The latest revision of CSS2.1 has this to say on the matter:
When an inline box contains an in-flow block-level box, the inline box
(and its inline ancestors within the same line box) are broken around
the block-level box (and any block-level siblings that are consecutive
or separated only by collapsible whitespace and/or out-of-flow
elements), splitting the inline box into two boxes (even if either
side is empty), one on each side of the block-level box(es). The line
boxes before the break and after the break are enclosed in anonymous
block boxes, and the block-level box becomes a sibling of those
anonymous boxes. When such an inline box is affected by relative
positioning, any resulting translation also affects the block-level
box contained in the inline box.
In other words, from a layout point of view, the inlined div and h3 combination forms an inline box, a block box and another inline box. Only the two inline boxes take the formatting (i.e. the background-color) and the block box does not form any part of the inline box defined by the div and so takes its default background-color setting (which is transparent, showing through the background color of its containing block box).