Cornhuskers Casualty v. Samples

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 30, 2008
Docket06-35106
StatusPublished

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

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Cornhuskers Casualty v. Samples, (9th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

CORNHUSKER CASUALTY INSURANCE  COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. No. 06-35106 CHRIS KACHMAN, Defendant,  D.C. No. CV-05-05026-RBL and OPINION BROOKS SAMPLES, individually and as Personal Representative of the Estate of Leanne Samples, Defendant-Appellant.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington Ronald B. Leighton, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted October 19, 2007—Seattle, Washington

Filed January 30, 2008

Before: Ronald M. Gould and Richard A. Paez, Circuit Judges, and Lyle E. Strom,* District Judge.

Opinion by Judge Gould

*The Honorable Lyle E. Strom, Senior United States District Judge for the District of Nebraska, sitting by designation.

1505 1508 CORNHUSKER CASUALTY INS. v. SAMPLES COUNSEL

Kevin Coluccio, Garth L. Jones, Paul L. Stritmatter, Stritmat- ter Kessler Whelan Withey Coluccio, Hoquiam, Washington, for defendant-appellant Brooks Samples.

Irene M. Hecht, Maureen M. Falecki, Keller Rohrback L.L.P., Seattle, Washington, for plaintiff-appellee Cornhusker Casu- alty Insurance Company.

OPINION

GOULD, Circuit Judge:

Brooks Samples (“Samples”) appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Cornhusker Casualty Insurance Company (“Cornhusker”) and denial of Samples’ cross-motion for summary judgment in Cornhusker’s declara- tory judgment action. The district court held that Cornhusker, before the accident that resulted in the death of Samples’ wife, effectively cancelled its policy insuring the company responsible for her fatal injuries. The crux of the district court’s holding is its determination that certified mail satisfies the notice requirement for cancellation of an insurance policy under the Revised Code of Washington (“RCW”) § 48.18.290. Samples challenges this conclusion and also argues that Cornhusker, because it informed the insured that it would collect the premium in a quarterly payment plan, is estopped from denying coverage under its insurance policy when the insured paid its last installment less than three months after the previous payment. Cornhusker, in addition to endorsing the district court’s statutory interpretation, contends that Samples waived his right to argue that certified mail, unlike regular mail, must actually be delivered in order to sat- isfy the notice requirement of RCW § 48.18.290 because he did not raise the issue before the district court. We have juris- CORNHUSKER CASUALTY INS. v. SAMPLES 1509 diction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We hold that the issue of stat- utory interpretation raised by Samples has not been waived, and we further hold that Cornhusker is not equitably estopped from asserting its contrary theory of statutory interpretation. Thus, to resolve this question of statutory interpretation, in a separate order filed concurrently with this opinion we certify to the Washington State Supreme Court the sole dispositive issue of whether notice sent by certified mail qualifies as “mailed” under RCW § 48.18.290 and therefore satisfies the statutory notice requirement even if the letter is never received by the insured.

I

Beginning on June 28, 2000, Cornhusker, a Nebraska com- pany, provided commercial auto insurance for Rockeries, Inc. (“Rockeries”), a Washington landscaping company. The pol- icy renewed annually with a “quarterly” payment plan under which, after the first year, the total annual premium was billed in four equal installments throughout the year as specified on each installment notice. On eleven separate occasions during the more than four years that Cornhusker insured Rockeries, Rockeries did not pay a premium installment on time. After each payment deadline passed, Cornhusker sent a letter noti- fying Rockeries of the date the policy would be cancelled if Cornhusker did not receive Rockeries’ payment. On all but two of these occasions, Rockeries paid the amount due before the cancellation date and Cornhusker sent Rockeries a notice that Rockeries’ policy would be reinstated with no lapse in coverage. Rockeries did not pay by the cancellation date in January of 2001, but Cornhusker did not cancel Rockeries’ policy because the envelope containing the payment was post- marked before the cancellation date and the payment was received within five days of the cancellation date.

After Rockeries did not pay the premium installment due on September 2, 2004, Cornhusker, on September 29, 2004, sent via certified mail a letter notifying Rockeries that the pol- 1510 CORNHUSKER CASUALTY INS. v. SAMPLES icy would be cancelled if the payment was not received by October 19, 2004. Rockeries did not pay by the cancellation date for the second time and Cornhusker cancelled Rockeries’ policy on October 19. On October 22, 2004, Leanne Samples was fatally injured in an automobile accident with a Rockeries employee. Rockeries notified its insurance broker of the acci- dent on October 25, 2004, and Cornhusker received a check from Rockeries for the past-due premium installment on October 28, 2004. Rockeries never received the cancellation letter that Cornhusker sent by certified mail on September 29, and the letter was returned to Cornhusker on November 1, 2004.

Brooks Samples, Leanne’s husband and the administrator of her estate, brought a wrongful death action against Rocke- ries and its owners in Washington state court. Cornhusker then brought this action against Rockeries and Samples seek- ing a declaratory judgment that it had effectively cancelled its policy insuring Rockeries due to nonpayment of premiums prior to the accident and that it therefore had no obligation to provide Rockeries with a defense or assume any liability in the wrongful death action.

Cornhusker filed a motion for summary judgment. Samples filed a cross-motion for summary judgment in which he asserted that Cornhusker never cancelled the policy because it had sent the cancellation notice to Rockeries by certified mail. Samples argued that because certified mail requires a signature for delivery and because the letter was returned to Cornhusker, the cancellation letter was never delivered. Sam- ples contended that the failed delivery deprived Rockeries of the notice of cancellation mandated by RCW § 48.18.290. Samples also argued that Cornhusker was estopped from denying Rockeries coverage because (1) Cornhusker had on one occasion accepted late payments from Rockeries in the past and (2) the policy stated that Rockeries had to pay the premium on a quarterly basis and Cornhusker had received CORNHUSKER CASUALTY INS. v. SAMPLES 1511 Rockeries’ payment less than three months after Cornhusker received Rockeries’ previous installment payment.

The district court granted Cornhusker’s motion for sum- mary judgment and denied Samples’ cross-motion for sum- mary judgment, holding that as a matter of law notice sent by certified mail is “mailed” under RCW § 48.18.290 and that a letter of cancellation sent via certified mail provides sufficient notice of cancellation to comply with the statute even if, as in this case, the cancellation letter was never actually received by the insured.

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