Dempsey v. Allstate Insurance Co.

2004 MT 391, 104 P.3d 483, 325 Mont. 207, 2004 Mont. LEXIS 673
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 2004
Docket04-032
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 2004 MT 391 (Dempsey v. Allstate Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dempsey v. Allstate Insurance Co., 2004 MT 391, 104 P.3d 483, 325 Mont. 207, 2004 Mont. LEXIS 673 (Mo. 2004).

Opinions

JUSTICE LEAPHART

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 The Plaintiffs, Tyler Dempsey and those similarly situated, brought this class action in the United States District Court for the District of Montana to recover damages from Allstate Insurance Company pursuant to insurance policies Allstate had issued. The Class alleges that the retroactive application of our decision in Hardy v. Progressive Specialty Insurance Co., 2003 MT 85, 315 Mont. 107, 67 P.3d 892, entitles them to additional payments from past insurance claims that were not previously allowed because their automobile insurance policies did not allow for stacking. Allstate moved to dismiss, pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The District Court certified a question and six relevant facts to this Court and denied Allstate’s motion without prejudice pending our answer.

[209]*209¶2 We accepted the certified question, which is stated as:

¶3 Does the Montana Supreme Court’s decision in Hardy v. Progressive Specialty Insurance Co., 2003 MT 85, 315 Mont. 107, 67 P.3d 892, apply prospectively only, or does it apply retroactively to require payment of stacked uninsured, underinsured motorist and medical payment insurance coverages in qualifying circumstances on claims arising before the date of the Hardy decision?

¶4 Our answer is that the Hardy decision applies retroactively to cases pending on direct review or not yet final.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶5 The District Court certification included the following four agreed upon facts:1

¶6 1. On January 1, 2000, Dempsey was injured in a motor vehicle accident in Gallatin County, Montana. He was a named insured under an Allstate policy which had medical payment coverage limits of $2,000 applicable to each of four vehicles listed in the policy.

¶7 2. Although Dempsey’s medical expenses exceeded $10,000, Allstate only paid the single limit of liability, $2,000, and declined to stack limits, relying on anti-stacking language in the policy and Montana’s anti-stacking statute, § 33-23-203, MCA, which was in effect at the time of Dempsey’s accident.

¶8 3. On April 18,2003, the Montana Supreme Court decided Hardy v. Progressive Specialty Insurance Co., which determined Montana’s anti-stacking statute to be unconstitutional and the anti-stacking language in Progressive’s insurance policy to be void and unenforceable and further held that Progressive had to “stack” and pay underinsured motorist benefits for each coverage for which the insured had paid a separate premium.

¶9 4. Allstate has maintained that the Hardy decision applies prospectively only. On that basis, Allstate has declined to stack uninsured motorist, underinsured motorist, or medical payment benefits in claims arising before the April 18,2003, decision in Hardy. Dempsey accordingly brought a class action to force Allstate to stack medical payment, uninsured, and underinsured policy limits on all claims arising prior to the Hardy decision.

¶10 In sum, the claims of Dempsey and of many other Montana automobile insurance consumers ride on our determination of whether [210]*210the Hardy decision applies retroactively or whether it only applies to claims that arose on or after April 18, 2003. In addressing this issue, we invited the Montana Trial Lawyers Association (MTLA) and the Montana Defense Trial Lawyers Association (MDLTA) to appear as amicus curiae. We held oral argument en banc on July 14, 2004.

DISCUSSION

¶11 Does the Montana Supreme Court’s decision in Hardy v. Progressive Specialty Insurance Co. apply prospectively only, or does it apply retroactively to require payment of stacked uninsured, underinsured motorist and medical payment insurance coverages in qualifying circumstances on claims arising before the date of the Hardy decision?

I. The Rule of Retroactivity in Montana

¶12 In 1971 the United States Supreme Court announced Chevron Oil Co. v. Huson (1971), 404 U.S. 97, 92 S.Ct. 349, 30 L.Ed.2d 296. Chevron laid-out a flexible three-factored test for whether a decision applies prospectively only. We adopted the Chevron test for questions of Montana law in LaRoque v. State (1978), 178 Mont. 315, 318-19, 583 P.2d 1059, 1061, and subsequently applied it several times. See, e.g., Poppleton v. Rollins, Inc. (1987), 226 Mont. 267, 271, 735 P.2d 286, 289; Nehring v. LaCounte (1986), 219 Mont. 462, 471, 712 P.2d 1329, 1335; Jensen v. State, Dep’t of Labor & Indus. (1984), 213 Mont. 84, 88, 689 P.2d 1231, 1233. In the meantime, the United States Supreme Court revisited the question of prospective application several times and eventually overruled Chevron in Harper v. Virginia Dep’t of Taxation (1993), 509 U.S. 86, 113 S.Ct. 2510, 125 L.Ed.2d 74.

¶13 Then, in Porter v. Galarneau (1996), 275 Mont. 174, 185, 911 P.2d 1143, 1150, and without analyzing Harper, we strayed from our reliance on Chevron. Although Porter involved statutory retroactivity, we remarked in dicta that “[w]e will continue to give retroactive effect to judicial decisions, which is in accord with the U.S. Supreme Court’s holding in Harper v. Virginia Dep’t of Taxation.” Subsequently, this time as a general rule of law, we cited Porter in support of retroactivity. See Kleinhesselink v. Chevron, U.S.A. (1996), 277 Mont. 158, 162, 920 P.2d 108, 111 (holding that “[w]e give retroactive effect to judicial decisions” and therefore a decision of ours “is applicable to this case even though it was not available to the District Court....”); Haugen v. Blaine Bank of Montana (1996), 279 Mont. 1, 8, 926 P.2d 1364, 1368; State v. Steinmetz, 1998 MT 114, ¶ 10, 288 Mont. 527, ¶ 10, 961 P.2d 95, ¶ 10 (criminal case).

[211]*211¶14 Following Steinmetz it appeared that we would follow the rule of the United States Supreme Court’s Harper decision. However, subsequent decisions did not bear that out. In Ereth v. Cascade County, 2003 MT 328, 318 Mont. 355, 81 P.3d 463, Seubert v. Seubert, 2000 MT 241, 301 Mont. 382, 13 P.3d 365, and Benson v. Heritage Inn, Inc., 1998 MT 330, 292 Mont. 268, 971 P.2d 1227, without reference to the Porter line of cases, we applied the Chevron test to determine whether prospective application was appropriate. The Class argues that we did not expressly adopt a new approach to retroactivity in Ereth, Seubert, and Benson, that only pre-Harper cases were cited by the parties in those cases, and that the decisions were therefore aberrations where this Court inadvertently reverted to old discredited precedent.

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Dempsey v. Allstate Insurance Co.
2004 MT 391 (Montana Supreme Court, 2004)

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Bluebook (online)
2004 MT 391, 104 P.3d 483, 325 Mont. 207, 2004 Mont. LEXIS 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dempsey-v-allstate-insurance-co-mont-2004.