BDR Clyde Hill VII LLC v. Continental Western Insurance Company, No. 2:2019cv01647 - Document 31 (W.D. Wash. 2020)

Court Description: ORDER granting Plaintiff's 12 Motion for Partial Summary Judgment Regarding Defendant's Unreasonable Breach of Its Duty to Defend; denying Defendant's 28 Motion for Summary Judgment re Priority of Coverage and Dismissal of Extra-Contractual Claims. Signed by Judge Richard A. Jones. (PM)

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BDR Clyde Hill VII LLC v. Continental Western Insurance Company Doc. 31 HONORABLE RICHARD A. JONES 1 2 3 4 5 6 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF WASHINGTON AT SEATTLE 7 8 9 BDR CLYDE HILL VII LLC, a Washington Limited Liability Company, 10 11 12 13 14 Case No. 2:19-cv-01647-RAJ Plaintiff, ORDER ON CROSS SUMMARY JUDGMENT v. CONTINENTAL WESTERN INSURANCE COMPANY, a foreign insurance company, Defendant. 15 I. 16 INTRODUCTION 17 Before the Court are two motions. For the reasons below, Plaintiff’s Motion for 18 Partial Summary Judgment Regarding Defendant’s Unreasonable Breach of Its Duty to 19 Defend (Dkt. # 12) is GRANTED, and Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment re 20 Priority of Coverage and Dismissal of Extra-Contractual Claims (Dkt. # 28) is DENIED. 21 II. BACKGROUND 22 In 2018, Plaintiff BDR Clyde Hill VII LLC (“BDR”) sold a home that it built to 23 Francois Vigneault and Catherine Marcotte (together, the “Homeowners”). Dkt. # 13 ¶ 3. 24 In building that home, BDR subcontracted LR Drywall Systems, Inc. (“LR Drywall”) to 25 install spray foam insulation. Id. The Homeowners later sued BDR for property damage 26 caused by LR Drywall’s allegedly defective installation. Dkt. # 13-7 ¶¶ 8, 11-16. 27 28 In turn, BDR tendered the lawsuit to LR Drywall’s insurer, Defendant Continental ORDER – 1 Dockets.Justia.com 1 Western Insurance Company (“Continental”), seeking Continental’s defense and 2 indemnification. Dkt. # 13-8. When BDR subcontracted LR Drywall, they entered a 3 Master Subcontract Agreement, in which LR Drywall agreed to name BDR as an 4 “additional insured” under LR Drywall’s insurance (“Continental Policy” or “Policy”). 5 Dkt. # 13-2 at 10. As an additional insured, BDR believed that Continental had a duty to 6 defend and indemnify it in the Homeowner’s lawsuit. Dkt. # 13-8. But Continental 7 refused. Dkt. #13-9 at 39-41. According to Continental, under the Policy, the additional insured coverage that it 8 9 provided to BDR was excess. Id. BDR was insured by Amtrust International 10 Underwriters DAC, which, Continental believed, provided primary coverage to BDR. Id. 11 The Amtrust policy was further subject to a $100,000 “self-insured retention,” or an 12 “SIR,” which BDR had to pay before Amtrust’s defense and indemnification obligations 13 were triggered. Dkt. # 13-1 at 75. Under the Policy’s “other insurance provision,” 14 Continental believed that the Policy was excess to both the Amtrust policy and the SIR. 15 Dkt. # 13-9 at 40. Given that, Continental explained, “any defense coverage that 16 [Continental] might provide could not be triggered unless and until [BDR’s] primary 17 insurer(s) decline to provide a defense to you after you exhaust the applicable SIR.” Id. 18 And, for that reason, Continental refused to defend or indemnify BDR at the time. Id. at 19 40-41. 20 BDR then sued Continental in this Court for breaching the duty to defend and later 21 moved for partial summary judgment. Dkt. ## 1, 12, 16. Continental responded to the 22 motion and many months later moved for cross summary judgment. Dkt. ## 18, 28. 23 Because there are no issues of material fact, the cross motions for summary judgment are 24 ripe for adjudication. III. LEGAL STANDARD 25 26 Summary judgment is appropriate if there is no genuine dispute as to any material 27 fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 28 ORDER – 2 1 56(a). The moving party bears the initial burden of demonstrating the absence of a 2 genuine issue of material fact. Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986). 3 Where the moving party will have the burden of proof at trial, it must affirmatively 4 demonstrate that no reasonable trier of fact could find other than for the moving party. 5 Soremekun v. Thrifty Payless, Inc., 509 F.3d 978, 984 (9th Cir. 2007). On an issue where 6 the nonmoving party will bear the burden of proof at trial, the moving party can prevail 7 merely by pointing out to the district court that there is an absence of evidence to support 8 the non-moving party’s case. Celotex Corp., 477 U.S. at 325. If the moving party meets 9 the initial burden, the opposing party must set forth specific facts showing that there is a 10 genuine issue of fact for trial to defeat the motion. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 11 U.S. 242, 250 (1986). The court must view the evidence in the light most favorable to 12 the nonmoving party and draw all reasonable inferences in that party’s favor. Reeves v. 13 Sanderson Plumbing Prods., 530 U.S. 133, 150-51 (2000). IV. DISCUSSION 14 15 A. Duty to Defend 16 “The insurer’s duty to defend is separate from, and substantially broader than, its 17 duty to indemnify.” Nat’l Sur. Corp. v. Immunex Corp., 297 P.3d 688, 691 (Wash. 18 2013). “The duty to indemnify applies to claims that are actually covered, while the duty 19 to defend arises when a complaint against the insured, construed liberally, alleged facts 20 which could, if proven, impose liability upon the insured within the policy’s coverage.” 21 Id. at 691 (internal quotation marks and emphasis omitted). “If there is any reasonable 22 interpretation of the facts or the law that could result in coverage, the insurer must 23 defend.” Id. (alterations and internal quotation marks omitted). 24 BDR argues that Continental has the duty to defend and that the duty has been 25 triggered; Continental says not yet. Dkt. # 12 at 6, 8; Dkt. # 18 at 15-16. Because 26 insurance policies are construed as contracts and interpretation is a matter of law, State 27 Farm Gen. Ins. Co. v. Emerson, 687 P.2d 1139, 1141-42 (Wash. 1984), the Court will 28 ORDER – 3 1 analyze the Continental Policy here, Dkt. # 12 at 4; Dkt. # 18 at 2-8. i. 2 BDR is an “additional insured” under the Continental Policy 3 Under endorsement CL CG 20 71 09 16, LR Drywall could name an “additional 4 insured” under the Continental Policy. Dkt. # 13-3 at 58. The additional insured could 5 be any “person(s) or organization(s)” that LR Drywall was “obligated [to] by virtue of a 6 written contract or agreement,” and the Policy only applied if LR Drywall was in fact 7 “required to add the additional insured” under that agreement. Id. Here, when BDR 8 subcontracted LR Drywall to install spray foam insulation, LR Drywall agreed to name 9 BDR as an additional insured, making BDR a proper “additional insured” under the 10 Policy. Dkt. # 13-2 at 10. 11 ii. 12 13 Continental’s duty to defend is subject to several conditions, all of which have been triggered Invoking Section IV of the Commercial General Liability Coverage Form 14 (“Section IV”), BDR claims that Continental has a duty to defend BDR in the 15 Homeowner’s lawsuit. Section IV(4)(b)(2) states: 16 17 18 19 (2) When this insurance is excess, we will have no duty under Coverages A or B to defend the insured against any “suit” if any other insurer has a duty to defend the insured against that “suit.” If no other insurer defends, we will undertake to do so, but we will be entitled to the insured’s rights against all those other insurers. 20 Dkt. # 13-3 at 33. Based on this section, Continental must defend BDR under several 21 conditions. First, for the section to apply, the Policy must be excess. Second, if another 22 insurer has a duty to defend BDR in the Homeowner’s lawsuit, then Continental will not 23 have a duty to defend. Finally, if no other insurer defends BDR, then Continental must 24 do so. All these conditions have been met here. 25 The first condition is met because the Policy is excess to the Amtrust policy. 26 Under endorsement CL CG 01 14 09 16, the Policy is excess over any “other insurance, 27 whether primary, excess, contingent or on any other basis . . . [t]hat is available to . . . an 28 ORDER – 4 1 additional insured.” Dkt. # 13-3 at 46. The Policy could be primary and noncontributory 2 over BDR’s insurance, however, if LR Drywall and BDR had agreed to as much by a 3 written contract. Id. But that is not the case here. BDR does not argue that the Policy is 4 in fact primary, nor does it offer any evidence of an agreement with LR Drywall to make 5 the Policy so. Thus, the Policy is excess. 6 The second condition is also met because Amtrust has no duty to defend BDR 7 against the Homeowners. The Amtrust policy makes clear that it is subject to an SIR and 8 that the SIR must be first paid before any defense obligations may arise. Dkt. # 13-1 at 9 75. Although payment of the SIR is a “condition precedent” to Amtrust’s duty to defend, 10 it is not a sufficient condition. Id. That is, even if BDR pays the SIR, Amtrust is not 11 required to defend. Instead, Amtrust has “the right but not the duty to . . . defend any 12 claim or ‘suit’ to which the ‘Self-Insured Retention’ applies.” Id. (emphasis added). 13 Continental does not argue otherwise. Thus, given that no other insurer has a duty to 14 defend BDR, Continental is not relieved from its duty to defend. 15 Finally, based on this record, the last condition is met as no other insurer is 16 defending BDR. Dkt. # 13-10. Continental argues, however, that BDR is indeed being 17 defended by an insurer—itself. Dkt. # 18 at 16; Dkt. # 28 at 11. BDR is self-insured, 18 Continental says, and therefore “a defense is being provided . . . by the self-insurer, who 19 has been defending.” Dkt. # 18 at 16; Dkt. # 28 at 11. This argument is unpersuasive. 20 Although BDR is in fact self-insured up to its SIR, it is not an “insurer” under any 21 reasonable interpretation of the Policy. This is true under a dictionary definition. 22 Insurer, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (defining an insurer as “[s]omeone who 23 agrees, by contract, to assume the risk of another’s loss and to compensate for that loss”) 24 (emphasis added). It is also true under the definition provided by Washington’s 25 insurance code. RCW § 48.01.050 (defining an insurer as “every person engaged in the 26 business of making contracts of insurance”). And it is further supported by Washington 27 case law. Bordeaux, Inc. v. Am. Safety Ins. Co., 186 P.3d 1188, 1192 (Wash. Ct. App. 28 ORDER – 5 1 2008) (“No one has yet to suggest in such instances that [a self-]insured, being self- 2 insured up to the amount of [a] deductible, is an ‘insurer’ who has merely ‘reinsured’ the 3 risk above a certain limit.”) (quoting Stamp v. Dep’t of Labor & Indus., 859 P.2d 597, 4 601 (Wash. 1993)). 5 BDR is a general contractor, not an “insurer.” Dkt. # 1 ¶ 5; Dkt. # 12 at 1. 6 Continental offers no evidence suggesting that BDR is in the business of making 7 insurance contracts or that it insures anyone other than itself. Continental’s argument— 8 that BDR is an “insurer” defending itself under an SIR—fails, and the final condition on 9 Continental’s duty to defend has been met. 10 In sum, several conditions had to occur before Continental’s duty to defend was 11 triggered. All conditions have been met, and as a result Continental has a duty to defend 12 BDR in the Homeowner’s lawsuit. 13 iii. Continental’s refusal to defend is unsupported by the Policy or case law 14 Continental’s argument is not whether it has a duty to defend BDR so much as 15 when. Continental says that, as an excess insurer, it “does not yet have a duty defend 16 BDR because an excess policy does not apply until the underlying primary insurance has 17 been exhausted.” Dkt. # 18 at 2. In short, it believes that BDR must exhaust both the 18 SIR and the AmTrust policy before the Continental Policy is triggered. Id. at 15. 19 This position is hardly supported by the Policy’s terms. As discussed, there are a 20 few condition precedents to Continental’s duty to defend—exhaustion of primary 21 insurance is not among them. Indeed, exhaustion is barely mentioned in the Policy at all. 22 By the Court’s count, the word “exhaust” and its derivatives appear only once in the 23 entire Policy and not in any context relevant here. Dkt. # 13-3. The Court will not now 24 inject a new condition. 25 But Continental insists that the Policy supports its refusal to defend. It says that 26 Section IV (which outlines Continental’s duty to defend) is superseded by endorsement 27 CL CG 20 71 09 16 (which allowed LR Drywall to name an additional insured). Dkt. 28 ORDER – 6 1 # 18 at 16; Dkt. # 28 at 4-6. The endorsement modifies Section IV by declaring that the 2 “insurance is excess of all other insurance available to an additional insured whether on a 3 primary, excess, contingent or any other basis” and by “supersed[ing] any provision to 4 the contrary.” Dkt. # 13-3 at 59. Continental makes two arguments. First, because the 5 Policy is excess of all other insurance on any basis, it is excess to the Amtrust policy and 6 the SIR. Dkt. # 28 at 8. Second, the endorsement supersedes the duty to defend portion 7 of Section IV because that section is contrary to the endorsement. Id. at 11. 8 Neither argument is persuasive. Section IV and endorsement CL CG 20 71 09 16 9 are, in fact, compatible. As BDR argues, although the endorsement supersedes Section 10 IV, nothing in the endorsement is “contrary” to Continental’s promise to defend. Dkt. 11 # 19 at 7. The section and endorsement are harmonious. The endorsement makes the 12 Policy excess to any other insurance. Dkt. # 13-3 at 59. And “[w]hen th[e Policy] is 13 excess,” Continental’s duty defend in Section IV is implicated. Id. at 33. As BDR puts 14 it, “the main policy form assumes that Continental is ‘excess’—and then states that the 15 insurer will defend anyway.” Dkt. # 19 at 7 (emphasis in original). 16 A more fundamental point: Continental dedicates much of its argument hoping to 17 persuade the Court that the Policy is excess to all other insurance available to BDR. Dkt. 18 # 18 at 11-18; Dkt. # 28 at 8-14. If it can prove that the Policy is excess, Continental 19 seems to think, then the Court should hold that the Amtrust policy and the SIR must be 20 exhausted before Continental’s duty to defend arises. Dkt. # 18 at 11-18; Dkt. # 28 at 8- 21 14. Quite the opposite. Under Section IV, Continental’s duty to defend applies because 22 the Policy is excess insurance. Dkt. # 13-3 at 33 (“When this insurance is excess, we will 23 have no duty . . . to defend . . . if any other insurer has a duty to defend the insured . . . . If 24 no other insurer defends, we will undertake to do so . . . .”) (emphasis added). The Court 25 agrees that the Policy is excess to the Amtrust policy, which is what, in part, triggers 26 Continental’s duty to defend. See supra Part IV.A.ii. Thus, at the center of summary 27 judgment here is not whether the Policy is excess but whether Continental’s duty to 28 ORDER – 7 1 2 defend BDR has been triggered. Finding no support for Continental’s position in the text of the Policy, the Court 3 turns to Continental’s cited authority. Continental cites several cases in support of its 4 exhaustion argument. 5 First, it cites Weyerhaeuser Co. v. Commercial Union Ins. Co., 15 P.3d 115, 134- 6 35 (Wash. 2000), as amended (Jan. 16, 2001). In that case, the Washington Supreme 7 Court explained that “an excess insurer’s duty to defend may also arise when . . . (3) the 8 coverage and obligations of the underlying insurers have been validly exhausted.” Id. 9 Because the Amtrust policy and SIR have not yet been exhausted, Continental concludes 10 that its obligations as an excess insurer have not been triggered. Dkt. # 18 at 15; Dkt. 11 # 28 at 9. But Continental ignores the court’s holding just two sentences earlier: “An 12 excess insurer’s obligation to defend is generally defined by the excess policy.” 13 Weyerhaeuser, 15 P.3d at 134. In Weyerhaeuser, the excess policy was silent on the 14 excess insurer’s duty to defend. Id. at 134. The Continental Policy is not. Dkt. #13-3 at 15 33. Therefore, the general rule applies, and the Court looks to the excess Policy to 16 determine Continental’s obligation to defend BDR. The Court need not determine when 17 “an excess insurer’s duty to defend may also arise” here. Weyerhaeuser, 15 P.3d at 134 18 (emphasis added). 19 Continental next relies on Cornhusker Cas. Co. v. SQI, Inc., No. 2:08-cv-00456- 20 JCC, 2008 WL 5378312, at *6 (W.D. Wash. Dec. 23, 2008), arguing that the excess 21 policy there is much like the Policy here. In Cornhusker, an insurer provided excess 22 coverage. Id. The excess policy in that case maintained that it was “excess over any 23 other valid and collectible insurance, whether such other insurance is primary, excess, 24 contingent or otherwise.” Id. at *2. The district court ultimately found no duty to defend 25 because the defendants offered no proof that they exhausted their other insurance and 26 SIR. Id. at *7. 27 28 The policy in Cornhusker and the Policy here, though similar, differ in one key ORDER – 8 1 respect: there, defense was a right; here, defense is a duty. Id. Although the Cornhusker 2 court explained that an excess insurer’s duties may depend on “whether the obligations of 3 the underlying insurers, if any, have been exhausted,” it also reaffirmed the general rule 4 that the duties of “an excess insurer are defined by the policy.” Id. Under the excess 5 policy in that case, the excess insurer had “the right, but not the duty to defend,” and if 6 the claimant had no other insurer to defend it, the excess insurer “may [have] 7 undertake[n] to do so.” Id. (emphasis in original) (internal quotation marks omitted). 8 The Policy here stands in stark contrast. In plain terms, the Policy holds that if no insurer 9 defends BDR, Continental “will undertake to do so.” Dkt. # 13-3 at 33 (emphasis added). 10 Here, the Policy clearly imposes a duty to defend on Continental, and that duty has been 11 triggered. Because the two polices are so different, Continental’s reliance on Cornhusker 12 is unpersuasive. 13 Finally, Continental argues that the Policy is not excess, but “super excess.” Dkt. 14 # 28 at 10. It says that endorsement CL CG 20 71 09 16 (modifying the Policy to be 15 “excess of all other insurance available to an additional insured whether on a primary, 16 excess, contingent, or any other basis”), Dkt. # 13-3 at 59, is in fact a “super excess 17 clause,” Dkt. # 28 at 10. According to Continental, the endorsement is much like the 18 “super escape clause” in New Hampshire Indem. Co. v. Budget Rent-A-Car Sys., Inc., 64 19 P.3d 1239, 1241 (Wash. 2003). There, the policy of one insurer contained a super escape 20 clause, which, the Washington Supreme Court explained, provides that “insurance will 21 not apply to any liability for loss that is covered by primary, excess, contributory, or any 22 other basis by other insurance.” Id. at 1241 n.2 (emphasis added). The court held that, 23 under the super escape clause, coverage would become available “only after all other 24 insurance available, including excess insurance, is exhausted.” Id. at 1243. 25 Again, there is a significant difference between the “super escape clause” in 26 Budget and the “super excess” Policy here: there, the super escape clause explicitly stated 27 that no coverage would be triggered until all other insurance was exhausted; here, 28 ORDER – 9 1 exhaustion is not mentioned at all. The policy in Budget stated that “BUDGET’S 2 LIABILITY PROTECTION DOES NOT APPLY until after exhaustion of all automobile 3 liability insurance and/or other protection available to the driver.” Budget, 64 P.3d at 4 1241. The Continental Policy here says nothing of exhaustion. Dkt. # 13-3 at 59. 5 In sum, the case law holds that an excess insurer’s rights and obligations are 6 defined by the insurer’s excess policy. Although in some cases an excess insurers’ rights 7 may be triggered upon exhaustion of all other insurance, the Court must rely on the 8 Policy’s terms here. See Budget, 64 P.3d at 1240 (“We hold that the conditions of 9 coverage depend on the terms of the insurance contracts and that no per se rule 10 [governs] . . . .”). The Policy indeed states that it is excess to all other insurance. But it 11 does not state that if the Policy is excess, its duty to defend will only be triggered after all 12 other insurance is exhausted. In fact, the opposite is true—the Policy clearly states that 13 when the Policy is excess, Continental will undertake BDR’s defense (provided that the 14 other condition precedents are met). 15 Under the Policy, Continental has a duty to defend BDR in the Homeowners’ 16 lawsuit, and Continental breached that duty. Budget, 64 P.3d at 1243 (“The insured 17 should not be left without a prompt and proper defense and if a primary insurer fails to 18 assume the defense, for any reason, the secondary insurer which has a duty to defend 19 should provide the defense and, to do justice, should be entitled to recoup its costs from 20 the primary insurer.”). 21 B. Bad Faith 22 “An insurer acts in bad faith if its breach of the duty to defend was unreasonable, 23 frivolous, or unfounded.” Am. Best Food, Inc. v. Alea London, Ltd., 229 P.3d 693, 700 24 (Wash. 2010) (en banc). An insurer may not base its refusal to defend on an “an 25 equivocal interpretation of case law to give itself the benefit of the doubt rather than its 26 insured.” Id. at 701. Instead, an insured “may defend under a reservation of rights and 27 may seek declaratory relief to establish that its policy excludes coverage.” Id. “Denying 28 ORDER – 10 1 a duty to defend based on a questionable interpretation of case law constitutes bad faith 2 as a matter of law.” Webb v. USAA Cas. Ins. Co., 457 P.3d 1258, 1274 (Wash. Ct. App. 3 2020). If a court determines that an insurer breached the duty to defend in bad faith, it 4 must “presume harm from the insurer’s actions” and “hold the insurer liable for the cost 5 of any defense and estop the insurer from asserting that there is no coverage.” Robbins v. 6 Mason Cty. Title Ins. Co., 425 P.3d 885, 894 (Wash. Ct. App. 2018), aff’d, 462 P.3d 430 7 (Wash. 2020). 8 9 Continental refused to defend BDR on an incorrect, or at the very least equivocal, interpretation of the Policy and case law. Its argument relies on generic rights and 10 obligations of excess insurers described in the case law, while ignoring the plain terms of 11 the Policy—a Policy that does not condition Continental’s duty to defend on BDR’s 12 exhaustion of all other insurance. Indeed, the word exhaustion and its equivalents are 13 hardly found in the policy at all. Thus, Continental’s refusal is bad faith as a matter of 14 law. The Court presumes that BDR was harmed and estops Continental from asserting 15 that it has no duty to defend. 16 C. Insurance Fair Conduct Act (“IFCA”) 17 Under the IFCA, a claimant to an insurance policy who is “unreasonably denied a 18 claim for coverage or payment of benefits by an insurer may bring an action in the 19 superior court of this state to recover the actual damages sustained, together with the 20 costs of the action, including reasonable attorneys’ fees and litigation costs.” RCW 21 48.30.015(1). Continental moves for summary judgment on BDR’s IFCA claim. Dkt. 22 # 28 at 15. But, as discussed, Continental’s refusal to defend was unreasonable and done 23 in bad faith. Thus, BDR is entitled to summary judgment on its IFCA claim. 24 Although BDR did not move for summary judgment on its IFCA claim, that does 25 not prevent the Court from granting summary judgment in its favor sua sponte. “Even 26 when there has been no cross-motion for summary judgment, a district court may enter 27 summary judgment sua sponte against a moving party if the losing party has had a ‘full 28 ORDER – 11 1 and fair opportunity to ventilate the issues involved in the matter.’” Gospel Missions of 2 Am. v. City of Los Angeles, 328 F.3d 548, 553 (9th Cir. 2003) (quoting Cool Fuel, Inc. v. 3 Connett, 685 F.2d 309, 312 (9th Cir.1982)). That was the case here. Continental moved 4 for summary judgment nearly eight months after it responded to BDR’s motion for 5 summary judgment. In that time, Continental had a full and fair opportunity to ventilate 6 BDR’s IFCA claim and raise a genuine factual issue, but it has failed to do so. Thus, as 7 to this claim, the Court denies Continental’s request for summary judgment and grants 8 summary judgment in favor of BDR. V. CONCLUSION 9 10 For the reasons stated above, the Court GRANTS Plaintiff’s Motion for Partial 11 Summary Judgment Regarding Defendant’s Unreasonable Breach of Its Duty to Defend 12 (Dkt. # 12) and DENIES Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment re Priority of 13 Coverage and Dismissal of Extra-Contractual Claims (Dkt. # 28). 14 15 DATED this 12th day of August, 2020. A 16 17 The Honorable Richard A. Jones United States District Judge 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 ORDER – 12

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