Dee Frye v. Auto-Owners Insurance Company , 845 F.3d 782 ( 2017 )


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  •                                In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 16-1677
    DEE FRYE and LANHUI FRYE,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    AUTO-OWNERS INSURANCE CO.,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of Indiana, South Bend Division.
    No. 3:13-CV-113 — Rudy Lozano, Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED SEPTEMBER 21, 2016 — DECIDED JANUARY 3, 2017
    ____________________
    Before FLAUM, KANNE, and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges.
    FLAUM, Circuit Judge. Dee Frye was injured in a car acci-
    dent caused by an underinsured driver. Frye sued his insur-
    ance company for coverage, and the parties reached a partial
    settlement, but Frye thought he was entitled to additional
    payments under the policy. The district court disagreed, and
    awarded summary judgment to the insurer. Frye appeals, and
    for the reasons that follow, we reverse the decision of the dis-
    trict court.
    2                                                   No. 16-1677
    I. Background
    In January 2011, Dee Frye was seriously injured in a car
    accident while driving for his job. The other driver admitted
    responsibility for the collision, and the latter’s insurance com-
    pany agreed to pay Frye $100,000, the applicable per-person
    limit. Frye accepted the payment and offered to assign it to
    his lawyer and to his employer’s insurer, Auto-Owners Insur-
    ance Company, from which Frye had already received
    $692,895.79 in workers’-compensation benefits. Auto-Owners
    took $75,000 of the third-party payment (in partial satisfaction
    of a statutory lien), and the remaining $25,000 went to Frye’s
    attorney. See 
    Ind. Code § 22-3-2-13
    .
    Frye’s injuries were also covered by two other insurance
    policies—a commercial automobile policy, and a commercial
    umbrella policy—issued by Auto-Owners to Frye’s employer.
    The former policy required Auto-Owners to pay any compen-
    satory damages Frye was legally entitled to recover for bodily
    injuries caused by an underinsured motorist, and defined the
    insurer’s per-occurrence limit of liability as the lesser of:
    (1) the difference between:
    (a) the amount paid in compensatory dam-
    ages … to the injured person by or for
    any person … who may be liable for the
    injured person’s bodily injury; and
    (b) the “each person” limit for … Underin-
    sured Motorist Coverage stated in the
    Declarations [i.e., $1 million]; [and]
    No. 16-1677                                                       3
    (2) the difference between:
    (a) the total amount of compensatory dam-
    ages … incurred by the injured person;
    and
    (b) the amount paid by or for any person …
    liable for the injured person’s bodily in-
    jury. 1
    The latter policy afforded follow-on coverage to the auto-
    mobile policy, and stated with respect to the insurer’s limit of
    (excess) liability:
    The most we shall pay under this [umbrella pol-
    icy] in any one occurrence shall not exceed the
    Limit of Liability shown in the Declarations for
    … [t]he combined coverages of Uninsured Mo-
    torist and Underinsured Motorist ….
    The declarations reflected an uninsured-and-underinsured-
    motorist liability limit of $1 million. (The general limit for
    bodily injury was also $1 million when the umbrella policy
    was first issued in November 2007. Beginning in May 2010,
    however, the general limit was increased to $5 million per oc-
    currence.) As to underinsured-motorist (or UIM) coverage in
    particular, the umbrella policy stated:
    For [such] coverage, our Limit of Liability shall
    be reduced by any amounts:
    1 We omit in this opinion the emphases originally included in the
    quoted policy provisions.
    4                                                           No. 16-1677
    …
    2) Paid or payable for the same bodily in-
    jury covered under any workers com-
    pensation or similar law; and
    3) Paid by or on behalf of any person …
    who may be legally responsible for the
    bodily injury
    which are in excess of the retained limit.
    “Retained limit” was defined as the greater of:
    (a) The highest applicable limits of liability of
    any and all underlying policy(ies); [and]
    (b) … $500,000 for bodily injury ….
    In January 2013, Frye and his wife (collectively, “Frye”)
    sued Auto-Owners in Indiana state court, seeking payment
    under the aforementioned policies for damages arising from
    Frye’s January 2011 car accident. 2 Auto-Owners removed the
    suit to federal court, and the parties later reached a partial set-
    tlement, through which Auto-Owners agreed to pay Frye
    $1,282,314.21. This amount included: $900,000 under the au-
    tomobile policy ($1 million in total coverage, less $100,000
    from the other motorist’s insurer 3); and $382,314.21 under the
    2 Frye also sued Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company, the entity
    that had insured the car Frye was driving at the time of the collision. Na-
    tionwide was ultimately dismissed from the case, and is not a party to this
    appeal.
    3Frye claimed damages exceeding $1 million, so Auto-Owners main-
    tained that it owed no more than $900,000 under the automobile policy—
    which, as already noted, capped the insurer’s liability at the lesser of:
    No. 16-1677                                                                 5
    umbrella policy ($1 million in UIM coverage, less $617,685.79
    in net workers’-compensation payments 4).
    Auto-Owners asserted that the settlement amount ex-
    hausted its obligations under the relevant policies, but Frye
    disagreed. According to Frye, Indiana statutory law required
    Auto-Owners to provide through its umbrella policy UIM
    coverage in an amount equal to the policy’s general liability
    limit: $5 million (as of May 2010). Moreover, said Frye, the set-
    off for workers’-compensation payments was impermissi-
    ble—both under the umbrella contract’s terms, and also as a
    matter of Indiana public policy. The district court rejected
    both arguments, and awarded summary judgment to Auto-
    Owners. Frye appeals.
    [the per-person limit ($1 million)]               –
    [amounts paid by the liable party ($100,000)] =       $900,000;
    and
    [total damages ( > $1 million)]                   –
    [amounts paid by the liable party ($100,000)] =       > $900,000.
    Frye objected to this calculation before the district court, but has not re-
    newed his objection on appeal.
    4 It is unclear how Auto-Owners obtained this figure. Frye received
    $692,895.79 in workers’ compensation; and, as noted above, $75,000 of that
    amount was returned to his employer’s insurance carrier (also Auto-Own-
    ers)—thus yielding a net compensation payment of $617,895.79, not
    $617,685.79. We also question whether the net payment amount should
    not also reflect (i.e., be further reduced by) the $25,000 that went to Frye’s
    attorney. See Tunny v. Erie Ins. Co., 
    790 N.E.2d 1009
    , 1012, 1015–17 (Ind. Ct.
    App. 2003) (concluding that amounts assigned to an insured’s lawyer un-
    der Indiana Code § 22-3-2-13 were not amounts retained by the insured).
    As Frye does not object to the insurer’s calculation, however, we assume
    for present purposes that this calculation is correct.
    6                                                             No. 16-1677
    II. Discussion
    We review de novo a district court’s grant of summary
    judgment, construing all facts and drawing all reasonable in-
    ferences in favor of the non-moving party—here, Frye. See
    C.G. Schmidt, Inc. v. Permasteelisa N. Am., 
    825 F.3d 801
    , 805 (7th
    Cir. 2016) (citation omitted). Summary judgment is appropri-
    ate where there are no genuine issues of material fact and the
    movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ.
    P. 56(a).
    A. The UIM Coverage Limit
    Frye argues that § 27-7-5-2 of the Indiana Code obligates
    insurers who provide UIM coverage to provide such coverage
    in amounts equal to the limits of liability for bodily injury in
    general. Thus, says Frye, although the umbrella policy here
    purported to cap Auto-Owners’s UIM liability at $1 million,
    the statute required a UIM liability limit equal to the policy’s
    general per-incident limit of $5 million.
    Section 27-7-5-2 states: 5
    (a) Except as provided in subsection (d), the insurer
    shall make available, in each automobile lia-
    bility or motor vehicle liability policy … in-
    suring against loss resulting from … bodily
    5 Unless otherwise noted, we refer to the 2009 version of the statute,
    which was in effect when Auto-Owners renewed the umbrella policy for
    Frye’s employer. Frye argued in the district court that the 2009 version did
    not apply here, as the umbrella policy was first issued in 2007. The district
    court disagreed, and Frye has abandoned the issue on appeal. The quoted
    language from 2009 (with one immaterial exception) still appears in the
    current version of § 27-7-5-2.
    No. 16-1677                                                     7
    injury … arising from the … use of a motor
    vehicle, … the following types of coverage:
    (1) … for the protection of persons … enti-
    tled to recover damages from owners or
    operators of uninsured or underinsured
    motor vehicles because of bodily injury
    [or] injury to or destruction of prop-
    erty …; or
    (2) … for the protection of persons … enti-
    tled to recover damages from owners or
    operators of uninsured or underinsured
    motor vehicles because of bodily in-
    jury ….
    The uninsured and underinsured motorist
    coverages must be provided by insurers …
    in limits at least equal to the limits of liability
    specified in the bodily injury liability provisions
    of an insured’s policy, unless such coverages
    have been rejected in writing by the in-
    sured….
    …
    (d) An insurer is not required to make available the
    coverage described in subsection (a) in a commer-
    cial umbrella or excess liability policy ….
    
    Ind. Code § 27-7-5-2
     (emphases added). In construing a state
    statute, we must interpret the statute as we think the state’s
    highest court would interpret it. United States v. Mohamed, 
    759 F.3d 798
    , 804 (7th Cir. 2014) (citing Laborers Local 236, AFL-CIO
    v. Walker, 
    749 F.3d 628
    , 634 (7th Cir. 2014)). Indiana courts em-
    ploy the basic tools of statutory interpretation: Statutes are
    8                                                     No. 16-1677
    read as a whole, and words are given their plain and ordinary
    meaning. See 
    id.
     (explaining that the plain language of the
    statute is the best evidence of legislative intent) (citations
    omitted); see also Ellis v. CCA of Tenn. LLC, 
    650 F.3d 640
    , 651
    (7th Cir. 2011) (same) (quoting Estate of Moreland v. Dieter, 
    576 F.3d 691
    , 695 (7th Cir. 2009)).
    The parties agree that the plain language of § 27-7-5-2(d)
    exempts insurers from having to provide UIM coverage in
    their commercial umbrella policies. The present dispute in-
    stead turns on the extent to which subsection (d) creates a
    carve-out. Auto-Owners argues that § 27-7-5-2(d) permits in-
    surers issuing (or renewing) commercial umbrella policies to
    selectively dispense with any requirements set forth in sub-
    section (a) of that statute. In other words, not only may insur-
    ance companies abstain from providing UIM coverage in the
    first place, but if they do provide such coverage, they may
    provide it in any form they choose. In Frye’s view, subsection
    (d) allows insurers to omit from commercial umbrella policies
    any UIM coverage, but if such coverage is included, it must
    otherwise comply with the limit-of-liability requirements set
    forth in subsection (a). Frye’s reading is the more sensible one.
    Section 27-7-5-2(d) states that insurers are not required to
    make available in commercial umbrella policies “the coverage
    described in subsection (a).” 
    Ind. Code § 27-7-5-2
    (d). And sub-
    section (a) defines “coverage” as one of two things: UIM pro-
    tection against bodily injury and property damage; or UIM
    protection against bodily injury only. 
    Id.
     § 27-7-5-2(a). Subsec-
    tion (a) then states that these “coverages must be provided …
    in limits at least equal to the limits of liability [for] bodily in-
    jury” generally. Id. (emphasis added). So the limit-of-liability
    No. 16-1677                                                    9
    requirement is modifying the “coverage” already described;
    the liability requirement is not part of the description itself.
    Auto-Owners nevertheless insists that the liability re-
    quirement must be part of the “coverage described in subsec-
    tion (a)”—and that subsection (d) therefore exempts insurers
    from satisfying that requirement—because this is what the In-
    diana legislature intended in adding subsection (d) to the stat-
    ute. We disagree. Initially, § 27-7-5-2 contained no affirmative
    exceptions to the UIM-coverage mandate (though the insured
    could still reject such coverage in writing). See 
    Ind. Code § 27-7-5-2
     (1995). So if an insurance policy was an “automobile
    liability” or “motor vehicle liability” policy—the types of pol-
    icies to which the statute applied, see 
    id.
     § 27-7-5-2(a)—then
    Indiana law required that the policy cover all injuries caused
    by underinsured motorists, see United Nat’l Ins. Co. v. DePrizio,
    
    705 N.E.2d 455
    , 457–463 (Ind. 1999) (interpreting § 27-7-5-2 to
    impose the UIM-coverage requirement on umbrella policies
    insuring against motor-vehicle-related liability). In DePrizio,
    the Indiana Supreme Court made clear that if the state legis-
    lature wished to exclude any specific types of insurance con-
    tracts from the UIM-coverage mandate, only an explicit stat-
    utory carve-out would suffice. See id. at 463–64. Subsection
    (d), which was added to the statute in 2009, effected just such
    an exemption for commercial umbrella policies; and, because
    of that exemption, insurers need not include in such contracts
    any UIM coverage at all. Nothing in the language of subsec-
    tion (d), however, permits insurance companies—to the ex-
    tent they do include UIM coverage in their commercial um-
    brella policies—to provide that coverage in any manner they
    like.
    10                                                    No. 16-1677
    That the Indiana legislature did not intend such a result is
    further evidenced by later amendments to the same statute.
    Section 27-7-5-2(h), which appears in the current version of
    the statute, provides that insurers are not required to make
    available in personal (as distinguished from commercial) um-
    brella or excess liability policies “the coverage described in
    subsection (a).” 
    Ind. Code § 27-7-5-2
    (h)(1) (2013). So subsec-
    tion (h), like subsection (d), exempts insurers from having to
    include UIM coverage in certain types of insurance contracts.
    But subsection (h) also states that, where an insurer does in-
    clude such coverage, the insurer “may make available the cov-
    erage in limits determined by the insurer,” and “is not required
    to make available the coverage in limits equal to the limits spec-
    ified in the personal umbrella or excess liability policy.” 
    Id.
    § 27-7-5-2(h)(3) (emphases added). We must therefore assume
    that the exception for commercial contracts in subsec-
    tion (d)—which (still) contains no such language—grants no
    such permission. Otherwise, the permission explicitly af-
    forded in subsection (h) would be redundant. See, e.g., Buelna
    v. State, 
    20 N.E.3d 137
    , 142 (Ind. 2014) (“We read statutes as a
    whole—avoiding an interpretation that makes any part of the
    statute superfluous.” (citing City of Carmel v. Steele, 
    865 N.E.2d 612
    , 618 (Ind. 2007)); Marquez v. Weinstein, Pinson & Riley, P.S.,
    
    836 F.3d 808
    , 811 (7th Cir. 2016) (“It is a cardinal principle of
    statutory construction that a statute ought … to be so con-
    strued that, if it can be prevented, no clause, sentence, or word
    shall be superfluous, void, or insignificant.” (quoting TRW
    Inc. v. Andrews, 
    534 U.S. 19
    , 31 (2001); United States v. Michalek,
    
    54 F.3d 325
    , 335–36 (7th Cir. 1995))) (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    Section 27-7-5-2(d) allowed Auto-Owners to abstain from
    providing UIM coverage in the umbrella policy issued to
    No. 16-1677                                                     11
    Frye’s employer. Once the insurance company elected to af-
    ford such coverage, however, it was required under
    § 27-7-5-2(a) to provide that coverage in limits equal to or
    greater than the policy’s general liability limit: $5 million. We
    thus agree with Frye that the latter limit applies here by oper-
    ation of statutory law.
    B. The Workers’-Compensation Set-Off
    The district court interpreted the umbrella policy to per-
    mit Auto-Owners to reduce its UIM liability limit by the
    amount of Frye’s previous workers’-compensation payments.
    Frye argues that the set-off was contrary to both the contrac-
    tual language and Indiana public policy. We do not reach the
    latter issue, as we agree with Frye that the set-off violated the
    contract’s terms.
    We generally interpret insurance policies as we do other
    types of contracts, though a few “specialized” rules of con-
    struction apply. See Justice v. Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co., 
    4 N.E.3d 1171
    , 1176 (Ind. 2014) (citing Holiday Hosp. Franchising, Inc. v.
    AMCO Ins. Co., 
    983 N.E.2d 574
    , 577 (Ind. 2013); Everett Cash
    Mut. Ins. Co. v. Taylor, 
    926 N.E.2d 1008
    , 1012 (Ind. 2010); Wag-
    ner v. Yates, 
    912 N.E.2d 805
    , 811 (Ind. 2009)). Where a policy’s
    terms are ambiguous, for example, we construe them in favor
    of the insured. See 
    id.
     (citing Am. States Ins. Co. v. Kiger, 
    662 N.E.2d 945
    , 947 (Ind. 1996)). We otherwise give to clear and
    unambiguous policy language its plain and ordinary mean-
    ing. See 
    id.
     (citing Am. Econ. Ins. Co. v. Motorists Mut. Ins. Co.,
    
    605 N.E.2d 162
    , 164 (Ind. 1992)); Holiday Hosp., 983 N.E.2d at
    577 (citing Colonial Penn Ins. Co. v. Guzorek, 
    690 N.E.2d 664
    , 667
    (Ind. 1997)).
    12                                                  No. 16-1677
    Paragraph 4(b)(1)(c) of the umbrella policy provides that
    the insurer’s limit of liability for UIM coverage “shall be re-
    duced by any amounts”:
    …
    2) Paid or payable for the same bodily in-
    jury covered under any workers com-
    pensation or similar law; and
    3) Paid by or on behalf of any person …
    who may be legally responsible for the
    bodily injury
    which are in excess of the retained limit.
    (emphasis added). “Retained limit” is in turn defined (in par-
    agraph 1(a)(3)) as the greater of:
    (a) The highest applicable limits of liability of
    any and all underlying policy(ies); [and]
    (b) … $500,000 for bodily injury ….
    The parties agree that “the highest applicable limit” of the rel-
    evant underlying policy—i.e., the automobile policy issued to
    Frye’s employer—is $1 million, thus making $1 million (which
    exceeds $500,000) the “retained limit” under the umbrella
    contract.
    Frye’s workers’-compensation payments were “in excess
    of” this limit, argues Auto-Owners, because Frye also re-
    ceived $900,000 from that insurance company under the auto-
    mobile policy, as well as an additional $100,000 from the un-
    derinsured motorist’s own insurer. This is not quite right. Be-
    cause “retained limit” is defined in the umbrella policy as
    simply a dollar amount (here, $1 million), the policy in effect
    states that Auto-Owners’s liability “shall be reduced by
    No. 16-1677                                                   13
    [workers’-compensation payments and payments made by or
    on behalf of the underinsured motorist] which are in excess of
    [$1 million].” However, the workers’-compensation payments
    that Frye received—even when considered in combination
    with the $100,000 obtained from the other motorist’s insurer—
    did not exceed $1 million; so no portion of those payments
    may be subtracted from Auto-Owners’s liability cap.
    This is not to say that the workers’-compensation pay-
    ments may never be taken into account under the umbrella
    contract. Paragraph 4(b)(1)(b) of that policy makes clear that
    coverage exists only for damages “in excess of” the retained
    limit and, among other things, amounts paid under any work-
    ers’-compensation laws. Thus, Auto-Owners need not pay an-
    ything under the umbrella policy unless and until Frye’s com-
    pensable damages have exceeded at least $1,617,685.79
    (which includes the $1 million retained limit, plus $617,685.79
    in net workers’-compensation payments). Should his dam-
    ages clear that threshold, Auto-Owners is liable for the differ-
    ence, up to $5 million. What Auto-Owners seeks to do here is
    to also decrease that $5 million cap. But such a reduction is not
    permitted in this case, as explained above.
    III. Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the judgment of the
    district court and REMAND for further proceedings consistent
    with this opinion.