CONNOLLY, J.
In this declaratory judgment action, Federated Service Insurance Company (Federated) sought a determination that under its policy with Sadler Line Construction, Inc. (Sadler), it had no duty to defend or indemnify Alliance Construction, Inc. (Alliance). Sadler was a subcontractor of Alliance. The district court granted summary judgment to Federated. We reverse the judgment and remand the cause for further proceedings.
In June 2005, Sadler signed a subcontract agreement with Alliance to provide services on a construction project to widen an intersection in Omaha, Nebraska. An insurance procurement clause required Sadler to purchase specific insurance coverages and to make Alliance an additional insured on Sadler's coverages for commercial general liability (CGL) and umbrella/excess liability. The subcontract also provided that Sadler's insurance would be primary to any other applicable insurance maintained by Alliance or the project owner. A separate indemnity clause required Sadler to indemnify and hold Alliance harmless from any liability for personal injuries or property damages, even if Alliance's active or passive negligence caused the loss. The only exception was for liability arising from Alliance's sole negligence.
Sadler's CGL coverage with Federated contained a "Contractual Liability" provision. It provided coverage for liability that Sadler had assumed through a contract if the contract met Federated's definition of an "`insured contract.'" The definition included Sadler's agreement to assume another party's tort liability in a business contract. But it specified that
In 2005, Danny O'Neall was injured while working for Sadler on the jobsite. In 2007, he filed a negligence action against Alliance, Sadler, the project owner, and the Department of Roads. Federated agreed to defend Alliance in the O'Neall suit subject to a reservation of rights. O'Neall's complaint named Sadler in the action, to comply with Neb.Rev.Stat. § 48-118.01 (Reissue 2010). That section of the Nebraska Workers' Compensation Act requires an employee or employer to give notice to other potential parties before bringing an action against a third person so that the other parties have an opportunity to join the action.
In its declaratory judgment action against Alliance, Federated alleged that it had no duty to defend or indemnify Alliance against O'Neall's personal injury action. Federated alleged that O'Neall had not sued Sadler for independent acts of negligence. It claimed that a limitation and exclusion in the additional insured endorsement precluded coverage. In addition, Federated alleged that under Neb. Rev.Stat. § 25-21,187(1) (Reissue 2008), it had no duty to defend or indemnify Alliance. Section 25-21,187(1) is Nebraska's anti-indemnity statute. It sets out the circumstances under which an agreement to indemnify another party for the promisee's own negligence is void as against public policy. But it contains an exception for insurance contracts.
Alliance, Sadler, and Federated all moved for summary judgment. The court overruled Alliance's and Sadler's motions and granted Federated's motion.
Alliance argued that Federated was obligated to indemnify it under the contractual liability provision of Sadler's CGL coverage. Although § 25-21,187 rendered the indemnity clause void, Alliance argued that Sadler's agreement in the subcontract to procure insurance to cover Alliance's own liability was an insurance contract under § 25-21,187's exception. The court rejected that argument.
The court also ruled that Alliance was not entitled to additional insured coverage under the endorsement. It concluded that the limitation in the endorsement precluded that coverage. The limitation in paragraph B of the endorsement provided, "Coverage shall not exceed the terms and conditions that are required by the terms of the written agreement to add any insured, or to procure insurance." The court concluded that under the limitation, the additional insured coverage was limited by the requirements of the subcontract's insurance procurement clause.
The court determined that under this court's case law, the subcontract could only validly require Sadler to obtain insurance coverage for losses caused by Alliance's own negligence in two circumstances: (1) The subcontract contained express language to that effect, or (2) the subcontract contained clear and unequivocal language that the parties intended Sadler to obtain such insurance. The court concluded that the subcontract did not satisfy the express language requirement. It also rejected Alliance's argument that the court should consider the indemnity clause as evidence that the parties intended Sadler to obtain insurance coverage for Alliance's own negligence. Accordingly, the court
Alliance assigns that the district court erred as follows:
(1) determining that the subcontract did not require Sadler to insure Alliance for its direct acts of negligence;
(2) determining that the Federated policy did not insure Alliance for its direct acts of negligence;
(3) entering an inconsistent order by concluding that Federated had insured Alliance under the policy for its vicarious liability but that Federated had no duty to defend and indemnify Alliance in the personal injury suit; and
(4) overruling Alliance's motion for summary judgment.
The interpretation of an insurance policy presents a question of law that we decide independently of the trial court.
When adverse parties have each moved for summary judgment and the trial court has sustained one of the motions, the reviewing court obtains jurisdiction over both motions. The reviewing court may determine the controversy that is the subject of those motions or make an order specifying the facts that appear without substantial controversy and direct such further proceedings as the court deems just.
Alliance contends that the court erred in determining that the additional insured endorsement did not cover loss caused by its own negligence. Federated counters that it had no duty to indemnify or defend Alliance because the coverage was either precluded by a limitation in the endorsement or excluded under a "sole negligence" exclusion in the endorsement.
We begin by stating some familiar principles for claims involving an insurer's duties to indemnify and to defend. We construe insurance contracts like other contracts, according to the meaning of the terms that the parties have used. When the terms of an insurance contract are clear, we give them their plain and ordinary meaning as a reasonable person in the insured's position would understand them.
Whether an insurer has a duty to indemnify and defend an insured depends upon whether the insured's claimed occurrence falls within the terms of the insurer's coverage as expressed in the policy.
A court must initially measure an insurer's duty to defend an action against the insured by the allegations in the complaint against the insured.
So an insurer has a duty to defend its insured whenever it ascertains facts that give rise to the potential of liability under the policy.
%As noted, paragraph B of the additional insured endorsement provided, "Coverage shall not exceed the terms and conditions that are required by the terms of the written agreement to add any insured, or to procure insurance." The court correctly concluded that this language limited the coverage available to Alliance to the coverage that Sadler had agreed to provide under the subcontract's insurance procurement clause. But it erred in concluding that the subcontract's insurance procurement clause was insufficient to show that the parties intended Sadler to insure against Alliance's negligence.
As noted, the insurance procurement clause required Sadler to make Alliance an additional insured. Federated argues that the clause is like the one that we considered in Anderson v. Nashua Corp.
Citing previous case law, we held in Anderson that a party to a construction contract (the promisee) may require a subordinate party (which could be a general contractor or subcontractor) to insure losses caused by the promisee's own negligence in two circumstances: if the contract contains (1) express language to that effect or (2) clear and unequivocal language shows that that is the intention of the parties. In Anderson, a property owner
In Anderson, we concluded that the clause did not contain express language requiring the contractor to provide insurance to cover loss caused by the property owner's negligence. We further concluded that the same clause did not contain clear and unequivocal language that the parties intended the contractor to insure the owner against its own negligence. So we implicitly concluded that coverage for claims that arose out of the contractor's work did not clearly require the contractor to insure against the property owner's own negligence. We did not interpret the "arise out of" language to clearly include the property owner's negligence that would not have occurred but for the contractor's work on the property.
We recognize that in interpreting liability insurance policies, we have stated that the phrase "arising out of" is broad and comprehensive and requires only "but for" causation.
In contrast, in Anderson, our analysis of the construction contract was governed by case law requiring clear and unequivocal language showing the parties' intent. As the case illustrates, we apply this higher standard because if a contract clearly requires a subordinate party to insure against the promisee's negligence and the subordinate party fails to do so, the subordinate party will be liable for the promisee's damages for its own negligence. And so we declined to interpret the "arise out of" language as clearly requiring the contractor to insure against the property owner's negligence. But the provision that we considered in Anderson is significantly different from a requirement that a subordinate party make a promisee an additional insured on the subordinate party's CGL policy.
Subject to restrictions in the additional insured endorsement, an additional insured has the same coverage rights and obligations as the principal insured under the policy.
It is common practice in construction contracts for owners and general contractors to shift the risk of liability for injuries sustained by a subordinate party's employees to the subordinate party's insurer.
In sum, Sadler's agreement to make Alliance an additional insured on its CGL policy unequivocally showed that the parties intended for Sadler to procure tort liability coverage for Alliance's negligence. Further, the limitation in the additional insured endorsement provided that the coverage would not exceed "the terms of a written agreement to add any insured, or to procure insurance."
Alliance was covered under Sadler's blanket endorsement for additional insureds, as distinguished from an endorsement that names a specific entity or person as an additional insured. In the blanket endorsement, paragraph A extended coverage to "[a]ny person or organization... for which you [Sadler] have agreed by written contract to procure bodily injury or property damage liability insurance, arising out of operations performed by you [Sadler] or on your behalf...."
Alliance contends that the court erred in failing to interpret the "arising out of" language in the indemnity provision to extend coverage to Alliance for its own negligence.
Federated relies on a federal district court case in which the court considered an additional insured endorsement that was more restrictive. The endorsement specifically limited an additional insured's coverage to "`LIABILITY FOR THE CONDUCT OF THE NAMED INSURED.'"
We agree with these courts. O'Neill would not have been injured but for performing work for Sadler's operations. Interpreting the "arising out of" language in the additional insured endorsement to require only a simple causal relationship to the principal insured's operations is consistent with our reasoning in interpreting other liability policies. We also note that the insurance industry issued a new additional insured endorsement in 2004 in response to courts' interpreting the "arising out of" language to require only "but for" causation.
We conclude that because Sadler's employee was injured while performing work for Sadler, the accident arose out of Sadler's operations even if Sadler was not negligent. Accordingly, paragraph A of the additional insured endorsement provides direct primary coverage for Alliance's own negligence, not just its vicarious liability. Federated's interpretation of the coverage provision is without merit.
Federated argues that the "sole negligence" exclusion in the endorsement bars coverage to Alliance for a loss caused by its own negligence. Paragraph D of the endorsement excluded coverage for bodily injury or property damage "arising out of the sole negligence of" the additional insured. This exclusion is relevant both to Federated's duty to indemnify and its duty to defend. But the insurer has the burden to prove that an exclusion applies,
We conclude that the parties, by requiring Sadler to name Alliance as an additional insured on its CGL policy, intended that Sadler would insure against loss caused by Alliance's negligence. We also determine that Sadler's additional insured endorsement, which provided coverage for liability arising out of Sadler's operations, was broad enough to include coverage for Alliance's negligence even if Sadler was not negligent. We reverse the judgment and remand the cause for further proceedings on the application of the "sole negligence" exclusion in the endorsement.
REVERSED AND REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS.
WRIGHT, J., not participating.