State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Houle

269 P.3d 654, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 141, 2011 WL 6957589
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 26, 2011
DocketNos. S-13645, S-13855
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 269 P.3d 654 (State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Houle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Houle, 269 P.3d 654, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 141, 2011 WL 6957589 (Ala. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETI, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

At issue in this case are the coverage limits associated with underinsured motorist (UIM) insurance and whether coverage provided under disputed insurance policies complies with the requirements of Alaska insurance statutes. The respondent families hold UIM policies. They allege that they have suffered emotional distress and loss of consortium as a result of a collision that killed one family's child and severely injured the other family's child. The insurer accepts that the policyholders incurred damages. However, it contends that the families have already exhausted the coverage limits available to them under the UIM policies because the family members seeking damages were not "in" the fatal collision.

The superior court concluded that the families had not exhausted their UIM coverage under Alaska insurance statutes and reformed the insurance policies to allow the emotional distress claims to proceed to arbitration. The superior court dismissed the families' loss of consortium claims as outside the coverage of the policies. Because we conclude that the families have exhausted the coverage limits available under their policies and that these policies are consistent with statutory requirements, we reverse the superior court's decision to reform the policies. Because coverage limits are exhausted, we decline to consider whether loss of consortium is covered under the policies.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

This is a dispute over insurance coverage arising from an automobile accident in which Nolan Houle was killed and Caroline Noel sustained significant injuries. The accident took place in August 2001 near the intersection of O'Malley Road and New Seward Highway in Anchorage. Nolan and Caroline were passengers in a car driven by Ryan Schubert. Schubert, who is not a party in this case, turned left in front of a bus that slammed into his car. The parties do not dispute that the injuries in this ease resulted from Schubert's driving and that the families' claims triggered coverage under Schubert's liability insurance policy.

Schubert was insured by State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company. Schubert's liability policy covered claims up to a per-person limit of $100,0001 and a per-accident limit of $300,000.) Pursuant to Schubert's liability policy, State Farm paid $100,000 to Caroline Noel and $100,000 to the estate of Nolan Houle, exhausting two separate per-person limits and two-thirds of the sum available for a single accident. Pursuant to the same liability policy, State Farm also made payments to Caroline's parents and Nolan's parents based on claims that, according to the families, included negligent infliction of emotional distress (NIED). Together these payments exhausted the $300,000 per-accident limit of Schubert's liability policy.

The Houle family had three automobile insurance policies with State Farm. Each policy provided underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage to the members of the Houle household up to a per-person limit of $250,000 and a per-accident limit of $500,000. The Noel [656]*656family also had three State Farm automobile insurance policies subject to the same policy language. Each policy provided UIM coverage to members of the Noel family up to a per-person limit of $100,000 and a per-accident limit of $300,000. It is undisputed that the Houle and Noel families' UIM policies were "stackable," as that term is commonly understood.2 By stacking, the Houle family effectively had UIM coverage up to a per-person limit of $750,000 and a per-accident limit of $1.5 million, while the Noel family's limits were effectively $300,000 per person and $900,000 per accident. Further, there is no dispute that coverage under these UIM policies was triggered because, as a result of the August 2001 accident, members of the Houle and Noel families suffered damages that exceeded the coverage available under the Schubert liability policy.3

Pursuant to the Houle and Noel UIM poli-cles, Caroline Noel, the estate of Nolan Houle, and the respondent family members presented State Farm with claims for various medical and economic costs resulting from the August 2001 accident, as well as punitive damages. State Farm paid $750,000 on account of Nolan Houle's UIM coverage and $300,000 on account of Caroline Noel's UIM coverage. These payments exhausted the stacked per-person limits of the families UIM policies. But State Farm's payments did not exhaust the aggregate per-accident limits of the Houle and Noel UIM policies.4

That is the origin of this dispute. The respondent family members believed that they were entitled to additional coverage based on the claims they had filed with State Farm. In other words, they believed that the injuries Caroline's and Nolan's parents and siblings had suffered as a result of the August 2001 accident triggered UIM coverage subject to separate per-person limits for each injured family member. But State Farm refused to make additional payments under the UIM policies, believing that any injuries suffered by the respondent family members were subject to the single per-person limits triggered by Caroline's and Nolan's injuries. Thus, State Farm filed an action for declaratory judgment, asking the superior court to declare that the Noel and Houle families' coverage limits had been exhausted. The families sought a stay of the declaratory judgment action and appointment of an arbitrator to hear their claims and resolve any factual disputes.

The superior court carefully addressed three rounds of summary judgment and several other motions concerning procedure and discovery. It responded to new developments in the governing law, including the release of our opinion in State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Dowdy (Dowdy II).5 Among other issues, the superior court considered which of the parents' and siblings' claims constituted "bodily injury" under the UIM policy's broad definition of this term; it [657]*657concluded that the policy covered negligent infliction of emotional distress but not loss of consortium. The superior court later concluded that the families had not exhausted their UIM coverage under Alaska insurance statutes and reformed State Farm's insurance policy to allow the negligent infliction of emotional distress claims to proceed to arbitration.

State Farm then filed a petition for review, arguing that its UIM policy is consistent with the requirements of Alaska statutes and should not have been reformed. We granted the petition and authorized a cross-petition. The families cross-petitioned, urging us to address their loss of consortium claims and to reconsider our ruling in Dowdy II. We have considered the issues raised by both petitions.

IIL - STANDARD OF REVIEW

This case "involves a ruling on summary judgment and presents a question of law. We therefore apply a de novo standard of review, 'adopting the rule of law that is most persuasive in light of precedent, reason, and policy'"6 "We also review de novo as a question of law the interpretation of insurance policy language."7

IV. DISCUSSION

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
269 P.3d 654, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 141, 2011 WL 6957589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-farm-mutual-automobile-insurance-co-v-houle-alaska-2011.