Steadfast Insurance Company v. Greenwich Insurance Company ( 2019 )


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    2019 WI 6
    SUPREME COURT               OF   WISCONSIN
    CASE NO.:               2016AP1631
    COMPLETE TITLE:         Steadfast Insurance Company,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    Greenwich Insurance Company,
    Defendant-Appellant-Petitioner.
    REVIEW OF DECISION OF THE COURT OF APPEALS
    Reported at 
    380 Wis. 2d 184
    , 
    908 N.W.2d 502
                                     PDC No: 
    2018 WI App 11
    - Published
    OPINION FILED:          January 25, 2019
    SUBMITTED ON BRIEFS:
    ORAL ARGUMENT:          October 29, 2018
    SOURCE OF APPEAL:
    COURT:               Circuit
    COUNTY:              Milwaukee
    JUDGE:               Glenn H. Yamahiro
    JUSTICES:
    CONCURRED:           A.W. BRADLEY, J. concurs and dissents, joined by
    DALLET, J. (opinion filed).
    R.G. BRADLEY, J. concurs and dissents (opinion
    filed).
    DISSENTED:
    NOT PARTICIPATING:
    ATTORNEYS:
    For the defendant-appellant-petitioner, there were briefs
    filed by Pamela J. Tillman, Esq., Michael J. Cohen, Esq., and
    Meissner Tierney Fisher & Nichols S.C., Milwaukee; with whom on
    the briefs were Thomas G. Drennan, Esq., and Dinsmore & Shohl
    LLP, Chicago, Illinois.            There was an oral argument by Michael
    J. Cohen.
    For the plaintiff-respondent, there was a brief filed by
    Monte E. Weiss, Charles W. Kramer, and Weiss Law Office, S.C.,
    Mequon.             There   was   an   oral    argument   by   Monte   Weiss.
    
    2019 WI 6
                                                                      NOTICE
    This opinion is subject to further
    editing and modification.   The final
    version will appear in the bound
    volume of the official reports.
    No.   2016AP1631
    (L.C. No.   2013CV1685)
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                              :             IN SUPREME COURT
    Steadfast Insurance Company,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    FILED
    v.
    JAN 25, 2019
    Greenwich Insurance Company,
    Sheila T. Reiff
    Defendant-Appellant-Petitioner.                      Clerk of Supreme Court
    REVIEW of a decision of the Court of Appeals.                     Affirmed in
    part, reversed in part.
    ¶1     PATIENCE DRAKE ROGGENSACK, C.J.              We review a decision
    of the court of appeals1 affirming the circuit court's2 grant of
    summary     judgment      to   Steadfast    Insurance     Company      (Steadfast).
    Summary judgment granted Steadfast the right to recover from
    1
    Steadfast Ins. Co. v. Greenwich Ins. Co., 
    2018 WI App 11
    ,
    
    380 Wis. 2d 184
    , 
    908 N.W.2d 502
    .
    2
    The    Honorable        Glenn   H.   Yamahiro     of    Milwaukee        County
    presided.
    No.    2016AP1631
    Greenwich Insurance Company (Greenwich) based on Steadfast's and
    Greenwich's relationships with Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage
    District (MMSD), who was sued for alleged negligent inspection,
    maintenance,       repair,    and    operation       of    Milwaukee's         sewerage
    system.
    ¶2     MMSD     tendered    its    defense       to    both    Steadfast        and
    Greenwich.       Steadfast accepted the tender; Greenwich did not,
    claiming that its policy was excess to Steadfast's based on its
    "other    insurance"       clause.        Steadfast        disagreed          and   sued
    Greenwich to recover the defense costs it paid to MMSD and the
    attorney fees incurred in suing Greenwich to reimburse it for
    those defense costs.
    ¶3     First,    we     conclude   that       Greenwich,     who    insured     the
    risk that United Water Services Milwaukee, LLC (United Water)
    would    negligently    perform      services       for   MMSD,    thereby      causing
    damage,    and   Steadfast,      who    for    a    different      period      of   time
    insured the risk that Veolia Water Milwaukee, LLC (Veolia) would
    negligently perform services for MMSD, thereby causing damage,
    were both primary and successive insurers in regard to MMSD,
    their common additional insured.3
    3
    Veolia Water North American Central, LLC, d/b/a Veolia
    Water Milwaukee, LLC, is a wholly owned subsidiary of WASCO LLC,
    who is the actual named insured on the Steadfast policy. Veolia
    and United Water were sued for sewage backups as well as MMSD.
    2
    No.     2016AP1631
    ¶4    Second,        we     conclude       that        Greenwich       breached       its
    contractual       duty    to    defend     MMSD.         Third,       we     conclude      that
    Steadfast's contractual subrogation claim against Greenwich was
    timely     filed    as     it     comes    within       the     six-year       statute       of
    limitations for contract actions.
    ¶5    Fourth, we conclude Steadfast had a contractual duty
    to defend MMSD that was not abrogated by Greenwich's breach of
    its contractual duty to defend MMSD.                    Therefore, we apply a pro-
    rata allocation of defense costs Steadfast paid to MMSD based on
    Steadfast's       and    Greenwich's       respective          policy      limits     of    $30
    million and $20 million.              Fifth, and finally, we conclude that
    Steadfast is entitled to recover attorney fees from Greenwich
    due   to   Steadfast's         stepping    into        the    shoes     of    MMSD    through
    contractual subrogation to force Greenwich to pay defense costs.
    ¶6    Accordingly, we affirm the decision of the court of
    appeals in part and reverse it in part.
    I.    BACKGROUND
    ¶7    This        dispute     arises       out     of     historic       rains       that
    occurred     in    Milwaukee        in    June     2008.          Those       heavy     rains
    overwhelmed MMSD's sewerage system, which resulted in raw sewage
    backing up into more than 8,000 homes.                           Lawsuits were filed
    against United Water, Veolia and MMSD because of sewage backups,
    3
    No.   2016AP1631
    alleging negligence in the repair, maintenance, and operation of
    the sewerage system both before and during the heavy rains.4
    ¶8      Beginning     in     1998,         MMSD    entered   into     Operating
    Agreements with private companies to operate and maintain its
    sewerage system.         United Water provided operational services for
    many       years.   MMSD's        Operating        Agreement    with   United    Water
    required       United    Water      to    maintain        comprehensive      liability
    insurance, naming MMSD as an additional insured.                          United Water
    contracted with Greenwich for liability insurance with the last
    contract of insurance beginning July 24, 2007 and ending July 24
    2008; it named MMSD as an additional insured.                          The Greenwich
    policy limits were $20 million.                   United Water maintains that it
    last provided services under an Operating Agreement with MMSD on
    February 29, 2008.
    ¶9      Beginning on March 1, 2008, and continuing through the
    June 2008 heavy rains, MMSD contracted with Veolia to operate
    and maintain its sewerage system.                        Their Operating Agreement
    similarly required Veolia to maintain comprehensive liability
    insurance,      naming     MMSD    as    an   additional       insured.      Steadfast
    4
    Banicki, et al. v. Veolia, et al., Milwaukee Cty. Case
    No. 09-CV-1860; Westmoreland v. Veolia, et al., Milwaukee Cty.
    Case No. 09-CV-6121; FM Global v. Veolia, et al., Milwaukee Cty.
    Case No. 09-CV-7594; Reep, et al. v. City of Milwaukee, et al.,
    Milwaukee Cty. Case No. 09-CV-3483. FM Global and Westmoreland
    were eventually consolidated into Banicki.
    4
    No.   2016AP1631
    provided the required insurance to Veolia, with policy limits of
    $30 million.
    ¶10    The Greenwich policy obligated it to defend any claim
    against      its   insureds,    United    Water    and    MMSD,   as   well     as   to
    provide indemnification:
    With respect to the insurance afforded by this Policy,
    the Company shall defend any CLAIM against the INSURED
    seeking DAMAGES to which this insurance applies, even
    if any of the allegations are groundless, false or
    fraudulent. Defense counsel may be designated by the
    Company or designated by the INSURED . . . .
    ¶11    In   a   similar    fashion,      the      Steadfast     policy    gave
    Steadfast "the right and duty to assume the adjustment, defense
    and settlement of any 'claim' to which this insurance applies."
    Steadfast's        policy,     which     insured      Veolia   and     MMSD,     also
    contained a subrogation clause, which stated in relevant part:
    In the event of any payment under this policy, we
    shall be subrogated to all an "insured's" rights of
    recovery against any person or organization.     An
    "insured" shall execute and deliver instruments and
    papers and do whatever else is necessary to secure
    such rights.     An "insured" shall do nothing to
    prejudice such rights.
    ¶12    After MMSD tendered its defense to both Steadfast and
    Greenwich, it opted to hire its own counsel.                   The lawsuits were
    settled      without    MMSD     paying       plaintiffs'      claimed      damages.
    Steadfast participated in MMSD's defense by reimbursing MMSD for
    $1.55 million in defense costs.               However, when MMSD tendered its
    defense to Greenwich and Steadfast, there was no way of knowing
    that   settlement      would     be    achieved    without     paying      something
    toward claimed damages.
    5
    No.    2016AP1631
    ¶13     Greenwich,      who    had   refused      MMSD's     tender,      had   sent
    MMSD a letter explaining that "we fail to see how [United Water]
    could be liable for causing a sewage backup in June 2008 when
    its services for MMSD terminated in February 2008."                           Greenwich
    further argued that "there is ample evidence that when [United
    Water] turned over operational responsibilities to Veolia and
    MMSD in February 2008, all systems, equipment, and machinery at
    the subject sewage overflow diversion chamber were functioning
    according to operational protocols."
    ¶14     One year later, MMSD renewed its tender to Greenwich.
    It informed Greenwich that United Water had been named as a
    defendant     in    lawsuits      that   resulted         from   the    2008    sewage
    backups.    Greenwich responded five months later, acknowledging
    that "there may be a potential for coverage" and requesting
    "additional        information     in    order      to     determine     Greenwich's
    current coverage obligations."                 After receiving the requested
    information, including confirmation that MMSD had satisfied its
    $250,000 self-insured retention amount, Greenwich continued to
    refuse the tender of MMSD's defense.                     Instead, it unilaterally
    determined based on its "other insurance" clause that its policy
    was excess to Steadfast's $30 million liability limit.
    ¶15     After     the   conclusion        of   the    lawsuits     that    resulted
    from the sewage backups, Steadfast sued Greenwich to recover the
    $1.55 million in defense costs that it had paid to MMSD.                            The
    circuit court granted summary judgment in favor of Steadfast,
    awarding it the entire amount Steadfast paid MMSD, as well as
    6
    No.   2016AP1631
    $325,000 in attorney fees that Steadfast incurred bringing this
    lawsuit.
    ¶16   The court of appeals affirmed.                Steadfast Ins. Co. v.
    Greenwich Ins. Co., 
    2018 WI App 11
    , ¶4, 
    380 Wis. 2d 184
    , 
    908 N.W.2d 502
    .      The court of appeals based its decision on the
    following conclusions:
    (1) Greenwich's policy provided primary, not excess,
    coverage for claims against MMSD; (2) MMSD has
    established that it met the $250,000 risk retention
    amount by incurring $594,302.23 in defense costs;
    (3) Steadfast's equitable subrogation claim is timely
    because the six-year statute of limitations in Wis.
    Stat. § 893.43 applicable to contract claims applies
    to Steadfast's claim, which is premised on Greenwich's
    breach of the duty to defend MMSD; (4) under the facts
    of this case, because Greenwich breached its duty to
    defend MMSD, Greenwich is not equitably entitled to an
    allocation of MMSD's defense costs; and (5) under the
    facts of this case, Steadfast is equitably entitled to
    recover attorney fees in this lawsuit.
    
    Id. We granted
    Greenwich's petition for review, and now affirm
    in part and reverse in part.
    II.     DISCUSSION
    A.    Standard of Review
    ¶17   We   review   summary       judgment     decisions   independently,
    applying the same methodology as the circuit court and the court
    of appeals, while benefitting from their discussions.                   Dufour v.
    Progressive Classic Ins. Co., 
    2016 WI 59
    , ¶12, 
    370 Wis. 2d 313
    ,
    
    881 N.W.2d 678
    .
    ¶18   We     also        review         insurance     contract      clauses
    independently of decisions of the circuit court and court of
    7
    No.    2016AP1631
    appeals,      while          again       benefitting         from      their        discussions.
    Wadzinski v. Auto-Owners Ins. Co., 
    2012 WI 75
    , ¶10, 
    342 Wis. 2d 311
    , 
    818 N.W.2d 819
    .                Therefore, whether a party is entitled to
    attorney fees based on contractual subrogation is a question of
    law for our independent review.                          Estate of Kriefall v. Sizzler
    USA, 
    2012 WI 70
    , ¶16, 
    342 Wis. 2d 29
    , 
    816 N.W.2d 853
    .
    ¶19    Determining which statute of limitations applies to
    contract issues involves a question of law that we also decide
    independently.           Zastrow v. Journal Commc'ns, Inc., 
    2006 WI 72
    ,
    ¶12, 
    291 Wis. 2d 426
    , 
    718 N.W.2d 51
    .                              And finally, the proper
    measure of damages for an insurer's breach of a contractual duty
    to   defend       is    likewise          a    question       of     law     that       we   review
    independently.           Newhouse v. Citizens Sec. Mut. Ins. Co., 
    176 Wis. 2d 824
    , 837, 
    501 N.W.2d 1
    (1993).
    B.     Contract Interpretation
    ¶20    The        issues       in    this      case    all     stem    from     Greenwich's
    insurance contract with United Water and Steadfast's insurance
    contract with Veolia.                Each policy listed MMSD as an additional
    insured.          Therefore,             the    following          general     principles         of
    contract      interpretation                   guide       our       initial         discussion.
    Wadzinski, 
    342 Wis. 2d 311
    , ¶11.
    ¶21    Our        general       task      in       contract    interpretation           is   to
    determine and carry out the parties' intentions.                                    Preisler v.
    Gen. Cas. Ins. Co., 
    2014 WI 135
    , ¶18, 
    360 Wis. 2d 129
    , 
    857 N.W.2d 136
    .         The        parties'         intentions       are     presumed        to   be
    expressed     in       the    language         of    the    contract.         Wadzinski,          
    342 Wis. 2d 311
    ,       ¶11.          Where       the      language     of     a     contract      is
    8
    No.   2016AP1631
    unambiguous and the parties' intentions can be ascertained from
    the face of the contract, we give effect to the words they
    employed.    Estate of Kriefall, 
    342 Wis. 2d 29
    , ¶21.       However, if
    the policy terms are ambiguous, we construe the policy from the
    perspective of a reasonable insured.             Wadzinski, 
    342 Wis. 2d 311
    , ¶11.
    1.   Risk and Loss
    ¶22    Greenwich and Steadfast issued comprehensive liability
    insurance policies, which their Operating Agreements with MMSD
    required.    As a general matter, liability policies insure risks
    that are dependent on various circumstances that cause insureds
    to obtain insurance coverage.        Couch on Insurance § 101:3 (3rd
    ed. 1999).       Stated otherwise, risk is the "type of liability the
    insurer agreed to provide coverage for under the terms of the
    policy."     
    Id. There is
    a causal connection between risk and
    loss.5     
    Id. That is,
    when the insured-for risk occurs, the
    insurer indemnifies for the resulting-loss (damages) in accord
    with the policy provisions.        
    Id. Insurance policy
    clauses "may
    come into conflict" when two or more policies cover the same
    risk for the same period of time.        
    Id., § 219:2.
    5
    The Illinois Supreme Court recently provided a useful
    distinction between risk and loss in the insurance context.
    Courts analyze risk by looking prospectively at what the parties
    set out to cover.    Home Ins. Co. v. Cincinnati Ins. Co., 
    821 N.E.2d 269
    , 281 (Ill. 2004).    Loss, in contrast, is analyzed
    retrospectively by looking at the injury or damages actually
    sustained in a particular case. 
    Id. 9 No.
          2016AP1631
    ¶23       In the context presented herein, Greenwich's policy
    insured the risk that United Water's conduct in managing the
    Milwaukee         sewerage     system   during     the      policy    period       would     be
    negligent, thereby causing damage to a third party.6                                   As an
    "additional insured" under the Greenwich policy, MMSD's risk was
    that       it    would    be   responsible    in       money   damages       for   a    third
    party's damage caused by United Water's negligence.
    ¶24       Steadfast's policy insured the risk that Veolia would
    negligently         manage     the   Milwaukee         sewerage     system    during        the
    policy          period,   causing    damage       to    a   third    party.7           As    an
    6
    The Greenwich policy provides in relevant part:                             Coverage
    B – CONTRACTOR'S POLLUTION LEGAL LIABILITY
    To pay on behalf of the INSURED all LOSS, in excess of the
    Retention   amount . . . which the  INSURED   becomes  legally
    obligated to pay as a result of an OCCURRENCE which arises out
    of CONTRACTING SERVICES and which first commenced during the
    POLICY PERIOD.
    . . . .
    G.   INSURED means the NAMED INSURED and:
    . . . .
    7.        Solely as respects Coverage B – Contractor's Pollution
    Legal Liability, the client for whom the NAMED INSURED
    performs    or     performed    covered    CONTRACTING
    SERVICES . . . .
    7
    The   Steadfast  policy   provides                      in     relevant          part:
    CONTRACTOR'S POLLUTION LIABILITY . . . .
    We will pay on behalf of an "insured" any "loss" an "insured" is
    legally obligated to pay as a result of a "claim" caused by a
    "pollution event" resulting from "covered operations" or
    "completed operations" of the "covered operations" and provided
    that the "covered operations" must commence on or after the
    (continued)
    10
    No.    2016AP1631
    "additional insured" of Steadfast, MMSD's risk was that it would
    be   responsible       in    money    damages       for    a    third    party's       damage
    caused by Veolia's negligence.                 The plain language of both the
    Greenwich policy and the Steadfast policy obligated insurers to
    indemnify        and   defend    their      named    insureds      and       MMSD     against
    claims     of     damage     caused    by    the     negligence         of    their     named
    insureds.         To   clarify       further,      while       United    Water       was    not
    providing services at the time of the flooding, it was alleged
    that its services during an earlier time when it was managing
    the MMSD system were a cause of the resulting damage.
    ¶25       "Other insurance" clauses may be raised in disputes
    between two insurance companies about whose policy is primary
    and therefore must pay first and whose policy is excess, also
    referred to as successive insurance, and pays subsequent to the
    primary payment.            Plastics Eng'g Co. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
    
    2009 WI 13
    , ¶48, 
    315 Wis. 2d 556
    , 
    759 N.W.2d 613
    .                                  To explain
    further, policies may be concurrent, i.e., cover the same time
    period     and    risk,     or   successive,        i.e.,      cover     different         time
    "retroactive date" and before the end of the "policy period" and
    the "claim" is first made against the "insured" during the
    "policy period" . . . .
    . . . .
    L.   "Insured" means:
    1.    You or your; . . .
    4.    Any other person or organization endorsed onto this
    policy as an "insured."         (Milwaukee Metropolitan
    Sewerage District is an endorsee.)
    11
    No.    2016AP1631
    periods and risks.         However, "other insurance" clauses do not
    apply unless two policies are concurrent.                 
    Id. "The accepted
    meaning    of   'other     insurance'        provisions   does    not       include
    application to successive insurance policies."                   
    Id. If the
    "other insurance" clauses cannot be used to establish a primary
    and an excess insurer, then "neither insurer is given priority
    over the other and each contributes toward the loss pro rata."
    Oelhafen v. Tower Ins. Co., 
    171 Wis. 2d 532
    , 536-37, 
    492 N.W.2d 321
    (Ct. App. 1992) (citing Schoenecker v. Haines, 
    88 Wis. 2d 665
    , 672, 
    277 N.W.2d 782
    (1979)).
    ¶26    As we have explained, concurrent insurance is required
    before "other insurance" clauses are triggered.                  Two insurance
    policies   cannot    be    concurrent    unless    they   insured      "the    same
    risk, and the same interest, for the benefit of the same person,
    during the same period."         Plastics Eng'g, 
    315 Wis. 2d 556
    , ¶48
    (quoting   Douglas    R.    Richmond,    Issues    and    Problems     in    "Other
    Insurance," Multiple Insurance, and Self-Insurance, 22 Pepp. L.
    Rev. 1373, 1376-82 (1995)).
    ¶27    The Greenwich and Steadfast policies were primary with
    regard to each company's respective insurance of United Water
    and Veolia.     The policies were primary and successive in regard
    to insuring MMSD's risk of damage because each policy relied on
    the negligence of a different insured, whose alleged negligence
    occurred during a different period of time, i.e., while that
    primary insured was maintaining the sewerage system.                        Stated
    otherwise, Greenwich would owe MMSD only if the negligence of
    United Water caused damages for which MMSD was held responsible
    12
    No.    2016AP1631
    and Steadfast would owe MMSD only if the negligence of Veolia
    caused    damages       for       which    MMSD     was    held      responsible.
    Accordingly,     we    do   not    interpret      the   terms   of    the   "other
    insurance" clauses because under the undisputed facts as set out
    above, Greenwich's "other insurance" clause provided successive
    insurance to MMSD.
    ¶28    In addition, the duty to defend is broader than the
    duty to indemnify.            Acuity v. Bagadia, 
    2008 WI 62
    , ¶52, 
    310 Wis. 2d 197
    , 
    750 N.W.2d 817
    (explaining that the duty to defend
    arises from allegations in the complaint, while the duty to
    indemnify is dependent on fully developed facts).                    Furthermore,
    when an insurance policy provides potential coverage for one
    claim alleged in a lawsuit, the insurer must defend the entire
    suit, even when the claims are groundless.                 Fireman's Fund Ins.
    Co. of Wis. v. Bradley Corp., 
    2003 WI 33
    , ¶21, 
    261 Wis. 2d 4
    ,
    
    660 N.W.2d 666
    .        Accordingly, two insurance policies that insure
    separate and distinct risks may nevertheless become implicated
    in the same lawsuit, causing the two insurers to defend the same
    loss in the form of their mutual insured's alleged liability for
    damages and defense costs.
    2.    Greenwich Breached Its Duty To Defend
    ¶29    We    have    established       a   procedure    for      an   insurance
    company to follow when it disputes coverage.                      Wis. Pharmacal
    Co., LLC v. Neb. Cultures of Cal., Inc., 
    2016 WI 14
    , ¶18, 
    367 Wis. 2d 221
    , 
    876 N.W.2d 72
    (explaining that an insurer may avoid
    breaching its duty to defend by requesting a bifurcated trial on
    the issues of coverage and liability, with liability determined
    13
    No.     2016AP1631
    after coverage has been established); 
    Newhouse, 176 Wis. 2d at 836
    (stating that the insurer should request a bifurcated trial
    on   the    issues    of    coverage     and    liability      when    coverage         is
    disputed).        An insurer who fails to follow this procedure risks
    breaching its duty to defend if its coverage determination was
    wrong.     
    Id. at 837.
    ¶30    Alternatively,        an   insurer    may   choose   to        reject   the
    insured's tender of defense based on its determination that the
    claim is not covered under the policy.                   However, it does so at
    its own risk.        Marks v. Houston Cas. Co., 
    2016 WI 53
    , ¶41 n.21,
    
    369 Wis. 2d 547
    , 
    881 N.W.2d 309
    .               If the insurer is wrong about
    its potential coverage obligation, it "is guilty of a breach of
    contract which renders it liable to the insured for all damages
    that naturally flow from the breach."               
    Id. (citing Newhouse,
    176
    Wis. 2d at 837).          Finally, as mentioned earlier, an insurer has
    a duty to defend the entire lawsuit "when an insurance policy
    provides    [potential]      coverage     for     even   one   claim        made   in    a
    lawsuit."     Fireman's Fund Ins. Co., 
    261 Wis. 2d 4
    , ¶21.
    ¶31    In    this    case,    Greenwich     did    not    seek    a     judicial
    determination of its coverage obligations, nor did it pay any
    amount toward MMSD's defense costs.                Instead, it chose to rely
    on its own unilateral determination that its policy was excess
    to Steadfast's.           As we have explained, Greenwich's unilateral
    determination        was    erroneous;         Greenwich's      policy        provided
    potential coverage for a claim made in lawsuits based on sewage
    backups.     Therefore, Greenwich breached its duty to defend, and
    14
    No.    2016AP1631
    it is responsible for all damages that naturally flow from the
    breach.    Marks, 
    369 Wis. 2d 547
    , ¶41 n.21.
    3.    Steadfast's Contractual Subrogation Claim
    ¶32        Steadfast     asserts       that        it     has     a        contractual
    subrogation claim against Greenwich due to its payment of $1.55
    million in defense costs and Greenwich's failure to provide a
    defense.       Greenwich asserts that if Steadfast has a claim, it
    sounds    in    contribution,       not    subrogation.             Greenwich      further
    asserts    that       the   time    has     passed      in     which      to     bring    a
    contribution claim.
    ¶33        Subrogation    is    the    "substitution        of     one      party    for
    another whose debt the party pays, entitling the paying party to
    rights, remedies, or securities that would otherwise belong to
    the debtor."          Dufour, 
    370 Wis. 2d 313
    , ¶15.                  "The doctrine of
    subrogation      enables     an    insurer      that    has    paid       an    insured's
    loss . . . to recoup that payment from the party responsible for
    the loss."        
    Id. (citations omitted).
                 The insurer "steps into
    the shoes" of its insured and pursues the legal rights or claims
    to which the insured would have been entitled.                       Wilmot v. Racine
    Cty., 
    136 Wis. 2d 57
    , 63, 
    400 N.W.2d 917
    (1987).
    ¶34        Contribution       claims   sometimes         occur     between       joint
    tortfeasors, or in other circumstances, where one person has
    paid more than that person's share of a joint obligation.                            Kafka
    v. Pope, 
    194 Wis. 2d 234
    , 241, 
    533 N.W.2d 491
    (1995) (concluding
    that "[w]hether the common obligation be imposed by contract or
    grows out of a tort, the thing that gives rise to the right of
    15
    No.    2016AP1631
    contribution is that one of the common obligors has discharged
    more than his fair equitable share of the common liability.").
    ¶35        Subrogation    may     arise       in    three    different       forms:
    contractual, statutory, and equitable subrogation.                            Estate of
    Kriefall, 
    342 Wis. 2d 29
    , ¶37.                   In a subrogation claim, the
    subrogee seeks payment based on rights the subrogee acquired
    from another.          Millers Nat'l Ins. Co. v. City of Milwaukee, 
    184 Wis. 2d 155
    ,     168,    
    516 N.W.2d 376
       (1994).        The     "purpose    of
    subrogation is to place the loss ultimately on the wrongdoers."
    Cunningham v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., 
    121 Wis. 2d 437
    , 444, 
    360 N.W.2d 33
       (1985).       When   express       contractual         subrogation     is
    claimed, we examine the policy's provisions.                      
    Id. at 449.
             We
    have given effect to express subrogation clauses contained in
    insurance contracts.         
    Id. at 446.
    ¶36        Here,    Steadfast's       policy        expressly       provided      for
    subrogation:
    In the event of any payment under this policy, we
    shall be subrogated to all an "insured's" rights of
    recovery against any person or organization.
    MMSD's right of recovery against Greenwich to which Steadfast is
    contractually subrogated arises from Greenwich's breach of its
    contractual obligation to defend MMSD.                   Accordingly, we examine
    Steadfast's alleged right of recovery against Greenwich as an
    express   contractual        subrogation        right    that   arose     from   MMSD's
    right to a defense from Greenwich.
    ¶37        Subrogation    does   not    change       the    type    of    claim   for
    relief that was held by the subrogor.                   
    Wilmot, 136 Wis. 2d at 63
    16
    No.     2016AP1631
    (explaining      that    "the    identity       of    a    cause   of    action      is   not
    changed    by    the    subrogation,       and       no    new   cause    of    action    is
    created    thereby.").           Because    "[t]he          original     right       of   the
    plaintiff measures the extent of the subrogated party's right,"
    the statute of limitations for a subrogated claim is the same as
    the statute of limitations that would apply to the claim if it
    had not been subrogated.                Gen. Accident Ins. Co. of Am. v.
    Schoendorf & Sorgi, 
    202 Wis. 2d 98
    , 109, 
    549 N.W.2d 429
    (1996).
    Wisconsin has a six-year statute of limitations for breach of
    contract claims.         Wis. Stat. § 893.43(1) (2015-16).8                      Steadfast
    was subrogated to MMSD's contract claim that Greenwich breached
    its duty to defend.
    ¶38    Steadfast paid MMSD's debt for defense costs, which
    included what Greenwich was obligated to provide as well as
    Steadfast's own portion of MMSD's defense costs, when it paid
    MMSD $1.55 million.             Because subrogation does not change the
    identity    of    the    cause    of    action,           Steadfast's    claim       against
    Greenwich is also for breach of contract.                        Claims for breach of
    contract have a six-year statute of limitations.                                Wis. Stat.
    § 893.43(1).       Steadfast's action was filed less than six years
    after    Greenwich's      breach       occurred,          therefore,     it    was    timely
    filed.
    8
    All subsequent references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to
    the 2015-16 version unless otherwise indicated.
    17
    No.   2016AP1631
    4.    Allocation of Defense Costs
    ¶39     Steadfast and Greenwich each had a contractual duty to
    defend MMSD.     Because MMSD chose to pay for its own defense, it
    incurred $1.55 million in stipulated defense costs.                        Steadfast
    paid $1.55 million to MMSD; however, part of that payment was
    attributable     to    the      defense        that    Steadfast,     itself,     was
    obligated to provide.
    ¶40     The circuit court and the court of appeals ignored the
    financial    import        of   Steadfast's      own    duty   to    defend     MMSD.
    Instead, both courts focused on Greenwich's failure to defend
    and adjudged the full amount of MMSD's defense costs as being
    due from Greenwich to Steadfast.9                 In so doing, they relieved
    Steadfast   of   its       contractual     obligation      for      defense   costs,
    without recognition of the windfall that Steadfast received from
    what amounted to a judicial forgiveness of Steadfast's duty to
    defend MMSD.     This placed Steadfast (as subrogee) in a better
    position than MMSD (the subrogor) from whom Steadfast obtained
    the contractual right of subrogation.                  To explain further, MMSD
    litigated the defense through attorneys of its own choosing, but
    it received no windfall when it was repaid $1.55 million in
    litigation costs it actually incurred.                 Here, Steadfast obtained
    9
    The circuit court concluded that Greenwich waived the
    right to raise coverage defenses by its breach of the duty to
    defend.   The court of appeals concluded that because Greenwich
    breached its duty to defend MMSD, it was not equitably entitled
    to an allocation of a portion of MMSD's defense costs to
    Steadfast. Steadfast Ins. Co., 
    380 Wis. 2d 184
    , ¶4.
    18
    No.   2016AP1631
    litigation costs beyond what it incurred in satisfying its duty
    to defend.
    ¶41    We conclude that both Steadfast and Greenwich had a
    duty to provide a defense to MMSD.                   Accordingly, the financial
    sanction of an insurer who fails in its duty to defend does not
    include     judicial   forgiveness          of   another     insurer's    financial
    obligation for defense costs.                Therefore, we conclude that the
    $1.55 million in defense costs that Steadfast paid should be
    allocated between Steadfast and Greenwich.
    ¶42    We have not directly addressed the proper formula for
    allocating defense costs when two insurers have a duty to defend
    the same insured.          See Burgraff v. Menard, Inc., 
    2016 WI 11
    ,
    ¶111,      
    367 Wis. 2d 50
    ,     
    875 N.W.2d 596
      (Roggensack,       C.J.,
    dissenting).       However,       in   a    well-reasoned     opinion,    the    Utah
    Supreme Court addressed the question of allocation of defense
    costs between insurers, each of whom had a duty to defend.                       Ohio
    Cas. Ins. Co. v. Unigard Ins. Co., 
    268 P.3d 180
    , 185-86 (Utah
    2012).      In Ohio Cas., the court noted the obligation of each
    insurer to participate in defense costs and under the facts of
    Ohio Cas., which involved a long term exposure, the court chose
    the     time-on-risk       method      of    defense       cost   apportionment.10
    10
    Time-on-risk method of apportionment weights the defense
    costs by the time that each policy was at risk for actions of
    its insured that could require coverage. Sharon Steel Corp. v.
    Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 
    931 P.2d 127
    , 140 (Utah 1997) (explaining
    that damages based on the relative period of time for which
    coverage was provided under each policy is an equitable method
    of apportionment of defense costs).
    19
    No.    2016AP1631
    Apportionment    also     may   be    done    on    an    equal    division     among
    insurers, and it has been ordered based on respective policy
    limits.     Sharon Steel Corp. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 
    931 P.2d 127
    , 140 (Utah 1997).           In discussions of apportionment, there
    has been a uniform recognition of the obligation for defense
    costs that both insurers faced.
    ¶43     In equal apportionment, defense costs are distributed
    equally among any insurers with a duty to defend, for example
    with two insurers each would pay one-half, with three insurers
    each would pay one-third.            See, e.g., Cargill, Inc. v. Ace Am.
    Ins. Co., 
    784 N.W.2d 341
    (Minn. 2010).                   This method is easy to
    apply;    however,   it   could      lead    to    unfairness      and     upset   the
    parties'    reasonable    expectations        if    one    insurer    insures      for
    lesser policy limits and charges a lower premium.                          See, e.g.,
    Sharon Steel 
    Corp., 931 P.2d at 140
    (pointing out that "insurers
    do not stand on an equal footing where there are significantly
    different liability limits.").
    ¶44     The third option is to apportion defense costs pro
    rata, based on the parties' policy limits.                        For example, if
    insurer A's policy limit is $1 million, and insurer B's policy
    limit is $2 million, insurer A will be responsible for one-third
    of defense costs.       We have suggested that this is the preferred
    approach.     See 
    Schoenecker, 88 Wis. 2d at 671
    ; 
    Oelhafen, 171 Wis. 2d at 537
    ("The proportion [each insurer contributes toward
    the insured's loss] usually is based on their respective policy
    limits.").       This     approach      better       reflects      the      insurance
    companies'    respective    bargains.             See,   e.g.,    Armstrong     World
    20
    No.    2016AP1631
    Indus., Inc. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 
    52 Cal. Rptr. 2d 690
    , 707
    (Cal. Ct. App. 1996)          (explaining       that     apportioning        damage
    reflects that higher premiums generally are paid for higher per
    person or per liability limits).             Accordingly, we conclude that
    pro rata allocation based on insurers' policy limits is the best
    method for apportionment of defense costs in the matter before
    us.
    ¶45    Here, Steadfast paid $1.55 million for MMSD's defense
    costs.       Greenwich and Steadfast have stipulated that this was
    the    "reasonable      and    necessary"       cost     of    MMSD's      defense.
    Greenwich's policy limit was $20 million.                     Steadfast's policy
    limit was $30 million.          Therefore, Greenwich owed two-fifths of
    $1.55 million in defense costs and Steadfast was responsible for
    three-fifths of those costs.           Accordingly, Steadfast is entitled
    to recover from Greenwich $620,000, plus interest accruing on
    that    amount   from   the    date   of    entry   of   the    circuit     court's
    judgment.     Wis. Stat. § 815.05(8).11
    5.   Attorney Fees
    ¶46    We conclude that Steadfast also is entitled to recover
    attorney     fees   from   Greenwich    under    principles      of   contractual
    subrogation.        We have held that when an insurer breaches its
    duty to defend, it may be liable for attorney fees incurred by
    its insured in successfully establishing coverage.                       Elliott v.
    11
    We do not address whether Wis. Stat. § 628.46 applies to
    claims made within Steadfast's contractual subrogation clause
    because neither party addressed § 628.46.
    21
    No.    2016AP1631
    Donahue, 
    169 Wis. 2d 310
    , 324-25, 
    485 N.W.2d 403
    (1992).                                        See
    also    
    Newhouse, 176 Wis. 2d at 837
          ("[W]here           an       insurer
    wrongfully    refuses     to    defend    on        the      grounds        that       the    claim
    against the insured is not within the coverage of the policy,
    the insurer is guilty of a breach of contract which renders it
    liable to the insured for all damages that naturally flow from
    the breach.").
    ¶47   As we have explained above, Steadfast had rights of
    contractual       subrogation         based        on        its     payment           to     MMSD.
    Therefore,     Steadfast       asserted       rights          that     MMSD       had       against
    Greenwich for failing to defend.                   Stated otherwise, if MMSD were
    to sue Greenwich to recover defense costs, it would have been
    entitled     to   the    attorney      fees        and       costs    incurred          in     such
    litigation.       
    Id. at 838.
         Here,          by    virtue        of    its       express
    subrogation rights, Steadfast stands in MMSD's shoes and seeks
    attorney fees incurred in obtaining a judgment against Greenwich
    for payment of defense costs just as MMSD could have recovered
    were it to have brought this lawsuit.
    ¶48   Although     Wisconsin       courts             have         not    yet        awarded
    attorney fees for breach of a duty to defend to an insurer who
    was subrogated to an insured's rights, neither the principles of
    contractual subrogation, nor the rationale behind attorney fee
    awards for breach of a duty to defend, foreclose this result.
    However,     other   states     have     approached                this    question.            The
    decisions of the Supreme Court of California and of Florida have
    provided helpful discussions.
    22
    No.    2016AP1631
    ¶49   In Emp'rs Mut. Liab. Ins. Co. v. Tutor-Saliba Corp.,
    
    951 P.2d 420
    (Cal. 1998), a subcontractor's employee was injured
    on   the   job.       The    subcontractor's         insurer      paid     worker's
    compensation, which made it "subrogated to all of the rights and
    liabilities" of the subcontractor.             
    Id. at 424.
             The underlying
    contract between the subcontractor and general contractor stated
    that in any dispute between the two, the prevailing party was
    entitled to attorney fees.          
    Id. at 422.
          The subrogated insurer
    unsuccessfully      sued    the    general    contractor       to     recover     its
    worker's   compensation      payment.        
    Id. The California
          Supreme
    Court held that as the prevailing party, the general contractor
    would be entitled to recover attorney fees from the subrogated
    insurer:     "the insurer should likewise be subrogated to——i.e.,
    both benefited and bound by——any contract providing for attorney
    fees to a prevailing party that the employer and the third party
    have executed."      
    Id. at 424.
            While this involved an award of
    attorney fees against the subrogee, the court held that the
    subrogee was "both benefited and bound by" the attorney fee
    provision.    
    Id. ¶50 Florida's
    supreme court appears to have followed suit.
    In Cont'l Cas. Co. v. Ryan Inc. E., 
    974 So. 2d 368
    (Fla. 2008),
    it held that a subrogee surety could not pursue attorney fees
    against the principal's insurer, but only because the principal
    still had the right to pursue attorney fees.                   
    Id. at 377.
           If
    the principal had assigned all its rights to the surety via
    contractual   subrogation,        the   surety     would   have     been   able   to
    recover attorney fees.       
    Id. 23 No.
       2016AP1631
    ¶51    Their reasoning is persuasive.                            We conclude that a
    contractual subrogee's right to recovery may include an award of
    attorney fees the subrogor would have been entitled to receive
    had   it    brought       the      lawsuit.          We   have    long     recognized       that
    contractual subrogation "entitl[es] the paying party to rights,
    remedies,        or    securities        that    would      otherwise       belong     to    the
    debtor."         Dufour, 
    370 Wis. 2d 313
    , ¶15; see also 
    Wilmot, 136 Wis. 2d at 63
    .         We    decline     to    create      an    exception     to    this
    longstanding rule by excluding attorney fees from the bundle of
    contractual           subrogation       rights       that      arise      from    a   specific
    subrogation clause upon payment by the subrogee.
    ¶52    In this case, Greenwich breached its duty to defend,
    so MMSD had the right to request attorney fees for successfully
    establishing          Greenwich's        obligation         to    defend.         Steadfast's
    contract with Veolia and MMSD stated in relevant part:                                 "In the
    event of any payment under this policy, we shall be subrogated
    to all an 'insured's' rights of recovery against any person or
    organization."            Because        MMSD's      "rights      of    recovery"      against
    Greenwich would include attorney fees incurred in successfully
    establishing coverage, Steadfast is entitled to recover $325,000
    in    attorney         fees    from      Greenwich        as     MMSD's     subrogee,       plus
    interest accruing on that amount from the date of entry of the
    circuit court's judgment.                 Wis. Stat. § 815.05(8).                Furthermore,
    nothing     in    this        opinion     prevents        Steadfast       from    moving    the
    circuit     court        for       an   award    of       attorney      fees     incurred     in
    litigating the appeal and our review herein.
    24
    No.     2016AP1631
    III.     CONCLUSION
    ¶53     First,       we    conclude       that   Greenwich,         who      insured      the
    risk that United Water would negligently perform services for
    MMSD, thereby causing damage, and Steadfast, who for a different
    period of time insured the risk that Veolia would negligently
    perform services for MMSD, thereby causing damage, were both
    primary and successive insurers in regard to MMSD, their common
    additional insured.
    ¶54     Second,       we     conclude          that    Greenwich          breached        its
    contractual       duty    to    defend     MMSD.          Third,       we   conclude         that
    Steadfast's contractual subrogation claim against Greenwich was
    timely     filed    as    it     comes     within         the    six-year        statute       of
    limitations for contract actions.
    ¶55     Fourth,       we    apply     a    pro-rata         allocation       of    defense
    costs    Steadfast        paid     to     MMSD       based       on     Steadfast's           and
    Greenwich's       respective      policy       limits      of    $30    million        and    $20
    million.      Fifth, and finally, we conclude that Steadfast is
    entitled     to    recover       attorney          fees    from       Greenwich        due     to
    Steadfast's stepping into the shoes of MMSD through contractual
    subrogation to force Greenwich to pay defense costs.
    ¶56     Accordingly, we affirm the decision of the court of
    appeals in part and reverse it in part.
    By     the     Court.—The     decision          of    the    court      of      appeals    is
    affirmed in part and reversed in part.
    25
    No.   2016AP1631.awb
    ¶57    ANN      WALSH    BRADLEY,         J.    (concurring           in        part,
    dissenting in part).         I agree with the majority that the "other
    insurance" provisions are not triggered.                   Additionally, I agree
    that Greenwich breached its duty to defend, and that Steadfast's
    claim sounds in subrogation and not contribution.1
    ¶58    I write separately, however, because the majority errs
    in   two    ways.       First,   it   allocates           defense     costs     between
    Steadfast and Greenwich, allowing Greenwich to breach its duty
    to defend with impunity.           Second, it awards attorney fees to
    Steadfast in derogation of the longstanding American Rule.
    ¶59    An insurer that breaches the duty to defend should not
    be   able    to     escape   liability       for    the     consequences        of    its
    behavior.     Our case law is clear that an insurer who refuses to
    defend its insured proceeds at its own peril.                   Olson v. Farrar,
    
    2012 WI 3
    , ¶30, 
    338 Wis. 2d 215
    , 
    809 N.W.2d 1
    .
    ¶60    Yet, the majority extinguishes the peril, allowing a
    breaching insurer to refuse to uphold its duty to defend with
    the security that it will suffer no financial consequence.                             In
    doing so, it encourages a game of chicken between insurers that
    may leave the insured as the only loser.
    ¶61    Further, our case law dictates that exceptions to the
    American Rule be limited and narrow.                Nevertheless, the majority
    goes where no court has previously ventured.
    ¶62    In expanding the exception to the American Rule by
    awarding attorney fees from one insurance company to another,
    1
    I join parts II.B.1, II.B.2, and II.B.3 of the majority
    opinion.
    1
    No.       2016AP1631.awb
    one wonders what is next.                The majority's determination crafts a
    new exception to the American Rule that is unsupported by case
    law and that chips away at the vitality of the Rule.                                       I fear
    that "once the camel's nose is in the tent, the rest will likely
    follow."
    ¶63     Accordingly, I concur in part and dissent in part.2
    I
    ¶64     The       majority      errs       first    in    its    determination             that
    Greenwich       is    not    liable      for    the    entirety       of    MMSD's        defense
    costs.     Instead, it pro-rates costs, turning the purpose of this
    court's coverage framework on its head and creating a perverse
    incentive for insurers to fail to uphold their duty to defend.
    ¶65     As the majority recognizes, this court has established
    a preferred framework for an insurance company to follow when it
    disputes coverage.             Majority op., ¶29 (citing                    Wis. Pharmacal
    Co., LLC v. Neb. Cultures of Cal., Inc., 
    2016 WI 14
    , ¶18, 
    367 Wis. 2d 221
    , 
    876 N.W.2d 72
    ).                   Pursuant to such a framework, "the
    proper     procedure         for    an    insurance          company       to    follow        when
    coverage is disputed is to request a bifurcated trial on the
    issues     of    coverage          and    liability          and    move        to     stay     any
    proceedings          on   liability        until       the    issue        of    coverage        is
    resolved."       Newhouse by Skow v. Citizens Sec. Mut. Ins. Co., 
    176 Wis. 2d 824
    ,          836,    
    501 N.W.2d 1
            (1993)       (citing          Elliott     v.
    Donahue, 
    169 Wis. 2d 310
    , 318, 
    485 N.W.2d 403
    (1992)).                                    When an
    2
    I dissent from parts II.B.4 and II.B.5 of the majority
    opinion.
    2
    No.    2016AP1631.awb
    insurer follows this procedure, the insurer runs no risk of
    breaching its duty to defend.                 
    Id. ¶66 An
    insurer who unilaterally refuses to defend does so
    at its own peril.            Olson, 
    338 Wis. 2d 215
    , ¶30.                   Accordingly,
    the "general rule is that where an insurer wrongfully refuses to
    defend on the grounds that the claim against the insured is not
    within the coverage of the policy, the insurer is guilty of a
    breach of contract which renders it liable to the insured for
    all damages that naturally flow from the breach."                          
    Newhouse, 176 Wis. 2d at 837
    .
    ¶67    Indeed,      this       court    in    Water    Well   Solutions      Serv.
    Group, Inc. v. Consolidated Ins. Co. recently warned that "an
    insurer opens itself up to a myriad of adverse consequences if
    its unilateral duty to defend determination turns out to be
    wrong."      
    2016 WI 54
    , ¶28, 
    369 Wis. 2d 607
    , 
    881 N.W.2d 285
    .                         An
    insurer's liability "may potentially be greater than what the
    insurer would have paid had it defended its insured in the first
    instance . . . ."          
    Id. ¶68 Our
       established         framework        encourages       insurers    to
    fulfill      their    duty       to    defend       and   thereby    avoids     negative
    outcomes for both insurers and insureds.                       "A unilateral refusal
    to defend without first attempting to seek judicial support for
    that   refusal       can   result       in    otherwise      avoidable     expenses   and
    efforts      to   litigants       and    courts,      deprive    insureds      of   their
    contracted-for protections, and estop insurers from being able
    to further challenge coverage."                      Liebovich v. Minnesota Ins.
    Co., 
    2008 WI 75
    , ¶55, 
    310 Wis. 2d 751
    , 
    751 N.W.2d 764
    .
    3
    No.    2016AP1631.awb
    ¶69      The     majority           effectively          rewards        Greenwich       for
    ignoring this court's established framework and allows Greenwich
    to escape the consequences of its willful breach of the duty to
    defend.      By     allowing       Greenwich           to   pay   pro-rated        costs,    the
    majority lessens the impact of the insurer's breach of the duty
    to defend.         It further encourages future insurers to follow a
    similar course rather than seeking a bifurcated coverage trial
    as this court has recommended numerous times.
    ¶70      According to the majority, Greenwich should suffer no
    consequence at all for breaching the duty to defend.                                  It pays
    merely what it would have paid anyway if it had lived up to its
    duty to defend in the first instance.
    ¶71      The     result           of        the     majority      opinion        is     the
    proliferation       of    a     game       of    chicken     between    insurers.            See
    Southeast Wis. Prof'l Baseball Park Dist. v. Mitsubishi Heavy
    Indus. Am., Inc., 
    2007 WI App 185
    , ¶64, 
    304 Wis. 2d 637
    , 
    738 N.W.2d 87
    .         When       there    are      two    or   more    insurers       from     whom
    coverage is sought, what incentive is there to provide coverage
    if an insurer can simply refuse to defend the case and end up
    paying the exact same amount later in the event it is sued?
    Each insurer would simply hold out and hope that someone else
    takes on the defense.
    ¶72      Rather than encouraging insurers to live up to their
    contractual obligations, the majority opinion allows insurers to
    rest comfortably in their decisions to deny a defense with the
    knowledge     that       if    a      breach      is    later      found,     no    financial
    consequence will be forthcoming.                      The only loser in this game is
    4
    No.       2016AP1631.awb
    the insured, who may be forced to expend resources for a defense
    that should have been covered by insurance from the beginning.
    ¶73    Unlike the majority, I conclude that there must be
    some element of penalty and deterrence to encourage insurance
    companies to defend when they are obligated.                    See Water Well,
    
    369 Wis. 2d 607
    , ¶28.          I thus determine that Greenwich is liable
    for the full cost of MMSD's defense.
    ¶74    My conclusion is further buttressed by the fact that
    Greenwich's      insurance     policy    does    not    contain       a    pro-ration
    clause.       Where a policy contains no pro-ration language, this
    court is not to rewrite the policy to include it.                             Plastics
    Eng'g   Co.     v.   Liberty   Mut.     Ins.   Co.,    
    2009 WI 13
    ,      ¶59,   
    315 Wis. 2d 556
    , 
    759 N.W.2d 613
    .             Yet by pro-rating defense costs,
    the majority gives Greenwich the benefit of a bargain it did not
    make.
    ¶75    Accordingly,     I    dissent     from    part    II.B.4         of    the
    majority opinion, which effectively eliminates any incentives
    for insurance companies to promptly defend lawsuits and fails to
    encourage insurers to follow this court's preferred framework
    for determining insurance coverage.
    II
    ¶76    The majority errs further in its determination that
    Steadfast is entitled to attorney fees incurred in litigating
    this    case.        It   fails    to   heed    this    court's       warning       that
    exceptions to the American Rule are to be limited and narrow.
    Instead, it opens up a new exception that is contrary to clear
    precedent that arrives at a directly opposite outcome.
    5
    No.    2016AP1631.awb
    ¶77   Generally,      we    adhere       to    the   American        Rule,    which
    provides that parties to litigation are responsible for their
    own attorney fees unless recovery is expressly allowed by either
    contract or statute, or when recovery results from third-party
    litigation.      DeChant v. Monarch Life Ins. Co., 
    200 Wis. 2d 559
    ,
    571, 
    547 N.W.2d 592
    (1996).              Absent statutory authority or a
    contractual provision to the contrary, Wisconsin courts strictly
    follow this rule.        
    Id. ¶78 In
       the    insurance       coverage          context,        analysis    of
    entitlement to attorney fees begins with Elliott v. Donahue, 
    169 Wis. 2d 310
    .       The    Elliott    court          determined   that       Wis.    Stat.
    § 806.04(8), "which recognizes the principles of equity, permits
    the recovery of reasonable attorney fees incurred by the insured
    in   successfully       establishing     coverage."            
    Id. at 314.
         It
    concluded that attorney fees were appropriate under the specific
    facts that were present:
    The insurer that denies coverage and forces the
    insured to retain counsel and expend additional money
    to establish coverage for a claim that falls within
    the ambit of the insurance policy deprives the insured
    the benefit that was bargained for and paid for with
    the periodic premium payments.         Therefore, the
    principles of equity call for the insurer to be liable
    to the insured for expenses, including reasonable
    attorney fees, incurred by the insured in successfully
    establishing coverage.
    
    Id. at 322.
    ¶79   Subsequent     case    law     has      limited   the     application      of
    Elliott to its facts.          Specifically, in Riccobono v. Seven Star,
    Inc., the court of appeals denied a claim for attorney fees by
    one insurer against a second insurer.                       
    2000 WI App 74
    , 234
    6
    No.    2016AP1631.awb
    Wis. 2d 374, 
    610 N.W.2d 501
    .          The Riccobono court reasoned:              "In
    defining the dispute in Elliott, the supreme court stated:                      'The
    sole issue on review concerns whether an insured may recover
    attorney fees incurred in successfully defending coverage under
    an insurance policy.'"          
    Id., ¶22. It
    then distinguished the
    facts present in Riccobono from those in Elliott, writing that
    "Society is not an insured and, thus, does not appear to fall
    within the holding of the supreme court."             
    Id., ¶22. ¶80
      The   Riccobono    court    found   it   dispositive        that   the
    identity of the party seeking attorney fees was an insurer and
    not an insured.        On this issue, Riccobono is on all fours with
    this   case.       Curiously,   the     majority   fails   to     even    mention
    Riccobono.
    ¶81   Despite   the   majority's     silence,    Riccobono     instructs
    that attorney fees are not available to Steadfast because it is
    an insurer, and not an insured.             Even with such an instruction
    in hand, an additional step is required in the analysis due to
    7
    No.   2016AP1631.awb
    the fact that Steadfast's claim is one for subrogation, i.e., it
    steps into the shoes of its insured.3
    ¶82   Finding the nature        of Steadfast's subrogation claim
    dispositive,     the   majority   turns    to    the   case     law    of     other
    jurisdictions in support of its result.             Majority op., ¶¶48-51.
    Because MMSD would have been entitled to attorney fees, the
    majority reasons, so is Steadfast.              
    Id., ¶47. I
    do not find
    this approach persuasive.
    ¶83   The   court   of   appeals     in    Riccobono     was     clear    that
    Elliott "does not encompass the payment of attorney fees and
    costs from one insurer to another . . . ."             
    234 Wis. 2d 374
    , ¶2.
    The driving factor behind the            Elliott   decision was that            the
    insured    retained    independent      counsel    who      established        that
    coverage existed.      See Gorton v. Hostak, Henzl & Bichler, S.C.,
    
    217 Wis. 2d 493
    , ¶¶32-33, 
    577 N.W.2d 617
    (1998).
    3
    Although the insurer requesting attorney fees in Riccobono
    sought such fees pursuant to a theory of subrogation, the court
    of appeals did not address this argument because it determined
    that the insurer was not entitled to subrogation under the
    language of the policy. Riccobono v. Seven Star, Inc., 2000 WI
    App 74, ¶28, 
    234 Wis. 2d 374
    , 
    610 N.W.2d 501
    .       As the court
    stated, "the conditions under which Society might have been
    subrogated to Seven Star's right to attorney fees and costs
    never came into fruition."       
    Id., ¶28. Nevertheless,
    the
    Riccobono court's declaration that attorney fees are not
    available under Elliott when one insurer seeks attorney fees
    from another insurer is consistent with this court's previous
    reluctance to extend Elliott beyond its particular facts and
    circumstances regardless of whether the insurer is a subrogated
    party.   See DeChant v. Monarch Life Ins. Co., 
    200 Wis. 2d 559
    ,
    569, 
    547 N.W.2d 592
    (1996); Elliott v. Donahue, 
    169 Wis. 2d 310
    ,
    
    485 N.W.2d 403
    (1992).
    8
    No.    2016AP1631.awb
    ¶84    This court has expressly declined to extend Elliott
    beyond its particular facts and circumstances.                         
    Id., ¶33 (citing
    DeChant, 200 Wis. 2d at 569
    ); see also Reid v. Benz, 
    2001 WI 106
    ,   ¶13,    
    245 Wis. 2d 658
    ,           
    629 N.W.2d 262
            ("The    facts      and
    circumstances that gave rise to our decision in                               Elliott     are
    particularly        significant,        because     our        reasoning      therein     is
    inextricably        connected     to    those      facts       and    circumstances.").
    Instead, we have adhered to the maxim that exceptions to the
    American     Rule    should     be     "limited    and     narrow."           Gorton,     
    217 Wis. 2d 493
    , ¶33; Nationstar Mortg. LLC v. Stafsholt, 
    2018 WI 21
    , ¶27, 
    380 Wis. 2d 284
    , 
    908 N.W.2d 784
    .                            "Awarding attorney
    fees, as we did in Elliott, should not be the usual result."
    Reid, 
    245 Wis. 2d 658
    , ¶27.
    ¶85    Although generally Steadfast steps into MMSD's shoes
    when pursuing a subrogation claim, to do so here flies in the
    face of clear precedent.              To allow such subrogated status to one
    insurer seeking to recover attorney fees from another insurer
    extends far beyond the "particular facts and circumstances" of
    Elliott.      See 
    DeChant, 200 Wis. 2d at 569
    .                   Unlike the majority,
    I would follow our case law indicating that such exceptions to
    the American Rule must be narrowly circumscribed.
    ¶86    Accordingly,        I    dissent     from        part    II.B.5      of    the
    majority      opinion      because      it    allows      an     insurer      to   recover
    attorney     fees    from     another        insurer,     contravening         the      long-
    established American Rule.
    ¶87    In    sum,    for       the     reasons      set        forth     above,     I
    respectfully concur in part and dissent in part.
    9
    No.   2016AP1631.awb
    ¶88   I am authorized to state that Justice REBECCA FRANK
    DALLET joins this concurrence/dissent.
    10
    No.   2016AP1631.rgb
    ¶89     REBECCA      GRASSL       BRADLEY,     J.    (concurring         in     part,
    dissenting       in    part).        I    agree     with    the    majority         that   an
    insured's defense costs should be allocated between insurers who
    share a contractual, overlapping duty to defend the insured.                               I
    also agree that the allocation between insurers should be pro
    rata, based upon each insurer's policy limits.                           Accordingly, I
    join part II.B.4 of the majority opinion to the extent it adopts
    these legal principles.              However, I disagree with the majority's
    conclusion      that     Greenwich       is    responsible       for    any    portion     of
    defense costs paid on behalf of MMSD.                        Vis-à-vis Steadfast's
    policy of insurance covering MMSD, Greenwich's policy was excess
    over       Steadfast's,     relieving         Greenwich     of    any     obligation       to
    contribute       to    MMSD's    defense,          which    Steadfast         was    already
    providing.            The   majority          erroneously    concludes          otherwise,
    deeming both Steadfast and Greenwich to be primary insurers,
    each with a duty to defend MMSD in the consolidated lawsuits
    stemming from the 2008 rain event.                   In reaching this result, the
    majority declines to apply clear and unambiguous policy language
    dictating a different priority of insurance, instead applying an
    offhanded statement in a case involving an unrelated issue with
    no application here.            The majority errs.               I would reverse the
    judgment against Greenwich in its entirety.1
    1
    Because I conclude that Greenwich had no duty to defend, I
    do not address the remaining issues resolved by the majority
    because they are moot unless Greenwich had a duty to defend. I
    do agree with Justice Ann Walsh Bradley's dissent to the extent
    it would deny recovery of attorney fees by one insurer against
    another.
    1
    No.   2016AP1631.rgb
    I
    ¶90    Insurance policies are contracts.                      Wadzinski v. Auto-
    Owners       Ins.     Co.,       
    2012 WI 75
    ,     ¶11,    
    342 Wis. 2d 311
    ,       
    818 N.W.2d 819
    .               When    interpreting       contracts,          we     presume     the
    parties' intentions are expressed in the language they chose.
    
    Id. Accordingly, when
    construing policy terms and conditions,
    we begin with their plain language.                     See Johnson Controls, Inc.
    v. London Mkt., 
    2010 WI 52
    , ¶59, 
    325 Wis. 2d 176
    , 
    784 N.W.2d 579
    ("Wisconsin case law instructs that the language of the policy
    should       be     our     initial      focus.");     see        also    BV/B1,      LLC    v.
    InvestorsBank,            2010    WI    App   152,    ¶25,    
    330 Wis. 2d 462
    ,       
    792 N.W.2d 622
    ("When interpreting a contract clause, we begin with
    the plain language of the clause.").                     "When the language of [an
    insurance]          contract      is     unambiguous,        we     apply       its   literal
    meaning."         Wisconsin Label Corp. v. Northbrook Prop. & Cas. Ins.
    Co.,     
    2000 WI 26
    ,    ¶23,    
    233 Wis. 2d 314
    ,         
    607 N.W.2d 276
    .
    Interpretation of policy language is a question of law we review
    de novo.      Wadzinski, 
    342 Wis. 2d 311
    , ¶10.
    ¶91    As a general rule, a primary insurer "has the primary
    duty to defend a claim" while an excess insurer is not required
    to contribute to the defense as long as "the primary insurer is
    required to defend."               Johnson Controls, Inc., 
    325 Wis. 2d 176
    ,
    ¶57 (quoted source omitted).                    "Whenever two policies apply to
    the same insured at the same time, the issue of which policy
    must pay first——or which is primary and which is excess——is
    dealt with by other insurance clauses."                            Burgraff v. Menard,
    Inc., 
    2016 WI 11
    , ¶27, 
    367 Wis. 2d 50
    , 
    875 N.W.2d 596
    (quotation
    2
    No.    2016AP1631.rgb
    marks      and    quoted      source   omitted).        In   such   situations,      the
    insurers may, by the terms of their policies, "define the extent
    to   which       each    is    primary    and    each   excess[.]"         Wis.     Stat.
    § 631.43(1); see also Burgraff, 
    367 Wis. 2d 50
    , ¶27.2                       Regardless
    of its status as primary or excess, whether an insurer has a
    duty       to   defend      "depends   on   the    language    of    the    policies."
    Johnson Controls, Inc., 
    325 Wis. 2d 176
    , ¶58 (emphasis added).
    II
    ¶92       While Steadfast and Greenwich issued their respective
    policies         to   two     different     primary     insureds,     neither       party
    disputes that both policies cover the same additional insured:
    MMSD.       It is MMSD's losses——namely, defense costs——that are at
    issue in this case.             Therefore, the focus should be on MMSD as
    the insured, not United Water or Veolia.                     Instead, the majority
    views coverage from the standpoint of the primary insureds——
    United      Water     and     Veolia——who    are   entirely     removed      from   this
    coverage litigation:             "Greenwich's policy insured the risk that
    United Water's conduct in managing the Milwaukee sewerage system
    during the policy period would be negligent . . . Steadfast's
    policy insured the risk that Veolia would negligently manage the
    Milwaukee sewerage system during the policy period[.]"                         Majority
    op., ¶¶23, 24.              The negligence of United Water and Veolia are
    irrelevant for purposes of determining the respective insurers'
    2
    This holds true unless "the policies contain inconsistent
    terms on that point," in which case "the insurers shall be
    jointly and severally liable to the insured on any coverage
    where the terms are inconsistent[.]" Wis. Stat. § 631.43(1).
    3
    No.    2016AP1631.rgb
    duty to defend MMSD, a different insured altogether.                            By framing
    the issue incorrectly, the majority's analysis collapses at the
    outset.
    ¶93      The language of Greenwich's and Steadfast's insurance
    contracts       determines        whether    Greenwich      and    Steadfast       provide
    primary or excess coverage to MMSD.                        Under the "PROFESSIONAL
    LIABILITY" section of its policy, Greenwich agreed "[t]o pay on
    behalf     of    the    INSURED     all     LOSS   in     excess    of    the    Retention
    amount . . . as         a    result    of     CLAIMS      first    made    against       the
    INSURED . . . during the POLICY PERIOD . . . by reason of any
    act,       error        or        omission         in      PROFESSIONAL           SERVICES
    rendered . . . by           the    INSURED    or    by    any     person   whose     acts,
    errors or omissions the INSURED is legally responsible."3                            Under
    the separate "CONTRACTOR'S POLLUTION LEGAL LIABILITY" section of
    its policy, Greenwich agreed "[t]o pay on behalf of the INSURED
    all LOSS, in excess of the Retention amount . . . as a result of
    an OCCURRENCE which arises out of CONTRACTING SERVICES and which
    first commenced during the POLICY PERIOD."                         Under the policy,
    "LOSS"——what Greenwich is contractually obligated to pay to or
    on behalf of MMSD——means not only "DAMAGES [i.e., a "monetary
    judgment, award or settlement of compensatory damages"] which
    the INSURED shall become legally obligated to pay as a result of
    a CLAIM" but also "CLAIMS EXPENSE."                      Under the policy, "CLAIMS
    EXPENSE"        includes     "all    other     fees,      costs . . . and         expenses
    resulting        from    the . . . defense              . . . of    such        CLAIM,    if
    3
    Capitalization appears in Greenwich's policy to signify
    defined terms.
    4
    No.    2016AP1631.rgb
    incurred . . . with the written consent of the Company, by the
    INSURED."           In simpler terms, Greenwich insured MMSD not only for
    "DAMAGES" MMSD would become legally obligated to pay as a result
    of   a    covered         claim       (here     there      were        none)     but    also    "CLAIMS
    EXPENSE,"        which          includes       attorney        fees       incurred       by     MMSD    in
    defending        against          such     a    claim,        regardless         of     whether       MMSD
    became     legally          obligated           to   pay      damages      to     a     third    party.
    Despite the fact that only "CLAIMS EXPENSE" and not "DAMAGES"
    are at issue in this case, the majority ignores in its analysis
    of Greenwich's duty to defend the fact that "CLAIMS EXPENSE"
    constitutes MMSD's exclusive "LOSS."
    ¶94    Steadfast's            policy        similarly           promises       to     "pay     on
    behalf     of       an     'insured'        any      'loss'       an     'insured'       is     legally
    obligated       to        pay    as    a   result        of   a    'claim[.]'"           Steadfast's
    policy defines "Loss" to mean both (1) "Compensatory damages or
    legal     obligations            arising        from     'Bodily         injury'"       or    "Property
    damage" and (2) "Related 'claim expense.'"                                       Under Steadfast's
    policy, "Claim expenses" include attorney fees and "[a]ll other
    fees, costs and expenses resulting from the defense . . . of a
    'claim'        if    incurred         by"      Steadfast          or    MMSD     with    Steadfast's
    consent.
    ¶95    In the underlying rain event litigation, no damages
    were awarded or paid to the plaintiffs for their claims against
    MMSD.      MMSD sustained no "loss" under the first prong of that
    definition           in     either         Greenwich's            or     Steadfast's          policies.
    Instead, MMSD's "loss" as defined in each policy was limited to
    attorney        fees       incurred        in    defending             against    the     rain    event
    5
    No.    2016AP1631.rgb
    claims, included under the second prong of "loss" in each policy
    and denominated as "CLAIMS EXPENSE" under Greenwich's policy and
    as "Claim expenses" under Steadfast's policy.                          Although MMSD was
    never found liable in the rain event litigation, nor did it
    agree to pay damages in settlement of that litigation, MMSD did
    incur   an   insurable      loss    under       the   policies,         in    the    form   of
    attorney fees incurred in its defense.
    ¶96   At this step in the analysis, I conclude that both
    Greenwich       and   Steadfast     contractually           agreed       to    pay    MMSD's
    attorney     fees     in   defending   the       rain      event       litigation.          The
    analysis does not end there, however, because of course MMSD is
    not entitled to recover double its attorney fees, nor was MMSD
    entitled to duplicative defenses against the rain event claims.
    If multiple policies cover the same insured during the same
    period,      then     the    policies'          respective         "other          insurance"
    provisions      determine     which    insurer        is    primary          and    which    is
    excess.
    ¶97   Greenwich's      "other    insurance"          clause       in    its    policy
    insuring MMSD provides in pertinent part:                     "this insurance shall
    be in excess of the Retention amount . . . and any other valid
    and collectible insurance available to the INSURED . . . unless
    such    other    insurance     is   written       only      as     a    specific      excess
    insurance over the Limits of Liability provided in this policy."
    (Emphasis added.)           While Greenwich contractually declares its
    insurance to be excess if other valid and collectible insurance
    is available to MMSD, Steadfast's "other insurance" provision is
    6
    No.    2016AP1631.rgb
    markedly      different.      Steadfast   designates    its       insurance   as
    primary unless other primary insurance is available to MMSD:
    L. OTHER INSURANCE
    1. The insurance provided under this policy is primary
    insurance, except when:
    a. Stated in the Declarations or by endorsement to
    apply in excess of or contingent upon the absence of
    other insurance; or
    b. Any other primary insurance is available covering
    liability for any "claim" or "loss" . . . .
    When this insurance is primary and the "insured" has
    other insurance which is stated to be applicable to
    the "claim" or "loss" on an excess basis, the amount
    of our liability under this policy shall not be
    reduced by the existence of such excess insurance.
    (Emphasis added.)          Both Greenwich and Steadfast agreed to pay
    MMSD's "loss" in the form of attorney fees incurred in defending
    the rain event litigation.         Because Steadfast's policy provided
    valid   and    collectible    insurance   to   MMSD   for   this     particular
    loss, Greenwich's insurance covering this loss——attorney fees——
    is excess.       Steadfast's own policy declares its coverage to be
    primary unless (1) otherwise stated in the declarations or an
    endorsement, or (2) any other primary insurance is available.
    Neither condition exists under these facts.
    ¶98       No one disputes Steadfast had a duty to defend MMSD
    against    the    entire    litigation,   even   though     not    all   claims
    implicated Veolia, Steadfast's primary insured.               See Fireman's
    Fund Ins. Co. of Wis. v. Bradley Corp., 
    2003 WI 33
    , ¶21, 
    261 Wis. 2d 4
    , 
    660 N.W.2d 666
    ("[W]hen an insurance policy provides
    coverage for even one claim made in a lawsuit, the insurer is
    7
    No.      2016AP1631.rgb
    obligated      to     defend    the     entire     suit.")        Steadfast's         "other
    insurance"         provision    states     that    its    policy     provides        primary
    coverage.          Greenwich also promised coverage for MMSD's defense
    costs,       but     its     "other     insurance"        provision         states        that
    Greenwich's         coverage       is    excess     to     any      other       valid      and
    collectible insurance.                Steadfast's contractual obligation to
    pay    MMSD's        defense       costs    constitutes          "other         valid      and
    collectible insurance," rendering Greenwich an excess insurer as
    to that loss.
    ¶99    Despite      this      straightforward       and    unambiguous         policy
    language,      the       majority       declines     to    interpret           the    "other
    insurance"         clauses,     inexplicably        stating       that      "we      do   not
    interpret the terms of the 'other insurance' clauses because
    under the undisputed facts . . . Greenwich's 'other insurance'
    clause provided successive insurance to MMSD."                            Majority op.,
    ¶27.       The majority does not explain how an "other insurance"
    clause grants any coverage to an insured.                     Although the majority
    contradictorily appears to have engaged in some interpretation
    of Greenwich's "other insurance" clause (but not Steadfast's),
    it    does    not    include      its   analysis     of    that     provision        in   the
    opinion.          Instead,     the    majority     examines      only    the      "damages"
    aspect of "loss" despite the absence of any "damages" incurred
    by MMSD.       Based solely on the "damages" for which MMSD could
    have been held liable (but was not), the majority holds that
    both insurers provided primary coverage "in regard to insuring
    MMSD's risk of damage[,]" majority op., ¶27, and therefore both
    had    a   duty     to   defend.        Majority    op.,     ¶39.        The    majority's
    8
    No.   2016AP1631.rgb
    disregard for the actual and only "loss" incurred by MMSD——
    attorney fees——generates its analytical error.
    ¶100 The majority concludes that "concurrent insurance is
    required       before    'other      insurance'         clauses     are   triggered."
    Majority op., ¶26.            But the majority ignores the concurrent
    coverage of the claim expense "loss" incurred by MMSD——attorney
    fees——during overlapping policy periods.                    No one disputes that
    both       policies    covered     the    2008    rain    event;     therefore,     the
    majority's       conclusion      that     the    policies    were     successive      is
    logically       impossible.         The     majority       then     quotes      Plastics
    Engineering4 for the proposition that "[t]wo insurance policies
    cannot be concurrent unless they insured 'the same risk, and the
    same interest, for the benefit of the same person, during the
    same period.'"          Majority op., ¶26.           Relying upon the different
    contractors       insured    by     each    policy      rather    than    the    common
    insured (MMSD), the majority concludes that the policies were
    successive,       not    concurrent.             This    contradicts      the    actual
    language of the policies, which should have been the focus of
    analysis in this case.
    ¶101 The       majority's    reliance       on    Plastics    Engineering      is
    misplaced.       The case did not, as the majority maintains, hold
    that "[t]wo insurance policies cannot be concurrent unless they
    insured 'the same risk, and the same interest, for the benefit
    of the same person, during the same period.'"                          Majority op.,
    ¶26.       Rather, the case addressed whether Wis. Stat. § 631.43(1)
    4
    Plastics Eng'g Co. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 
    2009 WI 13
    ,
    ¶48, 
    315 Wis. 2d 556
    , 
    759 N.W.2d 613
    .
    9
    No.    2016AP1631.rgb
    applies    to   successive     policies;     it    did    not   address       "other
    insurance" clauses at all.           Plastics Eng'g Co. v. Liberty Mut.
    Ins. Co., 
    2009 WI 13
    , ¶44, 
    315 Wis. 2d 556
    , 
    759 N.W.2d 613
    .                      The
    language     the    majority   quotes    from     Plastics      Engineering      was
    lifted from an explanatory parenthetical in a citation to a law
    review article.         
    Id., ¶48 (quoting
    Douglas R. Richmond, Issues
    and Problems in "Other Insurance," Multiple Insurance, and Self-
    Insurance, 22 Pepp. L. Rev. 1373, 1376-82 (1995)).5                     Nothing in
    Plastics Engineering should be read as supplanting the actual
    policy language, which forms the contract between insurer and
    insured,     with   a   mechanical   analysis     of     whether      the   policies
    cover "the same risk, and the same interest, for the benefit of
    the   same    person,    during   the    same     period."         Significantly,
    Greenwich's "other insurance" clause does not limit its excess
    position to only those policies insuring "the same risk, and the
    same interest, for the benefit of the same person, during the
    same period."       Instead, Greenwich's insurance is excess if there
    is other valid and collectible insurance for the insured's loss—
    —here, MMSD's attorney fees.
    ¶102 The majority effectively discards the policy language
    in favor of loose generalizations from our case law.                        Whether
    Greenwich's policy was primary or excess (and whether Greenwich
    violated its contractual obligations) should be resolved by the
    5
    In context, this statement appears to reflect a general
    description of how "other insurance" clauses operate.     But a
    general description of how courts have dealt with "other
    insurance" clauses cannot rewrite the policy language the court
    is supposed to interpret and apply.
    10
    No.    2016AP1631.rgb
    actual   language       of   the   insurance     contracts     that   govern    our
    analysis.        See   Johnson     Controls,    Inc.,   
    325 Wis. 2d 176
    ,     ¶58
    (whether a duty to defend exists depends on the language of the
    policies).       Instead, the majority centers its holding on a stray
    citation    to    a    law   review   article,    resulting     in    a   misguided
    fixation on the claims made in the rain event litigation rather
    than MMSD's actual "loss."
    ¶103 It is true that Greenwich had a duty to indemnify MMSD
    for "damages" MMSD may have been liable to pay as a result of
    the acts or omissions of United Water, while Steadfast had a
    duty to indemnify MMSD for damages MMSD may have been liable to
    pay as a result of the acts or omissions of Veolia.                       However,
    indemnification for such damages is not the issue here.                        MMSD
    did not incur any loss based on the acts or omissions of its
    contractors.      Instead, the issue is which insurer was primary as
    to claim expenses, not damages.                Both Greenwich and Steadfast
    insured the same "loss," namely, MMSD's defense of the rain
    event    litigation,         and   both   policies      were   in     effect    for
    overlapping periods of time.6             Because Steadfast provided other
    valid and collectible insurance for the attorney fees necessary
    to defend against the rain event litigation, Greenwich's policy
    6
    Greenwich's pollution policy period was July 24, 2007 to
    July 24, 2008, and Steadfast's claims-made policy period was
    July 1, 2008 to July 1, 2009, with retroactive dates varying by
    coverage type and ranging from March 1, 1998 to June 11, 2008.
    11
    No.    2016AP1631.rgb
    provided excess coverage.           Notably, MMSD did collect its defense
    costs from Steadfast.7
    ¶104 Nothing         prohibits      an   insurer    from       denying    its
    insured's tender of defense and stating the grounds for this
    denial.     See Water Well Sols. Serv. Grp. Inc. v. Consolidated
    Ins. Co., 
    2016 WI 54
    , ¶28, 
    369 Wis. 2d 607
    , 
    881 N.W.2d 285
    .
    While the insurer takes the risk that its coverage position will
    later be found incorrect, see 
    id., there is
    nothing improper
    about taking this course of action, as Greenwich did.                     Based on
    its   policy      language    and   the    existence     of   other    valid    and
    collectible insurance, Greenwich correctly determined that any
    coverage under its policy for MMSD's claim expenses necessary to
    defend the rain event litigation was excess to Steadfast's.                      It
    is irrelevant that Greenwich might ultimately have been liable
    to indemnify MMSD for any damages awarded against MMSD as a
    result of United Water's services; Steadfast was obligated to
    pay   all   the    claim     expenses   necessary   to    resolve      the   entire
    litigation, and in fact Steadfast did so.                An "insurer breaches
    the duty to defend by requiring the insured to incur attorney
    fees to defend . . . on the issue of liability and to litigate
    coverage simultaneously."           Reid v. Benz, 
    2001 WI 106
    , ¶3, 245
    7
    Steadfast maintains that Greenwich's "other insurance"
    clause does not apply because Steadfast's policy was not
    collectible, arguing that "MMSD will never be able to 'collect'
    on the Steadfast policy for any liability due to the vicarious
    liability of United Water." Steadfast commits the same error as
    the majority by focusing exclusively on the claims for damages
    instead of the common loss insured by both Greenwich and
    Steadfast: defense costs.
    12
    No.    2016AP1631.rgb
    Wis.   2d   658,   
    629 N.W.2d 262
    .         In    this   case,     Steadfast      paid
    MMSD's attorney fees incurred to defend against the rain event
    litigation;    MMSD      was   not   forced    to     bear    the    expense.        And
    Steadfast——not      MMSD——litigated          coverage        for    defense      costs.
    Accordingly, Greenwich did not breach any duty to defend MMSD;
    as an excess insurer with respect to defense costs, Greenwich
    had no obligation to provide a defense that MMSD was already
    receiving from its primary insurer.
    ¶105 The    majority     disregards         applicable      policy     language,
    upsets the insurers' contractual allocation of risk, and binds
    Greenwich to a risk for which it did not bargain.                         I would apply
    the "other insurance" provisions of each contract and therefore
    reverse the judgment against Greenwich in its entirety, holding
    Greenwich had no duty to defend MMSD because its policy provided
    only excess coverage for MMSD's defense costs.                       Other than the
    principles of law regarding the pro rata allocation of defense
    costs between insurers set forth in part II.B.4 of the majority
    opinion, I respectfully dissent.
    13
    No.   2016AP1631.rgb
    1