West v. West Virginia Department of Transportation

687 S.E.2d 346, 224 W. Va. 563, 2009 W. Va. LEXIS 117
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 2009
Docket34749
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 687 S.E.2d 346 (West v. West Virginia Department of Transportation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West v. West Virginia Department of Transportation, 687 S.E.2d 346, 224 W. Va. 563, 2009 W. Va. LEXIS 117 (W. Va. 2009).

Opinions

[565]*565PER CURIAM:

This appeal is brought by the defendants below,1 the West Virginia Department of Transportation, Division of Highways, and Paul A. Mattox in his capacity as Commissioner of Highways (hereinafter collectively referred to as “DoH”) from the judgment entered March 19, 2008, by the Circuit Court of Brooke County after a trial by jury resulting in a verdict in favor of plaintiffs below, Keith West and Susan West, (hereinafter jointly referred to as “Wests”) in an amount of over $8 million.2 Although DoH raises numerous questions in this appeal, the dis-positive issue is whether the applicable State liability insurance policy provides coverage under the circumstances presented in this case. Based upon our consideration of the issues raised in the briefs and oral arguments in light of the relevant documents and legal precedents, we reverse the judgment of the lower court and remand the ease for further proceedings in order to determine the threshold issue of whether a properly executed State liability insurance policy was in place at the time the West accident occurred.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

The case on which this appeal is based was filed by the Wests following a motor vehicle accident on January 20, 2005. Mr. West was a passenger in a truck his father was driving on Route 7, near Morgantown, West Virginia. There was slush on the road and the father lost control of the vehicle while entering a sharp curve. Although he regained control of the vehicle, the father was unable to bring the truck to a stop and steered the vehicle between a guardrail and telephone pole believing that the truck would come to rest in a meadow. Unfortunately, what the father conceived to be a meadow was actually a hillside. The track rolled over while proceeding down the hill. The father was not injured, but Mr. West was ejected from the vehicle and sustained fractures to an upper arm and hip socket. No DoH employees were present at the site when the West accident occurred.

The subject guardrail had been damaged during a previous accident, which by all accounts occurred on February 1, 2004. A shortening of the guardrail resulted from this prior incident due to the impact causing the guardrail to buckle and bend backward toward itself. DoH maintains it requested Penn Line to repair the guardrail on November 8, 2004, but the repair did not occur until February 7, 2005, or eighteen days after Mr. West was injured at the site.

On April 19, 2006, the Wests filed suit against DoH and Penn Line, the company which eventually repaired the guardrail in question through its contract with DoH. The negligence claims the Wests levied against DoH involved negligent selection of Penn Line as a contractor, and failure to post a warning at the site of the damaged guardrail. The Wests’ complaint also alleged that Penn Line was negligent in failing to install, repair, erect and/or replace the damaged section of guardrail, and for not engaging another entity to complete the repair in a more timely manner.

With regard to the State’s liability insurance policy, the complaint asserted that the Wests were seeking recovery from DoH pursuant to the State’s National Union Fire Insurance Company policy number RMGL 480-62-96 “under and up to the limit of said liability insurance coverage.” The complaint goes on to state: “In the event that the defendants DoH and Mattox invoke the exclusion contained under ‘Endorsement #7’ [of the State liability insurance policy], plaintiffs seek a determination by the Court, and for the Court to enter a declaratory judgment, declaring that the same is null and void as being[] vague, ambiguous, unconscionable and against public policy.”3

[566]*566In Penn Line’s answer to the complaint, it raised a cross-claim against DoH seeking indemnification. In answer ,to Penn Line’s cross-claim, DoH invoked immunity pursuant to Article VI, Section 35 of the West Virginia Constitution, and sought indemnification against Penn Line should DoH nonetheless be found liable based on the acts or omissions of Penn Line.

Penn Line also filed a third-party complaint against the driver of the truck which the driver countered with a motion to dismiss. The trial court signed an agreed order on May 4, 2007, dismissing the third-party complaint against the driver with prejudice “based on the good faith settlement heretofore entered into between plaintiffs and ... [the father].”

On February 4, 2008, Penn Line filed a “Motion for Summary Judgment for,Affirmative Finding of Insurance Coverage.” Four days later the Wests filed a “Motion for Summary Judgment on Declaratory Judgment Action” regarding coverage under the State’s liability insurance policy. Arguments were heard on these motions on February 20, 2008; the lower court’s rulings on the motions appeared in an order signed on February 26, 2008. The order conveys the trial court’s initial finding that a declaratory judgment action was the proper course to decide the controversies. Thereafter, the order reflects the circuit court’s conclusion that the policy issued by the National Union Fire Insurance Company was in place during the time of the accident and that the policy, without modification by endorsement, provided coverage for the accident. The lower court specifically found that Endorsement No. 7, delineating circumstances in which coverage is excluded,4 was not part of the insurance contract because it was not signed. Finding that the lack of signature created an inherent ambiguity as to whether the insurance contract was modified by the provisions of Endorsement No. 7, the lower court concluded that the ambiguity had to be strictly construed against the insurance company in favor of providing coverage. The order further reflects the lower court’s finding that even if the terms of Endorsement No. 7 were applicable, DoH had a duty to inspect guardrails and inspection was not an activity specifically excluded from coverage by the terms of Endorsement No. 7. Based upon these findings, the lower court granted both the Wests’ motion for summary judgment on the declaratory judgment action and Penn Line’s motion for summary judgment for an affirmative finding of insurance coverage. However, the lower court denied Penn Line’s motion for summary judgment with respect to liability because the court concluded that issues of material fact remained in dispute.

On February 27, 2008, the trial court entered an order captioned “Stipulation and Agreed Order of of [sic] Dismissal of Defendant Penn Line Service, Inc.” As related in this order, the Wests’ claims against Penn Line were dismissed with prejudice due to a settlement between the parties. The order also reflects that the dismissal with prejudice included “all cross-claims filed against Penn [567]*567Line by defendant West Virginia Department of Transportation, Division of Highways, for any indemnification and/or contribution.”

The jury trial began on March 4, 2008, and concluded on March 7, 2008. DoH claims that the trial court made various flawed rulings before and during the trial which left the agency virtually defenseless,5 and it was because of these errors that the jury returned a verdict in favor of the Wests for over $8 million.6

DoH thereafter filed motions for a new trial, entry of judgment as a matter of law and entry of an order modifying or altering judgment.

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Related

West v. West Virginia Department of Transportation
687 S.E.2d 346 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 2009)

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Bluebook (online)
687 S.E.2d 346, 224 W. Va. 563, 2009 W. Va. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-west-virginia-department-of-transportation-wva-2009.