Summers Hardware and Supply Company, Inc. v. Vermont Mutual Insurance Co.

922 F.2d 841, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 33869, 1991 WL 1107
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 8, 1991
Docket89-5552
StatusUnpublished

This text of 922 F.2d 841 (Summers Hardware and Supply Company, Inc. v. Vermont Mutual Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Summers Hardware and Supply Company, Inc. v. Vermont Mutual Insurance Co., 922 F.2d 841, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 33869, 1991 WL 1107 (6th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

922 F.2d 841

Unpublished Disposition
NOTICE: Sixth Circuit Rule 24(c) states that citation of unpublished dispositions is disfavored except for establishing res judicata, estoppel, or the law of the case and requires service of copies of cited unpublished dispositions of the Sixth Circuit.
SUMMERS HARDWARE AND SUPPLY COMPANY, INC., Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
VERMONT MUTUAL INSURANCE CO., Defendant-Appellee.

No. 89-5552.

United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.

Jan. 8, 1991.

Before KRUPANSKY and DAVID A. NELSON, Circuit Judges, and BELL, District Judge.*

PER CURIAM.

This is a diversity case brought by a landlord against its tenant's insurance carrier. The lease agreement appeared to obligate the tenant to maintain liability insurance covering anyone injured on or about the leased premises, and the defendant insurance company gave the tenant an oral binder for such insurance. The tenant's son was then injured on a construction lift, owned by the landlord, that was being used to move the tenant's property into the leased premises. The insurance company denied that the binder gave the landlord any protection with respect to this sort of accident, and the present lawsuit followed.

In addition to suing the insurance company in federal court, the landlord sued the tenant in a state court in Tennessee. The landlord contended there, as it did in its federal case, that the tenant's contractual obligation to obtain liability insurance was broad enough to require insurance covering the son's accident. While the landlord claimed in the federal case that the insurance obtained by the tenant met the requirements of the lease, with the result that the insurance company was liable under the binder, the landlord claimed in the state case that the insurance obtained by the tenant did not meet the requirements of the lease, with the result that the tenant was liable for breach of contract. The threshold issue raised by the landlord was the same in both cases: Did the lease require the tenant to provide insurance coverage extending to the son's accident, or did it not?

The federal case was decided first. A federal magistrate entered summary judgment in favor of the insurance company and against the landlord, holding that the lease did not obligate the tenant to obtain coverage extending to the son's accident. The state trial court subsequently granted summary judgment to the tenant on the same ground, holding explicitly that the lease agreement "does not obligate [the tenant] to ... provide insurance protecting [the landlord] with respect to this accident...." The state court declined to determine the collateral estoppel effect of the federal court decision, finding it unnecessary to address that question. The judgment of the state trial court was affirmed on appeal without any reference being made to the federal litigation, and an application for permission to appeal to the Supreme Court of Tennessee was denied.

The insurance company argues that because the scope of the oral binder depends on the scope of the tenant's contractual obligation to provide insurance, and because it has now been established in the state courts that the tenant had no obligation to obtain insurance that would extend to the son's accident, the landlord is collaterally estopped from seeking relief inconsistent with the state court judgment. We agree. The insurance company's defensive use of the collateral estoppel doctrine is appropriate under Tennessee law, the plaintiff landlord having had a fair and full opportunity to litigate in state court the threshold issue common to both its lawsuits, and we see no reason why collateral estoppel may not be invoked in this case at the appellate level. Although we might have decided the case differently were it not for the result reached in the Tennessee litigation, we shall affirm the magistrate's judgment on collateral estoppel grounds.

* The underlying facts are not disputed. Plaintiff Summers Hardware and Supply Co. owned a two-story building called "the annex," which was located across the street from its main office in Johnson City, Tennessee. The upper floor of the annex was vacant, and Summers Hardware agreed to lease the space to John Steele, an artist, for use as a studio.

The lease agreement was memorialized in a written instrument drafted by the hardware company's lawyers. In paragraph 12 of the lease Mr. Steele agreed to indemnify Summers Hardware and hold it harmless from any liability arising in connection with the lease or in connection with Steele's occupation of the premises, including any liability that Summers Hardware might incur "because of any person injured on or about the leased premises." Mr. Steele further agreed "to maintain liability insurance [in the amount of $25,000 per person] covering anyone who may be injured on or about the premises...."1

Before he moved into the studio Mr. Steele telephoned a local representative of Vermont Mutual Insurance Co. and read the lease to her over the phone. She committed Vermont Mutual to writing the insurance. Vermont Mutual concedes that an oral binder for the coverage specified in the lease was in effect at the time of the accident.

The accident occurred as Mr. Steele and two helpers, one of whom was Steele's son Paul, were in the process of moving a table saw up to the second floor of the annex. The only access to the second floor provided for in the lease agreement was via an outside stairway,2 but as a favor to Mr. Steele, Summers Hardware offered to let him make use of the company's construction lift while moving in. The lift, which had been installed by company employees some 11 years earlier, had a platform that moved up and down between the ground floor of the annex and a hole cut in the middle of the floor above. The lift itself was not covered by the lease. When the platform reached the upper floor level, however, a passenger standing on the platform would be within the leased space.

On the day of the accident Mr. Steele and his helpers were let into the ground floor of the annex by a Summers Hardware employee named Davidson. Using a dolly, the men wheeled Mr. Steele's table saw to the lift and placed it on the platform. Paul Steele was asked to ride up to the second floor with the table saw. When the lift platform reached its destination, there was a loud snap, the platform fell to the floor below, and the resulting impact left Paul Steele with injured feet. Paul, his father, and Mr. Davidson all swore that the lift platform had reached the upper floor before the accident, which meant that Paul was actually within the leased premises at the start of his fall.

Paul and his wife brought a tort action against Summers Hardware in a Tennessee court. Summers tendered the defense to Vermont Mutual, which declined the tender. The tort case was eventually settled. Summers Hardware then sued the senior Mr. Steele in state court, seeking damages for an alleged breach of Steele's contractual obligation to maintain liability insurance and to indemnify Summers Hardware himself.

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Bluebook (online)
922 F.2d 841, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 33869, 1991 WL 1107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/summers-hardware-and-supply-company-inc-v-vermont-mutual-insurance-co-ca6-1991.