Benning v. Allstate Insurance

602 A.2d 233, 90 Md. App. 592, 1992 Md. App. LEXIS 53
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 2, 1992
Docket818, September Term, 1991
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 602 A.2d 233 (Benning v. Allstate Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benning v. Allstate Insurance, 602 A.2d 233, 90 Md. App. 592, 1992 Md. App. LEXIS 53 (Md. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

*594 WILNER, Chief Judge.

On February 4,1989, Patricia Benning, while a passenger in a car being driven by her sister Pamela, was severely injured when the car went out of control and hit a pole. Pamela was insured at the time under a policy issued by Allstate Insurance Company. The policy provided coverage for bodily injury claims up to $100,000 but contained a partial “household exclusion,” which limited coverage to $20,000 for bodily injury claims made by “any person related to an insured person ... and residing in that person’s household.” Residence was defined in the policy as “the physical presence in your household with the intention to continue living there.” (“your” emphasized in original; other emphasis supplied.)

Through counsel, Patricia informed Allstate that she was asserting a claim against Pamela. Allstate, apparently, did not contest that the accident was covered under the policy or that Patricia’s injuries would support a claim for more than. $20,000. Because at the time of the accident Patricia was living in the same home as Pamela, however, Allstate took the position that the household exclusion applied; it offered to settle the claim for $20,000. Contending that she was but a temporary resident in Pamela’s home and did not, at the time of the accident, intend to continue living there, Patricia rejected both Allstate’s position that the household exclusion applied and its offer. Instead of rushing to sue her sister, however, Patricia filed suit against Allstate in the Circuit Court for Charles County seeking a declaratory judgment that the household exclusion did not apply to her and that the policy therefore covered her claim up to $100,000. That suit was filed on July 18, 1990.

After an exchange of discovery focusing on Patricia’s living arrangements, Allstate, on March 22,1991, moved for summary judgment, or, in the alternative, for dismissal, principally on the basis that Patricia had no standing to bring the action. That defense was based on Butler v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 86 Md.App. 684, 375 A.2d 576 (1977), where we concluded that a declaratory judgment action will *595 not lie by a claimant against an alleged tortfeasor’s insurer to resolve a dispute as to the tortfeasor’s coverage until the claimant has obtained a judgment against the tortfeasor.

On April 8, 1991, eighteen days prior to the date scheduled for trial of the action, Pamela filed a motion to intervene in the case, asserting, among other things, that she wanted Allstate to compensate her sister but did not want to be sued by her. She did not concede, either in her motion or in the proposed complaint attached to her motion, that she was negligent or otherwise responsible for the accident or would have any liability to her sister. Pamela supported Patricia’s assertion that the household exclusion in the policy did not apply. Concomitantly, Patricia responded to Allstate’s motion, contending that Pamela’s intervention would “cure” the standing problem and that, if Pamela were allowed to intervene, Patricia could remain in the case “as a co-plaintiff.”

The complaint, Allstate’s motion, and Pamela’s motion to intervene all came before the court on April 26, 1991, the previously scheduled trial date. Although Pamela asked the court to deal with her motion first, the court began (and ended) with Allstate’s motion. After hearing argument, including a concession by Patricia that the motion was well-founded and that, had Patricia known of the Butler case, she never would have brought the action, the court granted the motion. The effect of that was to put Patricia, the only plaintiff then in the case, out of court. The court then decided that it did not need to address Pamela’s motion because there was no case pending in which she could intervene. Both Patricia and Pamela have appealed.

Patricia’s Appeal

Patricia acknowledges in her brief that the judgment entered with respect to her was correct. She concedes that her case is controlled by Butler, and she tells us that the soundness of that decision “is not now being questioned.” The law is clear that the right to appeal may be lost by “acquiescence in, or recognition of, the validity of the *596 decision below from which the appeal is taken____” Franzen v. Dubinok, 290 Md. 65, 68, 427 A.2d 1002 (1981), quoting from Rocks v. Brosius, 241 Md. 612, 630, 217 A.2d 531 (1966). That is certainly the case here. We shall therefore dismiss Patricia’s appeal.

Pamela’s Appeal

Pamela’s appéal stands in a different posture. The effect of the court’s failure to address her motion to intervene was a denial of the motion. Denial of intervention, whether claimed as of right or as permissive, is an appeal-able final order. Maryland Life & Health Ins. v. Perrott, 301 Md. 78, 87, 482 A.2d 9 (1984). Her appeal, therefore, is a procedurally proper one.

As we indicated, the court declined to address Pamela’s motion on the ground that, having dismissed Patricia’s complaint, there was no pending action in which Pamela could intervene. Technically, of course, that was correct, but it does not end the inquiry. It simply recasts the issue as whether the court abused its discretion in addressing Allstate’s motion to dismiss Patricia’s complaint before considering Pamela’s motion to intervene.

The Maryland Rules are designed, and are directed to be construed, “to secure simplicity in procedure, fairness in administration, and elimination of unjustifiable expense and delay.” Md.Rule l-201(a). Those objectives, we believe, must also govern the exercise of the court’s discretion in dealing generally with proceedings before it. The effect of the procedure used by the court here was to deny Pamela's motion whether or not it had merit and to force her, if she chose to pursue her action against Allstate, to file another lawsuit with all of the cost, delay, and inconvenience attending that course. 1 We see absolutely no virtue in *597 that approach, only mischief. If the court believed that Pamela did not meet the standards for either mandatory or permissive intervention under Md.Rule 2-214, it should have so ruled and denied her motion on that basis. If, on the other hand, Pamela did meet the standards for intervention and should have been made a party-plaintiff, then the procedure used became simply a device to deny her a right to which she was entitled. In either event, the procedure chosen secured neither simplicity in procedure, fairness in administration, nor the elimination of unjustifiable expense and delay; indeed, it achieved quite the opposite. We therefore conclude that the court abused its discretion in failing to address Pamela’s motion to intervene before acting upon Allstate’s motion to dismiss Patricia’s complaint.

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Bluebook (online)
602 A.2d 233, 90 Md. App. 592, 1992 Md. App. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benning-v-allstate-insurance-mdctspecapp-1992.