhead costs for one day of project supervision by
    the 131 days Kadena spent on remediation. He studied Kadena’s financial records and
    determined its average daily overhead cost for the VA project was $2,239, which,
    multiplied by 131, equaled about $293,000.
    31
    Before closing argument, Kadena’s counsel asked the court to provide a limiting
    instruction directing the jury to focus on only the issue of water damages because the
    parties had already resolved any other issues under their contract. Kadena’s counsel was
    concerned the jury would consider the evidence it had heard about Kadena not being able
    to pay Global because the VA had withheld those amounts. Global’s counsel opposed
    the instruction; he wanted to argue during closing that Kadena had suffered no damages
    because it had completed the modular units for less than the Global-Kadena contract
    price. The following exchange occurred:
    Kadena’s Counsel: “[W]e have a settlement agreement that resolved everything
    about payment under the contract, and the only thing left in the case is what’s—our
    pursuit of the property damage claim . . . So I think we need to give them an instruction
    that says the only thing we are asking you to focus on is the valuation of the property
    damage. There may be other issues about the contract that you haven’t heard about, and
    that’s because they’ve already been resolved, and you need not worry about them.”
    “The Court: All right. I would read a limiting instruction to that effect.”
    Global’s Counsel: “I intended, past tense, to introduce the fact that the complete
    job was completed by Kadena for less money than what they would have had to pay my
    client; hence, no damages.”
    Kadena’s Counsel: “That’s not true. We don’t have all the—we only have the
    water damage costs. We don’t have the cost of finishing their work.”
    32
    Global’s Counsel: “That’s the whole kit and caboodle. That’s what your client
    testified to.”
    Kadena’s Counsel: “No, he did not.”
    “The Court: I don’t think there was any evidence of the total cost. I did not hear
    any evidence of the total cost.”
    Global’s Counsel: “If that’s the Court’s ruling.”
    “The Court: That is the Court’s ruling.”
    At the close of evidence, the court instructed the jury that Kadena’s claim for
    breach of contract was based on Global’s alleged obligation, and failure, to “repair the
    water damage” to the unit interiors. It also provided the limiting instruction Kadena’s
    counsel had requested:
    “As you may have determined, this case focuses on the water damage for which
    Global is responsible, if at all, and the value of any such damages to Kadena to address
    the water damage. There are other issues related to the contract that have already been
    resolved, and you need not worry about those issues or any issues outside the issue of
    property damage, if any, for which Global is responsible.” (Italics added.)
    The special verdict form listed eight categories of damages: (1) Concrete Repair;
    (2) In-house Drywall Repair; (3) Rough Carpentry; (4) WF Hayward Drywall Repair; (5)
    KR Environmental Services; (6) ServiceMaster Restoration; (7) Golden Valley
    Mechanical Duct Repair; and (8) Damages Due to Delay. The jury found Global was
    33
    responsible for repairing the water damage under the contract and assigned amounts to
    each of the damage items.
    After trial, Global brought a motion for offset, asking the court to subtract
    $321,975—the amount it paid Kadena under the settlement—from the jury’s damage
    award. Kadena opposed the motion, arguing the settlement payment compensated it for
    different harms than the damage award. Kadena acknowledged its cross-complaint had
    alleged Global breached the contract in multiple ways, causing over $5 million in
    damages, but pointed out the parties subsequently settled all of those allegations except
    the allegation that Global was responsible for repairing the water damage. The trial court
    granted the motion for offset, finding trial had not been limited to insured claims and
    concluding the insured and noninsured claims are too intertwined to separate.
    2.     Analysis
    The equitable concept of offset recognizes it is unfair to require a defendant to
    compensate a plaintiff twice for the same injury. “To prevent a double recovery, equity
    demands credit be given for payments received on the judgment.” (Jhaveri v. Teitelbaum
    (2009) 
    176 Cal. App. 4th 740
    , 753 (Jhaveri).) “The plaintiff is entitled only to a single
    recovery of full compensatory damages for a single injury.” (Howard v. American Nat.
    Fire Ins. Co. (2010) 
    187 Cal. App. 4th 498
    , 516.)
    “The right of offset rests upon the inherent power of the court to do justice to
    parties appearing before it” and we review a trial court’s ruling on a motion for offset for
    abuse of discretion. 
    (Jhaveri, supra
    , 176 Cal.App.4th at p. 753.) A trial court abuses its
    34
    discretion if it misinterprets the law or makes a factual finding not supported by
    substantial evidence. (Ibid. [upholding court’s offset ruling because “substantial
    evidence supports the . . . finding that appellants are entitled to a $61,000 credit against
    the judgment”]; Board of Administration v. Wilson (1997) 
    57 Cal. App. 4th 967
    , 973 [“The
    question is whether the trial court’s actions are consistent with the substantive law and, if
    so, whether the application of law to the facts of the case is within the range of discretion
    conferred upon the trial court”].)
    Thus, to warrant offset, Global’s settlement payment to Kadena must have
    compensated Kadena for the same harm as the jury’s damage award. The record
    demonstrates this was not the case. Kadena had originally sued Global alleging various
    contractual breaches and seeking over $5 million in damages. Before trial, however, the
    parties settled several claims—Global its failure-to-pay claim and Kadena all of its
    uninsured claims. At trial, Kadena upheld its end of the settlement agreement by
    pursuing only its allegation that Global breached the contract by failing to repair the
    units’ water-damaged drywall, insulation, framing, and ducting. That the trial was so
    limited is evidenced by the court’s opening instructions describing the nature of the suit,
    the limited scope of Kadena’s evidence on its damages, the court’s closing instructions
    (most notably the limiting instruction), and the jury’s special verdict, which shows the
    jury awarded specific categories of damages relating only to the water remediation and
    not, say, to defective workmanship or pre-rain delays. Indeed, the trial court recognized
    the limited nature of the jury’s damage award in its written ruling on the cross-motions
    35
    for summary judgment when it stated the delay damage component “compensates for
    delays that relate only to the covered property damages [i.e., water damage] and is not an
    item of general delay damages.” (Italics added.)
    Based on this record, the trial court’s conclusion that trial was not limited to
    insured claims is not supported by substantial evidence. The court’s ruling overlooks the
    fact Kadena settled its faulty workmanship and pre-rain delay claims after filing its cross-
    complaint and limited the evidence of its damages to the costs of remediating the water
    damage to the unit interiors. The record demonstrates Global’s settlement payment
    compensated Kadena for releasing those faulty workmanship and pre-rain delay (i.e.,
    uninsured) claims, and did not compensate for the water damage remediation costs. As a
    result, the settlement payment does not constitute a payment “received on” the judgment.
    
    (Jhaveri, supra
    , 176 Cal.App.4th at p. 753.)
    In arguing otherwise, Global claims nothing in the settlement agreement delineates
    between insured and uninsured claims. It also contends Kadena presented evidence of
    uninsured claims at trial. These arguments strike us as disingenuous considering
    Global’s representations to the trial court about the import of the settlement agreement.
    Before trial, Global served Kadena with notice of its motion in limine to exclude “any
    evidence of damages claimed by [Kadena], which are not covered under [Global’s]
    policies of insurance.” Global made the following argument in its motion: “[P]ivotal in
    this case is the underlying settlement entered . . . in which KADENA agreed to release
    any and all claims as against GLOBAL except ‘property damage, personal injury, loss
    36
    of use and other claims’ covered by GLOBAL’s Commercial General Liability Policies
    issued by [NAC]. . . . In short, if KADENA’s damage claims do not constitute ‘covered
    damages’ under the NAC CGL POLICIES, KADENA’s claims are barred . . .
    Accordingly, evidence of damages not covered under the NAC CGL POLICIES is
    wholly irrelevant to the subject action [and] has no probative value.” Global’s motion
    demonstrates it knows full well how the settlement agreement operates, and we will not
    countenance its attempts to avoid that result on appeal.5
    Finally, Global argues even if we find the offset ruling erroneous, we cannot
    reverse unless we find the error prejudicial. We have no trouble concluding Kadena was
    prejudiced by an unwarranted $321,975 reduction in its damage award. Accordingly, we
    reverse the offset ruling and direct the trial court to reinstate the full jury award.6
    5 Kadena brought Global’s motion in limine to our attention in a motion to
    augment the appellate record, which we grant. Global argues we cannot augment the
    record with its motion in limine because Global never filed it with the court. The rule
    allowing record augmentation “is to be construed liberally” and allows a party to
    supplement the appellate record with any materials that were before the trial court.
    (People v. Brooks (1980) 
    26 Cal. 3d 471
    , 484 citing an earlier version of Cal. Rules of
    Court, rule 8.155 [formerly rule 12]; Vons Companies, Inc. v. Seabest Foods, Inc. (1996)
    
    14 Cal. 4th 434
    , 444, fn.3.) On the morning of the first day of trial, the court stated for the
    record that it had discussed Global’s motion in limine with the parties, and Global agreed
    to withdraw it. We see no issue in considering something the trial court clearly
    considered.
    6Reinstating the full award has no effect on Kadena’s election not to pursue its
    mold and concrete damages under NAC’s policy.
    37
    III
    DISPOSITION
    We reverse the order granting Global’s motion for offset and affirm the judgment
    in all other respects. Kadena shall recover its costs on appeal.
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    SLOUGH
    J.
    We concur:
    MILLER
    Acting P. J.
    FIELDS
    J.
    38