Edward Lafferty v. Nicholas T. Vaughn, Tyler A. Veazey, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company And Mississippi Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 20, 2021
Docket2021CA0084
StatusUnknown

This text of Edward Lafferty v. Nicholas T. Vaughn, Tyler A. Veazey, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company And Mississippi Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company (Edward Lafferty v. Nicholas T. Vaughn, Tyler A. Veazey, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company And Mississippi Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edward Lafferty v. Nicholas T. Vaughn, Tyler A. Veazey, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company And Mississippi Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company, (La. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

No. 2021 CA 0084

101-11 11811XW. y 1DtA 611

VERSUS

NICHOLAS T. VAUGHN, TYLER A. VEAZEY, STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY AND MISSISSIPPI FARM BUREAU CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY

Judgment Rendered. M(, 2 0 2021

Appealed from the 22nd Judicial District Court In and for the Parish of Washington State of Louisiana Case No. 111598

The Honorable William J. Knight, Judge Presiding

G. Brice Jones Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellant

Paul D. Hesse Edward Lafferty L. Jason Cuccia Slidell, Louisiana

Dan Richard Dorsey Counsel for Defendant/ Appellee

Patricia P. Barattini Mississippi Farm Bureau Casualty Covington, Louisiana Insurance Company

BEFORE: GUIDRY, McCLENDON, AND LANIER, JJ. , r

S 5 P) c L c,1C,, {' , LANIER, J.

This matter is before us on appeal by plaintiff, Edward Lafferty, from the

district court's summary judgment, dismissing his claims against defendant,

Mississippi Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company (" Mississippi Farm

Bureau"), with prejudice. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This case arises out of vehicular collision that occurred on January 20, 2017,

in Pearl River County, Mississippi, when Mr. Lafferty was operating a vehicle,

owned by The Estate of Edward T. Lafferty Revocable Trust, westbound on

Highway 26. At the same time, Nicholas T. Vaughn was operating a vehicle,

owned by Edward Friedlander] and insured by State Farm Mutual Automobile

Insurance Company (" State Farm"), south on the exit off r-amp of I-59, preparing to

turn west onto Highway 26. Mr. Vaughn failed to yield the right of way to Mr.

Lafferty and struck the Lafferty vehicle in the right passenger door.

According to the record, Mr. Lafferty' s counsel advised Mississippi Farm

Bureau, Mr. Lafferty' s underinsured/ uninsured (" UM") insurer, that he represented

Mr. Lafferty in connection with a possible UM claim resulting from the accident.

In response thereto, counsel for Mississippi Farm Bureau informed Mr. Lafferty' s

counsel that if they " settle[ d] with another person or insurer without [ Mississippi

Farm Bureau' s] express written consent, then additional coverage, including

uninsured motorist coverage, may be excluded."

Mr. Lafferty filed suit on January 11, 2018, seeking to recover damages for

his injuries, naming, among others, Mississippi Farm Bureau. On February 2,

2018, Mississippi Farm Bureau was advised of a possible settlement with State

Farm. On February 20, 2018, Mississippi Farm Bureau filed an answer, generally

1 Although the owner of the vehicle Mr. Vaughn was operating is identified in the petition as Tyler A. Veazey, it is clear from the record that the true owner of the vehicle is Edward Friedlander.

N denying Mr. Lafferty' s allegations and asserting that the Mississippi Farm Bureau

policy in question was issued in favor of The Edward T. Lafferty Irrevocable Trust

in Mississippi and that Mississippi law governed all claims concerning the policy.

Thereafter, on February 27, 2018, Mr. Lafferty' s counsel provided

Mississippi Farm Bureau with additional information indicating that Mr. Lafferty

had settled his claim directly the with the State Farm adjustor, but that executed

affidavits of no other insurance were needed before the release and settlement

agreement could be finalized. On March 2, 2018, Mr. Lafferty's counsel provided

a copy of an affidavit of no other insurance executed on March 1, 2018, by Mr.

Friedlander. However, according to the record, Mississippi Farm Bureau had no

notice that a settlement agreement was finalized until after Mr. Lafferty provided

answers to written discovery in January 2019, which prompted counsel for

Mississippi Farm Bureau to inquire with the Washington Parish Clerk of Court' s

office as to whether there had been a dismissal filed. It was at this time that

counsel for Mississippi Farm Bureau learned that a " Motion and Order of Partial

Dismissal" was filed and signed on January 11, 2019, dismissing Mr. Vaughn, Mr.

Veazey, Mr. Friedlander, and State Farm.2 Moreover, according to the record, Mr.

Lafferty executed the release on May 4, 2018, discharging Mr. Vaughn, Mr.

Friedlander and his estate, and State Farm ( hereinafter collectively referred to as

State Farm"), for the policy limits of $100, 000. 00. 3

On July 29, 2019, Mississippi Farm Bureau filed a motion for leave to

amend its answer to assert a defense based on the consent -to -settle exclusion of the

policy. Leave was granted by the district court on July 29, 2019, and Mississippi

2 According to the record, there was an identical prior " Motion and Order of Partial Dismissal" signed by the district court on June 11, 2018, and filed into the record on June 8, 2018. However, Mississippi Farm Bureau asserts it only discovered this earlier dismissal on review of the trial record, which was prompted by the appeal that is now before us. 3 Mississippi Farm Bureau asserts that although Mr. Lafferty had provided it with a copy of the unexecuted release with its written discovery responses, it has never received a copy of the executed release from Mr. Lafferty.

3 Farm Bureau filed its supplemental and amended answer. In response thereto, Mr.

Lafferty advised the district court that he opposed the motion for leave and

requested that a hearing be set. The matter proceeded to hearing on September 20,

2019, at which time the district court heard argument from counsel and, adopting

its previous order signed on July 29, 2019, ordered that Mississippi Farm Bureau

be allowed to file its supplemental and amended answer. A judgment was signed

accordingly on October 16, 2019.

In response to Mr. Lafferty's claims, Mississippi Farm Bureau filed a motion

for summary judgment asserting that there was no genuine issue as to any material

fact in dispute and that Mississippi Farm Bureau was entitled to summary

judgment as a matter of law because the policy in question does not provide UM

coverage for Mr. Lafferty' s claims. Mississippi Farm Bureau argued that Mr.

Lafferty failed to comply with the terms of the policy by failing to request or

obtain the express written agreement of Mississippi Farm Bureau prior to settling.

Mr. Lafferty opposed the motion for summary judgment, arguing that there

were genuine issues of material fact remaining that precluded summary judgment

in this case. Although Mr. Lafferty did not dispute that Mississippi law should be

applied to the insurance contract in question, he argued that under Mississippi

jurisprudence, a valid consent -to -settle clause can be waived by the inaction of an

UM insurer. He maintained that Mississippi Farm Bureau' s conduct in this case

constituted an implied waiver of the enforcement of the consent -to -settle clause.

Following a hearing on the motion for summary judgment, the district court

signed a judgment on June 30, 2020, granting summary judgment in favor of

Mississippi Farm Bureau and dismissing, with prejudice, all claims filed by Mr.

Lafferty against Mississippi Farm Bureau. This appeal by Mr. Lafferty followed,

wherein the following specifications of error were assigned for our review:

M I.

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Edward Lafferty v. Nicholas T. Vaughn, Tyler A. Veazey, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company And Mississippi Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edward-lafferty-v-nicholas-t-vaughn-tyler-a-veazey-state-farm-mutual-lactapp-2021.