Allstate Insurance v. Tonja Blount

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 26, 2007
Docket06-3628
StatusPublished

This text of Allstate Insurance v. Tonja Blount (Allstate Insurance v. Tonja Blount) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allstate Insurance v. Tonja Blount, (8th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ________________

No. 06-3628 ________________

Allstate Insurance Company, * * Appellant, * * v. * Appeal from the United States * District Court for the Tonja Blount; Nathan Smith; * Western District of Missouri. Andrew J. Grimes; Barbara * Grimes; Mitchell Y. Choi, * * Appellees. *

________________

Submitted: March 15, 2007 Filed: June 26, 2007 ________________

Before COLLOTON, HANSEN and GRUENDER, Circuit Judges. ________________

GRUENDER, Circuit Judge.

Allstate Insurance Company (“Allstate”) brought a declaratory judgment suit seeking a determination that the homeowner’s insurance policy it issued to Barbara Grimes (“Grimes”) did not provide coverage for damages awarded against her in a wrongful death suit. The district court held that the damages were covered by the policy and granted summary judgment against Allstate. For the reasons that follow, we affirm in part and reverse in part. I. BACKGROUND

This case arises out of the underlying wrongful death suit Tonja Blount filed in the Circuit Court for Greene County, Missouri, against Nathan Smith, Grimes, Andrew Grimes and Mitchell Y. Choi (collectively, “defendants”), alleging that defendants negligently caused or contributed to the death of her son, Jeffrey Cale Gormley, who had became ill, and eventually died, after drinking alcohol and using drugs while at Grimes’s home.1

At the time of the alleged actions, Grimes was insured under a homeowner’s insurance policy with Allstate. The policy covered “damages which an insured person becomes legally obligated to pay because of bodily injury or property damage arising from an occurrence to which the policy applies” (“damages provision”). Allstate defended Grimes under a reservation of rights in the wrongful death proceeding.2 At the same time, however, Allstate filed the instant declaratory judgment suit in federal court seeking a determination that the negligence claims in the wrongful death suit were not covered by the damages provision and, alternatively, were excluded under the policy’s exclusion for “bodily injury or property damage intended by, or which may be reasonably expected to result from the intentional or criminal acts or omissions of, any insured person” (“criminal acts exclusion”).

1 With respect to Grimes, the suit alleged that she negligently: failed to supervise Gormley, failed to control Gormley, failed to protect Gormley, failed to provide assistance to Gormley, supervised Gormley, and created a substantial risk to the life of Gormley. We will refer to these collectively as the “negligence claims.” 2 Defending an insured under a “reservation of rights” allows the insurer to assume the defense of the claim and later “contest whether or not a judgment ultimately entered in the case f[alls] within the policy coverage.” Butters v. City of Independence, 513 S.W.2d 418, 424-25 (Mo. 1974).

-2- While the wrongful death and declaratory judgment suits were pending, Grimes faced state criminal charges related to the death of Gormley. In the criminal proceeding, Grimes pled guilty to first-degree involuntary manslaughter, a violation of Mo. Rev. Stat. § 565.024.1.3 Specifically, Grimes admitted to “recklessly caus[ing] the death of Jeffrey Cale Gormley by providing her home to minors for the consumption of alcohol and/or controlled substances without adult supervision.”

At the guilty plea hearing, the prosecutor recited the factual basis for the charge. Following the prosecutor’s factual recitation, Grimes admitted to the facts and entered her guilty plea.4 The admitted facts established that Choi, Smith, Andrew Grimes and Gormley drove to a convenience store where they purchased two cases of beer and a bottle of bourbon. The boys then drove to Grimes’s home where they arrived around 7:30 p.m. There, Gormley drank alcohol and consumed Xanax. At some point during the evening Gormley fell and hit his head, creating a knot above his eye. Thereafter, Gormley laid down underneath a coffee table where he passed out. Around 11:00 p.m. that evening, Smith called Tracie Whitlock, Gormley’s girlfriend, to inform her that Gormley was “having problems.” Andrew Grimes called her around 1:00 a.m. to tell her that Gormley did not “look right” and was having trouble breathing. Whitlock instructed Andrew Grimes to alert his mother of Gormley’s condition and to call her back if the problems persisted. Whitlock did not receive any other phone calls. Grimes was aware that Gormley was sixteen years old and had been drinking and doing drugs in her home. Her only instruction to the boys was to move the coffee table so that Gormley would not break it when he awoke. Eventually, emergency personnel arrived at Grimes’s home where they pronounced Gormley dead. Gormley

3 The statute provides that “[a] person commits the crime of involuntary manslaughter in the first degree if he or she . . . [r]ecklessly causes the death of another person.” Mo. Rev. Stat. § 565.024.1. 4 In the response to Allstate’s motion for summary judgment before the district court, Grimes admitted that she pled guilty because she acted as alleged by the prosecution in the criminal complaint and at the plea hearing.

-3- died from respiratory failure resulting from intoxication. The medical examiner concluded that had Gormley received medical attention he would have lived.

Following Grimes’s criminal conviction, Allstate moved for summary judgment against Grimes, Andrew Grimes and Blount in the declaratory judgment suit. In effect, Allstate argued for the application of non-mutual collateral estoppel,5 asserting that Grimes’s guilty plea and resulting criminal conviction prevented her from challenging the fact that the policy’s damages provision does not apply and that the criminal acts exclusion does apply, thereby precluding coverage for any damages awarded against her in the wrongful death suit. The district court denied Allstate’s summary judgment motion, holding that the negligence cause of action pled in the wrongful death suit was “separate and distinct” from the conduct established by the guilty plea and conviction and that “it is likely coverage exists for this separate cause of action.”

Also subsequent to Grimes’s criminal conviction, Blount, Grimes and Andrew Grimes entered into an agreement under Mo. Rev. Stat. § 537.065 with respect to the wrongful death suit. An agreement under this provision “expressly authorizes an insured to settle a personal injury or wrongful death action by agreeing that the plaintiff may collect the settlement only against the insurer.” Esicorp, Inc. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 193 F.3d 966, 971 (8th Cir. 1999). It does not determine the insured’s liability but merely limits enforceability of a judgment. O’Donnell v. St. Luke’s Episcopal Presbyterian Hosps., 800 F.2d 739, 741 (8th Cir. 1986). In the present case, the agreement provided that:

5 Non-mutual collateral estoppel “allow[s] strangers to the prior suit to assert collateral estoppel against parties to the prior suit to bar relitigation of issues previously adjudicated.” Oates v. Safeco Ins. Co. of Am., 583 S.W.2d 713, 719 (Mo. banc 1979).

-4- The § 537.065 agreement also provided that the parties agreed to allow a consent judgment of $1,500,000 to be entered in favor of Blount and against Grimes and Andrew Grimes, jointly and severally. Finally, the agreement noted that Grimes and Andrew Grimes expressly denied all liability. The parties waived a trial by jury. The trial court stated that:

[h]aving heard the evidence, and with the consent of defendants Andrew Grimes and Barbara Grimes, [the court] finds the issues in favor of plaintiff Tonja Blount for the wrongful death of [Gormley]. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
Allstate Insurance v. Tonja Blount, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allstate-insurance-v-tonja-blount-ca8-2007.