Ginsberg v. Harleysville Worcester Insurance Company, n/k/a Nationwide Property and Casualty Insurance Company

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 29, 2024
Docket431, 2023
StatusPublished

This text of Ginsberg v. Harleysville Worcester Insurance Company, n/k/a Nationwide Property and Casualty Insurance Company (Ginsberg v. Harleysville Worcester Insurance Company, n/k/a Nationwide Property and Casualty Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ginsberg v. Harleysville Worcester Insurance Company, n/k/a Nationwide Property and Casualty Insurance Company, (Del. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

MARK GINSBERG, § Individually, and as Executor of § the ESTATE OF LISA DAVIS, § No. 431, 2023 and RON ZOLADKIEWICZ, as § Ad Litem Guardian of § Court Below: Superior Court BRANDON ZOLADKIEWICZ, § of the State of Delaware a Minor Child, § § C.A. No. N22C-08-165 Plaintiffs Below, § Appellants, § § v. § § HARLEYSVILLE § WORCESTER INSURANCE § COMPANY, n/k/a § NATIONWIDE PROPERTY § AND CASUALTY § INSURANCE COMPANY, § § Defendant Below, § Appellee. §

Submitted: September 4, 2024 Decided: October 29, 2024

Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA and LEGROW, Justices.

Upon appeal from the Superior Court. REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Adam F. Wasserman, Esquire, CICONTE WASSERMAN & SCERBA, LLC, Wilmington, Delaware for Plaintiffs Below/Appellants.

Cynthia G. Beam, Esquire, REGER RIZZO & DARNALL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware for Defendant Below/Appellee. SEITZ, Chief Justice:

Lisa Davis and her husband, Mark Ginsberg, insured their cars with separate

but nearly identical insurance policies from the same carrier. In a car crash with an

uninsured drunk driver, Davis died, and her son was seriously injured. Her husband,

individually and as executor of her estate, and the child’s father, Ron Zoladkiewicz,

as guardian ad litem for his son, Brandon Zoladkiewicz, sought uninsured motorist

coverage from both policies.

For underinsured/uninsured coverage, the Delaware Insurance Code provides

that when “2 or more vehicles owned or leased by persons residing in the same

household are insured by the same insurer or affiliated insurers, the limits of

liability . . . shall not exceed the highest limit of liability applicable to any 1

vehicle.”1 In other words, under the circumstances described in the statute, when

there are two or more policies, recovery is limited to the one policy with the highest

limit of liability. Here, both policies contained identical limits of liability provisions.

The insurance carrier agreed to pay the coverage limit for only one policy. The

insureds were not allowed to combine or stack the two policies.

After the plaintiffs filed suit, the Superior Court agreed with the carrier that

the Insurance Code limited coverage to one policy and dismissed the complaint. It

reasoned that, even though a provision in each policy permitted overlapping

1 18 Del. C. § 3902(c) (2024). 2 coverage, the statute limited coverage to one policy if the policies were issued by

the same insurance company to insureds in the same household.

We reverse. The Insurance Code does not prohibit combining or stacking

under/uninsured insurance coverage policies issued by the same carrier to insureds

in the same household. Instead, in that instance, the Code requires that the court

limit coverage to “the highest limit of liability” set by either insurance policy. Here,

in their “Other Insurance” provisions, both policies allowed stacking. But the

policies also provided that, when the same or affiliated carriers provide coverage to

insureds in the same household, the coverage is limited to the policy with the

“highest limit of liability.” In each policy, the two policy provisions conflict and the

policies are therefore ambiguous. We interpret the policies in favor of the insureds.

The “Other Insurance” provisions with their permissive stacking provisions provide

the “highest limit of liability.”

Finally, even though Ginsberg signed a release, he signed in an individual

capacity. He did not release claims as executor of Ms. Davis’s estate. And the

release signed by Brandon Zoladkiewicz was limited to the Davis Policy. Thus,

Ginsberg (as executor) and Brandon Zoladkiewicz can stack the Davis and Ginsberg

policies.

3 I.

A.

The material facts are undisputed. On September 28, 2020, Lisa Davis and

her son, Brandon Zoladkiewicz, were in a car crash with an uninsured driver who

was under the influence of alcohol. Davis died. Brandon Zoladkiewicz suffered

serious injuries. At the time of the crash, Davis and Brandon Zoladkiewicz were

insured under two nearly identical policies issued to Davis and Ginsberg by

Harleysville Worcester Insurance Company. Both policies have Uninsured/

Underinsured Motorist coverage (“UM/UIM”) of $100,000 per person and $300,000

per accident. We will refer to the policies as the Davis Policy and the Ginsberg

Policy. Both policies also contain the following provisions:

Other Insurance

If there is other applicable insurance available under one or more policies or provisions of coverage that is similar to the insurance provided under this Part of the Policy: 1. Any insurance we provide with respect to a vehicle: a. You do not own, including any vehicle while used as temporary substitute for “your covered auto”; or b. Owned by you or any “family member”, which is not insured for this coverage under this Policy; shall be excess over any collectible insurance providing such coverage on a primary basis. 2. If the coverage under this Policy is provided: a. On a primary basis, we will pay only our share of the loss that must be paid under insurance providing coverage on a primary basis. Our share is the proportion that our limit of liability bears to the total of all applicable limits of liability for coverage provided on a primary basis. 4 b. On an excess basis, we will pay only our share of the loss that must be paid under insurance providing coverage on an excess basis. Our share is the proportion that our limit of liability bears to the total of all applicable limits of liability for coverage provided on an excess basis.2

Two Or More Auto Policies

If this Policy and any other auto insurance policy issued to you or any resident of your household, by us or any company affiliated with us, apply to the same accident, the maximum limit of liability under all the policies shall not exceed the highest applicable limit of liability under any one policy.3

Davis, Brandon Zoladkiewicz, and Ginsberg lived together and were covered

under both policies as members of the same household.

Following the crash, Ginsberg and Brandon Zoladkiewicz filed a claim under

both policies. In exchange for releases, Harleysville agreed to pay $200,000 in

UM/UIM benefits under the Davis Policy but refused to pay any benefits under the

Ginsberg Policy. Harleysville claimed that the “Two Or More Auto Policies”

provisions in each policy prohibited members of the same household from

combining or stacking UM/UIM coverage under the separate policies issued by

Harleysville.

2 App. to Pls. Below/Appellants’ Opening Br. on Appeal at A40 [hereinafter A__]. 3 Id. 5 B.

The plaintiffs sued Harleysville for breach of contract. In dispositive motion

briefing, Harleysville argued that, under Section 3902(c) of the Delaware Insurance

Code, the “Two Or More Auto Policies” provision is an anti-stacking provision.

According to Harleysville, it paid $200,000 under the Davis Policy,4 but the “Two

Or More Auto Policies” provision in each policy prohibited combining UM/UIM

benefits from a different policy issued by the same insurer. Harleysville also

contended that, in any event, the plaintiffs signed releases when they accepted

payment under the Davis Policy that released any further claims against Harleysville.

The plaintiffs responded that the Ginsberg Policy “Other Insurance” provision

expressly permits stacking UM/UIM benefits, the “Other Insurance” and “Two Or

More Auto Policies” provisions conflict and the policies are therefore ambiguous.

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Bluebook (online)
Ginsberg v. Harleysville Worcester Insurance Company, n/k/a Nationwide Property and Casualty Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ginsberg-v-harleysville-worcester-insurance-company-nka-nationwide-del-2024.