Nationwide Agribusiness Ins. v. George Perry & Sons, Inc.
Nationwide Agribusiness Ins. v. George Perry & Sons, Inc.
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiffs in the above, related cases are insurance companies. Defendants include a commercial farming company, George Perry & Sons, Inc. (Perry); Perry's Vice President of Operations and farm manager, Paul Gomes; and Gary Mattes both individually and doing business as Gary's Apiaries (collectively, Mattes), a beekeeping business. Plaintiffs sue for a judicial determination that they owe no duty to defend or indemnify Perry and Gomes under the insurance policies issued to Perry with respect to Mattes's state court lawsuit against Perry and Gomes for alleged destruction of Mattes's beehives while the beehives were on Perry's property. See Nationwide
Plaintiffs have moved for summary judgment. Nationwide Mot., ECF No. 11; Unigard Mot., ECF No. 20. Defendants have opposed. Nationwide Opp'n, ECF No. 36; Unigard Opp'n, ECF No. 27. Plaintiffs have replied. Nationwide Reply, ECF No. 42; Unigard Reply, ECF No. 36. Plaintiffs contend both a rented (or loaned) property exclusion and a care, custody or control exclusion in their insurance policies with Perry apply as a matter of law, meaning plaintiffs have no duty to indemnify Perry or Gomes with respect to the Mattes lawsuit. See Nationwide Mot. at 4-9; Unigard Mot. at 6-11. Defendants contend genuine disputes of material fact exist that preclude determining the agreement between Mattes and Perry was a contract to rent property, not a services contract. Nationwide Opp'n at 7-10; Unigard Opp'n at 7-12. Defendants also dispute plaintiffs' contention that Perry had exclusive care, custody or control of the beehives. Nationwide Opp'n at 10-14; Unigard Opp'n at 13-15.
As explained below, the court finds genuine disputes of material fact preclude finding as a matter of law that the rented or loaned property exclusion or the care, custody or control exclusion apply. The court therefore DENIES summary judgment to plaintiffs.
I. BACKGROUND
In addition to evidence submitted by the parties and documents the court judicially notices, the court draws the following facts primarily from the following documents, *1068whose existence and content are undisputed unless otherwise noted: Nationwide plaintiffs' Statement of Undisputed Facts (NSUF), Nationwide ECF No. 11-2; defendants' Response to Nationwide plaintiffs' Statement of Undisputed Facts (NRSUF) and Statement of Disputed Facts (NSDF), Nationwide ECF No. 36-1; Unigard plaintiffs' Statement of Undisputed Facts (USUF), Unigard ECF No. 22; defendants' response to Unigard plaintiffs' Statement of Undisputed Facts (URSUF) and Statement of Disputed Facts (USDF), ECF No. 27-1; and Unigard plaintiffs' Reply to defendants' response, Unigard ECF No. 36-1.
Nationwide plaintiffs issued multiple insurance policies to Perry between 2012 to 2016. NSUF Nos. 20-26. These policies provided, in relevant part, that Nationwide will "pay those sums that the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as damages because of ... 'property damage' to which this insurance applies." NSUF No. 28. The policies included exceptions for any property the insured rents. NSUF Nos. 30-31, 36, 38. Additionally, the policies excluded property damage for "[p]ersonal property in the care, custody or control of the insured." NSUF Nos. 33, 36, 40.
Unigard plaintiffs also issued multiple insurance policies to Perry, between 2010 and 2012. USUF No. 24. These policies provided that the insured "will pay those sums that the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as damages because of ... 'property damage' ...." USUF No. 25. Similar to the Nationwide plaintiffs' insurance policies, the Unigard plaintiffs' insurance policies contained exceptions for property Perry rented, property loaned to Perry, or "[p]ersonal property in the care custody or control of the 'insured' ...." USUF No. 26.
In 2013, Mattes sued Perry and Gomes for negligence, negligence per se, intentional misrepresentation and concealment, and negligent misrepresentation and negligent concealment relating to the mass death of Mattes's pollinating bees on farm property owned by Perry. Nationwide ECF No. 12-1
The parties have submitted deposition testimony taken in the Mattes state suit, and agree the court can rely on it here. Mattes was deposed in February and March of 2015, and Gomes was deposed in *1069June 2016. Mattes Decl. ¶ 14, Nationwide ECF No. 36-5; Gomes Decl. ¶ 10, Nationwide ECF No. 36-2. During his first deposition, Mattes stated Gomes first called him in April 2009 "and asked [Mattes] if [Mattes] wanted to do their melons and pumpkins." Mattes Dep. Vol. I at 98:19-22, ECF No. 36-5 Ex. A. Mattes responded, "Right," when asked if Mattes recalled Gomes's inquiring "if [Mattes was] interested in providing pollination services." Id. at 102:8-10; see also id. at 117:16-20 (Mattes responding in part, "Yeah," to a question about providing pollination services to Perry). Mattes acknowledged that "[p]rice and how many hives they need and when they need them" were the terms typically involved in an oral agreement with farmers for pollination. Id. at 103:14-17. Before contracting with Perry and Gomes, Mattes had gotten "heavier into feeding" his bees used to pollinate crops, and "[n]ow [they] supplement feed quite a bit." Id. at 93:8-21.
According to Mattes, initial hive placement "was always done at night or early morning" and did not involve anyone affiliated with Perry being there during the initial placement. Id. at 144:13-15. It was "[u]sually [Mattes's] decision" to place the bee hives: "They pretty much left it in our hands where to put them." Id. at 145:5-20. Mattes would check on hives at times "with a drive-by" without stopping if "everything look[ed] good." Id. at 150:17-21; see also id. at 151:7-12 (discussing visual inspections of "[t]he amount of bees going in and out ...."). Mattes recalled that "[w]e generally looked at [the hives] once or twice" for Perry's watermelon pollination between the time Mattes dropped off the hives and later picked them up. Id. at 150:22-151:2. In 2009, Mattes "did replace some [hives] with nukes," which were smaller versions of normal bee hives. Id. at 152:2-7, 153:19-24; see also Mattes Decl. ¶ 8 (explaining nukes or "nucs" as smaller versions of normal bee hives). At times, Mattes would be informed that Perry did not "want [Mattes] working any bees while the pickers are out here [in the field] ...." Id. at 149:12-24. Mattes's hives would remain in Perry's fields for about one month to pollinate pumpkins and "from June through September" to pollinate watermelons. Id. 148:18-149:8, 161:14-17. Gomes would call Mattes and tell Mattes "to get [the hives] out." Id. at 161:18-24.
Although "[t]he rule is once [Mattes] put [the hives] there, leave them there," Mattes stated "there were times [Mattes] had gone out there and they moved them, which is not a good thing to do." Id. at 123:10-21. On these occasions, nobody had advised Mattes that the hives were not in an appropriate location; "they just moved them." Id. at 144:20-23.
Mattes also acknowledged non-employee compensation of $27,460 reported on a 2009 IRS 1099 form as corresponding with the amount Mattes charged Perry for pollination services that year. Id. at 138:1-11.
During his deposition as the person most knowledgeable for Perry, Gomes testified he would tell a prospective pollinator "[w]e're going to have X amount of acres of watermelons, they will be in these general locations and everything and we will need bees." Gomes Dep. at 56:2-8, Nationwide ECF No. 11-7. Gomes knew "we want[ed] to put a hive or a hive and a half per acre." Id. at 56:11-12. Gomes would "let them know" when to bring the bee hives out. Id. at 56:12-15. Gomes acknowledged Mattes would invoice Perry, and the invoice would reflect where Gomes told Mattes to put the bees and however many bees Gomes determined were necessary. Id. at 58:25-59:3. However, in response to a specific invoice exhibit presented to Gomes at deposition, Gomes stated the only thing that particular invoice "doesn't *1070show" is whether the "bees that [Mattes] billed me for ... were his bees or somebody else's bees." Id. at 59:4-9. Gomes stated if Mattes did not have enough bees, Mattes would rent bees from somebody else. Id. at 59:10-12.
Gomes would check to ensure the hives were where Gomes told Mattes to put them. Id. at 78:21-79:1, 94:23-95:2. According to Gomes, beekeepers are "not going into the field" within 24 hours of pesticide application; they would go "[a]round the field" or in a buffer zone, but not into the field itself. Id. at 130:18-132:8.
For these motions, no party disputes Mattes's allegation that Perry applied pesticides to its fields while Mattes's bees were pollinating those fields, the applied pesticides were toxic to the bees, and as a result of the pesticide exposure over a four-year period, the bee hives suffered a catastrophic loss of bees. NRSUF Nos. 16-17.
Mattes, in a declaration submitted in opposition to the pending motions, has stated he maintained access to the bees after placing them near Perry's fields, regularly visiting, inspecting, feeding, medicating and vaccinating the bees. Mattes Decl. ¶¶ 3, 7-9 (explaining he would drop in smaller versions of normal bee hives if bee populations were insufficient and would "requeen" a hive with another queen if needed). Mattes expected Perry would not interact with his bees or their hives and that Perry would not attempt to move them, consistent with Mattes's expectation of all growers who receive his pollination services. Id. ¶ 11. According to Mattes, interacting with the hives would create a safety hazard both to farm workers and to the bees. Id. Moving the hives and caring for the bees takes special skills, knowledge and equipment. Id.
In a declaration submitted in opposition to the motions, Gomes states Perry does not employ a trained beekeeper and has always contracted with beekeepers in the area who keep their own hives. Gomes Decl. ¶ 2. According to Gomes, Perry's personnel stayed away from Mattes's hives when working in Perry's fields. Id. ¶ 6. "Perry did not move or relocate Mattes'[s] hives." Id.
Although the parties do not dispute a 2009 invoice from Gary's Apiaries referring to the number of bee hives Perry "rented" from Mattes, the parties dispute the meaning of this invoice. NRSUF No. 5. For instance, Mattes's general practice with Perry was to provide one invoice up front and receive payment of that amount, then submit a second invoice for the actual number of hives used during the growing season. Mattes Dep. Vol. I at 135:20-25; see also Mattes Decl. ¶ 4 ("I charged Perry for my services on a 'per hive' basis.... consistent with how I charged other local growers.").
In motions in limine filed in the Mattes state suit, Perry and Gomes repeatedly refer to Mattes as owning "a bee business in which he rents bee hives to local farmers" and represent that Perry "rented bee hives from Mattes from 2009 to 2012." E.g. , Nationwide ECF No. 35-1 at 3, 6, 9.
*1071Perry has submitted the declarations of Todd Garibaldi, a licensed insurance broker, and Charleen Carroll, owner of Pollination Contracting Inc. See Garibaldi Decl., Nationwide ECF No. 36-3; Carroll Decl., Nationwide 36-4. Garibaldi refers to his experience of "farming for over 30 years," having "retained the pollination services of many different beekeepers" and being "familiar with the general practices of farmers and beekeepers in arranging for pollination services." Garibaldi Decl. ¶ 2. Garibaldi asserts he "require[s], and the beekeeper insists, that the beekeeper remain in control of his or her bees and hives while providing the pollination services that [Garibaldi's] crops need." Id. ¶ 3. The beekeepers Garibaldi hires are "responsible for inspecting, feeding, medicating, and providing any other care that the bees or hives require." Id. ¶ 4.
In her declaration, Carroll indicates she is the owner of a company that, since 1978, has "connect[ed] beekeepers and growers, primarily almond growers, for pollination services." Carroll Decl. ¶ 1. Carroll provided testimony in the Mattes suit, including "opinions related to the almond market, pollination services in general, and [her] experience working with Mr. Mattes." Id. ¶ 3. Carroll states "growers and beekeepers use the terms 'hive rental' and 'pollination services' interchangeably." Id. ¶ 6. Carroll also states beekeeping "requires very specialized skills," and the contracts her company "has been involved with over the last forty years" contain "provisions that the beekeeper will always have access to his or her hives while the hives are present in the grower's fields, the grower shall not move the hives without express permission from the beekeeper, and the grower shall be penalized ... if any hive is moved without permission from the beekeeper."Id. ¶ 11.
II. LEGAL STANDARD
A court will grant summary judgment "if ... there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). The "threshold inquiry" is whether "there are any genuine factual issues that properly can be resolved only by a finder of fact because they may reasonably be resolved in favor of either party." Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc. ,
The moving party bears the initial burden of showing the district court "there is an absence of evidence to support the nonmoving party's case." Celotex Corp. v. Catrett ,
In deciding summary judgment, the court draws all inferences and views all evidence in the light most favorable to the non-movant.
*1072Tolan v. Cotton ,
III. DISCUSSION
A. Rented Property or Services Contract
Plaintiffs contend the rented (or loaned) property exclusion in their insurance policies with Perry apply as a matter of law, meaning plaintiffs have no duty to indemnify Perry or Gomes with respect to the Mattes lawsuit against them. See Nationwide Mot. at 4-7; Unigard Mot. at 6-8. Defendants contend genuine disputes of material fact exist that preclude determining the agreement between Mattes and Perry was a contract to rent property, not a services contract. Nationwide Opp'n at 7-10; Unigard Opp'n at 7-12. The court agrees with defendants.
"A contract must be so interpreted as to give effect to the mutual intention of the parties as it existed at the time of contracting, so far as the same is ascertainable and lawful."
No party disputes that the contract between Perry and Mattes was an oral contract. The Nationwide and Unigard plaintiffs focus on two slim reeds: one, a single passing reference to renting bee hives in Mattes's first amended complaint, specifically a reference to bee hives "rented" in a 2009 invoice, and two, the cursory references to Perry's renting bee hives as part of a brief factual summary included in motions in limine drafted by attorneys funded by plaintiffs. The latter motions do not turn on whether the contract is a rental contract or a services contract. Plaintiffs argue these items permit this court to rule that no reasonable factfinder could conclude Perry and Mattes had a contract for pollination services because these items constitute judicial admissions. Nationwide Reply at 6. Judicial admissions, which generally "are formal admissions in the pleadings," withdraw "a fact from issue and dispens[e] wholly with the need for proof of the fact."
*1073Am. Title Ins. Co. v. Lacelaw Corp. ,
The court cannot find on the record before it, as a matter of law, that the contract between Perry and Mattes was a rental contract. Plaintiffs' arguments ignore the multiple references to pollination services throughout the Mattes deposition, which reveal both the lack of concern about the contract's status as a rental or services contract and a genuine dispute of material fact precluding summary judgment on this issue. See, e.g. , Mattes Dep. Vol. I at 102:8-10, 117:16-20. Additionally, Gomes testified at deposition that a "memorializer" of the agreement between Perry and Mattes would show if the bees Mattes billed Perry for "were his bees or somebody else's bees," acknowledging that Mattes would rent bees from someone else if Mattes did not have enough bees. Gomes Dep. at 59:6-12. This deposition testimony, if given weight, could permit a reasonable juror to conclude that Gomes and Mattes had a services contract, not a rental contract.
Other conflicting evidence supports the existence of a genuine dispute of material fact as to the nature of the agreement between Mattes and Perry. Compare, e.g. , Mattes Dep. Vol. I at 138:1-11 (Mattes acknowledging non-employee compensation of $27,460 on a 2009 IRS 1099 form as corresponding with the amount Mattes charged for pollination services that year), with NRSUF No. 5 (2009 invoice from Gary's Apiaries, Mattes's beekeeping business, referring to the number of bee hives Perry "rented" from Mattes).
The Carroll and Garibaldi declarations also provide evidence of industry custom related to bee hive pollination agreements, including trade usage of the term "rent." E.g. , Carroll Decl. ¶ 6 ("growers and beekeepers use the terms 'hive rental' and 'pollination services' interchangeably"); id. ¶¶ 1, 3, 11; Garibaldi Decl. ¶¶ 2-4. This evidence is relevant to contract interpretation under California law. See Wolf v. Superior Court ,
*1074Block v. City of Los Angeles ,
The court's conclusion here is consistent with other cases that have expressly held an insurance property's rented property exclusion did not apply when the property could not be separated concurrent services provided. For example, in Rice Bros. Inc. v. Glens Falls Indem. Co. ,
Furthermore, in Northbrook Excess & Surplus Ins. Co. v. Coastal Rescue Sys. Corp. ,
B. Judicial Estoppel
The Unigard plaintiffs also contend defendants are judicially estopped from contending Perry did not rent the bee hives. Unigard Mot. at 8-10. Defendants argue Unigard plaintiffs have failed to show the elements required to trigger judicial estoppel are satisfied here. Opp'n at 10-12. As explained below, the court finds judicial estoppel does not apply to defendants' contention that the contract between Perry and Mattes was not one to rent property.
Judicial estoppel "is an equitable doctrine a court may invoke to protect *1075the integrity of the judicial process." United Nat. Ins. v. Spectrum Worldwide, Inc. ,
The Unigard plaintiffs have not shown Mattes or Perry have taken different positions, much less "totally" or "clearly inconsistent" positions. As noted above, in Mattes's first deposition, he made references to renting and pollination services interchangeably with no indication that he meant different things by using different wording, or that one described the correct legal nature of his agreement with Perry. See, e.g. , Mattes Dep. Vol. I at 102:8-10, 117:16-20. Mattes's reference in his amended complaint to Perry's "rent[ing]" bee hives is not fairly read as a legal position or an allegation about the nature of the contract but a passing reference to the relationship between Perry and Mattes, also described as Perry's "orally contract[ing] with Mattes to provide bee hives to pollinate Perry's crops." Nationwide ECF No. 12-2 at 3-4. Moreover, Mattes's use of "rented" in his complaint would not judicially estop Perry from contending the relationship was different. Perry's references to his "rent[ing]" bee hives from Mattes in multiple motions in limine in state court, in the introductory sections of those motions, do not indicate a legal position regarding the nature of the contract between Perry and Mattes. See, e.g. , Nationwide ECF No. 35-1 at 3, 6, 9.
Even if Perry or Mattes had asserted their agreement legally was a rental contract, the Unigard plaintiffs have not shown how Mattes or Perry have succeeded in advancing the assertion. Even if Perry or Mattes had advanced totally inconsistent positions in their depositions, their deposition testimony contrasts sharply with statements made in the case of United Nat. Ins. ,
Finally, the Unigard plaintiffs also have not shown that any purported position taken by Mattes or Perry was deliberate, or that the cursory references to "rented" were not "a result of ignorance, fraud, or mistake." Padron ,
*1076interchangeably," Carroll Decl. ¶ 6, and the drafting of Perry's motions in limine in the Mattes state suit by attorneys funded by plaintiffs in this case.
The court declines to apply the equitable doctrine of judicial estoppel.
C. Care, Custody or Control
Plaintiffs also argue the care, custody or control exclusions in their insurance policies preclude plaintiffs' providing coverage in the Mattes suit. Nationwide Mot. at 7-9; Unigard Mot. at 10-11. They say Mattes maintained care, custody and control of his bees while they pollinated Perry's crops, pointing not only to the evidence before the court but also to a California regulatory scheme as evidence that beekeepers, not property owners, maintain care, custody and control of pollinating bees. Nationwide Opp'n at 10-14; Unigard Opp'n at 13-15. As explained below, the court finds a genuine dispute of material fact sufficient to deny summary judgment to plaintiffs here as well.
This case is analogous to that of Home Indem. Co. v. Leo L. Davis, Inc. ,
Here, genuine disputes of material fact preclude a finding that Perry exercised "exclusive and complete" control of the bee hives at the time the hives allegedly suffered damage from Perry's pesticides. See Home Indemn. Co. ,
*1077Vol. I at 93:8-21; Mattes Decl. ¶¶ 3, 7-9. Mattes placed the hives without Perry's presence. Mattes Dep. Vol. I at 144:13-15. It was "[u]sually [Mattes's] decision" as to how to place the bee hives; "They pretty much left it in our hands where to put them." Id. at 145:5-20. In 2009, Mattes "did replace some [hives] with nukes." Id. at 152:2-7, 153:19-24
Although Mattes stated in his deposition that others had moved his hives, "[t]he rule is once [Mattes] put [the hives] there, leave them there." Id. at 123:10-21. Gomes also stated Perry personnel stayed away from Mattes's hives when they were working in Perry's fields. Gomes Decl. ¶ 6. Further, Gomes stated Perry does not employ a trained beekeeper and has always contracted with beekeepers in the area who keep their own hives. Id. ¶ 2. To the extent maintenance of bee hives "requires very specialized skills," see Carroll Decl. ¶ 11, and Perry's personnel did not actually move the hives, the court cannot rule as a matter of law that Perry exercised exclusive and complete control of the bee hives without employing its own beekeeper. See Essex Ins. Co. v. Soy City Sock Co. ,
Plaintiffs direct the court's attention to Perry's not "want[ing] [Mattes's] working any bees while the pickers are out here [in the field] ...." Mattes Dep. Vol. I at 149:12-24. Additionally, Gomes testified at deposition that beekeepers would not go "into the field" within 24 hours of pesticide application; they would go "[a]round the field" or in a buffer zone, but not into the field itself. Gomes Dep. at 130:18-132:8. Although this testimony suggests Mattes might not have had exclusive control of the bee hives during pesticide application, the court still finds a genuine dispute of material fact as to the "nature and extent" of Perry's control-the "insured's control"-during pesticide application. See Home Indemn. Co. ,
Additionally, the timing and duration of the harm inflicted on the bee populations here is not clear. Mattes alleges the harm caused to his bees occurred as a result of pesticide exposure over a four-year period. NRSUF Nos. 16-17. The court finds a genuine dispute of material fact remains as to the nature and extent of Perry's control across that four-year period. Even if Mattes did not retain complete and exclusive control over the bee hives during this four-year period, a reasonable juror could conclude that at all times, even during pesticide spraying, Mattes and Perry exercised "shared" control of the bee hives in light of the prohibition against Perry's moving the hives. See Home Indem. Co. ,
This case differs substantially from Karpe v. Great Am. Indem. Co. ,
*1078exclusion applied to prevent plaintiff from being indemnified by his insurance for damages from his sending the cow to slaughter. Id. at 233,
As noted, defendants also direct the court's attention to a California regulatory scheme that requires advising beekeepers, not the owners of property where bee hives are located, of pesticide application "at least 48 hours in advance of the application." Cal. Code Regs., tit. 3 § 6654(b) ; see Nationwide Opp'n at 11-12; Unigard Opp'n at 14-15. Although this regulatory scheme does not prove the details of Mattes's and Perry's agreement or conduct, it casts further doubt on plaintiffs' assertion that Perry exercised exclusive control at least during pesticide applications. This doubt is sufficient to contribute to a genuine dispute of material fact as to the nature and extent of Perry's control during pesticide application.
At hearing, plaintiffs asserted Perry would not know the exact time of application when it relied on others to apply pesticides as support for their position that Mattes lacked exclusive control over the bee hives. In any event, the record does not support the assertion. See NSDF 7; Gomes Decl. ¶ 9 ("When Perry applied pesticides itself, it did so by injecting the pesticides into Perry's underground irrigation system (this is called chemigation). Perry retained the services of licensed, third-party pesticide applicators (independent contractors) to perform aerial and ground applications of pesticides on Perry's crops."); see also URSUF 17, 20 (though disputed for other reasons, noting allegation that "Perry applied pesticides"). Moreover, Gomes testified at deposition that Perry alerts its employees when pesticide application is going to occur, after testifying about ground application contractors, in-house chemigation and contractors for aerial application. Gomes Dep. (Unigard excerpts) at 50:25-53:17, ECF No. 24-1 at 5. The summary judgment record thus does not clearly indicate Perry did not know precise application times of applications by independent contractors. To the extent Perry did lack knowledge, this too contributes to a genuine dispute of material fact regarding Perry's "exclusive and complete" control across that four-year period. See Home Indemnity Co. ,
D. Self-Serving Declaration
Nationwide plaintiffs assert "the Court need not consider Gomes's self-serving and inconsistent declaration." Nationwide Reply at 7. As the Ninth Circuit has observed, "a party cannot create an issue of fact by an affidavit contradicting his prior deposition testimony." Yeager v. Bowlin ,
The court observes no clear and unambiguous inconsistency here. Although Gomes states in his declaration that he "relied upon Mattes to determine where to *1079place his hives near Perry's crops so that the bees will work Perry's field and pollinate its crops," Gomes Decl. ¶ 5, Gomes's deposition testimony that he would provide "general locations" for the bee hives and would check to ensure the hives were placed where Gomes indicated is not clearly inconsistent with a later declaration that Gomes relied on Mattes for placement sufficient to pollinate the crops. See Gomes Dep. at 56:2-8, 78:21-79:1, 94:23-95:2. Gomes's declaration that "Perry did not move or relocate Mattes'[s] hives," Gomes Decl. ¶ 6, merely reveals a difference in perceptions from Mattes's deposition testimony, testimony which itself did not report direct observation of Perry's moving the hives. See Mattes Dep. Vol. I at 123:10-21, 144:20-23. These different observations by likely trial witnesses call for a credibility determination that is the sole province of the jury. The court declines to strike the Gomes declaration.
IV. CONCLUSION
Nationwide plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment, ECF No. 11, is DENIED. Unigard plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment, ECF No. 20, is DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
"Nationwide" as used here identifies documents on the docket or the plaintiffs in Nationwide Agribusiness Insurance et al v. George Perry & Sons, Inc. et al , No. 2:17-cv-01910-KJM-CKD. "Unigard" identifies documents on the docket or the plaintiffs in Unigard Ins. Co. et al v. George Perry and Sons, Inc. et al . , No. 2:18-cv-00188-KJM-CKD.
The court judicially notices the existence of this complaint as a fact that "can be accurately and readily determined by trial courts from sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned." Fed. R. Evid. 201(b). The complaint is a matter of public record. See Emrich v. Touche Ross & Co. ,
The court judicially notices the existence of these statements as facts that "can be accurately and readily determined by trial courts from sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned." Fed. R. Evid. 201(b). These motions, filed in the Superior Court of the State of California, are a matter of public record. See Emrich ,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- NATIONWIDE AGRIBUSINESS INSURANCE and Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company v. GEORGE PERRY & SONS, INC. and Paul Gomes, Unigard Insurance Company and One Beacon Insurance Company v. George Perry & Sons, Inc., a California Corporation, Gary Mattes, individually and dba Gary's Apiaries and Does 1 through 20, inclusive
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published