M.O. v. Geico General Insurance Company and Government Employees Insurance Company

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 7, 2022
DocketWD84722
StatusPublished

This text of M.O. v. Geico General Insurance Company and Government Employees Insurance Company (M.O. v. Geico General Insurance Company and Government Employees Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M.O. v. Geico General Insurance Company and Government Employees Insurance Company, (Mo. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT M.O., ) ) Respondent, ) ) v. ) WD84722 ) GEICO GENERAL INSURANCE ) Opinion filed: June 7, 2022 COMPANY AND GOVERNMENT ) EMPLOYEES INSURANCE ) COMPANY, ) ) Appellants. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF JACKSON COUNTY, MISSOURI THE HONORABLE S. MARGENE BURNETT, JUDGE

Division Two: Karen King Mitchell, Presiding Judge, Edward R. Ardini, Jr., Judge and Thomas N. Chapman, Judge

Government Employees Insurance Company and GEICO General Insurance Company

(collectively “GEICO”) appeal the judgment of the Circuit Court of Jackson County confirming

an arbitration award finding against GEICO’s insured—M.B. (“Insured”)—and in favor of M.O.

Insured and M.O. were in a romantic relationship. After M.O. contracted anogenital human

papillomavirus (“HPV”), she submitted a settlement offer to GEICO, asserting Insured negligently

infected her with the disease during sexual encounters in his automobile, and that Insured’s

GEICO-issued automobile insurance policy provided coverage for her injuries and losses. GEICO

denied coverage and rejected her settlement offer. Insured and M.O. entered into an agreement pursuant to section 537.065, RSMo,1 and

agreed to arbitrate M.O.’s claims. The arbitrator found Insured negligently infected M.O. with

HPV and awarded her $5.2 million in damages. Thereafter, M.O. filed this action in the trial court.

GEICO moved to intervene and M.O. moved to confirm the arbitration award. The trial court

granted both motions on the same date and entered judgment in favor of M.O. consistent with the

arbitration award. GEICO appeals, asserting the trial court erred in confirming the arbitration

award without giving GEICO a meaningful opportunity to defend its interests. For the reasons

stated below, we affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

In November of 2017, M.O. and Insured began a romantic relationship. Effective at that

time was an automobile insurance policy issued by GEICO to Insured.

On February 25, 2021, M.O. submitted to GEICO a copy of a petition she intended to file

against Insured, and made a final settlement offer to resolve her “claims against [Insured] for the

applicable limits of $1m.”2 The petition attached to the settlement offer alleged that during

“November and early December of 2017,” Insured and M.O. engaged in unprotected sexual

activities in Insured’s vehicle, and during those sexual encounters, Insured “negligently caused or

contributed to cause [M.O.] to be infected with HPV by not taking proper precautions and

neglecting to inform and/or disclose his diagnosis,” despite “having knowledge of his condition.”

1 Unless otherwise noted, all statutory references are to RSMo 2016 as supplemented through March 11, 2021, the date M.O. and Insured entered into their section 537.065 agreement. See Britt v. Otto, 577 S.W.3d 133, 136 n.1 (Mo. App. W.D. 2019). 2 It is unclear from the record when M.O. first submitted her claim to GEICO. However, in January 2021, GEICO informed M.O. via letter that it had “completed [its] coverage investigation” and determined “there was no coverage” because the “damages claimed did not arise out of the normal use of the vehicle.” GEICO “disclaim[ed] any and all liability or obligation to [M.O.] and to others under” Insured’s automobile policy and advised that it would “take no further action with respect to any claim . . . and hereby withdraws from the matter entirely.”

2 M.O. alleged that as a result of Insured’s negligence, she incurred, and will incur, “past and future

medical expenses,” as well as “past and future mental and physical pain and suffering.” On April

7, 2021, GEICO denied coverage and refused M.O.’s settlement offer. GEICO also initiated a

declaratory judgment action in federal court to establish the parties’ rights and obligations under

the insurance policy.

Meanwhile, on March 11, 2021, M.O. and Insured entered into a Contract to Limit

Recovery to Specified Assets and Arbitration Agreement Pursuant to Section 537.065 RSMo (“065

Agreement”).3 On May 17, 2021, M.O. and Insured arbitrated M.O.’s claims, and the arbitrator

thereafter issued his “Findings, Conclusions, and Award.”

The award first described procedural aspects of the arbitration proceeding, including that:

(1) Prior to the arbitration, Insured submitted an Arbitration Statement detailing his defense; (2)

Both parties presented opening statements at the arbitration; (3) Insured was given the opportunity

to cross-examine M.O.’s witnesses and elicit testimony for Insured’s defense; (4) Insured

submitted as exhibits three internet articles discussing HPV; (5) M.O. requested an award of $9.9

million in damages in her closing argument; and (6) In his closing argument, Insured disputed that

he was aware he could transmit HPV to M.O., M.O. received HPV from him, he had a duty to

disclose such diagnosis to M.O., and the amount of damages.

As to his substantive findings, the arbitrator determined that: (1) “there was sexual activity

in [Insured’s] automobile in November/December of 2017 which occurred in Jackson County,

Missouri”; (2) the sexual activity in Insured’s vehicle “directly caused, or directly contributed to

3 The 065 Agreement was not made part of the record on appeal, nor was it presented to the trial court. Any reference to the title or the contents of the 065 Agreement we take from filings that were included in the record. Section 537.065, which will be discussed extensively in our analysis, allows an injured party and tortfeasor to enter into an agreement to limit the injured party’s recovery to the tortfeasor’s applicable insurance limits if the insurer has refused to defend the tortfeasor.

3 cause, M.O. to be infected with HPV”; (3) Insured knew he had “been told that his throat cancer

tumor was diagnosed as HPV positive”; (4) Insured should have disclosed his diagnosis to M.O.

prior to the sexual activity that occurred, but he did not; and (5) Insured “was negligent and is

liable for causing M.O. to contract HPV.” The arbitrator found that “an amount that would fairly

and justly compensate Plaintiff, M.O., for all of her damages and injuries is $5,200,000,” and

entered an award in that amount “in favor of Plaintiff M.O. and against the Defendant [Insured].”

On May 24, 2021, M.O. provided written notice to GEICO that she and Insured had entered

into an agreement pursuant to section 537.065. The following day, M.O. initiated this action by

filing her Petition for Damages in the trial court.4 On June 10, 2021, GEICO discovered the

existence of this lawsuit by monitoring Case.net (Missouri state courts’ automated case

management system). On June 18th, GEICO filed a motion to intervene.

On June 22nd, M.O. filed a response to GEICO’s motion to intervene and a motion to

confirm the arbitration award. In her motion to confirm the award, M.O. asserted she and Insured

had agreed “that after an arbitration award is issued, [M.O.] will immediately seek to have the

award confirmed . . . and reduced to judgment . . . and that neither party will seek judicial review

of the award or attempt to have the award set aside, modified, amended or changed in any way

unless by express written agreement of each party.” On June 29th, GEICO filed a reply in support

of its motion to intervene. On July 2nd, the trial court granted M.O.’s motion to confirm the

arbitration award and entered judgment in favor of M.O.

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M.O. v. Geico General Insurance Company and Government Employees Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mo-v-geico-general-insurance-company-and-government-employees-insurance-moctapp-2022.