Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Western Casualty & Surety Co.

712 S.W.2d 722, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 4326
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 30, 1986
DocketNo. 49689
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 712 S.W.2d 722 (Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Western Casualty & Surety 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
Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Western Casualty & Surety Co., 712 S.W.2d 722, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 4326 (Mo. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

SATZ, Judge.

This is a dispute between two insurance companies, Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company (Hartford) and Western Casualty and Surety Company (Western), over which company has liability coverage for a particular personal injury claim. Hartford filed a declaratory judgment action against Western, requesting the trial court to declare that Hartford and Western shared pro rata coverage for the personal injury in question. The trial court did so. Western appeals. We reverse.

The case was tried on stipulated testimony and other agreed to facts. Prior to August 1978, Mar-Le Nursing Home was being run by Mr. Robert Rogers, the principal stockholder and president of R & B Ranch, Inc. (R & B). R & B built Mar-Le Nursing Home. Rogers obtained a general liability policy from Western for R & B Ranch, Inc. d/b/a Mar-Le Nursing Home. Among other things, the policy provided general liability coverage for the operation of the nursing home and was to be in effect from March 25, 1978 to March 25, 1979.

[723]*723By a five year lease executed on September 1, 1978, but effective as of August 1, 1978, Rogers leased the Mar-Le Nursing Home to James C. Lincoln (Lincoln) and Larry G. Richardson (Richardson). Lincoln and Richardson in turn contracted with Health Facilities Management, Inc. (Health Facilities) to operate the nursing home effective August 1, 1978. The new operation continued to use the name Mar-Le Nursing Home.

Under the terms of the lease agreement between Lincoln and Richardson and R & B, Lincoln and Richardson were responsible for all operational costs, maintenance and upkeep of the improvements on the leased premises and were to procure fire, extended coverage and public liability insurance. Rogers was to be included as an additional insured under the liability provisions and as a loss payee under the casualty provisions. Lincoln acquired a general liability insurance policy from Hartford effective August 9, 1978 at 12:01 a.m. According to an underwriter at Hartford, Lincoln’s agent stated the named insured was to read “Mar-Le Nursing Home, Inc. c/o Health Facilities Management, Inc.” Although Mar-Le Nursing Home was never a corporation, the name of the insured on Hartford’s policy was “Mar-Le Nursing Home, Inc. c/o Health Facilities Management Inc.” Rogers was listed as an additional insured.

On August 9,1978, an ambulance attendant slipped and fell on the nursing home’s premises while delivering a patient. The attendant sued “Health Facilities Management, Inc. and Lincoln-Richardson Enterprises, Inc., d/b/a Mar-Le Nursing Home.” The record does not show why Lincoln-Richardson Enterprises, Inc. was named as the owner of the business operating Mar-Le Nursing Home. Hartford provided the defense for these defendants and requested Western to participate in the defense and any settlement. Western declined to do so on the grounds its policy did not cover any of the named defendants. Hartford settled that case for $30,000.

Hartford then sought the declaratory judgment here, requesting a declaration that Western’s policy of liability insurance was applicable to the ambulance attendant’s claim and that Western was liable for its pro rata share of the settlement and legal expenses. The trial court found the policies of both Western and Hartford were in effect on the date of the attendant’s accident and also found each policy “in-sur[ed] the premises of the Mar-Le Nursing Home.” Without explicit reasons, the court then concluded Western owed a pro rata share of the settlement and legal expenses.

On appeal, Western argues its liability policy issued to R & B did not cover any of the defendants named in the underlying tort action. Consequently, even if Western’s policy covered the accident, Western contends, it still would not owe Hartford a pro rata share of the settlement and legal expenses. We agree.1

Under our Declaratory Judgment Act, “[a]ny person interested under ... a written contract” or any person “whose rights, status or other legal relations are affected by a ... contract” has the right to have determined any question of construction “arising under the ... contract.” Section 527.020, RSMo 1978. The outer dimensions of the terms — “interest” in a contract and “rights, status [and] other legal relations” affected by a contract — remain unclear. However, “it may safely be said that the term ‘rights and other legal relations’ was intended to include the Hohfeldian jural relations of rights, privileges, powers and immunities, and their correlative duties, no-rights, liabilities and disabilities.” Boreh-ard, Declaratory Judgments and Insurance Litigation, 34 Ill.L.Rev. 245, 250 (1939). The right Hartford seeks to have declared here is a right to contribution from Western.

[724]*724Hartford’s insurance contract was with “Mar-Le Nursing Home, Inc. c/o Health Facilities Management Inc.” Western’s insurance contract was with R & B. Thus, facially, there is no privity of contract between Hartford and Western, nor is Hartford a third party beneficiary under Western’s policy. Both Hartford and the trial court tacitly acknowledge this lack of legal relationship and base Western’s liability to Hartford on what they conceive to be Hartford’s legal or equitable right to pro rata contribution from Western. This right is created, Hartford contends, from the fact Hartford and Western both had liability policies in effect on the premises of the Mar-Le Nursing Home at the time the personal injury occurred. In short, Hartford bases its right to contribution against Western on what it conceives to be Western’s concurrent coverage. We disagree.

From the trial court’s findings, Hartford’s policy and Western’s policy were in effect on the nursing home’s premises on the date of the injury. Moreover, each policy did have a pro-rata clause based upon “other insurance.”2 But in order for Hartford to have a right of contribution against Western on the ground of concurrent insurance, the insurance provided by each — the “other insurance” — must cover the same insured, the same interest and the same risk. See Phillips Hotel Operating Co. v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co., 366 S.W.2d 54, 57 (Mo.App.196B). See also 16 G. Couch, R. Anderson, M. Rhodes, Couch on Insurance 2d §§ 62:93-:97, 62:162 (rev. ed. 1983) and cases cited therein.

The risk at issue here was the attendant’s claim of negligence against “Lincoln-Richardson Enterprises, Inc. and Health Facilities Management, Inc.” because their “employee allow[ed] a garden hose to run and spread water” on the premises, creating a slippery and unsafe condition. While both policies covered the nursing home premises, Western insured only the legal liability of R & B and not the liability of Lincoln-Richardson Enterprises, Inc. or Health Facilities. On the present record, only Hartford covered Lincoln-Richardson Enterprises, Inc. and Health Facilities, the only parties in the underlying personal injury action, as well as the only parties against whom the ambulance attendant asserted a claim. Thus, Hartford and Western were not concurrent insurers because they did not both cover the tort-feasers in the underlying action, i.e. they did not cover the “same insured.”

Admittedly, there was a mutually insured party under the respective policies: Rogers.

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Bluebook (online)
712 S.W.2d 722, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 4326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartford-accident-indemnity-co-v-western-casualty-surety-co-moctapp-1986.