Nationwide Mutual Insurance v. Gearhart

86 Va. Cir. 305, 2014 WL 1040823, 2013 Va. Cir. LEXIS 127
CourtRoanoke County Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 18, 2013
DocketCase No. CL08-946
StatusPublished

This text of 86 Va. Cir. 305 (Nationwide Mutual Insurance v. Gearhart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Roanoke County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nationwide Mutual Insurance v. Gearhart, 86 Va. Cir. 305, 2014 WL 1040823, 2013 Va. Cir. LEXIS 127 (Va. Super. Ct. 2013).

Opinion

By Judge Clifford R. Weckstein

This declaratory judgment suit arises from the injury claim of David Kyle Umberger, HI, who was a pedestrian on a sidewalk near a Roanoke hospital when he was struck and injured by an airborne four-by-eight foot sheet of plywood. Wind or other natural forces lifted the unsecured sheet of plywood from the cargo area of a pickup truck, propelling it into Umberger. The pickup truck’s driver and his foreman, acting in the course of their employer’s business, had loaded the plywood sheet into the pickup.

While Umberger’s personal injury suit was pending, Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company (“Nationwide”) filed this suit, seeking “adjudication of its obligations . . . and its responsibility ... for any claims or causes of action arising... out of the incident described [in Umberger’s Complaint].” The Cincinnati Insurance Company (“Cincinnati”), one of the defendants named by Nationwide, answered, counterclaimed, cross-claimed, and filed [306]*306a third-party complaint. Cincinnati, like Nationwide, asserted that it had no responsibility to defend against, or to pay, any claim in the Umberger suit.

“Cincinnati and Nationwide,” according to their Amended Joint Stipulation of Facts, “agreed to litigate the insurance coverage issues this case presents following settlement of the Underlying Tort Action.” The Umberger tort claim was settled, and those coverage questions are before this court on dueling motions for partial summary judgment.

Cincinnati had issued policies insuring the employer. The driver had an auto insurance policy issued by Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Company, and the pickup truck’s owner had an auto insurance policy issued by Nationwide General Insurance Company. By stipulation, both of those companies are referred to as “Nationwide” and treated as a single entity.

Partial Summary Judgment Is Appropriate

Virginia Code § 8.01-184 states, in relevant part, that, “[i]n cases of actual controversy, circuit courts within the scope of their respective jurisdictions shall have power to make binding adjudications of right, whether or not consequential relief is, or at the time could be, claimed.” Each insurance company seeks summary judgment on the issue of liability, or legal responsibility. See Fried v. Smith, 244 Va. 355, 358, 421 S.E.2d 427, 439 (1992) (definition of liability).

Under Rule 3:20 of the Rules of the Supreme Court of Virginia:

Summary judgment, interlocutory in nature, may be entered as to the undisputed portion of a contested claim or on the issue of liability alone although there is a genuine issue as to the amount of damages. Summary judgment shall not be entered if any material fact is genuinely in dispute.

Counsel for both companies have successfully worked to assure that there are no material facts in dispute and that the court has all of the information necessary to determine each company’s legal responsibility. The court finds that partial summary judgment is appropriate.

Backgromd

The facts before the court are contained in an “Amended Joint Stipulation of Facts” and a “Joint Stipulation of Facts” entered into by Nationwide and Cincinnati. A number of documents are before the court as a result of those stipulations, including the transcript of deposition testimony of Jimmy C. Gearhart, Jr.; the transcript of the “summary judgment hearing” in which defendants Jimmy C. Gearhart, Jr., and Jennifer C. Shipp participated. (As that transcript shows, Nationwide and Cincinnati stipulated that, in ruling on the motions for summary judgment, the court could consider and rely on the information presented at that hearing. Gearhart, Shipp, and the [307]*307other dramatis personae are introduced below.); and responses to Requests for Admission propounded by Nationwide.

The Amended Joint Stipulation recites that Nationwide and Cincinnati “agreed to litigate the insurance coverage issues this case presents following settlement of the Underlying Tort Action.” Either company, they agreed, could engage in mediation and could settle the Umberger case without waiving its rights in this coverage dispute.

In mediation, Cincinnati paid Umberger $375,000 in full settlement of his claim. The active stage of this litigation followed.

The Participants

These are the key players and their roles.

Jennifer Shipp owned the parked pickup truck from which wind or other natural forces lifted the unsecured sheet of plywood that struck Umberger. She is a defendant in this declaratory judgment suit, but is not represented by counsel.

Jimmy C. Gearhart, Jr., drove the pickup truck to his worksite from the home that he and Shipp share. Later that day, Gearhart and Will Altizer loaded the sheet of plywood onto the pickup truck’s bed. He, too, is a defendant in this case and, like Shipp, is not represented.

Gearhart and Altizer were employees of F&S Building & Remodeling Corporation (“F&S”). On the day Umberger was injured, Altizer was Gearhart’s supervisor.

Shipp, Gearhart, and their children are members of the same household. Gearhart had Shipp’s unrestricted permission to use the pickup truck.

Shipp and Gearhart each owned a vehicle insured by a Nationwide “Personal Auto Policy.” For each occurrence, Shipp’s policy provided liability coverage of up to $100,000 per claimant, with a $300,000 occurrence limit. Gearhart’s policy had a liability limit of $50,000 per claimant with a $100,000 occurrence limit.

F&S was insured by Cincinnati under a “Virginia Business Auto Policy” with a $1 million per-occurrence policy limit and under a “commercial package policy” that included commercial general liability (CGL) coverage with a per-occurrence limit of $3 million, and an umbrella policy.

All of these insurance policies were issued in Virginia. The Shipp and Gearhart vehicles were garaged in Virginia.

The Events

On the morning in question, Gearhart and Altizer, as F&S employees, were assigned to work on a job that they were finishing up at Carilion Roanoke Community Hospital. Gearhart drove the pickup truck from his home directly to the worksite, where he parked. He and Altizer met on the site at about 6:30 a.m. Altizer arrived in a dump truck, behind which he was [308]*308towing a trailer that carried a Bobcat, a piece of construction equipment. “Bobcat” is a brand name; Bobcat Company makes a number of different types of construction vehicles and equipment. The company’s line of skid-steer loaders and similar pieces of equipment often are called “Bobcats.” That is the label that will be used throughout this opinion.

Altizer and Gearhart, in the course of their employment as employees of F&S, proceeded to “clean up the job,” throwing trash and debris from the site into the dump truck.

By approximately 11:00 a.m., the dump truck was full. The sheet of plywood that later struck Umberger was leaning against a hospital wall. This plywood sheet, Gearhart said, was “the last thing on the job.” It belonged to F&S, and Gearhart and Altizer had used it on the Community Hospital job.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 Va. Cir. 305, 2014 WL 1040823, 2013 Va. Cir. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nationwide-mutual-insurance-v-gearhart-vaccroanokecty-2013.