ACE Fire Underwriters v. Romero , 831 F.3d 1285 ( 2016 )


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  •                                                                                FILED
    United States Court of Appeals
    PUBLISH                           Tenth Circuit
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                       August 1, 2016
    Elisabeth A. Shumaker
    FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT                            Clerk of Court
    _________________________________
    ACE FIRE UNDERWRITERS
    INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Plaintiff Counter Defendant -
    Appellant,
    v.                                                        No. 14-2073
    DAVE ROMERO, JR., as personal
    representative of the wrongful death
    proceedings of Jose A. (Felix) Chavez,
    deceased; ISABEL CHAVEZ,
    individually; BRANDON CHAVEZ,
    individually; LUIS GUTIERREZ,
    individually; TIFFANY FISHER,
    individually,
    Defendants Counter Plaintiffs -
    Appellees.
    _________________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of New Mexico
    (D.C. No. 1:12-CV-01129-KG-RHS)
    _________________________________
    Danny L. Worker, Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith, LLP, Chicago, Illinois; (Stephen D.
    Hoffman, Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith, LLP, Phoenix, Arizona, with him on the
    briefs), for Plaintiff Counter Defendant-Appellant.
    Randy Knudson, Doerr & Knudson, P.A., Portales, New Mexico; (W.H. Greig, Greig &
    Richards, P.A., Clovis, New Mexico, with him on the brief), for Defendant Counter
    Plaintiffs-Appellees.
    _________________________________
    Before HOLMES, MATHESON, and MORITZ, Circuit Judges.
    _________________________________
    MORITZ, Circuit Judge.
    _________________________________
    ACE Fire Underwriters Insurance Company appeals the district court’s
    declaration that a policy ACE issued offers total coverage up to $2 million for an
    accident involving two insured vehicles: a tractor and trailer. Because we agree with
    ACE that the policy instead limits its liability to only $1 million, we reverse.
    BACKGROUND
    I.     The Accident and Insurance Dispute
    In the early morning hours of March 24, 2011, Jesse Hale left Finney Farms
    driving a tractor-trailer rig. When he pulled onto a highway adjacent to Finney
    Farms, the trailer detached from the tractor. Hale drove his tractor off the roadway
    and back onto the farm, hoping to make a quick U-turn and return to the roadway so
    that he could pull up behind the trailer and illuminate it on the dark highway. But
    before he could complete this maneuver, Jose Chavez’s vehicle collided with the
    unlit trailer, killing Chavez.
    The personal representative of Chavez’s estate, Dave Romero, Jr., together
    with Chavez’s surviving family members (collectively, the Estate), brought a
    wrongful death action against Finney Farms and Hale. As the insurer of the tractor
    and the trailer, ACE reached a settlement with the Estate. But the parties conditioned
    the settlement upon litigating the available limits of the policy. ACE maintained that
    the policy provisions limited its liability to $1 million per accident, regardless of the
    2
    number of covered autos1 involved. The Estate, on the other hand, insisted that
    ACE’s liability under the policy was $1 million per covered auto involved in each
    accident. That interpretation of the policy would cap ACE’s liability in this case at
    $2 million because, according to the Estate, the tractor and the trailer were both
    involved in the accident. Under the terms of the settlement, ACE initially paid the
    Estate $1 million. But it agreed to pay it an additional $550,000 if the court accepted
    the Estate’s interpretation of the policy.
    II.   The District Court’s Original Decision
    In accordance with the terms of the settlement agreement, ACE sought a
    declaratory judgment as to the policy limits, and both parties moved for summary
    judgment. The district court initially sided with ACE, concluding that the policy
    unambiguously limits ACE’s liability to $1 million per accident under New Mexico
    contract law.2
    In reaching that conclusion, the court relied heavily on two provisions in the
    policy: (1) Item Two of the declarations, titled “SCHEDULE OF COVERAGES
    AND COVERED AUTOS,” and (2) a section in the body of the policy titled “Limit
    of Insurance.” App. vol. 1, 38, 76. The court explained that Item Two—which lists
    “$1,000,000” in the liability coverage row under the heading “LIMIT THE MOST
    WE WILL PAY FOR ANY ONE ACCIDENT OR LOSS”—unambiguously limits
    liability coverage to $1 million per accident. See id. at 38. The court further
    1
    “Auto” is a defined term under the policy encompassing both the tractor and
    trailer at issue.
    2
    The parties agree that New Mexico law controls in this diversity action.
    3
    explained that the Limit of Insurance provision—which provides that regardless of
    the number of covered autos involved, “the most [ACE] will pay for the total of all
    damages . . . resulting from any one ‘accident’ is the Limit of Insurance for Liability
    Coverage shown in the Declarations”—reinforces that the policy’s provisions limit
    liability coverage to Item Two’s $1 million cap. Accordingly, the court entered
    summary judgment in favor of ACE.
    III.    The District Court’s Decision Following a Motion to Reconsider
    But following the district court’s initial decision, the New Mexico Court of
    Appeals reached the opposite conclusion after considering a similar policy. See
    Lucero v. Northland Ins. Co. (Lucero I), 
    326 P.3d 42
     (N.M. Ct. App. 2014), rev’d,
    
    346 P.3d 1154
     (N.M. 2015). In Lucero I, the court interpreted an insurance policy
    (the Northland policy) containing (1) an Item Two that was nearly identical to the
    Item Two in the ACE policy, and (2) a Limit of Insurance provision that was
    identical to the Limit of Insurance provision in the ACE policy. 
    Id. at 49
    ; Lucero v.
    Northland Ins. Co. (Lucero II), 
    346 P.3d 1154
    , 1156 (N.M. 2015) (reproducing Item
    Two of the Northland policy, which includes a “LIMITS OF LIABILITY” column
    and a corresponding entry of “$1,000,000 each ‘accident’” in the liability coverage
    row).
    The Lucero I court concluded that the Northland policy limited liability to
    $1 million for each covered auto involved in an accident. 326 P.3d at 44. In reaching
    that conclusion, the court found it significant that Item Two included a qualifier
    stating, “Each of these coverages will apply only to those ‘autos’ shown as Covered
    4
    ‘Autos.’” Id. at 44.3 Relying on this language, the court explained, “It follows that
    each vehicle involved in an accident that is a ‘Covered “Auto”’ carries $1 million in
    liability coverage.” Id. at 46-47.
    The Lucero I court further concluded that the Limit of Insurance provision
    didn’t apply when more than one covered auto was involved in the same accident.
    Instead, the Lucero I court reasoned that the Limit of Insurance provision only
    prevented aggregating “policy limits applicable to more than one vehicle where the
    other vehicles are not involved in the accident.” Id. at 47 (quoting Progressive
    Premier Ins. Co. of Ill. v. Kocher ex rel. Fleming, 
    932 N.E.2d 1094
    , 1098 (Ill. App.
    Ct. 2010)).
    Alternatively, the Lucero I court noted that even if the Limit of Insurance
    provision applied, the policy was ambiguous. Id. at 48-49. The court explained that
    the Northland policy’s listing of covered autos “show[ed] a separate premium paid
    for each listed vehicle, and each listed vehicle [was] provided $1 million in
    coverage.” Id. at 49. In contrast, the Limit of Insurance provision ostensibly
    “eliminate[d] all liability coverage available to one of the two vehicles involved in
    the accident,” resulting in an ambiguity that the court construed against the insurer.
    Id.
    Following Lucero I, the Estate in this case filed a motion to reconsider in the
    district court, arguing that the New Mexico Court of Appeals’ interpretation of the
    Northland policy controlled here because—according to the Estate—the Northland
    3
    The ACE policy contains a nearly identical qualifier. See App. vol. 1, 38.
    5
    policy at issue in Lucero I was “virtually identical” to the policy at issue here. App.
    vol. 4, 498. The district court recognized the nonbinding nature of the New Mexico
    Court of Appeals’ decision, but concluded that “the New Mexico Supreme Court
    would most likely adopt the New Mexico Court of Appeals’ ruling in Lucero [I].”
    App. vol. 5, 554. Then, applying Lucero I, the district court concluded that the
    qualifier contained in Item Two of the ACE policy provides up to $1 million in
    liability coverage for each covered auto. And the court explained that the Limit of
    Insurance provision—if interpreted to apply when more than one covered auto was
    involved in a single accident—would eliminate coverage to all but one covered auto.
    Accordingly, the district court found the ACE policy ambiguous and construed the
    ambiguity against ACE. The court thus amended its judgment to reflect that the
    policy limited liability to $1 million per covered auto involved in an accident.
    IV.   The New Mexico Supreme Court’s Decision
    But the legal landscape was about to shift again. That’s because after the
    district court amended its judgment to reflect New Mexico’s intermediate appellate
    court’s ruling in Lucero I, the New Mexico Supreme Court agreed to review Lucero
    I. This action prompted ACE to seek (1) a stay of the case pending the New Mexico
    Supreme Court’s decision, and (2) reconsideration of the district court’s decision
    granting rehearing and adopting the rationale of Lucero I. But the district court
    declined to reconsider or stay enforcement of its judgment against ACE. ACE
    appealed, and we held the appeal in abeyance pending the New Mexico Supreme
    Court’s review of Lucero I.
    6
    Ultimately, the New Mexico Supreme Court reversed Lucero I and, in doing
    so, specifically rejected Lucero I’s characterization of the Northland policy as
    ambiguous. Instead, the state’s highest court characterized that policy as
    unambiguously “limit[ing] [the insurer’s] exposure to $1,000,000 per accident
    regardless of the number of covered autos involved in any one accident.” Lucero II,
    346 P.3d at 1158. In arriving at this conclusion, the court relied on three sections of
    the Northland policy: (1) Item Two; (2) the Limit of Insurance provision; and (3) a
    “Liability Coverage” provision. That provision stated, in relevant part, “We will pay
    all sums an ‘insured’ legally must pay as damages because of ‘bodily injury’ or
    ‘property damage’ to which this insurance applies, caused by an ‘accident’ and
    resulting from the ownership, maintenance or use of a covered ‘auto’.” Id. at 1157.4
    Reading these three provisions together, the New Mexico Supreme Court concluded
    that Northland’s promise to “pay all sums an ‘insured’ legally must pay” remained
    subject to, per the Limit of Insurance provision, “the Limit of Insurance for Liability
    Coverage shown in the Declarations.” And that limit, according to the New Mexico
    Supreme Court, was $1 million per accident, as specified in Item Two. Id. at 1157.
    Moreover, the New Mexico Supreme Court rejected the portion of Lucero I’s
    analysis that construed Item Two’s qualifier—i.e., “Each of these coverages will
    apply only to those ‘autos’ shown as Covered ‘Autos’”—as meaning Northland
    promised to pay $1 million for each auto involved in an accident. Id. at 1156-57. The
    4
    Notably, the ACE policy contains an identical Liability Coverage provision.
    See App. vol. 1, 73.
    7
    court explained that the policy didn’t say, “[E]ach of these coverages will apply to
    [each of] those autos shown,” but rather said, “[E]ach of these coverages will apply
    only to those ‘autos’ shown.” Id. The court noted that “the provision [was] phrased
    not as a grant but as a limitation,” and emphasized the “critical distinction between a
    grant of coverage and ‘the amount of such coverage.’” Id. at 1157-58 (quoting Vigil
    v. Cal. Cas. Ins. Co., 
    811 P.2d 565
    , 567 (N.M. 1991)). Thus, the court rejected
    Lucero I’s conclusion that Item Two’s qualifier granted each covered auto $1 million
    in liability coverage. Instead, the court concluded that while Item Two “makes
    liability coverage available for each of the covered autos . . . it does not grant policy
    limits for each covered auto.” Id. at 1158.
    Finally, the court noted that even “if there were reasonable grounds for
    disagreement over the terms” of Item Two, language in the Limit of Insurance
    provision “settle[d] the matter.” Id. at 1158. The court explained that, read together,
    the Limit of Insurance provision and Item Two clearly indicate that, regardless of the
    number of covered autos involved in a single accident, the most Northland will pay
    “is the Limit of Insurance for Liability Coverage shown in the Declarations,” i.e.,
    “$1,000,000 each accident.” Id.; see also id. at 1158, 1160 (citing cases from
    numerous other jurisdictions “interpreting similar insurance clauses” and “reach[ing]
    a similar conclusion”).
    Following Lucero II, we lifted the abatement of ACE’s appeal.
    8
    DISCUSSION
    Summary judgment is appropriate “if the movant shows that there is no
    genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a
    matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). “We review the district court’s grant of
    summary judgment de novo, employing the same legal standard applicable in the
    district court.” Thomson v. Salt Lake County, 
    584 F.3d 1304
    , 1311 (10th Cir. 2009).
    In this diversity action, “we apply state law with the objective of obtaining the result
    that would be reached in state court.” Butt v. Bank of Am., N.A., 
    477 F.3d 1171
    , 1179
    (10th Cir. 2007).
    Here, the parties stipulated to the relevant facts and agree that New Mexico
    law governs our interpretation of the policy. Thus, the question before us is purely a
    matter of contract interpretation under New Mexico law. See Ponder v. State Farm
    Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    12 P.3d 960
    , 964 (N.M. 2000) (explaining that the court resolves
    “questions regarding insurance policies by interpreting their terms and provisions in
    accordance with the ‘same principles which govern the interpretation of all
    contracts’” (quoting Rummel v. Lexington Ins. Co., 
    945 P.2d 970
    , 976 (N.M. 1997))).
    When interpreting the provisions at issue, we will “look to the rulings of the [New
    Mexico Supreme Court], and, if no such rulings exist, must endeavor to predict how
    that high court would rule.” Johnson v. Riddle, 
    305 F.3d 1107
    , 1118 (10th Cir. 2002).
    In that regard, the parties disagree over whether we may “look to” Lucero II as
    the New Mexico Supreme Court’s controlling opinion on this issue. See 
    id.
     ACE
    argues Lucero II controls because the Northland policy contained language identical
    9
    to the language in the ACE policy, placing Lucero II “on all fours with the present
    case.” Aplt. Br. 2, 16. The Estate, on the other hand, maintains that material
    distinctions exist between the ACE and Northland policies and that Lucero II
    therefore doesn’t apply.5
    Specifically, the Estate points to Item Three of the ACE policy, which is titled
    “SCHEDULE OF COVERED AUTOS YOU OWN.” App. vol. 1, 48, 52 (reproduced
    in relevant part below).
    5
    In support of its motion to reconsider, the Estate initially represented to the
    district court that Lucero I should control because it involved “a policy virtually
    identical to the policy in this case.” App. vol. 4, 498 (emphasis added). On appeal,
    however, the Estate reverses course and insists that Lucero I “has no applicability or
    relevance to an interpretation of the [ACE] policy” because—contrary to the Estate’s
    initial position—the policies contain key differences. Aplee. Br. 19.
    10
    That schedule lists both the tractor and trailer at issue6 and includes a qualifier
    noting that the “[a]bsence of a deductible or limit entry in any column below means
    that the limit or deductible entry in the corresponding ITEM TWO column applies
    instead.” 
    Id.
     Immediately following this qualifier, the policy separately lists the
    tractor and trailer, and provides a $1 million liability limit for each vehicle. 
    Id.
     The
    Estate argues that Item Three—which it insists wasn’t in the Northland policy, thus
    rendering Lucero II inapplicable—introduces two sources of ambiguity into the
    policy language, which the Estate asserts must be construed against ACE. See
    Ponder, 12 P.3d at 967 (explaining that a court should construe ambiguities against
    the insurer as a matter of public policy).
    At the outset, it’s not at all clear that the Northland policy didn’t contain this
    or a similar schedule. In fact, Lucero I and Lucero II both point out that the
    Northland policy included a schedule of covered autos, and Lucero I further
    described the schedule as a “separate listing of covered autos, which in turn shows a
    separate premium paid for each listed vehicle, and each listed vehicle is provided $1
    million in coverage.” Lucero I, 326 P.3d at 49. This description suggests that the
    Northland policy may have contained a substantially similar schedule to the ACE
    policy’s Item Three, particularly in light of the striking similarities between the other
    provisions of the two policies. And if the Northland policy did contain a similar Item
    Three, Lucero II would foreclose the Estate’s argument.
    6
    The parties agree that covered auto numbers 38 and 49 refer to the trailer and
    tractor at issue, respectively.
    11
    But because neither Lucero I nor Lucero II contained a visual depiction of the
    Northland policy’s schedule of covered autos or mentioned whether the Northland
    policy contained an “[a]bsence of a deductible or limit entry” qualifier similar to the
    one in the ACE policy, see App. vol. 1, 48, 52, we assume for purposes of this
    decision that the policies differ in this regard.
    Even so, we disagree that Item Three renders the ACE policy ambiguous. The
    Estate first argues that the policy is ambiguous because the $1 million-per-covered-
    auto limits of Item Three conflict with the $1 million-per-accident limit of Item Two.
    More specifically, the Estate points to the qualifier included with Item Three: the
    “[a]bsence of a deductible or limit entry in any column below means that the limit or
    deductible entry in the corresponding ITEM TWO column applies instead.” App. vol.
    1, 48, 52. The Estate reads this qualifier as standing for a corollary principle: namely,
    that the Item Two, per-accident limit “only applies to the specific covered autos
    identified in the policy under Item Three” when there are no limits specified in Item
    Three. Aplee. Br. 15. Accordingly, it argues that because each covered auto listed in
    Item Three is associated with a liability limit in the next column, those limits, and
    only those limits, apply for each of the 51 covered autos.
    We disagree. At the outset, the policy clearly indicates that the autos listed in
    Item Three are subject to Item Two’s $1 million-per-accident limit. See App. vol. 1,
    38 (indicating that covered autos denoted by symbol 7 are subject to Item Two’s
    $1 million liability limit); id. at 72 (explaining that symbol 7 denotes those autos
    described in Item Three). And contrary to the Estate’s characterization of the policy’s
    12
    provisions, the policy contains no indication or statement that the per-accident limit
    of Item Two only applies in the absence of a deductible or limit entry in Item Three.
    Rather, Item Three simply says that the “[a]bsence of a deductible or limit entry in
    any column below means that the limit or deductible entry in the corresponding
    ITEM TWO column applies instead.” Id. at 48, 52. The plain meaning of this
    provision is that if ACE hadn’t provided a liability limit for each covered auto in
    Item Three, the per-accident limit of Item Two would serve as the appropriate per-
    covered-auto limit. See Christmas v. Cimarron Realty Co., 
    648 P.2d 788
    , 790 (N.M.
    1982) (explaining that it’s “established that courts will apply the plain meaning of the
    contract language as written in interpreting terms of a contract”).
    The Estate’s proffered interpretation of the language—that the per-accident
    limit of Item Two only applies when there is no limit provided in Item Three—
    requires us to read the word “only” into the policy when that word doesn’t appear
    there.7 We decline to do so. See Heimann v. Kinder-Morgan CO2 Co., 
    144 P.3d 111
    ,
    115 (N.M. Ct. App. 2006). Instead, we apply the plain meaning of the policy’s
    language: Each covered vehicle carries the corresponding liability limit provided in
    7
    In addition to adding language to the policy that isn’t there, the Estate’s
    interpretation commits the fallacy of denying the antecedent. See TorPharm, Inc. v.
    Ranbaxy Pharm., Inc., 
    336 F.3d 1322
    , 1329 n.7 (Fed. Cir. 2003) (defining fallacy of
    denying antecedent as “[a]n invalid argument of the general form: If p, then q. Not p.
    Therefore, not q”). Here, the policy states that if there is no limit listed in Item Three,
    then the limit in Item Two applies. The Estate insists this means that if there is a limit
    listed in Item Three, then the limit in Item Two doesn’t apply. “But this does not
    logically follow, as an example illustrates: ‘Because it’s not cold outside, it’s not
    snowing. It is now cold outside, therefore it must be snowing.’” Agri Processor Co.
    v. NLRB, 
    514 F.3d 1
    , 6 (D.C. Cir. 2008).
    13
    Item Three. But regardless of the number of covered autos or their individual liability
    limits for a single accident, ACE’s per-accident liability is capped at the limit
    provided in Item Two: $1 million. See Mayfield Smithson Enters. v. Com-Quip, Inc.,
    
    896 P.2d 1156
    , 1161 (N.M. 1995) (refusing to give defendant’s proffered contract
    interpretation weight because it was “incongruous with other contract provisions”
    and made “great portions of [the] agreement surplusage”); Brooks v. Tanner, 
    680 P.2d 343
    , 346 (N.M. 1984) (noting “each part of the contract is to be accorded
    significance according to its place in the contract”). Thus, Item Three’s qualifier
    doesn’t render the policy ambiguous.
    And this conclusion also controls the Estate’s second ambiguity argument: i.e.,
    that the liability limits specified in Item Three render the Limit of Insurance
    provision ambiguous. The Estate points out that the Limit of Insurance provision
    limits liability for any one accident to “the Limit of Insurance for Liability Coverage
    shown in the Declarations.” App. vol. 1, 76 (emphasis added). It suggests that it’s
    unclear which limit “shown in the Declarations” this provision refers to. And it
    argues that a reasonable insured would understand the Limit of Insurance provision
    as referring to the limits listed in Item Three because “the Item Two limit would only
    apply if no coverage was listed in the column [of Item Three] relating to coverage.”
    Aplee. Br. 18 (emphasis added).
    But once again, accepting this argument would require that we read the word
    “only” into Item Three’s qualifier. And for the reasons discussed above, we decline
    to do so.
    14
    Because Item Three introduces no ambiguity into the policy, the New Mexico
    Supreme Court’s Lucero II decision controls. Specifically, under New Mexico law,
    we interpret the ACE policy as establishing that ACE’s promise to “pay all sums an
    ‘insured’ legally must pay” remains subject to, per the Limit of Insurance provision,
    “the Limit of Insurance for Liability Coverage shown in the Declarations,” which
    includes Item Two’s $1 million-per-accident limit. See Lucero II, 346 P.3d at 1157.
    Accordingly, the ACE policy unambiguously limits ACE’s liability to $1 million per
    accident regardless of the number of covered autos involved.8 We therefore reverse
    and remand to the district court with instructions to enter judgment in favor of ACE.
    8
    Because we conclude that the policy limits ACE’s liability to $ 1 million per
    accident regardless of the number of covered autos involved, we need not resolve
    whether the trailer was “involved” in the March 24, 2011, accident.
    15