Valentine v. Farmers Insurance Exchange

2006 UT App 301, 141 P.3d 618, 556 Utah Adv. Rep. 30, 2006 Utah App. LEXIS 330, 2006 WL 2021718
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJuly 20, 2006
DocketNo. 20050160-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2006 UT App 301 (Valentine v. Farmers Insurance Exchange) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valentine v. Farmers Insurance Exchange, 2006 UT App 301, 141 P.3d 618, 556 Utah Adv. Rep. 30, 2006 Utah App. LEXIS 330, 2006 WL 2021718 (Utah Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

ORME, Judge:

¶ 1 This case arises out of a work-related automobile accident and the insureds’ claim under their personal automobile insurance policy for underinsured motorist (UIM) benefits. The trial court ruled that an exclusion in the policy precluded their claim. We affirm, albeit on slightly different grounds.

BACKGROUND

¶ 2 On December 6, 2000, Nicole Valentine was injured in an accident. The pick-up truck Nicole was driving as an auto parts delivery runner was rear-ended by a vehicle that had itself been struck from behind by another vehicle. Frank Edwards Company (Parts Plus) owned the truck Nicole was driving and provided it to her, as one of six delivery runners Parts Plus employed, for use during regular business hours to make deliveries. There is no dispute that Nicole was making deliveries for her employer at the time of the accident.

[620]*620¶ 3 As a matter of routine, Nicole would drive her own car to work and then use the same Parts Plus truck that she was driving at the time of the. accident — or one of the other four vehicles Parts Plus provided — to make deliveries. Nicole used the truck strictly for work purposes. ■ She did not have any personal copies of the keys to any of the Parts Plus vehicles and did not use any of those vehicles to drive to lunch or to go on any other type of personal errand. At the end of her shift, Nicole would always return the Parts Plus vehicle to the company lot and then use her own car to drive home.

¶4 Following the accident, Nicole settled her claim against the driver who started the chain-reaction accident for $25,000 — the policy limit of his insurance coverage — and she also received Workers’ Compensation benefits because she sustained her injuries in the course of her employment. Because the damages Nicole suffered as a result of the accident exceeded these two sources of compensation, she made an additional claim for coverage under her personal automobile insurance policy pursuant to its UIM provision.

¶ 5 Defendant Farmers Insurance Exchange, the issuer of the policy, denied Nicole UIM benefits based on an exclusion in the policy. Nicole and her husband Jakobe then brought suit against Farmers in an effort to secure UIM benefits under the policy. Farmers answered the Valentines’ complaint and cross-claimed for declaratory relief, requesting that the trial court determine that the policy exclusion barred the Valentines’ claim. Farmers then moved for summary judgment, and the trial court granted the motion. The Valentines now appeal.

ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶ 6 This appeal requires us to review whether the trial court correctly determined on summary judgment that the Valentines’ automobile insurance policy precludes UIM benefits for injuries Nicole sustained while driving the Parts Plus truck.1 Specifically, we must decide whether the trial court correctly concluded, as a matter of law on the undisputed facts, that Nicole’s use of the Parts Plus truck constituted “regular use.” “Because summary judgment presents only questions of law, we give no deference to the district court’s legal decisions and review them for correctness.” Fericks v. Lucy Ann Soffe Trust, 2004 UT 85,¶ 10, 100 P.3d 1200.

ANALYSIS

¶ 7 While the parties’ arguments center primarily on the meaning of an exclusion in the Valentines’ policy,2 the matter before us can properly be resolved under the policy’s basic UIM provision and its definitions. Concerning UIM coverage, the Valentines’ automobile insurance policy states:

Subject to the Limits of Liability we will pay all sums which an insured person is legally entitled to recover as damages from [621]*621the owner or operator of an underinsured motor vehicle because of bodily injury sustained by the insured person while occupying your insured car.
If other than your insured car, [UIM] coverage applies only if the motor vehicle is a newly acquired or replacement vehicle covered under the terms of this policy.

(Emphasis omitted.) Consequently, the policy is clear that UIM coverage only extends to an insured when the insured has been injured while in his or her insured car. Pivotal to the case at hand, then, is the determination whether the Parts Plus truck Nicole was driving at the time of the accident qualifies under the Valentines’ policy as' an insured car.

¶ 8 The policy defines the meaning of “your insured car” and clearly specifies that an insured car includes “[a]ny other private passenger ear, utility ear or utility trailer not owned by or furnished or available for regular use by you or a family member.” (Emphasis omitted.) By definition, then, an insured ear cannot include a non-owned vehicle that is “furnished or available for regular use by [the insured].” (Emphasis added.) Thus, the crux of this appeal is whether Nicole’s use of the Parts Plus truck constituted regular use so as to eliminate it, by definition, from UIM coverage.

¶ 9 The Valentines’ most compelling argument is that the phrase “regular use”, is ambiguous.3 In assessing the Valentines’ assertion, we are mindful that insurance policy language “should be construed pursuant to the same rules as are applied to other ordinary contracts.” Bergera v. Ideal Nat’l Life Ins. Co., 524 P.2d 599, 600 (Utah 1974). See also Village Inn Apartments v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 790 P.2d 581, 582 (Utah Ct.App.1990). Under our rules of contract interpretation, “[a]n ambiguity exists if the contract provision is susceptible to more than one reasonable interpretation.” Wagner v. Clifton, 2002 UT 109,¶ 12, 62 P.3d 440. In other words, when the insurance policy language is viewed “fairly and reasonably, in accordance with the usual and natural meaning of the words, and in the light of existing circumstances, including the purpose of the policy,” it can only be said to contain an ambiguity if its meaning “is not plain to a person of ordinary intelligence and understanding.” Nielsen v. O’Reilly, 848 P.2d 664, 666 (Utah 1992) (internal quotations and citation omitted). And insurance policy language “is not necessarily ambiguous simply because one party seeks to endow it with a different meaning from that relied on by the drafter.” Camp v. Deseret Mut. Benefit Ass’n, 589 P.2d 780, 782 (Utah 1979). See also Village Inn Apartments, 790 P.2d at 583 (“A policy-term is not ambiguous ... merely because one party ássigns a different meaning to it in accordance with his or her own interests.”).

¶ 10 To advance their contention that the phrase “regular use” is susceptible of more than one interpretation, the Valentines urge us to consider that the phrase “regular use” can plausibly be interpreted to mean a type of use that is unfettered or without limitation. They argue that the word “regular,” as used in the policy, denotes a use that is by its nature the kind one would ordinarily or customarily make of her own vehicle.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2006 UT App 301, 141 P.3d 618, 556 Utah Adv. Rep. 30, 2006 Utah App. LEXIS 330, 2006 WL 2021718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valentine-v-farmers-insurance-exchange-utahctapp-2006.