FILED
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
August 24, 2010
PUBLISH Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
TENTH CIRCUIT
STATE FARM MUTUAL
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
COMPANY,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v. No. 09-1415
BARBARA FISHER,
Defendant-Appellant.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO
(D.C. No. 1:08-cv-01687-REB-MEH)
Steven T. Nolan, Steven T. Nolan, P.C., Colorado Springs, Colorado, (Joseph R.
Winston, The Winston Law Firm, P.C., Colorado Springs, Colorado, with him on
the briefs), for Defendant-Appellant.
Marc R. Levy, (Scot C. Kreider with him on the brief), Levy, Morse & Wheeler,
P.C., Englewood, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellee, State Farm Mutual Auto
Insurance Company.
Before BRISCOE, Chief Judge, HOLLOWAY, and KELLY, * Circuit Judges.
*
Former Chief Circuit Judge Robert H. Henry was originally a member of
this panel. He resigned his commission effective June 30, 2010, and has been
replaced on this panel by Circuit Judge Paul J. Kelly, Jr.
BRISCOE, Chief Judge.
State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company (“State Farm”) filed
this declaratory judgment action as a result of a claim for uninsured motorist
benefits filed by Barbara Fisher (“Ms. Fisher”). Ms. Fisher appeals the district
court’s grant of summary judgment to State Farm. Ms. Fisher also appeals the
district court’s grant of summary judgment to State Farm on a counterclaim which
she brought against State Farm alleging unreasonable delay or denial of an
insurance claim. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and
AFFIRM.
I
On November 5, 2007, Tiffany Howard, a high school student in Colorado
Springs, Colorado, telephoned Jeremy Vialpondo and asked him to pick her up at
her residence because she was concerned about the conduct of her ex-boyfriend,
Andrew Brown. At the time, Vialpondo, Caleb Moore, and Robert Ellsworth
were passengers in a Ford Explorer being driven by Ms. Fisher’s son, Michael
Fisher (“Mr. Fisher”).
Shortly after picking up Howard, Mr. Fisher and his passengers noticed that
they were being followed by a Chevrolet Suburban driven by Brown. After
Brown followed Mr. Fisher and his passengers for approximately two miles and
rammed his vehicle into theirs several times, Brown pulled next to the Explorer
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and fired a shotgun at it, striking Vialpondo. Moore was also struck by flying
glass as a result of the shotgun blast.
Mr. Fisher then pulled the Explorer to the side of the road, got out of the
vehicle, and attempted to obtain assistance for Vialpondo. Howard, Moore, and
Ellsworth also got out of the Explorer at this time. Meanwhile, Brown turned the
Suburban around and parked it behind the Explorer and perpendicular to the flow
of traffic. Brown then got out of the Suburban and within moments, shot and
killed Mr. Fisher, who was standing in the middle of the roadway. Brown then
chased Howard into a field next to the road where he began to physically assault
her. However, upon the arrival of law enforcement, Brown abandoned his assault
of Howard and returned to the Suburban where he obtained another firearm which
he used to shoot and kill himself.
Based on these events, Ms. Fisher, acting on behalf of Mr. Fisher’s estate,
filed an insurance claim with Geico Direct (“Geico”), the insurer of the Suburban
Brown had been driving. Geico declined coverage, citing an intentional acts
exclusion in the policy which covered the Suburban. Consequently, Ms. Fisher
filed an uninsured motorist (“UM”) claim with her own insurer, State Farm, with
whom she had a policy on the Explorer her son had been driving. Vialpondo and
his mother and next friend Lorrie Vasquez, as well as Moore and his mother and
next friend Stacey Moore, also submitted UM claims to State Farm, asserting that
Vialpondo and Moore were also covered by Ms. Fisher’s policy.
3
After these claims were submitted, State Farm filed a declaratory judgment
action in the United States District Court for the District of Colorado seeking
declarations (1) that Mr. Fisher’s death, along with his passengers’ injuries, were
not caused by an accident that involved the operation and/or use of an uninsured
motor vehicle as defined by State Farm’s policy, and (2) that Ms. Fisher cannot
obtain the stacked limits of two State Farm policies potentially applicable to her
son’s death. In response, Ms. Fisher filed a counterclaim pursuant to Colo. Rev.
Stat. § 10-3-1116(1), alleging that State Farm unreasonably delayed or denied
payment of insurance benefits to which she is entitled, while Vialpondo and
Vasquez and the Moores filed counterclaims based upon a common law theory of
bad faith.
Ms. Fisher and State Farm resolved the stacking issue by stipulation, and
the parties subsequently filed a series of motions seeking summary judgment on
the remaining issues. As regards the district court’s rulings that are relevant to
this appeal, the court denied State Farm’s motion for summary judgment on the
issue of causation with respect to Vialpondo and Vasquez and the Moores, but
granted it with respect to Ms. Fisher, holding that Mr. Fisher’s death did not arise
out of the use of an uninsured motor vehicle. The district court also granted
summary judgment to State Farm on Ms. Fisher’s unreasonable delay or denial
counterclaim.
Ms. Fisher filed this timely appeal, challenging both of the district court’s
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grants of summary judgment. After hearing oral argument, we certified the
question of Ms. Fisher’s entitlement to UM benefits to the Colorado Supreme
Court pursuant to 10th Cir. R. 27.1 and Colo. App. R. 21.1. See State Farm Mut.
Auto. Ins. Co. v. Fisher, — F.3d —, 2010 WL 2382263 (10th Cir. June 14, 2010).
The Colorado Supreme Court, however, issued an en banc order on June 26, 2010,
declining to answer.
II
“We review the entry of summary judgment de novo.” Sewell v. Great N.
Ins. Co., 535 F.3d 1166, 1170 (10th Cir. 2008) (internal quotation marks omitted).
In so doing, “[w]e view the evidence and make all reasonable inferences in the
light most favorable to the nonmoving party.” Id. (internal quotation marks
omitted). Summary judgment is only appropriate “if the pleadings, the discovery
and disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits show that there is no genuine
issue as to any material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a
matter of law.” Fed R. Civ. P. 56(c)(2).
As our jurisdiction in this case arises in diversity, the law of the forum
state, in this case Colorado, governs our analysis of the underlying claims. See
Reid v. Geico Gen. Ins. Co., 499 F.3d 1163, 1167 (10th Cir. 2007). Accordingly,
“we apply the law as set forth by [Colorado’s] highest court.” Long v. St. Paul
Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 589 F.3d 1075, 1081 (10th Cir. 2009). “The decisions of
lower [Colorado] courts, while persuasive, are not dispositive.” Id.
5
DID MICHAEL FISHER’S DEATH ARISE OUT OF THE “USE” OF AN
UNINSURED MOTOR VEHICLE?
Pursuant to Colo. Rev. Stat. § 10-4-609(1)(a), automobile insurers in
Colorado are “require[d] . . . to provide coverage against uninsured motorists for
injuries ‘arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use of a motor vehicle,’
unless rejected in writing by the insured.” State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v.
Kastner, 77 P.3d 1256, 1260 (Colo. 2003) (quoting Colo. Rev. Stat. § 10-4-
609(1)(a)). Accordingly, the Colorado Supreme Court has noted that all UM
policy provisions in Colorado automobile insurance contracts “are express
attempts to conform to statutory requirements,” 1 and thus, that the judicial
interpretation of such provisions “should reflect the overall legislative purpose of
the UM . . . statute[]” which is “to provide compensation for injury caused by an
uninsured motorist equal to that obtainable for injury caused by an insured
motorist.” See id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
1
Ms. Fisher’s State Farm policy reads, in relevant part, as follows:
We [State Farm] will pay compensatory damages for bodily
injury an insured is legally entitled to collect from the owner or driver
of an uninsured motor vehicle. The bodily injury must be:
1. sustained by an insured; and
2. caused by an accident that involves the operation,
maintenance, or use of an uninsured motor vehicle as a
motor vehicle.
App. at 345 (emphasis removed).
6
To this end, the Colorado Supreme Court, in Kastner, adopted a two-part
test to determine whether UM benefits are available under a Colorado automobile
insurance policy. To be entitled to benefits, a claimant must first demonstrate
that an uninsured motor vehicle was being “used” at the time he or she sustained
an injury. Id. at 1261. If so, “the next prong of the inquiry is whether the ‘use’ is
causally related to the . . . injury.” Id. at 1263. We address each of Kastner’s
two prongs in order.
1. “Use” of a Motor Vehicle
“As a threshold matter to recovery under [the UM] . . . provision[] of a
[Colorado motor vehicle insurance] policy, the claimant must show that at the
time of the ‘accident,’ the [uninsured] vehicle was being ‘used’ in a manner
contemplated by the policy in question.” Id. at 1261 (emphasis added) (internal
quotation marks and footnote omitted). And according to the Kastner court,
“unless articulated otherwise in the policy, the only use of a non-commercial
passenger vehicle that is foreseeable or conceivable at the time of contracting for
insurance is use as a means of transportation.” Id. at 1262.
State Farm contends that this first prong of Kastner’s test is satisfied only if
the foreseeable use of the motor vehicle—in this case as a means of
transportation—occurs contemporaneously with the injurious conduct.
Accordingly, State Farm argues that because Brown got out of the Suburban
before shooting Mr. Fisher, his death did not arise out of Brown’s use of the
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Suburban. Ms. Fisher counters that Kastner’s first prong does not require
contemporaneity so long as the events in question constitute one ongoing assault,
which she claims describe Brown’s actions.
In Kastner, a victim was abducted in a parking lot and transported in her
own car at knifepoint to a remote location where she was sexually assaulted while
she was still in the vehicle. See 77 P.3d at 1258-59. In addressing the question
of whether the victim was entitled to UM benefits, the Colorado Supreme Court
held that neither of the two prongs it announced earlier in its opinion had been
satisfied. In so doing, the court noted that the “[u]se of a car to get to an isolated
area to commit a crime may relate to a vehicle’s general transportation purpose,
but here it was not concurrent with the injury itself, and . . . it lacks the requisite
causal connection between sexual assault and ‘use’ of a car for transportation.”
Id. at 1265 (emphasis added). This language might be fairly read to support State
Farm’s position in the case at bar because it suggests that the claim in Kastner
failed the first, or “use” prong because the assailant’s utilization of the vehicle as
a means of transportation was not contemporaneous with his assault upon the
woman he abducted.
That Kastner’s “use” prong requires contemporaneity is also supported by
the Kastner court’s discussion of Cung La v. State Farm Automobile Insurance
Co., 830 P.2d 1007, 1008 (Colo. 1992), a case which arose out of a coordinated,
multi-car drive-by shooting in which “three vehicles . . . took part in a maneuver
8
that prevented [the victim] from changing the speed or direction of [his vehicle]
and enabled the assailant in one vehicle to shoot the [victim].” The Kastner court
approvingly noted that in reversing a grant of summary judgment to the insurer,
the Cung La court “assumed that the assailants . . . were ‘using’ their [uninsured]
cars as contemplated by the insured’s policy since the cars were moving at the
time of the shooting.” Kastner, 77 P.3d at 1265 (emphasis added). Moreover, this
interpretation of Kastner’s “use” prong is also supported by Justice Bender’s
dissent in Kastner, wherein he laments that “the majority requires that [the
victim’s] injuries be concurrent with [the] vehicle’s use.” Id. at 1267 (Bender, J.,
dissenting) (emphasis added).
There is, however, some support for Ms. Fisher’s position as well. Perhaps
most significantly, one year before the Colorado Supreme Court issued its
decision in Kastner, the Colorado Court of Appeals issued its decision in Cole v.
United Services Automobile Ass’n, 68 P.3d 513, 515 (Colo. App. 2002), wherein
it held that so long as a claimant can demonstrate that the injury “originated in,”
“grew out of,” or “flowed from,” the use of an uninsured vehicle, “the fact that
the assailant left the uninsured vehicle before assaulting [the victim] does not
sever the casual connection between [the victim’s] injuries and the uninsured
vehicle.” While this is a discussion of causation, Kastner’s second prong, this
language obviously indicates that the Cole court would reject a bright line rule
requiring contemporaneity in connection with Kastner’s “use” prong.
9
As this discussion indicates, there is some potential confusion regarding the
parameters of Kastner’s “use” prong. However, as we will discuss below, we
conclude here that Brown’s use of the Suburban is not sufficiently linked to the
cause of Mr. Fisher’s injuries as to satisfy Kastner’s second, or “causation”
prong. Thus, we need not resolve any potential confusion which relates to
Kastner’s first prong.
2. Causal Connection
Assuming, without deciding, that Kastner’s first prong is satisfied, we must
next determine whether Brown’s “use” of the Suburban was causally related to
Mr. Fisher’s death. See Kastner, 77 P.3d at 1263. The requisite causal
connection requires “something more than a mere ‘but for’ relation,” but
“something less than proximate cause in the tort sense.” Id.
In a discussion that is relevant to whether the use of Brown’s vehicle was
causally related to Mr. Fisher’s death, the Kastner court observed that “to
complete and satisfy [this] analysis, the claimant must show . . . that no
independent significant act or non-use of the vehicle interrupted the ‘but for’
causal chain between the covered use of the vehicle and the injury,” and that
“[w]here the injury in question . . . is actually the result of an intentional act of
another, this showing can be particularly difficult to make.” Id. at 1264. The
Kastner court also cautioned, however, that “even [the] criminal act of another
will not automatically preclude recovery.” Id.
10
It appears clear under Colorado law that if an assailant’s injurious conduct
is predicated upon his or her presence in a moving vehicle, such as in a so-called
“drive by” shooting, the requisite causal nexus is present. See State Farm Mut.
Auto. Ins. Co. v. McMillan, 925 P.2d 785, 794 (Colo. 1996); Cung La, 830 P.2d
at 1011. If, however, the vehicle in which the assailant is traveling stops and the
assailant gets out of the vehicle before attacking his or her victim, the requisite
causal connection between the “use” of the vehicle and the attack becomes more
difficult to establish.
In Cole, the Colorado Court of Appeals had occasion to address the issue of
causation in such a case. There,
The uninsured vehicle . . . pulled . . . in front of [the victim’s] vehicle
and stopped suddenly. [The victim’s] vehicle stopped to avoid a
collision. The driver of the uninsured vehicle then backed his vehicle
into the front of [the victim’s] vehicle. Both drivers left their vehicles,
and an altercation ensued. A passenger in the uninsured vehicle went
to [the victim’s] vehicle, opened the passenger door, and assaulted [the
victim] with his fists and a wine bottle.
Cole, 68 P.3d at 514. The Colorado Court of Appeals held that UM benefits were
available because “as in Cung La and McMillan, the uninsured vehicle impeded
the progress of [the victim’s] vehicle and enabled the passenger of the uninsured
vehicle to get out and assault [the victim],” and thus, the uninsured vehicle “was
not used merely to transport the assailant to the scene of the assault.” Id. at 515.
The facts of the instant case are, however, readily and meaningfully
distinguishable from those in Cole. Indeed, as State Farm noted in its response to
11
Ms. Fisher’s motion for summary judgment, “Brown [did not use] his motor
vehicle to control the movement of Mr. Fisher, or anyone else.” Aplt. App., Vol.
2, at 580. Rather, Mr. Fisher’s pulling the Explorer over to the side of the road
was, at worst, caused by Brown’s use of the shotgun, and not his use of the
Suburban. And moreover, when Brown turned the Suburban around, he did not
position it in a manner which restricted the movement of either the Explorer’s
passengers, or the Explorer itself. The Suburban was not used by Brown to strike
Mr. Fisher, or as an instrumentality in assaulting Mr. Fisher.
Thus, Brown used the Suburban, in essence, as a means to transport himself
to the scene of his assault of Mr. Fisher. And, it is clear that such “use” is
insufficient to establish the causal nexus required by Kastner’s second prong. See
Kastner, 77 P.3d at 1266 (“[U]sing the car to drive the victim to a remote location
no more connects the car to the assault than if the assailant had used the car as the
mere situs of the assault without moving it.”). Accordingly, we conclude that the
district court did not err in granting summary judgment to State Farm with respect
to Ms. Fisher’s entitlement to UM benefits.
DID STATE FARM ACT UNREASONABLY?
Ms. Fisher also appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment to
State Farm on the counterclaim which she brought pursuant to Colo. Rev. Stat. §
10-3-1116(1), a statute which permits an insurance claimant “whose claim for
payment of benefits has been unreasonably delayed or denied [to] bring an action
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. . . to recover reasonable attorney fees and court costs and two times the covered
benefit.” (emphasis added). Ms. Fisher contends that if “there exists a genuine
issue of material fact as to coverage, such facts when viewed in the light most
favorable to [her] create a genuine issue of material fact as to whether State
Farm’s conduct in delaying and denying [her] claim was unreasonable.” Aplt. Br.
at 27. Ms. Fisher’s position is, however, untenable.
The Colorado Court of Appeals has held that “[i]t is reasonable for an
insurer to challenge claims that are fairly debatable.” Pham v. State Farm Mut.
Auto. Ins. Co., 70 P.3d 567, 572 (Colo. App. 2003) (emphasis added). And, as
our previous discussion clearly indicates, the parameters of UM coverage in
Colorado are “fairly debatable.” State Farm’s decision to file a declaratory
judgment action was, therefore, not unreasonable. Accordingly, we conclude that
the district court properly granted summary judgment to State Farm on Ms.
Fisher’s counterclaim.
III
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
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