This action was brought by the Fort Bragg Unified School District (District) on behalf of two public agency self-insured risk pools that funded repairs to a District elementary school damaged by rain. The suit sought reimbursement of the repair costs from two contractors and a performance bond surety arising from the contractors' failure to properly secure the school while replacing portions of its roof. One of the contractor defendants, Solano County Roofing, Inc. (Solano), cross-complained against the second contractor, Sterling Environmental Corporation (Sterling).
Solano and its surety, Colonial American Casualty and Surety Company (Colonial), appeal on multiple grounds from a judgment on the complaint in favor of the District. Sterling appeals from an adverse judgment on Solano's cross-complaint. We reverse the District's judgment and award of prejudgment interest against Solano, affirm its judgment and interest award against Colonial, and vacate as moot the judgment on Solano's cross-complaint against Sterling.
The District began a two-stage modernization project at Redwood Elementary School in 1998. In the first phase, contractors completely renovated the school's interior, including painting, carpeting, and installation of new telephone and computer systems. All planned interior renovations and remodeling were completed by the fall of 2000 at a cost in excess of $2.4 million. In the second phase of the modernization, the District contracted with Solano to reroof the school. This required removal of the existing builtup roof membrane from the wooden roof deck structure and then attaching a new underlayment followed by a new metal roof. During phase I, the District contracted with Sterling to perform asbestos abatement work for the whole modernization project, including the removal in phase II of part of the roof membrane that contained asbestos. Solano's responsibilities in phase II included removing portions of the old roof membrane that did not contain asbestos, and reroofing the entire building.
The District's contract with Sterling required Sterling to continuously maintain adequate protection of all of its work, protect the District's property from injury or loss arising from the contract, and hold the District harmless from any such damage, injury, or loss. Sterling was specifically required to make sure the roofing asbestos area was "not left uncovered at any time due to the possibility of rain or moisture entering the building."
Solano's contract contained numerous provisions requiring it to protect its work and the District's property from rain or moisture damage. Under the contract, Solano was required, among other things, to bear all costs for "replacement of damage to existing or new construction from weather effects," "[r]estore any improvements damaged by this work to their original condition," and repair or replace all existing finished work "damaged by operations under this contract . . . at no extra cost to the Owner." Solano also bore overall responsibility to coordinate its work with Sterling's, keep track of all of Sterling's activities, and ensure the entire structure was adequately covered at all times, both in the areas it was working on and those Sterling worked on. The contract also required Solano to obtain a bond in an amount at least equal to the base price of the contract "to guarantee the faithful performance of the Contract."
The phase II roof work began on Monday, June 18, 2001. Water penetration into the interior of the school—caused by three days of rain beginning on Monday, June 25, 2001—resulted in $389,968 of damage to the interior of the school. The trial court found the damage was proximately caused by Sterling's and Solano's breaches of their contractual covenants with the District to maintain the integrity of the school's roof covering against rain and moisture, and prevent damage to its interior, during the performance of their work.
The costs of repairing the rain damage to Redwood Elementary School were ultimately paid by three entities: the Northern California Schools Insurance Group (NCSIG) ($96,131.16), Northern California Regional Liability Excess Fund Joint Powers Authority (NCR) ($150,000), and Insurance Company of the West (ICW) ($150,493.45).
The annual pool contribution for each public entity participating in NCSIG and NCR (collectively, the JPA's) is calculated pursuant to NCR's bylaws. The bylaws provide that each member must pay an annual base contribution rate based upon, among other information, the member's prior year average daily attendance, loss history, unusual exposures, and total insured values. The base rate could be modified based on a member's claims experience according to methodology calculated by an actuary or consultant approved by the NCR's underwriting committee. The bylaws further provided: "Any Subrogation recoveries received by [NCR], or its Members, shall be credited to the amounts paid by the Authority for the Member, with the remainder, if any, remitted to the Member . . . ." Although considered the "property" of NCR, subrogation monies received are credited to the member's account for purposes of computing the member's annual contribution to the costs of the pool.
The application of the District's primary and excess coverage were also governed by a memorandum spelling out the scope of claims and losses covered and the rights and duties of the members and NCR with respect to claims. That memorandum states: "The Memorandum of Coverage is not an insurance policy. [NCR] is not a commercial insurer, nor is it subject to regulation under the California Insurance Code. (Gov. Code § 990.8(c); City of South El Monte v. Southern California Joint Powers Insurance Authority (1995) 38 Cal.App.4th 1629 [45 Cal.Rptr.2d 729].)" The memorandum further provided: "In the event of any payment under this Memorandum, [NCR] shall be subrogated to all the rights of recovery against any person or organization . . . ."
Colonial issued a performance bond on Solano's behalf in the amount of $713,999 in connection with its phase II work on Redwood Elementary School. Solano maintained a $1 million liability insurance policy with
Sterling maintained a $2 million liability insurance policy with Zurich American Insurance Company (Zurich) during the relevant policy period.
The District filed this action in April 2004, asserting causes of action for breach of contract and negligence against Solano, Sterling, and Colonial. Solano and Colonial cross-complained against Sterling for indemnity, contribution, and declaratory relief.
Solano moved for summary judgment in November 2005, asserting all of the District's claims against it were barred under Insurance Code section 1063.1, subdivision (c)(5) (hereafter subdivision (c)(5)), since (1) Villanova was insolvent; (2) CIGA was handling the District's claims against Solano; and (3) the District's insurers—NCSIG, NCR, and ICW—were bringing the complaint as a subrogation action for reimbursement on the amounts they had paid to the District.
The motion was heard by Judge Richard J. Henderson, who denied Solano's motion in part. The court accepted the premise of Solano's motion
The District's claims proceeded to an eight-day bench trial before Judge Leonard J. LaCasse. Pursuant to an earlier off-the-record discussion, the parties agreed Judge Henderson's ruling that the JPA's were not insurance companies or insurance pools under the Guarantee Act would be treated as the law of the case for purposes of the trial, without prejudice to Solano challenging that ruling on appeal. The trial on the District's claims was followed by a half-day trial on Solano's and Colonial's cross-complaints against Sterling.
Following lengthy posttrial proceedings, the trial court found in favor of the District on its breach of contract and negligence claims against Solano and Sterling, but sharply limited Solano's exposure to damages based on the court's interpretation of provisions of the Guarantee Act.
Solano's exposure was further reduced by the court's findings with respect to Sterling's liability. Sterling was found to be jointly and severally liable along with Solano and Colonial for $252,800 of the $389,968 in damages incurred by the District. The lesser figure for Sterling's joint and several liability was based on the limited portions of the school's roof Sterling was working on—and for which it therefore shared responsibility with Solano—
The court also partially shielded Solano from a posttrial ruling awarding prejudgment interest to the District. The District successfully sought prejudgment interest against Solano and Colonial on the theory that the total amount of its damages as to these defendants (but not as to Sterling) was certain for purposes of Civil Code section 3287, subdivision (a), because the amount had been uncontested at trial.
Colonial was found jointly and severally liable for the full amount of the District's damages and award of prejudgment interest. The court found Colonial's performance bond incorporated all of the terms of Solano's contract with the District, including its covenants to maintain the integrity of the roof and restore improvements damaged by the work. The court rejected Colonial's claims that it was entitled to the benefit of Solano's defenses under the Guarantee Act.
We consolidated the ensuing appeals of Colonial (case No. A127186), Solano (case No. A127189), and Sterling (case No. A127244) for purposes of briefing, oral argument and decision.
Solano contends Judge Henderson erred in denying its motion for summary judgment, relying on subdivision (c)(5) and Insurance Code section 1063.1, subdivision (c)(9)(B) (hereafter subdivision (c)(9)(B)).
The issue of whether self-insurers are to be treated as "insurers" for purposes of the Guarantee Act—and thus excluded under subdivision (c)(5) from recovering against CIGA—was squarely considered in Black Diamond Asphalt, Inc. v. Superior Court (2003) 114 Cal.App.4th 109 [7 Cal.Rptr.3d 466] (Black Diamond). Black Diamond Asphalt (Black Diamond) leased two trailers to a truck owner and hired him to haul materials for Black Diamond. (Id. at p. 113.) The contracts required the truck owner to maintain liability insurance naming Black Diamond as an additional insured and to indemnify the company for any liability arising out of the owner's performance of the contracts. (Ibid.) While hauling freight for Black Diamond, the owner was involved in an accident that killed one person and injured another, leading to a tort suit against Black Diamond and the truck owner. (Ibid.) The owner's liability insurer became insolvent and CIGA undertook its obligations. (Ibid.) Black Diamond, which was self-insured for the costs of defense and the first $1 million in damages, sought indemnity against the owner. (Ibid.) The trial court disallowed the claim on the grounds, in part, that subdivision (c)(5) barred an indemnity claim against the insured of an insolvent carrier. (Black Diamond, at pp. 113, 117.)
If there were any doubt about the status of such pools, the Legislature resolved it by expressly declaring in Government Code section 990.8, "[t]he pooling of self-insured claims or losses" by local public agencies "shall not be considered insurance nor be subject to regulation under the Insurance Code." (Id., subd. (c).) This is very broad language. Had the Legislature intended joint authority risk pools to be treated as insurance for some purposes, such as in Insurance Code section 1063.1, but not for others, it would have chosen its words differently. The courts have held in other legal contexts that joint authority risk pools are not to be treated as insurance. (See, e.g., Southgate Recreation & Park Dist. v. California Assn. for Park & Recreation Ins. (2003) 106 Cal.App.4th 293, 297-298 [130 Cal.Rptr.2d 728] [interpretation of coverage]; Schools Excess Liability Fund v. Westchester Fire Ins. Co. (2004) 117 Cal.App.4th 1275, 1285-1286 [12 Cal.Rptr.3d 626] [application of insurer's "`other insurance' clause"]; Orange County Water Dist., supra, 54 Cal.App.4th at pp. 777-780 ["`other insurance' clause"]; South El Monte, supra, 38 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1639-1640 [interpretation of coverage].) Solano fails to establish section 1063.1 requires a different result.
The trial court was correct in holding subdivision (c)(5) did not bar the District's claim against Solano.
For the first time in this appeal, Solano contends subdivision (c)(9)(B) bars the District's claim without regard to whether the JPA's are "insurers" or "insurance pools" for purposes of the Guarantee Act. According to Solano, that subdivision bars any claim for subrogation against the insured of an insolvent carrier, whoever brings such claim. Since all parties stipulated in the trial court that this was a subrogation action brought by the District on behalf of the JPA's, Solano argues the claim is barred even assuming the JPA's are not "insurers" or "insurance pools." Solano maintains that if anyone other than the "original claimant" under the insured's policy has paid the loss,
In response to Solano's summary judgment motion under subdivision (c)(5), the District did not dispute that this was a subrogation action; it only disputed whether the JPA's were insurers or insurance pools. In fact, the District came forward with evidence the District initiated this action against Solano on behalf of the JPA's under the subrogation provisions of the JPA's bylaws and memorandum of coverage, and that its recovery is deemed under those agreements to be the property of the JPA's. In his opening statement to the court at trial, counsel for plaintiff acknowledged the subrogation nature of the claims against Solano and Sterling: "[T]his is a subrogation action. We stepped into the shoes of the District under our memorandum of coverage. We are the joint power[s] association, and we can pursue the District's rights in subrogation to recover the funds we paid from all sources that the District could have collected money from itself." The District did not try this case on the theory that it incurred a direct or indirect financial loss as a result of the self-insurance aspects of its pooling agreements, nor did it prove the amount of such loss.
Other appellate courts have reached the same conclusion. "[T]he language of . . . [subdivision (c)(9)(B)] excluding claims by right of subrogation [is] clear and unambiguous. We need not construe the statute; its meaning is clear—. . . a claim by right of subrogation is not a `covered claim.'" (California Ins. Guarantee Assn. v. Argonaut Ins. Co. (1991) 227 Cal.App.3d 624, 633 [278 Cal.Rptr. 23] (Argonaut); see also California Ins. Guarantee Assn. v. Workers' Comp. Appeals Bd. (2005) 128 Cal.App.4th 307, 315 [26 Cal.Rptr.3d 845].) In E. L. White, Inc. v. City of Huntington Beach (1982) 138 Cal.App.3d 366 [187 Cal.Rptr. 879] (E. L. White), the company's insurer, Royal Globe Insurance Company (Royal Globe), brought an action in subrogation against the City of Huntington Beach after it paid part of two tort judgments entered against the company and the city arising from an accident. (Id. at p. 369.) The city's excess insurer, which would otherwise have been responsible for partially indemnifying Royal Globe, had become insolvent. (Ibid.) The Court of Appeal held Royal Globe could not maintain an action for indemnity against the city, relying in part on the provisions of former subdivision (c)(7) of Insurance Code section 1063.1, now contained in subdivision (c)(9)(B), which it found to be clear and unambiguous: "`[C]overed claims' do not include `any obligations to insurers, insurance pools, or underwriting associations . . .' [citation], nor do they include `any claim by any person other than the original claimant under the insurance policy in his own name . . . [or] any claim asserted by an assignee or one claiming by right of subrogation . . . .' [Citation.] Because Royal Globe is an insurer and because its claim is by right of subrogation, it may not seek payment from CIGA. Such is the clear and unambiguous language of the statute." (E. L. White, at pp. 370-371, italics added; see also Collins-Pine Co. v. Tubbs
For these reasons, we reverse the District's judgment against Solano on its complaint, including its award of prejudgment interest against Solano.
Colonial attacks the judgment on three grounds: (1) the District failed to plead or prove, and the court failed to make findings on essential elements of equitable subrogation; (2) Colonial is entitled to the benefit of any defenses Solano has under the Guarantee Act; and (3) the judgment is inconsistent with Colonial's statutory rights as a surety under Civil Code sections 2845 and 2849.
As the trial court recognized, the facts in this case are not typical. Solano's contract contained numerous provisions requiring it to protect its work and the District's property from rain or moisture damage, and to repair or replace any District property damaged by its work. For example, the contract provided, "Temporary covering of all tear-off areas and responsibility for all damage to buildings and contents are the work of the Re-Roofing Contract. . . ." Solano was required to "[m]aintain continuous temporary protection prior to and during insulation of [the] new roofing system," and "[p]rovide temporary weather tight enclosure of [the] exterior walls . . . as
As a proximate result of Solano's failure to adequately protect the structure, water penetration from the June 2001 rains caused damage to much of Redwood Elementary School's newly remodeled and painted ceilings, insulation, walls, and telephone system, as well as to library books, computer equipment, and other school property and improvements.
Here, Solano defaulted in its contractual covenants to protect the District's property from weather effects, and to repair or replace any District property damaged by its work. These contractual defaults triggered Colonial's liability under the bond.
We turn now to Colonial's claims of error.
As discussed, the District's repair costs in this case were paid for by the JPA's, not by the District itself or by Solano or Colonial. As with the District's claim against Solano, its claim against Colonial proceeded to trial on the premise that this was a subrogation action brought by the District on behalf of the JPA's. Colonial contends the District was therefore required to plead and prove the following eight elements specific to "insurer" subrogation claims: "(1) the insured [here, the District] suffered a loss for which the subrogation defendant [here, Colonial] is liable, either as the wrongdoer whose act or omission caused the loss or because the defendant is legally responsible to the insured for the loss caused by the wrongdoer; (2) the claimed loss was one for which the insurer [here, the joint powers authorities] [were] not primarily liable; (3) the insurer has compensated the insured in whole or in part for the same loss for which the defendant is primarily liable; (4) the insurer has paid the claim of its insured to protect its own interest and not as a volunteer; (5) the insured has an existing, assignable cause of action against the defendant which the insured could have asserted for its own benefit had it not been compensated for its loss by the insurer; (6) the insurer has suffered damages caused by the act or omission upon which the liability of the defendant depends; (7) justice requires that the loss be entirely shifted to the defendant, whose equitable position is inferior to that of the insurer; and (8) the insurer's damages are in a liquidated sum, generally the amount paid to the insured." (Original italics.) These elements are drawn from State Farm General Ins. Co. v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. (2006) 143 Cal.App.4th 1098, 1111-1112 [49 Cal.Rptr.3d 785] (State Farm). Colonial argues in
Colonial did not demur to the District's complaint or file any other motion attacking the sufficiency of the complaint with respect to subrogation. Colonial asserted no defense based on superior equities or lack of primary liability. Prior to the trial of the District's subrogation claim, Colonial's counsel told the court that Colonial's liability depended on a pure issue of law—whether its obligations under the bond were fully performed and discharged when Solano completed the roof work and was paid in full by the District for the job. Counsel represented that Colonial, as distinct from its principal, Solano, had no "role in a factual-based setting," did not intend to cross-examine witnesses, and had "no role at the trial per se in the sense that . . . our principal is being defended." The District's counsel stated during the colloquy that since the JPA's were subrogated to the District's contractual rights against Colonial under the bond, Colonial's liability would be "triggered" if the District could demonstrate the water damage was a product of Solano's failure to perform covenants of its contract with the District. Colonial's counsel did not reply or object to this statement during this colloquy, nor did Colonial suggest it took issue with the District's pleading or proof of any element of subrogation.
Trial testimony took place over eight days ending on April 22, 2009. True to its word, Colonial called no witnesses of its own, introduced no evidence, and conducted only minimal cross-examinations of a few of the witnesses called by the other parties. It never raised the subrogation proof issue by
Colonial did not articulate the position on subrogation it is taking now until October 6, 2009, more than five months after the trial ended, at the conclusion of a hearing held just before judgment was to be entered, to finalize the wording of the court's statement of decision and judgment. The court responded with incredulity. It pointed out the issue had not been raised before and the case had been tried on the premise, seemingly shared by the parties, that the JPA's equitable right to seek subrogation was not in issue. The court said it felt "bushwhacked" because the case had been tried under an apparent agreement between the parties as to the scope of the material issues to be tried, and Colonial was raising an entirely new issue outside that scope.
According to Colonial, Meyers is a controlling precedent in this case and demonstrates as a matter of law the JPA's could not have proven their superior equities relative to Colonial. Under Colonial's analysis, neither the JPA's nor Colonial were wrongdoers, but each had independent contractual liabilities to the District under, respectively, the memorandum of coverage and the performance bond. Following Meyers, the satisfaction by the JPA's of their primary liability does not entitle them to recover from Colonial, as the District's subrogees, upon Colonial's totally different contractual liability to the District. (See Meyers, supra, 11 Cal.2d at p. 102; see also Patent Scaffolding Co. v. William Simpson Constr. Co. (1967) 256 Cal.App.2d 506 [64 Cal.Rptr. 187] (Patent Scaffolding).)
We do not believe the unique facts of this case fit within the superior equities paradigm, at least as to the payments not funded by ICW. First, this is not a typical insurance subrogation case. The JPA's are not insurers who received compensation in return for assuming the District's risks. They are pools formed between self-insured public agencies. Each member agency retains its own risks because, ultimately, it must pay back at least some of the amounts the JPA's advance on its behalf. (Orange County Water Dist., supra, 54 Cal.App.4th at p. 777.) For their part, the JPA's do not make money by accepting risk in return for premiums. They essentially function as nonprofit, depositor-owned banks, extending temporary credit to their member agencies to cover losses. The JPA's are therefore not equivalent to "compensated sureties" who have historically been presumed by courts to have a lesser entitlement (and greater burden of proof) in trying to recoup their losses from third parties than the insured party itself has, because their business profit is based on agreeing to assume such losses.
Second, unlike Meyers and Patent Scaffolding, the subrogor in this case has a substantial stake in its subrogees' recovery. Absent a recovery of the JPA's payments (at least the two payments not reinsured by ICW), the District will not be made whole for its loss because it is required to repay the JPA's in the form of higher contribution rates. To a large degree, the equities to be balanced are not Colonial's versus the JPA's, but Colonial's versus the District's. In our view, a balancing of the equities in this case would not have changed the result.
We therefore reject Colonial's arguments regarding equitable subrogation on substantive as well as procedural grounds.
The trial court found Solano and its surety, Colonial, were jointly and severally liable for the full amount of the District's damages and prejudgment interest. However, pursuant to Insurance Code section 1063.1 and Judge Henderson's ruling on Solano's motion for summary judgment, the court held the District could not collect from Solano the portion of its claim ($150,493.45) that had been reimbursed to the JPA's by solvent reinsurer, ICW, or prejudgment interest on that amount. In addition, applying section 1063.1, subdivision (c)(9)(A),
Colonial argues the trial court erred by denying it the benefit of Solano's CIGA defenses. It relies upon the general rule codified in Civil Code section 2810 that "a surety is entitled to assert as defenses to payment of a surety bond all defenses available to its principal" (Cates, supra, 21 Cal.4th 28, 48), and denies the statutory exceptions to this rule set forth in Civil Code sections 2810 and 2825 apply to Solano's CIGA defenses, as the trial court ruled. As it did in the trial court, Colonial also cites Civil Code section 2809, which specifies in substance that the surety's obligation is no greater than the principal's. According to Colonial, the trial court's rulings denying it Solano's CIGA defenses effectively deprive Solano of those defenses as well. Colonial points out that a surety is entitled by law to reimbursement from its principal for any payments it is required to make upon the principal's default.
Civil Code section 2809 is unavailing. That section provides: "The obligation of a surety must be neither larger in amount nor in other respects more
The application of these sections is illustrated in Gottschalk v. Draper Companies (1972) 23 Cal.App.3d 828 [100 Cal.Rptr. 434] (Gottschalk). The appellants in Gottschalk guaranteed full payment under two promissory notes issued by the buyer of certain real property to the sellers. (Id. at p. 829.) The notes were secured by purchase money deeds of trust that were junior to another encumbrance on the property. (Id. at pp. 829-830.) Due to a foreclosure sale by the trustee of the senior deed of trust, the sellers' security for the two notes was extinguished. (Id. at p. 830.) Since a deficiency judgment against the buyer was unavailable under Code of Civil Procedure section 580b,
The court in Gottschalk held the guarantors would still be liable to the sellers under Civil Code section 2825 even assuming for the sake of analysis the foreclosure sale did terminate the buyer's liability. The court stated: "[W]hile ordinarily whatever discharges the principal debtor will discharge the surety too, this rule does not apply where the discharge is by operation of law or where the defense is personal . . . ." (Gottschalk, supra, 23 Cal.App.3d at p. 831, italics added.) The court found a discharge of the buyer's liability under Code of Civil Procedure section 580b was a discharge by operation of law under Civil Code section 2825: "[A]ny discharge of [the buyer's] liability, if at all, took place by a mere application of the relevant code provision (Code Civ. Proc., § 580b) without any `intervention or omission of the creditor' [(the sellers)]. Since the bar of the remedy against [the buyer] came about by operation of law, the provisions of Civil Code section 2825, are clearly applicable prohibiting appellants from exoneration." (Gottschalk, at pp. 831-832.) The court also observed Code of Civil Procedure section 580b provided a defense personal to the principal debtor, and the guarantors would therefore also be liable under the alternative "`personal defense' test." (Gottschalk, at p. 832.)
Even assuming Solano's CIGA defenses did affect its liability, we would in any event construe them as being personal to Solano and as defenses that apply "by operation of law, without the intervention or omission of [the District]," for purposes of Civil Code section 2825. Insurance Code section 1063.1 protects the insured of an insolvent carrier. Only Solano, not Colonial, has that status. Solano entered that status and became entitled to assert CIGA defenses not as a result of any act by the District or the JPA's, but due solely to the insolvency of its liability carrier. In our view, the trial court correctly held Civil Code sections 2810 and 2825 are inconsistent with Colonial's claim that Insurance Code section 1063.1 afforded Colonial the same protection in this lawsuit that it afforded to Solano.
Colonial also argues the practical effect of denying it Solano's defenses under the Guarantee Act will be to deny Solano those defenses as well, because it will be entitled to reimbursement from Solano for any amounts it has to expend in the future to satisfy the judgment rendered here. Colonial urges that by failing to recognize its right to assert Solano's defenses under the Guarantee Act, we would undermine the policy of the Guarantee Act to protect the insureds of insolvent carriers from loss. We are not persuaded.
First, Colonial is asking this court to assume any loss resulting from finding it liable here will ultimately fall on Solano. In fact, Solano's liability, if any, to Colonial has not yet been adjudicated. This court is not empowered to make speculative assumptions about the likelihood, course, or outcome of future events. Colonial's claim may in fact be a "covered claim" under the Guarantee Act, in which case the loss could fall on CIGA rather than
Second, even assuming the loss would ultimately fall on Solano, that would still not afford Colonial a defense in this action. The Guarantee Act does not protect Solano from any and all liabilities. It protects it only against loss caused by the insolvency of its liability insurer. (See Black Diamond, supra, 114 Cal.App.4th at p. 118.) Solano's future liability to Colonial, if any, arose directly from Solano's own default on its contractual obligations to the District. When that default occurred, Colonial immediately became liable to the District "without demand or notice." (Civ. Code, § 2807.) This was two years before Solano's liability carrier became insolvent. Under the express terms of its bond, Colonial would have had joint and several liability to the District along with Solano even if Villanova had remained solvent.
For these reasons, we affirm the trial court's ruling Colonial is not entitled to Solano's defenses under the Guarantee Act.
Colonial contends the judgment conflicts with its rights under Civil Code sections 2845 and 2849.
We reject Colonial's arguments. First, Colonial raised no issues under Civil Code section 2845 or 2849 in the trial court. To the extent that the applicability of either section might turn on factual questions that could have been explored at trial, Colonial failed to preserve these statutory claims for appellate review. (City of San Diego v. D.R. Horton San Diego Holding Co., Inc. (2005) 126 Cal.App.4th 668, 685 [24 Cal.Rptr.3d 338].)
Second, we would find Civil Code sections 2845 and 2849 inapplicable as a matter of law in any event. Colonial effectively concedes that section 2845 is factually inapplicable in the present case because it made no predicate demand that the District pursue insurance remedies. By the time Colonial was first notified of the District's loss, the District had already obtained payments from the JPA's. By its terms, section 2845 is inapplicable in this circumstance. (See United California Bank v. Maltzman (1974) 44 Cal.App.3d 41, 54 [118 Cal.Rptr. 299] [demand must be made as a prerequisite to maintaining an action under § 2845; appeal is too late to raise demand].)
More fundamentally, both Civil Code sections 2845 and 2849 concern a surety's rights with respect to the creditor's security for the principal's performance: "Sections 2845 and 2849 of the Civil Code giv[e] a surety the benefit of all security held by the creditor for performance of the obligation and the power to require the creditor to proceed against such security . . . ." (Brunswick Corp. v. Hays (1971) 16 Cal.App.3d 134, 138 [93 Cal.Rptr. 635]; see also Wiener v. Van Winkle (1969) 273 Cal.App.2d 774, 786 [78 Cal.Rptr. 761].) Even assuming for the sake of analysis that the JPA funds were in fact true insurance rather than self-insurance, Colonial cites no case treating the creditor's own purchase of loss insurance as "security" for the performance of the principal's obligation. Such a construction is not supported by the words
The trial court did not err in determining Colonial's rights, defenses, and liabilities.
Solano cross-complained against Sterling for contribution, indemnity, and declaratory relief. The premise of the cross-complaint was that Solano and Sterling were jointly and severally liable, along with Colonial, for $252,800 of the $389,968 of the damages awarded. On that premise, Solano contended Sterling would have to satisfy the $252,800 portion of the judgment ahead of Solano under Insurance Code section 1063.1, subdivision (c)(9)(A) because Sterling had "other insurance" available from its solvent liability carrier, Zurich. The trial court agreed with Solano on that point, and additionally ruled Sterling must pay prejudgment interest on the $252,800 award based on its interpretation of the Guarantee Act.
Our ruling reversing the underlying damages award against Solano under Insurance Code section 1063.1 effectively moots the issues decided on Solano's cross-complaint and requires entry of a new judgment dismissing the cross-complaint. We therefore reverse the portions of the judgment addressing the issues raised by Solano's cross-complaint against Sterling, including (1) matters pertaining to the satisfaction on the $252,800 portion of the judgment for which both were found jointly and severally liable along with Colonial and (2) Sterling's liability for prejudgment interest. This does not affect Sterling's joint and several liability, along with Colonial, on the District's complaint in the amount of $252,800, nor does it affect Colonial's liability for the full judgment amount of $389,968 and prejudgment interest thereon.
The judgment on the District's complaint against Solano is reversed, and the judgment on Solano's cross-complaint against Sterling is vacated with directions to enter a new judgment dismissing the cross-complaint as moot. The judgment is affirmed in all other respects. The District is awarded its costs in case No. A127186. Solano is awarded its costs in case No. A127189. Each party shall bear its own costs in case No. A127244.
Marchiano, P. J., and Dondero, J., concurred.