Lucas Cox v. St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company, Defendant/Respondent. , 477 S.W.3d 62 ( 2015 )


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  •                     In the Missouri Court of Appeals
    Eastern District
    DIVISION TWO
    LUCAS COX,                                   )       No. ED102333
    )
    Plaintiff/Appellant,                  )       Appeal from the Circuit Court of
    )       St. Louis County
    vs.                                   )
    )       Honorable Michael D. Burton
    ST. PAUL FIRE AND MARINE                     )
    INSURANCE COMPANY,                           )
    )
    Defendant/Respondent.                 )       Filed: June 16, 2015
    Introduction
    Lucas Cox (Appellant) appeals from the trial court’s summary judgment entered in favor
    of St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company (Respondent). We affirm.
    Factual and Procedural Background
    Appellant brought a negligence action against Billy Fair (Fair) for personal injuries
    Appellant sustained in November 2006 while riding on the back of a sanitation truck Fair was
    driving when both were acting in the course and scope of their employment with the sanitation
    department of the City of Kirkwood. Fair turned a corner too sharply, causing Appellant to be
    struck by a telephone pole. After a bench trial, the trial court found Fair negligent and awarded a
    judgment in Appellant’s favor against Fair in the amount of seven million dollars ($7,000,000).
    In the instant case, Appellant brought a two-count action against Respondent seeking
    underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage for his damages (Count I) and equitable garnishment of
    his judgment against Fair (Count II) under an insurance policy, #GP09312545 (the Policy),
    Respondent issued to the City of Kirkwood. At the trial court, Appellant conceded Respondent
    was entitled to summary judgment on Count II, noted by the trial court in its Judgment granting
    summary judgment to Respondent on both counts. This appeal follows. Only Count I of
    Appellant’s petition, for UIM coverage, is at issue in this appeal. The Policy will be set forth in
    pertinent part as relevant to our discussion of Appellant’s point on appeal.
    Point on Appeal
    Appellant maintains the trial court erred in entering summary judgment in favor of
    Respondent on Appellant’s claim for UIM coverage under the Policy because the sanitation truck
    was underinsured as defined by the Policy and none of the exclusions apply.
    Appellant also asserts Missouri’s motor vehicle financial responsibility (MVFR) law
    compels coverage under the Policy despite the holding in Baker v. DePew, 
    860 S.W.2d 318
    (Mo.banc 1993), because DePew was wrongly decided.
    Standard of Review
    We review the entry of summary judgment de novo. ITT Commercial Finance v. Mid-
    Am. Marine, 
    854 S.W.2d 371
    , 376 (Mo.banc 1993). Summary judgment is appropriate when
    there is no genuine issue of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of
    law. 
    Id. at 376.
    When reviewing a trial court’s grant of summary judgment, this Court views the
    record in the light most favorable to the party against whom summary judgment was entered. 
    Id. There is
    no issue in this case over a material fact. Where there is no issue over a material
    fact with respect to interpretation of an insurance policy, but there is a question about whether
    the language affords coverage for a loss, the matter in dispute is a question of law. Moore v.
    2
    Commercial Union Ins. Co., 
    754 S.W.2d 16
    , 18 (Mo.App. E.D. 1988). Summary judgment is
    properly granted in those circumstances. 
    Id. Discussion The
    Policy was in full force and effect at the time of the accident and covered the
    sanitation truck owned by the City of Kirkwood and driven by Fair at the time of the accident.
    The Policy’s pertinent portions are set out as follows.
    General Liability
    Form G0209 of the Policy contains the City of Kirkwood’s Public Entity General
    Liability (PEGL) Protection:
    Bodily injury and property damage liability.
    We’ll pay amounts any protected person is legally required to pay as damages for
    covered bodily injury or property damage that:
    • happens while this agreement is in effect; and
    • is caused by an event.
    …
    Employees and volunteer workers.
    Your employees are protected persons only for:
    • work done within the scope of their employment by you;
    • their performance of duties related to the conduct of your operations; or
    • their acts as good samaritans in response to an accident or public emergency.
    The PEGL coverage is modified by a “Fellow Employee Bodily Injury Endorsement,” which
    states:
    We won’t apply the exclusions in this Employees and volunteer workers section
    to bodily injury to any fellow employee that results from work done by:
    Any of your employees.
    The PEGL coverage contains the following Auto exclusion:
    3
    Auto. We won’t cover bodily injury, property damage, or medical expenses that
    result from the:
    • Ownership, maintenance, use, or operation;
    • loading or unloading;
    • entrustment to others; or
    • supervision of others in or for the maintenance, use, operation, loading or
    unloading, or entrustment to others; of any auto owned, operated, rented, leased,
    or borrowed by any protected person.
    Auto Liability
    The Auto Liability coverage provides as follows in the “Who Is Protected under This
    Agreement” Section:
    Corporation or other organization. If you are named in the Introduction as a
    corporation or other organization, you are a protected person for the use of a
    covered auto. Also, your executive officers and directors are protected persons.
    But only for the use of a covered auto. Also, your stockholders are protected
    persons, but only for their liability as your stockholders.
    Any permitted user. Any person or organization to whom you’ve given
    permission to use a covered auto you own, rent, lease, hire or borrow is a
    protected person.
    The Policy’s Introduction further states:
    The words you, your, and yours mean the insured named here, which is a
    MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENT
    CITY OF KIRKWOOD
    139 SOUTH KIRKWOOD RD
    KIRKWOOD MO 63122
    Form 44449 of the Policy provides for the City of Kirkwood’s Auto Liability Protection
    under the Policy:
    Bodily injury and property damage liability. We’ll pay amounts any protected
    person is legally required to pay as damages for covered bodily injury or property
    damage that:
    • results from the ownership, maintenance, use, loading or unloading of a covered
    auto; and
    • is caused by an accident that happens while this agreement is in effect.
    4
    The Auto Liability coverage contains the following Fellow Employee exclusion:
    Injury to a fellow employee. We won’t cover bodily injury to a fellow employee
    of any protected person arising out of and in the course of the fellow employee’s
    employment by you.
    Form 44460 provides the Auto Liability coverage’s Limit of Coverage is two million
    dollars ($2,000,000).
    UIM Coverage
    Form A0094 of the Policy defines a UIM and provides for the City of Kirkwood’s UIM
    Protection:
    An underinsured vehicle is a land motor vehicle or trailer for which one or more
    liability policies or bonds at the time of an accident exists, but the total of these
    policies or bonds is less than the amount that a protected person is legally required
    to receive as damages as a result of the accident.
    …
    We’ll pay compensatory damages the named insured and other persons protected
    under this agreement are legally entitled to collect from the owner or driver of an
    underinsured vehicle if the damages result from an accident that caused bodily
    injury to the protected person.
    Umbrella Protection
    Forms E0113 and 47550 provide the Policy has Umbrella Excess Liability Protection
    limited at five million dollars ($5,000,000) of additional coverage for personal injury. This
    coverage has an endorsement, the Public Sector Services Missouri Statutory Cap Limits of
    Coverage Endorsement, which provides:
    Missouri personal injury each person statutory cap limit. This limit is shown
    below. It’s the most we’ll pay for all covered personal injury:
    • that’s sustained by any one person or organization;
    • that’s caused by any one or more personal injury offenses that are considered a
    single accident or occurrence under Missouri Revised Statute Section 537.610 or
    any amendments to that section; and
    5
    • for which you’re legally required to pay damages that are subject to Missouri’s
    statutory caps on damages for governmental tort liability.
    Missouri personal injury each person statutory cap limit: $345,499.
    Appellant’s Claim for Coverage
    Appellant maintains he is entitled to UIM coverage from the Policy for his injuries
    because the sanitation truck on which he was injured was underinsured in that it only had a
    maximum of two million dollars ($2,000,000) in coverage under the auto liability limit of
    coverage, which is less than the seven million dollars ($7,000,000) he incurred in damages.
    Appellant argues the Policy’s five million dollars ($5,000,000) in umbrella coverage for personal
    injury does not add up to create a total of seven million dollars ($7,000,000) in coverage because
    the umbrella coverage is rendered illusory by the statutory sovereign immunity cap of two
    million dollars ($2,000,000) set forth in Section 537.610.2.1
    This argument is without merit because the statutory sovereign immunity cap applies to
    governmental entities, like Kirkwood, and Fair is not a governmental entity but an employee of
    one. See Section 537.600.1(1). The immunity is explicitly waived for negligent acts of public
    employees arising out of the operation of motor vehicles within the course of their employment.
    See 
    id. Therefore, the
    Policy’s total coverage for the sanitation truck is seven million dollars
    ($7,000,000), the same amount as Appellant’s damages, and thus the sanitation truck was not
    underinsured. Appellant’s claim for UIM based on this reasoning fails.
    1
    All statutory references are to RSMo 2006, unless otherwise indicated. Section 537.610.2 provides:
    The liability of the state and its public entities on claims within the scope of sections 537.600 to
    537.650, shall not exceed two million dollars for all claims arising out of a single accident or
    occurrence and shall not exceed three hundred thousand dollars for any one person in a single
    accident or occurrence, except for those claims governed by the provisions of the Missouri
    workers’ compensation law, chapter 287.
    6
    More significantly, Appellant is not entitled to coverage from this Policy because he is
    specifically excluded from liability coverage.
    Appellant’s damages are not covered under the Policy because it has a specific “fellow
    employee exclusion.” A “fellow employee” is defined as “another employee of the same
    employer.” See Zink v. Employers Mut. Liab. Ins. Co. of Wisconsin, 
    724 S.W.2d 561
    , 563
    (Mo.App. W.D. 1986) (“Zink II”); see also Ward v. Curry, 
    341 S.W.2d 830
    , 837-38 (Mo. 1960)
    (“another employee of the same employer”). In Zink v. Allis, 
    650 S.W.2d 320
    (Mo.App. W.D.
    1983), the plaintiffs were the survivors of an employee killed while a passenger in a company
    truck driven by another employee. 
    Id. at 321.
    The substance of the plaintiffs’ argument was
    that, due to a fellow-employee exclusion in the liability policy, the negligent driver was
    “uninsured” for purposes of determining whether that policy’s uninsured motorist coverage was
    applicable. 
    Id. at 322.
    The Zink court observed the plaintiffs “did not really base their claim
    upon the terms of the uninsured motorist portion of the policy itself” and that liability under the
    uninsured motorist policy was contingent on whether the vehicle in which the decedent was
    riding was insured, not whether the driver was insured. 
    Id. at 321.
    As a liability policy covered
    the vehicle in question, the plaintiffs could not directly avail themselves of the uninsured
    motorist coverage. 
    Id. at 322-23.2
    It is well-established in Missouri that an individual for whom liability coverage is
    excluded under a fellow employee exclusion cannot look to the same policy’s uninsured motorist
    provision for coverage because that would nullify the fellow employee exclusion and give the
    insured protection for which he did not bargain. Thompson v. Schlecter, 
    43 S.W.3d 847
    , 850
    2
    Appellant’s argument that the Policy is underinsured as to him is similar to the Zink plaintiffs’ theory of recovery
    in that regard. Like Zink, the sanitation truck at issue in the instant case is fully covered and not underinsured. This
    is another aspect of why Appellant’s UIM argument must fail. The Policy’s definition of UIM coverage does not
    coincide with Appellant’s interpretation of it.
    7
    (Mo.App. E.D. 2000); Seymour v. Lakewood Hills Ass’n, 
    927 S.W.2d 405
    , 407-09 (Mo.App.
    E.D. 1996).
    Seymour and Schlecter involved claims for uninsured motorist coverage and the instant
    claim is for underinsured motorist coverage. Missouri statutory law requires all automobile
    insurance policies in this State include uninsured motorist coverage, see Section 379.203, but it
    does not require the same of underinsured motorist coverage. This is a definite indication in the
    law of the sovereignty that it considers uninsured motorist coverage more important than
    underinsured motorist coverage. See, e.g., Windsor Ins. Co. v. Lucas, 
    24 S.W.3d 151
    , 154
    (Mo.App. E.D. 2000); Muschany v. United States, 
    324 U.S. 49
    , 66-67, 
    65 S. Ct. 442
    , 451, 
    89 L. Ed. 744
    , 756 (1945). Exceptions based on public policy must usually find support in necessary
    implication from statutory provisions. Halpin v. American Family Mut. Ins. Co., 
    823 S.W.2d 479
    , 483 (Mo.banc 1992). Therefore, it follows that if the legislature allows a contractual fellow
    employee exclusion to supersede statutorily required uninsured motorist coverage in an auto
    liability policy, then it would allow a contractual fellow employee exclusion to override non-
    statutorily required underinsured motorist coverage.
    Seymour involved a one-vehicle accident involving a garbage truck. The truck was
    owned by Reliable Disposal and insured by Ohio Casualty. 
    Id. at 407.
    At the time of the
    accident, the plaintiff, a garbage collector, was standing on the back of a garbage truck. 
    Id. The driver
    of the truck, a fellow employee, while attempting to back down a street to collect trash in a
    cul-de-sac, backed the truck into a tree located in the middle of the road, severing the plaintiff’s
    left hand. 
    Id. Ohio Casualty
    denied liability coverage under the “fellow employee” exclusion.
    
    Id. The plaintiff
    tried to recover under Ohio Casualty’s policy of uninsured motorist coverage.
    
    Id. The trial
    court granted a motion for summary judgment in favor of Ohio Casualty,
    8
    determining that the truck was not an uninsured motor vehicle as defined in Ohio Casualty’s
    policy. 
    Id. We affirmed
    the judgment of the trial court, finding the truck was not an “uninsured
    motor vehicle” within the meaning of the policy and the uninsured motorist (UM) statute because
    if we were to hold that the plaintiff should fall within uninsured motorist coverage, the effect
    would be to nullify the fellow employee exclusion from liability coverage, giving the insured
    protection he did not bargain for. 
    Id. at 408.
    In Thompson v. Schlecter, an employee who was injured by a truck driven by a fellow
    employee brought an action to recover uninsured motorist benefits from his employer’s
    automobile insurer, Liberty Mutual Insurance Company. We affirmed the trial court’s summary
    judgment in favor of Liberty. Following Seymour, we stated:
    [The policy] had a specific provision for a fellow employee exclusion. As we
    found in Seymour the fellow employee exclusion does not violate MVFRL or the
    UM statute. Thompson’s employer bargained for liability insurance with
    exclusions, including the fellow employee exclusion. Liberty’s denial of
    coverage in this instance complies with the policy and for what the insured
    bargained for. The insured’s attempt to recover under uninsured motorist
    coverage is an attempt to circumvent what he bargained for under the policy.
    Like in Seymour, if we held that Thompson should fall within the uninsured
    motorist coverage, the effect would be to nullify the fellow employee exclusion
    from liability coverage, giving the insured protection he did not bargain for.
    Thus, the trial court correctly granted Liberty’s motion for summary judgment.
    
    Schlechter, 43 S.W.3d at 850
    .
    The Missouri Supreme Court upheld the fellow employee exclusion in Baker v. DePew,
    
    860 S.W.2d 318
    , 323 (Mo.banc 1993), where an employee injured in a one-vehicle automobile
    accident while sitting in the back of a work truck obtained a default judgment against the co-
    employee driver and brought a garnishment action against the insurer who had issued a business
    automobile liability insurance policy covering the truck with the employer as the named insured.
    
    Id. at 319.
    The co-employee DePew, who was operating the pickup truck with the permission of
    9
    the employer at the time of the accident, maintained he was an insured under the omnibus clause
    of the policy but the insurance company denied coverage on the grounds that coverage was
    excluded by the fellow employee exclusion. 
    Id. The court
    affirmed the trial court’s judgment
    for the insurer, based on the fellow employee exclusion in the automobile policy. 
    Id. at 324.
    The court held a fellow employee exclusion does not violate the MVFR law because the statute
    allows a policy exclusion for injury to an employee of the insured. 
    Id. The court
    found the
    injured party was in fact an employee of the insured and was engaged in the employment of the
    insured at the time of the injury; the MVFR law did not override the contract; and the fellow
    employee exclusion clause was fully applicable to the situation and barred coverage to DePew
    for his co-employee’s injury. 
    Id. In considering
    whether the MVFR law should be construed in such a way as to override
    an insurance contract containing a fellow employee exclusion clause, the Supreme Court said,
    “[a]bsent a clear mandate in the statute we are not inclined to override the agreement between
    [the insurance company] and [the insured].” 
    Id. at 324.
    The Western District specifically echoed
    that sentiment in Shelter Mut. Ins. Co. v. Gebhards, 
    947 S.W.2d 132
    , 134 (Mo.App. W.D. 1997),
    where it stated, “[w]e do not find such a mandate in Chapter 303 for overriding Shelter’s fellow
    employee exclusion.”
    Appellant maintains DePew was wrongly decided. However, this Court is not at liberty
    to second-guess the decisions of the Missouri Supreme Court. We are constitutionally bound to
    follow the most recent controlling decision of the Missouri Supreme Court and claims that the
    Missouri Supreme Court has incorrectly decided a previous case are not cognizable in the
    10
    Missourii Court of Ap
    ppeals. Doee v. Roman Catholic
    C        Dioocese of St. L
    Louis, 
    311 S.W.3d 818
    , 822
    p. E.D. 2010).3
    (Mo.App
    Based
    B     on the foregoing, we
    w find Resp
    pondent is enntitled to juddgment as a m
    matter of law
    w on
    Appellan
    nt’s claim forr UIM coverrage becausee Appellant iis excluded ffrom coveraage by the
    Policy’s fellow emplloyee exclusiion clause an
    nd the sanitaation truck w
    was not undeerinsured.
    Appellan
    nt’s point on appeal is deenied.
    Conclusion
    C
    The
    T trial courrt’s judgmen
    nt is affirmed
    d.
    Sherrri B. Sullivaan, P.J.
    Mary K. Hoff, J., andd
    Philip M. Hess, J., co
    oncur.
    3
    We ackno  owledge the diifficulty of seek
    king satisfactio
    on of the judgm
    ment in this casse, but we cannnot overturn a
    decision off the Supreme Court.
    11