Milburn v. Allstate Insurance Co. Property & Casualty

925 N.E.2d 1018, 185 Ohio App. 3d 796
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 15, 2009
DocketNo. 09AP-392
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 925 N.E.2d 1018 (Milburn v. Allstate Insurance Co. Property & Casualty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milburn v. Allstate Insurance Co. Property & Casualty, 925 N.E.2d 1018, 185 Ohio App. 3d 796 (Ohio Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Sadler, Judge.

{¶ 1} Plaintiff-appellant, John W. Milburn V, individually and as the administrator of the estate of Ashley Nicole Milburn, appeals from the summary judgment rendered by the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas, which dismissed appellant’s claims against defendant-appellee, Allstate Insurance Company Property and Casualty.

{¶ 2} The tragic facts giving rise to appellant’s claims are undisputed. On October 29, 2005, appellant’s daughter, Ashley, was killed while riding as a passenger in a 1997 Honda Civic that her grandfather, John W. Milburn Jr. (“John Jr.”), owned and that he had furnished for Ashley’s full-time use. Ashley and her 14-year-old boyfriend, Timothy Shanks, had been out driving around with Ashley’s friends, who were driving a second vehicle. The group had no specific destination at first, but eventually they drove down Agler Road toward Shanks’s house with the ultimate goal of taking Shanks home.

[799]*799{¶ 3} At some point Shanks asked Ashley if he could drive the Civic. Ashley assented, despite the fact that Shanks did not have a valid driver’s license. According to Shanks, he was driving that night for no reason other than he wanted to drive. Shanks drove down Agler Road, following Ashley’s friend Erin. When Erin slowed down, Shanks believed that Erin was going to make a right turn, so he moved into the center turn lane in order to pass her. However, Erin did not turn right and sped up. From the passenger seat, Ashley yelled at Shanks to get back over into the through lane. According to Shanks, when he failed to do so immediately, Ashley grabbed the steering wheel and pulled it to the right. Shanks lost control of the vehicle and struck two trees and a concrete barrier, killing Ashley.

{¶ 4} At the time of her death, Ashley was residing with her parents and grandparents in the same home in New Albany, Ohio. Ashley’s parents held an Allstate automobile insurance policy under which the Civic was listed as a covered vehicle. The coverage for the Civic specified bodily-injury liability limits of $100,000 per person and $300,000 per occurrence, and uninsured/underinsuredmotorist (“UM/UIM”) limits in the same amounts. Appellant and his wife testified that while they had never explicitly forbidden Ashley to allow anyone else to drive the Civic, they always felt that such a prohibition was understood. John Jr. held a separate Allstate policy with liability limits of $250,000 per person and $500,000 per occurrence and UM/UIM limits of $100,000 per person and $300,000 per accident. The Civic was not listed as a covered vehicle on John Jr.’s policy. John Jr. had specifically forbidden Ashley to allow anyone else to drive the Civic.

{¶ 5} Shanks’s mother, Jill, had an automobile insurance policy with Farmers Insurance Columbus, Inc., with liability limits of $30,000. Farmers extended coverage to Shanks for his liability and offered appellant the limits of its policy, which appellant accepted. Appellee denied coverage under both appellant’s and John Jr.’s policies, after which appellant instituted this action for declaratory judgment. On November 19, 2008, the trial court granted appellee’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed appellant’s claims. This appeal followed, in which appellant advances three assignments of error for our review, as follows:

I. The trial court committed reversible error when it granted summary judgment in favor of respondent/appellee Allstate Insurance Company Property and Casualty in denying the extension of liability coverage to Timothy Shanks, Jr., under policy number 926554443.
II. The trial court committed reversible error when it granted summary judgment in favor of respondent/appellee Allstate Insurance Company Property and Casualty in denying underinsured motorists benefits under policy number 926554443.
[800]*800III. The trial court committed reversible error when it granted summary judgment in favor of respondent/appellee Allstate Insurance Company Property and Casualty in denying underinsured motorists benefits under policy number 026848319.

{¶ 6} In his first assignment of error, appellant argues that the trial court erred in granting appellee’s motion for summary judgment with respect to appellant’s claim that Shanks was an “insured person” under the liability section of appellant’s policy, thereby providing liability coverage to Shanks for the accident that killed Ashley. The trial court determined that Shanks was not an “insured person” under the language of the liability section of appellant’s policy.

{¶ 7} The liability section of appellant’s policy defines “insured person” as, inter alia:

1. While operating your insured auto:
a. you,
b. any resident relative,
c. any other person operating it with your permission.

(Emphasis sic.)

{¶ 8} The liability section also provides that “Allstate will not pay for any damages an insured person is legally obligated to pay because of: * * * 8. bodily injury to any person related to an insured person by blood, marriage, or adoption and residing in that person’s household.” (Emphasis sic.) This is known as an intrafamily exclusion. The trial court determined that under this exclusion Shanks is not covered for Ashley’s injuries, because Ashley is related to insured persons (her parents) and she resided in their household. The court refused to read the term “insured person” to mean only the person who was operating the vehicle at the time of the accident (here, Shanks) because, it explained, “the policy exclusion reads: ‘an’ insured person; and, the effect of ‘an’ encompasses three different types of Insured Persons: one being ‘you,’ another being a ‘your resident relative,’ and a third being the one Plaintiff advocates: Timothy Shanks * * *. Thus, Ashley’s relation and residence with the first two precludes coverage.”

{¶ 9} Appellant argues, as he did below, that because the term “insured person” is defined in reference to being engaged in “operating your insured auto,” neither he nor any of his resident relatives can be treated as an insured person because none of them were operating the Civic at the time of the accident. Thus, he contends, the intrafamily exclusion does not apply to preclude liability coverage for Ashley’s injuries. In response, appellee argues that “according to the plain language of the policy, the exclusion applies to any insured, not just the [801]*801one person who may fit the definition of insured with respect to the particular accident that caused the injury.” (Emphasis sic.)1

{¶ 10} We reject appellee’s argument and hold that the exclusion does not apply. We acknowledge that the trial court was correct in observing that the use of the word “an” preceding the term “insured person” necessarily includes all three possible definitions of “insured person” (that is, “a. you, b. any resident relative, c. any other person operating it with your permission”). However, no matter which of these three types of persons one uses to determine whether any person is an insured person, the fact remains that each is subject to the introductory qualifying phrase “While operating your insured auto” and thus can be an insured person for purposes of liability coverage only “while operating your insured auto.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
925 N.E.2d 1018, 185 Ohio App. 3d 796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milburn-v-allstate-insurance-co-property-casualty-ohioctapp-2009.