Timmy Lee Briggs and Monica Mae Evison v. First Chicago Insurance Company ( 2023 )


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  •                    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 22-1263
    Filed June 7, 2023
    TIMMY LEE BRIGGS and MONICA MAE EVISON,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    vs.
    FIRST CHICAGO INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, David Porter, Judge.
    Insured drivers denied coverage for property damage to a third party
    challenge the grant of summary judgment for the insurer. REVERSED AND
    REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS.
    Marc S. Harding and Joe Casey of Harding Law Office, Des Moines, for
    appellants.
    Scott Wormsley of Lamson, Dugan & Murray, LLP, West Des Moines, for
    appellee.
    Heard by Bower, C.J., and Tabor and Greer, JJ.
    2
    TABOR, Judge.
    Denied insurance coverage for an accident under their policy, Timmy Briggs
    and Monica Evison challenge the district court’s interpretation of Iowa’s motor
    vehicle financial responsibility law. The court granted summary judgment to their
    insurer, First Chicago Insurance Company, finding its refusal to pay under
    business-use policy exclusions did not thwart the “absolute” liability language in
    Iowa Code section 321A.21(6)(a) (2021). Briggs and Evison insist that when it
    comes to an injured third party, the insurer may not rely on those policy exclusions
    to circumvent the statute’s purpose—to protect the motoring public. Trouble is, the
    injured third party did not bring this suit and did not join Briggs and Evison in
    seeking damages from First Chicago.          Although First Chicago did not raise
    standing, we may do so on our own motion.              See Rieff v. Evans, 
    630 N.W.2d 278
    , 285 (Iowa 2001). But we decline to determine that issue for the first
    time on appeal. Instead, we reverse the grant of summary judgment as premature
    and remand for the district court to determine whether Briggs and Evison have
    standing to bring this lawsuit.
    I. Facts and Prior Proceedings
    First Chicago issued Briggs an insurance policy for his 2004 Dodge Grand
    Caravan. The policy covered up to $20,000 per person for bodily injury, up to
    $40,000 per bodily-injury accident, and up to $15,000 in property damage per
    accident as required by Iowa Code section 321A.21(2)(b).1 The policy listed
    1 The policy listed twenty-eight exclusions. If one of these exclusions applied, the
    policy stated that First Chicago did not have to provide liability coverage and had
    “no duty to settle or defend a claim or lawsuit.”
    3
    Evison as a covered driver.      One morning Evison was using Briggs’s Grand
    Caravan to deliver newspapers when she hit a parked Mediacom van. Both
    vehicles sustained damage. And police cited Evison for failing to maintain control
    of her vehicle.
    After that collision, the CEI Group—a fleet management company
    representing Mediacom—wrote to Evison demanding a loss amount of $6697. But
    when Briggs and Evison filed their insurance claim to pay for that damage, First
    Chicago denied coverage—citing two policy exclusions for “business use” of the
    vehicle.2 The pair sued First Chicago, claiming those exclusions violated Iowa
    Code section 321A.21(6)(a) and seeking the $6697 in damages owed to
    Mediacom. Before answering the petition, First Chicago moved to dismiss. The
    company argued that the petition failed to state a claim upon which relief could be
    granted because the “narrow” exclusions satisfied Iowa’s minimum financial
    liability requirements. The district court denied First Chicago’s motion, finding “a
    question of fact whether the breadth of the exclusions thwart the intent of
    section 321A.21 by lessening insurance protection to the public.”
    After this denial, both sides moved for summary judgment. The district court
    ruled for First Chicago, finding that section 321A.21(6)(a) “does not require carriers
    2 The first exclusion related to damages “arising out of the ownership, maintenance
    or operation of any vehicle while it is being used in a delivery-related business.”
    The policy defined “delivery-related business” to include using a car for “pickup or
    delivery or return from a pick-up of delivery of persons, products, documents,
    newspapers, or food.” The second exclusion was for “the business-related use of
    an auto, unless we have so agreed and charged an additional premium.” The
    policy defined “business” to mean “any full or part-time profession, occupation,
    trade, business or commercial enterprise.”
    4
    to provide coverage for all damages, regardless of circumstances.” Briggs and
    Evison now appeal.
    II. Scope and Standard of Review
    If we could reach the merits, we would review the grant of summary
    judgment for correction of legal error.         Breese v. City of Burlington, 
    945 N.W.2d 12
    , 17 (Iowa 2020). “Summary judgment is appropriate only when the
    record shows no genuine issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law.” Hedlund v. State, 
    930 N.W.2d 707
    , 715 (Iowa 2019).
    We view the record in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party—in this
    case, Briggs and Evison.         See Banwart v. 50th St. Sports, L.L.C., 
    910 N.W.2d 540
    , 544 (Iowa 2018). “When the facts are undisputed, we reverse only if
    the district court misapplied the law.” Iowa Dep’t of Human Servs. ex rel. Palmer
    v. Unisys Corp., 
    637 N.W.2d 142
    , 149 (Iowa 2001).
    III. Analysis
    Briggs and Evison urge that First Chicago’s coverage exclusions conflict
    with the Iowa’s motor vehicle financial responsibility law. At issue is this provision
    on the “absolute” liability of the insurance carrier:
    6. Every motor vehicle liability policy shall be subject to the
    following provisions which need not be contained therein:
    a. The liability of the insurance carrier with respect to the
    insurance required by this chapter shall become absolute whenever
    injury or damage covered by said motor vehicle liability policy occurs;
    said policy may not be canceled or annulled as to such liability by
    any agreement between the insurance carrier and the insured after
    the occurrence of the injury or damage; no statement made by the
    insured or on the insured’s behalf and no violation of said policy shall
    defeat or void said policy.
    Iowa Code § 321A.21(6)(a).
    5
    Twenty-five years ago, our supreme court interpreted this absolute-liability
    language. See Dave Ostrem Imports, Inc. v. Globe Am. Cas./GRE Ins. Grp., 
    586 N.W.2d 366
     (Iowa 1998).3 In that case, “a vehicle owned by Ostrem was struck
    by a vehicle owned by David Morse.” 
    Id. at 367
    . When Ostrem could not satisfy
    its default judgment against Morse, it sued Morse’s insurer, Globe America. 
    Id.
    But Globe asserted that Morse’s coverage was voided because the driver failed to
    give proper notice of the accident. 
    Id.
     Ostrem moved for summary judgment,
    “asserting that Globe was absolutely liable as a certifier of financial responsibility
    pursuant to Iowa Code section 321A.18(1).” The district court agreed that under
    section 321A.21(6)(a), policy violations may not defeat the coverage otherwise
    provided. 
    Id.
     The supreme court affirmed. In doing so, it noted that the “absolute”
    liability etched into the statute meant “there shall be no defenses to liability of the
    insurer based . . . upon exclusions, conditions, terms, or language contained in the
    policy.” 
    Id. at 368
     (quoting 7 Lee R. Russ & Thomas F. Segalla, Couch on
    Insurance § 104:45 (3d ed.1996)).        The court emphasized: “It is the clearly
    expressed purpose of statutes like section 321A.21(6)(a) to preclude a lessening
    of the protection to the motoring public that financial responsibility laws are
    intended to provide.” Id.
    Briggs and Evison rely on Ostrem. But in ruling for First Chicago, the district
    court distinguished that case, finding a distinction between pre-injury and post-
    3 That same year, our legislature enacted a statute requiring all motorists to carry
    minimum liability insurance. See 1997 Iowa Acts ch. 139, § 2(1) (codified as
    amended at 
    Iowa Code § 321
    .20B(1)(a)); see also Baker v. Catlin Specialty Ins.
    Co., 
    769 F. Supp. 2d 1157
    , 1168 (N.D. Iowa 2011) (referring to this statute as a
    “compulsory financial liability coverage law”).
    6
    injury exclusion clauses. In the district court’s view: “Section 6(a) merely prevents
    insurance carriers from denying coverage based on actions taken after the injury
    occurs.” On appeal, Briggs and Evison contend that the pre-injury and post-injury
    distinction finds no support in the language of section 321A.21(6)(a). And while
    Ostrem involved the insured’s conduct after the accident, that opinion takes no
    position on the application of section 321A.21(6)(a) to policy exclusions that exist
    before the accident. See id.4
    But before reaching the merits, we flag a foundational difference between
    this case and Ostrem: the party bringing suit. Ostrem was the injured third party,
    the   intended    beneficiary    of   the       “absolute”   liability   protections   in
    section 321A.21(6)(a). Meanwhile, Briggs is the policy holder and Evison is the
    insured driver and tortfeasor. As a leading treatise on insurance explains:
    The purpose of a Financial Responsibility Act is to furnish
    compensation for innocent persons and members of the general
    public who are injured by the negligent operation of automobiles and
    to protect them from financially irresponsible persons. The purpose
    is not generally to protect tortfeasor insureds against their own
    negligence.
    7A Steven Plitt et al., Couch on Insurance 3d § 109:36 (Revised ed. 2013)
    (footnotes omitted). So as a threshold question, we must decide whether Briggs
    4 Indeed, this open question has led to diverging opinions in other states with
    compulsory financial liability coverage laws. Compare Salamon v. Progressive
    Classic Ins. Co., 
    841 A.2d 858
    , 860 (Md. 2004) (finding delivery-related business
    policy exclusion invalid under Maryland’s compulsory automobile insurance
    statute), with Progressive Universal Ins. Co. of Illinois v. Liberty Mut. Fire Ins.
    Co., 
    828 N.E.2d 1175
    , 1186 (Ill. 2005) (finding a similar policy exclusion valid
    under Illinois’s mandatory insurance law); see also Proformance Ins. Co. v.
    Jones, 
    887 A.2d 146
    , 154−55 (2005) (finding business-use policy exclusion invalid
    under New Jersey’s compulsory insurance law and collecting cases from other
    states).
    7
    and Evison have standing to seek recovery of the $6697 in damages incurred by
    Mediacom.
    Standing requires a party to have a sufficient stake in a controversy to
    obtain judicial resolution.    Birkhofer ex rel. Johannsen v. Brammeier, 
    610 N.W.2d 844
    , 847 (Iowa 2000).        Briggs and Evison must show (1) a specific,
    personal, and legal interest in the litigation, and (2) injury. Rieff, 
    630 N.W.2d at 284
    . When asked about standing at oral argument, counsel for Briggs and
    Evison asserted that his clients were injured because “the claim still exists for
    Mediacom to go ahead and come back after them.” But without more of a record
    documenting Mediacom’s interest in the litigation and their injury, we cannot
    determine whether Briggs and Evison have enough stake in the controversy to
    obtain a resolution of this legal challenge.
    And then we still have to fashion a remedy. Even if we had evidence that
    Mediacom planned to collect its $6697 in damages from Briggs and Evison, and if
    we were persuaded that First Chicago was liable for those damages under section
    321A.21(6)(a), we would still need to contend with Iowa Code section 321A.21(8).
    That provision recognizes that an insurance company may seek reimbursement
    from the insured for the absolute liability imposed by statute.5 This provision shows
    how the legislature contemplated that, in certain situations, the insurance company
    would first compensate the innocent injured party and then bear the burden of
    5 Iowa Code section 321A.21(8) states: “Any motor vehicle liability policy may
    provide that the insured shall reimburse the insurance carrier for any payment the
    insurance carrier would not have been obligated to make under the terms of the
    policy except for the provisions of this chapter.” The First Chicago policy issued
    to Briggs contains that reimbursement clause.
    8
    collecting from the insured. So under that statute and the related policy provision,
    First Chicago could seek reimbursement from Briggs and Evison for any recovery
    they receive on behalf of Mediacom. Such circuitous circumstances could inform
    the district court’s decision on standing.
    In closing, we reverse the merits ruling on the summary judgment motions
    as premature and remand for the district court to hold an evidentiary hearing to
    determine whether Briggs and Evison have standing to pursue this matter. Cf. In
    re Est. of Bart, No. 07-0464, 
    2007 WL 4553553
    , at *4 (Iowa Ct. App. Dec. 28, 2007)
    (remanding for further proceedings where the district court denied standing but we
    were “unable to determine” why the appellant lacked “standing to bring this claim”
    and the record was “not sufficient for us to determine whether this claim raises a
    justiciable issue”). If the court holds that the plaintiffs lack standing, it should
    dismiss their petition. If the court decides that they do have standing, the parties
    may file new summary judgment motions on the merits and incorporate any facts
    developed at the hearing.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS.