Lonestar Rodeo, LLC v. United States Fire Insurance Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 20, 2021
Docket2020 CA 000825
StatusUnknown

This text of Lonestar Rodeo, LLC v. United States Fire Insurance Company (Lonestar Rodeo, LLC v. United States Fire Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lonestar Rodeo, LLC v. United States Fire Insurance Company, (Ky. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

RENDERED: MAY 21, 2021; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals NO. 2020-CA-0825-MR

LONESTAR RODEO, LLC; APPELLANTS PRESTON C. FOWLKES; CLINT MADISON; RACHEL BOYD; BRIAN STEVEN MONTGOMERY; AND STOCKDALE’S LLC

APPEAL FROM WARREN CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE STEVE ALAN WILSON, JUDGE ACTION NO. 17-CI-00427

UNITED STATES FIRE INSURANCE APPELLEE COMPANY

OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: JONES, LAMBERT, AND L. THOMPSON, JUDGES.

JONES, JUDGE: The appellants1 in this case appeal from the Warren Circuit

Court’s order granting United States Fire Insurance Company’s (USFIC’s) motion

for summary judgment. In its order, the circuit court found the underlying event at

1 Upon its motion, Stockdale’s LLC was dismissed as a party to this case on January 8, 2021. issue herein was not covered by USFIC’s insurance policy with appellant Lone

Star Rodeo, LLC (Lone Star).2 We affirm.

BACKGROUND

Lone Star is in the business of hosting professional rodeo events, and

it organizes and performs approximately twenty-five events per year in about

eleven states. Lone Star is a family business owned by appellant Preston C.

Fowlkes, Jr. and his wife, although the two are retired and no longer actively

participate in managing the business. One of the appellants, Clint Madison, is

Preston Fowlkes’s son-in-law and is responsible for Lone Star’s livestock. Rachel

Boyd is the last of the Lone Star appellants. She is Preston Fowlkes’s daughter

and manages Lone Star’s office, including its contract and insurance paperwork.

Lone Star planned to hold a rodeo in Bowling Green, Kentucky, from

February 10 through February 12, 2017. To promote the rodeo, on February 9,

2017, Lone Star exhibited two bulls in an enclosure at Stockdale’s, LLC

(Stockdale’s), a rural lifestyle retailer. Unfortunately, the bulls escaped from the

enclosure and began running loose in the streets of Bowling Green. During its

brief period of freedom, one of the bulls allegedly struck Brian Steven

Montgomery as he was walking home from work. Montgomery suffered a broken

2 We have referred to this appellant as “Lonestar Rodeo, LLC” in our caption because that is how the name is spelled in the body of the notice of appeal. However, a review of the record indicates the party’s name should be “Lone Star Rodeo, LLC.”

-2- femur as a result of the incident. The injury required Montgomery to undergo

surgery, and he was forced to use a walker for mobility for about two months

afterward. Montgomery subsequently filed a personal injury suit against Lone

Star, Fowlkes, Madison, Boyd, and Stockdale’s. In his complaint, Montgomery

claimed the defendants failed to maintain control of the bull when it struck him,

thus causing his injuries.

Prior to the incident of this case, Lone Star purchased a Commercial

General Liability Policy from USFIC to insure it against personal injury claims.

The policy’s Certificate of Coverage designates Lone Star as the named insured

member and provides general liability coverage for personal and advertising injury

up to one million dollars. (Record (R.) at 722.) However, the policy also contains

an endorsement entitled “Limitation of Coverage to Designated Premises or

Project,” which reads as follows:

This endorsement modifies insurance provided under the following: COMMERCIAL GENERAL LIABILITY COVERAGE PART

...

This insurance applies only to “bodily injury”, “property damage”, “personal and advertising injury” and medical expenses arising out of:

1. The ownership, maintenance or use of the premises shown in the Schedule and operations necessary or incidental to those premises; or

-3- 2. The project shown in the Schedule.

(R. at 93.)

The ellipsis in the quoted section above is a placeholder for what the

endorsement refers to as “the Schedule,” a table containing a “Premises” section

and a “Project” section. The premises section is entirely blank, but a provision

following the Schedule states, “If no entry appears above, information required to

complete this endorsement will be shown in the Declarations as applicable to this

endorsement.” The project section contains a series of dates which Boyd had

submitted to USFIC to cover Lone Star’s scheduled rodeo events. However, the

project dates include only February 10, 2017 through February 12, 2017, and not

the promotional event at Stockdale’s on February 9, 2017. In her deposition, Boyd

admitted she intended to include the date for the rodeo’s promotional event as well,

but she inadvertently left it out. All of the parties agree that the incident of this

case occurred on a date not included in the project section.

On May 4, 2017, USFIC sent a letter to Lone Star denying coverage

for the incident, asserting the incident did not occur on a date covered by the

project section within the endorsement. Lone Star then filed a declaratory action

suit against USFIC in an attempt to compel USFIC to defend and indemnify Lone

Star in the underlying case. The circuit court ordered the two cases to be

consolidated, and USFIC subsequently moved the court for summary judgment.

-4- The circuit court granted summary judgment to USFIC on October 28,

2019. The circuit court initially expressed that it did not understand why

Stockdale’s would not be considered covered premises for the purpose of the

policy. Stockdale’s was able to produce a “Certificate of Liability Insurance”

based on Lone Star’s policy in order to argue that it ought to be covered, and the

circuit court’s order mistakenly referred to this document as a “Certificate of

Coverage.” The circuit court stated it “would question why the issuance of a

certificate of Coverage to a nonentity.” (R. at 766.) Despite this apparent

confusion, the circuit court found that the terms of the policy unambiguously

excluded coverage on February 9, 2017, and on those grounds found USFIC had

no duty to defend or indemnify the Lone Star appellants or Stockdale’s. (R. at

767.) Furthermore, because the circuit court found the policy to be unambiguous,

it determined that the appellants’ arguments regarding reasonable expectations of

an insured did not apply.

Following the circuit court’s order, each of the appellants separately

moved the circuit court to reconsider its order. The appellants argued the court had

correctly determined that Stockdale’s should be considered a premises covered by

the policy, but the circuit court appeared to believe that the policy’s limitation

endorsement required both premises and applicable project dates to be in effect for

coverage to apply. The appellants pointed to the language of the endorsement,

-5- which states that meeting the definition of the “premises” or the “project” section

of the Schedule would provide coverage. Arguing that the circuit court’s previous

decision appeared to believe that Stockdale’s met the definition of covered

premises, the appellants asked the circuit court to reconsider the previous order and

enter judgment requiring USFIC to defend and indemnify the Lone Star appellants.

On April 30, 2020, the circuit court entered an order denying the

appellants’ motions for reconsideration. The circuit court noted how all the parties

involved agreed that the provision in the endorsement limiting liability applied to

this case.

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