Robertus v. Farmers Union Mutual Insurance , 344 Mont. 157 ( 2008 )


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  •                                                                                             June 16 2008
    DA 07-0076
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    
    2008 MT 207
    DYLLON R. ROBERTUS,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    v.
    FARMERS UNION MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Defendant, Appellee, and Cross-Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM:          District Court of the Thirteenth Judicial District,
    In and For the County of Yellowstone, Cause No. DV 05-0257
    Honorable Gregory R. Todd, Presiding Judge
    COUNSEL OF RECORD:
    For Appellant:
    Steven J. Harman and Donald L. Harris, Cozzens, Harman, Warren & Harris,
    Billings, Montana
    For Appellee:
    Guy W. Rogers and Matthew I. Tourtlotte, Brown Law Firm, Billings,
    Montana
    Submitted on Briefs: February 13, 2008
    Decided: June 16, 2008
    Filed:
    __________________________________________
    Clerk
    Justice Brian Morris delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    ¶1        Dyllon Robertus (Robertus) appeals from an order of the Thirteenth Judicial District,
    Yellowstone County, denying his motion for summary judgment. Farmers Union Mutual
    Insurance Company (Farmers Union) cross-appeals from the District Court’s judgment
    following a jury trial. We reverse and remand for new trial.
    ¶2        Robertus presents the following issues for review:
    ¶3        Whether the District Court properly determined that Farmers Union effectively had
    notified Robertus of a change in his insurance coverage.
    ¶4        Whether the District Court properly determined that the modified insurance policy
    precluded Robertus from stacking his underinsured motorists (UIM) coverage.
    ¶5        Farmers Union presents the following issues for review:
    ¶6        Whether the District Court properly allowed Robertus to testify regarding a claim for
    future lost earning capacity.
    ¶7        Whether the District Court properly instructed the jury on Robertus’s future economic
    losses.
    ¶8        Whether the District Court properly allowed a mortgage banker to testify as a non-
    expert regarding interest rates as they relate to determining the value of future economic
    losses.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    ¶9        Robertus sustained serious injuries to his back in a car accident on December 12,
    1997, when he was 15 years old. Robertus had been driving a pickup truck insured under a
    2
    Farmers Union policy issued to his parents. The driver of the other vehicle admitted
    liability. The other driver’s insurer paid Robertus and his parents the liability policy’s
    $50,000 limit. Robertus’s injuries have required ongoing medical treatment at a cost far in
    excess of $50,000. Farmers Union agreed to pay up to $300,000 of UIM coverage.
    ¶10   Robertus’s parents purchased their Farmers Union policy in December 1994. The
    parties renewed the policy the following December of each year leading up to the accident.
    The policy covered the Robertus family’s seven vehicles. The policy specifically included
    $300,000 uninsured motorists (UM) coverage and $300,000 UIM coverage. Farmers Union
    charged the Robertuses separate premiums for UM/UIM coverage for each vehicle from
    1994 to 1996. Farmers Union indicated the UM/UIM charges on the policy’s declarations
    page. The declarations page listed each vehicle separately along with the UM/UIM coverage
    limit and the specific amount of the premium for the listed vehicle. The declarations page
    appeared as follows:
    ¶11   Farmers Union had taken notice of the trend in Montana toward allowing stacked
    payments for UM/UIM coverage where the insured had paid separate premiums for multiple
    vehicles. Farmers Union modified the way that it charged policy-holders for UM/UIM
    coverage in 1996 in an attempt to avoid stacking of UM/UIM coverage. Farmers Union
    changed the Robertuses’ UM/UIM coverage when the parties renewed the policy in
    3
    December 1996. Farmers Union modified the policy’s UM/UIM coverage to charge the
    Robertuses a single premium for all seven of the Robertuses’ vehicles. The change
    decreased the total amount that the Robertuses paid for UM/UIM coverage for the seven
    vehicles from $199 to $116. Farmers Union intended that the modified policy would limit its
    UM/UIM obligation to the Robertuses to $300,000 per occurrence.
    ¶12     Farmers Union did not send a separate notice of the change to the Robertuses. The
    policy’s declarations page provided the only indication that Farmers Union had changed the
    Robertuses UM/UIM coverage. The declarations page previously had listed each vehicle
    along with the amount of UM/UIM coverage for that vehicle. Farmers Union simply
    replaced the column showing the separate UM/UIM premium charged for each vehicle with
    the word “included.” Farmers Union listed a total UM/UIM premium amount separately at
    the bottom of the list. The new declarations page appeared as follows:
    ¶13   Robertus brought this action against Farmers Union on March 4, 2005, alleging that
    Farmers Union had failed to pay to Robertus the full amount of UIM coverage required
    under the policy. Robertus moved for partial summary judgment on the issue of coverage.
    He argued that Farmers Union’s failure to notify him properly of the change in coverage
    4
    rendered the policy modification void pursuant to § 33-15-1106(1), MCA (1995), thereby
    entitling him to up to $2.1 million in UIM coverage.
    ¶14    Farmers Union filed its own motion for summary judgment. Farmers Union asserted
    that it effectively had prevented stacking under the policy by charging a single premium for
    each vehicle under the Robertuses’ policy. Farmers Union contended that the decreased total
    UIM coverage and the modified declarations page in the December 1996 policy constituted
    sufficient notice to Robertus of the change in coverage.
    ¶15    The District Court decided that the modified policy excluded Robertus from receiving
    stacked payments pursuant to Hardy v. Progressive Specialty Ins. Co., 
    2003 MT 85
    , ¶ 47,
    
    315 Mont. 107
    , ¶ 47, 
    67 P.3d 892
    , ¶ 47, in light of the fact that the policy charged a single
    premium for UM/UIM coverage for all seven of the Robertuses’ vehicles. The District Court
    arrived at seemingly contradictory conclusions, however, regarding whether the policy
    modification constituted a change requiring notice. The court determined first that the
    modification constituted a change requiring notice pursuant to Thomas v. Northwestern Nat.
    Ins. Co., 
    1998 MT 343
    , ¶ 19, 
    292 Mont. 357
    , ¶ 19, 
    973 P.2d 804
    , ¶ 19. By contrast, the
    District Court determined that the modification did not constitute a change requiring notice
    under § 33-15-1106(1), MCA (1995). The court concluded, in any event, that Farmers
    Union had satisfied any statutory notice requirement because the decrease in total UM/UIM
    premiums charged and the changed format of the UM/UIM declarations page should have
    put the Robertuses on notice of the change in coverage.
    5
    ¶16       The case proceeded to trial to determine the amount of compensatory damages to
    which Robertus’s injuries entitled him. Robertus based his future lost wages claim on the
    fact that his injuries caused his physical capacity to deteriorate and eventually would limit
    his wage-earning abilities. Farmers Union submitted its first discovery request to Robertus
    on May 4, 2005, including an interrogatory regarding future lost wages. Robertus responded
    on June 2, 2005, that he could not provide an answer to this interrogatory without an expert
    opinion. Robertus asserted that he would supplement his answer after consulting with an
    expert.
    ¶17       Farmers Union submitted a second interrogatory on October 25, 2006, requesting
    supplemental answers, including supplementation regarding Robertus’s answers to the
    interrogatory regarding future lost wages. Robertus responded on November 22, 2006, more
    than two months after the close of discovery and six months after the deadline to disclose
    expert testimony. He reported that he earns $65 per hour as a welder, and that he would be
    required to accept significantly less if his injuries required him to quit welding in favor of
    teaching high school level industrial arts. Robertus did not elaborate on how he would
    present evidence of lost wages. Farmers Union filed a motion in limine to prohibit Robertus
    from presenting evidence regarding his claim for future lost earning capacity without expert
    testimony. Farmers Union asserted that such testimony would be speculative and lack
    foundation.
    ¶18       The District Court allowed Robertus to testify regarding future lost wages, but it
    limited his testimony to “the amount of compensation he receives currently as a welder.”
    6
    The court determined that Robertus lacked the qualifications to testify as to future wages,
    interest rates, or other financial projections. The court ordered Robertus to rely on other
    sources for any evidence regarding future wage loss. Robertus filed a brief on January 13,
    2007, three days before trial that announced his intention to testify regarding the average
    wage for secondary school industrial arts teachers in Montana in order to prove future lost
    wages. Farmers Union responded that the brief constituted an untimely discovery response
    and that the proposed evidence regarding teacher salaries lacked foundation. Farmers Union
    argued that Robertus’s dilatory discovery tactics severely impaired its ability to defend as
    Farmers Union had not had the opportunity to prepare witnesses, expert or otherwise, to
    rebut Robertus’s vocational claims.
    ¶19    The District Court nevertheless allowed Robertus to testify as to the amount of
    compensation that he received as a welder pursuant to the court’s instructions. Robertus’s
    counsel also questioned Robertus during trial about his knowledge of teacher salaries.
    Farmers Union objected for lack of foundation, speculation, and late disclosure. Robertus
    presented two documents not previously disclosed to the court to demonstrate that the
    information Robertus intended to present constituted a matter of public record. The first
    document, from the U.S. Department of Labor website, showed the average wage for
    secondary school industrial arts teachers in Montana. The second document, the Billings
    Public School District Master Agreement, showed the starting salary for a beginning teacher
    with a bachelor’s degree and no experience. The District Court refused to allow Robertus to
    testify as to the average wage for a secondary school industrial arts teacher in Montana as
    7
    this information was too vague. The District Court took judicial notice of the starting salary
    for a beginning teacher with a bachelor’s degree and no experience, and allowed Robertus to
    testify to this information.
    ¶20    The court settled jury instructions. Farmers Union objected to Robertus’s proposed
    instructions regarding future lost earning capacity based upon lack of foundation, late notice,
    and speculation. Farmers Union also objected to Robertus’s proposed instructions regarding
    adjustment of future economic losses to present cash value based upon lack of foundation
    absent expert testimony. The District Court determined that Robertus had presented enough
    evidence about future earning capacity to the jury to warrant the instructions.
    ¶21    Robertus’s brother, a mortgage broker, testified regarding interest rates as they relate
    to determining present value of future economic losses. Farmers Union objected on the basis
    that Robertus had not disclosed his brother as an expert witness. The District Court allowed
    Robertus’s brother to testify as a non-expert witness regarding a fair rate of return for a safe
    investment.
    ¶22    The jury awarded Robertus $1,375,292. Farmers Union already voluntarily had paid
    $220,422 to Robertus. The court previously had limited Farmers Union’s UIM coverage to
    $300,000 in light of its determination that Farmers Union’s policy modification effectively
    had avoided stacking of UIM coverages. The District Court ordered Farmers Union to pay
    Robertus the remaining amount of $79,577.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    8
    ¶23    We review de novo a district court’s decision to grant summary judgment using the
    same criteria applied by the district court under M. R. Civ. P. 56. Walters v. Luloff, 
    2008 MT 17
    , ¶ 17, 
    341 Mont. 158
    , ¶ 17, 
    176 P.3d 1034
    , ¶ 17. A district court properly grants a
    motion for summary judgment when no genuine issue of material fact exists and the moving
    party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Walters, ¶ 17. We review for abuse of
    discretion a district court’s determination of the admissibility of the evidence. State v.
    Roedel, 
    2007 MT 291
    , ¶ 35, 
    339 Mont. 489
    , ¶ 35, 
    171 P.3d 694
    , ¶ 35.
    DISCUSSION
    ¶24    Whether the District Court properly determined that Farmers Union effectively had
    notified Robertus of a change in his insurance coverage.
    ¶25    The District Court addressed the parties’ summary judgment motions in a 21-page
    order and memorandum. The court, in its own words, “travel[ed] through the looking glass”
    to address alternate and hypothetical bases for granting partial summary judgment to Farmers
    Union, in addition to reaching dispositive issues. As such, its order and memorandum
    reaches several different conclusions. We shall attempt to clarify.
    ¶26    Whether an insurer has provided adequate notice of a change in insurance coverage
    requires a two-step analysis. Contrary to the District Court’s analysis we first must
    determine whether the policy modification constituted a change in coverage requiring notice
    under § 33-15-1106, MCA. We then must determine whether the insurer provided adequate
    notice of the change in coverage. Thomas, ¶ 29.
    I.
    9
    ¶27    Section 33-15-1106(1), MCA, governs an insurer’s duty to notify an insured of
    certain policy changes. Section 33-15-1106(1), MCA (1995), the version of the statute
    applicable to Robertus’s claim, provides in relevant part:
    If an insurer offers or purports to renew a policy but on less favorable
    terms, at a higher rate, or at a higher rating plan, the new terms, rate, or rating
    plan take effect on the policy renewal date only if the insurer has mailed or
    delivered notice of the new terms, rate, or rating plan to the insured at least 30
    days before the expiration date.
    Thomas also clarified that “when an insurer renews a previously issued policy, it has an
    affirmative duty to provide adequate notice to the insured of changes in coverage.”
    Thomas, ¶ 19.
    ¶28    The District Court considered both the 1995 version of the statute and Thomas when it
    addressed whether Farmers Union effectively had modified Robertus’s UIM coverage in
    December 1996. The District Court asserted that this Court did not prohibit anti-stacking
    clauses for UIM coverage until 1998 when it rendered its second opinion in the dispute
    between Farmers Alliance Mutual Insurance Company and Kristi Holeman. Farmers
    Alliance Mut. Ins. Co. v. Holeman, 
    1998 MT 155
    , 
    289 Mont. 312
    , 
    961 P.2d 114
     (Holeman
    II). The court thus reasoned that Montana law permitted stacking clauses for UIM coverage
    at the time of Farmers Union’s 1996 modification. The court nevertheless determined that
    the modification actually constituted a change in coverage because Dempsey v. Allstate Ins.
    Co., 
    2004 MT 391
    , ¶ 37, 
    325 Mont. 207
    , ¶ 37, 
    104 P.3d 483
    , ¶ 37, had rendered retroactive
    the prohibition on anti-stacking for UIM coverage announced in Holeman II.
    10
    ¶29    The District Court next discussed whether the modified UIM premium charges
    constituted less favorable terms, a higher rate, or a higher rating plan under § 33-15-1106(1),
    MCA (1995). The court reasoned that the modification only could be considered to have
    been on less favorable terms if it had been certain in December 1996 that Montana law
    would allow stacking of UIM coverage.           The court conceded that the modification
    potentially would have had the effect of reducing Robertus’s UIM coverage from $2.1
    million to $300,000.
    ¶30    The court examined our stacking precedent and again determined that Montana did
    not recognize stacking of UIM coverage until January 1998 when this Court announced its
    decision in Holeman II. The District Court decided that the modification did not present
    Robertus with less favorable terms when Montana law did not entitle Robertus to stack UIM
    payments, either before or after the modification. The District Court concluded therefore that
    the modification did not constitute less favorable terms that would require notice under § 33-
    15-1106(1), MCA (1995).
    ¶31    The District Court nevertheless analyzed separately the adequacy of the notice
    pursuant to Thomas’s requirement and the statute’s requirement. It is true that Thomas, in
    part, analyzes an insurer’s duty to notify under the common law. Thomas, ¶¶ 24-27. Thomas
    provides no separate basis or separate analysis, however, for the requirement that an insurer
    must provide the insured with notice of changes in coverage. The Court in Thomas rejected
    the notion that an insured’s duty to read the insurance policy required a page by page
    inspection as evidenced by the fact that “the requirements of § 33-15-1106, MCA (1991),
    11
    suggest otherwise.” Thomas, ¶ 28. The Court’s conclusion that “the insurer has the burden
    to prove that it provided adequate notice of policy changes to its insured” emanated from this
    statutory basis. Thomas, ¶ 29. Section 33-15-1106, MCA (1991), set forth an insurer’s duty
    to provide notice of policy changes. Thomas provides additional analysis of this statutory
    duty.
    ¶32     Robertus asserts that this Court has upheld the public policy that “an insurer may not
    place in an insurance policy a provision that defeats coverage” in the context of UIM
    coverage since well before 1996. E.g. Bennett v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    261 Mont. 386
    , 389, 
    862 P.2d 1146
    , 1148 (1993). This Court considered in Bennett, upon certification
    from the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, whether Montana public policy rendered void a
    clause that prohibited stacking of UIM coverage provided by separate policies. Bennett, 261
    Mont. at 388, 
    862 P.2d at 1147
    .
    ¶33     Bennett asserted that she was entitled to stack UIM coverage for two separate State
    Farm insurance policies that covered two different vehicles after an underinsured motorist
    struck and injured her. Both policies limited Bennett’s UIM coverage to $100,000 per
    person and $300,000 per accident. Bennett, 261 Mont. at 388, 
    862 P.2d at 1147-48
    . The
    Court affirmed longstanding Montana public policy that “an insurer may not place in an
    insurance policy a provision that defeats coverage for which the insurer has received
    valuable consideration.” Bennett, 261 Mont. at 389, 
    862 P.2d at 1148
    . The Court concluded
    that Montana public policy renders void an insurance clause that prohibits stacking of UIM
    coverage provided by separate policies from the same insurer. Bennett, 261 Mont. at 390,
    12
    
    862 P.2d at 1149
    . Robertus argues, therefore, that the Court’s decision in Holeman II plays
    no part in the question of whether Montana law allowed stacked UIM coverage at the time of
    his accident in December 1996.
    ¶34    Farmers Union counters that the District Court correctly concluded that Montana law
    did not prohibit anti-stacking provisions for UIM coverage until the Court decided Holeman
    II in 1998. Farmers Union points to the statement in Farmers Alliance Mut. Ins. Co. v.
    Holeman, 
    278 Mont. 274
    , 
    924 P.2d 1315
    , (1996) (Holeman I), that the legislature had left to
    policy interpretation the question of whether UIM coverage can be stacked. Farmers Union
    further argues that the Court in Holeman II distinguished Bennett on the grounds that Bennett
    involved two separate insurance policies. We disagree.
    ¶35    The Court decided Holeman I on the issue of whether the statutory prohibition against
    stacking of required coverages pursuant to § 33-23-203, MCA (1995), precluded stacking of
    UIM coverage. Holeman I, 278 Mont. at 275-76, 
    924 P.2d at 1316-17
    . Holman I did not
    discuss whether Montana law otherwise prohibited anti-stacking provisions for UIM
    coverage. The Court’s comments regarding the legislature’s intent to leave that question to
    policy interpretation refers merely to the longstanding public policy affirmed in Bennett.
    Holeman I, 287 Mont. at 281, 
    924 P.2d at 1320
    .
    ¶36    Holeman II also did not announce a new rule when it concluded that insurers may not
    prohibit stacking of UIM coverages where one policy covered multiple vehicles. Holeman
    II, ¶ 47. Farmers Union asserts that this holding constituted a new rule, and not a
    continuation of Bennett’s statement of Montana public policy, as evidenced by the fact that
    13
    Bennett concerned stacking of UIM coverages under more than one policy. Although the
    Court in Holeman II stated that Bennett was “arguably distinguishable” on its facts, the
    reasoning of Bennett nevertheless governed its analysis. Holeman II, ¶ 43. The Court
    rejected as immaterial the fact that two separate policies were at issue in Bennett. Holeman
    II, ¶ 43. The Court concluded that “the overriding public policy considerations upon which
    we relied in Bennett mandate that Holeman be permitted to stack the [UIM] coverages in this
    case.” Holeman II, ¶ 44. The Court affirmed Bennett’s rule; it did not clearly distinguish
    Bennett. Holeman II, ¶¶ 43-44.
    ¶37    Bennett affirmed Montana public policy that this Court will not enforce an anti-
    stacking provision regarding UIM coverage because “an insurer may not place in an
    insurance policy a provision that defeats coverage for which the insurer has received
    valuable consideration.” Bennett, 261 Mont. at 389, 
    862 P.2d at 1148
    . Holeman I and
    Holeman II reinforced that public policy. The factual distinctions between Bennett and
    Holeman I and II did not alter this basic public policy. This basic public policy existed and
    governed insurance policies like the Robertuses’ before this Court decided Bennett in 1993,
    and certainly in 1996, when Farmers Union modified the Robertuses’ insurance policy.
    Bennett, 261 Mont. at 388-89, 
    862 P.2d at 1148
    .
    ¶38    Robertus would have been entitled to stack seven UIM coverages for which he paid
    separate premiums under the pre-1996 policy according to longstanding Montana public
    policy. Bennett, 261 Mont. at 388-89, 
    862 P.2d at 1148
    . Stacking of the Robertuses’ seven
    UIM coverages would have obligated Farmers Union to pay up to $2.1 million in UIM
    14
    coverage. Farmers Union admits that it intended to avoid that stacking when it modified the
    policy in 1996. Avoiding stacking of the seven UIM coverages would have limited Farmers
    Union’s total financial obligation to $300,000. A policy modification intended to reduce the
    amount of UIM coverage to which Robertus was entitled by nearly $2 million dollars
    constitutes less favorable terms that required Farmers Union to provide notice under § 33-15-
    1106(1), MCA (1995).
    II.
    ¶39    We next must analyze the adequacy of the notice that Farmers Union provided
    Robertus. The District Court concluded that the changed UIM premium and the declarations
    page constituted adequate notice. The court contrasted the policy change from the one in
    Thomas. The Court noted that the modification in Thomas represented a subtle change to an
    obscure exclusion found within the main body of the policy. Thomas, ¶ 28. The District
    Court relied on the fact that the Court emphasized the obscurity of the policy modification in
    Thomas by noting that it was not of a kind that could be revealed on the declarations page or
    the forms and exclusions page. Thomas, ¶ 28.
    ¶40    The District Court also attempted to distinguish Thomas by noting that the UM/UIM
    modification accompanied other obvious changes. The court pointed to the fact that
    UM/UIM payments decreased from $199 to $116, and that the Robertuses’ premium for the
    entire policy increased from $2,532 to $2,944. The District Court stated that it would “take
    judicial notice that a $400+ increase in ones [sic] insurance premiums from year to year is
    usually enough to cause one to look at the declarations page to see why.” The District Court
    15
    further deemed it to be reasonable to expect the Robertuses to have noticed such changes to
    their UM/UIM coverage.
    ¶41    Robertus argues that the District Court improperly has placed upon an insured the
    burden of “figuring out” that a modification to the policy exists. Robertus cites Montana
    cases interpreting an earlier statutory duty to notify for the proposition that Montana law
    requires more notice, including, in one instance, a separate, written summary of policy
    changes. Home Insurance Company v. Pinski Bros., Inc., 
    156 Mont. 246
    , 257, 
    479 P.2d 274
    ,
    280 (1971); Fassio v. Montana Physicians’ Service, 
    170 Mont. 320
    , 327-28, 
    553 P.2d 998
    ,
    1001-02 (1976). Robertus also reasserts Thomas’s rule that “when an insurer renews a
    previously issued policy, it has an affirmative duty to provide adequate notice to the insured
    of the changes in coverage.” Thomas, ¶ 19.
    ¶42    Thomas considered whether a common law principle obligating an insured to read and
    examine the insurance policy tempers the insurer’s duty to notify. Thomas, ¶ 26. The Court
    affirmed that “the extent of an insured’s obligation to read the policy depends upon what is
    reasonable under the facts and circumstances of each case.” Thomas, ¶ 27 (citing Fillinger v.
    Northwestern, 
    283 Mont. 71
    , 77, 
    938 P.2d 1347
    , 1351-52 (1997)). The Court determined
    that an insured does not have an absolute obligation to read a renewed insurance policy page
    by page to discover policy changes. Thomas, ¶ 28. The Court concluded that the statute
    instead imposed upon the insurer the burden to prove that it had provided to its insured
    adequate, affirmative notice of policy changes. Thomas, ¶¶ 25, 29.
    16
    ¶43    Farmers Union argues that the District Court correctly distinguished Thomas based
    upon the nature of the modification at issue. The Court in Thomas stated that “a fair
    comparison of the policies . . . would reveal no significant changes in either the declaration
    page or the second page which scheduled the forms and exclusions.” Thomas, ¶ 28. The
    District Court determined, and Farmers Union argues on appeal, that, here, by contrast, the
    change itself should have put the Robertuses on notice to an extent that relieves the insurer of
    providing additional notification.
    ¶44    We refuse to interpret Thomas so narrowly. The Court cited Fillinger for the
    proposition that “the extent of an insured’s obligation to read the policy depends upon what
    is reasonable under the facts and circumstances of each case.” Thomas, ¶ 27. Fillinger
    determined that the facts and circumstances include the nature of the relationship between
    the parties. Fillinger, 283 Mont. at 77-78, 
    938 P.2d at 1351-52
    . The relationship involves
    whether the insured is an “‘unsophisticated individual[] who know[s] nothing about
    insurance,’” an “‘experienced business person[] knowledgable about insurance,’” or a “‘large
    corporation[] with batteries of lawyers.’” This reasoning also considers the complexity of
    the provision at issue. Fillinger, 283 Mont. at 78, 
    938 P.2d at 1352
     (quoting Martini v.
    Beaverton Ins. Agency, Inc., 
    838 P.2d 1061
    , 1067 (Ore. 1992)).
    ¶45    The modification to the Robertuses’ policy appeared on the declarations page and
    accompanied a decrease in the amount that Farmers Union charged for UIM coverage and a
    $400 increase in the total premium. Farmers Union did not bury the modification deep
    within the policy. The modification cannot be considered, however, a simple, easy concept
    17
    to understand. To the contrary, the modification concerned stacking of UIM coverage for
    multiple vehicles covered under a single policy. Nothing in the record indicates that
    Robertus and his parents are experienced business people with knowledge of insurance, or a
    large corporation with batteries of lawyers. Fillinger, 283 Mont. at 78, 
    938 P.2d at 1352
    .
    The District Court unreasonably expected the Robertuses to grasp the significance of the
    policy changes based solely on the declarations page and the changed cost of the overall
    premium.
    ¶46    Section 33-15-1106(1), MCA (1995), imposed upon Farmers Union an affirmative
    duty to provide the Robertuses with adequate notice of a change in coverage that resulted in
    terms less favorable to the insured. Thomas, ¶¶ 28-29. The modified declarations page and
    modified amount that Farmers Union charged for the policy, standing alone, did not
    constitute adequate notice based upon the facts and circumstances of this case. We conclude
    that § 33-15-1106(1), MCA (1995), rendered ineffective the modification inserted into the
    Robertus’s renewed insurance policy in December 1996 based upon Farmers Union’s failure
    to provide adequate notice pursuant to Montana law. Thomas, ¶¶ 28-29. We need not
    address whether the District Court properly determined that the modified insurance policy
    precluded Robertus from stacking his UIM coverage in light of the fact that we determine
    that Farmers Union did not effectively modify Robertus’s UIM coverage.
    ¶47    Whether the District Court properly allowed Robertus to testify regarding a claim for
    future lost earning capacity.
    18
    ¶48    Farmers Union claims that Robertus’s late discovery responses resulted in substantial
    prejudice to its defense. Farmers Union asserts that it could not reach a settlement as it had
    no opportunity to evaluate Robertus’s claim for future lost earning capacity. Farmers Union
    points out that it was unable to assess Robertus’s future lost wages claim, and, therefore, it
    could not conduct further discovery and obtain an expert to rebut Robertus’s testimony.
    Farmers Union asserts that Robertus’s dilatory discovery tactics amount to a blatant abuse of
    discovery.
    ¶49    The Court in Morris v. Big Sky Thoroughbred Farms, 
    1998 MT 229
    , 
    291 Mont. 32
    ,
    
    965 P.2d 890
    , concluded that the plaintiffs had abused the discovery process when they
    repeatedly had evaded a request for an admission that a civil rights claim did not apply to
    one of the defendants. Morris, ¶¶ 2-3, 16. The Court upheld the district court’s imposition
    of discovery sanctions against the plaintiffs after two months had passed since the
    defendants’ final request for admission. Morris, ¶¶ 4, 18. The Court concluded that the
    district court appropriately had sanctioned the plaintiffs for abusing the discovery process
    whether the plaintiffs’ discovery deficiencies resulted from tactical trickery or mere
    carelessness. Morris, ¶ 16.
    ¶50    Discovery serves to “promote the ascertainment of truth and the ultimate disposition
    of the lawsuit in accordance therewith . . . [by] assuring the mutual knowledge of all relevant
    facts gathered by both parties which are essential to proper litigation.” Massaro v. Dunham,
    
    184 Mont. 400
    , 405, 
    603 P.2d 249
    , 252 (1979) (citing Hickman v. Taylor, 
    329 U.S. 495
    , 507,
    
    67 S. Ct. 385
    , 392 (1947)). Adherence to discovery and pre-trial procedures produces a
    19
    “‘fair contest with the basic issues and facts disclosed to the fullest practicable extent.’”
    Richardson v. State, 
    2006 MT 43
    , ¶ 22, 
    331 Mont. 231
    , ¶ 22, 
    130 P.3d 634
    , ¶ 22 (quoting
    United States v. Procter & Gamble, 
    356 U.S. 677
    , 682, 
    78 S. Ct. 983
    , 986-87 (1958)). This
    Court follows “a strict policy that dilatory discovery actions shall not be dealt with
    leniently.” Morris, ¶ 13 (internal citation omitted).
    ¶51    Robertus provided an incomplete answer to Farmers Union’s May 4, 2005, request for
    information regarding his claim for future lost wages. Robertus failed to consult an expert
    and to supplement his answer as he had promised in his initial response. Robertus finally
    answered Farmers Union’s second interrogatory requesting supplemental answers relating to
    future lost wages on November 22, 2006, more than two months after the close of discovery
    and six months after the deadline to disclose expert testimony. Robertus’s answer discussed
    future lost wages, but it failed to elaborate on how he would present evidence of future lost
    wages at trial. Robertus did not disclose his intention to testify himself regarding future lost
    wages until three days before the start of trial.
    ¶52    Robertus’s conduct amounted to dilatory discovery tactics. This conduct prevented
    Farmers Union from assessing the merits of the Robertus’s case. Farmers Union could not
    prepare adequately its defense, could not conduct follow-up discovery, and could not obtain
    its own expert to rebut Robertus’s testimony regarding future lost wages in time for trial.
    The District Court abused its discretion when it allowed Robertus to testify regarding his
    claim for future lost earning capacity. Morris, ¶ 18; Roedel, ¶ 35. We remand for a new trial
    20
    on damages in light of the prejudice that Farmers Union suffered. We need not address
    Farmers Union’s two additional cross-appeal issues for this reason.
    ¶53    We reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    /S/ BRIAN MORRIS
    We Concur:
    /S/ KARLA M. GRAY
    /S/ JAMES C. NELSON
    /S/ PATRICIA COTTER
    /S/ JOHN WARNER
    Justice W. William Leaphart, dissenting in part and concurring in part.
    ¶54    I dissent as to the question of whether the District Court properly allowed Robertus to
    testify regarding a claim for future lost earning capacity. I concur in the Court’s analysis of
    the other issues.
    ¶55    Robertus’s actions in the discovery phase of the litigation do not rise to the level of
    abuse discussed in Richardson v. State, 
    2006 MT 43
    , 
    331 Mont. 231
    , 
    130 P.3d 634
    .
    Robertus eventually provided responses to Farmers Union’s specific request for
    supplementation, including information about his new full time job. Contrary to Richardson,
    Farmers Union did not seek a motion to compel; Robertus did not fail to respond to a court
    order. Richardson, ¶¶ 7, 13. Farmers Union did not move to seek clarification of Robertus’s
    21
    answers as it could have under M. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(2), and (3) nor did it ask that discovery be
    reopened to allow further depositions or ask that the trial be postponed.
    ¶56    I cannot conclude that the District Court abused its discretion when it allowed
    Robertus to testify as to future lost earnings despite his late discovery responses. State v.
    Roedel, 
    2007 MT 291
    , ¶ 35, 
    339 Mont. 489
    , ¶ 35, 
    171 P.3d 694
    , ¶ 35.
    /S/ W. WILLIAM LEAPHART
    Justice Jim Rice, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
    ¶57    I concur with the Court’s resolution of the cross appeal, but dissent from the Court’s
    reversal of the District Court on the appeal issues. I do not believe that Farmers Union was
    required to provide notice of the 1996 change in the method it calculated Robertuses’
    premium for UIM coverage.
    ¶58    The Court reasons that Holeman II “did not announce a new rule” permitting stacking
    of single-policy coverages because previous, generalized public policy statements against
    provisions which “defeat[ed] coverage for which the insurer has received valuable
    consideration,” ¶ 36, were sufficient enough to communicate the specific message that anti-
    stacking provisions would not be enforced. According to the Court, even though the
    Robertuses’ pre-1996 policy contained an explicit anti-stacking provision, “Robertus would
    have been able to stack seven UIM coverages for which he paid separate premiums under the
    22
    pre-1996 policy,” ¶ 38, despite the fact that no case or statute then permitted Robertus to
    ignore the anti-staking provision of his single policy. In my view, this is not a fair rendering
    of the law as it stood in 1996 and places a divination requirement upon Farmers Union which
    is unreasonable.
    ¶59    The pre-1996 policy contained express anti-stacking language notifying the Robertus
    family that only one $300,000 payment was available under their single Farmers Union
    policy. At the time Farmers Union changed its pricing structure to charge a single premium
    for UIM coverage on all vehicles, Montana law had not prohibited this anti-stacking
    provision. Bennett, decided in 1993, did not apply to this policy. Although we offered the
    observation eleven years later in Dempsey that anti-stacking policies had been “discouraged”
    in Bennett, the actual holding in Bennett permitted stacking of two separate policies for
    which separate premiums were paid. Bennett, 261 Mont. at 390, 
    862 P.2d at 1149
     (“Bennett
    could reasonably expect to recover damages up to the limit of both policies under which she
    was an insured and for which separate premiums had been paid.”) Beyond that, Bennett’s
    general statement of public policy, that “an insurer may not place in an insurance policy a
    provision which defeats coverage,” Bennett, 261 Mont. at 389, 
    862 P.2d at 1148
    , was
    certainly not a broad prohibition against all anti-stacking provisions. Indeed, two years later,
    we rejected stacking of coverages in Chilberg v. Rose, 
    273 Mont. 414
    , 417, 
    903 P.2d 1377
    ,
    1379 (1995), because the injured party was a passenger in a vehicle owned by an individual
    with three separate policies covering three separate vehicles. Holeman I, decided in 1996,
    merely determined that § 33-23-203, MCA, did not prohibit stacking of UIM coverages.
    23
    Holeman I did not hold that UIM coverages could be stacked if separate premiums were
    charged for each vehicle and, as the Court correctly observes, “Holeman I did not discuss
    whether Montana law otherwise prohibited anti-stacking provisions for UIM coverage.” ¶
    35. Nonetheless, the Court concludes that a clear rule had somehow emerged from this
    uncertain precedent so that Holeman II “did not announce a new rule.” I must disagree.
    There remained uncertainty in the law which generated considerable litigation over this
    issue. It was not until 1998, when Holeman II held that UIM coverages could be stacked
    because “separate premiums were charged for coverage of each motor vehicle listed within
    the policy,” Holeman II, ¶ 47, that the rule applicable to this case emerged. That was after
    Farmers Union had changed the premium structure of the Robertus policy.
    ¶60    The Court’s decision begs an interesting practical question. Given the facial validity
    of the pre-1996 policy under then-existing law, just what notice would Farmers Union have
    been required to give of the policy change at that time? Are insurance companies really
    required to give notice that they are revising a policy in a manner which does not change
    existing coverages, but so that, in the event the law changes in the future, the coverages in
    the policy will remain the same as currently provided? Are they supposed to notify insureds
    of policy changes made for the purpose of confirming an existing belief that an explicit
    provision of the policy which requires payment of the UIM limits only once is legal?
    Neither statute nor caselaw require that insurers give notice of such “nonchanges” in policy
    coverages for the purpose of satisfying potential future legal developments. Here, the Court
    takes the easy way out—it declares that Farmers Union’s notification of the change in
    24
    premium was “inadequate,” but offers not insight regarding how Farmers Union could have
    provided “adequate” notice under the law as it existed in 1996.
    ¶61    Farmers Union should not be held retroactively liable for its failure to comply with a
    rule pronounced subsequent to its actions in 1996. Although Dempsey made the stacking
    rule retroactive, the purpose of retroactivity is to apply the rule to pending cases—it does not
    require that Farmers Union bear responsibility for a rule announced years after it acted. I
    would affirm the District Court.
    /S/ JIM RICE
    25