Hulsey v. Mid-America Preferred Insurance Co.
This text of 1989 OK 107 (Hulsey v. Mid-America Preferred Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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The dispositive issue on certiorari is whether the petition states a claim upon which relief can be granted. We answer in the affirmative.
While driving his pickup late one night, Robert L. Hulsey [insured] received a fatal gunshot wound to the head. The bullet came from another vehicle whose type, driver and occupants, if any, are not identified.1 The unidentified vehicle never made physical contact with the insured’s truck.
Judy Kay Hulsey [plaintiff], the insured’s widow, sued the uninsured motorist [UM] carrier, Mid-America Preferred Insurance Company [insurer], to recover for the loss. She alleges that a hit-and-run driver caused the insured’s death.
The insurer moved for summary judgment, arguing that the following terms of the insurance policy preclude recovery:
“We will pay damages which a covered person is entitled to recover from the owner or operator of an uninsured motor vehicle because of bodily injury:
1. Sustained by a covered person; and
2. Caused by an accident.
“The owner’s or operator’s liability for these damages must arise out of the ownership, maintenance or use of the uninsured motor vehicle....
“Uninsured motor vehicle” means a land motor vehicle or trailer of any type: ...
3. Which is a hit and run vehicle whose operator or owner cannot be identified and which causes an accident resulting in bodily injury to a covered person.” [Emphasis by the insurer.]
The insurer argues the policy’s UM provisions do not cover murder and, because the “intentional” shooting in controversy did not arise out of the unidentified vehicle’s ownership, maintenance or use, the plaintiff cannot recover.
Without revealing the grounds upon which its decision was based, the trial court gave summary judgment to the insurer.2 The Court of Appeals reversed, holding the [935]*935harm-dealing incident must be viewed from the insured’s perspective and, from that vantage point, the death appears to have been accidental.3 The appellate court further held:
“[Although some causal relationship or nexus must exist between the use of the automobile and the injury, the automobile need not be the instrumentality of the injury nor must the type of conduct which causes the injury be foreseeably identifiable with the normal use of a vehicle. It is for the trier of fact to decide whether the accident arose out of ‘use’ of an uninsured vehicle.”
Among other things, the appellate court incorrectly assumed as an admitted fact that the insured was the targeted victim of an intentional shooting. Other facts were similarly treated as uncontroverted, though they were neither undisputed nor supported by evidentiary material from which but a single inference could be drawn — one in favor of coverage.4 For this reason we now grant certiorari to provide necessary and precedential guidance for the proceedings to follow on remand.
I.
SUMMARY JUDGMENT FOR THE INSURER CANNOT STAND
When the insurer sought summary judgment, copies of the policy and some legal authorities from this and other jurisdictions constituted the totality of the material appended to its motion and brief. The plaintiff's response consisted of like attachments. Although both parties referred several times to the “testimony” of various witnesses who had apparently been deposed, no materials extraneous to the pleadings were either tendered for the court’s consideration or even filed with the trial court.
Deposition testimony that is not on file in conformity with 12 O.S.Supp.1986 § 3207(G)8 may not be used as evidentiary [936]*936material in the summary judgment process.9 By stipulation shown in the record, the parties may tender an abstracted transcript of an unfiled deposition to support their quest for judgment sans trial.10 In any event, an appellate court cannot, on review, take notice of any item that was not properly before the trial court.11 The appellant bears the total responsibility for including in the appellate record all materials necessary to secure corrective relief.12 A deficient record may not be supplemented or corrected on rehearing.13
Since, as we appraise the record, no evidentiary materials were tendered below, the insurer’s motion below must be treated as though it were one to dismiss for the petition’s legal insufficiency rather than as one for summary judgment.14 The critical question to be answered is hence whether the petition contains allegations sufficient to state a legally cognizable claim.15 We hold that it does.
[937]*937II.
THE PETITION ALLEGES FACTS WHICH MIGHT SUPPORT RECOVERY UNDER THE POLICY’S UNINSURED MOTORIST COVERAGE
The petition alleges that 1) while the insured was driving, an unidentified (hit-and-run) driver or passenger of another vehicle shot him; 2) as a result of the gunshot wound, the insured died and 3) his death was “caused by” the hit-and-run driver, or, in the alternative, “directly and proximately caused by the negligence” of that unidentified person. Because these allegations accommodate a host of scenarios, some of which could be actionable, we cannot conclusively rule, as a matter of law and on the basis of plaintiffs petition alone, that her quest for UM protection will fail.16 The death could have been caused by a hit-and-run driver or occupant who, while target shooting from a moving or stationary vehicle, missed his intended mark and, instead, wounded the insured.17 This scenario would unveil prima facie an unintentional act within the ambit of the insurance policy’s hit-and-run UM coverage mandated by the provisions of 36 O.S.1981 § 3636.18 The law requires no physical contact with the offending vehicle for recovery under the hit-and-run UM protection.19
In both the trial court and in the Court of Appeals this case was incorrectly treated as though the insurer had pressed for summary judgment rather than for the claim’s dismissal. Even though the result reached by us today is similar to that of the Court of Appeals, that court’s holding incorrectly settled the law of this case with respect to a significant part in controversy.20 We will not speculate today on what the facts adduced at trial will show, or whether they will indeed develop into a scenario consistent with the parameters of the insurer’s UM liability.21
[938]
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
1989 OK 107, 777 P.2d 932, 1989 Okla. LEXIS 138, 1989 WL 78284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hulsey-v-mid-america-preferred-insurance-co-okla-1989.