Adam Dutton was injured in an automobile accident caused by Barbara Hiles. The accident occurred while Hiles was driving a Nissan Maxima sedan which she owned, and which was insured by American Family. American Family has paid Dutton the full limits of liability under the policy insuring the Maxima. Dutton now seeks to recover additional money under a second American Family policy, which insured a Ford F-250 pickup truck Hiles also owned. The F-250 was not involved in the accident in which Dutton was injured. And the F-250 policy provides, in clear and unambiguous language, that [t]his coverage does not apply to . . . [¶] [b]odily injury or property damage arising out of the use of any vehicle, other than your insured car, which is owned . . . by you . . . .
2 This exclusion plainly precludes coverage for Dutton's injuries, since Hiles was operating a vehicle she owned, but which was not insured under the F-250 policy, at the time of the accident. Because the majority finds coverage despite the unambiguous language of the other owned vehicle exclusion, I respectfully dissent. I. Missouri's Motor Vehicle Financial Responsibility Law (the "MVFRL"), specifies that an owner's policy of automobile liability insurance "[s]hall designate by explicit description or by appropriate reference all motor vehicles with respect to which coverage is thereby to be granted." § 303.190.2(1). 1 The majority opinion concludes that, because the F-250 policy's insuring clause extends coverage to an insured's use of any private passenger car, any vehicle Hiles happened to be driving was a "designated" vehicle under the F-250 policy. The majority then holds that the other owned vehicle exclusion violates § 303.190.2(2), because it denies coverage for Hiles' use of what the majority deems to be a "designated" vehicle. The majority's conclusion that the Maxima was "designated" under the F-250 policy is a linchpin of its analysis: the majority only finds the other owned vehicle exclusion invalid because it purportedly conflicts with the coverage required by § 303.190.2 for "designated" vehicles. The MVFRL requires that an owner's policy insure the named insured, and any permissive user of the designated vehicle(s), "against loss from the liability imposed by law for damages arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use of such motor vehicle or motor vehicles . . ." § 303.190.2(2).
1 Statutory citations refer to the 2000 edition of the Revised Statutes of Missouri, as updated through the 2008 cumulative supplement.
3 There are at least two fundamental problems with the majority's conclusion that Hiles' Nissan Maxima – which was insured under a separate American Family policy – is a "designated" vehicle under the F-250 policy. First, Dutton has never made this argument; to the contrary, Dutton has explicitly acknowledged that the F-250 policy only "designates" a single vehicle: the F-250 itself. Second, even if it had been presented, the majority's "designation" argument is simply incorrect, and will have absurd and unintended consequences. A. Dutton has not argued that Hiles' Nissan Maxima was a "designated" vehicle under the F-250 policy; to the contrary, Dutton has explicitly rejected the majority's conclusion that the F-250 policy "designated" any vehicle beyond the F-250 itself. During oral argument, the following exchange occurred during Dutton's counsel's introductory remarks: [Counsel:] There's no dispute as to the facts. It was a car accident. The tortfeasor, Barbara Hiles, turned in front of Adam Dutton, causing a car accident, and he was injured. Barbara Hiles at the time was driving a 2007 Nissan; she owned that vehicle. She also owned a Ford F-250. She had an owner's policy on each of those vehicles; separate policies. A policy that named the 2007 Nissan, and a separate policy that designated the Ford F-
[Judge:] Mr. Brown, I apologize for interrupting, but given your comment . . . . For owner's policies, the Financial Responsibility Law says that the policy "[s]hall designate by explicit description or by appropriate reference all motor vehicles with respect to which coverage is thereby to be granted." I believe I heard your comment that the vehicle or vehicles designated under what we refer to as the F-250 policy is the F-250. [Counsel:] Yes, that's right, it's the single vehicle on that policy. [Judge:] And that's the single designated vehicle under that policy.
4 [Counsel:] That's right, the other policy designated the vehicle she was driving at the time. American Family paid the limits for the policy that designated the Nissan. We're concerned with the owner's policy on the F-
(Emphasis added.) Dutton's statements at oral argument were not inadvertent, or an aberration. In his petition, discovery responses, and motion papers in the trial court, and in his appellate briefing, Dutton has repeatedly and expressly acknowledged: that the F-250 policy "does not identify any other vehicle as the insured vehicle"; that the F-250 is the only vehicle "listed" or "named" in the F-250 policy; that the F-250 policy is not a "multi-vehicle policy"; and that the F-250 policy was issued "on" the F-250 alone. Indeed, although it concludes that the Maxima was "designated" in the F-250 policy, the majority opinion itself recognizes that Hiles' two owner's policies insured different vehicles: according to the majority, "Hiles complied with section 303.025.1 by maintaining an owner's policy on each of her two vehicles." Maj. Op. at 9. Given Dutton's multiple, explicit acknowledgments that the F-250 truck is the only vehicle "designate[d]" under the policy at issue, we cannot reverse the trial court's grant of summary judgment based on a conclusion, first suggested in the majority opinion, that the Maxima was "designated" in the F-250 policy. It is black-letter law that we will not consider arguments not raised in the trial court to support reversal of a summary judgment. 2
2 See, e.g., Est. of Downs v. Bugg, 242 S.W.3d 729, 733 (Mo. App. W.D. 2007); Citibrook II, LLC v. Morgan's Foods of Mo., Inc., 239 S.W.3d 631, 635 (Mo. App. E.D. 2007). It is also black-letter law that we will not construct arguments for
5 an appellant which the appellant has not explicitly made. 3 Yet the majority now goes a step further: not only does it reverse based on an argument never presented to the trial court, and never argued here; it reverses based on an argument which the appellant has explicitly repudiated B. . I cannot join in such overreaching. Even if it were properly before us, the majority's "designation" argument is legally incorrect. While we do not have the benefit of briefing or argument addressing the issue, I can perceive at least the following flaws in the majority's analysis.
- The F-250 policy itself denominates the F-250 as the "insured car." As
explained in greater detail in Judge Martin's separate dissent (in which I join), the policy's explicit definition of the "insured car" should be decisive. The policy itself makes clear that the F-250 – and the F-250 alone – is the "designated" vehicle under this owner's policy, even though the policy provides some limited coverage for the insured's use of other vehicles.
- The majority opinion goes beyond the declarations page – which identifies
only the F-250 – to the policy's insuring clause to identify the vehicle(s) purportedly "designated" under the policy. Yet the majority offers no rationale for looking to the policy's insuring clause to expand the universe of "designated" vehicles, while not also looking to the policy's exclusions, which specify that coverage does not extend to other owned vehicles. The majority's "pick and choose" approach – determining coverage by
3 See, e.g., Glass v. First Nat'l Bank of St. Louis, 191 S.W.3d 662, 667-68 n.16 (Mo. banc 2006) (noting that "the dissenting opinion . . . plays the role of advocate and puts forth an argument not offered by either party," based on "a distinction that the parties apparently felt had no merit"); Willis v. Mo. Farm Bureau Servs., Inc., 396 S.W.3d 451, 454 (Mo. App. W.D. 2013).
6 looking to the insuring agreement, but not the exclusions – is inconsistent with the principle that "the risk insured against is made up of both the general insuring agreement as well as the exclusions and definitions." Todd v. Mo. United Sch. Ins. Council, 223 S.W.3d 156, 163 (Mo. banc 2007); accord, Grable v. Atl. Cas. Ins. Co., 280 S.W.3d 104, 108-09 (Mo. App. E.D. 2009). The majority's misguided analysis is illustrated by the fact that the section of its opinion titled "Coverage" blithely ignores the other owned vehicle exclusion – even though that exclusion is at the center of this appeal. Instead, the majority's "Coverage" analysis discusses only whether Hiles' operation of the Maxima fell within the F-250 policy's insuring clause, considered in isolation – an issue American Family does not even dispute. The Supreme Court's decision in Todd holds that an exclusion is a proper place for an insurer to place a coverage limitation like the one at issue here. The majority offers no justification for holding that American Family was required to exclude Hiles' use of other owned vehicles from coverage in the insuring agreement itself, rather than in an exclusion. 4 The majority opinion (at 13-14) also suggests that the use of an exclusion to withdraw coverage for Hiles' use of an other owned vehicle, which would otherwise be covered by the broad language of the insuring agreement, creates an ambiguity which
4 At various points, the majority states that its decision rests on the fact that coverage is afforded by "the liability coverage portion of the Ford policy." That statement is inaccurate – the other owned vehicle exclusion is part of the F-250's "liability coverage" section (Part 1 of the policy), to the same extent as the insuring agreement on which the majority so heavily relies. Stated more accurately, the majority opinion relies on one isolated provision in the policy's "liability coverage" section, to the exclusion of everything else appearing there.
7 must be interpreted against American Family. The Supreme Court rejected just such an analysis in Todd, where it explained: Insurance policies customarily include definitions that limit words used in granting coverage as well as exclusions that exclude from coverage otherwise covered risks. While a broad grant of coverage in one provision that is taken away by a more limited grant in another may be contradictory and inconsistent, the use of definitions and exclusions is not necessarily contradictory or inconsistent. . . . Definitions, exclusions, conditions and endorsements are necessary provisions in insurance policies. If they are clear and unambiguous within the context of the policy as a whole, they are enforceable.
223 S.W.3d at 162-63. Accord, Progressive Nw. Ins. Co. v. Talbert, 407 S.W.3d 1, 12-13 (Mo. App. S.D. 2013); Grable, 280 S.W.3d at 108 ("exclusions and definitions do not make an insurance policy ambiguous because they limit or exclude coverage given in the form policy"); Hawkeye-Sec. Ins. Co. v. Bunch, 643 F.3d 646, 652 (8th Cir. 2011) (Missouri law; observing that "[e]xclusions by their very nature set limitations on broader grants of coverage").
- Under the majority's reading of the policy, any number of non-owned
vehicles (if driven by Hiles) are now considered to be "designated" vehicles under this owner's policy. Yet the Missouri Supreme Court has held that "the distinction between [owner's and operator's policies] should rest on the insured's ownership or lack of ownership of the vehicle involved in the accident. This is evidenced by the nomenclature and dichotomy employed." Karscig v. McConville, 303 S.W.3d 499, 503 (Mo. banc 2010) (citation and emphasis omitted). Neither the legislature, nor the Supreme Court, contemplated that non-owned vehicles would be considered to be "designated" vehicles under an owner's policy of insurance.
8
- The majority opinion takes provisions of the F-250 policy which are
intended to cover an insured's occasional, permissive use of a non-owned vehicle, and turns them into something entirely different: coverage for all of the insured's other owned vehicles. Although the principal purpose of the F-250 policy is to insure the operation of the F-250 itself, I recognize that the policy provides additional coverage for an insured's incidental use of other vehicles. Such uses are easy to imagine: for example, the insured's use of a rental car, or of a vehicle belonging to a friend, when the insured is traveling, when the insured's vehicle is under repair, or when the insured requires greater passenger or cargo capacity for a special errand. As the Missouri Supreme Court explained more than forty years ago: "The purpose of the 'drive other cars' provision in an automobile liability policy is to cover occasional or incidental use of other cars without the payment of an additional premium, but to exclude the habitual use of other cars, which would increase the risk on the insurance company without a corresponding increase in the premium." State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Western Cas. & Sur. Co., 477 S.W.2d 421, 424 (Mo. banc 1972) (citation omitted); accord, Shelter Mut. Ins. Co. v. Sage, 273 S.W.3d 33, 39 (Mo. App. W.D. 2008); Earl v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 820 S.W.2d 623, 624 (Mo. App. W.D. 1991). The majority opinion transforms this easily-understood additional coverage into something it plainly was not intended to be: coverage for other vehicles the insured owns, or other vehicles which are provided for the insured's regular (or even exclusive) use. Under the majority opinion, any household owning multiple vehicles now needs to
9 purchase an owner's policy on only one: if the policy provides any coverage for the insured's use of other vehicles, that coverage will be interpreted to apply to all vehicles the insured uses, including other owned vehicles, despite an exclusion intended to prevent this result. We have previously rejected just such an interpretation, observing that "the rationale behind 'non-owned auto' clauses is to protect an insurer from a situation where an insured could purchase one policy for a described vehicle and be covered by the same policy without qualification while operating any and all other automobiles under his control or available for his use." Allstate Ins. Co. v. Ibrahim, 243 S.W.3d 452, 457 (Mo. App. E.D. 2007). We have explained that the MVFRL, did not intend to enact a scheme by which only one policy of insurance need be purchased per household and several cars operated thereunder. If we adopted Plaintiff's position, households with several drivers could purchase one policy of insurance to cover all vehicles owned by them, thereby obtaining multicar coverage with payment of a one-car premium.
Schuster v. Shelter Mut. Ins. Co., 857 S.W.2d 381, 385 (Mo. App. W.D. 1993). Notably, in State Farm v. Western the Supreme Court recognized that the inclusion of coverage for incidental use of other non-owned vehicles did not change the identity of the vehicle "designated" under a policy: the Court observed that the policy at issue "was intended basically to provide coverage on one designated vehicle" named in the policy's declarations, even though – as here – "the policy does contain clauses which provide limited additional coverage" "with respect to operation of 'non-owned' automobiles." 477 S.W.2d at 423-24 (emphasis added). Because the F-250 policy provides the required minimum coverage for the vehicle "designated" in the policy (i.e., the F-250 itself), the additional coverage for an insured's
10 occasional use of other vehicles is not separately subject to the MVFRL's mandates. Providing such additional, non-statutory coverage is expressly sanctioned by the MVFRL. See § 303.190.7 ("Any policy which grants the coverage required for a motor vehicle liability policy may also grant any lawful coverage in excess of or in addition to the coverage specified for a motor vehicle liability policy and such excess or additional coverage shall not be subject to the provisions of this chapter.") As discussed in § II.B, below, numerous Missouri decisions have held that the MVFRL does not apply to additional coverage contained in an owner's policy for the insured's occasional use of non-owned automobiles. The majority opinion is necessarily inconsistent with these decisions.
- Finally, the majority's interpretation of the vehicles "designated" under
this owner's policy is in tension with other provisions of the MVFRL. The MVFRL requires that an insurance identification card, showing that required insurance is in force, must "be carried in the insured motor vehicle at all times," and must be provided to law enforcement officers on request. § 303.024.5. The statute specifies that the insurance identification card must contain "[a] description of the insured motor vehicle, including year and make or at least five digits of the vehicle identification number or the word Fleet if the insurance policy covers five or more motor vehicles." § 303.024.2(5); see also 12 C.S.R. 10-25.060(2)(E), (F) (Department of Revenue's implementing regulation). Plainly, the "insured motor vehicle" which must be described on an insurance identification card is the vehicle "designate[d] by explicit description or by appropriate reference" in an owner's policy pursuant to § 303.190.2(1). The MVFRL thus
11 contemplates that the "designated" vehicle(s) will be capable of being identified by make and model, or by vehicle identification number, at the time an insurer issues an insurance identification card. Yet under the majority's interpretation of the "designation" requirement, that would be impossible, since the F-250 policy would (on the majority's reading) constitute the statutorily-mandated insurance not only for the vehicle identified on the declarations page (the F-250), but also for any other vehicle Hiles happened to operate during the policy period. II. The argument Dutton actually makes is no more persuasive. Dutton argues that the other owned vehicle exclusion in the F-250 policy is unenforceable under the Missouri Supreme Court's decision in Karscig v. McConville, 303 S.W.3d 499 (Mo. banc 2010). Karscig held that the same American Family exclusion at issue in this case could not be invoked to deny coverage where the insured was driving a non-owned vehicle made available for her regular use, because this would deny the insured the minimum coverage required by the MVFRL. Id. at 504. Karscig does not assist Dutton, however, for two separate reasons:
- Karscig dealt with an "operator's policy," subject to the requirements of
§ 303.190.3, while this case involves an "owner's policy" subject to the very different requirements of § 303.190.2; and
- Even if the Karscig rule applied, it would not aid Dutton, because Karscig
only requires that coverage be provided for an insured's use of non-owned vehicles; in this case, however, Hiles was driving another vehicle she owned at the time of the accident. I address these issues in reverse order.
12 A. The relevant holding from Karscig is: As an "operator's policy" [subject to the requirements of § 303.190.3], . . . [the insured driver's] policy must insure her against liability arising out of her use of any motor vehicle not owned by her. . . . The MVFRL controls and mandates that Jennifer's policy "shall insure" her against liability "arising out of the use" of the non-owned accident vehicle, the 1998 Pontiac. 303 S.W.3d at 504 (second emphasis added). As the italicized language reflects, Karscig held only that "operator's policies" must provide coverage for an insured's liability arising out of the use of any non-owned automobile. This was the only issue directly presented in Karscig: the driver in that case caused an accident while driving a vehicle owned by her parents. 303 S.W.3d at 501. Moreover, § 303.190.3, on which Karscig relied, only requires that an "operator's policy" insure "against loss from the liability imposed upon [the insured] by law for damages arising out of the use by him or her of any motor vehicle not owned by him or her." Id. at 504 (quoting § 303.190.3 (emphasis added by Karscig)). Although Dutton suggests that Karscig "invalidated" the other owned vehicle exclusion, he reads Karscig too broadly – it simply held that the exclusion could not be employed, in an operator's policy, to deny coverage for liability arising from the insured's use of a non-owned vehicle. In contrast with Karscig, in the present case Hiles was driving a vehicle she owned at the time of the accident which injured Dutton. Nothing in Karscig, or in § 303.190.3, requires that an insurer provide coverage for the insured's use of another owned vehicle.
13 And in Lawson v. Traders Insurance, 946 S.W.2d 298 (Mo. App. S.D. 1997), this Court expressly rejected the argument that the MVFRL requires an insurer to cover other vehicles owned by an insured: The [vehicle involved in the accident] was owned by Landing, but was not designated in the policy as a vehicle with respect to which coverage was granted. As pointed out by Traders, § 303.190 does not require that a liability policy insure the named insured for an accident occurring while he is operating a vehicle which is owned by him, but is not one for which the policy grants coverage. If the Motor Vehicle Financial Responsibility Law does not require liability insurance coverage for a particular situation, a policy provision excluding that coverage is not invalid. Under the facts of this case, the policy was not violative of public policy in the manner argued by Plaintiffs. Id. at 301 (emphasis added; citation and internal quotation marks omitted). We must enforce the terms of the contract between the parties unless those terms are contrary to public policy as expressed by the legislature. Halpin v. Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co., 823 S.W.2d 479, 483 (Mo. banc 1992). Here, the F-250 policy unambiguously excludes coverage for Hiles' use of an other owned automobile; and the MVFRL does not require coverage for such a situation – even in an operator's policy. The exclusion in the policy must accordingly be applied. Because Hiles was involved in the accident while driving a vehicle which she owned, but which was not designated as the "insured car" in the F-250 policy, the policy's "other owned vehicles" exclusion defeats coverage for the accident. Even if Karscig applied to this case, we would be compelled to affirm.
14 B. Dutton's reliance on Karscig fails for a second, separate reason: the Karscig rule only applies to operator's policies; this case, on the other hand, involves an owner's policy. Section 303.190 contemplates only two categories of automobile liability insurance policies: an "owner's policy," and an "operator's policy." The statute specifies different mandatory requirements for each. Section 303.190 provides in relevant part:
- A "motor vehicle liability policy" as said term is used in this
chapter shall mean an owner's or an operator's policy of liability insurance, certified as provided in section 303.170 or section 303.180 as proof of financial responsibility, and issued, except as otherwise provided in section 303.180 by an insurance carrier duly authorized to transact business in this state, to or for the benefit of the person named therein as insured.
- Such owner's policy of liability insurance:
(1) Shall designate by explicit description or by appropriate reference all motor vehicles with respect to which coverage is thereby to be granted; (2) Shall insure the person named therein and any other person, as insured, using any such motor vehicle or motor vehicles with the express or implied permission of such named insured, against loss from the liability imposed by law for damages arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use of such motor vehicle or motor vehicles within the United States of America or the Dominion of Canada, subject to limits, exclusive of interest and costs, with respect to each such motor vehicle, as follows: twenty-five thousand dollars because of bodily injury to or death of one person in any one accident and, subject to said limit for one person, fifty thousand dollars because of bodily injury to or death of two or more persons in any one accident, and ten thousand dollars because of injury to or destruction of property of others in any one accident; and
15 (3) May exclude coverage against loss from liability imposed by law for damages arising out of the use of such motor vehicles by a member of the named insured's household who is a specifically excluded driver in the policy.
- Such operator's policy of liability insurance shall insure the
person named as insured therein against loss from the liability imposed upon him or her by law for damages arising out of the use by him or her of any motor vehicle not owned by him or her, within the said territorial limits and subject to the same limits of liability as are set forth above with respect to any owner's policy of liability insurance. (Emphasis added.) As the quotation reflects, owner's policies and operator's policies are subject to radically different statutory requirements. An "owner's policy" must insure against liability arising from the use of the designated vehicle, by the insured or by any permissive user. An "operator's policy," on the other hand, insures the personal liability of the named insured when operating "any motor vehicle not owned by" the insured. § 303.190.3. An "owner's policy" covers a particular vehicle, while an "operator's policy" covers a particular insured for their use of any non-owned vehicle. 5 According to the MVFRL, a motor vehicle liability policy shall be either "an owner's or an operator's policy of liability insurance." § 303.190.1.
As Dutton concedes, the F-250 policy is an "owner's policy" – it designated a specific vehicle for which coverage was provided, and the named insured identified in the policy (Hiles) was, in fact, the owner of the designated vehicle. Karscig explains that, because Hiles owned the vehicle insured under the F-250 policy, that policy can only be an "owner's policy":
5 The majority opinion (at 16, 19) emphasizes that Karscig found coverage under an operator's policy, even though the policy did not identify the vehicle involved in the accident on its declarations page. That is not surprising, however: coverage under operator's policies is not limited to any particular vehicle or vehicles.
16 While the MVFRL does not define either "owner's policy" or "operator's policy," it does define "owner" and "operator." An owner is "a person who holds the legal title to a motor vehicle." § 303.020(9). An operator is "a person who is in actual physical control of a motor vehicle." § 303.020(8). These definitions are used throughout the MVFRL. § 303.020. Based on these definitions, a policy issued to an owner is an "owner's policy" and must comply with the statutory mandates of § 303.190.2, while a policy issued to a non-owner is an "operator's policy" and must comply with the statutory mandates of § 303.190.3. This is consistent with the general understanding of liability insurance law. An "owner's policy" insures a person who owns a vehicle, while an "operator's policy" insures a person who operates a vehicle owned by another. Ownership or non-ownership is the crux of the distinction. Karscig, 303 S.W.3d at 503 (citations and footnotes omitted). Karscig involved an operator's policy issued to a driver who did not own a vehicle. Karscig held that the "other owned vehicles" exclusion in an operator's policy could not validly exclude coverage for the insured's use of a non-owned vehicle made av ailable for her regular use. 303 S.W.3d at 504. The opinion makes clear that the Court's holding depended on the fact that the policy at issue was an operator's policy, rather than an owner's policy. The Court said as much: "In this case, the applicability of the exclusion depends on whether [the insured's] policy is an 'owner's policy' or an 'operator's policy.'" Id. at 503. Moreover, the Court stated that the other owned vehicle exclusion could not defeat coverage in that case only "because it conflicts with the MVFRL's requirements for an 'operator's policy.'" Id. (emphasis added). The only authority the Court cited to invalidate the exclusion was § 303.190.3, which requires that
17 an operator's policy cover the insured for any liability arising out of his or her use "of any motor vehicle not owned by him or her." Id. at 504 (quoting § 303.190.3). 6 Karscig does not apply to owner's policies. Section 303.190.2, which specifies the mandatory contents of an "owner's policy," does not contain the statutory language on which Karscig relied; it does not require an "owner's policy" to insure against liability arising out of the use of "any motor vehicle not owned by [the named insured]." Instead, § 303.190.2 only requires an "owner's policy" to insure against liability arising out of the use of the motor vehicle "designate[d] by explicit description or by appropriate reference" in the policy itself.
7 A number of cases have held that exclusions similar, or even identical, to the one in this case are enforceable in an owner's policy. For example, Sisk v. American Family Mutual Insurance Co., 860 S.W.2d 34 (Mo. App. E.D. 1993), held that the same exclusion at issue in this case was enforceable in an owner's policy under the MVFRL. The Court emphasized that the policy before it was an owner's policy, not an operator's policy, and that the requirements of § 303.190.3 were therefore inapplicable. Id. at 36. Similarly, Shelter Mutual Insurance Co. v. Harter, 940 S.W.2d 555 (Mo. App. S.D.
6 Ironically, even the majority recognizes that Karscig only ruled as it did because "the requirements of an operator's policy mandated minimal coverage of $25,000." Maj. Op. at 17 (emphasis added). 7 The majority also relies on American Standard Ins. Co. v. Hargrave, 34 S.W.3d 88 (Mo. banc 2000), in which the Supreme Court held that two owner's policies were both required to pay the MVFRL minimum limits with respect to an accident. But Hargrave contains no discussion as to why both owner's policies were implicated, or why the MVFRL applied to both policies. Instead, in Hargrave it was "conceded at oral argument" that the negligent driver "was insured under two owner's policies at the time of her accident," id. at 90, and the insurer did not contest that each policy's coverage was subject to the MVFRL. The insurer's principal argument in Hargrave was that it had no obligation to pay "because the minimum statutory liability coverage required under the MVFRL need only be paid once, by one insurer, in any given accident," and another insurer had already paid the statutory minimum under a second owner's policy. 34 S.W.3d at 89. Because coverage under both owner's policies, and the MVFRL's applicability, were conceded, Hargrave is of limited relevance here. (Judge Martin's opinion contains a more extended discussion of the flaws in the majority's reliance on Hargrave.)
18 1997), held that an owner's policy could properly limit coverage for non-owned "motor vehicles" to four-wheeled vehicles, thus excluding the insured's motorcycle, which the MVFRL defines as a "motor vehicle." The Court explained: [A]n operator's policy "shall insure the person . . . against loss . . . arising out of the use . . . of any motor vehicle not owned by him." Section 303.190(3), RSMo 1994. . . . An owner's policy under the MVFRL, on the other hand, requires coverage for liability arising out of the use by the named insured of those motor vehicles which the policy designates "by explicit description or by appropriate reference." Section 303.190.2(2) RSMo 1994. Respondent's policy fits this description. Under the undisputed facts, Showalter could not reasonably expect the policy to be an operator's policy. This Court agrees with the trial court's assessment that "the insurance policy in question is an owner's policy and not an operator's policy" and concludes it was not error to grant summary judgment in favor of Respondent. Id. at 556-57 (other citations and footnote omitted). Other cases reach the same result – an "owner's policy" may permissibly limit coverage for the insured's use of other vehicles, even though such limitations would not be enforceable in an "operator's policy." 8
8 State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Scheel, 973 S.W.2d 560, 567 (Mo. App. W.D. 1998) ("where there is coverage which complies with either § 303.190.2, for an owner's policy, or § 303.190.3, for an operator's policy, any added or excess coverage not required under one or the other does not have to comply with the requirements of the MVFRL"; because policy complied with MVFRL's requirements for an owner's policy, "the fact that the policy's exclusion for the unauthorized use of a non-owned vehicle may violate the MVFRL as to an operator's policy only is inconsequential"); Shelter Mut. Ins. Co. v. Ridenhour, 936 S.W.2d 857, 859 (Mo. App. E.D. 1997) (appellant claimed that policy exclusion "violates the public policy of the MVFRL by excluding coverage for liability arising from the unauthorized use of a non-owned vehicle. We find no merit to this argument because the Shelter policy meets the minimum requirements of an owner's policy as set out in the MVFRL, is not an operator's policy and, therefore, satisfies the intent of the legislature."); Am. Family Std. Ins. Co. of Wis. v. Hamil, 862 S.W.2d 511, 512 (Mo. App. S.D. 1993) (because driver "had an owner's policy," § 303.190.3 inapplicable, and policy could lawfully exclude coverage for non-owned vehicle made available for insured's regular use); Schuster v. Shelter Mut. Inc. Co., 857 S.W.2d 381, 385 (Mo. App. S.D. 1993) (same); DeMeo v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 686 F.3d 607, 611 (8th Cir. 2012) (Missouri law; citing to "a host of [Missouri] appellate decisions holding that an owner's policy that complies with § 303.190.2 may provide additional, operator's coverage(s) that are more limited than what an operator's policy must provide to comply with § 303.190.3"; holding that an owner's policy is not required, by
19 Because this case involves an "owner's policy," the rule announced in Karscig is inapplicable. Nothing in the MVFRL required this "owner's policy" to provide coverage for the use of any vehicle other than the vehicle expressly designated in the policy itself. 9
Conclusion By all rights, this should be a simple case: the policy under which Dutton now seeks coverage did not insure the vehicle involved in the accident. To avoid this straightforward outcome, the majority has conjured a brand-new coverage argument from whole cloth. Dutton has made crystal clear that he does not
Alok Ahuja, Judge
advance the argument on which the majority relies; and that argument is meritless anyway. Dutton's own arguments fare no better, because they conflate the very different statutory requirements imposed on owner's and operator's policies of automobile liability insurance. Even if this owner's policy were subject to the requirements applicable to operator's policies, there is no requirement that an operator's policy provide coverage for vehicles owned by the insured driver. The trial court got it right, and its judgment should be affirmed.
statute, to include coverage for an insured's operation of a non-owned automobile, even though this coverage is statutorily mandated in an operator's policy). 9 In his second Point, Dutton argues that the anti-stacking language in the American Family policies is ambiguous, and would not prevent him from simultaneously obtaining coverage under both the Maxima and the F- 250 policies. If the F-250 policy does not provide coverage, however, it is unnecessary to address any "stacking" issue. Bush v. Shelter Mut. Ins. Co., 412 S.W.3d 336, 341 (Mo. App. W.D. 2013) ("Before stacking can be an issue, there must first be applicable coverages to stack.").
ADAM DUTTON,
Appellant,
v.
AMERICAN FAMILY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY,
Respondent. ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) )
WD74940