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No. 10007812
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Agk Sierra De Montserrat, L.P. v. Comerica Bank
No. 10007812 · Decided July 19, 2024
No. 10007812·Ninth Circuit · 2024·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
July 19, 2024
Citation
No. 10007812
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, No. 23-15290
L.P.,
D.C. No. 2:15-cv-
Plaintiff-Appellee, 01280-DAD-DB
v.
OPINION
COMERICA BANK,
Defendant-Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of California
Dale A. Drozd, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted February 13, 2024
San Francisco, California
Filed July 19, 2024
Before: Eric D. Miller, Bridget S. Bade, and Lawrence
VanDyke, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge VanDyke;
Concurrence by Judge Miller
2 AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK
SUMMARY *
California Law / Attorneys’ Fees
The panel reversed the district court’s award of attorney
fees associated with litigating a first-party breach of contract
suit enforcing an indemnity provision, and remanded.
The district court determined that Comerica Bank
breached its agreement to indemnify AGK Sierra De
Montserrat, L.P. (AGK) in two underlying lawsuits and
awarded attorney fees incurred in those underlying actions.
In addition, relying on DeWitt v. Western Pacific
Railroad Co., 719 F.2d 1448 (9th Cir. 1983), the district
court awarded AGK damages for attorney fees associated
with the present first-party breach of contract suit enforcing
the indemnity provision. The panel held that DeWitt was
only binding in the absence of any subsequent indication
from the California courts that this Court’s interpretation
was incorrect, and California appellate courts since DeWitt
have uniformly indicated that first-party attorney fees are not
recoverable under an indemnity provision. Accordingly, the
panel reversed the district court’s award of attorney fees for
litigating the present action, and remanded for the district
court to determine whether those fees were otherwise
recoverable.
Concurring, Judge Miller wrote separately to explain
why it was appropriate that the court apply a more flexible
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK 3
standard of intra-circuit stare decisis to questions of state law
than to questions of federal law.
COUNSEL
Reuben A. Ginsburg (argued), Timothy J. Gorry, Jon-
Jamison Hill, and Adam M. Korn, Michelman & Robinson
LLP, Los Angeles, California; Gregory L. Maxim and
Thomas G. Trost, Sproul Trost, Roseville, California; for
Plaintiff-Appellee.
Ernest Slome (argued), Lann G. McIntyre, Jeffry A. Miller,
and Daniel R. Velladao, Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith
LLP, San Diego, California; Frank R. Perrott, Lewis
Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith LLP, Sacramento, California, for
Defendant-Appellant.
4 AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK
OPINION
VANDYKE, Circuit Judge:
Following a bench trial, the district court determined that
Comerica Bank (Comerica) breached its agreement to
indemnify AGK Sierra de Montserrat, L.P. (AGK) in two
underlying lawsuits and accordingly awarded damages for
attorney fees incurred in those underlying actions. In
addition, the district court, relying on our forty-year-old
decision in DeWitt v. Western Pacific Railroad Co., 719 F.2d
1448 (9th Cir. 1983), awarded AGK damages for attorney
fees associated with the present first-party breach of contract
suit enforcing the indemnity provision. But DeWitt is “only
binding in the absence of any subsequent indication from the
California courts that our interpretation was incorrect,”
Owen ex rel. Owen v. United States, 713 F.2d 1461, 1464
(9th Cir. 1983), and California appellate cases since DeWitt
uniformly indicate that first-party attorney fees are not
recoverable under an indemnity provision. Therefore, we
reverse the district court’s award of fees for litigating the
present action. We remand for the district court to determine
whether those fees are otherwise recoverable.
I.
In 2005, Westwood Montserrat, Ltd., began developing
a residential subdivision in Loomis, California. Westwood
obtained, and subsequently defaulted on, a construction loan
from Comerica. Comerica then foreclosed on fifty-one lots
in the development. Before the foreclosure, Westwood
recorded a Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, and
Restrictions and a Supplemental Declaration, which
reserved certain rights for itself as the declarant.
AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK 5
In 2009, Comerica purchased the fifty-one lots at a
trustee’s sale, and then in 2010, it agreed to sell the lots to
AGRE. 1 The Purchase and Sale Agreement (PSA) included
a California choice-of-law clause and an attorney fees
provision stating that:
In the event of any action between Buyer and
Seller for enforcement or interpretation of
any of the terms or conditions of this
Agreement, the prevailing party in such
action shall be entitled to recover its
reasonable costs and expenses, including
without limitation court costs and attorneys’
fees actually incurred, as awarded by a court
of competent jurisdiction.
After signing the agreement, AGRE was concerned about
the possibility of Westwood remaining the declarant despite
the foreclosure and sale of the lots, which would give
Westwood significant control over development. Comerica
and AGRE extended and amended the PSA on several
occasions, the last of which required Comerica to revoke the
Supplemental Declaration and assign AGK all its rights as
declarant. AGRE then assigned the PSA to AGK on June
28, 2010.
Comerica provided the required assignment of rights on
June 29, 2010. Because AGK remained concerned about
potential litigation arising from Westwood claiming to be the
1
AGRE then formed a limited partnership with Kinetic Homes called
AGK (the plaintiff in this case) for the purpose of developing the lots.
6 AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK
declarant, the Assignment of Declarant Rights also included
an indemnity provision. The provision stated that:
The undersigned agrees to indemnify, defend
and hold Successor Declarant harmless from
and against any and all loss, liability, claims
or causes of action existing in favor of or
asserted by any party arising out of the
undersigned’s position as “Declarant” under
the CC&Rs on or before the date first above
written.
The parties closed the deal, and Westwood indeed
commenced several actions against AGK, which Comerica
refused to indemnify. AGK then sued Comerica for breach
of the indemnity provision, and Comerica removed the case
to federal court. Following a nonjury trial, the district court
found that the assignment, including the indemnity
provision, was a valid and binding contract, and that
Comerica breached the contract by failing to indemnify
AGK in the suits with Westwood. That part of the district
court’s ruling has not been appealed.
The district court also determined that Comerica owed
AGK for attorney fees and costs incurred in litigating the
present breach of contract action—that is, the action to
determine whether Comerica was obligated to indemnify
AGK for its litigation with Westwood under the indemnity
provision in the Assignment of Declarant Rights. The
district court, relying on DeWitt, a 1983 Ninth Circuit case,
determined that under California law “costs and attorney’s
fees for prosecuting an indemnification claim may be
included in the indemnification award.” 719 F.2d at 1453.
Thus, in addition to the costs AGK experienced from the
AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK 7
Westwood actions, the district court also awarded AGK
$1,146,337.24 plus prejudgment interest for costs and fees
incurred in prosecuting the indemnity action against
Comerica. The sole issue before us is whether this latter
award of fees for litigating the indemnity obligation between
the parties was contrary to California law.
II.
“We review de novo the district court’s interpretation of
state law.” Paulson v. City of San Diego, 294 F.3d 1124,
1128 (9th Cir. 2002). The parties dispute the standard by
which we reexamine circuit precedent interpreting state law.
AGK suggests we “must apply binding precedent even when
it is clearly wrong.” Silva v. Garland, 993 F.3d 705, 717
(9th Cir. 2021). But that rule applies to precedent
interpreting federal law, not state law. See id. (interpreting
federal law). Precedent interpreting federal law is binding
absent a decision of the Supreme Court or our court sitting
en banc that “undercut[s] the theory or reasoning underlying
the prior circuit precedent in such a way that the cases are
clearly irreconcilable.” Miller v. Gammie, 335 F.3d 889, 900
(9th Cir. 2003) (en banc).
Interpretation of state law, however, is a different
exercise. There, “[o]ur duty as a federal court … is to
ascertain and apply the existing California law.” Alvarez v.
Chevron, 656 F.3d 925, 932 (9th Cir. 2011) (quoting
Munson v. Del Taco, Inc., 522 F.3d 997, 1002 (9th Cir.
2008)). “In the absence of a pronouncement by the highest
court of a state, the federal courts must follow the decision
of the intermediate appellate courts of the state unless there
is convincing evidence that the highest court of the state
would decide differently.” Owen ex rel. Owen, 713 F.2d at
1464 (internal quotation marks omitted). In other words, we
8 AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK
use our “own best judgment in predicting how the state’s
highest court would decide the case.” T-Mobile USA Inc. v.
Selective Ins. Co. of Am., 908 F.3d 581, 586 (9th Cir. 2018)
(quotation omitted). Circuit precedent interpreting state law,
therefore, “is only binding in the absence of any subsequent
indication from the California courts that our interpretation
was incorrect.” Alvarez, 656 F.3d at 932 (quotations
omitted).
III.
Comerica appeals the district court’s award of fees
incurred by AGK in litigating the present action, arguing
that, contrary to AGK’s position in the district court, those
fees are not covered by the text of the indemnity provision
in the Assignment of Declarant Rights. AGK argues that,
based on our precedent, first-party litigation costs like these
are covered by standard indemnity provisions under
California law. AGK also argues that those fees are
otherwise recoverable under the attorney fees provision in
the PSA. We address each of AGK’s arguments in turn.
A.
As the district court explained, in the 1983 DeWitt
decision, this court interpreted California law to provide that
“costs and attorney’s fees for prosecuting an indemnification
claim may be included in the indemnification award.”
Dewitt, 719 F.2d at 1453. And in 1992, our court followed
Dewitt’s interpretation, specifically noting the absence of
any indication at that point from California courts that its
interpretation was incorrect. See Jones-Hamilton Co. v.
Beazer Materials & Servs., 973 F.2d 688, 696 n.4 (9th Cir.
1992).
AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK 9
The two California cases DeWitt relied on, however,
contained essentially no reasoning, and no subsequent
California cases have followed them. Instead, there have
been a half-dozen California cases that have gone the other
way, explaining in some detail their reasons for doing so and,
in some of the cases, explaining why DeWitt or the two cases
it relied on are wrong. Moreover, other California cases
make clear that the DeWitt rule, if it were the correct
interpretation of California law, would combine with other
California rules in a way that would work a dramatic change
in how indemnity provisions are interpreted in California.
On balance, “subsequent indication[s] from the California
courts” strongly suggest that DeWitt’s interpretation of
California law was incorrect. Alvarez, 656 F.3d at 932
(quotations omitted). We therefore conclude it does not bind
us.
1.
To start, DeWitt relied on two California appellate cases
nearly devoid of reasoning on the issue for which DeWitt
cited them. In DeWitt, a train conductor who worked for
Western Pacific was injured in an accident on a spur line
leading to a plant owned by the Flintkote Company. 719
F.2d at 1450. Flintkote had agreed to indemnify Western
Pacific for any liability arising from its failure to maintain
the spur line. Id. at 1451–52. After awarding Western
Pacific its attorney fees expended in defending the
underlying negligence action between the train conductor
and Western Pacific, our court held that Flintkote was also
required to pay for Western Pacific’s fees and costs incurred
in prosecuting the indemnification action directly against
Flintkote. Id. at 1452–53. DeWitt cited three cases of the
California Courts of Appeal, two that it said supported its
rule, see id. at 1453 (citing Schackman v. Universal Pictures
10 AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK
Co., 255 Cal. App. 2d 857, 863 (1967); Nicholson-Brown,
Inc. v. City of San Jose, 62 Cal. App. 3d 526, 537 (1976),
overruled on other grounds by Bullis v. Sec. Pac. Nat’l Bank,
21 Cal. 3d 801, 815 n.18 (1978)); and one that “seem[ed] to
be to the contrary, but … cite[d] no authority,” id. at 1453
(citing County of San Joaquin v. Stockton Swim Club, 42
Cal. App. 3d 968, 973 (1974)). Our court in DeWitt then
chose to follow the two cases that it characterized as
supporting indemnification for first-party litigation costs.
But in fact, Schackman and Nicholson-Brown have little
to no relevant analysis, while County of San Joaquin
explained why it declined to include first-party litigation
costs in an indemnification award. First, Schackman
primarily concerned whether an indemnity provision
covered losses caused by the combined negligence of both
the plaintiff and the defendant. 255 Cal. App. 2d at 859. The
California Court of Appeal spent only two sentences
addressing first-party attorney fees. Id. at 863. After
determining that the indemnity provision indeed covered the
underlying negligence judgment, the court noted that
“Respondent requests that if the judgment is affirmed, either
this court receive testimony as to the attorneys’ fees that
should be awarded counsel for respondent for representing
him on this appeal or remand the case to the superior court
for this purpose.” Id. The court concluded that “the latter
procedure is more appropriate.” Id. So rather than
explaining why the first-party litigation costs were
recoverable under the indemnity provision, the court in
Schackman simply sent the attorney fee question back to the
trial court to decide in the first instance. The court did not
address whether such an award would be appropriate, nor did
it provide any basis for any such award—whether it be the
AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK 11
indemnity provision, a separate attorney fees provision in the
contract, or some statute. Id.
Nicholson-Brown is similarly sparse on the relevant
question. It notes that the indemnitee requested remand for
the trial court to determine the amount of attorney fees that
should be awarded for the costs of the appeal, and, citing
only Schackman, said that “[i]n cases involving
indemnification provisions this has been determined to be
the proper procedure.” 62 Cal. App. 3d at 537. So both
Schackman and Nicholson-Brown primarily address the
procedural question of whether fees should be determined
by the trial or appellate court, not the substantive question of
whether an indemnity provision includes first-party
litigation costs. And neither gives any reason why such fees
would be appropriate.
County of San Joaquin, on the other hand, declined to
follow Schackman, noting that the “allowance [of fees] was
made in the Schackman case without any discussion.” 42
Cal. App. 3d at 974 (italics added). Instead, the California
court chose “to follow the general rule that the defendant in
a contract suit is not liable for his opponent’s attorney fees
unless the contract expressly provides for it.” Id. It therefore
declined to read first-party litigation costs into the indemnity
provision, even where “[t]he language of the indemnity
clause is sweeping.” Id. at 973.
To summarize, DeWitt based its interpretation of
California law on an arguable two-to-one split, where two
cases were without analysis and did not even directly answer
the question of whether an indemnity provision covered
first-party fees, while the third conformed with the American
rule by requiring attorney fees provisions in contract cases
to be explicit. Of course, as the court in Jones-Hamilton
12 AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK
reasoned, if this remained the state of California law, we
would nonetheless follow DeWitt’s questionable reading of
California’s precedent “in the absence of any subsequent
indication from the California courts that our interpretation
was incorrect.” 973 F.2d at 696 n.4. But California
appellate cases since DeWitt decisively and persuasively
indicate that attorney fees for prosecuting indemnity actions
are not recoverable under an indemnity provision absent
specific language allowing for such fees.
2.
After DeWitt, California appellate courts have uniformly
rejected our court’s reasoning, instead following reasoning
similar to that expressed in City of San Joaquin. In Hillman
v. Leland E. Burns, Inc. the California Court of Appeal noted
the “split of authority,” including DeWitt on one side, but
decided to “follow[] the latter rule” from City of San
Joaquin. 209 Cal. App. 3d 860, 869 (1989). It explained
that “[a]n attorney fees provision would have been the
proper subject for negotiation between the parties and
possible inclusion in the indemnity agreement; but we
decline to add, in the guise of interpretation, a provision
which is not there.” Id. at 870.
In Otis Elevator Co. v. Toda Construction of California,
the court similarly acknowledged the split and determined
the “second line of cases represents the better-reasoned
authority.” 27 Cal. App. 4th 559, 566 (1994). “Because the
indemnity agreement at issue [in Otis] did not explicitly
provide for attorney fees incurred in pursuing an indemnity
claim,” the appellee was not entitled to them. Id.
One California court applied this same rule to statutory
indemnity provisions in Jacobus v. Krambo Corp., 78 Cal.
App. 4th 1096 (2000). Jacobus concerned a statute requiring
AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK 13
employers to indemnify employees for litigation arising
from their duties. Id. at 1100. After determining that
Jacobus was entitled to indemnification by his employer for
an underlying sexual harassment suit against him, the court
determined that the indemnification statute did not extend to
attorney fees incurred in bringing the action for
indemnification against the employer. Id. at 1104–06. The
court analogized to the indemnity contract in Otis and
followed the “established principle that a prevailing party is
not entitled to recover attorney fees in the absence of a
specific contract or statute.” Id. at 1105–06. It “decline[d]
to read into the statutory phrase … a specific provision
allowing recovery of attorney fees to enforce its
indemnification provisions.” Id. at 1106. The court
acknowledged that the Ninth Circuit applied a different rule
in DeWitt, but it explained that “the California appellate
courts have not followed DeWitt and have concluded that
unless an indemnity agreement specifically provides for
attorney fees incurred in pursuing the indemnity claim, the
indemnitee is not entitled to such fees.” Id. at 1105.
Hillman, Otis, and Jacobus reveal a broader rule
regarding indemnity provisions in California, which is that
such provisions are presumptively about covering costs
incurred between one party to the contract and a third party,
not about costs incurred between the two parties to the
contract containing the indemnity clause. “Generally,
indemnity is defined as an obligation of one party to pay or
satisfy the loss or damage incurred by another party,” and
does not include “attorney fees incurred in an action between
the parties to the contract.” Alki Partners, LP v. DB Fund
Servs., LLC, 4 Cal. App. 5th 574, 600 (2016) (quotation
omitted). Only when specific language in the indemnity
provision evinces an intent to include first-party attorney
14 AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK
fees is that presumption overcome. Id. at 601–05 (detailing
examples of such specific language). Based on this
presumption, Alki Partners similarly determined that the
indemnity clause in that contract did not include attorney
fees. Id. at 606.
Our court has already acknowledged this presumption in
Epic Games, Inc. v. Apple, Inc., 67 F.4th 946 (9th Cir. 2023).
There, Apple asserted that an indemnification provision in a
contract between the parties required Epic to pay Apple’s
attorney fees incurred in Epic’s suit against Apple. Id. at
970. The court acknowledged that “California courts
presume” that an indemnity clause “relates to third party
claims, not attorney fees incurred in a breach of contract
action between the parties to the indemnity agreement
itself.” Id. at 1003 (quoting Alki Partners, 4 Cal. App. 5th
at 600).
Our court went on to explain that the presumption is
rebutted “with language that ‘specifically provide[s] for
attorney’s fees in an action on the contract.’” Id. (alteration
in original) (quoting Alki Partners, 4 Cal. App. 5th at 600–
01). In that indemnity provision, Epic agreed to indemnify
Apple for fees and costs incurred from Epic’s “breach of any
certification, covenant, obligation, representation, or
warranty in” the rest of the contract. Id. at 1004. Because
Epic could “not identif[y] a single situation in which a third-
party could possibly sue Apple pursuant to” that “breach”
clause, the presumption was deemed rebutted, and the
indemnity provision was interpreted as covering first-party
costs associated with Epic’s breach of the contract. Id. But
that was only because of specific language in that particular
indemnity provision that would have been superfluous if it
did not apply to first-party costs. We read Epic Games as
AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK 15
indirectly acknowledging that the DeWitt rule is inconsistent
with California law.
3.
Finally, DeWitt’s holding is undermined by its
implications for California Civil Code section 1717. Section
1717(a) provides that:
In any action on a contract, where the
contract specifically provides that attorney’s
fees and costs, which are incurred to enforce
that contract, shall be awarded either to one
of the parties or to the prevailing party, then
the party who is determined to be the party
prevailing on the contract, whether he or she
is the party specified in the contract or not,
shall be entitled to reasonable attorney’s fees
in addition to other costs.
The statute then states that “[w]here a contract provides for
attorney’s fees, as set forth above, that provision shall be
construed as applying to the entire contract, unless each
party was represented by counsel in the negotiation and
execution of the contract, and the fact of that representation
is specified in the contract.” Id. By operation of this statute,
most attorney fees provisions in California contracts are
reciprocal and apply to all provisions of a contract, even if
they are not written that way. So even if parties attempt to
write a contractual provision that purports to grant attorney
fees to only one party or for only one particular part of the
contract, under section 1717 that provision could
immediately morph into a comprehensive attorney fees
provision that grants all parties to the contract attorney fees
if they prevail in any contract dispute.
16 AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK
This has obvious implications for the DeWitt rule. If
DeWitt is correct that an indemnity provision provides
attorney fees for first-party disputes over the indemnity
clause, then many such indemnity provisions would
automatically be converted into broad, reciprocal attorney
fees provisions applying to the entire contract by operation
of section 1717. In decisions issued after DeWitt, several
California appellate courts have noted this exact problem.
First, in Appalachian Insurance Co. v. McDonnell
Douglas Corp., McDonnell Douglas asserted that, though
the contract at issue did not contain an explicit attorney fees
provision, it contained a broad indemnity provision, which it
argued included the present litigation. 214 Cal. App. 3d 1,
42–43 (1989). Though the court ultimately determined that
the indemnity provision did not apply to the litigation at
issue, it noted that, had it applied to the litigation, it “might
be sufficient to support an award of attorney’s fees to
McDonnell Douglas.” Id. at 43.
Similarly, in Myers Building Industries, Ltd. v. Interface
Technology, Inc., Myers asserted it was entitled to attorney
fees based on a provision in its contract which required
Myers to indemnify Interface against claims relating to
Myers’s performance as a contractor for Interface. 13 Cal.
App. 4th 949, 962–64 (1993). Myers argued that the
indemnity provision, which broadly covered “all claims,
damages, losses and expenses, including but not limited to
attorney’s fees, arising out of or resulting from the
performance of the Work,” covered Interface’s attorney fees
in any first-party litigation between Interface and Myers. Id.
And because of section 1717, if Interface would have had the
right to attorney fees should it have prevailed, then Myers
argued it too was entitled to attorney fees if it prevailed. Id.
AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK 17
The court rejected this argument. It explained that “[a]n
indemnitor in an indemnity contract generally undertakes to
protect the indemnitee against loss or damage through
liability to a third person,” id. at 968, and “[i]ndemnification
agreements ordinarily relate to third party claims,” id. at
968–69. To read a general indemnity provision “as covering
‘actions on the contract[] would render it inconsistent with
the balance of’” the provision. Id. at 970 (quoting Meininger
v. Larwin-N. Cal., Inc., 63 Cal. App. 3d 82, 85 (1976)). In
short, reading an indemnity provision to include first-party
litigation costs would “defeat the purpose of an indemnity
agreement,” which is “intended to be [a] unilateral
agreement[],” not to be made reciprocal by operation of
section 1717. Id. at 973. So, the court held that “[a]
provision including attorney fees as an item of loss in an
indemnity clause is not a provision for attorney fees in an
action to enforce the contract.” Id. at 971.
Other cases cited by the parties follow Myers’s lead. See
Carr Bus. Enters., Inc. v. City of Chowchilla, 166 Cal. App.
4th 14, 20, 23 (2008); Silverado Modjeska Recreation &
Park Dist. v. County of Orange, 197 Cal. App. 4th 282, 310
n.21 (2011); Rideau v. Stewart Title of Cal., Inc., 235 Cal.
App. 4th 1286, 1296–97 (2015). Only where specific
language overcomes the presumption, such as in Epic
Games, and makes the provision applicable to first-party
litigation costs is an indemnity provision interpreted that
way, and when that happens section 1717 usually makes
such a provision reciprocal and applicable to the entire
contract. See Epic Games, 67 F.4th at 1004; see also Carr,
166 Cal. App. 4th at 21–23 (comparing language in different
provisions). Therefore, the way section 1717 would interact
with third-party indemnity provisions if they were
18 AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK
interpreted to include first-party attorney fees also cautions
against DeWitt’s interpretation of California law.
4.
In short, cases since DeWitt clearly evince a presumption
against reading first-party attorney fees into indemnity
clauses, and that presumption reconciles the general purpose
of indemnity clauses with section 1717. Therefore, in our
“own best judgment,” we conclude the California Supreme
Court would not agree with DeWitt. T-Mobile USA Inc., 908
F.3d at 586 (quotation omitted). Instead, it would likely
apply a presumption that indemnity provisions only apply to
third-party losses. This presumption applies to even broad
language in indemnity provisions, like “all claims … arising
out of or resulting from performance of the Work,” Myers,
13 Cal. App. 4th at 964, and “all liability” relating to claims
by “any person” for injuries “aris[ing] out of, or … in any
way connected with, or incidental to the performance of the
work under this []contract,” Otis, 27 Cal. App. 4th at 561
n.1. Put differently, indemnity provisions that cover “any,
all, and every claim which arises out of the performance of
the contract deal[] only with third party claims.” Alki, 4 Cal.
App. 5th at 601 (internal citation and quotation marks
omitted).
Only much more specific language that clearly evinces a
desire to include first-party litigation costs is sufficient to
overcome California’s presumption. For example,
provisions that might defeat the presumption include those
covering “attorney’s fees incurred in enforcing the
indemnity agreement,” “all losses whether or not arising out
of third party Claims,” or losses from an “action or suit by
or in the right of the corporation to procure a judgment in its
favor.” Id. at 602–03 (emphases added) (internal quotation
AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK 19
marks and alterations omitted) (quoting Carr, 166 Cal. App.
4th at 22–23; Dream Theater, Inc. v. Dream Theater, 124
Cal. App. 4th 547, 556 (2004); Wilshire-Doheny Assocs. Ltd.
v. Shapiro, 83 Cal. App. 4th 1380, 1395 (2000)).
Here, Comerica agreed to indemnify AGK against “any
and all loss … asserted by any party arising out of the
undersigned’s position as ‘Declarant’ ….” (emphasis
added). This provision contains exactly the type of broad
language that is presumed to only apply to third-party costs
and fees, and it contains none of the specific language that
would indicate an agreement to include first-party litigation
costs. We therefore reverse the district court’s award of
first-party attorney fees pursuant to the indemnity provision.
B.
AGK argues that this court should alternatively affirm
the award of fees based on the attorney fees provision in the
PSA. Comerica argues that AGK failed to properly raise this
argument in the district court and therefore waived it, and
that in any event the attorney fees provision in the PSA did
not apply to litigation over the Assignment of Declarant
Rights. Because this question was first raised in AGK’s
answering brief and was not addressed by the district court,
we remand for the district court to determine whether the
argument has been waived or forfeited and, if not, whether
AGK is entitled to first-party attorney fees based on the PSA.
IV.
Notwithstanding our court’s forty-year-old precedent to
the contrary, California law presumes that indemnity
provisions do not cover the costs of litigation to enforce
them. The indemnity provision here does not rebut that
presumption, and therefore AGK is not entitled to attorney
20 AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK
fees spent in litigating the present suit based on that
provision. We therefore reverse the award of those fees and
remand to the district court.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
MILLER, Circuit Judge, concurring:
I join the court’s opinion in full. I write separately to
explain why it is appropriate that we apply a more flexible
standard of intra-circuit stare decisis to questions of state law
than to questions of federal law.
Generally, a panel of this court is strictly bound to follow
circuit precedent. In Miller v. Gammie, we recognized a
narrow exception to that rule, limited to cases in which “our
prior decision [has] been undercut by higher authority to
such an extent that it has been effectively overruled.” 335
F.3d 889, 899 (9th Cir. 2003) (en banc). For that exception
to apply, “the relevant court of last resort must have undercut
the theory or reasoning underlying the prior circuit precedent
in such a way that the cases are clearly irreconcilable.” Id.
at 900 (emphasis added). As we have repeatedly reaffirmed,
“[t]his is a high standard.” Rodriguez v. AT & T Mobility
Servs. LLC, 728 F.3d 975, 979 (9th Cir. 2013) (quoting Lair
v. Bullock, 697 F.3d 1200, 1207 (9th Cir. 2012)).
Our decision in Miller involved a question of federal law,
and so have most of the cases applying it. In such cases, the
Miller rule reflects a balance of the competing demands of
adherence to vertical precedent (decisions of the Supreme
Court) and horizontal precedent (decisions of this court).
But not all our cases involve questions of federal law. In
cases in which state law provides the rule of decision, Erie
AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK 21
requires us to apply—or, sometimes, to predict—the
decisions of the courts of another sovereign. See 28 U.S.C.
§ 1652; Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64, 79–80
(1938). More specifically, when tasked with applying state
law, we must follow the decisions of the highest court of the
State. Vestar Dev. II, LLC v. General Dynamics Corp., 249
F.3d 958, 960 (9th Cir. 2001). And when there is no
controlling decision from that court, then, so long as “there
is no convincing evidence that the state supreme court would
decide differently,” we are “obligated to follow the decisions
of the state’s intermediate appellate courts.” Ryman v. Sears,
Roebuck & Co., 505 F.3d 993, 995 (9th Cir. 2007) (quoting
Vestar Dev. II, LLC, 249 F.3d at 960). In other words, the
considered decision of an intermediate state appellate court
is “a datum for ascertaining state law which is not to be
disregarded by a federal court unless it is convinced by other
persuasive data that the highest court of the state would
decide otherwise.” West v. American Tel. & Tel. Co., 311
U.S. 223, 237 (1940); see Estrella v. Brandt, 682 F.2d 814,
817 (9th Cir. 1982).
State-law questions do not necessarily call for the same
balancing of vertical and horizontal precedent that federal
questions can require. Instead, they can implicate a balance
between the deference that we owe to state courts on matters
of state law and our duty to follow horizontal precedent. We
have not provided a clear answer as to how to strike that
balance. In particular, our cases do not specify what to do
when subsequent decisions of intermediate state appellate
courts run contrary to circuit precedent.
On the one hand, Miller’s reference to “the relevant court
of last resort” might be taken to refer to a state high court,
excluding intermediate state appellate courts. 335 F.3d at
900. Similarly, from our post-Miller cases establishing that
22 AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK
“some tension” between subsequent authority and circuit
precedent is insufficient to justify departing from that
precedent, one could infer that the decisions of intermediate
state appellate courts—which, at best, can only be predictive
of the decisions of state high courts—are insufficient to
justify a departure from circuit precedent. Lair, 697 F.3d at
1207 (quoting United States v. Orm Hieng, 679 F.3d 1131,
1140 (9th Cir. 2012)).
On the other hand, we have stated, albeit without
explanation, that circuit precedent interpreting state law “is
only binding in the absence of any subsequent indication
from the [state] courts that our interpretation was incorrect.”
Alvarez v. Chevron Corp., 656 F.3d 925, 932 (9th Cir. 2011)
(emphasis added) (quoting Munson v. Del Taco, Inc., 522
F.3d 997, 1002 (9th Cir. 2008)). That statement suggests a
more permissive view—that a decision of an intermediate
state appellate court could be a sufficient basis on which to
depart from circuit precedent on a state-law question. See In
re Watts, 298 F.3d 1077, 1081–83 (9th Cir. 2002). But see
id. at 1083–87 (O’Scannlain, J., concurring in the judgment).
Although that description of our approach to precedent long
predates Miller, we have never attempted to reconcile it with
the Miller rule. See, e.g., Owen ex rel. Owen v. United States,
713 F.2d 1461, 1464 (9th Cir. 1983).
Today the court correctly adopts the more permissive
view, and it declines to follow our holding in DeWitt v.
Western Pacific Railroad Co. that California law permits an
award of first-party attorney’s fees in a breach-of-contract
action to enforce an indemnity agreement. 719 F.2d 1448
(9th Cir. 1983). Our decision in DeWitt is not contrary to any
subsequent decision of the California Supreme Court, but, as
the court explains, multiple decisions of the California Court
of Appeal have made clear that DeWitt is not a correct
AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK 23
statement of California law. Indeed, in one such decision, the
California Court of Appeal expressly observed that “the
California appellate courts have not followed DeWitt.”
Jacobus v. Krambo Corp., 93 Cal. Rptr. 2d 425, 432 (Ct.
App. 2000). Because it is our duty “to ascertain from all the
available data what the state law is and apply it . . . however
much the state rule may have departed from prior decisions
of the federal courts,” I agree that we should follow the
California decisions rather than DeWitt. West, 311 U.S. at
237.
Adherence to precedent is “a foundation stone of the rule
of law,” Michigan v. Bay Mills Indian Cmty., 572 U.S. 782,
798 (2014), and it “promotes the evenhanded, predictable,
and consistent development of legal principles,” Payne v.
Tennessee, 501 U.S. 808, 827 (1991). By allowing a panel to
depart from circuit precedent when a subsequent Supreme
Court decision has abrogated that precedent, the Miller
approach recognizes that “the vertical obligation trumps the
horizontal obligation.” Byran A. Garner et al., The Law of
Judicial Precedent 38 (2016). And by insisting on a high
standard for identifying abrogation—demanding that a
subsequent decision be “clearly irreconcilable” with our
precedent—it promotes predictability and uniformity within
our circuit. Miller, 335 F.3d at 900.
But as explained above, the relevant balance is different
when it comes to questions of state law. In resolving state-
law issues, we cannot achieve predictability and uniformity
on our own because we are not the only forum in which
parties can litigate those issues. If we were to persist in an
approach that intermediate state appellate courts have
rejected, we would undermine not only the values
underlying Miller but also those underlying Erie, as we
would create opportunities for forum shopping and leave
24 AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P. V. COMERICA BANK
parties uncertain about what law will govern their primary
conduct. See Hanna v. Plumer, 380 U.S. 460, 468 (1965)
(describing “the twin aims of the Erie rule: discouragement
of forum-shopping and avoidance of inequitable
administration of the laws”); Poublon v. C.H. Robinson Co.,
846 F.3d 1251, 1267 (9th Cir. 2017) (explaining that “state
law should be applied consistently in federal and state courts,
a goal that ‘would be thwarted if the federal courts were free
to choose their own rules of decision whenever the highest
court of the state has not spoken’” (quoting West, 311 U.S.
at 236)). In so doing, we would defeat the purposes that
adherence to precedent and deference to state courts on
questions of state law advance.
To be sure, we could correct the problem by sitting en
banc, but resolving state-law questions is not generally an
appropriate use of our limited en banc resources. Likewise,
although a state high court could resolve the question, it is
an imposition on our state-court colleagues to require a state
high court to use its resources, which are also limited, simply
to correct our mistakes.
Of course, we should not lightly depart from circuit
precedent, even on issues of state law. But it is appropriate
for us to do so when decisions of intermediate state appellate
courts have shown that we are wrong.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, No.
02Drozd, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted February 13, 2024 San Francisco, California Filed July 19, 2024 Before: Eric D.
03Opinion by Judge VanDyke; Concurrence by Judge Miller 2 AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, L.P.
04COMERICA BANK SUMMARY * California Law / Attorneys’ Fees The panel reversed the district court’s award of attorney fees associated with litigating a first-party breach of contract suit enforcing an indemnity provision, and remanded.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT AGK SIERRA DE MONTSERRAT, No.
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