Provost v. Unger

949 F.2d 161, 1991 WL 255811
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 23, 1991
DocketNo. 91-3149
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 949 F.2d 161 (Provost v. Unger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Provost v. Unger, 949 F.2d 161, 1991 WL 255811 (5th Cir. 1991).

Opinions

DUHÉ, Circuit Judge.

The parties in this case ask us to make sense of a welter of contradictory insurance policies. We therefore must divine the overall insuring intent, trying to understand how the jumble of policies may be ordered.

I. The Facts

A car and a truck were involved in an accident; both vehicles were being driven by employees in the course and scope of their employment. The three people in the truck were hurt, and the truck was damaged. Rex Milling Company, which is insured by American Motorist Insurance Company, owned the truck and employed two of the people in it. The car was rented by Charles Lewis Pump Company from the New Orleans franchisee of Budget Rent A Car, which is owned by Diversified Services, and Diversified is insured by Columbia Casualty Company. Martin Unger, who was driving the car, is insured by Farmers Insurance Company. Mr. Unger is employed by Charles Lewis Pump Company, which is owned by Baker International. Aetna Life & Casualty Company is Baker’s insurer. The basic question is who must pay. The parties that remain in the litigation are Budget, Columbia, Aetna, and Farmers.

All parties who suffered damage have received settlements, as follows:

Rex Milling $ 22,000 (property damage)

Isaac Stevens $ 46,000 (personal injury)

$ 23,000 (personal injury)

Rodney Stevens $ 5,000 (personal injury)

Subtotal $ 96,000

Provost $125,000 (personal injury)

Total $221,000

The settlements with Rex Milling, Isaac Stevens, and Rodney Stevens were completed at one time, and the Provost settlement was reached later.

Budget ordinarily provides lessees with the Louisiana statutory minimum liability insurance of $10,000 per person, $20,000 per occurrence, and $10,000 for property damage (abbreviated 10/20/10). Some corporate'Budget customers, however, receive [163]*163greater insurance coverage as part of the promotional “Corp-Rate” program. Corporations try to reach a certain volume of business with Budget, and in return they receive certain advantages, including coverage of 100/300/25. Budget’s New Orleans franchise has participated in this national program since at least 1978, and Charles Lewis Pump Co. was a Corp-Rate customer.

Aetna and Farmers’ policies provide primary coverage, but they include “other insurance” clauses. Farmers’ is an ordinary “excess” clause, providing that “[a]ny insurance we provide for a vehicle you do not own shall be excess over any other collectible insurance.” Aetna’s policy says that it is “excess” insurance over “other valid and collectible insurance available to the insured whether such other insurance is stated to be primary, excess, or contingent.” Similarly, Columbia’s policy purports to be excess over all other available insurance. Unlike Aetna and Farmers, though, the Columbia policy is labelled a “special excess liability policy.” It only applies after Budget has paid its self-retention of $100,-000.

We are faced with the task of ranking these policies, all of which say specifically how they should be ranked, but all of which contradict each other on the ranking question. Before we examine the jumble, however, we must resolve some preliminary issues.

II. Preliminaries

A. Is Budget Self-Insured?

Budget argues that it is a self-insurer and that self-insurance is not insurance, citing Hearty v. Harris, 574 So.2d 1234 (La.1991), and Jones v. Henry, 542 So.2d 507 (La.1989). Budget reasons that it is self-insured for its $100,000 self-retention under the Columbia policy, and that the insurance coverage provided to corporate customers under the Corp-Rate program is also self-insurance. Because self-insurance is not insurance according to Budget’s reading of these cases, Budget provides no insurance within the meaning of the “other insurance” clauses of all of the insurance policies. Budget concludes that Farmers and Aetna should pay because Budget provides no insurance.

The law is not what Budget suggests. According to the Louisiana Insurance Code, " 'insurance' is a contract whereby one undertakes to indemnify another or pay a specified amount upon determinable contingencies.” La.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 22:5(l)(a) (West Supp.1991). Budget entered into such a contract when it leased the car to Lewis. The cases that Budget cites are inapposite. They discuss whether self-insurance should be considered insurance for the purposes of uninsured motorist (UM) coverage and do not concern “self-insurance” of the type that Budget allegedly has. The Louisiana Supreme Court only observed that under the Louisiana Motor Vehicle Safety Responsibility law (LMVSR),1 vehicle owners need not have the statutory minimum insurance if they obtain a certificate of self-insurance, which represents assets adequate to satisfy a judgment of a certain amount. The Supreme Court concluded that self-insurance in this sense is not insurance, but merely a way to meet the requirements of the LMVSR. The court decided, partly for policy reasons, that a motorist with UM coverage who was involved in an accident with a self-insured motorist could recover from the UM carrier. The carrier could then pursue the self-insured motorist. Jones, 542 So.2d at 509; Hearty, 574 So.2d at 1237-38.

The public policy that dictates that a UM carrier should pay its insured when a self-insured motorist is involved in an accident does not apply in the present case. Budget agreed to act as an insurer for its lessee, agreeing to pay for certain liabilities upon certain contingencies. To protect itself, Budget purchased insurance that would cover these liabilities that exceeded $100,-000. At least on the facts of this case, the $100,000 self-retention under the Columbia policy is just a deductible. See William S. McKenzie & H. Alston Johnson, III, Insur-[164]*164anee Law & Practice § 232 (15 Louisiana Civil Law Treatise 1986).

As part of a promotional program, Budget provided coverage of 100/300/25 instead of 10/20/10 to corporate customers that would reach a certain volume of business. This increased coverage was an inducement for corporations to rent vehicles from Budget. The corresponding increase in Budget’s corporate business is legally significant consideration. Budget must pay as an insurer just as it received this consideration as an insurer.

B. Is Budget’s Coverage Secondary or Primary?

Budget also contends that its coverage is secondary to Aetna’s and Farmers’, arguing that the parties never discussed whether the Corp-Rate coverage was primary or secondary. Budget argues that the 1978 Corp-Rate agreement between Budget-National and Budget-New Orleans said the coverage was primary, but that the word “primary” was removed and does not appear in the 1986 agreement, which was in force at the time of the accident.

The agreement between corporate Budget and Budget-New Orleans, though, is of tangential importance in interpreting the intent of Budget-New Orleans and its lessee, Charles Lewis Pump Co. The Corp-Rate agreement between Baker (which owns Charles Lewis Pump Co.) and Budget-New Orleans in 1986 did not expressly describe the coverage as primary, but the 1988 renewal of the agreement did.

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949 F.2d 161, 1991 WL 255811, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/provost-v-unger-ca5-1991.