Winnacunnet & SAU 21 v. N a t 'l Union

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedNovember 3, 1995
DocketCV-93-627-B
StatusPublished

This text of Winnacunnet & SAU 21 v. N a t 'l Union (Winnacunnet & SAU 21 v. N a t 'l Union) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winnacunnet & SAU 21 v. N a t 'l Union, (D.N.H. 1995).

Opinion

Winnacunnet & SAU 21 v. N a t '1 Union CV-93-627-B 11/03/95 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

Winnacunnet Cooperative School District

v. Civil No. 93-627-B

National Union Fire Insurance Company

and

School Administrative Unit #21

v. Civil No. 93-671-B

O R D E R

The parties have filed supplemental materials in response to

my order of September 25, 1995, to address the question raised in

the plaintiffs' motion for reconsideration concerning the source

of the plaintiffs' injuries in the underlying lawsuits. Having

considered all of the materials, I deny the plaintiffs' motions

for reconsideration for the following reasons.

I. BACKGROUND

In my order dated August 29, 1995, I granted defendant's.

National Union Fire Insurance Company ("National"), motions for

summary judgment denying the plaintiffs', Winnacunnet Cooperative School District ("Winnacunnet") and School Administrative Unit

#21 ("Unit #21"), petitions for declaratory judgment seeking

insurance coverage. National asserted that policy exclusions for

"claims arising out of" either assault or battery or bodily

injury or death barred coverage for the claims made against

Winnacunnet and Unit #21. I looked beyond the pleadings in the

underlying suits because the facts alleged did not clearly

preclude coverage and the circumstances1 suggested the need "to

avoid permitting the pleading strategies, whims, and vagaries of

third party claimants to control the rights of parties to an

insurance contract." M. Mooney Corp. v. United States Fidelity &

Guar. C o ., 136 N.H. 463, 469 (1992). Relying on counsels'

representations made during a telephone conference that the

conspiracy and murder of Gregory Smart were the source of the

plaintiffs' alleged injuries, I concluded that the source of the

underlying claims was undisputed. I followed the majority rule,

explained in my order, that a cause of action is deemed to arise

out of an assault or the death of another person if that is the

1 The two underlying suits, one brought by Cecelia Pierce against SAU #21, and the other brought by Vance Lattime, William Flynn, Patrick Randall, and their parents against Winnacunnet, allege negligence in hiring, training, and supervising Pamela Smart. Pierce, Flynn, Randall, and Lattime were students at Winnacunnet High School who became involved with Pamela Smart and the conspiracy and murder of her husband, Gregory Smart.

2 source of injury claimed in the suit, even if the insured

negligently allowed the assault or death to occur. I then

concluded that the claims were barred by the policy exclusions

because the conspiracy and murder of Gregory Smart were the

undisputed sources of the injuries claimed, and granted summary

judgment in National's favor.

Winnacunnet and Unit #21 moved for reconsideration. In

their motions, they disavowed the representations made during the

telephone conference that the source of the underlying injuries

was the conspiracy and murder of Gregory Smart. Because the

telephone conference was not recorded and the parties' agreement

on the issue was not in writing, I granted the parties an

opportunity to submit additional materials on the issue of

whether the conspiracy and murder of Gregory Smart was the source

of the underlying plaintiffs' alleged injuries.

II. DISCUSSION

National, as the insurer in a declaratory judgment action

for disputed coverage, bears the burden of proving noncoverage.

N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. §422:22-a (Supp. 1994). To win summary

judgment in its favor. National must produce enough supportive

evidence to entitle it to judgment as a matter of law (i.e., no

reasonable jury could find otherwise even when construing the

3 evidence in the light most favorable to Winnacunnet and Unit

#21), and Winnacunnet and Unit #21 must fail to produce

sufficient responsive evidence to raise a genuine dispute as to

any material fact. Fitzpatrick v. City of Atlanta, 2 F.3d 1112,

1115-17 (11th Cir. 1993); Murphy v. Franklin Pierce Law Center,

882 F. Supp. 1176, 1180 (D.N.H. 1994) . Having decided the legal

guestions pertinent to the interpretation and application of the

relevant policy exclusions and finding no error, I decline to

reconsider my previous legal analysis. Therefore, in ruling on

the motions to reconsider, I must determine whether the

undisputed material facts entitle National Union to summary

judgment under the applicable legal standard.

A. Cecelia Pierce's Suit

In her complaint in the underlying suit, Cecelia Pierce

alleges that Unit #21's negligence caused her "loss of education,

loss of past, present and future earnings, loss of reputation and

standing in the community, and mental anguish." National argues

that all of her alleged injuries arose from the conseguences of

her participation in the conspiracy to kill Gregory Smart. In

support of its argument. National offers excerpts of Pierce's

deposition in which she explained the injuries she claims.

She testified that her loss of education was due to her

absence from school during her junior year to testify at Pamela

4 Smart's murder trial. Pierce described later difficulties

getting into college without the assistance of Winnacunnet High

School. She testified that she lost earnings because she had to

leave her job in order to assist the police in the investigation

of the Smart murder and then to testify at the trial. She also

testified that her involvement in the murder conspiracy, her

failure to reveal the plan before Gregory Smart's death, the

trial, and the resulting publicity caused her to lose friends and

her reputation and standing in the community, all of which

resulted in mental anguish.

In response. Unit #21 discusses Pierce's claims of negligent

hiring, training, and supervision of Pamela Smart, the discovery

conducted, and the probable evidence of negligence to be

presented at trial in the underlying action. Unit #21 includes

copies of the complaint, the notice of claim, Pierce's pretrial

statement, interrogatories from Pierce to Unit #21, Pierce's

answers to Unit #21's interrogatories, and excerpts from Pierce's

depositions to show that Pierce alleges negligence as her cause

of action against Unit #21 and does not assert a claim based on

the conspiracy and murder of Gregory Smart.

Unit #21 points to one of Pierce's answers, which is only

submitted in part, to explain the basis of her claim. Apparently

referring to a previous discussion. Pierce was asked, "Is it

5 these things that went on that you're complaining about in this

lawsuit?" and she responded in part:

It's just everything, it's everything. Mainly, it's that my mother went to the school and she spoke to my principal and she told him that I was spending too much time with Pam and she wanted it ended. And he said that he had noticed and he would do something about it. And he didn't. And if he had, I can't tell you what. I'm not, you know, I can't predict the . . .

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Related

Fitzpatrick v. City of Atlanta
2 F.3d 1112 (Eleventh Circuit, 1993)
Murphy v. Franklin Pierce Law Center
882 F. Supp. 1176 (D. New Hampshire, 1994)
M. Mooney Corp. v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.
618 A.2d 793 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1992)

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