Tammy Ratliff, as Personal Representative and Administratrix of the Estate of Amy Ratliff v. Kentucky Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company ( 2023 )


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  •             RENDERED: JANUARY 6, 2023; 10:00 A.M.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    Commonwealth of Kentucky
    Court of Appeals
    NO. 2021-CA-1410-MR
    TAMMY RATLIFF, AS PERSONAL
    REPRESENTATIVE AND
    ADMINISTRATRIX OF THE ESTATE
    OF AMY RATLIFF; JORDAN ISAIAH
    RATLIFF; NATHANAEL RYAN
    TACKETT; AND TAMMY RATLIFF,
    AS NEXT FRIEND OF NATHANAEL
    RYAN TACKETT                                        APPELLANTS
    APPEAL FROM LETCHER CIRCUIT COURT
    v.          HONORABLE JAMES W. CRAFT, II, JUDGE
    ACTION NO. 13-CI-00454
    KENTUCKY FARM BUREAU
    MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY;
    CODY SHELBY; AND TIMOTHY
    PAUL SHELBY AS PERSONAL
    REPRESENTATIVE AND
    ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE
    OF TIMOTHY LEE SHELBY                                APPELLEES
    AND
    NO. 2021-CA-1411-MR
    TAMMY RATLIFF, AS PERSONAL
    REPRESENTATIVE AND
    ADMINISTRATRIX OF THE ESTATE
    OF AMY RATLIFF; JORDAN ISAIAH
    RATLIFF; NATHANAEL RYAN
    TACKETT; AND TAMMY RATLIFF,
    AS NEXT FRIEND OF NATHANAEL
    RYAN TACKETT                                                                  APPELLANTS
    APPEAL FROM LETCHER CIRCUIT COURT
    v.                  HONORABLE JAMES W. CRAFT, II, JUDGE
    ACTION NO. 13-CI-00454
    CODY SHELBY; KENTUCKY FARM
    BUREAU MUTUAL INSURANCE
    COMPANY; AND TIMOTHY PAUL
    SHELBY AS PERSONAL
    REPRESENTATIVE AND
    ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE
    OF TIMOTHY LEE SHELBY                                                           APPELLEES
    OPINION
    AFFIRMING
    ** ** ** ** **
    BEFORE: LAMBERT, MAZE, AND TAYLOR, JUDGES.1
    LAMBERT, JUDGE: These appeals arise from an action in Letcher Circuit Court
    filed as a result of the shooting death of Amy Ratliff by Timothy Shelby. Tammy
    Ratliff, as Personal Representative and Administratrix of the Estate of Amy Ratliff;
    1
    Judge Irv Maze concurred in this Opinion prior to his retirement from the Court of
    Appeals. Release of this Opinion was delayed by administrative handling.
    -2-
    Jordan Isaiah Ratliff; Nathanael Ryan Tackett; and Tammy Ratliff, as Next Friend
    of Nathanael Ryan Tackett, a minor (collectively, “Ratliff”), have appealed from
    two summary judgments entered in October 2021. The first appeal is from an
    order granting Kentucky Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company’s (“KFB”)
    renewed motion for summary judgment and holding that no coverage existed under
    the homeowner’s policy. The second is from the order granting Cody Shelby’s
    motion for summary judgment and holding that there was no genuine issue of
    material fact as to foreseeability. We affirm both orders.
    In the late night and early morning hours of August 1 and 2, 2013,
    Timothy Lee Shelby (“Timothy”) shot and killed three people before killing
    himself. He first killed his girlfriend, Jennifer Walters, in the bedroom of his
    house. He then drove to Amy Ratliff’s (“Amy”) residence, where he killed Amy
    and her boyfriend, Josh Wyatt, before shooting himself in the stairway. At the
    time of her death, Amy was the mother of two minor children, Jordan and
    Nathanael. On December 18, 2013, Tammy Ratliff, who was Amy’s mother and
    had been appointed as the Administratrix of Amy’s Estate, filed a wrongful death
    complaint against Timothy’s Estate on behalf of Amy’s Estate and the two minor
    children. Ratliff alleged that Timothy was negligent and grossly negligent in
    injuring Amy and causing her death. Her death caused the children to endure the
    -3-
    loss of consortium, care, and parental guidance. Ratliff sought compensatory and
    punitive damages totaling $1B for each of the plaintiffs.
    On February 27, 2015, Ratliff filed an amended complaint properly
    naming Timothy Paul Shelby, Timothy’s son, as Personal Representative and
    Administrator of the Estate of Timothy Lee Shelby, as the defendant (“Shelby”).
    Ratliff also named Timothy’s son, Cody Shelby (“Cody”), as a defendant, alleging
    that Cody’s actions contributed to Amy’s death. Shelby and Cody filed separate
    answers, in which they sought dismissal of Ratliff’s complaint and pled several
    affirmative defenses.
    In June 2016, KFB moved the court to file an intervening complaint,
    which was granted. In the intervening complaint, KFB alleged that it had issued a
    homeowner’s policy to Timothy (policy number HO 808238) on July 8, 2009.
    KFB maintained that this policy was no longer in effect on August 1, 2013, as it
    had expired for the non-payment of the premium. KFB had been providing Shelby
    and Cody a defense under a reservation of rights. Therefore, KFB sought a
    declaration of rights as to coverage under the policy based upon its expiration due
    to non-payment of the premium and whether it had an obligation to provide a
    defense and satisfy a judgment entered against either Shelby or Cody. In her
    answer, Ratliff contended that the homeowner’s policy was in effect on August 1,
    2013. Ratliff also filed a cross-claim against KFB, alleging a violation of the
    -4-
    Kentucky Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act, Kentucky Revised Statutes
    (“KRS”) 304.12-230 and KRS 304.12-235, and she sought compensatory and
    punitive damages as well as attorney’s fees.
    Later that month, Cody moved to dismiss Ratliff’s amended complaint
    for failure to state a claim against him upon which relief could be granted. In the
    amended complaint, Ratliff alleged that Cody had a duty to promote safety in the
    community, which, he argued, was not a duty recognized in Kentucky. In addition,
    Ratliff did not describe what acts of his either caused or contributed to Amy’s
    death. In response, Ratliff provided more information about Cody’s actions. She
    stated that Cody had admitted to the police that he had opened the lock box where
    Timothy kept his gun and that he had given the loaded gun to Timothy, knowing
    that he was angry and intoxicated and that he had a history of violence. Ratliff
    included this information in her cross-claim against KFB. Ratliff requested that
    the motion to dismiss be denied or that she be permitted to amend her complaint.
    Following a hearing in September, the court denied Cody’s motion to dismiss and
    granted Ratliff time to file a second amended complaint.
    Ratliff filed a second amended complaint in October 2016, fleshing
    out more of the details of Cody’s involvement and alleging that his providing the
    loaded gun to Timothy was a substantial factor in Amy’s death.
    -5-
    In January 2018, KFB filed a motion for summary judgment as to its
    liability. KFB argued that Timothy’s homeowner’s policy had been canceled for
    non-payment of the premium on July 9, 2013. A notice of premium had been
    mailed to Timothy on June 6, 2013, and $661.43 was due to be paid by July 9,
    2013. The premium was not paid, and KFB mailed an expiration notice to
    Timothy on July 20, 2013. The expiration notice indicated that as a courtesy, KFB
    would extend the payment due date until August 3, 2013, but if payment was not
    received by that date, coverage would have terminated as of July 9, 2013. The
    premium was not paid. KFB asserted that it had followed the provisions of KRS
    304.20-035 and KRS 304.20-320, and that pursuant to KRS 304.20-320(2), proof
    of mailing was sufficient as proof of notice. In addition, KFB noted that a notice
    of lis pendens as well as a foreclosure action had been filed against Timothy in
    March of 2013, and that he had filed for bankruptcy on July 8, 2013. KFB
    concluded that because no policy of insurance was in effect on August 1, 2013, it
    was entitled to a judgment in its favor as to liability for defense and indemnity.
    Ratliff objected to KFB’s motion, stating that the notice from KFB
    indicated that the mortgagee, Embrace Home Loans, had been billed for the
    homeowner’s insurance premium; KFB never asked Timothy to pay the premium.
    Ratliff asserted that KFB had not complied with the applicable statutes in
    canceling the policy. In addition, the events at issue in this lawsuit took place prior
    -6-
    to August 3, 2013. Therefore, KFB should be estopped from arguing that there
    was no coverage because Timothy died prior to that date and could no longer pay
    the premium by then.
    After hearing arguments from the parties, the circuit court denied
    KFB’s motion for summary judgment on February 13, 2018.
    In November 2020, KFB filed a renewed motion for summary
    judgment, continuing to argue that the undisputed facts established that the policy
    had lapsed prior to the incident. KFB included a second argument that there was
    no coverage because the undisputed facts established that the claims did not arise
    from an accident and therefore could not constitute an occurrence under the policy.
    Ratliff filed an objection to the motion in September 2021, arguing that Amy’s
    death constituted an occurrence under the policy. KFB also filed a supplemental
    memorandum, addressing both the policy lapse and lack of occurrence issues.
    In January 2021, both Shelby and Cody were deposed by Ratliff, more
    than seven years after the shootings. Shelby testified that he had not spoken with
    his father, Timothy, for eight months prior to the shootings, explaining that they
    did not get along very well. He testified that Timothy had dealt with an alcohol
    problem his whole life, noting that he was a Vietnam War veteran. As to
    Timothy’s finances, Shelby stated that he had helped his father with this for several
    years but had stopped doing so about a year before the incident. Timothy, Shelby
    -7-
    related, was not good about paying his bills. Shelby became the executor of
    Timothy’s estate, and he went through Timothy’s paperwork and bills on the
    dining room table. Shelby saw the cancellation notice from KFB indicating that
    the policy had expired in mid-June or July. He had not seen the renewal notice
    before the deposition, and when he was shown the document dated July 19th, he
    read that the mortgagee/lender had been billed for the premium and that the due
    date was August 3, 2013. Shelby knew that Timothy was in default on the
    mortgage and was going through bankruptcy. Shelby said that Timothy had guns
    in the house, except during the time he was a convicted felon. He had about ten
    guns, including pistols, shotguns, and rifles.
    In his deposition, Cody testified about the circumstances leading to
    the shootings in early August 2013. He and his cousin, William, had been riding
    bikes. Cody decided to ask his father for some money. His father was half asleep
    watching television. His father reached for his wallet in his pants pocket but did
    not find it. He had just received between $5,000.00 and $6,000.00 from an
    insurance settlement, and he was angry that he could not find it. His father went to
    talk to Jennifer, and then he said to Cody, “get a gun out of the box for me to keep
    safe.” Cody got a gun and locked it in his box before he left. He did not want to
    be part of his father getting angry. He went with William to his house, and then
    they went to Jordan Ratliff’s house to meet up with him. He and William walked
    -8-
    into Jordan’s house with Jordan. As he and William were removing their boots,
    Jordan walked through the utility room and kitchen to the stairwell. Jordan had a
    weird look on his face and told Cody to not go over there. Cody went over there,
    and when he turned the corner, he saw his father “laying there, gun between his
    legs laying in a pool of his own blood.” He started crying, and William helped him
    out of the house. Around the time the police arrived, Cody remembered that his
    father had been angry earlier, and he told Jordan to check on his mother, Amy.
    Cody did not see anything else in the house. He asked Jim Stevens to check on his
    father’s house. Cody did not know who called the police; he was crying on the
    back porch.
    Cody did not know if his father had been drinking that day. His father
    had a Ruger Mark II 22/30 pistol that belonged to Cody. But Cody said that when
    his father told him to get it, Cody removed it from his father’s storage box and put
    it in his own storage box. He locked it before he left; he said his father never
    touched that pistol. His father had told him to “take it, keep it safe, don’t let
    anything ever happen to it.” Cody said it had been stolen. His father had a 10 mm
    Glock, and to his knowledge, that was the gun his father used in the shootings.
    Cody only unlocked the box to get the Ruger Mark II pistol out, not the Glock. He
    said he locked his father’s box after he removed the Ruger from it. Cody said his
    father occasionally had a temper.
    -9-
    Cody then testified about his police interview. He agreed that his
    father was probably blaming Jennifer for the missing money. Cody did not know
    how the other two people who were killed were involved with the missing wallet
    but agreed that his father probably was blaming them as well. Cody believed that
    Jennifer was a thief because some of his things had gone missing since his father
    started seeing her, including a flashlight and a bayonet that had belonged to his
    grandfather. He denied that his father asked him to get the Glock; he asked him to
    get the Ruger Mark II. Cody said he was the only person – other than his father –
    who knew how to open the container in which the Glock was kept. His father kept
    the key hidden.
    The record also contains police reports and interviews conducted
    shortly after the shooting, which we have reviewed.
    After the depositions were taken, Cody moved the court to dismiss the
    second amended complaint filed against him for failure to state a claim upon which
    relief could be granted as Ratliff failed to establish any recognized duty he had
    under Kentucky law to support a negligence claim. There was no special
    relationship between Amy and Cody that would impose a duty on him, and the
    result was not foreseeable. There was also no duty on Cody to control his father,
    Timothy. Ratliff objected to Cody’s motion to dismiss.
    -10-
    In August 2021, Ratliff filed a motion for summary judgment on
    Cody’s negligence or to deny Cody’s motion to dismiss. Ratliff argued that Cody
    had admitted to negligence related to furnishing the gun to Timothy knowing what
    state he was in, which Timothy then used to kill three people who he believed had
    stolen his wallet containing several thousand dollars. In response, Cody continued
    to argue that he had no duty that could have been breached. In his sur-reply, Cody
    stated,
    The Plaintiffs argue, without a single case for
    authority, that Kentucky requires everyone to act with a
    general duty of care to everyone else. However, this
    argument ignores the fact that in order for there to be a
    duty, there has to be an identifiable person to whom the
    duty is owed. Any duty of care only exists to prevent
    injuries that are reasonably foreseeable. Kentucky law is
    clear that, in the majority of instances, criminal actions
    are not foreseeable.
    Because Ratliff failed to establish that an exception to the law that a person cannot
    generally be held liable for the criminal actions of another applied, Cody argued
    that he was not under any duty to Amy, citing James v. Wilson, 
    95 S.W.3d 875
    (Ky. App. 2002).
    On October 18, 2021, the court granted Cody’s motion for summary
    judgment, ruling that there was no genuine issue of material fact related to
    foreseeability. And the next day, the court granted KFB’s motion for summary
    -11-
    judgment, declaring that no coverage existed under the policy for the claims
    asserted against either Shelby or Cody. These appeals by Ratliff now follow.
    I. KFB Coverage Appeal (No. 2021-CA-1410-MR)
    We shall first address whether the circuit court properly granted
    KFB’s renewed motion for summary judgment and determined that no coverage
    existed under the homeowner’s policy for the claims Ratliff asserted against
    Shelby or Cody. Ratliff argues that the policy had not lapsed at the time of Amy’s
    death, that there was an occurrence under the policy which covered Timothy and
    Cody’s actions, and that the intentional act exclusion did not defeat coverage in
    this case. The circuit court did not specify the basis upon which the summary
    judgment was granted, and KFB contends that summary judgment was proper
    under any of these grounds.
    This Court’s standard of review of a summary judgment is set forth in
    Patton v. Bickford, 
    529 S.W.3d 717
    , 723 (Ky. 2016):
    Summary judgment is a remedy to be used
    sparingly, i.e. “when, as a matter of law, it appears that it
    would be impossible for the respondent to produce
    evidence at the trial warranting a judgment in his favor
    and against the movant.” Shelton v. Kentucky Easter
    Seals Society, Inc., 
    413 S.W.3d 901
    , 905 (Ky. 2013)
    (citations omitted). We frequently caution, however, the
    term “impossible” is to be used in a practical sense, not
    in an absolute sense. See 
    id.
     (citing Perkins v.
    Hausladen, 
    828 S.W.2d 652
    , 654 (Ky. 1992)). The trial
    court’s primary directive in this context is to determine
    whether a genuine issue of material fact exists; if so,
    -12-
    summary judgment is improper, Steelvest, Inc. v.
    Scansteel Service Center, Inc., 
    807 S.W.2d 476
    , 480 (Ky.
    1991). This requires that the facts be viewed through a
    lens most favorable to the party opposing summary
    judgment, here the Estate. 
    Id.
     It is important to point out
    that “a party opposing a properly supported summary
    judgment motion cannot defeat it without presenting at
    least some affirmative evidence showing that there is a
    genuine issue of material fact for trial.” Id. at 482.
    A motion for summary judgment presents only
    questions of law and “a determination of whether a
    disputed material issue of fact exists.” Shelton, 413
    S.W.3d at 905. Our review is de novo, and we afford no
    deference to the trial court’s decision.
    As to the interpretation of insurance contracts, in James Graham
    Brown Foundation, Inc. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company, 
    814 S.W.2d 273
    , 279 (Ky. 1991), the Supreme Court of Kentucky recognized:
    The proper standard for the analysis of insurance
    contracts in Kentucky is a subjective one. Fryman v.
    Pilot Life Insurance Company, Ky., 
    704 S.W.2d 205
    (1986) holds that terms of insurance contracts have no
    technical meaning in law and are to be interpreted
    according to the usage of the average man and as they
    would be read and understood by him in the light of the
    prevailing rule that uncertainties and ambiguities must be
    resolved in favor of the insured.
    And in Motorists Mutual Insurance Company v. RSJ, Inc., 
    926 S.W.2d 679
    , 681
    (Ky. App. 1996), this Court recognized that “terms used in insurance contracts
    ‘should be given their ordinary meaning as persons with the ordinary and usual
    understanding would construe them.’ City of Louisville v. McDonald, Ky. App.,
    -13-
    
    819 S.W.2d 319
    , 320 (1991).” With these statements of the law in mind, we shall
    consider Ratliff’s arguments.
    The first issue is whether the homeowner’s policy had lapsed for non-
    payment at the time of the shooting. The record and the parties’ briefs reflect that
    KFB sent a renewal notice to Timothy on June 5, 2013. The notice provided that
    the policy would renew for the period of July 9, 2013, through July 9, 2014; that
    the premium amount was $661.43; that the due date was July 9, 2013; and that
    Timothy’s mortgagee, Embrace Home Loans ISAOA/ATIMA, had been billed for
    the premium. When the premium had not been paid by the due date, KFB sent
    Timothy an expiration notice on July 19, 2013, stating:
    Your payment MUST be received in our office before
    8/3/13. If not, coverage under this policy terminates. As
    a courtesy to you, we have extended the payment due
    date to 8/3/13. If your payment is not received by that
    date, coverage is terminated on 7/9/13 at 12:01 a.m.
    standard time.
    There is no dispute that the premium payment had not been received by August 3,
    2013.
    Ratliff expends several pages arguing about notice and whether KFB
    followed the applicable provisions related to the policy cancellation. We need not
    address those arguments, however, because we agree – under the narrow and
    specific circumstances of this case – that the policy had not lapsed when the
    shooting took place between August 1 and 2, 2013. The expiration notice
    -14-
    specifically stated that the policy would not terminate unless the premium payment
    had not been received by August 3, 2013. Because Timothy had passed away prior
    to that date, albeit by his own hand, it was impossible for him to pay the premium
    by that date. He had at least one more day to pay the premium when the shooting
    and death occurred, and we hold that, for this reason, the policy had not lapsed
    when Amy passed away.
    Next, we must consider whether Ratliff’s claims arose from an
    occurrence covered under the policy. Under the definitions section of the policy,
    an “occurrence” is defined as “an accident, including continuous or repeated
    exposure to substantially the same general harmful conditions, which results,
    during the policy period,” in either bodily injury or property damage. The policy
    does not include a definition of “accident.” Therefore, we look to caselaw for
    guidance:
    In the context of an insurance policy, the word “accident”
    should be interpreted in accordance with its common
    usage. Fryman v. Pilot Life Ins. Co., Ky., 
    704 S.W.2d 205
     (1986). In construing the language of a life
    insurance policy, the court in Fryman held that “a death
    is accidental absent a showing that the death was a result
    of plan, design, or intent on the part of the decedent.” 
    Id. at 206
    .
    Stone v. Kentucky Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co., 
    34 S.W.3d 809
    , 811 (Ky. App.
    2000).
    -15-
    Ratliff contends that there were multiple occurrences under the policy,
    including Timothy killing Amy with a firearm, Cody giving Timothy a gun, and
    Cody failing to warn Amy about the danger he created. As to Timothy, Ratliff
    cites to the Supreme Court of Kentucky’s opinion in Brown Foundation, supra,
    which states:
    We believe this to be the majority rule, and we agree that
    if injury was not actually and subjectively intended or
    expected by the insured, coverage is provided even
    though the action giving rise to the injury itself was
    intentional and the injury foreseeable. While the activity
    which produced the alleged damage may be fully
    intended, recovery will not be allowed unless the insured
    intended the resulting damages. Cf. City of Johnstown v.
    Bankers Standard Insurance Company, 
    877 F.2d 1146
    (2nd Cir. 1989).
    814 S.W.2d at 278. Ratliff contends that no one knows what Timothy’s subjective
    intent was at the time of Amy’s death and that, therefore, the policy should be
    construed to provide coverage in this instance. In addition, Ratliff argues that the
    inferred intent rule did not apply here, citing the following passage from Stone,
    
    supra:
     “[I]f an actor suffered from a mental defect that rendered him unable to
    understand the nature and quality of his acts, or unable to tell right from wrong, or
    unable to control his conduct, then the act was not considered intentional for the
    purposes of an intentional act exclusion in an insurance policy.” Stone, 
    34 S.W.3d at 813
    .
    -16-
    On the other hand, KFB cites to Cincinnati Insurance Company v.
    Motorists Mutual Insurance Company, 
    306 S.W.3d 69
    , 76 (Ky. 2010), for the
    holding that an event must be accidental before it may be covered by a policy of
    insurance:
    For an event to be truly fortuitous, it must, of
    course, be accidental because the policy only covers
    occurrences that are accidents. Of course, one cannot
    intend to commit an accident because an accident is “an
    event that takes place without one’s foresight or
    expectation . . . .” Or, as our late colleague William E.
    McAnulty, Jr., wrote as a judge of the Kentucky Court of
    Appeals, an accident in the insurance law context is
    “something that does not result from a plan, design, or
    . . . intent on the part of the insured.” So focusing solely
    upon whether Elite intended to build a faulty house is
    insufficient. Rather, a court must also focus upon
    whether the building of the Mintmans’ house was a
    “‘chance event’ beyond the control of the insured
    [Elite].” Or, in other words, a court must bear in mind
    that a fortuitous event is one that is “beyond the power of
    any human being to bring . . . to pass, [or is] . . . within
    the control of third persons . . . .” It is abundantly clear,
    therefore, that the issue of control is encompassed in the
    fortuity doctrine.
    Id. at 76 (citations in footnotes omitted). KFB also cites to Stone, 
    supra:
    The resulting bodily harm, or in this case death, cannot
    be conceived in any other way other than that which was
    the result of a plan, design, or intent. There is no doubt
    that pointing and firing a loaded rifle at Jeremy was an
    act “certain to cause a particular kind of harm . . . .”
    Stone, 
    34 S.W.3d at 812-13
     (citation omitted).
    -17-
    First, we agree with KFB that there was only one potential
    occurrence, not three as Ratliff asserts.
    [M]erely because there were multiple negligent acts that
    combined to cause a single injury or multiple causes of
    action may be asserted does not mean there were multiple
    occurrences as that term is unambiguously defined in the
    Kentucky Farm Bureau policy. There are frequently
    multiple acts of negligence that cause a single injury. For
    instance, a negligent driver in a car accident may have
    been inattentive because he was intoxicated and
    distracted by his texting and speeding. As a result of the
    driver’s negligence, a collision occurs injuring another
    person. Under those circumstances, although there were
    multiple acts of negligence, it cannot be reasonably
    argued there was more than one accident caused by the
    driver’s negligence.
    Under the unambiguous language of the policy, the
    meaning of “occurrence” in the Kentucky Farm Bureau
    policy is “accident.” There was only one accident,
    Ja’Corey’s choking on a push-pin.
    Davis v. Kentucky Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company, 
    495 S.W.3d 159
    ,
    166-67 (Ky. App. 2016). The only potential occurrence was Amy’s death as a
    result of Timothy’s shooting; Cody’s giving the gun to Timothy and his failure to
    warn Amy do not constitute potential occurrences under the homeowner’s policy.
    Second, we agree with KFB that the homeowner’s policy does not
    include coverage for Ratliff’s claims against Shelby or Cody because her claims do
    not arise from an occurrence. The event causing Amy’s death – the shooting by
    Timothy – was in no way accidental. Ratliff’s citation to Brown Foundation is
    -18-
    misplaced pursuant to the Supreme Court of Kentucky’s holding in Cincinnati
    Insurance, supra, which addresses the same definition of “occurrence” as in the
    present case. The Court explained:
    Likewise, we do not believe our nearly two-decade
    old decision in James Graham Brown Foundation, Inc. v.
    St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. compels us to affirm the
    Court of Appeals. Again, that case is markedly factually
    distinguishable from the case at hand.
    James Graham Brown Foundation, Inc. involved a
    question of whether a CGL policy purchased for a wood
    treatment facility provided coverage for a federally
    mandated environmental cleanup. We held that the trial
    court erred by finding on summary judgment that there
    was no “occurrence” under the CGL policy. In the
    course of explaining our decision, we made some
    expansive statements about CGL policies. Specifically,
    we opined that the term “occurrence” is to be “broadly
    and liberally construed” and that a CGL policy’s very
    nature “suggests” an “expectation of maximum
    coverage.” Furthermore, we held that “if injury was not
    actually and subjectively intended or expected by the
    insured, coverage is provided even though the action
    giving rise to the injury itself was intentional and the
    injury foreseeable.”
    Perhaps some of our language in James Graham
    Brown Foundation, Inc. could lead to the conclusion
    reached by the Court of Appeals. But a close
    examination of the different definition of occurrence in
    that case and this one reveals that our decision in James
    Graham Brown Foundation, Inc. does not compel
    affirming the Court of Appeals in this case.
    The CGL policies in James Graham Brown
    Foundation, Inc. defined occurrence as “[a]n accident,
    including continuous or repeated exposure to conditions,
    -19-
    which result in bodily injury or property damage, neither
    expected nor intended from the standpoint of the
    insured.” The language referencing the expectations and
    intentions of the insured led us to adopt a broad,
    subjective standard of policy construction. The policy at
    hand, however, in accordance with modern CGL policies,
    completely omits from the definition of occurrence any
    language referencing the expectations or intent of the
    insured.
    The policy at issue in [Bituminous Cas. Corp. v.
    Kenway Contracting, Inc., 
    240 S.W.3d 633
     (Ky. 2007),]
    contained the same definition of occurrence as does the
    policy in the case at hand. In Bituminous Cas. Corp.,
    therefore, we likely should not have quoted and relied
    upon much of the sweeping language of James Graham
    Brown Foundation, Inc. without acknowledging that the
    policy to be interpreted in Bituminous Cas. Corp.
    contained a definition of occurrence materially different
    from that found in James Graham Brown Foundation,
    Inc. Upon reflection, we now recognize the crucial,
    materially different definition of occurrence in this case
    renders James Graham Brown Foundation, Inc. of, at
    most, limited value in determining whether there is an
    “occurrence” in the case at hand.
    Cincinnati Ins. Co., 306 S.W.3d at 77-78 (footnotes omitted). We find no merit in
    Ratliff’s arguments regarding Timothy’s lack of intent or alleged diminished
    mental capacity to overcome the decision that the shooting was not accidental and,
    thus, not an occurrence under the policy.
    Accordingly, because there was no occurrence under the policy, there
    can be no coverage for Ratliff’s claims against Shelby or Cody.
    -20-
    Finally, Ratliff contends that the intentional act exclusion did not
    apply to defeat coverage. Under Section II – Exclusions, 1(a), the policy provides
    that personal liability coverage under Coverage E2 does not apply to bodily injury
    “[w]hich is expected or intended by one or more ‘insureds[.]’” KFB contends that
    this exclusion does apply to negate coverage for both Shelby and Cody. In
    Goldsmith v. Physicians Insurance Company of Ohio, 
    890 S.W.2d 644
    , 646-47
    (Ky. App. 1994), this Court considered the application of the inferred intent rule:
    We now turn to the issue of the applicability of the
    inferred-intent rule when the insured asserts an incapacity
    to form an intent to harm as is argued by the appellant
    based upon the expert evidence of Dr. Lehne. Keeping in
    mind that the parties herein do not dispute that Wheeler’s
    conduct was intentional, but only the existence of his
    specific intent to harm, we now return to the Third
    Circuit’s opinion in [Wiley v. State Farm Fire & Cas.
    Co., 
    995 F.2d 457
     (3rd Cir. 1993)]. Commencing at p.
    465 Judge Rosenn reviews the three basic lines of
    treatment of the issue and concluded at p. 467:
    The first approach offers the better rule
    because in exceptional cases such as sexual
    child abuse, where the insured’s conduct is
    both intentional and of such a nature and
    character that harm inheres in it, that
    conduct affords a sufficiently clear
    demonstration of intent to harm subsuming
    any need for a separate inquiry into capacity.
    Once it is determined, strictly by examining
    the nature and character of the act in
    2
    As pertains to this case, Coverage E – Personal Liability provides that if a claim is made
    against an insured for damages due to bodily injury caused by an occurrence to which coverage
    applies, the policy will pay damages and provide a defense.
    -21-
    question, that it is appropriate to apply the
    inferred intent rule, then the actor’s actual
    subjective intent to harm or capacity to form
    that intent becomes irrelevant. At that point,
    it does not matter whether a subjective intent
    existed or why it did or did not exist. Once
    subjective intent is deemed irrelevant, an
    actor who is unable to form the intent to
    harm is indistinguishable from one who
    could have formed the intent but claims he
    or she did not.
    We totally agree with the foregoing view and hereby
    extend the views of [Thompson v. West American Ins.
    Co., 
    839 S.W.2d 579
     (Ky. App. 1992)], to reflect the
    same.
    Goldsmith, 
    890 S.W.2d at 646-47
     (citations omitted). Again, we agree with KFB
    that the inferred intent rule applies in this case to defeat coverage. As KFB states
    in its brief, “it would be unsound to hold that Timothy Lee Shelby did not intend to
    harm Amy Ratliff when he retrieved the gun and traveled to two separate homes
    and shot and killed three people before shooting and killing himself.”3
    And, once again, we agree with KFB that the policy’s exclusion of
    coverage for bodily injury intended or expected by one or more of the insureds also
    applies to Ratliff’s claims against Cody. See K.M.R. v. Foremost Ins. Group, 
    171 S.W.3d 751
    , 754 (Ky. App. 2005) (“[T]the intentional acts exclusion in the
    Foremost policy addresses the insureds more precisely and more directly,
    3
    To be precise, the record reflects that Timothy only traveled to Amy’s residence as he shot and
    killed Jennifer at his own residence.
    -22-
    excluding coverage for damages that are ‘intended by any of you to cause any
    harm or that any of you could reasonably expect to cause harm.’ (Emphasis
    added.) It denies protection to an innocent actor who is tainted by association with
    an intentional wrongdoer.”).
    Based upon the foregoing, we hold that the circuit court did not
    commit any error in holding that coverage did not apply under the policy for either
    Shelby or Cody or in granting summary judgment to KFB.
    II. Negligence Claim Against Cody (Appeal No. 2021-CA-1411-MR)
    We shall next consider Ratliff’s appeal from the October 18, 2021,
    order granting Cody’s motion for summary judgment, which was based on the
    circuit court’s finding that there was no genuine issue of material fact as to
    foreseeability. Ratliff asserted below that Cody was negligent in giving a gun to
    Timothy when he was intoxicated and in failing to warn Amy. Our standard of
    review of a summary judgment is set forth above. And in order to establish a
    negligence claim, a plaintiff must prove: “(1) a duty on the part of the defendant;
    (2) a breach of that duty; and (3) consequent injury.” Mullins v. Commonwealth
    Life Ins. Co., 
    839 S.W.2d 245
    , 247 (Ky. 1992). “The absence of proof on any one
    of the required elements is fatal to a negligence claim.” Keaton v. G.C. Williams
    Funeral Home, Inc., 
    436 S.W.3d 538
    , 542 (Ky. App. 2013).
    -23-
    In her brief, Ratliff contends that Cody’s admissions in police
    recordings or in his deposition entitled her to summary judgment and necessitated
    the denial of Cody’s motion. These admissions were that Cody retrieved the gun
    from a locked box and gave the gun to a felon he knew to be unstable, intoxicated,
    un-medicated, and angry at Amy. She argues that a person of ordinary prudence
    would not actively furnish a gun to such an individual. Ratliff noted Cody’s
    argument was that he did not owe a duty to Amy.
    Cody, on the other hand, relies upon this Court’s opinion in James v.
    Wilson, 
    supra,
     which addressed the issue of duty in the context of a school
    shooting. In James, the appellants argued that a universal duty applied to everyone
    and that, pursuant to this universal duty, the appellees should be held accountable
    for their failure to report Michael Carneal’s conduct. 95 S.W.3d. at 889. The
    Court rejected this argument and held that, absent a special relationship and
    foreseeability of the harm, “[i]t is well settled in Kentucky jurisprudence that there
    is no legal duty to report the commission of a crime by another, let alone the
    possibility of a crime being committed by another. Both common law and, as
    indicated above, statutory law, have consistently upheld this fundamental
    principle.” 
    Id. at 889
    . These special relationships include common carriers,
    innkeepers, or a person who opens his land to the public. 
    Id. at 890
    .
    -24-
    In the present case, there was no special relationship between Cody
    and Amy that would trigger any duty on Cody’s part to protect or warn her. Nor
    was there a duty for Cody to control his father. In addition, we agree with the
    circuit court that there are no disputed facts that Timothy’s acts of shooting and
    killing Amy in her residence were not foreseeable to Cody, despite Ratliff’s
    assertions to the contrary.
    Nearly all human acts, of course, carry some
    recognizable but remote possibility of harm to another
    . . . . Those against which the actor is required to take
    precautions are those which society, in general, considers
    sufficiently great to demand them. No man can be
    expected to guard against harm from events which are
    not reasonably to be anticipated at all, or are so unlikely
    to occur that the risk, although recognizable, would
    commonly be disregarded.
    
    Id.
     at 892 (citing North Hardin Developers, Inc., v. Corkran by Corkran, 
    839 S.W.2d 258
    , 261-62 (Ky. 1992)). We also note Cody’s mention in his brief that
    Ratliff had abandoned the foreseeability argument in her response to KFB’s
    supplemental memorandum in support of its motion for summary judgment below
    when she stated that Cody could not have foreseen the events that took place that
    day.
    Because Cody did not owe any duty to Amy and because the risk of
    harm to her was not foreseeable, Ratliff cannot establish her claim of negligence.
    Therefore, the circuit court properly granted summary judgment in Cody’s favor.
    -25-
    Finally, we agree with Cody that any arguments Ratliff makes that her
    motion for summary judgment should have been granted are not well taken. The
    circuit court did not rule on Ratliff’s motion, limiting the order to granting Cody’s
    motion for summary judgment.
    For the foregoing reasons, the orders of the Letcher Circuit Court are
    affirmed.
    ALL CONCUR.
    BRIEFS FOR APPELLANTS:                     BRIEF FOR APPELLEE
    KENTUCKY FARM BUREAU
    James P. Bowling                           MUTUAL INSURANCE CO. (2021-
    Hindman, Kentucky                          CA-1410-MR):
    Marcia L. Wireman
    Jackson, Kentucky
    Michael D. Risley
    Louisville, Kentucky
    BRIEF FOR APPELLEE CODY
    SHELBY (2021-CA-1411-MR):
    Deborah R. Lewis
    Hazard, Kentucky
    -26-