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Nature of Suit Code: 110
Nature of Suit: Insurance
Cause of Action: 

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NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION

File Name: 20a0236n.06

Case No. 19-3635

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

COMMERCE & INDUSTRY INSURANCE 

COMPANY,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

CENTURY SURETY COMPANY,

Defendant-Appellee.

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ON APPEAL FROM THE 

UNITED STATES DISTRICT 

COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN 

DISTRICT OF OHIO

O P I N I O N

BEFORE: MOORE, McKEAGUE, and READLER, Circuit Judges.

McKEAGUE, Circuit Judge. An ATV accident on the Alaska Peninsula over ten years 

ago spawned this insurance dispute; today, a federal court based in Ohio resolves it with the help 

of Pennsylvania law. What takes us all over the map are dueling policies issued to contractors at 

the accident site by jurisdictionally diverse insurers—the plaintiff, Commerce & Industry, and the 

defendant, Century Surety. Commerce argues that its insurance coverage took a backseat to 

Century’s, so Century must pay for all the legal defense costs associated with the ATV accident. 

Century responds that the district court got it right in splitting costs between the two of them. The

district court got it mostly right, but not all right. We accordingly AFFIRM in part, VACATE in 

part, and REMAND.

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I.

A.

Weston Solutions was a contractor working on a decontamination project in the remote 

town of Port Heiden, Alaska. It subcontracted for transportation services with Aniakchak, a local 

company presumably named after the nearby ancient volcano, Mount Aniakchak. In remote 

Alaska, though, “transportation services” is a euphemism for ATV rides, which have their risks. 

So Weston and Aniakchak agreed in their subcontract that Aniakchak would “indemnify, defend 

and hold harmless” Weston and its employees in the event of an accident resulting from 

Aniakchak’s work. Aniakchak further agreed that it would maintain a commercial general liability 

insurance policy (a “CGL” policy) that named Weston as an “additional insured,” covering Weston

for such an accident. Weston already had its own CGL policy issued by Commerce; Aniakchak’s 

CGL policy was issued by Century, and Weston was named as an additional insured through an 

“endorsement” to the policy (an amendment, basically) after the subcontract was executed.

What does that all mean? It means that in the event of an accident involving Aniakchak, 

Weston was doubly insured—through the policy Commerce directly issued it, and through the 

additional insured provision in the policy Century issued Aniakchak. 

That’s how these subcontracts normally work, by the way. A contractor hires a 

subcontractor to perform some work. Pursuant to the subcontract, the subcontractor maintains a 

CGL policy that, in addition to covering the subcontractor, covers the contractor as an additional 

insured. The idea is that if a third party gets hurt because of the subcontractor’s work, and that 

third party sues the contractor, the subcontractor’s insurer will take care of everything. But 

contractors already have CGL policies of their own which cover them in the event of such an 

accident. So to avoid overlapping coverage, a contractor’s insurer will include a provision in its 

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policy saying that if the contractor is covered as an additional insured in a subcontractor’s policy, 

the contractor’s policy is “excess.” This is called an “other insurance” provision. Usually, it 

operates such that the contractor will first rely on its coverage as an additional insured (the 

contractor’s “other insurance”), then turn to its own insurer. See, e.g., First Mercury Ins. Co. v. 

Cincinnati Ins. Co., 882 F.3d 1289, 1301–04 (10th Cir. 2018); Wright-Ryan Constr., Inc. v. AIG 

Ins. Co. of Canada, 647 F.3d 411, 414–17 (1st Cir. 2011).

That’s what the subcontract between Weston and Aniakchak contemplated. The 

subcontract mandates that Weston’s additional insured coverage through Aniakchak’s insurance 

be “primary” to Weston’s own CGL coverage. Accordingly, Aniakchak’s policy with Century

contains a standard additional insured provision for Weston: Century covers Weston as an 

additional insured “but only with respect to ‘bodily injury,’ ‘property damage,’ or ‘personal and 

advertising injury’ caused, in whole or in part, by” Aniakchak or those working on its behalf “in 

the performance of [its] ongoing operations for [Weston.]” Century Policy, R. 37-6, PageID 1454. 

And sure enough, the Century policy provides that its coverage is “primary and non-contributory”

with respect to its additional insureds. Id. These provisions operate seamlessly with Weston’s 

CGL policy with Commerce: Commerce’s coverage is excess when other insurance is available to 

Weston as an additional insured. Commerce Policy, R. 37-13, PageID 1510. 

Simple enough (for insurers, at least). There’s just one problem. Century’s policy also 

includes an other-insurance provision, but it’s broader. It says that if an “insured” under the 

Century policy has any other insurance available to it, then Century’s coverage is excess—even if 

the other insurance is itself excess. Century Policy, R. 37-6, PageID 1436. We’ll see how that 

complicates things later on. 

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B.

With that groundwork, we turn to the accident. Just before the project in Port Heiden 

finished, an Aniakchak ATV crashed en route from a Weston barbecue, injuring the passenger, an 

engineer named Kathryn Daniel. Daniel sued three parties in Alaska state court for her injuries: 

Weston, Aniakchak, and Konan Lind, the ATV driver. In her first complaint, filed in 2011, she 

alleged that (1) Weston itself was negligent, (2) Aniakchak was negligent and vicariously liable 

for Lind’s negligence as Lind’s employer, and (3) Lind was negligent. Two years later, in 2013, 

Daniel filed a second, amended complaint. In the second complaint, she added allegations that 

Lind was also employed by Weston, and that Weston was vicariously liable for Lind’s negligence.

The litigation in Alaska has since resolved. Its outcome is irrelevant here because the 

insurers are fighting over who has to pay defense costs—an obligation that arises from an insurer’s 

broad contractual “duty to defend” its insureds in litigation. The parties agree that their policies 

provide a duty to defend only when their coverage is primary. And generally, an insurer’s duty to 

defend kicks in when a complaint alleges there was an injury that potentially falls within the scope 

of the defendant’s insurance coverage. 

You might see where things are headed now. Weston might have been doubly covered—

through normal CGL insurance with Commerce, and as an additional insured in Century’s policy. 

If so, which coverage was primary (that is, which insurer had to pay Weston’s defense costs)? 

What about Lind—was there an issue of primacy there, too? And did it matter when Daniel alleged 

Lind was a Weston employee? Commerce sued Century for a declaratory judgment to figure this 

all out.

With respect to Weston’s defense, Commerce argued that Weston was possibly covered as 

an additional insured under Century’s policy because Daniel’s injuries were allegedly caused “in 

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part” by Aniakchak. And additional insured coverage is “primary and non-contributory,” 

according to the Century policy. Thus, Commerce said, its coverage was excess per its own otherinsurance provision, vitiating its duty to defend Weston. Century responded that even if that’s so, 

the broad other-insurance provision in Century’s policy also deems Century’s coverage excess, 

because other insurance was available to Weston through Commerce. And if both policies are 

excess, they conflict, making both insurers responsible for defense costs. 

As for Lind’s defense, Commerce reiterated its Weston-based arguments: Lind was an 

additional insured, so Century’s coverage was primary. Commerce alternatively argued that if its 

own coverage was primary, then it couldn’t be responsible for defense costs incurred by Lind 

before he was alleged to be Weston’s employee. Commerce’s policy only covered Weston and its 

employees, not Aniakchak employees. For its part, Century countered that only Weston is an 

additional insured under its policy, not Weston employees. On top of that, Commerce’s otherinsurance provision applies only when Weston is additionally insured, not Lind. And, according 

to Century, Commerce was obligated to pay all defense costs once Commerce’s policy became 

primary, even costs incurred before that point.

The district court held in Century’s favor on both points. See Commerce & Indus. Ins. Co. 

v. Century Sur. Co., 313 F. Supp. 3d 877 (S.D. Ohio 2018). Century’s policy, governed by Alaska 

law, and Commerce’s policy, governed by Pennsylvania law, conflicted with respect to Weston’s 

defense. Both policies claimed they were excess. So both insurers had to pay. Id. at 883–84. As 

for Lind, while both policies provided primary coverage, Commerce’s other-insurance provision 

was inapplicable. Commerce alone thus had to pay for Lind’s defense. Moreover, as the primary 

insurer, Commerce was in for a penny, in for a pound—all defense costs, even those incurred 

before Daniel alleged Weston employed Lind, were Commerce’s responsibility. Id. at 884–85.

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II.

Commerce appeals, and both sides renew their arguments from below. We review the 

district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. K.V.G. Props., Inc. v. Westfield Ins. Co., 900 

F.3d 818, 821 (6th Cir. 2018).

A.

We deal with Weston first. To start, we don’t doubt that given Daniel’s allegations, Weston 

potentially qualified as an additional insured, engendering Century’s duty to defend under that 

provision. Under Alaska law, which applies to the Century policy, the duty to defend arises where 

“a complaint states a cause of action within, or potentially within, the policy coverage.” Afcan v. 

Mut. Fire, Marine & Inland Ins. Co., 595 P.2d 638, 645 (Alaska 1979). Here, the additional 

insured provision—specifically its coverage of Weston for injury “caused, in whole or in part, by” 

Aniakchak—“plainly extends coverage beyond underlying lawsuits in which a plaintiff expressly 

raises claims against [Aniakchak], requiring only that [Aniakchak’s] acts or omissions have some 

causal relationship to the injury.” First Mercury Ins. Co., 882 F.3d at 1302. Thus, even though 

Daniel initially alleged Weston was itself negligent rather than vicariously liable, her allegations 

against Aniakchak meant Aniakchak could be a cause in part of her injuries, triggering potential 

coverage for Weston. See id.; Ramara, Inc. v. Westfield Ins. Co., 814 F.3d 660, 673–76 (3d Cir. 

2016); see also Pro Con, Inc. v. Interstate Fire & Cas. Co., 794 F. Supp. 2d 242, 256–57 (D. Me. 

2011) (“[B]y including the language ‘in whole or in part’ in its [additional insured provision], [the 

insurer] specifically intended coverage for additional insureds to extend to occurrences attributable 

in part to acts or omissions by both the named insured and the additional insured.”). And because 

Daniel’s complaint triggered the additional insured provision, in a normal case, Commerce’s 

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coverage of Weston would be excess to Century’s: Commerce’s policy is excess over additional 

insured coverage available to Weston. Commerce Policy, R. 37-13, PageID 1510.

But this is not a normal case. The Century policy includes a broad other-insurance 

provision: coverage is excess to any other insurance “the insured” has, even if that other insurance 

is excess. Century Policy, R. 37-6, PageID 1436. And “the insured” means not just Aniakchak

(defined in the policy as “you” or the “named insured”) but anyone insured under the policy, 

including additional insureds like Weston. Id., PageID 1404. In other words, even if Weston is 

covered as an additional insured under the Century policy—thus deeming Weston’s normally 

primary CGL coverage with Commerce excess—the Century policy’s coverage is also excess. 

This is strange because one would expect to see a qualifying clause in Century’s policy keeping

its additional insured coverage primary, to honor the subcontract between Weston and Aniakchak. 

See, e.g., Westfield Ins. Co. v. Weaver Cooke Constr., LLC, 383 F. Supp. 3d 566, 579 (E.D.N.C. 

2019) (“This coverage shall be excess with respect to [an additional insured]; any other insurance 

[an additional insured] has shall be primary with respect to this insurance, unless this coverage is 

required to be primary and not contributory in the contract [between the additional insured and the 

named insured].”). But that clause, or one like it, is absent here. 

This doesn’t read the phrase “primary and non-contributory” out of Century’s additional 

insured provision, as Commerce suggests. We must give effect to every provision of an insurance 

policy when possible. Stordahl v. Gov’t Emps. Ins. Co., 564 P.2d 63, 66 n.7 (Alaska 1977). And 

here, in order to give effect to both the additional insured provision and the other-insurance 

provision, the additional insured provision must provide primary and non-contributory coverage 

except when the other-insurance provision applies. That’s how it works with Century’s coverage 

of Aniakchak, too: coverage is primary, unless the other-insurance provision applies. 

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Granted, the phrase “primary and non-contributory” assumes that additional insureds will 

have excess coverage lurking elsewhere. And they typically do. So the way the other-insurance 

provision is written, it will nearly always apply to an additional insured. But not always. If for 

some reason an additional insured has no other coverage, or its other coverage isn’t “valid” or 

“collectible,” the other-insurance provision won’t apply. Century Policy, R. 37-6, PageID 1436. 

Moreover, we know that Century intended the other-insurance provision to apply to additional 

insureds because the provision applies to “the insured,” rather than simply “you” or the “named 

insured.” Nowhere are additional insureds carved out—even though the named insured is, under 

certain circumstances. Id. And again, noticeably absent from the policy is standard qualifying 

language deeming an additional insured’s coverage excess unless a subcontract requires it to be 

primary and non-contributory. We can’t read an “additional insured exception” into Century’s 

other-insurance provision where there is none.

Nor can the terms of the subcontract between Weston and Aniakchak change what the 

Century policy says. We recognize that the other-insurance provision of the Century policy 

seemingly means that the policy didn’t comply with Aniakchak’s obligations under its subcontract 

with Weston. That’s an issue between Aniakchak and Weston, however, and not relevant to this 

dispute between Commerce and Century.

Century’s other-insurance provision was therefore triggered in addition to Commerce’s. 

Both policies, however, can’t be excess. That would leave Weston without any primary coverage

and, in turn, no defense. So the law provides that if other-insurance provisions conflict, both 

insurers are on the hook for defense costs. Am. Cas. Co. of Reading v. PHICO Ins. Co., 702 A.2d 

1050, 1056 (Pa. 1997); Werley v. United Servs. Auto. Ass’n, 498 P.2d 112, 117–19 (Alaska 1972). 

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We thus agree with the district court’s bottom-line conclusion that Commerce and Century are 

each responsible for Weston’s defense.

B.

We also agree with the district court that Commerce’s coverage of Lind was primary to 

Century’s. Once Daniel alleged Lind was an employee of Weston and Aniakchak, all agree there 

was a potential for coverage for Lind under each policy’s normal CGL coverage. The only 

question is whether both policies’ other-insurance provisions were triggered, too, creating a 

conflict.

They weren’t. Commerce’s other-insurance provision says that its coverage is excess over 

“[a]ny other primary insurance available to you covering liability for damages arising out of the 

. . . operations . . . for which you have been added as an additional insured . . . .” Commerce Policy, 

R. 37-13, PageID 1510 (emphasis added). “You” means only the “named insured”—Weston. Id.,

PageID 1501. It does not mean anyone who is an “insured” under Commerce’s policy, a category 

which includes Weston’s employees. Id., PageID 1501, 1508. Thus, even if Lind potentially 

qualified as an additional insured under the Century policy, that would be other insurance available 

to him, not to Weston, which fails to trigger Commerce’s other-insurance provision. Compare this 

with Century’s policy. Its other-insurance provision more broadly applies whenever “the insured” 

has any other insurance coverage. Century Policy, R. 37-6, PageID 1436. “The insured” includes 

Aniakchak employees like Lind. Id., PageID 1404, 1412. Century’s other-insurance provision 

was thus triggered, but not Commerce’s, rendering Century’s coverage excess and Commerce’s 

primary. 

The district court therefore correctly held that, once Lind was alleged to be a Weston 

employee, Commerce’s coverage was primary and Commerce alone had a duty to defend.

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C.

Our agreement with the district court ends there, though. The district court concluded that 

because Commerce’s coverage was primary and Century’s excess, Commerce was responsible for 

all of Lind’s defense costs—even those that arose before Daniel alleged Lind was a Weston 

employee. 

We see it differently. Under Pennsylvania law, which governs Commerce’s policy, “[a]n 

insurer is obligated to defend its insured if the factual allegations of the complaint on its face 

encompass an injury that is actually or potentially within the scope of the policy.” Am. & Foreign 

Ins. Co. v. Jerry’s Sport Ctr., Inc., 2 A.3d 526, 541 (Pa. 2010). Put another way, “[a]s long as a 

complaint alleges an injury which may be within the scope of the policy, the insurer must defend 

its insured until the claim is confined to a recovery the policy does not cover.” State Farm Fire & 

Cas. Co. v. DeCoster, 67 A.3d 40, 46 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2013) (quotation and emphasis omitted). 

Here, no duty to defend could have existed on Commerce’s part until Lind was arguably 

its insured. And that wasn’t the case until Daniel’s second complaint alleged Weston employed 

Lind. The first complaint, in comparison, stated that Lind was Aniakchak’s employee. Nor were 

there any factual allegations in the first complaint suggesting Weston employed Lind. The 

allegations that Century points to—that Weston hosted the barbecue from which Lind drove 

Daniel, and that Lind failed to comply with the “transportation safety plan” Aniakchak and Weston 

adopted—don’t come close to suggesting Weston had the control over Lind necessary to create an 

employer–employee relationship. See Cmty. for Creative Non-Violence v. Reid, 490 U.S. 730, 

751–52 (1989); Powell v. Tanner, 59 P.3d 246, 249 (Alaska 2002). The fact that Daniel filed a 

second complaint illustrates that point. If the first complaint actually stated Weston’s control over 

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Lind, she wouldn’t have needed to file a second complaint alleging Weston “retained control over 

[Lind’s] work, and directed his work during the contract.”

Accordingly, from the beginning of Daniel’s suit in 2011 up to the filing of her second 

complaint in 2013, her claim was “confined to a recovery” that Commerce’s policy didn’t cover 

with respect to Lind; any injury caused by Lind was definitively outside the scope of the policy. 

Jerry’s Sport Ctr., Inc., 2 A.3d at 542; DeCoster, 67 A.3d at 46 (quotation and emphasis omitted). 

No potential coverage, no duty to defend, and no responsibility for defense costs—at least until 

the filing of the second complaint. See Seaboard Indus., Inc. v. Monaco, 392 A.2d 738, 744 (Pa. 

Super. Ct. 1978); cf. Allan D. Windt, Insurance Claims and Disputes, § 4.44 (6th ed.) (noting that,

in the context of pre-tender defense costs, most courts hold that “an insurer is not liable for [such] 

costs” in part because “until the policy coverage is triggered, defense costs are not covered”).

True, it seems that Weston and Commerce were tipped off to the possibility of Lind’s 

employment with Weston earlier. Lind’s counsel tendered defense on Commerce and Weston in 

2012, mentioning the issue. There was also summary-judgment briefing in Daniel’s case just 

before the filing of her second complaint arguing Weston employed Lind. But “[t]he question of 

whether a claim against an insured is potentially covered is answered by comparing the four 

corners of the insurance contract to the four corners of the complaint.” Jerry’s Sport Ctr., Inc., 2 

A.3d at 541. This evidence breaches all eight corners. And the one published Pennsylvania case 

that says a court can look outside the complaint in circumstances like this—Heffernan & Co. v. 

Hartford Ins. Co., 614 A.2d 295, 298 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1992)—is a “misfit” that we cannot follow. 

Lupu v. Loan City, LLC, 903 F.3d 382, 391–92 (3d Cir. 2018). Commerce’s duty to defend 

therefore couldn’t have arisen until Daniel filed her second complaint. 

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Determining precisely when Commerce’s duty to defend Lind arose, though, is best left 

for the district court to resolve on remand. As Century notes, it may raise “a whole new set of 

tender issues.” Appellee Br. at 36. Regardless, when splitting the bill, Century must be left with 

the costs it incurred for Lind’s defense before Commerce’s duty to defend arose; for costs after 

that point, Commerce pays.

III.

For these reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment with respect to Weston’s defense costs. We 

VACATE the judgment with respect to Lind’s defense costs, and REMAND for further 

proceedings.

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