Gateway Hotel Holdings, Inc. v. Lexington Insurance Co.

275 S.W.3d 268, 2008 Mo. App. LEXIS 1273, 2008 WL 4205055
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 16, 2008
DocketED 90345
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 275 S.W.3d 268 (Gateway Hotel Holdings, Inc. v. Lexington Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gateway Hotel Holdings, Inc. v. Lexington Insurance Co., 275 S.W.3d 268, 2008 Mo. App. LEXIS 1273, 2008 WL 4205055 (Mo. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

KURT S. ODENWALD, Judge.

Introduction

Plaintiffs Gateway Hotel Holdings, Inc., Richfield Hospitality Services, Inc., Rich-field Holdings, Inc. (collectively referred to as the Gateway Plaintiffs), and Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Company, and Liberty Mutual Group (collectively referred to as the Liberty Mutual Plaintiffs), appeal the trial court’s summary judgment order against them and in favor of Defendant Lexington Insurance Company (Lexington). In rendering its order, the trial court determined that an exclusion clause under the Legion Indemnity Company (Legion) general liability policy applies, and therefore the Lexington excess liability insurance policy does not provide coverage to the Gateway Plaintiffs. As a result of the exclusion, the trial court denied the Gateway Plaintiffs and Liberty Mutual Plaintiffs reimbursement for defense costs and a judgment entered against them in a prior personal injury lawsuit, affirmed on appeal in Maldonado v. Gateway Hotel Holdings, L.L.C., 154 S.W.3d 303 (Mo.App. E.D.2005). We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

The Underlying Lawsuit

This appeal arises out of a separate lawsuit in which a boxer, Fernando Ibarra Maldonado (Maldonado), was injured in a boxing match at a hotel and brought a negligence action against the hotel owners, Gateway Hotel Holdings, L.L.C. (Gateway) and the match’s promoter, Doug Hart-mann Productions, L.L.C. (Hartmann). Maldonado participated in a boxing match at the Regal Riverfront Hotel in January 1999. Maldonado was knocked out during the boxing match. After he was revived, Maldonado left the ring and went to his dressing room where he later lost consciousness. No ambulance was on site. An ambulance was called and took Maldonado to the hospital. Maldonado suffered severe brain damage as a result of his injury.

Maldonado filed a petition for damages against several plaintiffs and submitted his negligence claim against Gateway under the “inherently dangerous activity” doctrine. The trial court submitted the following verdict-directing instruction to the jury:

Your verdict must be for plaintiff Fernando Ibarra Maldonado and against defendant Gateway Hotel Holdings, Inc. if you believe:
First, boxing is an inherently dangerous activity, and
Second, during such activity, Doug Hartmann Productions, L.L.C. either:
*272 Failed to provide an ambulance on standby during the plaintiffs boxing match, or
Failed to provide medical personnel in plaintiffs locker room to monitor his condition, and
Third, Doug Hartmann Productions, L.L.C., in one or more respects submitted in Paragraph Second, was thereby negligent, and
Fourth, such negligence and the danger inherent in such activity combined to directly cause or contribute to cause damage to plaintiff.

A jury returned a verdict in the amount of $18.7 million in favor of Maldonado and against Gateway. This Court affirmed the judgment on appeal in Maldonado v. Gateway Hotel Holdings, L.L.C., 154 S.W.3d 303 (Mo.App. E.D.2005). In discussing whether the trial court erred in denying Gateway’s motion for directed verdict or JNOV, this Court noted that the contract to organize and promote a boxing match, entered between Gateway and Hartmann, required Hartmann to secure $5,000,000 in indemnity insurance, and provide a doctor at ringside and an ambulance on stand-by at the hotel on the night of the event. Id. at 306. This Court found that the failure to have medical monitoring and an ambulance present at the hotel for the boxing match was not “collateral negligence,” but direct negligence relating to the boxing activity. In affirming the jury verdict this Court reasoned that it was Hartmann’s failure to take precautions against the danger involved in the work itself, which the employer, Gateway, should have contemplated at the time of the contract. Id. at 310. The Court held:

Boxing is an activity that is by its very nature, violent and potential injury is an obvious risk. Because injury is clearly a potential risk of the sport, and the sport is of a violent nature itself, this would provide sufficient warning to a landowner of the potential risk of harm or special reason to take certain medical precautions to prevent further injury from a delay in treatment. The negligent failure to have medical monitoring or an ambulance on stand-by is not the type of negligence which would be foreign to the contemplated risk of being injured or knocked unconscious during a boxing match. Moreover, having medical monitoring and an ambulance on stand-by was provided for or contemplated by the contract between Hartmann Productions and the hotel.

Id.

The Insurance Policies and Denial of Coverage

Hartmann approached insurance agent Tom Bormann, who worked for Chapman-Sander, Inc., to procure the two insurance policies for the boxing match. Two insurance policies were obtained: a $1,000,000 general liability policy issued by Legion, and a $4,000,000 excess liability policy issued by Lexington. Legion refused to defend Gateway in the lawsuit and denied coverage for the Maldonado claim based upon an exclusion provision in its policy for assault and battery and an exclusion provision for bodily injury suffered by athletic participants. Lexington similarly refused to defend Gateway in the lawsuit and denied coverage for the Maldonado claim based upon exclusionary language contained in the excess liability policy issued by Lexington, which excluded coverage for injuries suffered by athletic participants and injuries resulting from an assault and battery exclusion. Lexington also relied upon the exclusion contained in the Legion policy as a basis for denying coverage. As a result of Legion’s and Lexington’s denial of a defense, Gateway’s commercial general liability insurer, Liberty Mutual, took on *273 the defense and indemnity costs for Gateway in the underlying lawsuit.

The Gateway Plaintiffs and Liberty Mutual Plaintiffs subsequently brought a civil suit against defendants Legion and Lexington, seeking a declaratory judgment on the insurance policies issued by Legion and Lexington and reimbursement for the underlying case’s defense costs and judgment entered against them. Additionally, after filing their action, the Gateway Plaintiffs and Liberty Mutual Plaintiffs learned that an “Order of Liquidation with a Finding of Insolvency” was entered against Legion on April 9, 2003, rendering the claim against it moot and leaving Lexington as a defendant.

The Exclusionary Provisions

Legion’s policy .provided Hartmann with $1,000,000 in bodily injury coverage for injuries caused by an occurrence during the policy period, which included the date Maldonado was injured. Specifically, the policy states:

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275 S.W.3d 268, 2008 Mo. App. LEXIS 1273, 2008 WL 4205055, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gateway-hotel-holdings-inc-v-lexington-insurance-co-moctapp-2008.