Nationwide Insurance Co. v. Elchehimi

249 S.W.3d 430, 51 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 626, 2008 Tex. LEXIS 229, 2008 WL 821039
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 2008
Docket06-0106
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 249 S.W.3d 430 (Nationwide Insurance Co. v. Elchehimi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nationwide Insurance Co. v. Elchehimi, 249 S.W.3d 430, 51 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 626, 2008 Tex. LEXIS 229, 2008 WL 821039 (Tex. 2008).

Opinions

[432]*432Justice WAINWRIGHT

delivered the opinion of the Court,

joined by Chief Justice JEFFERSON, Justice HECHT, Justice BRISTER, Justice GREEN, Justice JOHNSON, and Justice WILLETT.

This breach of contract suit stems from the denial of coverage by Nationwide Insurance Company on a claim arising from a collision between insured Mohamad El-chehimi’s vehicle and an axle-wheel assembly separated from an unidentified semitrailer truck. The court of appeals reversed the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Nationwide. Because there was no actual physical contact between Elchehimi’s vehicle and the unidentified truck as required by statute to trigger the uninsured motorist coverage, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment.

On January 4, 2002, Mohamad Elchehi-mi’s station wagon collided with a drive axle and attached tandem wheels that had separated from an eighteen-wheel semitrailer truck. The unidentified truck, which was being driven in the opposite direction on a divided highway, did not stop. Momentum carried the axle-wheel assembly across the dividing median where it struck Elchehimi’s vehicle, injuring the occupants and damaging the car. Elchehimi had purchased from Nationwide a standard Texas personal automobile insurance policy, including the optional statutorily defined unidentified motorist coverage. Nationwide denied Elchehimi’s claim for uninsured motorist benefits because the impact between Elchehimi’s vehicle and the axle-wheel assembly was not “actual physical contact” with an unknown “motor vehicle” as required by the terms of the policy and the Texas Insurance Code.

Elchehimi sued Nationwide for breach of contract and breach of the duties of good faith and fair dealing. Nationwide moved for summary judgment, arguing that no actual physical contact occurred between Elchehimi’s vehicle and the unidentified truck. The trial court granted the motion. A divided court of appeals reversed, concluding that an issue of fact remained as to whether actual physical contact occurred. 183 S.W.3d 833, 839. Specifically, the court of appeals interpreted the Texas uninsured/underinsured motorist statute, then article 5.06-l(2)(d) of the Texas Insurance Code,1 to require actual physical contact only with an “integral part” of an unidentified motor vehicle as a “result of an unbroken chain of events with a clearly definable beginning and ending, occurring in a continuous sequence” rather than actual physical contact with a motor vehicle. Id. at 838-39; see also Brooks v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 2003-0389, p. 7 (La.App. 4 Cir. 9/24/03); 855 So.2d 419, 424 (citing references omitted). Nationwide petitioned this Court for review.

The parties do not dispute the facts of the collision and agree that the following statutory provision, which provides the parameters of coverage for damage or injury caused by unidentified motorists in Texas, governs this dispute:

[F]or the insured to recover under the uninsured motorist coverage if the owner or operator of any motor vehicle that causes bodily injury or property damage [433]*433to the insured is unknown, actual physical contact must have occurred between the motor vehicle owned or operated by the unknown person and the person or property of the insured.

Tex. Ins.Code § 1952.104(3) (emphasis added). The relevant policy language is consistent with the statute. To survive summary judgment, Elchehimi must raise a fact issue that his vehicle’s collision with the axle-wheel assembly qualified as “actual physical contact” with a “motor vehicle” or a legally recognized substitute for such contact.

Because there was actual physical contact between Elchehimi’s vehicle and the axle-wheel assembly, we examine whether the assembly is a motor vehicle under the Texas Insurance Code. Section 1952.104(3) does not define motor vehicle. However, the common usage of the term motor vehicle does not include a single axle attached to two wheels. See Slaughter v. Abilene State Sch., 561 S.W.2d 789, 791-92 (Tex. 1977). “Common usage has made the phrase ‘motor vehicle’ a generic term for all classes of self-propelled vehicles not operating on stationary rails or tracks.” Id. at 792. In addition, other relevant statutory definitions aid our analysis. The Texas Insurance Code expressly incorporates the Texas Motor Vehicle Safety-Responsibility Act, chapter 601 of the Transportation Code. Tex. Ins.Code § 1952.101(a). Chapter 601 sets minimum coverage amounts for vehicle liability insurance, and those amounts explicitly apply to uninsured motorist coverage. Tex. TRAnsp. Code § 601.072. Because Section 1952.104(3) and Chapter 601 address the same subject matter — motor vehicle insurance — the definition of motor vehicle in section 601.002 of the Transportation Code is persuasive, if not controlling. Chapter 601 defines a motor vehicle as “a self-propelled vehicle designed for use on a highway, a trailer or semitrailer designed for use with a self-propelled vehicle, or a vehicle propelled by electric power from overhead wires and not operated on rails.” Tex. TRAnsp. Code § 601.002(5).

A drive axle with two tandem wheels attached on one side lacks an engine or other means of propulsion. It is therefore neither a self-propelled vehicle nor a vehicle propelled by electric power from overhead wires. This wheel assemblage is not capable of carrying a load, nor can it be towed down a road by a self-propelled vehicle other than being dragged by or mounted underneath one, as Elche-himi’s expert witness testified. The axle-wheel assembly is thus not a trailer or semitrailer designed for use with a self-propelled vehicle. The axle-wheel assembly is not a motor vehicle under Chapter 601. Applying the common usage of the term and the definition in Chapter 601, we conclude that physical contact with a detached axle and tandem wheels is not actual physical contact with a motor vehicle under the unidentified motor vehicle provision.

Elchehimi also argues that this collision involved a legally recognized substitute for the statute’s actual physical contact requirement. In Latham v. Mountain States Mutual Casualty Co., the court of appeals determined that the physical contact requirement could be satisfied through indirect contact where an unidentified vehicle first impacts an intermediary vehicle that in turn collides with an insured claimant. 482 S.W.2d 655, 657 (Tex. Civ.App.-Houston [1st Dist.] 1972, writ refd n.r.e.). The court of appeals held that “[wjhere a Car’ A strikes Car B and propels it into Car C, there is physical contact between Car A and Car C” within the meaning of an automobile insurance policy that required physical contact with an unidentified vehicle. Id.

[434]*434No Texas court, however, has ever relied on Latham to conclude that physical contact occurred where there was no “Car B.” Cf. Old Am. County Mut. Fire Ins. Co. v. Sanchez,

Related

Michael Justin Jacobs v. Adana Alt
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2015
State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Baldwin
373 S.W.3d 424 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 2012)
Ohnesorge v. Winfree Academy Charter School
328 S.W.3d 654 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2010)
Nationwide Insurance Co. v. Elchehimi
249 S.W.3d 430 (Texas Supreme Court, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
249 S.W.3d 430, 51 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 626, 2008 Tex. LEXIS 229, 2008 WL 821039, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nationwide-insurance-co-v-elchehimi-tex-2008.