Continental Casualty Company v. Allstate Property and Casualty Insurance Company

235 So. 3d 40
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 24, 2017
DocketNO. 2016-CA-00359-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 235 So. 3d 40 (Continental Casualty Company v. Allstate Property and Casualty Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Casualty Company v. Allstate Property and Casualty Insurance Company, 235 So. 3d 40 (Mich. 2017).

Opinions

KITCHENS, JUSTICE,

FOR THE COURT:

1f 1. As Greg Peters and Mike Williams were attempting to position, Peters’s fishing boat on its trailer, the winch handle recoiled, struck, and seriously injured Williams. Peters, who owned the truck, the trailer, and the boat, had two liability insurance policies covering bodily injury: his truck and trailer were insured by Allstate Property and Casualty Insurance Company (Allstate) and his boat was insured by Continental Casualty Company (Continental). Ultimately, the insurers settled with Williams for $460,000, each paying $230,000' toward the total settlement. Prior to settlement, however, the insurers had not agreed on apportionment. Continental sought a declaratory judgment in the Circuit Court of the First Judicial District of Harrison County, in which it claimed indemnity from Allstate based on its apportionment theory and also reimbursement for the defense costs it had incurred investigating the claim. Allstate responded with' a motion to dismiss, in which it sought indemnity. from Allstate based on its own apportionment theory and also sanctions against Continental for having made its defense costs and expenses claim. The circuit court treated the motion to dismiss as a motion for partial summary judgment and granted summary judgment in Allstate’s favor, but declined to award sanctions to Allstate. Allstate then filed a motion for summary judgment on Continental’s remaining indemnity claim, which the circuit court granted. Continental now appeals the grant of summary judgment on its indemnity claim. Allstate cross-appeals the denial of sanctions. As to Continental’s indemnity claim, we reverse the grant of summary judgment to Allstate and render- judgment in favor of Continental. As to Continental’s claim of entitlement to defense costs, we affirrh the grant of summary judgment for Allstate. Finally, we affirm the denial of sanctions to Allstate.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. Greg Peters and his family took Peters’s twenty-six-foot, 2003 Regulator fishing boat to Ship Island, Mississippi, for a beach day and picnic lunch on June 22, 2013, accompanied by their friend Mike Williams and Williams’s son. The group returned to the boat launch in Gulfport, Mississippi, and Refers tied off the boat so the others could disembark. Williams then backed. Peters’s 2012 Chevrolet Silverado truck and the attached trailer down a public launch ramp and into the water so Peters could maneuver the boat onto the trailer. Peters drove the vessel onto the trailer and Williams, on land, hooked the trailer’s winch strap, which runs around rollers to position the vessel’s bow on the trailer, to the bow. Williams began tightening, the winch to draw the vessel onto the trailer,, .but the bow was .off-center. [43]*43Williams told Peters that he needed to back up the boat so that the bow could be centered on the trailer; but when Peters did, the winch recoiled and the handle struck Williams’s left eye, causing serious bodily injuries to Williams.

¶ 3. At the time of the accident, Peters’s 2012 Chevrolet Silverado truck and trailer were covered by a liability insurance policy from Allstate. The Allstate policy, effective from April 14, 2013, to October 14, 2013, covered liability for bodily injury up to $250,000. Peters also had obtained a liability insurance policy from Continental for his 2003 Regulator fishing boat, which was effective from April 13, 2013, to April 13, 2014, and covered liability for bodily injury up to $300,000.'

114. The respective insurance policies contained “other insurance” clauses. The Allstate policy’s “other insurance” clause stated the following: “[i]f more than one policy applies on a primary basis to an accident involving your insured auto, we will bear our proportionate share with other collectible liability insurance.” (Emphasis in original.) The Continental policy’s “other insurance” clause stated that “[i]f there is any other available insurance that would apply in the absence of this policy, this insurance shall apply as excess over the other insurance ....”

¶ 5. Peters reported the incident to Continental on August 26, 2013, and' Continental assigned Stuart Platt to investigate. Continental requested from ’ Williams an explanation of benefits from his piimary health insurance carrier and a medical records authorization form which allowed Continental “to correspond ■ directly with [Williams’s] doctors . regarding ... bills and treatment.”

¶ 6. Platt photographed the boat, trailer, and winch, including the handle which had struck Williams. Platt took recorded statements from Peters, Peters’s wife, and Williams. Platt also received authorization from Williams to obtain his medical records. His report of the investigation concluded that Williams ultimately had, to have surgery “to reattach the retina” and a second surgery “to place an artificial lens in the eye, to see if they could restore his vision.” According to Platt’s report of September 13, 2013, “[s]ince the surgeries, [Williams] has experienced some inter-ocular pressure” and “[i]f the pressure in the eye cannot be controlled,, another surgery may be needed to insert a valve to allow drainage of fluid from the eye to relieve .pressure ....” The injury caused Williams to have limited vision and, thus, Platt stated that “[w]e will have to retrieve the [medical] records and monitor [Williams’s] medical progress towards maximum medical cure, and determine if he has any permanent disability in the end .... ” He assumed the combined medical bills and lost wages would be substantial. On September 19, 2013, Platt sent Williams’s medical records to Continental from initial evaluations at Gulfport Memorial Hospital and Tri-County Eye Clinic and from a specialist at Vitreoretinal Eye Center.

¶ 7. On September 27, 2013, Continental paid Williams $1,000, Peters’s policy limit for Medical Payments coverage. Continental also provided a check to Williams for $25,000 in excess of the Medical Payments coverage, but informed him that such payment was not an admission “of liability or wrongdoing, and any monies paid herein are credited toward any ultimate monetary resolution.”

¶ 8. On October 22, 2013, attorney Robert Schwartz of Biloxi, notified Continental that he had- been retained on behalf ,of Williams and, on November 5, 2013, Continental sent Schwartz a copy of Peters’s insurance policy. Also on November 5, 2013, Continental’s' defense counsel, Jedd Malish of New Orleans, opined in an e-mail [44]*44to Continental that the Allstate auto policy “should provide primary coverage for this claim,” that the Continental boat policy “should only provide coverage i[f] [Williams’s] damages exceed $250,000,” and that “[b]ecause Allstate has primary coverage for this loss, it has the duty to defend this claim.”

¶ 9. On November 6, Malish informed Continental that Schwartz had requested a copy of the Allstate policy and had informed him that Williams’s medical bills were in excess of $100,000, that only twenty to thirty percent of Williams’s vision had been restored, that future surgery or surgeries possibly would be necessary, and that Williams was at risk for developing glaucoma. Accordingly, Malish observed that the damages could exceed the $250,000 Allstate auto policy limit and that Continental would be obligated to pay the excess.

¶ 10. Peters then made a claim with Allstate. At Allstate’s request, Continental sent a copy of Peters’s Continental boat policy to Allstate on November 11, 2013.

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Bluebook (online)
235 So. 3d 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-casualty-company-v-allstate-property-and-casualty-insurance-miss-2017.