Country Casualty Insurance v. Villa-Chavez

208 P.3d 1036, 228 Or. App. 677, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 724
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMay 27, 2009
Docket060603L2; A135334
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 208 P.3d 1036 (Country Casualty Insurance v. Villa-Chavez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Country Casualty Insurance v. Villa-Chavez, 208 P.3d 1036, 228 Or. App. 677, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 724 (Or. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

*679 SCHUMAN, J.

Defendants—Villa-Chavez and three passengers in a car he was driving—were injured in an automobile accident that was caused by an underinsured motorist. 1 After a dispute arose between Villa-Chavez and Country Casualty Insurance Company (Country), Villa-Chavez’s underinsured motorist (UIM) carrier, Villa-Chavez brought an action—not this one—against Country. Country, acknowledging liability to defendants, then brought this action under the inter-pleader statute, ORCP 31, set out below. It deposited $50,000 with the court, the amount that it believed to be the limits of its liability for the accident, and asked to be discharged of further liability to all four defendants. It also asked the court to enjoin Villa-Chavez’s earlier breach of contract action. The court granted Country the relief it sought and, in a supplemental judgment, awarded it $5,649 in costs, disbursements, and attorney fees. Defendants appeal.

The relevant facts are undisputed. Villa-Chavez and his passengers were injured in a two-car accident caused by a man named Schneider, whose liability insurance with Allstate had coverage limits of $25,000 per person and $50,000 per accident. Villa-Chavez believed that his damages amounted to $200,000. When Country disputed that claim, Villa-Chavez brought a breach of contract action in Jackson County Circuit Court. In its answer, Country admitted that Villa-Chavez was in an accident; however, “[b]ased on lack of information and belief’ regarding the extent, if any, of Villa-Chavez’s injuries, Country denied his entitlement to any recovery under the UIM policy.

Before the breach of contract case went to trial, however, Country filed a separate complaint for interpleader; that complaint began the present case. In it, Country admitted that Schneider was at fault in the accident, that he was underinsured, and that he had no collectible assets. Country also admitted that the damages sustained by defendants amounted to at least $119,481 and that all of the defendants were its “insureds” under Villa-Chavez’s policy. Recognizing *680 some UIM exposure, Country promised to deposit with the court “the limits of UIM insurance determined to be available to the defendants,” and asked the court (1) to require that all persons who might have a claim against Country based on the accident “to interplead and resolve such claims in this action,” (2) to enjoin defendants from commencing or pursuing any action against Country for breach of contract, and (3) to discharge Country from all liability to defendants arising out of the accident with Schneider. Country also requested attorney fees. The legal source of Country’s complaint, as noted above, was ORCP 31, which provides:

“A Parties. Persons having claims against the plaintiff may be joined as defendants and required to interplead when their claims are such that the plaintiff is or may be exposed to double or multiple liability. It is not ground for objection to the joinder that the claims of the several claimants or the titles on which their claims depend do not have a common origin or are not identical but adverse to and independent of one another, or that the plaintiff alleges that plaintiff is not liable in whole or in part to any or all of the claimants. * * *
“B Procedure. Any property or amount involved as to which the plaintiff admits liability may, upon order of the court, be deposited with the court or otherwise preserved, or secured by bond in an amount sufficient to assure payment of the liability admitted. The court may thereafter enjoin all parties before it from commencing or prosecuting any other action regarding the subject matter of the interpleader action. Upon hearing, the court may order the plaintiff discharged from liability as to property deposited or secured before determining the rights of the claimants thereto.
“C Attorney fees. In any suit or action in inter-pleader filed pursuant to this rule by any party other than a party who has been compensated for acting as a surety with respect to the funds or property interpled, the party filing the suit or action in interpleader shall be awarded a reasonable attorney fee in addition to costs and disbursements upon the court ordering that the funds or property interpled be deposited with the court, secured or otherwise preserved and that the party filing the suit or action in interpleader be discharged from liability as to the funds or property. The attorney fees awarded shall be assessed against and paid from the funds or property ordered interpled by the court.”

*681 Approximately two months after filing its complaint, Country filed a motion to enjoin Villa-Chavez’s breach of contract case, pursuant to ORCP 31B. Villa-Chavez opposed the motion, arguing that an injunction was improper because, among other things, Country had not deposited with the court, or even promised to deposit with the court, “an amount sufficient to assure payment of the liability admitted.” ORCP 31 B. That amount, Villa-Chavez argued, was $100,000, the UIM policy limit.

“All plaintiff needed to do was deposit with the Clerk of the Court the $100,000 in UIM coverage policy limits which are applicable to the claims of the defendants. This would have removed plaintiff from the burden of defending against the various claims of the four defendants.”

Country replied that “there is no indication in any of the pleadings that plaintiff is contesting the amount of the available limits. They are $50,000 per person[,j $100,000 per accident, less any setoffs authorized by Oregon law.” (Emphasis added.) If by “plaintiff,” Country meant itself—that is, plaintiff in the interpleader action—then the reply is simply self-serving: Country is not disputing Country’s assertion of its policy limits. If, on the other hand, Country meant “plaintiff’ to refer to Villa-Chavez, the plaintiff in the breach of contract action, then the statement was true as far as it went, but not an accurate description of Villa-Chavez’s position.

That is so because, at this point in the proceedings, although Villa-Chavez agreed that the limits of Country’s liability was $100,000 “less any setoffs authorized by Oregon law,” he clearly did not agree on the amount of those setoffs. Country believed that $50,000 was its limit: $100,000 for the accident, minus a setoff of $50,000, the amount that Villa-Chavez received from Schneider’s liability insurance with Allstate. Villa-Chavez, for his part, believed that Country was not entitled to a setoff and had liability of $100,000.

The court granted Country’s motion to enjoin Villa-Chavez’s pending breach of contract action. At that point, because he no longer had the breach of contract action as a vehicle for asserting his entitlement to more than $50,000 in damages, Villa-Chavez filed an answer to Country’s inter-pleader complaint and, with the answer, a counterclaim for *682 $200,000. 2 Country filed a motion to dismiss the counterclaim and a motion to deposit $50,000 with the court as a full discharge of its liability. Defendants opposed those motions, but the court granted them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 P.3d 1036, 228 Or. App. 677, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/country-casualty-insurance-v-villa-chavez-orctapp-2009.