Mendez v. Brites

849 A.2d 329, 2004 R.I. LEXIS 103, 2004 WL 1219330
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 4, 2004
Docket2001-230-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 849 A.2d 329 (Mendez v. Brites) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mendez v. Brites, 849 A.2d 329, 2004 R.I. LEXIS 103, 2004 WL 1219330 (R.I. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

FLANDERS, Justice.

This is an automobile-accident case involving a Massachusetts insurance policy. The policy did not provide liability coverage to the insured motorist for bodily injury claims arising from accidents occurring in Rhode Island. The insured motorist was a Massachusetts resident who was driving his Massachusetts-registered vehicle in this state when be became involved in a three-car accident here. Together with a Rhode Island motorist who also was involved in the accident, the insured motorist now seeks to reform his automobile-liability policy to cover various bodily injury, contribution, and indemnification claims arising from the accident.

The insurer that issued the policy did so in Massachusetts to a Massachusetts resident who registered his insured vehicle in Massachusetts. Although the policy covered bodily injury claims arising from automobile accidents occurring within the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the insured motorist chose not to obtain similar coverage for accidents occurring outside Massachusetts. Consistent with Massachusetts law, the insurer had offered its insured a policy that, if he had selected the additional-coverage option, would have provided him with out-of-state liability coverage.

Does such a policy conflict with applicable Rhode Island law when the insured motorist drives his covered automobile into Rhode Island and gets into an accident here? If so, should the policy be reformed to include coverage for accidents occurring in Rhode Island?

Because we answer the first question in the negative, we have no warrant or need to reform the insurance policy. Indeed, we discern no conflict between Massachusetts and Rhode Island law concerning this *331 optional limitation on territorial coverage in Massachusetts-issued automobile-liability policies. Thus, we affirm a Superior Court summary judgment in favor of the insurer, defendant Metropolitan Property and Casualty Insurance Company (Metropolitan).

Facts and Travel

The plaintiff, Jose Mendez (Mendez), and Metropolitan’s codefendant, Jose Brites (Brites), who drove the Massachusetts-insured vehicle, appeal from the Superior Court judgment in this case. On March 10, 1998, Mendez, a Rhode Island resident, and Brites, a Massachusetts resident, were involved in a three-car accident on Route 146 in Providence (the March 10 accident). A third vehicle, owned and operated by Nouen Doak (Doak), also was involved in the accident. The Brites vehicle struck Doak’s vehicle. Mendez’s vehicle then collided with Brites’s vehicle. At the time of this accident, Metropolitan insured Brites and his automobile with a liability policy that it issued to Brites in Massachusetts for a car that Brites garaged in Massachusetts. Although the policy provided Brites with liability insurance only for bodily injuries arising out of Massachusetts accidents, its provisions to that effect were consistent with Massachusetts law. 1 Moreover, when he procured this policy, Brites did not purchase the optional additional insurance coverage that Metropolitan offered (per Massachusetts law requiring it to do so) that would have insured him for bodily injury liability to others resulting from accidents occurring in Rhode Island and in other places outside the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

On March 2, 2001, Mendez filed a declaratory-judgment action in Superior Court against Brites and Metropolitan. 2 *332 In doing so, he sought to reform the language in the insurance policy that Metropolitan issued to Brites. Specifically, he asked the court to declare that Metropolitan was required to provide Brites with liability coverage for bodily injuries to others resulting from automobile accidents, such as the March 10 accident, that occurred outside the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and, more specifically, in Rhode Island. 3 On April 2, 2001, Brites filed a *333 cross-complaint against Metropolitan, also seeking a declaratory judgment that would reform his Metropolitan insurance policy. He suggested that Rhode Island law required Metropolitan to provide him with insurance coverage for bodily injury claims arising out of the March 10 accident in Rhode Island and that the purported territorial limitation in the Metropolitan policy — effectively excluding coverage for accidents occurring outside Massachusetts— was invalid.

In due course, Metropolitan moved for summary judgment, asserting that, in accordance with Massachusetts law, it had offered Brites “extra-territorial coverage” — that is, coverage for claims alleging bodily injuries in connection with accidents occurring outside Massachusetts — but that Brites chose not to purchase such additional coverage. After a motion justice of the Superior Court heard oral arguments on this motion, the court granted summary judgment in favor of Metropolitan and entered a judgment according to Rule 54(b) of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure.

On appeal, Mendez and Brites argue that this Court should not enforce the Massachusetts-coverage limitation in Brites’s Metropolitan insurance policy. They contend that enforcing this liability-limiting language would conflict with Rhode Island law and public policy on this subject. They maintain that the General Assembly, in the Motor Vehicle Reparations Act, G.L.1956 chapter 47 of title 31 (the act), provided that the public policy of the state “is to require motorists to have financial responsibility when operating a motor vehicle on Rhode Island roadways.” Thus, they contend, the exclusionary language of the Metropolitan policy contravenes Rhode Island law and public policy. 4 Lastly, they insist that the application of Rhode Island law to this contract would not violate the Full Faith and Credit Clause of the United States Constitution. When, as here, the application of an out-of-state law to an accident in the forum state would violate the public policy of the forum state, they suggest that the forum state may apply its own law to the facts of the case, notwithstanding the Full Faith and Credit Clause of the United States Constitution.

Metropolitan counters that the Massachusetts statute authorizing optional liability coverage for bodily injuries occurring outside Massachusetts does not conflict with Rhode Island law or public policy. Rhode Island law, it says, does not purport to regulate the coverage that insurers provide in the out-of-state insurance policies that they issue to their insureds who reside in states other than Rhode Island. It points out that Rhode Island addresses the risk of accidents in Rhode Island involving uninsured or underinsured motorists, such as Brites. Indeed, Metropolitan suggests that the Rhode Island General Assembly anticipated this very situation when, pursuant to G.L.1956 § 27-7-2.1, it required Rhode Island insurers to procure a signed release from their insured customers who opt not to purchase uninsured motorist coverage. The release admits that they *334 have been informed of the risk that such motorists pose to the driving public.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
849 A.2d 329, 2004 R.I. LEXIS 103, 2004 WL 1219330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mendez-v-brites-ri-2004.