Navigators Insurance Company v. American Home Assurance Company and Arch Insurance Company

577 S.W.3d 802
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 25, 2019
DocketWD82118
StatusPublished

This text of 577 S.W.3d 802 (Navigators Insurance Company v. American Home Assurance Company and Arch 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
Navigators Insurance Company v. American Home Assurance Company and Arch Insurance Company, 577 S.W.3d 802 (Mo. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District

 NAVIGATORS INSURANCE  COMPANY,  WD82118 Appellant,  OPINION FILED:  v.  JUNE 25, 2019  AMERICAN HOME ASSURANCE  COMPANY AND ARCH INSURANCE  COMPANY,   Respondents.

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri The Honorable David Michael Byrn, Judge

Before Division Three: Thomas H. Newton, Presiding Judge, Anthony Rex Gabbert, Judge, Edward R. Ardini, Jr., Judge

Introduction

Navigators Insurance Company (“Navigators”) appeals the circuit court’s grant of

summary judgment to American Home Assurance Company (“American Home”) and Arch

Insurance Company (“Arch”) (“Respondents” collectively) on Navigators’ claim for attorneys’

fees and defense costs for Navigators’s defense of Respondents’ insured whom Navigators claimed

Respondents had a duty to defend. Navigators contends the circuit court erred in entering summary

judgment in favor of Respondents because the potential for coverage existed under Coverage A

and Coverage B of Respondents’ policies at the time of tender. We affirm. Factual and Procedural Background

KAMO Electric Cooperative, Inc. and its wholly-owned subsidiary, K-PowerNet, LLC,

(KAMO collectively) were named as defendants in a federal class action suit filed November 2011

by Chase Barfield, Michael D. Biffle, Gina Biffle, and Dwight K. Robertson (“Barfield Plaintiffs”

or “Plaintiffs”). On or about February 17, 2012, Barfield Plaintiffs filed a First Amended

Complaint. Barfield Plaintiffs alleged they owned land in Missouri underlying electricity

transmission or distribution lines and on or in which KAMO had installed or used, or announced

plans for the installation or use of, fiber-optic cable. KAMO, as well as another defendant, were

alleged to have illegally installed or used over 2,000 miles of fiber-optic cable throughout the state

on class members’ land that was subject only to a limited electric-utility easement or occupancy.

According to the class complaint, KAMO was using fiber-optic cable installed on electric easement

land to offer commercial communications services as a separate business distinct from the

generation, transmission, or distribution of electricity. Barfield Plaintiffs claimed KAMO’s use of

their land for telecommunications purposes went beyond the easements granted to KAMO and that

they were entitled to compensation for KAMO’s use of the land.

Count I of the first amended class action complaint was a claim for declaratory judgment

declaring KAMO had no legal right to control or use electric easement land to construct and

operate a fiber-optic-cable network for commercial-communications purposes. It also requested a

declaration that KAMO had no legal right or interest in the electric easement land beyond an

electric power easement for the limited purpose of transmitting or distributing electricity.

Count II was a claim for trespass, alleging that KAMO’s intentional and unauthorized entry

upon the electric easement land constituted trespass. It requested damages proximately caused by

2 the trespass including the reasonable value of the use of the land or, at Barfield Plaintiffs’ election,

all revenues arising from the trespass or title to the fiber-optic cable and related equipment.

Count III was a claim for unjust enrichment, alleging that as a result of KAMO’s intentional

and unlawful use and occupation of class members’ land, class members had been deprived of the

rents, profits, and other benefits arising from KAMO’s commercial use and occupation of the

electric easement land for purposes other than transmission of electricity. The claim alleged that

KAMO had been unjustly enriched and asked that KAMO be required to disgorge all sums

received as rents, profits, and other benefits arising from their unlawful commercial use and

occupation of the electric easement land for purposes other than transmitting or distributing

electricity.

Count IV was a claim for injunctive relief, requesting KAMO be enjoined from continuing

use of the fiber-optic cable on electric easement land.

On March 31, 2014, the federal court issued an Order after the parties filed cross-motions

for summary judgment. Therein the court found it undisputed that KAMO Electric Cooperative

created K-Powernet, LLC to operate commercial telecommunication companies because Missouri

law does not permit electric cooperatives to operate commercial telecommunication companies.

KAMO Electric Cooperative then leased to K-Powernet excess space on fiber optic cables that had

been laid on KAMO’s electric transmission easements. K-Powernet then used their space to

transmit commercial telecommunications, returning the profits from their enterprise to their

electric cooperative parent. KAMO Electric Cooperative had installed over 1,000 miles of fiber

optic cable on class members’ land which was being used for KAMO’s internal, electric

transmission business as well as K-Powernet’s commercial telecommunications services to third

parties.

3 The federal court defined the issue before it as a claim by Barfield Plaintiffs that KAMO’s

use of the electricity easements for the generation of commercial telecommunications exceeded

the scope of the easements and deprived Plaintiffs and the class of the right to benefit from the use

of their land as an information highway. The court synopsized the dispute as being “whether

Missouri law requires third parties to compensate land owners when they operate this information

highway under the landowners’ real property for a purpose not permitted by a valid easement.”

The court defined Plaintiffs’ theory of liability as KAMO Electric Cooperative licensing rights

they did not have to subsidiaries and, as a result, the subsidiaries’ use of Plaintiffs’ land for

commercial telecommunications purposes was unauthorized and, therefore, trespass. The court

discussed that, under Missouri law, trespass occurs either by unauthorized entry on land or by

exceeding the scope of any license to enter upon the land. (citing Illig v. Union Elec. Co., 652 F.3d

971, 977 (8th Cir. 2011)). The court reiterated settled Missouri precedent that, an easement does

not grant complete ownership of land with the right to use it for all lawful purposes perpetually

and throughout its entire extent, but, instead, is a right that extends only to one or more particular

uses. (citing Maasen v. Shaw, 133 S.W.3d 514, 518-19 (Mo. App. 2004)). Further, the court stated

that, even an easement granted in general terms without limitations as to its use is still one of

unlimited reasonable use. (citing Branson West, Inc. v. city of Branson, 980 S.W.2d 604, 606 (Mo.

App. 1998) (emphasis original)). The court narrowed the issue of Plaintiffs’ trespass claim to

whether the operation of a commercial telecommunications network was reasonable and necessary

to KAMO Electric Cooperative’s authorized use of their easements. The court found that, where

easements expressly allowed KAMO Electric Cooperative to use and lease Plaintiffs’ land for

commercial telecommunications purposes, no trespass occurred.

4 KAMO disputed that trespass had occurred at all on the grounds that there was no

interference with Plaintiffs’ possession. The court found, as it had previously in denying a Motion

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
577 S.W.3d 802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/navigators-insurance-company-v-american-home-assurance-company-and-arch-moctapp-2019.