Misleading Investment Advice Not Covered
|
General Liability |
Misrepresentation |
|
Error or Omission |
Advertising Injury |
Purchasers of extensive agricultural
property claimed financial loss as a result of misrepresentations and omissions
in the investment prospectus furnished by the organization that marketed the
property. They sued the marketing company for negligent misrepresentation,
unfair competition, and negligence. A default judgment was entered against the
marketer when it failed to defend.
The record showed
that the marketing company's attorney had informed its excess liability insurer
of the lawsuit but that the insurer had not been involved in the proceedings.
The purchasers of the property sued the insurer directly, seeking payment of the
judgment under coverage for advertising injury provided in the policy. The
insurer filed a motion for dismissal of the complaint on the grounds that the
allegations were not covered by the pertinent insuring provisions. The
purchasers appealed grant of the motion by the trial court.
The purchasers
stressed that "advertising injury" was defined in the policy to
include "....any negligent act, error or omission in the use of
advertising or merchandising ideas." They argued that "the incorrect
statements and significant omissions" in advertisements, upon which they
relied, were within the scope of the definition.
The appeal court
disagreed. It noted that the definition of "advertising injury" named
six specific causes of injury: "libel, slander, defamation, piracy,
infringement of copyrights, and invasion of the right of privacy." This
was followed by the general words "....or any negligent act, error or
omission in the use of advertising or merchandising activities."
The court cited
precedent to the effect that the general language could not be relied on for
coverage here. In effect, it must be construed in the context of enumerated
causes of injury from advertising activities. No reasonable person would expect
the general words to embrace misleading investment advice.
The judgment of the
trial court was affirmed in favor of the insurance company and against the
purchasers of the property.
Cahill Et Ux., Plaintiffs-Appellants v. Liberty
Mutual Insurance Company, Defendant-Appellee. United States Court of Appeals
for the Ninth Circuit. No. 94-55943. March 25, 1996. CCH 1996 Fire and Casualty
Cases, Paragraph 5648.