Toner, C. v. The Travelers Home ( 2016 )


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  • J-A32006-15
    
    2016 PA Super 69
    CHRISTOPHER TONER,                                  IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellant
    v.
    THE TRAVELERS HOME AND MARINE
    INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Appellee                       No. 53 WDA 2015
    Appeal from the Order December 12, 2014
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County
    Civil Division at No(s): GD 12-20308
    BEFORE: SHOGAN, OTT, and STABILE, JJ.
    DISSENTING OPINION BY SHOGAN, J.:                      FILED MARCH 21, 2016
    I respectfully dissent from the Majority’s decision in this case and
    would reverse the order granting summary judgment in favor of Appellee,
    The Travelers Home and Marine Insurance Company (“Travelers”) and
    denying summary judgment to Appellant, Christopher Toner.
    On December 2, 2011, twenty-one-year-old Appellant, a student at
    Penn State, was a front seat passenger in a vehicle operated by
    Jonathan Edwards. Complaint, 10/23/12, at ¶ 16. Edwards lost control of
    the vehicle, whereupon it traveled off the roadway over an embankment,
    rolled over, and struck a tree.      Id. at ¶ 16.    Appellant suffered multiple
    spine, pelvis, and rib fractures and a host of other injuries. Id. at 18.
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    Appellant recovered the liability policy limits for the vehicle driven by
    Edwards and made a claim for stacked1 underinsured motorist coverage
    under his mother’s auto policy with Travelers.2 In August 2006, Appellant’s
    mother, Patricia Toner (“Mother”), had purchased an automobile insurance
    policy from Travelers for a single vehicle, a 2004 Hyundai Santa Fe.
    Complaint, 10/23/12, at Exh. 1; Joint Statement of Stipulated Facts
    (“JSSF”), 11/24/14, at ¶ 8.             The bodily injury liability amounts were
    $100,000.00 per person and $300,000.00 per accident. Complaint at ¶ 5;
    ____________________________________________
    1
    The basic concept of stacking has been described as follows:
    [T]he ability to add the coverages available from different
    vehicles and/or different policies to provide a greater amount of
    coverage available under any one vehicle or policy. Additionally,
    there are two types of stacking, inter-policy and intra-policy. In
    re: Insurance Stacking Litigation, 
    754 A.2d 702
     (Pa. Super.
    2000).
    Intra-policy stacking[, under consideration instantly,] is
    when more than one vehicle is insured under a single policy of
    insurance. For example: three cars insured under a single policy
    providing 15/30 UM/UIM benefits. If stacked, an insured is
    entitled to a total of $45,000 in UM/UIM benefits-three vehicles
    insured at $15,000 each equaling $45,000 in total coverage. If
    unstacked, only $15,000 is available in UM/UIM coverage.
    The statutory rationale for this recovery procedure is found
    at 75 Pa.C.S. § 1733 and 75 Pa.C.S. § 1738 . . . .
    McGovern v. Erie Ins. Group, 
    796 A.2d 343
    , 344–345 (Pa. Super. 2002).
    2
    Appellant’s permanent residence was his mother’s house in Bethel Park,
    Pennsylvania. He is identified as a covered driver on the declarations page
    for the Travelers’ auto insurance policy.
    J-A32006-15
    JSSF at ¶ 9. Mother also purchased underinsured motorist (“UIM”) benefits
    in the amount of $100,000.00 per person and $300,000.00 per accident.
    Complaint at ¶ 7; JSSF at ¶ 9. The policy provided for full tort coverage.
    Complaint at Exh. 1; JSSF at ¶ 9.   In addition, Mother signed a form (an
    uninsured (“UM”)/UIM stacking waiver) rejecting stacking of UIM benefits in
    the August 2006 policy.    Complaint at Exh. 1; JSSF at ¶ 10.     The form
    advised, “Stacking can only be used if you have more than one motor
    vehicle.” Complaint at Exh. 1.
    Thereafter, Mother added two       vehicles to   the   policy; one   on
    February 15, 2007, and one on June 11, 2009, as follows: On February 15,
    2007, Travelers added a 2000 Chevrolet to the policy and placed it on the
    policy’s declarations page. Complaint at ¶ 10; JSSF at ¶ 12. The title for
    the 2000 Chevrolet reflects that Mother became the owner of the 2000
    Chevrolet on February 20, 2007; thus, Travelers insured the 2000 Chevrolet
    before Mother actually owned it. JSSF at ¶ 14. Travelers did not present a
    new UIM stacking waiver form to Mother. Complaint at ¶ 13; JSSF at ¶ 22.
    On June 11, 2009, Travelers added a 2005 Chevrolet to the policy and
    placed it on the policy’s declarations page; it was issued June 16, 2009,
    effective June 11, 2009. Complaint at ¶ 10; JSSF at ¶ 18. Again, Travelers
    did not present a new UIM stacking waiver form to Mother. Complaint at ¶
    13; JSSF at ¶ 22.
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    Appellant filed a complaint for declaratory judgment on October 23,
    2012. On November 21, 2012, Travelers filed a notice of removal to federal
    court.        By order and memorandum opinion dated January 8, 2013, the
    federal court remanded the case back to Allegheny County Common Pleas
    Court.        Travelers filed an answer with new matter on January 15, 2013.
    After discovery and the pleadings closed, Appellant filed a motion for
    summary judgment, and on August 21, 2014, Travelers filed a cross-motion
    for summary judgment.
    The parties filed the JSSF on November 24, 2014.         The trial court
    granted Travelers’ motion for summary judgment and denied Appellant’s
    motion for summary judgment on December 12, 2014.               Appellant filed a
    notice of appeal on January 8, 2015.          It does not appear the trial court
    ordered a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement. The trial court filed an opinion on
    February 10, 2015.
    Appellant raises the following issue on appeal:
    A.      Did the trial court err in holding that an insured, who
    signed a UM/UIM stacking waiver at the inception of a
    single-vehicle policy, was not entitled to stack UM/UIM
    benefits even though the carrier failed to obtain stacking
    waivers when a second and third vehicles were added to
    the policy?
    Appellant’s Brief at 4.
    The Majority has cited to the standard of review applicable herein.
    Thus, I first examine the relevant statute.
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    § 1738. Stacking of uninsured and underinsured benefits and
    option to waive
    (a) Limit for each vehicle.--When more than one vehicle is
    insured under one or more policies providing uninsured or
    underinsured motorist coverage, the stated limit for uninsured or
    underinsured coverage shall apply separately to each vehicle so
    insured. The limits of coverages available under this subchapter
    for an insured shall be the sum of the limits for each motor
    vehicle as to which the injured person is an insured.
    (b) Waiver.--Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a),
    a named insured may waive coverage providing stacking of
    uninsured or underinsured coverages in which case the limits of
    coverage available under the policy for an insured shall be the
    stated limits for the motor vehicle as to which the injured person
    is an insured.
    (c) More than one vehicle.--Each named insured purchasing
    uninsured or underinsured motorist coverage for more than one
    vehicle under a policy shall be provided the opportunity to waive
    the stacked limits of coverage and instead purchase coverage as
    described in subsection (b). The premiums for an insured who
    exercises such waiver shall be reduced to reflect the different
    cost of such coverage.
    75 Pa.C.S. § 1738.
    Thus, where benefits are stacked, the amount recited in the
    declarations is multiplied by the total number of scheduled vehicles. Section
    1738(a) provides that UM/UIM coverage shall be considered stacked by
    multiplying the available coverage by the number of vehicles insured. Under
    section 1738(b), however, a named insured may elect to waive stacking, in
    which case the limits of protection are those stated for any one vehicle.
    Section 1738(c) provides that an insured purchasing UM or UIM coverage for
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    more than one vehicle must be provided with the opportunity to waive
    stacking.
    The trial court referred to after-acquired and newly-acquired vehicle
    clauses in automobile insurance policies, noting that these clauses differ
    from insurance company to insurance company. It stated that there are two
    general types of such clauses: finite, “under which the insured is given a set
    number of days (such as thirty) for which [the] insurer will cover the added
    vehicle until the insured purchases a policy covering the additional vehicle,”
    and continuous, where “the insured must notify the insurer within a set
    number of days (usually thirty) that [the] insured is adding another vehicle
    to the policy and the additional vehicle is covered for the remaining term of
    the policy and going forward, unless the insured changes, replaces or adds
    vehicles.”   Trial Court Opinion, 2/10/15, at 2–3.       It maintained that these
    distinctions “are crucial.” Id. at 3. The essential holding of the trial court
    was as follows: “[I]t appears the vehicles were added via an after-acquired
    vehicle clause which was continuous.           Therefore an additional waiver was
    not required and [Mother] was not entitled to stacking of UIM benefits.”
    Id. at 6.
    The Majority, as did the trial court, focuses on the Sackett3 trilogy of
    ____________________________________________
    3
    See Sackett v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co., 
    919 A.2d 194
     (Pa. 2007)
    (“Sackett I”), modified on reargument, 
    940 A.2d 329
     (Pa. 2007) (“Sackett
    II”), and 
    4 A.3d 637
     (Pa. Super. 2010) (“Sackett III”).
    J-A32006-15
    cases. In the Sackett trilogy, the Pennsylvania appellate courts addressed
    the question of “whether an insurer is required to obtain new UM/UIM
    stacking waivers from an insured when new vehicles are added onto an
    existing automobile policy, where that insured had waived UM/UIM coverage
    at the inception of the original policy.” Bumbarger v. Peerless Indemnity
    Insurance Company, 
    93 A.3d 872
    , 875 (Pa. Super. 2014) (en banc)
    (citation omitted) (analyzing the decisions in Sackett I, II, and III).
    However, both the Sackett trilogy and Bumbarger involved multi-vehicle
    insurance policies, not single-vehicle policies as in the case sub judice.
    Majority Opinion at 7.
    When addressing the issue of enforcement of initial stacking waivers
    for UIM coverage in Sackett I, our Supreme Court focused only on
    existing multi-vehicle policies. The remedy for an automobile insurer’s
    failure to provide the opportunity to waive stacking of UM/UIM coverages,
    when the insured added a third vehicle to a policy, was the sum of stacked
    coverage limits for three vehicles, even though the insured did not pay the
    premium for stacked coverage. Without the waiver, coverage was provided
    by statute, and even though the insured had waived stacked coverage on
    two vehicles, there was no valid waiver on the sum of available stacked
    limits when the insured added a car to policy.     In Sackett II, the Court
    specifically confined its holding to “the scenario involving the addition of a
    vehicle to a multi-vehicle policy,” expressly and unequivocally stating that
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    J-A32006-15
    it was not “resolv[ing] . . . arguments concerning situations involving
    additions to single-vehicle policies.” Sackett II, 940 A.2d at 334, n.5
    (emphasis added).    In Sackett III, on appeal from a bench trial decision
    holding that the Sacketts could stack UIM benefits, this Court concluded that
    Sackett I was the controlling authority and determined that, because the
    Sacketts added the additional vehicle to the policy through an endorsement,
    the additional vehicle was covered under the general terms of the policy, not
    the after-acquired vehicle clause.   Since the additional vehicle was added
    prior to the accident therein, a waiver declining stacked coverage was
    required.
    Appellant asserts that the Sackett trilogy of cases is inapposite to the
    case sub judice because here, Mother had a single-vehicle policy when she
    signed a stacking waiver, and therefore, the waiver is not enforceable.
    Appellant contends that because the Sackett cases discuss the legal
    ramifications of a UM/UIM stacking waiver when adding a car to an already
    existing multi-vehicle policy, they do not pertain to UM/UIM claims and
    stacking waivers where a car is added to a single-vehicle policy.
    The Majority acknowledges Appellant’s “straightforward, and in many
    ways inviting, argument based largely on the statutory language found in 75
    Pa.C.S. § 1738,” but rejects it based upon Craley v. State Farm, 
    895 A.2d 530
     (Pa. 2006). Majority Opinion at 4–6. The Majority suggests that Craley
    “widened the scope of [75 Pa.C.S.] Section 1738 to include single-vehicle
    J-A32006-15
    insurance policies.” Majority Opinion at 6. My reading of Craley, however,
    is that it extended application of the Motor Vehicle Financial Responsibility
    Law (“MVFRL”)’s waiver provision only to inter-policy stacking of single-
    vehicle coverage, which is not involved herein.                Craley, 895 A.2d at 532
    (“[W]e    hold    the   named     insured’s      waiver   of    inter-policy   stacking
    enforceable under the facts of this case”) (emphasis added); Nationwide
    Mut. Ins. Co. v. Zerr, CIV.A. 10-4199, 
    2011 WL 3156860
     at *6 (E.D.Pa.
    2011).     The Majority sets forth an interpretation of 75 Pa.C.S. § 1738
    supported by dicta in Craley to “reject [Appellant’s] interpretation of the
    statutory requirements of Section 1738.” Majority Opinion at 7.
    The Majority goes on to evaluate the trial court’s application of
    Sackett II, finding that it “is the most relevant of the Sackett cases.”
    Majority Opinion at 7.           While acknowledging that the Sackett cases
    “involved the addition of a vehicle to an existing multi-vehicle policy, not a
    single-vehicle policy,” the Majority concludes that case law requires
    examination of the issue similarly.            Majority Opinion at 7.   I disagree and
    conclude that it is that very difference that compels a different result herein.
    Moreover, I take issue with the Majority’s extensive four-page discussion of
    the Bird4 exception in Sackett II, even though the Majority acknowledged
    that the Bird holding “is not relevant to the determination of the instant
    ____________________________________________
    4
    Bird v. State Farm, 
    165 P.3d 343
     (N.M.Ct.App. 2007).
    J-A32006-15
    matter as Bird expressly did not address UM/UIM stacking or waiver. . . .”
    Majority Opinion at 10.     In addition to that significant difference, Bird
    involved four different insurance policies, suggesting inter-policy stacking
    concepts, not intra-policy stacking as is at issue herein.
    In August 2006, when Mother purchased the single-vehicle policy with
    Travelers providing for UM/UIM coverage, she signed a UM/UIM stacking
    waiver. In February 2007, when she added a second vehicle to the policy,
    she essentially converted her policy into a multi-vehicle policy that provided
    UM/UIM coverage. Pursuant to 75 Pa.C.S. § 1738(a), as a purchaser of a
    multi-vehicle policy providing UM/UIM coverage, Appellant maintains that
    Mother automatically became entitled to UM/UIM stacking. Appellant’s Brief
    at 9. Mother did not waive UM/UIM stacking under section 1738(b) in 2007
    because Travelers did not provide her with a UM/UIM stacking waiver, as
    was required under section 1738(c). Without the waiver, Appellant argues
    that section 1738(a) of the statute remains in force, and Mother is entitled
    to UM/UIM stacking.
    As Appellant points out, the statute does not require the insurance
    company to provide a UM/UIM stacking waiver to a single-vehicle policy
    purchaser or to an insured purchasing a policy which provides no UM/UIM
    benefits. For 75 Pa.C.S. §1738 to be triggered, two criteria must be met:
    1.   the insurance policy that an insured is purchasing must
    provide UM/UIM benefits and
    2.   the policy must be purchased for more than one vehicle.
    J-A32006-15
    Here, when Mother purchased her policy in 2004, there was only one
    vehicle insured under the policy, and there was nothing to stack. Thus, as
    Appellant asserts, the UM/UIM stacking waiver obtained from Mother by
    Travelers at the time when she only was insuring one vehicle “was not
    mandatory and, therefore, [was] . . . unenforceable.”     Appellant’s Brief at
    15.
    I am persuaded that the Sackett trilogy of cases is inapposite to the
    case sub judice because here, Mother had a single-vehicle policy when she
    signed a stacking waiver, and the waiver was not enforceable. As Appellant
    submits, the Sackett cases discuss the legal ramifications of a UM/UIM
    stacking waiver when adding a car to an already existing multi-vehicle
    policy; they do not pertain to UM/UIM claims and stacking waivers where a
    car is added to a single-vehicle policy.
    I find Bumbarger similarly distinguishable.         In that case, the
    insurance company issued a personal automobile policy to Ms. Bumbarger
    providing coverage for two vehicles.       At that time, the insured executed
    forms rejecting stacking of UM/UIM coverage.       Approximately two months
    later, a third vehicle was added to the policy through an endorsement.      A
    fourth vehicle was added two years later; unlike the third vehicle, it was
    added by an amended declarations page.          Bumbarger, 
    93 A.3d at 874
    .
    After the insured was involved in an accident in the third vehicle and filed a
    claim for stacked UM benefits, the insurer maintained that the original
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    waiver of stacked UM/UIM benefits remained in effect. Bumbarger thus has
    different considerations from the instant case, as well.5
    I conclude that a new stacking waiver form should have been provided
    to Mother when she added the second vehicle to her policy in February of
    2007 because that was the first time there existed the possibility that
    stacking, in particular, intra-policy stacking, became possible. Thus, I would
    reverse the order of the trial court granting Travelers’ motion for summary
    judgment and denying Appellant’s motion for summary judgment.
    ____________________________________________
    5
    Herein, on both occasions when adding the second and third vehicles to
    her policy, Mother asked Travelers to add them to her policy. In both
    instances Travelers issued a new Declarations page reflecting the change to
    the policy, thereby adding coverage by endorsement. Thus, in neither
    instance was the after-acquired-vehicle clause triggered.