J.M. JOHNSON, J.
¶ 1 Albert Boogaard argues that the comprehensive marine liability insurance policy he purchased from International Marine Underwriters (IMU) for his general partnership, ABCD Marine, covers the bodily injuries he suffered while working as an independent contractor for Northland Services Inc. (NSI). Specifically, Boogaard claims that even as a general partner he qualifies and is covered as a third party under the "insured contract" provision of the policy.
¶ 2 We affirm summary judgment in favor of IMU. As a general partner, Boogaard does not qualify as a third party under the "insured contract" provision in accordance with Washington partnership law.
¶ 3 At the time pertinent to this case, Boogaard was one of two partners in ABCD, a Washington general partnership. Boogaard formed ABCD by oral agreement with Wes Dahl in 2000 for the purpose of providing marine welding services. Boogaard and Dahl were both welders and did the majority of their work as independent contractors for the Northland family of companies at Terminal 115 on the Duwamish River in Seattle. Boogaard was the senior partner and took the responsibility on himself to secure insurance and handle all of the partnership's other administrative paperwork.
¶ 4 In August 2001, the supervisor for barge maintenance and repair at Terminal 115 sent the contractors working at the terminal a letter in which he informed them that they would need to provide proof of general liability coverage in the amount of $1,000,000 in order to continue to work at the terminal. Clerk's Papers (CP) at 328. The required proof was a certificate of insurance that in addition to stating the coverage details, had to name and expressly add Naknek Barge Lines LLC (Naknek) and Northland Holdings Inc. (Northland) as additional insureds. Id. In order to comply with this requirement, Boogaard turned to ABCD's insurance broker, Alliance Insurance Corporation. Boogaard took the supervisor's letter directly to Alliance and requested insurance that complied with its requirements. Alliance purchased a policy on ABCD's behalf and issued a certificate reflecting aggregate coverage of $1,000,000 and Naknek and Northland as additional insureds. CP at 330. Alliance issued a similar certificate for the 2002-2003 policy period.
¶ 5 In September 2004, after Naknek was acquired by a Northland entity, the terminal supervisor informed the contractors that they would need to sign a new agreement (Access Agreement) with NSI in order to continue work at Terminal 115. The Access Agreement required ABCD to indemnify NSI for "all bodily and personal injuries to all persons arising out of or resulting from its operations and/or use of the [NSI] [p]roperty, including bodily and personal injuries to its own employees, except if caused by the sole intentional negligence of NSI." CP at 275. The Access Agreement also required ABCD to maintain a general liability policy for $1,000,000 that included an additional insured endorsement naming NSI as an additional insured. Id.
¶ 6 On September 29, 2004, Boogaard was presented with the Access Agreement. CP at 179-80, 274. Boogaard gave it a five-minute review and then personally filled it out and signed it in his capacity as "Senior Partner." Id. Boogaard did not know what an "additional insured" was and thought the insurance he had in place at the time was sufficient. CP at 183. Boogaard did not contact his broker, Alliance, to see if he had to modify his insurance in any way to comply with the requirements detailed in the Access Agreement. Id. Boogaard did not take the Access Agreement to a lawyer or anyone else to see if it required additional insurance.
¶ 7 In October 2004, Boogaard was seriously injured while on the job at Terminal 115
¶ 8 In November 2004, Boogaard and Dahl converted ABCD into a limited liability company (LLC). As a result of the accident, Boogaard realized that as a general partnership he and Dahl were exposed to what he deemed to be an unacceptable amount of personal liability. CP at 170.
¶ 9 In December 2004, acting on behalf of ABCD LLC, Alliance contacted IMU and asked that IMU change ABCD's policy to reflect its new LLC status, issue a certificate of insurance naming NSI as an additional insured, and issue additional insured and waiver of subrogation endorsements. For an additional $250 premium, IMU changed the policy and issued the endorsements as requested effective prospectively starting December 1, 2004. Alliance issued the accompanying certificate on December 10, 2004.
¶ 10 In November 2006, Boogaard filed a lawsuit in King County Superior Court against NSI and the forklift operator. NSI answered and counterclaimed alleging, among other things, breach of the Access Agreement. In March 2007, Boogaard tendered defense of the counterclaims to IMU. IMU accepted the tender under a reservation of rights and appointed additional counsel to work with Boogaard's primary counsel to defend against NSI's counterclaims. In March 2008, the trial court granted NSI summary judgment, ordering Boogaard to indemnify NSI pursuant to the Access Agreement for any amounts he may recover against NSI in the action, including attorney fees and costs. The trial court also found that Boogaard breached the Access Agreement by failing to procure insurance covering NSI.
¶ 11 After the trial court issued the summary judgment order, Boogaard's primary counsel asked IMU if it would be willing to continue to prosecute the appeal of the summary judgment order and if IMU would be covering any of the damages the court awarded NSI. IMU responded by letter on March 20, 2008, that it would continue to provide counsel for an appeal but that it would not agree to cover the damages the court awarded NSI, as IMU had determined that the policy did not cover NSI.
¶ 12 On April 10, 2008, during mediation, NSI and Boogaard reached a settlement agreement in which Boogaard was awarded $600,000 and NSI was awarded $712,022.01 (indemnification for the amount of damages awarded to Boogaard and NSI's attorney fees and costs). CP at 595-96, 740-743. NSI also agreed to pay Boogaard an additional $50,000 in partial satisfaction of the $600,000 judgment against NSI. CP at 596, 743. Boogaard agreed not to execute or enforce his judgment against NSI and to only seek recovery from IMU. CP at 742. The parties further agreed that resolution of the insurance claims, regardless of the outcome of that litigation, would be deemed as satisfaction of the judgments each party had against the other. Id.
¶ 13 On April 28, 2008, IMU filed a complaint for declaratory relief, seeking a judicial determination that there is no coverage under the IMU policy for the NSI counterclaims. In his answer and counterclaim, Boogaard argued that IMU's denial was in bad faith, that there was coverage under the policy for the counterclaims, or in the alternative, that IMU should be estopped from denying coverage and that Boogaard should be awarded treble damages and attorney fees.
¶ 15 In November 2009, IMU moved for partial summary judgment in the declaratory action, asking the court to determine that as a matter of law the IMU comprehensive marine liability policy does not cover the damages resulting from the NSI counterclaims. IMU argued that the policy was intended to cover ABCD and Boogaard's liability to others for the partners' negligence. IMU argues that this intent is manifested by the policy's listing ABCD Marine as the "named insured" and Boogaard as an "insured." CP at 110, 125. IMU acknowledged that there was an "insured contract" exception that would cover the torts of others which cause damage to "third persons or organizations." Id. IMU argued, however, that Boogaard does not qualify as a "third person," under the terms of the policy.
¶ 16 In January 2010, the trial court granted IMU's motion for partial summary judgment, ruling that as a matter of law, the damages arising out of the forklift incident are not covered by the IMU policy. The trial court subsequently denied Boogaard's motion for reconsideration.
¶ 17 Boogaard and ABCD appealed the trial court's summary judgment order and the Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court in a 3-0 decision, holding that Boogaard is not a "third person." Int'l Marine Underwriters v. ABCD Marine, LLC, 165 Wn.App. 223, 232, 267 P.3d 479 (2011). Boogaard and ABCD petitioned for discretionary review, which was granted.
¶ 18 We review summary judgment decisions de novo, engaging in the same inquiry as the trial court. Michak v. Transnation Title Ins. Co., 148 Wn.2d 788, 794-95, 64 P.3d 22 (2003). Summary judgment is proper only where there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Hubbard v. Spokane County, 146 Wn.2d 699, 707, 50 P.3d 602 (2002); CR 56(c).
¶ 19 Interpretation and construction are separate endeavors. When interpreting a contract a court is "`giv[ing] meaning to the symbols of expression used by another person.'" Berg v. Hudesman, 115 Wn.2d 657, 663, 801 P.2d 222 (1990) (quoting 3 ARRTHUR LINTON CORBIN, CORBIN ON CONTRACTS § 532, at 2 (1960)). In contrast, when construing a contract a court is engaging in the "`process by which legal consequences are made to follow from the terms of the contract and its more or less immediate context, and from a legal policy or policies that are applicable to the situation.'" Id. (quoting Edwin W. Patterson, The Interpretation and Construction of Contracts, 64 COLUM. L.REV. 833, 835 (1964)).
¶ 20 During interpretation, a court's primary goal is to ascertain the parties' intent at the time they executed the contract. Berg, 115 Wash.2d at 663, 801 P.2d 222. "[E]xtrinsic evidence is admissible as
¶ 21 When interpreting insurance contracts, courts use the same interpretive techniques employed on other commercial contracts.
¶ 22 If during interpretation a court has determined that an essential provision is ambiguous (susceptible to two different reasonable interpretations), the court must attempt to resolve that ambiguity. Boeing Airplane Co. v. Firemen's Fund Indem. Co., 44 Wn.2d 488, 496, 268 P.2d 654 (1954), overruled on other grounds by Berg v. Hudesman, 115 Wn.2d 657, 801 P.2d 222 (1990); see Farmers Ins. Co. of Wash. v. Grelis, 43 Wn.App. 475, 477, 718 P.2d 812 (1986) (recognizing that determining whether a policy is ambiguous is a matter of law). "Apparent" ambiguities can sometimes be resolved by reading the policy as a whole. Queen City Farms, 126 Wash.2d at 74, 882 P.2d 703, 891 P.2d 718; see also Boeing, 44 Wash.2d at 496, 268 P.2d 654 ("[I]t is the duty of the court to search out the intent of the parties by viewing the contract as a whole and considering all of the circumstances surrounding the transaction."); Kent Farms, Inc. v. Zurich Ins. Co., 140 Wn.2d 396, 400, 998 P.2d 292 (2000) (explaining that courts will interpret policy exclusions in the context of the whole policy). A court, however, may not interpret a policy in such a way that it creates nonexistent ambiguities that result in the policy being construed in favor of the insured. See, e.g., West Am. Ins. Co. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 80 Wn.2d 38, 44, 491 P.2d 641 (1971); McDonald v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 119 Wn.2d 724, 734, 837 P.2d 1000 (1992) (recognizing that just because the policy language is complicated or confusing does not mean the provision in question is ambiguous).
¶ 23 In addition, if there are any undefined terms they will be given their "plain, ordinary, and popular meaning...." Queen City Farms, 126 Wash.2d at 66, 882 P.2d 703, 891 P.2d 718; see also Lynott, 123 Wash.2d at 691, 871 P.2d 146 (holding that undefined exclusionary terms are given their plain, ordinary, and popular meaning). To determine the plain meaning of an undefined term, courts often refer to standard English dictionaries. Queen City Farms, 126 Wash.2d at 77, 882 P.2d 703, 891 P.2d 718 (referring specifically to Webster's Third New International Dictionary (1981)); see Spratt v. Crusader Ins. Co., 109 Wn.App. 944, 949-50, 37 P.3d 1269 (2002) (holding that an expert's affidavit could not be a stand-in for a dictionary definition because it is the role of the court to determine how the average person would understand the policy). If
¶ 24 Boogaard claims that the parties always intended for the policy to cover his injuries. Boogaard argues this is because it was the partnership that signed the Access Agreement, not the partners in their individual capacity, so he is a third party as to NSI and clearly within the scope of the "insured contract" exception. In response, IMU claims that it was clear from the start that the intent of this comprehensive marine liability insurance policy was to protect ABCD, Boogaard, and Dahl from any liability that might result if the partners/partnership injured another party. IMU argues that nowhere in the policy, or the parties' interaction leading up to execution, did either party express an expectation or desire that the policy cover damages stemming from personal injury to the partners themselves.
¶ 25 As explained above, we must look past these present claims of intent in our attempt to ascertain the parties' intent at the time of execution. This was a standard industry policy, so there was not any negotiation before execution. Boogaard, however, did express his purpose for obtaining the insurance when he presented Alliance with the 2001 terminal supervisor's letter that spelled out Northland and Naknek's new insurance requirements for its contractors. According to his deposition testimony, Boogaard presented the terminal supervisor's letter to his broker at Alliance and told her to "[t]ake care of it" so he could get back to work.
¶ 26 Thus, Boogaard intended to obtain the coverage spelled out in the terminal supervisor's letter. The letter shows it was possible that his "intent" was to cover his own personal injuries to the extent that he was injured by an employee of Naknek or Northland, as these entities should have been additional insureds on his policy.
¶ 27 The numerous exclusions relating to liability for injuries to employees or the insureds themselves make it clear that the predominant purpose of this policy was to cover the insured's liability to other entities/persons. The policy covers the insured for (1) bodily injury/property damage liability the insured becomes legally obligated to pay, (2) personal and advertising injury liability the insured becomes legally obligated to pay, and (3) certain medical payments the insured might have to pay. CP at 112-13. Among other exclusions, the policy does not cover the insured for (1) liability as an employer or in any other capacity to its employees; (2) liability to the spouse, child, dependent, etc., of any of its employees arising out of bodily/personal injury to that employee; (3) liability to any other party arising out of bodily/personal injury to any employees, including for indemnity or contribution in tort or contract and any liability of other parties assumed under contract; (4) liability of any employee with respect to bodily/personal injury to another employee; (5) any liability
¶ 28 Significantly, Boogaard and Dahl were aware of other types of insurance that clearly would have covered their work-related personal injuries. CP at 157-58. The fact that Boogaard and Dahl did not purchase labor & industries, longshoreman, or harbor workers' insurance would strengthen the argument that Boogaard thought his personal injuries were covered by the IMU policy if it were not for the fact that Boogaard said the principal reason they did not acquire those policies was that they were told they did not need them in order to work at the terminal. Id. Boogaard's decision to not buy workers' compensation insurance had more to do with the fact that he thought it was not a prerequisite to working at the terminal and not because he thought the IMU policy covered him.
¶ 29 Finally, we must consider the fact that "third party" is not defined in the insured contract exception or anywhere else in the policy. The ultimate issue we are to decide is whether or not Boogaard qualifies as a third party under the "insured contract" exception. We give undefined terms their plain, ordinary, and popular meaning. Queen City Farms, 126 Wash.2d at 66, 882 P.2d 703, 891 P.2d 718. A standard English dictionary defines "third party" as "[A] person other than the principals." WEBSTER'S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 2378 (2002). There is no indication IMU or ABCD/Boogaard intended any other definition for "third party." Thus, a person/entity is a third party as the term is used in the "insured contract" exception if he/she/it is not a principal/party to the indemnity agreement (Access Agreement). There is no ambiguity here.
¶ 30 After interpreting an insurance policy, the court must construe it, i.e., determine its legal effect. See Berg, 115 Wash.2d at 663, 801 P.2d 222. If a court is unable to resolve an ambiguity through interpretation, it must construe the ambiguity in favor of the insured. Queen City Farms, 126 Wash.2d at 68, 882 P.2d 703, 891 P.2d 718; see also George v. Farmers Ins. Co. of Wash., 106 Wn.App. 430, 439, 23 P.3d 552 (2001) ("Exclusionary clauses are narrowly construed for the purpose of providing maximum coverage for the insured."). Consequently, if insurers want exclusions upheld, they have the burden of drafting them in "clear" and "unequivocal" terms.
¶ 31 A "partnership" is an "association of two or more persons to carry on as co-owners a business for profit...." RCW 25.05.005(6). The legislature enacted the Revised Uniform Partnership Act (RUPA) in 1998 to replace the Uniform Partnership Act (UPA), the law governing partnerships in this state since 1945. Laws of 1998, ch. 103 (RUPA); Laws of 1945, ch. 137(UPA). The RUPA differs from the UPA in a number of respects.
¶ 32 Most importantly for this case, the RUPA places an "`increased emphasis on the entity theory [of partnerships] as the dominant model.'" ROBERT W. HILLMAN ET AL., THE REVISED UNIFORM PARTNERSHIP ACT SECTION 201, at 1 (Westlaw Sept. 2012) (quoting Unif. P'ship Act § 201 cmt., 6 pt.1 U.L.A. 91 (1997)). RCW 25.05.050 (UNIF. P'SHIP ACT § 201(a)) states that "[a] partnership is an entity distinct from its partners." The entity theory is one of the two main theories governing the law's treatment of partnerships. The other, aggregate theory, was traditionally applied in the common law and posits that partnerships are "nothing more than a conduit for a collection of individuals." HILLMAN ET AL., supra, author's cmt. 1. Under the aggregate theory, the partnership is not a separate legal personality. Id. The partners own an undivided share of partnership assets and conduct a pro rata share of partnership business. Id. In contrast, under the entity theory, the partnership is "a distinct entity interposed between partners and the partnership assets." Id. Each partner's interest is a "separate bundle of rights and liabilities associated with the partner's participation in the organization, analogous to the interest of a corporate shareholder in shares of stock." Id. "[T]he U.P.A. adopted an entity theory for some purposes, [but] the aggregate theory predominated." Id. The reverse is true for the RUPA. Id.
¶ 33 The RUPA's emphasis on the entity theory was intended to resolve some of the issues stemming from the aggregate theory. Id. For example, under the UPA if someone was added to or withdrew from a partnership, any title had to be conveyed by deed from the "`old'" partnership to the "`new'" partnership. Id. (quoting UNIF. P'SHIP ACT § 201 cmt., 6 pt. 1 U.L.A. 91). Under the RUPA, there is not necessarily a "`new'" partnership just because the membership changes.
¶ 35 Of special significance to this case, the aggregate theory continues to govern the personal liability of partners.
¶ 36 Clearly, our law does not treat ABCD as a distinct entity when it is time for the obligations it incurred under the Access Agreement to be honored. RUPA, through its adoption of the aggregate theory for liability, holds Boogaard and Dahl personally liable. In essence, when ABCD said that it agreed to indemnify NSI, then Boogaard simultaneously and automatically agreed to do the same thing.
¶ 37 Boogaard brings various cases to our attention in his attempt to avoid the conclusion that RUPA does not treat a general partnership as a distinct entity when determining liability. First, Boogaard points us to Cowan Systems, Inc. v. Harleysville Mutual Insurance Co., 457 F.3d 368 (4th Cir.2006). In Cowan, Linens N' Things contracted with Cowan, a corporation, to provide transportation services. Id. at 371. As part of the contract, Cowan agreed to indemnify Linens
¶ 38 Next, Boogaard argues that Truck Insurance Exchange v. BRE Properties, Inc., 119 Wn.App. 582, 81 P.3d 929 (2003) is strong persuasive authority in his favor. In Truck, West Star Construction, a corporation, contracted with BRE Properties, also a corporation, to work as a subcontractor on an apartment project. Id. at 584, 81 P.3d 929. In the contract, West Star agreed to indemnify BRE against certain risks and to obtain a comprehensive general liability policy that would cover both itself and BRE. Id. at 584-85, 81 P.3d 929. West Star obtained a policy that had an "insured contract" provision identical to the provision in the IMU policy. Id. at 587, 81 P.3d 929. West Star made sure BRE was listed as an "additional insured." Id. at 589, 81 P.3d 929. Later, a West Star employee injured by the negligence of a BRE employee sued BRE. Id. at 585, 81 P.3d 929. BRE requested coverage from West Star's insurer and brought a contribution claim against West Star. Id. The insurer filed a declaratory judgment action arguing it did not owe coverage to either party. Id. The court determined that as an "additional insured" BRE was entitled to coverage under the policy and that the indemnification agreement qualified as an "insured contract," so Truck must provide coverage for any indemnification West Star owed BRE. Id. at 592, 595-96, 81 P.3d 929.
¶ 39 Truck, however, does not resolve the issue before us. In Truck, it was again an employee of a corporation, not a partner in a general partnership, filing suit. Moreover, unlike ABCD, West Star complied with its contract by making sure BRE was an "additional insured." The parties agree that if NSI had been listed as an "additional insured" on the policy, there would have been coverage. Furthermore, unlike the insurer in Truck, IMU concedes that the Access Agreement is an "insured contract." Truck does nothing to alter our partnership law and is factually distinct from the present case.
¶ 40 Finally, Boogaard argues that we must deem him a third party because to do otherwise would fly in the face of our decision in McDowell v. Austin Co., 105 Wn.2d 48, 710 P.2d 192 (1985). In McDowell, we upheld a contract that required indemnification of the indemnitee against losses caused by its own negligence when the indemnitor was also negligent. Id. at 54-55, 710 P.2d 192. We said our decision to uphold the contract was consistent with RCW 4.24.115, which prohibits agreements requiring indemnification for the sole negligence of the indemnitee. Id. It is unclear, however, why McDowell is relevant here. The argument that the Access Agreement violated RCW 4.24.115 and McDowell and is therefore unenforceable would have been relevant in the underlying action between ABCD, Boogaard, and NSI, not in this declaratory action involving insurance coverage.
¶ 41 Boogaard contends that ruling in IMU's favor would leave contract workers and small general contractors without a remedy for their jobsite injuries. Boogaard also
¶ 42 First, if Boogaard had honored the contract he had signed with NSI and made NSI an additional insured, there would be coverage for his injuries. Most indemnification agreements of the type signed here require the indemnitor to also acquire comprehensive general liability insurance and place the indemnitee on the policy as an additional insured. Boogaard's own insurance expert acknowledged this fact. See CP at 413 (Decl. Sedillo ¶ 7) ("[I]t is common to require that the indemnitee be included as an additional insured on the indemnitor's liability insurance."). Second, Boogaard consciously decided not to purchase workers' compensation or other similar insurance, undoubtedly in an effort to keep his costs down. Third, as the dearth of case law involving "insured contracts" and partnerships shows, most of the time corporations are involved and employees of corporations are generally not parties to indemnification agreements.
¶ 43 In sum, our partnership law is not interacting with our law regarding indemnification and insurance contracts to create a pit for contract workers and small general contractors. If partnerships like ABCD honor their contracts and/or obtain first-party insurance for their partners, they will be covered for these types of injuries.
¶ 44 If we hold that Boogaard was not a party to the Access Agreement, in essence treating ABCD as if it were a corporation or an LLC, we would contradict the RUPA and further confuse our state's law governing business organizations. A general partnership is assumed as the default business organization. We require individuals interested in forming limited liability entities to register with the state as such and comply with additional requirements in part to provide fair warning to others with whom they interact. Corporations and partnerships have different corporate structures, rules and liabilities that warrant different treatment. Boogaard signed the Access Agreement and in doing so bound both him and the partnership.
¶ 45 The IMU policy was never intended to cover Boogaard's personal injuries. Moreover, Washington's partnership law, the RUPA, clearly treats a general partnership as an aggregation of its partners for purposes of determining liability. Consequently, when Boogaard signed the Access Agreement he was binding both himself and the partnership and cannot be considered a "third party" to that agreement. We affirm summary judgment in favor of IMU because, as a matter of law, Boogaard does not qualify as a third party under the "insured contract" exception in the IMU comprehensive marine liability insurance policy. Accordingly, Boogaard's request for attorney fees pursuant to Olympic Steamship Co. v. Centennial Insurance Co., 117 Wn.2d 37, 811 P.2d 673 (1991) and RCW 48.30.015 is denied.
WE CONCUR: MADSEN, C.J., and OWENS, J.
WIGGINS, J. (concurring).
¶ 46 I agree with the result the lead opinion reaches but would resolve this case much more simply. We must answer a straightforward question: was Albert Boogaard a "third person" to the indemnification agreement he signed as a general partner of ABCD Marine, as the term "third person" is used in ABCD's insurance policy with International Marine Underwriters (IMU)?
¶ 47 IMU issued an insurance policy covering ABCD and its partners for liability arising out of bodily injury and property damage. The policy expressly excluded from coverage bodily injury or property damage "for which the insured is obligated to pay damages by reason of the assumption of liability in a contract or agreement." Clerk's Papers at 114. However, the policy excepted from this exclusion any liability assumed in an "`insured contract,'" id., which the policy defined as "[t]hat part of any other contract or agreement pertaining to your business ... under which you assume the tort liability of
¶ 48 Unlike the lead opinion, I believe that Cowan Systems, Inc. v. Harleysville Mutual Insurance Co., 457 F.3d 368 (4th Cir.2006), is instructive in determining the identity of a third party to an indemnification agreement. The importance of Cowan is not that it involved an employee of a corporation rather than a partner of a general partnership, see lead opinion at 26-27, but that for the purposes of interpreting an insured contract clause, courts should look to whether the injured person is a third person as to the indemnified party. Cowan, 457 F.3d at 373 ("Because Cowan was assuming Linens N Things' tort liability to Shaffer and because Shaffer was a `third person' with respect to Linens N Things, the conditions of contractual coverage were satisfied." (emphasis added)). Thus, following Cowan's lead, the question that resolves this case is whether Boogaard, the injured party, was a third person as to NSI, the indemnified party.
¶ 49 This question is easily resolved in the negative. When ABCD entered into an indemnity agreement with NSI, ABCD undertook an obligation to hold NSI harmless for all injuries and property damage resulting from ABCD's operations on NSI's property. Because "all partners are liable jointly and severally for all obligations of the partnership," RCW 25.05.125(1), ABCD's indemnification obligation was also Boogaard's. Boogaard was therefore not a third party as to NSI.
¶ 50 Because Boogaard did not qualify as a third person, the indemnification agreement between ABCD and NSI was not an insured contract. Thus, the coverage exclusion applies to Boogaard's injury and IMU owes ABCD no coverage.
¶ 51 Because the lead opinion unnecessarily complicates the issues presented by this case, I join its opinion only insofar as it is consistent with the foregoing analysis.
¶ 52 I concur.
C. JOHNSON, J. (dissenting).
¶ 53 Both the lead opinion and concurrence misunderstand the nature of the partnership and the effect that a general partner's joint and several liability has in relationship to agreements entered into on behalf of the partnership. Because both opinions ignore clear statutory guidance on the relationship of partners vis-a-vis the partnership and the roles partners take when acting on behalf of the partnership, I dissent.
¶ 54 That a partnership is an entity apart from the general partners cannot be seriously contested. RCW 25.05.050 ("A partnership is an entity distinct from its partners."). The distinction between partner and partnership is given practical effect throughout the Revised Uniform Partnership Act (RUPA), chapter 25.05 RCW. A partnership can acquire property and that property "is property of the partnership and not of the partners individually." RCW 25.05.060. In fact, the partner is not even considered co-owner of any partnership property. RCW 25.05.200. Similarly, a creditor cannot go after the partners' assets individually without first liquidating the partnership's assets and must obtain a separate judgment against the partners. RCW 25.05.130. Nor can a creditor of an individual partner recover against the partnership for debts incurred outside of the ordinary course of the partnership's business. RCW 25.05.120. We interpret related statutes consistently and the lead opinion's attempt to follow the aggregate theory in only the liability context ignores RUPA's consistent and bright-line treatment of the partnership as a separate entity.
¶ 56 Understanding that any liability that might be incurred by Boogaard necessarily flows through the partnership and to him as a partner and not as an agent of the partnership demonstrates why both the concurrence and lead opinion are mistaken to distinguish Cowan Systems, Inc. v. Harleysville Mutual Insurance Co., 457 F.3d 368 (4th Cir.2006). The lead opinion distinguishes Cowan based on the fact that there was a corporation there and a partnership here. But this distinction is only meaningful if the aggregate theory of the partnership is adopted and, as discussed above, RUPA treats partnerships as entities separate from the partners. The concurrence rightfully acknowledges that the choice of entity does not distinguish Cowan, but then goes on to reason that because Boogaard might be liable as a partner, he was a party to the indemnity agreement and therefore not a third party. This reasoning is flawed, however, because a partner's liability flows through the entity and requires a separate judgment. Accordingly, both opinions misapply Cowan, a case which is factually on point and should guide our resolution of the current case.
¶ 57 Because the lead opinion and concurrence's finding that Boogaard was a party to the indemnity agreement is based on a misunderstanding of how joint and several liability might be applied and an erroneous interpretation of RUPA, I respectfully dissent and would reverse the grant of summary judgment to the insurer.
We Concur: Debra L. Stephens, Sheryl Gordon McCloud, and Steven C. González, Justices. C. Johnson, Justice, dissents.