Queen Villas Homeowners Ass'n v. TCB Property Management
(2007) 149 Cal.App.4th 1
COUNSEL
Stuart W. Knight for Plaintiff and Appellant.
Gates, O'Doherty, Gonter & Guy, K. Robert Gonter, Jennifer C. Lyons
and Gina Y. Kandarian-Stein for Defendants and Respondents. [149 Cal.App.4th 3]
OPINION
SILLS, P. J.-
I. Background
Jacqueline Wilburn was a member of the board of directors of the Queen
Villas Homeowners Association in Inglewood. Allegedly (at least
according to her) the condominiums suffered a variety of construction
defects and Wilburn, thinking she had special skills in the management
of plaintiffs' construction defect litigation, "agreed to provide
extraordinary services" to "facilitate that litigation," including
selecting and communicating with counsel, and coordinating the
litigation on the association's side. She was paid for her "services"
from the association checking account, allegedly with the knowledge and
at least tacit agreement of the association's property management
company, TCB Property Management, which is the dba of Laura Dawson. The
property management company maintained the association's checking
account and checkbook.
A dispute has arisen, and is the subject of the instant litigation, however, as to whether Wilburn was properly
paid or whether the property management company, in control of the
checkbook, had a duty to thwart Wilburn's self-dealing or at least blow
the whistle on it. According to the complaint filed by the association,
TCB Property Management breached at least two of its contractual duties
to the association: (1) to require the signature of two board members on
all association expense checks; and (2) to furnish a monthly financial
report to the board including check registers and expense [149 Cal.App.4th 4]
statements. The result was, according to the association, Wilburn's de
facto embezzlement of about $134,000 of association money.
The property management company brought a summary judgment motion based
on (among other things) the indemnity clause in the agreement between it
and the association. Actually, we should say "clauses" because if one
examines the copy of the contract appended to the complaint (in our
record, the second amended complaint), the subject of indemnity is
covered in two sections, once as paragraph F under the heading of
"Section II - Financial Management" fn. 1
and again in the second paragraph under C in the heading "Section IV -
Insurance and Indemnification." Here is the text of Section II,
paragraph F: "Association agrees to indemnify, defend and hold agent and
its employees, Agents, officers, and directors harmless against any and
all claims, costs, suits, and damages, including attorneys fees arising
out of the performance of this agreement or in connection with the
management and operation of the Association, including claims, damages,
and liabilities for injuries suffered, or occurrences of death or
property damage relating to the property, excluding any claims or
liabilities arising out of the sole negligence or willful misconduct of
Agent or its employees. The indemnification language set forth above,
shall survive the termination of the Agreement."
We should also add that the first paragraph under C in the heading
"Section IV - Insurance and Indemnification" contains pretty much the
same language, and for some reason it appears as a quotation in the
contract, as if it was blocked out from the facts in some published
opinion or other source and simply dropped into the contract. Here is
that language, including the recognition that it itself is a quotation:
"'In accordance with Civil Code Section 2772, et seq., as it is amended
from time to time, the Association hereby agrees to indemnify, hold
harmless and defend Agent and its employees, agents, officers and
directors against any loss, liability, damage, claim, demand, suit, or
course of action [sic: probably meant "cause of action"] arising from
Agent's performance of its duties and obligations under this Agreement,
or when acting upon the express authorization of the Association and its
Board of Directors, or when Agent within the course and scope of duties
enforces the Association's governing documents against violators. The
Association will also defend and hold Agent harmless for any action
taken by Agent which is directly or indirectly related [to] this
Agreement." [149 Cal.App.4th 5]
The trial court granted the motion for summary judgment based on the
indemnity clause quoted above as paragraph F under Section II, also
concluding that the property manager's negligence only constituted
"passive" negligence, and further that, as pled, the damages sustained
by the association were not solely the property manager's fault. The association now appeals from the ensuing judgment.
II. Discussion
[1] "Indemnification agreements ordinarily relate to third party claims." (Myers Building Industries, Ltd. v. Interface Technology, Inc. (1993) 13 Cal.App.4th 949,
969.) Thus we have no doubt, for example, that if a third-party visitor
to the Queen Villas complex tripped over a shovel left out by a
gardener hired by the management company, and then sued the management
company for negligent hiring, the management company would invoke the
indemnity -- and in that case properly so -- for protection against the
suit.
Here, however, the management company seeks to conscript the
indemnification agreement in this case into a direct, two-party
exculpatory clause, as happened in Rooz v. Kimmel (1997) 55 Cal.App.4th 573.
Because this case deals with a two-party situation where one party
asserts that a contract purportedly releases it of all liability to the
other, cases involving when classic three-party indemnification clauses
may or may not operate in light of an indemnitee's negligence are not
relevant. (E.g., Rossmoor Sanitation, Inc. v. Pylon, Inc. (1975) 13 Cal.3d 622; Goldman v. Ecco-Phoenix Elec. Corp. (1964) 62 Cal.2d 40.)
[2] In fact, bogging down in the issue of sole versus non-sole or active versus passive negligence only obscures the fact that this
is a two-party exculpatory clause case Where a two-party contract
purportedly releases one side from liability to the other (e.g., Saenz v. Whitewater Voyages, Inc. (1991) 226 Cal.App.3d 758
[contract in which plaintiff's decedent expressly assumed the risk of
white water rafting and relieved defendant rafting company of
liability]), courts must look for clear, unambiguous and explicit
language not to hold the released party liable. As the Saenz
court nicely put it: "Everyone agrees that drafting a legally valid
release is no easy task. Courts have criticized and struck down releases
if the language is oversimplified, if a key word is noted in the title
but not the text, and if the release is too lengthy or too general, to
name a few deficiencies. . . . However, we must remember that '[t]o be
effective, a release need not achieve perfection.... It suffices that a
release be clear, unambiguous, and [149 Cal.App.4th 6] explicit, and that it express an agreement not to hold the released party liable for negligence.'" (Id. at p. 765, quoting National & Internat. Brotherhood of Street Racers, Inc. v. Superior Court (1989) 215 Cal.App.3d 934, 938.)
In other words, exculpatory clauses are construed against the released party. (E.g., Bennett v. United States Cycling Federation (1987) 193 Cal.App.3d 1485,
1490 ["'courts have strictly construed the terms of exculpatory clauses
against the defendant who is usually the draftsman'"]; Philippine Airlines, Inc. v. McDonnell Douglas Corp. (1987) 189 Cal.App.3d 234,
237 ["The law generally looks with disfavor on attempts to avoid
liability or to secure exemption for one's own negligence. . . . The law
requires exculpatory clauses to be strictly construed against the party
relying on them."]; Salton Bay Marina v. Imperial Irrigation Dist. (1985) 172 Cal.App.3d 914, 932 [same]; Celli v. Sports Car Club of America, Inc. (1972) 29 Cal.App.3d 511, 518-519.)
The property management company cites us to only one case where a party obtained exculpation from an "indemnity" clause, Rooz v. Kimmel, supra, 55 Cal.App.4th 573. Our own research has turned up no other. fn. 2
Rooz, however, merely illustrates an extreme end of the rule of
strict construction: If parties go out of their way and say "we really,
really mean it," language clearly contemplating exculpation may be
enforced.
While the facts in Rooz are a thicket of complications arising
out of a "1031 exchange" between the owners of two office buildings, we
can sketch them in this paragraph. As part of the exchange the plaintiff
was to receive consideration in the form of a deed of trust on yet
another building, which we will call the "third building." The plaintiff
was a bit cheap, though, and rather than open a formal escrow and
purchase title insurance, insuring that his deed of trust would have a
guaranteed second position (see Rooz, supra, 55 Cal.App.4th at p.
590) on that third building, he asked a title company (which was
simultaneously handling the other party's acquisition of that building)
to simply record the trust deed on the property when the other party
actually acquired it. The title officer explained to the plaintiff that
the title company would only record the deed of trust as an
"accommodation," and moreover [149 Cal.App.4th 7] required the
plaintiff to sign an indemnification agreement which specifically
recited the recording of the deed as an accommodation "'with no title or
escrow liability.'" (Id. at p. 578.) The indemnity agreement
also specifically recited the absence of benefit otherwise derived by
the title company, and the reluctance of the title company to "'carry
out'" the recording unless indemnified. (Id. at p. 585.)
However, when the other party's escrow on the new building closed, the
other party delayed in giving the title company permission to record the
deed. In fact, the other party used the period of delay to encumber the
third building with another $1.5 million in other loans. That meant
that when the plaintiff's deed of trust was eventually recorded, it was
already subject to more than $2 million in encumbrances. When the real
estate recession of the early 1990's hit, the property was sold, and the
plaintiff lost the value of the deed of trust. (Rooz, supra, 55 Cal.App.3d at pp. 579-580.)
The plaintiff sued the title company to recover his loss, based on the
delay in the "accommodation" recording. That brought the indemnity
agreement to the fore. After a bench trial the court absolved the title
company of liability based on the indemnity agreement, and the appellate
court upheld the judgment. The appellate court noted that "strictly
speaking" the indemnity clause was being applied as a release of
liability clause. (Rooz, supra, 55 Cal.App.4th at p. 582.) Even
so, the court upheld that application -- and in fact made a point of
doing so regardless of whether the title company's negligence was
"active" or "passive." (See id. at p. 586.) The point was that the "commercial reality of the accommodation recording" showed that the parties intended for the indemnity clause to release the defendant title company. (Id. at p. 586.)
The Rooz court gave two reasons for its conclusion that the
parties intended exculpation: (1) The title company "made it clear" that
the service it was to provide was a "'favor.'" (Rooz, supra, 55
Cal.App.4th at p. 586.) (2) The title company "made it clear" that it
would undertake the service "only" if the plaintiff agreed to exonerate
it from all liabilities arising (specifically) out of the recording. (Ibid.) Under such circumstances the alternative of not enforcing the indemnity clause would deprive the title company of the benefit of its bargain. (Ibid.)
[3] In the case before us, in contrast to Rooz, there are no
indicia in terms of the "commercial reality" or the "benefit of the
bargain" received by the defendant that would require a court to
interpret the words "indemnify" or "hold harmless" here beyond the usual
context of third party indemnification.
In fact, quite the contrary: The contract fixed specific duties
regarding the management of the association's checking account upon the
management [149 Cal.App.4th 8] company for a consideration. The
tasks were not being done as a favor. There are no references in the
language of the indemnity agreement (in contrast to Rooz) to the
specific risk associated with the checkbook management services. And the
reference in the indemnity agreement to "sole negligence" -- and there
was no such language in the part of the indemnity agreement quoted in Rooz (see id.
at pp. 585-586) --underscores the purpose of this indemnity agreement
as a classic third party indemnity agreement. The "sole negligence"
clause points the reader to the fact that there will be, at least in
theory, situations where the property management company might not be indemnified if it were sued by a third party.
On top of all of this, there is the reductio ad absurdum of the property
management company's position vis-à-vis the association's contract
claims (as distinct from negligence claims). Under the property
management company's interpretation, it could just outright plain fail
to do any work at all for the association, such as hiring a gardening
company or arranging for insurance or the typical things that property
managers do, and the clause would protect it even from a breach of
contract action by the association for having paid for services never
performed.
That leaves only the property management company's emphasis on the words
"hold harmless" as somehow accomplishing the task of exculpation
despite any other indicia of intent to exculpate.
In passing, at least two California cases have observed that the words
"hold harmless" are synonymous with third-party indemnity situations.
(See Building Maintenance Service Company v. AIL Systems, Inc. (1997) 55 Cal.App.4th 1014, 1029 and Myers Building Industries, Ltd. v. Interface Technology, Inc. (1993) 13 Cal.App.4th 949, 968-969.)
The fountainhead of these observations is Varco-Pruden, Inc. v. Hampshire Constr. Co. (1975) 50 Cal.App.3d 654. In Varco-Pruden
a subcontractor agreed to build a building for a general contractor,
and part of their agreement was the general contractor's agreement with
the owner that the general contractor would hold the owner "free and
harmless from any and all losses." (Id. at p. 660.) The word "indemnify" was not part of the agreement. (See id. at pp. 659-660.)
When a fire broke out during construction, various amounts to compensate
for the expenses incurred by the general contractor were deducted from
the amount the general contractor paid the subcontractor, and the
subcontractor sued for the difference. The general contractor asserted
the "free and harmless" language as a defense and obtained summary
judgment. In reversing the summary judgment and concluding that the
clause did not impose any [149 Cal.App.4th 9] liability on the
plaintiff subcontractor, the appellate court reasoned that the clause
only applied "to claims made by third parties." (Varco-Pruden, supra, 50 Cal.App.3d at p. 660, relying on Dixie Container Corporation v. Dale (1968) 273 N.C. 624, 160 S.E.2d 708, 711.)
[4] However, neither Building Maintenance Service Company nor Myers Building Industries nor Varco-Pruden
addressed the possible problem of textual surplusage that arises if one
treats "hold harmless" as synonymous with "indemnify." When two words
are used in a contract, the rule of construction is that the words have
different meanings (e.g., ACL Technologies, Inc. v. Northbrook Property & Casualty Ins. Co. (1993) 17 Cal.App.4th 1773,
1785 ["In California, however, contracts -- even insurance contracts --
are construed to avoid rendering terms surplusage."]; but see Civ.
Code, § 3537 ["Superfluity does not vitiate."].)
[5] Are the words "indemnify" and "hold harmless" synonymous? No. One is offensive and the other is defensive -- even though both
contemplate third-party liability situations. "Indemnify" is an
offensive right -- a sword -- allowing an indemnitee to seek
indemnification. "Hold harmless" is defensive: The right not to be bothered by the other party itself seeking indemnification.
Let us illustrate: As every veteran of construction defect litigation
and every judge who ever picked up a hefty construction defect file
knows, in third-party situations there is usually a blizzard of
cross-complaints seeking indemnity for the cross-complainant's possible liability for
indemnity. Consider this hypothetical: Homeowner sues general
contractor. General contractor sues Subs 1 and 2 for indemnity, that is,
to make both subcontractors cover the general's prospective liability
to the homeowner. Now suppose Sub 1 has an agreement with Sub 2 which
requires Sub 2 to "indemnify and hold harmless" Sub 1. Sub 1 can use the
word "indemnify" in the agreement as a basis to sue Sub 2 for
indemnity for the possible liability Sub 1 may incur to the general. And
Sub 1 can use the phrase "hold harmless" as a basis to prevent Sub 2 from suing it
for the liability that Sub 2 might incur to the general. In other
words, "indemnify and hold harmless" can both apply to third-party
situations without violating the canon against surplusage.
Because the indemnity clause here should not be construed in an
exculpatory manner, we are spared the need to address the public policy
problems that might otherwise be raised if we affirmed. (See Civ. Code, §
1668; Rooz, supra, 55 Cal.App.4th at pp. 587-591 [discussing why exculpation in that case did not offend public policy].) [149 Cal.App.4th 10]
III. Disposition
The judgment is reversed. The association will recover its costs on appeal.
Moore, J., and Fybel, J., concurred.
FN 1.
All caps in original quotations from the agreement have been changed to
normal capitalization for reading ease. There are no issues in this
case involving size of type where the fact of all capitalization of text
might be relevant.
FN 2.
Dream Theater, Inc. v. Dream Theater (2004) 124 Cal.App.4th 547
is not an exculpation or even an indemnity case. It is a
scope-of-arbitration clause case where a party sought to avoid being
compelled to arbitration and used, as one of its arguments, the idea
that the arbitration clause was merely limited to third party claims
because of the proximity of the arbitration clause to the indemnity
clause. (See
id. at p. 555.) The court of course rejected the idea. (
Ibid.)