In this case, petitioner, Western Heritage Insurance Company (Western Heritage), provided a defense to its insured, a commercial provider of home health care services, in an action for damages resulting from an automobile accident. The claim arose from an accident in which the insured's employee drove in an allegedly negligent manner and the plaintiffs' decedent, her passenger, was injured. In addition to allegations that the insured's employee negligently caused the accident, it is also claimed that she failed to seek or obtain medical treatment for the decedent following the accident and he later died from his injuries. The claim against the insured was based on the allegation that the employee had been acting in the course and scope of her employment. Thus, the insured's alleged liability was vicarious in nature.
Western Heritage filed a petition for a writ of mandate. We issued an order to show cause and a stay of further trial court proceedings. After a review of the record and the relevant case law, we have concluded that the trial court's order was erroneous. Western Heritage, as an intervener, has the right to assert, on its own behalf, all defenses that otherwise would be available to the insured parties whether as to liability or damages. We will therefore grant the requested writ relief.
This action was filed on May 11, 2009, by plaintiffs (and real parties in interest herein), William Parks and Paula Parks (the Parkses) and the estate of George Brooks Parks (decedent).
On or about August 31, 2007, GHC and decedent entered into a contract pursuant to which GHC agreed to provide decedent with home health care services. In order to induce the execution of the health care agreement, GHC had made certain representations to the Parkses as to the quality of the health care services that would be provided to decedent as well as to the competence of the caregiver employee who would be assigned by GHC to provide those services to decedent.
On September 23, 2008, such agreement was in full force and effect and Reyes was the assigned caregiver. At 4:45 p.m. on that date, Reyes was acting in the course and scope of her employment by GHC and was driving her own vehicle in which decedent was a passenger. At the intersection of Wilshire Boulevard and Stanley Avenue in the City of Los Angeles, Reyes was attempting to make a left turn when her vehicle was struck by the Castellon vehicle. The collision was due to the negligence of both Reyes and the driver of the Castellon vehicle.
After the accident, decedent, who suffered from dementia, complained of head pain. Reyes did not seek or obtain medical treatment for him, but simply took him home, gave him his dementia medication, and put him to bed. The next morning, decedent was found dead. The cause of death was a brain injury that decedent had suffered as a result of the accident.
In addition to the alleged negligence of Reyes in operating her vehicle and failing to obtain medical care, plaintiffs also allege that GHC had represented
Western Heritage had issued a one-year general liability policy to GHC on January 26, 2008, which policy was in effect on the date of the accident. The defense of this action was tendered to Western Heritage on or about May 14, 2009, and the insurer agreed to provide a defense to both GHC and Reyes subject to a reservation of rights.
Subsequent to the filing of Reyes's answer, plaintiffs made requests for discovery from Reyes. In addition, they noticed her deposition. Despite multiple court orders requiring her to do so, Reyes failed to provide verified responses to such discovery requests and failed to appear for her deposition.
On June 14, 2010, Western Heritage filed an ex parte motion seeking leave to file a complaint in intervention in order to protect its own interests in light of the striking of Reyes's answer and the entering of her default. Western
At the time that Western Heritage filed its motion to intervene, plaintiffs' motions in limine were pending. One such motion sought to preclude defendants from disputing Reyes's liability "on her behalf because she is in default and she is not represented." The motion was granted; however, as the motion was made prior to Western Heritage's motion to intervene, Western Heritage never had an opportunity to oppose it. A dispute subsequently arose as to whether Western Heritage would be permitted to litigate the issue of Reyes's liability at trial.
On January 12, 2011, at a hearing intended to resolve the issue of how Western Heritage would be identified at trial,
Thereafter, Western Heritage filed a formal motion in limine, in an effort to persuade the trial court to change its ruling. On April 19, 2011, the trial court reaffirmed its earlier ruling and held that Western Heritage had no greater rights to litigate liability than its insured would have had. As its insured
Western Heritage filed a timely petition for writ relief in this court. We issued an order to show cause and stayed further trial court proceedings.
Western Heritage argues that (1) as an intervening party, its right to litigate all issues cannot be abridged; (2) denial of the right of an intervening insurer to contest liability of a defaulted insured as well as the issue of damages would undermine and defeat the whole purpose of the intervention right; and (3) an intervening insurer is not "subrogated" and thus limited to the rights of its insured, but rather has rights independent of the insured. In opposition, plaintiffs do not attempt to justify the trial court's ruling on the bases on which it was obtained. Instead, they argue, for the first time, that the trial court's ruling can be upheld due to the facts that (1) Western Heritage never filed a formal motion to vacate Reyes's default and (2) Western Heritage was providing a defense to GHC and Reyes under a reservation of rights.
As we explain, we believe that Western Heritage has the better of the argument. As an intervening insurer, its rights do not depend on, nor are they limited by, the rights of the defaulted insured. Thus, it is irrelevant that Western Heritage made no formal set aside motion; nor does it matter that it was providing a defense under a reservation of rights. We will therefore grant Western Heritage's petition for writ relief and will remand with directions.
Thus, for example, insurers have been permitted to intervene when the third party has obtained a default against the insured. (Clemmer v. Hartford Insurance Co. (1978) 22 Cal.3d 865, 884-885 [151 Cal.Rptr. 285, 587 P.2d 1098] (Clemmer); Nasongkhla v. Gonzalez (1994) 29 Cal.App.4th Supp. 1, 3-4 [34 Cal.Rptr.2d 379] (Nasongkhla).) Similarly, an insurer may intervene when its insured's answer has been stricken because its corporate status has been suspended. (Reliance Ins. Co. v. Superior Court (2000) 84 Cal.App.4th 383, 385-387 [100 Cal.Rptr.2d 807] (Reliance).) As the Reliance court explained, "intervention by an insurer is permitted where the insurer remains liable for any default judgment against the insured, and it has no means other than intervention to litigate liability or damage issues." (Reliance, supra, 84 Cal.App.4th at p. 385.)
Thus, it is apparent that the trial court did not err in granting Western Heritage's motion to intervene. Western Heritage had provided a defense to
There are three bases on which Western Heritage contends the trial court's limitation of its intervention right was erroneous: (a) the trial court misperceived the scope of intervention; (b) the entire purpose of allowing an insurer to intervene in an underlying action is to permit it to litigate liability and damages issues its insured is barred from litigating; and (c) the trial court erroneously treated Western Heritage as subrogated to, and thus limited by, Reyes's rights. We discuss each of these arguments separately.
Although, in Deutschmann, the insurer's claim was based on its right of subrogation, the court's reasoning has equal application in this case. Just as a plaintiff's procedural default does not bar the claim of an intervening party aligned with the plaintiff, a defendant's procedural default does not bar the defense of an intervening party aligned with the defendant. A party permitted to intervene is permitted to do so in order to pursue its own interests. Once permitted to intervene, it is a party to the action not bound by other parties' procedural defaults.
This is reflected in the language of the cases. In Reliance, supra, 84 Cal.App.4th 383, the trial court denied the insurer permission to intervene to represent its own interests when its insured could not defend because its corporate status had been suspended. In reversing this order as an abuse of discretion, the Reliance court stated that intervention "will not enlarge the issues in the case, since [the insurer] almost certainly will assert the same defenses which would have been asserted by [its insured] if [its insured]'s corporate status had not been suspended." (Id. at p. 387.) Similarly, in Nasongkhla, the trial court erred in denying an insurer's motion to intervene in an action in which the insured's default had been entered. The reviewing court stated, "unless [the insurer] is allowed to intervene, it may have no other opportunity to litigate fault or damage issues in any action brought by
It is therefore apparent that an intervening insurer is not limited to those defenses to which its insured might be restricted due to the procedural default. The entire purpose of the intervention is to permit the insurer to pursue its own interests, which necessarily include the litigation of defenses its insured is procedurally barred from pursuing.
First, Western Heritage is not here pursuing a subrogation claim. Western Heritage seeks to defend an action against its procedurally defaulted insured, in order to protect its own interests, which are implicated due to section 11580(b)(2). Thus, any law relating to subrogation simply does not apply.
Second, it is not true that insurers pursuing subrogation claims stand in the shoes of their insureds at all times. The language quoted from Kaufman & Broad stating that subrogated insurers stand in the shoes of their insureds was not part of its holding, but was part of its discussion of the law of an earlier case (Truck, supra, 60 Cal.App.4th 342). Truck, in turn, discussed subrogation only in dicta, as Truck was concerned with a claim for equitable contribution. In Truck, two insurers of a suspended corporation sued their insured to rescind their policies. As the insured was suspended, it could present no defense. A third insurer, which had a potential claim for equitable contribution against the two plaintiff insurers, sought to intervene on behalf of the common insured in order to oppose the plaintiff insurers' attempt to rescind their policies. (Id. at pp. 345-346.) The Truck court held that intervention was proper. The court, in dicta, distinguished the situation of an
Having concluded that the trial court's order cannot be upheld on any basis on which it was entered, we now turn to the arguments raised by plaintiffs for the first time in this writ proceeding. Plaintiffs' first such argument is that since Western Heritage did not seek to set aside the default entered against Reyes, it has no basis to complain about the trial court's intervention limitation order. We reject this argument.
The seeds of plaintiffs' argument were planted in Clemmer. In Clemmer, the third party obtained a default judgment against the insured, then brought a direct action against the insurer under section 11580(b)(2). (Clemmer, supra, 22 Cal.3d at pp. 871-872.) The insurer argued that it should not be bound by the amount of the default judgment because it did not have an opportunity to defend. (Id. at p. 884.) The Clemmer court disagreed, noting that, although the insurer might have received notice of the pendency of the action too late for it to bring a motion to intervene, it could have moved to set aside the
As a general rule, the choice between whether to seek intervention or move to set the default judgment aside will be determined by the stage the proceedings have reached when the insurer seeks to become involved. An insurer can move to intervene prior to the entry of judgment, or move to set aside the default judgment if that judgment has already been entered.
Some confusion has entered the law as the result of a case in which an insurer sought permission to both intervene in an action and vacate the default judgment entered against its insured. (Jade K. v. Viguri (1989) 210 Cal.App.3d 1459 [258 Cal.Rptr. 907] (Jade K.).)
Thereafter, the superior court appellate division cited Jade K. for the proposition that "[a]n insurer may, in some circumstances, intervene and set
As discussed above, we have concluded that an intervening insurer is not bound by a default taken against its insured. "`It is an established principle of law that admissions implied from the default of one defendant ordinarily are not binding upon a codefendant who, by answering, expressly denies and places in issue the truth of the allegations thus admitted by the absent party.'"
It makes no logical difference whether the nondefaulting codefendant was originally named as a defendant or joined the action, as in this case, by subsequent intervention. A party's default does not bind nondefaulting codefendants, even when the basis for the action against the codefendants is vicarious liability arising from the acts of the defaulting defendant. Thus, an insurer intervening in an action to pursue its own interests after its insured has defaulted is not required to move to vacate the insured's default as to itself; the insured's default simply has no effect on the insurer.
As their second and final argument in this proceeding, plaintiffs attempt to justify the trial court's order on the basis that Western Heritage was defending Reyes under a reservation of rights. Plaintiffs suggest that permitting Western Heritage to litigate the issue of Reyes's liability under these circumstances would "create an irreconcilable conflict." Plaintiffs are concerned that if Western Heritage litigates Reyes's liability, it may pursue a theory of the case that Reyes was, in fact, liable, but for conduct which falls within a policy exclusion.
Western Heritage's petition for a writ of mandate is granted. Upon remand, the trial court shall vacate its order limiting Western Heritage's intervention right to the contest of damages issues and issue a new and different order directing that Western Heritage may litigate both liability and damages issues. Western Heritage shall recover its costs in this appellate writ proceeding. The stay previously issued shall be vacated upon the filing of the remittitur herein.
Klein, P. J., and Kitching, J., concurred.