Scheafer v. Safeco Insurance Co. Of , 374 Mont. 278 ( 2014 )


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  •                                                                                             March 18 2014
    DA 11-0393
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    
    2014 MT 73
    VALERIE SCHEAFER, individually
    and on behalf of all others similarly
    situated,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    v.
    SAFECO INSURANCE COMPANY
    OF ILLINOIS, and any and all
    parent companies, subsidiaries, and
    affiliates, and John Doe Defendants 1-50,
    Defendant and Appellee.
    APPEAL FROM:           District Court of the Eighteenth Judicial District,
    In and For the County of Gallatin, Cause No. DV 09-1110C
    Honorable John C. Brown, Presiding Judge
    COUNSEL OF RECORD:
    For Appellant:
    Hillary P. Carls, Mark J. Luebeck; Angel, Coil & Bartlett;
    Bozeman, Montana
    For Appellee:
    Carey E. Matovich, Brooke B. Murphy; Matovich, Keller & Murphy,
    P.C.; Billings, Montana
    Submitted on Briefs: January 29, 2014
    Decided: March 18, 2014
    Filed:
    __________________________________________
    Clerk
    Justice Patricia Cotter delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    ¶1     This is the second appeal in this case. The appeals arise out of a November 7,
    2007 automobile accident and ensuing insurance coverage disputes.
    ¶2     At the time of the accident, Valerie Scheafer was driving a business vehicle owned
    by Mattress King, Inc. and insured by Mountain West Farm Bureau. Scheafer alleges
    that as a result of the accident, she incurred medical expenses and other losses. Scheafer,
    whose personal vehicles were insured by Safeco at the time, filed a claim with Safeco for
    medical payment benefits (Med Pay).          Safeco paid Scheafer Med Pay benefits and
    Mountain West paid to her an undisclosed amount of underinsured motorist (UIM)
    benefits.1 In November 2009, Scheafer, believing Safeco wrongfully refused to pay
    additional claimed benefits, brought a class action suit against her insurer in the
    Eighteenth Judicial District Court. Safeco moved to dismiss the complaint, and in June
    2011 the District Court granted the motion. Scheafer appealed to this Court.
    ¶3     In March 2012, we remanded the matter to the District Court with specific
    instructions pertaining to supplementation of the record and additional analysis by the
    District Court. The District Court issued its order following remand in August 2013,
    ruling in favor of Safeco. Scheafer appeals this order. We affirm.
    1
    There is virtually no information in the record before us about the accident. We are not even
    told whether this was a one-vehicle or two-vehicle accident. We presume two vehicles were
    involved and that the second vehicle was liable for and paid damages arising from the accident
    because Scheafer has made a claim for UIM benefits and Safeco’s brief in the first appeal states
    it “has not asserted a right to recover any amount from either the tortfeasor or the primary UIM
    insurer.” Furthermore, Scheafer does not disclose the amount of damages she claims to have
    sustained, or the amount she has recovered from the tortfeasor’s policy or the Mountain West
    UIM policy.
    2
    ISSUE
    ¶4    A restatement of the issue on appeal is whether the “other insurance” clauses in
    Scheafer’s automobile liability policy are valid, and whether they violate the “made
    whole” doctrine as de facto subrogation.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    First Appeal:
    ¶5    Scheafer was injured in an automobile accident on November 7, 2007. At the time
    of the accident, Scheafer, whose three personal vehicles were insured by Safeco, was
    driving a vehicle insured by Mountain West Farm Bureau. In August 2008, Scheafer
    submitted a notice of the accident to Safeco in which she specifically requested Med Pay
    benefits. She claimed that her then-current medical expenses exceeded $22,600. While
    Scheafer’s Safeco policy provided both Med Pay and UIM coverage and Scheafer paid
    separate premiums for each, Scheafer’s notice letter made no request for UIM benefits
    nor did it state any monetary damages related to UIM.
    ¶6    Scheafer later claimed that Safeco refused to pay Med Pay or UIM benefits.
    Safeco countered that it had paid her $1,000 which was the limit of her Med Pay
    coverage.   Safeco acknowledged that after learning she was not driving one of her
    Safeco-insured vehicles, it advised her that it would not pay any UIM claim until the
    limits of Mountain West’s UIM coverage were exhausted. Safeco explained to Scheafer
    that her policy contained “other insurance” clauses which provided that Safeco’s Med
    3
    Pay and UIM coverage were “excess”2 to any other similar coverage available under
    other applicable insurance policies—in this case, that of Mountain West.
    ¶7     On November 23, 2009, Scheafer filed suit against Safeco on her own behalf and
    on behalf of other similarly situated Safeco insureds. In her class action complaint,
    Scheafer claimed she had “incurred reasonable and necessary medical expenses and other
    damages and losses, which were causally related to the accident.” The complaint did not
    reference the amount of medical expenses Scheafer had incurred nor did it identify the
    type or amount of “other damages and losses” for which she was seeking benefits.
    Additionally, the complaint did not indicate whether Mountain West, or any other
    insurer, had paid benefits to Scheafer and, if so, the amount and nature of such benefits.
    ¶8     In Scheafer’s complaint, she alleged that by requiring other Med Pay and UIM
    coverage to be exhausted before triggering Safeco’s duty to pay benefits, Safeco engaged
    in unlawful subrogation that effectively reduced the amount of coverage available to her
    and all Safeco insureds under their applicable policies. In her complaint, she asserted that
    Safeco:    (1) breached its contract; (2) violated the Unfair Trade Practices Act,
    §§ 33-18-101–1006, MCA; (3) committed constructive fraud; and (4) breached the
    implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. Among other things, she sought the
    certification of her putative class and a declaration that the “other insurance” clauses in
    2
    An excess clause is “[a]n insurance-policy provision—usu. contained in the ‘other insurance’
    section of the policy—that limits the insurer’s liability to the amount exceeding other available
    coverage. This clause essentially requires other insurers to pay first.” Black’s Law Dictionary
    584 (Bryan A. Garner ed., 7th ed., West 1999). Excess clauses are designed to prevent an
    insured from receiving a double recovery or windfall. Nat’l. Cas. Co. v. American Bankers Ins.
    Co., 
    2001 MT 28
    , ¶ 16, 
    304 Mont. 163
    , 
    19 P.3d 223
    .
    4
    Safeco’s policies violated public policy and were void and/or unconstitutional because
    they constituted subrogation.    She also sought punitive damages.        Scheafer further
    asserted that the “other insurance” clauses violated her right to be made whole.
    ¶9     In December 2009, Safeco moved to have Scheafer’s action dismissed under
    M. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) (Rule 12(b)(6)) for failure to state a claim upon which relief may
    be granted. Safeco argued that the “other insurance” clauses were valid, enforceable, and
    did not constitute subrogation, and that Scheafer misinterpreted well-established Montana
    law. It asserted that Scheafer would not be entitled to the relief she seeks under any set
    of facts she could prove.
    ¶10    In its June 2011 order, the District Court noted that the “other insurance” clauses
    in Safeco’s policy constituted “excess” clauses and are generally considered valid and
    enforceable.   It acknowledged, however, that we have not previously discussed the
    enforceability of an excess clause in the context of both Med Pay and UIM coverage.
    After citing numerous cases in which we ruled excess insurance clauses were
    enforceable, the District Court concluded that the clauses in this case were valid and
    enforceable.
    ¶11    The court next addressed whether the “other insurance” clauses constituted
    subrogation. It determined that they did not amount to subrogation because the “excess”
    clause did not reduce the amount of coverage available to Safeco’s insureds; rather, the
    clause merely established a priority system by requiring that any other applicable policy
    be exhausted before Safeco’s coverage was triggered. Thus, if Scheafer’s damages
    5
    exceed the amount of coverage available under the primary policy issued by Mountain
    West and she has not been made whole, then Safeco’s benefits, up to the policy limits,
    are available to her. Having determined that the excess coverage clauses in Safeco’s
    policy were valid, enforceable, did not amount to subrogation, and did not violate
    Scheafer’s right to be made whole, the District Court granted Safeco’s Rule 12(b)(6)
    motion. Scheafer appealed.
    ¶12    We determined on appeal that the District Court record was insufficient to support
    its ruling in that the record did not contain either insurance policy at issue in the case.
    Furthermore, we observed there was nothing in the record to resolve the dispute as to
    whether Safeco had paid her Med Pay claim. Noting that we have historically treated
    Med Pay coverage differently from UIM coverage,3 we remanded the matter to the
    District Court for supplementation of the record and additional analysis concerning the
    distinction between Med Pay and UIM coverages in the context of “other insurance”
    clauses. We also instructed the District Court to determine the priority of the “other
    insurance” clauses contained in the two policies.
    Second Appeal:
    ¶13    Following additional proceedings, the District Court issued its supplemental order
    on August 1, 2013, and the matter has returned to us on appeal, once again by Scheafer.
    The record has been supplemented with a copy of each insurance policy and the parties
    have stipulated that on August 27, 2008, Safeco paid Scheafer the total $1,000 Med Pay
    3
    Allstate Ins. Co. v. Reitler, 
    192 Mont. 351
    , 355-56, 
    628 P.2d 667
    , 670 (1981); Farmers Ins.
    Exch. v. Christenson, 
    211 Mont. 250
    , 254-55, 
    683 P.2d 1319
    , 1322 (1984).
    6
    benefits to which she was entitled under her policies. Additionally, the District Court
    conducted the requested analysis pertaining to Med Pay and UIM coverage. The court
    again concluded the “other insurance” clauses contained in Safeco’s policy were valid,
    enforceable, and did not constitute unlawful subrogation. The court further held that
    under the facts of the case, Mountain West’s coverage was primary and Safeco’s
    coverage was excess. Scheafer appeals.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶14   We review a district court’s ruling on a motion to dismiss under the standards set
    forth in Rule 12(b)(6). A complaint should not be dismissed for failure to state a claim
    unless it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts which would
    entitle him to relief. When considering a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), all
    well-pled allegations and facts in the complaint are admitted and taken as true, and the
    complaint is construed in a light most favorable to the plaintiff. A district court’s
    determination that a complaint has failed to state a claim for which relief can be granted
    is a conclusion of law which we review for correctness. Sinclair v. Burlington Northern
    & Santa Fe Ry., 
    2008 MT 424
    , ¶ 25, 
    347 Mont. 395
    , 
    200 P.3d 46
    (citation omitted).
    DISCUSSION
    ¶15   The issue on appeal is whether the “other insurance” clauses in Scheafer’s
    automobile liability policy are valid, and whether they violate the “made whole”
    doctrine as de facto subrogation.
    ¶16   Scheafer’s claim on appeal is that the “other insurance” clauses contained in
    Safeco’s policy violate Montana’s subrogation law and are therefore void and
    7
    unenforceable. Scheafer asserts her right to be made whole is critical to this analysis.
    She cites numerous cases that stand for an injured insured’s right to be made whole
    before an insurer may seek subrogation. Skauge v. Mountain States Tel. & Tel. Co., 
    172 Mont. 521
    , 528, 
    565 P.2d 628
    , 632 (1977); Zacher v. American Ins. Co., 
    243 Mont. 226
    ,
    
    794 P.2d 335
    (1990); Youngblood v. American States Ins. Co., 
    262 Mont. 391
    , 
    866 P.2d 203
    (1993).
    ¶17    Subrogation is “[t]he principle under which an insurer that has paid a loss under an
    insurance policy is entitled to all the rights and remedies belonging to the insured against
    a third party with respect to any loss covered by the policy.” Black’s Law Dictionary at
    1440. As explained in 
    Skauge, 172 Mont. at 524
    , 565 P.2d at 630, “Subrogation is a
    device of equity which is designed to compel the ultimate payment of a debt by the one
    who in justice, equity and good conscience should pay it.” Additionally, we have held
    that it is “the public policy in Montana that an insured must be totally reimbursed for all
    losses as well as costs, including attorney fees, involved in recovering those losses before
    the insurer can exercise any right of subrogation, regardless of any contract language
    providing to the contrary.” Swanson v. Hartford Inc. Co., 
    2002 MT 81
    , ¶ 28, 
    309 Mont. 269
    , 
    46 P.3d 584
    .
    ¶18    Scheafer’s Safeco policy contained three “other insurance” clauses but the two
    clauses relevant to this case are contained in Scheafer’s Med Pay and UIM coverage.
    The clause pertaining to Med Pay states:
    If there is other applicable auto medical payments insurance
    available any insurance we provide shall be excess over any other
    8
    applicable auto medical payments insurance. If more than one policy
    applies on an excess basis, we will bear our proportionate share with other
    collectible auto medical payments insurance.
    Additionally, the Safeco policy “includes medical payments coverage with limits of
    $1,000 per person.”
    ¶19    The clause pertaining to UIM provides:
    If there is other applicable insurance similar to the insurance
    provided under this Part of this policy, we will pay only our share of the
    loss. Our share is the proportion that our limit of liability bears to the total
    of all applicable limits. However, any insurance we provide with respect to
    a vehicle:
    1. You do not own, including any vehicle while used as temporary
    substitute for your covered auto; or
    2. Owned by you or any family member which is not insured for this
    coverage under this policy;
    Shall be excess over any other collectible insurance similar to the insurance
    provided under this Part of the policy. [Emphasis in original.]
    The policy carried a $25,000 per person limit on underinsured bodily injury coverage
    regardless of the number of vehicles on the policy. Notably, this is not a “stacking” case
    in that Safeco’s policy expressly provides that for each Med Pay and UIM coverage,
    Safeco charges “one premium . . . regardless of the number of vehicles” listed on an
    insured’s policy.
    ¶20    The Mountain West policy also included an “other insurance” provision which
    provides:
    a.     For any covered “auto” you own, this Coverage Form provides
    primary insurance. For any covered “auto” you don’t own, the
    insurance provided by this Coverage Form is excess over any other
    collectible insurance. . . .
    9
    The Mountain West policy contained a Med Pay limit of $5,000/person and a UIM limit
    of $50,000/person/$100,000/accident.4 Because at the time of the accident Scheafer was
    driving a vehicle owned by Mattress King, Inc. and insured by Mountain West, Safeco
    argued that the Mountain West policy was primary, and its policy was excess. Moreover,
    Safeco asserted in its post-remand briefing to the District Court that it was its
    “understanding that Mountain West Farm Bureau has acted as primary insurer . . . and
    paid Scheafer’s medical expenses accordingly. . . .” This again highlights a void in the
    record in this case—Scheafer has failed to disclose the amount, nature, and source of
    insurance proceeds she has received in conjunction with this accident, whether from the
    tortfeasor’s insurer or from Mountain West. Without this information, we are unable to
    evaluate whether she has in actuality been made whole, or whether she has been denied
    any benefits to which she was entitled under either policy.
    ¶21    Scheafer asserts that “other insurance” clauses govern the relationship between
    insurers, but do not affect the right of the insured to recover under each concurrent
    policy. She claims that these clauses adversely affected her right to recover under both
    policies, and they therefore constituted unlawful subrogation. She further argues that she
    must be made whole before Safeco can deny coverage based upon its claimed status as an
    “excess” carrier. She maintains that the District Court erroneously determined that the
    clauses did not constitute subrogation and that Mountain West’s policy provided primary
    coverage with her Safeco policy providing excess.
    4
    It appears possible that Mountain West’s Med Pay coverage may have been stacked, thereby
    providing potential Med Pay coverage of $40,000 ($5,000 x 8 insured vehicles).
    10
    ¶22    Arguing Montana’s subrogation law and public policy are at the center of this
    dispute, Scheafer focuses much of her brief on the “made whole” doctrine, asserting the
    requirement in Montana that an injured party must be made whole before an insurer may
    assert its right of subrogation. She claims that Montana’s made whole doctrine will be
    rendered meaningless if we determine that these “other insurance” clauses are not
    subrogation clauses. She submits that “Montana law provides that there are no ‘other
    insurance’ priority of payment rights among concurrent insurance policies, when the
    claim implicates the Montana public policy set forth in [Reitler], and/or an insured’s
    made whole rights.” Scheafer maintains that Safeco’s “other insurance” clauses operate
    to reduce the total amount of benefits available to its insureds and therefore constitute de
    facto subrogation clauses.
    ¶23    Scheafer argues that Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Mont., Inc. v. Mont. State
    Auditor, 
    2009 MT 318
    , 
    352 Mont. 423
    , 
    218 P.3d 475
    , among other cases, supports her
    argument that Safeco’s “other insurance” clauses constitute subrogation. In Blue Cross
    & Blue Shield, BCBS asked the insurance commissioner to approve insurance forms that
    contained exclusion language stating that BCBS “would not pay for health care costs of
    its injured beneficiaries if the beneficiaries received, or were entitled to receive, benefits
    from any automobile or premises liability policy.” Blue Cross & Blue Shield, ¶ 5. After
    initially accepting the exclusion language, the commissioner subsequently disapproved
    the exclusion clauses and the district court affirmed the commissioner’s ruling. After an
    administrative and a district court hearing, we determined the exclusion clauses:
    11
    effectively allow [BCBS] to exercise subrogation before paying anything to
    its insured, contrary to § 33-30-1101, MCA, which allows reimbursement
    “for benefits paid.” The exclusions allow BCBS to avoid any payment of
    benefits to its insured if the insured is “entitled to receive” benefits from
    any other auto or premises liability policy, whether or not the insured
    actually receives any of those benefits, and whether or not the insured has
    been made whole. Only when the insured is made whole as defined in
    Montana law, and then only after BCBS has paid out benefits to its insured,
    could BCBS be entitled to claim subrogation. It is contrary to Montana law
    for BCBS to enjoy the benefits of subrogation in the circumstances allowed
    by the disputed exclusions.
    Blue Cross & Blue Shield, ¶ 19.
    ¶24    Safeco counters that Blue Cross & Blue Shield is readily distinguishable from the
    case before us, in that the language of the BCBS policy allowed the insurer to avoid
    payment altogether in the event the insured received, or was “entitled to receive” benefits
    from any other automobile policy.      By contrast, Safeco would be obligated to pay
    benefits to its insured in the event the benefits available under the primary insurance
    policy were insufficient to cover the damages claimed by the insured. It maintains it has
    a contractual right to invoke the “other insurance” clauses in its policy to determine the
    priority of payment when more than one policy provides coverage for the same loss.
    Citing several cases, it asserts that “[t]his Court has consistently upheld these types of
    clauses in the context of UIM, liability, and property damage/collision coverage,
    acknowledging that these clauses serve the valuable purpose of preventing an insured
    from recovering multiple times for the same loss.” See e.g. Bill Atkin Volkswagen v.
    McClafferty, 
    213 Mont. 99
    , 
    689 P.2d 1237
    (1984); P.C. Rental, Inc. v. Chase Manhattan
    Bank, 
    2000 MT 106
    , 
    299 Mont. 315
    , 
    998 P.2d 1168
    .
    12
    ¶25       Acknowledging that this Court has historically treated Med Pay subrogation
    differently from UIM subrogation,5 Safeco maintains that the distinction drawn in those
    cases is inapplicable here because this is not a subrogation case. Safeco further asserts
    that because Mountain West was the insurer of the involved vehicle, Mountain West was
    responsible for primary payment of damages and losses. Consequently, under the plain
    language of its policy, Safeco was the excess or secondary insurer, and would be
    available to pay benefits only after Mountain West had paid full benefits under the
    component coverages of its policy. Safeco thus insists that this is not a subrogation/made
    whole case. We agree.
    ¶26       In Blue Cross & Blue Shield, as detailed above, BCBS was seeking to avoid
    making payments if the insured was covered by any other insurance policy covering the
    same type of damages or injuries. Had the other insurer failed to pay benefits, BCBS
    could still have denied benefits under its exclusion clause. In the case before us, Safeco
    is not trying to eliminate its obligation to Scheafer, it is merely requiring that the involved
    vehicle’s insurer first pay what it is obligated to pay, and Safeco will pay the excess, if
    any, within its policy limits. Because the language and effect of the BCBS and Safeco
    policies is significantly different, reliance on Blue Cross & Blue Shield by Scheafer is
    misplaced.
    ¶27       Scheafer’s reliance on Reitler and Christenson for the proposition that unlawful
    subrogation is occurring here is similarly misplaced. In Reitler, Allstate made payments
    5
    See Reitler and Christenson (full cites at footnote 3 of this Opinion).
    13
    under its medical payments coverage to its insured Welton following an accident that was
    not her fault. It then sought to subrogate to the extent of those medical payments against
    the liability insurer for the tortfeasor Reitler. We held that because the insured had paid a
    premium for the medical payments coverage and that she would be likely to suffer if the
    medical payments she received must then be repaid out of her third-party recovery, the
    medical payment subrogation clauses at issue were invalid. We further observed that the
    tortfeasor’s carrier could conceivably conclude that because the injured person has
    already been paid medical expenses, it could make a smaller offer than it would
    otherwise be required to make.          
    Reitler, 192 Mont. at 356
    , 628 P.2d at 670.
    Subsequently, in Christenson, we held that our holding in Reitler declaring a subrogation
    clause invalid was limited to the medical payment coverage situation. 
    Christenson, 211 Mont. at 255
    , 683 P.2d at 1322.
    ¶28    We agree with Safeco that Reitler and Christenson have no application here. In
    Reitler, Allstate’s attempted subrogation could have conceivably depleted the available
    liability policy limits carried by the tortfeasor, thus resulting in a reduced recovery by the
    injured party. Here, Safeco has attempted no subrogation, nor has it refused Scheafer’s
    claim for either Med Pay coverage or UIM coverage. Rather, it paid Scheafer’s Med Pay
    claim and assumed a backup position to the UIM benefits available under the Mountain
    West policy. In short, this is not a subrogation case. This being so, we need make no
    distinction between the Med Pay and UIM excess coverages.
    14
    ¶29    Significantly, Scheafer does not argue that her damages and losses exceed the
    benefits that were available under the Mountain West policy, nor does she provide any
    evidence to establish that she has not been “made whole.” In fact, she asserts that she “is
    not alleging her losses exceed the limits” of the UIM coverage in Mountain West’s
    policy. This concession, when combined with the absence of any information about the
    amount of her UIM claim or the amount of benefits paid by Mountain West or any other
    insurer, leaves us to speculate as to the basis of her present claim. At a minimum, the
    concession draws into question her assertion that Safeco is somehow obligated to pay
    additional UIM benefits. While we are unable to make any informed determination of
    whether Scheafer’s damages entitled her to additional benefits, we can say—premised on
    the facts before us—that the “other insurance” clauses in Scheafer’s automobile policy
    are valid, and that, as applied here, do not constitute de facto subrogation.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶30    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the District Court’s ruling granting Safeco’s
    motion to dismiss Scheafer’s claim.
    /S/ PATRICIA COTTER
    We concur:
    /S/ MIKE McGRATH
    /S/ LAURIE McKINNON
    /S/ MICHAEL E WHEAT
    /S/ JIM RICE
    15