Kentucky Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company v. Shelter Mutual Insurance Company

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 2010
Docket2008 SC 000781
StatusUnknown

This text of Kentucky Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company v. Shelter Mutual Insurance Company (Kentucky Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company v. Shelter Mutual Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kentucky Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company v. Shelter Mutual Insurance Company, (Ky. 2010).

Opinion

RENDERED : NOVEMBER 18, 2010 TO BE PUBLISHED

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KENTUCKY FARM BUREAU MUTUAL APPELLANT INSURANCE COMPANY

ON REVIEW FROM COURT OF APPEALS V. CASE NOS . 2007-CA-001078-MR; 2007-CA-001132-MR MONTGOMERY CIRCUIT COURT NO . 06-CI-90203

SHELTER MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY APPELLEE

OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE SCOTT

REVERSING

I. Introduction

This is an appeal from an opinion of the Court of Appeals reversing the

Montgomery Circuit Court, which had imposed primary liability for a motor

vehicle accident on the vehicle's and vehicle owner's insurer, rather than on the

insurer of the permissive driver. Neither policy was for a business or

commercial coverage .

After paying the damages, the vehicle's and vehicle owner's insurer,

Shelter Mutual Insurance Company (Shelter), filed a declaratory judgment

action and subsequent motion for summary judgment against Kentucky Farm

Bureau Mutual Insurance Company (Farm Bureau), the permissive driver's

insurer, seeking to recover a pro-rata allocation of the damages between it and Farm Bureau . Farm Bureau filed a cross-motion for summary judgment

asserting Shelter's primary liability as the primary insurer of the vehicle and

thus, Farm Bureau, with its "excess insurance clause," would be an excess

carrier only.

The trial court granted Farm Bureau's cross-motion for summary

judgment, holding Shelter liable for the damages. It did not, however, detail its

findings or reasoning in its summary judgment order. The Court of Appeals

subsequently reversed, finding-as contended by Shelter-that each of the

insurers' policies contained "mutually repugnant" excess insurance clauses,

and thus prorated the damages between the insurers.

Because we find that Shelter, the vehicle's and vehicle owner's insurer,

was the primary insurer as mandated by the spirit and intent of the Kentucky

Motor Vehicle Reparations Act (MVRA), KRS 304.39-010, et. seq., we hold that

the Court of Appeals erred when it reversed the Montgomery Circuit Court and

prorated the damages . We, therefore, reverse the decision of the Court of

Appeals and reinstate the decision of the trial court.

"In substance, [an excess clause] provide[s] that in the case of a loss . . . the policy would be excess insurance over any other valid and collectible insurance." Government Emp. Ins. Co. v. Globe Indem. Co., 415 S.W.2d 581, 581 (Ky. 1967) . (internal citations omitted) . Compare this with a standard escape clause, which "in most instances . . . negat[es] any liability if `other valid and collectible insurance' is available to the driver." Id. at 582. On the other hand, a pro-rata clause "provides that if more than one policy applies, the insurer is responsible only for that percent of the total sum payable that the limit of liability of the coverage bears to the total limits of liability under that coverage for all the policies ." Robert D. Monfort, Kentucky Motor Vehicle Insurance Law §10 .2 (2d ed. 1996) . II. Background

This case stems from a two-car accident in which Farm Bureau insured

Kevin Watkins (Kevin), the non-owner, but permissive driver, of the vehicle,

while Shelter insured the vehicle through the owner's policy, and, thus, the

permissive driver . Although insured by Farm Bureau under his own separate

policy on his vehicle, Kevin was driving his parents' vehicle when he negligently

collided with another vehicle, causing injuries . Shelter was the insurer for the

parents' vehicle, while Farm Bureau insured Kevin personally.

The issue then is which of the companies--Farm Bureau insuring the

non-owner driver and Shelter insuring the vehicle, owner, and permissive

driver-is liable and therefore obligated to pay the damages. The complication

arises because each of the two policies arguably contains an "excess insurance

clause" purporting only to provide coverage in excess of the other's coverage .2

Thus, normally we would be called on to determine which policy, if any, is

primary and which is excess, or if both are excess and mutually repugnant,

how the damages should be pro-rated between them.

In acknowledging the importance of the questions presented, we are

aware of Shelter's assertion in its brief to the Court of Appeals that:

[T]he issues presented in this case arise every time the policy forms collide. Moreover, one or more of [the] policy forms at issue in this case are used by [other] insurers, multiplying exponentially the

2 The Court of Appeals found that each insurance policy had a liability limit of: $25,000 per person, $50,000 per accident for bodily injury, and $25,000 per accident for property damages . However, it is undisputed that that the injured parties' personal and property damages were less than either of these minimum policy limits, as the total amount of damages was $2,000 .00 for personal injury, $2,289 for medical expenses, and $954.26 for property damage . number of times when the competing forms collide. Thus, there is far more at stake than the amount in controversy.

In this same regard, we note Farm Bureau's concern in its brief that "[t]he

issues presented by this case arise each time the terms of separate policies are

at odds. The policy language at issue is used by multiple companies which

causes similar issues to arise on a frequent basis, making this case of far

greater significance than it may appear ."

In this regard, Shelter's excess clause for its insurance on the vehicle

states : "[i]f there is other insurance which covers the insured's liability with

respect to a claim also covered by this policy, [liability] Coverages A and B of

this policy will apply only as excess to such other insurance ."

Yet, Farm Bureau's excess insurance clause (for Kevin's insurance)

states: "[a]ny insurance we provide for a vehicle you do not own shall be excess

over any other collectable insurance or self-insurance whether primary, excess

or contingent."

(Emphasis added) .

Notwithstanding that Farm Bureau's clause seems, at first blush, to be

an "excess over excess" in that it recognizes that another competing policy may

be an excess policy, but still asserts an excess position over such other excess

coverage, see Globe Indem. Co., 415 S.W.2d at 582, the Court of Appeals

determined that both clauses evince both insurers' intention to provide only

excess coverage. Hence, the Court of Appeals found the clauses mutually repugnant and remanded the matter to the trial court for proration of the

damages between both insurers.

However, after due consideration, we reverse the Court of Appeals, and

hold that the insurer of the vehicle in this case, Shelter, had the primary

coverage and was thus liable for the damages to the extent of its coverage . In

so doing, we decline, in this instance, to further embroil Kentucky courts in

unduly complicated two-step insurance policy interpretations of continually

emerging and changing insurance avoidance clauses and the consequent

burden of apportionment because such considerations are inconsistent with

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Kentucky Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company v. Shelter Mutual Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-farm-bureau-mutual-insurance-company-v-shelter-mutual-insurance-ky-2010.