Rodriguez Ex Rel. Rodriguez v. Unified School District No. 500

351 P.3d 1243, 302 Kan. 134, 2015 Kan. LEXIS 365
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 12, 2015
Docket107174
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 351 P.3d 1243 (Rodriguez Ex Rel. Rodriguez v. Unified School District No. 500) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rodriguez Ex Rel. Rodriguez v. Unified School District No. 500, 351 P.3d 1243, 302 Kan. 134, 2015 Kan. LEXIS 365 (kan 2015).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Beier, J.:

This appeal addresses whether a Mutual of Omaha Insurance Company policy issued to the Kansas State High School Activities Association provided coverage for catastrophic personal injury suffered by 10th grader Jesus Rodriguez.

We hold that coverage exists. We therefore reverse contraiy rulings by the district court judge and a panel of our Court of Appeals, and we remand the case to the district court for further proceedings.

[135]*135Factual and Procedural Background

The accident that injured Rodriguez occurred on August 29, 2006, while he was traveling to his first match of the Sumner Academy soccer season. Rodriguez was riding in the bed of a pickup truck driven by fellow student and teammate Mike Hitze when the pickup collided with another car. Rodriguez was thrown from the pickup and sustained the injury that now requires him to have round-the-clock care.

Rodriguez’ mother, Graciela, initially filed this lawsuit on his behalf against the school district, Hitze, and the driver of the car that had collided with Hitze’s truck.

During the course of the lawsuit, plaintiff learned that the Association, which administers various extracurricular activities in the state, had purchased a Mutual of Omaha policy to cover injuries sustained by participants during events the Association sanctioned, as well as during certain types of travel to and from such events. The insurance policy covered

“[sjtudents participating in interscholastic competition or activities under the jurisdiction of the KSHSAA including school-supervised practice, try-outs, pre and post game-related activities including award banquets and covered travel as defined under the policy.”

There is no dispute that the soccer match was a competition that fit this description. The policy defined “covered travel” as

“team or individual travel, for purposes of representing the Participating School, that is to or from the location of a Covered Event and is authorized by the Insured Person’s Participating School, provided the travel is paid for or subject to reimbursement by the Participating School. Covered Travel to a Covered Event will commence upon embarkation from an authorized departure point and terminate upon arrival at the location of the Covered Event.” (Emphasis added.)

Rodriguez filed a claim, and Mutual of Omaha denied it, reasoning that the travel during which Rodriguez was injured did not qualify as covered under the policy. According to Mutual of Omaha, the school had indicated no request for reimbursement for the travel had been made; moreover, the travel was not “subject to reimbursement” because the school also had indicated that it had “been unable to locate any requests for reimbursement, or [136]*136payment of, expenses incurred by a parent or student using a private vehicle to transport students to a sporting event.” Mutual of Omaha asserted that all expenditures of the school system must be authorized by law, and there was no statutory authorization for a school to pay a private individual for use of a private car to transport a student in Rodriguez’ circumstances.

After the denial of coverage, Mutual of Omaha was added as a defendant in this lawsuit. A bench trial limited to the insurance coverage issue followed.

Rodriguez’ mother testified that Rodriguez’ father had signed a permission form covering travel options for members of the soccer team. The form granted permission for Rodriguez to, among other things, “[r]ide with other players from school to practice, home meets, or to meet the bus for away meets” and to “[rjide to team events with other players.”

Israel Ocanas, one of the other team members who rode with Hitze and Rodriguez on the day of the accident, testified that he was unaware whether the school had provided a bus for team members. He said that no one had directed him to travel by bus. According to Ocanas, it was “normal ... to just catch a ride with whoever was heading that way in a car.” Ocanas testified that, when the campus officer let Hitze’s pickup exit the school parking lot, Rodriguez was sitting in the pickup bed. The group then waited across from the school for other team members to arrive. Eventually a total of three, including Rodriguez, rode in the bed of the pickup.

Much of tire testimony at trial focused on the school district’s policies and administrative guidelines. The administrative guidelines mirror the numbering system of the policies but are amended with an “-A.” As one of the school district’s administrators would testify, the guidelines are not “policy per se. But they’re . .. guidelines that administrators are expected to follow. They help them in making their decisions in order to implement policy correctly.”

The clerk for the Board of Education, Susan Westfahl, testified about a school district administrative guideline, 3.5.5.0.0-A, which was titled “Pupil Transportation.” The guideline included the following passage:

[137]*137“.3.0 Field Trips, Curricular Activities, Extracurricular Activities Field.Trips and Curricular Activities
“Arrangements for activity transportation shall be made by the Building Administrator using the Field Trip Request procedure.
“When district equipment or drivers are unavailable or when it is economically advantageous to use other means of activity transportation, arrangements for hired or non- district-owned activity transportation shall be made by the building administrator.
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“.3.1.4 Private Vehicle
“Use of private automobiles for field trips and activity transportation shall not be authorized except in such instances where drivers are fully responsible adults (over 21 years of age). Authorized drivers shall verify insurance coverage in accordance with established Kansas insurance mínimums to the building principal or his designated representative.”

No copy of the guideline in the record on appeal includes a subsection covering extracurricular activities such as soccer matches. Westfahl also testified that, in the 10 years she had worked for the Board, she could not recall an instance in which the Board had approved reimbursement for a student who had transported another student to a school activity.

Testimony of Tom Petz, executive director of human resource services for the school district, was submitted during the bench trial by way of transcribed deposition and exhibits. The exhibits to Petz’ deposition included a school district policy, 3.5.5.0.0, titled “Pupil Transportation.” It stated in part:

“Responsibility for general administration of pupil transportation programs shall be subject to the direction of the Superintendent of Schools with a delegation of responsibility through the Assistant Superintendent for Business Affairs to the Director of Pupil Transportation Services.
“.1.0 Equipment
“Depending upon die demands of services involved, transportation shall be provided with equipment which may be:
• Owned by the school district

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
351 P.3d 1243, 302 Kan. 134, 2015 Kan. LEXIS 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodriguez-ex-rel-rodriguez-v-unified-school-district-no-500-kan-2015.