Arias v. Phoenix Indemnity Ins. Co. ( 2013 )


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  •        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    Opinion Number: _______________
    Filing Date: December 5, 2013
    Docket No. 31,571
    CARMEN ARIAS,
    Plaintiff/Counter-Defendant/Appellee,
    v.
    PHOENIX INDEMNITY
    INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Defendant/Counter-Plaintiff/Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY
    Ted C. Baca, District Judge
    Carter & Valle Law Firm, P.C.
    Richard J. Valle
    Kathryn L. Eaton
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Appellee
    The Law Offices of Bruce S. McDonald
    Bruce S. McDonald
    Daniel P. Ulibarri
    Laura K. Vega
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Appellant
    OPINION
    KENNEDY, Chief Judge.
    {1}     “The term ‘stacking’ refers to an insured’s attempt to recover damages in aggregate
    under . . . one policy covering more than one vehicle.” State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v.
    Safeco Ins. Co., 
    2013-NMSC-006
    , ¶ 8, 
    298 P.3d 452
     (internal quotation marks and citation
    1
    omitted). Plaintiff attempts to impose intra-policy stacking of uninsured/underinsured
    motorist (UM/UIM) coverage into an insurance policy we previously reformed, owing to the
    imperfect handling of her rejection of UM/UIM coverage. See Arias v. Phoenix Indem. Ins.
    Co., 
    2009-NMCA-100
    , 
    147 N.M. 14
    , 
    216 P.3d 264
    . In Arias, we held that her rejection of
    UM/UIM coverage was legally deficient and required judicial intervention to read the
    coverage into the policy. Id. ¶ 18. On similar grounds, we hold that she is also entitled to
    have her coverage stacked under our Supreme Court’s opinion in Montano v. Allstate Indem.
    Co., 
    2004-NMSC-020
    , 
    135 N.M. 681
    , 
    92 P.3d 1255
    . We affirm the district court and
    remand.
    I.      BACKGROUND
    {2}     Carmen Arias (Plaintiff), having settled for policy limits with the insurance company
    of a tortfeasor whose vehicle struck hers, attempted to pursue UM/UIM benefits under an
    insurance policy that she had purchased from Phoenix Indemnity Insurance Company
    (Defendant). This policy covered her liability up to the statutory minimum and covered two
    vehicles but, at the time of its purchase, she rejected UM/UIM coverage. In a previous
    appeal in this case, we held that, because her rejection of UM/UIM coverage was legally
    invalid, she was entitled to UM/UIM coverage as a matter of law. See Arias,
    
    2009-NMCA-100
    , ¶ 12. The issue of whether the coverage “stacked” because two vehicles
    were covered under the policy had not been addressed by the district court, and we remanded
    with instructions to consider and rule on the stacking issue. Id. ¶ 19.
    {3}     On remand, the district court resolved the stacking issue on summary judgment.
    Plaintiff’s judicially-minted UM/UIM coverage would apply to her damages, and the
    coverage would be stacked, reflecting the two vehicles covered under the policy. In doing
    so, the district court first determined that reasonable expectations of an insured in the terms
    of a policy are irrelevant once it was determined by this Court that Defendant had failed to
    obtain a valid rejection of UM/UIM coverage from Plaintiff. Second, interpreting the arc
    of New Mexico’s common law holdings that read UM/UIM coverage into a policy in
    amounts equal to the full extent of its liability limits, the district court determined that, in the
    absence of any valid rejection of UM/UIM coverage in a multiple-vehicle policy, the full
    coverage due is properly established by multiplying the available liability limits of the policy
    by the number of vehicles insured, rather than the number of premiums paid by an insured.
    The district court stated that UM/UIM coverage had been read into the policy as a result of
    Defendant entirely failing to obtain a valid rejection of coverage, and the reformation of the
    policy should include reading in stacking as well. From this judgment, Defendant now
    appeals. We agree with the district court.
    II.     DISCUSSION
    {4}    The facts of this case are not in issue and discussed fully in our previous opinion.
    The question is solely one involving interpretations of law, which we review de novo.
    Jordan v. Allstate Ins. Co., 
    2010-NMSC-051
    , ¶ 14, 
    149 N.M. 162
    , 
    245 P.3d 1214
    ; City of
    2
    Albuquerque v. BPLW Architects & Eng’rs, Inc., 
    2009-NMCA-081
    , ¶ 7, 
    146 N.M. 717
    , 
    213 P.3d 1146
     (holding that, in such a situation, we apply de novo review and are not required
    to view the appeal in the light most favorable to the party opposing summary judgment).
    {5}      In Romero v. Dairyland Insurance Co., our Supreme Court observed that unless
    rejection is accomplished in a manner consistent with the requirements imposed by the
    statute and regulations, UM/UIM coverage will be read into the policy “regardless of the
    intent of the parties.” 
    1990-NMSC-111
    , ¶ 1, 
    111 N.M. 154
    , 
    803 P.2d 243
    . Our Supreme
    Court further stated that the UM/UIM statute “embodies a public policy of New Mexico to
    make uninsured motorist coverage a part of every automobile liability insurance policy
    issued in this state,” and “[t]he statute was intended to expand insurance coverage and to
    protect individual members of the public against the hazard of culpable uninsured motorists.”
    Id. ¶ 6. Finally, our Supreme Court stated that the statute should be liberally interpreted in
    order to implement its remedial purpose, and the language in the statute that provides for an
    exception to UM/UIM coverage should be construed strictly to protect the insured. Id.;
    Farmers Ins. Co. of Ariz. v. Chen, 
    2010-NMCA-031
    , ¶ 25, 
    148 N.M. 151
    , 
    231 P.3d 607
    .
    {6}      Our courts have a continuing interest in implementing the legislative goal to direct
    New Mexicans to insure for damages caused by uninsured and underinsured motorists. In
    Arias, we followed Romero to implement the strong expansive legislative and public policy
    in New Mexico favoring insurance coverage to protect members of the public against losses
    caused by uninsured and underinsured motorists. Arias, 
    2009-NMCA-100
    , ¶ 7. We
    recognize that the Legislature enacted NMSA 1978, Section 66-5-301(A) and (C) (1983) to
    provide that every insurance policy in the state is to include UM coverage and, if the insured
    does not want the coverage, it should be specifically rejected in writing. Marckstadt v.
    Lockheed Martin Corp., 
    2010-NMSC-001
    , ¶¶ 16-17, 25-26, 
    147 N.M. 678
    , 
    228 P.3d 462
    (expressing the written rejection and attached notification requirements). Under our law, the
    insurer offers the maximum amount of UM/UIM coverage to the insured based on the
    liability limits of the policy and, in no event, less than the statutory minimum. Progressive
    Nw. Ins. Co. v. Weed Warrior Servs., 
    2010-NMSC-050
    , ¶ 12, 
    149 N.M. 157
    , 
    245 P.3d 1209
    ;
    Romero v. Progressive Nw. Ins. Co., 
    2010-NMCA-024
    , ¶ 16, 
    148 N.M. 97
    , 
    230 P.3d 844
    .
    Such coverage may only be foregone by an insured’s express and legally satisfactory
    rejection of it.
    {7}     The history of our case law considering the offer and rejection of UM/UIM coverage
    is extensive. See Weed Warrior, 
    2010-NMSC-050
    , ¶ 4 (listing cases that constitute the
    evolution of jurisprudence in this area). The default position of our courts is that any
    rejection of coverage that is found to be invalid under Section 66-5-301 results in courts
    reforming the insurance policy in question by reading into it UM/UIM coverage as if it was
    fully provided at the level of policy limits to the insured in the first instance. Romero, 2010-
    NMCA-024, ¶ 16; see Jordan, 
    2010-NMSC-051
    , ¶ 2. “Where a valid rejection of UM/UIM
    coverage has not been obtained by the insurer, New Mexico law requires UM/UIM coverage
    to be read into the policy at the liability limits, regardless of the intent of the parties or the
    fact that a premium has not been paid.” Chen, 
    2010-NMCA-031
    , ¶ 27 (noting that the de-
    3
    emphasis on premium payment becomes significant when dealing with an invalid rejection
    of both coverage and stacking).
    {8}    We have already reformed Plaintiff’s insurance contract to include UM/UIM
    coverage to the liability limits of her policy because Section 66-5-301 and 13.12.3.9 NMAC
    (5/14/2004) provide that automobile liability policies shall contain UM/UIM coverage in the
    absence of an appropriate rejection. Arias, 
    2009-NMCA-100
    , ¶ 15. Now that the district
    court on remand has separately considered whether Plaintiff’s two insured vehicles’
    coverage should be stacked, we review this remaining question.
    A.     Insufficient Rejections of Coverage Result in Reading in UM/UIM Coverage to
    Policy Limits
    {9}     There is no question that, in the absence of a valid rejection of UM/UIM coverage,
    such coverage will be read into the insured’s coverage as if there was no rejection at all.
    That is the law of the case here. Id. ¶ 12. The invalid rejection of partial UM/UIM stacking,
    or the ambiguous subjecting of a policy to a limitation on stacking, was similarly held in
    Montano to be no rejection at all, resulting in stacking to the policy limits for each covered
    vehicle being read into the policy. The question here is simply whether a complete reading
    of UM/UIM coverage where none had been before also requires the reading in of stacking
    of coverage if multiple vehicles are insured.
    {10} Plaintiff insured two vehicles under her policy. By our earlier decision in Arias, she
    is entitled to UM/UIM coverage to the limits of her liability under the policy irrespective of
    her intention to reject coverage or whether separate premiums were paid. Chen, 2010-
    NMCA-031, ¶ 27. To begin answering the question of whether stacking applies here, we
    will first assess the circumstances under which common law imposition of stacking upon
    insurance policies has occurred.
    B.     Stacking in New Mexico
    {11} Montano holds that insurers must obtain written rejections of stacking to avoid
    liability. 
    2004-NMSC-020
    , ¶ 1. UM/UIM coverage as required by statute is a mandatory
    component of an insurance policy. In Montano, the policy provided for some, but not all,
    covered vehicles’ coverage to be stacked. As a result, our Supreme Court’s pronouncements
    in Montano treated the stacking issue as a “judicially-created doctrine, which thus far has
    not met the disapproval of the Legislature[,]” id. ¶ 17, but also something that had been
    predicated on the insured’s payment of “a separate premium for the uninsured motorist
    coverage on each car insured under the policy[,]” id. ¶ 12 (internal quotation marks and
    citation omitted). Given that the Montano policy had stacked coverage subject to a separate
    premium, this language does not apply well to our case, where all UM/UIM coverage was
    judicially created. In the present case, there was a single policy, but no premium paid at all
    for UM/UIM coverage owing to our reading it into the policy. Following Montano, our
    Supreme Court was providing UM/UIM coverage up to liability limits, they were silent on
    4
    whether this judicially-created coverage was to be stacked. Jordan, 
    2010-NMSC-051
    . We
    first conclude that the rationale expressed in Chen that payment of any premium is irrelevant
    to our reading coverage into a policy in general should be extended to the question of
    stacking where the policy itself was silent, but coverage is read in the contract by the courts.
    {12} Despite Montano’s discussion of stacking as “extra coverage for which the parties
    have contracted,” it is clear that, absent the execution of a sufficient rejection of each and
    every possible combination of stacking, stacking is something “to which the insured is
    entitled by default[.]” 
    2004-NMSC-020
    , ¶ 18 (internal quotation marks and citation
    omitted). Defendant’s attempts to rely on Montano to limit stacking only to where “those
    who want stacked coverage pay for it, and those who don’t want it don’t pay for it” is
    inapposite. 
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Separate premiums are
    extraneous to Montano’s strong dicta indicating a preference for policies to treat vehicles
    individually and, hence, requiring a policyholder’s specific rejection of stacked coverage for
    each and every vehicle owned before stacking is validly rejected. Id. ¶ 19. Montano dealt
    with a policy that specifically sought to limit stacking by its terms, but wound up having
    those limitations struck down and full per-vehicle stacking imposed on the policy when an
    ambiguity resulted in an invalid rejection of stacking. In the absence of any such terms or
    premiums to be paid for stacking in this case, Montano demonstrates that, when invalid
    rejection of stacking exists, our courts favor and extend stacking to all vehicles covered by
    the policy. See id. ¶ 1.
    {13} This returns us to the expansive policy perspective of the Legislature as to this issue
    and our common law that no liability policy may issue, except that it provides “any vehicle
    registered or . . . garaged in New Mexico” is to be covered by UM coverage. Id. ¶ 19; § 66-
    5-301(A). Stacking must then be a default entitlement with regard to all individual vehicles
    covered under a policy where no sufficient rejection of stacking exists. Although Montano
    indicates the possible propriety of a stacking exclusion when under a policy only a single
    premium is paid and a specific rejection is properly executed, that is not the case here.
    Montano clearly requires an unambiguous rejection to defeat stacking as well and, in this
    case, we have neither a rejection of coverage or stacking as a matter of law. The lack of a
    valid rejection of UM/UIM coverage in this case led us to read coverage into the insurance
    contract. It appears we must now do the same with stacking of coverage as it would apply
    to each covered vehicle. The judicial imposition of stacking, like imposing coverage when
    an insured did not validly reject it, must inure exclusively to the benefit of the insured as a
    default position. Montano, 
    2004-NMSC-020
    , ¶ 19 (stating that the statute required each
    vehicle covered under a policy be covered by one minimum coverage, together with the
    requirement of written rejection of UM/UIM coverage combine to defeat an insurance
    company’s attempt to limit liability by avoiding stacking). Unless a policy “notif[ies] the
    insured that only one premium has been charged for one insurance coverage[,]” full stacking
    is read into the policy. Id. ¶ 27 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Where
    courts confer UM/UIM coverage where a policy is silent on the matter, it follows that each
    vehicle covered also acquires coverage, and those coverages are to be stacked.
    5
    {14} Our opinion in Arias left the stacking issue open as to the coverage we imposed on
    the insurance contract between the parties. We acknowledge that, by creating the coverage
    without reference to stacking, we created a legal ambiguity as to the extent of that coverage
    that also has implications for the question of whether to order stacking. “A court may find
    that an ambiguity exists if separate sections of the policy conflict, if the language may have
    more than one meaning, if the structure of the contract is not logical, or if a relevant matter
    of coverage is not explicitly addressed in the policy.” Bird v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins.
    Co., 
    2007-NMCA-088
    , ¶ 11, 
    142 N.M. 346
    , 
    165 P.3d 343
    . Bird held that, in the absence of
    such terms, coverage is to be read into the policy by our courts. We hold that, as much as
    coverage itself to the maximum limit of liability must be read into her policy, stacking of
    coverage for each of the two vehicles thus insured must now follow suit absent valid
    rejection, and we affirm the district court.
    C.     Failing to Adequately Reject Stacking Results in the Imposition of Stacking
    {15} Thus, we conclude that as we inject UM/UIM coverage into a policy as a matter of
    law for failure of any rejection of coverage, the law also requires the imposition of a per-
    vehicle stacking of coverage into a single policy. In this case, ambiguities arose in Arias’s
    policy’s language, owing first to the defective rejection of coverage requiring that coverage
    be read into the policy. Second, the requirement noted above that coverage applies to any
    vehicle demands stacking of coverage in the absence of indications to the contrary. Having
    extended to her the availability of UM/UIM coverage as a matter of law, we also include per-
    vehicle stacking. We believe that, in the absence of a rejection of coverage altogether, the
    coverage that must be extended is the full measure accorded her by the default positions
    afforded by law. This includes UM/UIM coverage generally, specifically to be stacked as
    to each of her insured vehicles.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    {16} We hold that the district court was correct as a matter of law and affirm its grant of
    summary judgment to Plaintiff and remand for resumption of proceedings in accordance with
    our ruling today.
    {17}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    ____________________________________
    RODERICK T. KENNEDY, Chief Judge
    WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________________
    JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge
    ____________________________________
    6
    J. MILES HANISEE, Judge
    7