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THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
GAROLD CHARLES, )
) Supreme Court No. S-14678
Appellant, )
) Superior Court No. 1KE-10-00102 CI
v. )
) OPINION
ANTHONY STOUT, TARA LORAINE )
STOUT, and CREDIT UNION 1, )
) No. 6824 - September 13, 2013
Appellees. )
)
Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, First
Judicial District, Ketchikan, William B. Carey, Judge.
Appearances: Charles W. Coe, Law Office of Charles W.
Coe, Anchorage, for Appellant. No appearance by Appellees
Anthony Stout and Tara Loraine Stout. C ynthia L. Ducey,
Delaney Wiles, Inc., Anchorage, for Appellee Credit Union 1.
Before: Fabe, Chief Justice, Winfree, Stowers, Maassen, and
Bolger, Justices.
MAASSEN, Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
Garold Charles was in an accident while riding as a passenger in a vehicle
belonging to Tara and Anthony Stout. Charles brought negligence claims against the
Stouts and Credit Union 1, the lienholder on the Stouts’ vehicle. Credit Union 1 moved
for summary judgment. Charles op posed the motion, relying on testimony from Tara’s
deposition and contending in part that he was a third-party beneficiary of an alleged
contract between Credit Union 1 and the Stouts by which the credit union agreed to
provide liability insurance. The superior court struck Tara’s testimony and granted
summary judgment to Credit Union 1. Charles appeals. We affirm.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Garold Charles filed a complaint against Anthony Stout, Tara Loraine Stout,
and Credit Union 1 seeking compensation for injuries he allegedly received in a 2008
rollover accident on the Tongass Highway. The Stouts were married but separated at the
time of the accident and held joint title to the car. Charles’s complaint alleged that he was
riding as a passenger in the Stouts’ vehicle and that Anthony was driving while
intoxicated. It alleged that Anthony lost control, the vehicle rolled several times, and
Anthony then fled the scene. The complaint alleged not only that Anthony was negligent
in driving the car but also that Tara and Credit Union 1 both had ownership interests in
the car and were liable for negligently entrusting it to Anthony. Anthony did not answer
the complaint and was eventually defaulted, but Credit Union 1 and Tara both answered,
Tara acting pro se.
Credit Union 1 moved for summary judgment, arguing that its only
involvement with the car was as lender and lienholder, which by law is not a sufficient
basis for liability.1 In response, Charles sought to depose Tara about the liability
insurance she may have purchased from Credit Union 1 at the time she financed the
vehicle.
1
Credit Union 1 relied on AS 45.29.402, which provides that “[t]he existence
of a security interest, agricultural lien, or authority given to a debtor to dispose of or use
collateral, without more, does not subject a secured party to liability in contract or tort
for the debtor’s acts or omissions.”
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Tara did not have counsel at her deposition. In response to questions by
Charles’s attorney, she testified that she thought she had contracted with Credit Union 1
for liability insurance in addition to loan financing. She testified that she switched from
an insurance company to Credit Union 1 because the credit union’s insurance was “a lot
cheaper [and] a lot more convenient.” She testified that she thought she had “the
minimum insurance,” “the normal coverage of what would be [necessary in order to be]
legal to drive.” She also testified that when she changed her insurance over to Credit
Union 1, the new insurance did not cover Anthony because the two of them “were
separated completely” and Anthony was in jail. She testified that when Anthony later
took possession of the vehicle, before the accident, she informed Credit Union 1 that she
did not own the vehicle anymore, at which point the credit union changed “the payments
and the insurance and all that” from her name to Anthony’s.
Soon after Credit Union 1’s attorney began her cross-examination, Tara
asserted that she did not want to continue without an attorney and that she wished to leave
the deposition. The attorneys for Credit Union 1 and Charles both advised her against it,
warning her that if she left before the deposition was completed she could be held liable
for expenses and monetary sanctions. After several contentious exchanges Tara left the
deposition, and Credit Union 1’s attorney was unable to complete her cross-examination.
The superior court subsequently ordered Tara to appear again, but she failed to attend
either her re-noticed deposition or a hearing on sanctions.
Charles relied heavily on Tara’s deposition testimony in his opposition to
the pending motion for summary judgment, in which he also raised several new theories
of liability. The superior court allowed Charles to amend his complaint to include these
new theories. The amended complaint asserted that Charles was a third-party beneficiary
of an agreement by Credit Union 1 to provide liability insurance to the Stouts, and it
included claims for breach of contract and breach of the covenant of good faith and fair
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dealing. The superior court expressly stated that it would consider these additional claims
when deciding Credit Union 1’s motion for summary judgment.
Credit Union 1 moved to strike Tara’s deposition testimony. The superior
court granted the motion, both as a sanction against Tara and under Alaska Civil Rule
32(b), which provides that “objection may be made at the trial or hearing to receiving in
evidence any deposition or part thereof for any reason which would require the exclusion
of the evidence if the witness were then present and testifying.” The court decided that
excluding the testimony was necessary to protect Credit Union 1’s right to cross-
examination — thwarted by Tara’s early departure from the deposition — and because
the testimony was hearsay not falling within any exception to the hearsay rule. The court
subsequently granted the motion for summary judgment, observing that the only evidence
raised in opposition was the deposition testimony, which had been stricken, and that even
when that evidence was considered, Credit Union 1 was entitled to judgment as a matter
of law. Charles appeals the decision to strike Tara’s deposition testimony and the grant
of summary judgment.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review grants of summary judgment de novo, “draw[ing] all factual
inferences in favor of, and view[ing] the facts in the light most favorable to, the party
against whom summary judgment was granted.”2 We will affirm the grant of summary
judgment when the record presents no genuine issues of material fact and the movant was
entitled to judgment as a matter of law.3
2
Interior Cabaret, Hotel, Rest. & Retailers Ass’n v. Fairbanks N. Star
Borough, 135 P.3d 1000, 1002 (Alaska 2006) (citing Rockstad v. Erikson, 113 P.3d
1215, 1219 (Alaska 2005)).
3
Smith v. State, 282 P.3d 300, 303 (Alaska 2012) (quoting Cragle v. Gray,
(continued...)
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IV. DISCUSSION
There Is No Genuine Issue Of Material Fact As To Whether Charles
Was An Intended Third-Party Beneficiary Of A Contract To Provide
Insurance.
There is no evidence in this case of an actual, written insurance contract that
would provide liability coverage for the Stouts’ vehicle at the time of the accident. What
Charles alleges instead is a promise to provide such insurance — a promise that Credit
Union 1 allegedly breached. Inherent in this theory, according to Charles, are genuine
issues of fact that preclude summary judgment in Credit Union 1’s favor: whether Credit
Union 1 actually made this promise and whether Charles himself was an intended third-
party beneficiary of the promise. Even assuming the existence of a contract to provide
liability insurance, we conclude that Charles has failed to raise a genuine issue of material
fact as to whether he was a third-party beneficiary of that contract with the right to bring
suit for its alleged breach.
Charles bases his rights as a third-party beneficiary on the theory that the
Stouts’ liability insurance policy, had one existed, would have included underinsured
motorist (UIM) coverage unless the Stouts explicitly declined it,4 and such coverage, had
it existed, would have been for his benefit. Citing Ennen v. Integon Indemnity Corp.,5
which we decided after the grant of summary judgment in this case, Charles asserts that
as the intended beneficiary of this never-placed UIM coverage, he has a cause of action
3
(...continued)
206 P.3d 446, 449 (Alaska 2009)).
4
See AS 28.20.445(e)(3) (providing that the UIM coverage that is required
to be offered “may be rejected by the insured in writing”).
5
268 P.3d 277 (Alaska 2012).
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against Credit Union 1 for its breach of the promise to provide the insurance in the first
place.
Intended third-party beneficiaries have enforceable rights in an insurance
contract, including the right to bring claims for bad faith against the insurer.6 Incidental
beneficiaries, such as tort victims, lack those rights.7 We decided in Ennen that an injured
passenger was an intended third-party beneficiary because the vehicle owner’s uninsured
motorist policy “defined ‘insured’ as including ‘[a]ny person occupying your covered
auto with the permission of the named insured.’ ”8 Because “[b]oth policyholders and
additional insureds are ‘insured,’ ” we held that both “are entitled to bring causes of
action for bad faith.”9
In this case there is no written agreement that Credit Union 1 would provide
liability insurance, nor is there any insurance policy from which third-party rights could
be extrapolated. Charles relies on the written loan agreement between the Stouts and
Credit Union 1, but the agreement adds nothing to his claim. Under the loan agreement,
the Stouts agreed to maintain insurance on the vehicle, with Credit Union 1 having the
right but not the obligation to secure insurance at the Stouts’ cost if the Stouts failed to
secure it themselves.10 Under the agreement, the Stouts also acknowledged that any such
6
Id. at 284.
7
Id.
8
Id. at 280 (alteration in original).
9
Id. at 286.
10
The record indicates that Credit Union 1 did invoke its right to place
insurance on the vehicle to protect its interests in the collateral. The letter Credit Union
1 sent to the Stouts apprising them of this stated, “This policy does not insure against
bodily injury, death, or property damage liability and does not satisfy Alaska’s
(continued...)
-6- 6824
insurance placed by Credit Union 1 would be primarily for the credit union’s own
protection, and that “this insurance does not cover liability or personal injury protection
to [the Stouts] if the vehicle is involved in an accident.”
Charles contends that this language in the loan agreement left the Stouts
uncertain as to whether Credit Union 1 would be providing insurance, and if so of what
type. He further relies on Tara’s testimony that employees of Credit Union 1 led her to
believe that it was providing coverage that “would make it legal for her to drive, as well
as[] cover the vehicle damage and liability.” But we can assume these facts to be true and
still find lacking a necessary element of Charles’s claim: that Credit Union 1’s promise
to Tara that it would provide liability insurance was intended at least in part to be for
Charles’s benefit.
We find no support for such an argument in Tara’s disputed deposition
testimony, which we have thoroughly reviewed. Although Tara did testify, with some
confusion and internal inconsistency, that she thought Credit Union 1 had agreed to
provide liability insurance, she did not testify that either she or Credit Union 1 intended
that the insurance benefit anyone other than themselves.11 Indeed, as noted above, Tara
testified that the insurance did not even cover her then-husband Anthony, from whom she
was separated when she allegedly procured it, and that when Anthony took possession of
the vehicle, sometime before the accident in which Charles was injured, the credit union
“took it out of [her] name, the payments and the insurance and all that.”
10
(...continued)
mandatory motor vehicle liability insurance requirements of AS[] 28.22.001.”
11
See Ennen, 268 P.3d at 284 (“[T]he tort victim only benefits from the
existence of the insurance contract indirectly: The insured did not purchase the policy
with the intention to benefit the tort victim; rather, the insured purchased the policy to
protect the insured from tort liability.”).
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Because there is no evidence that Charles was an intended third-party
beneficiary of an alleged contract to provide insurance, we do not need to reach the
underlying issue of whether such a contract even existed.12
V. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the superior court’s grant of summary judgment.
12
We also do not reach the following issues: (1) whether the superior court
erred in striking Tara’s deposition testimony; (2) whether there are genuine issues of
material fact regarding breach of contract and breach of the covenant of good faith and
fair dealing; (3) whether the superior court improperly relied on Tara’s credibility for
purposes of summary judgment; and (4) whether the superior court erred in considering
whether Anthony was a permissive driver.
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