SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI
en banc
ADAM DUTTON, )
)
Appellant, )
)
vs. ) No. SC94075
)
AMERICAN FAMILY MUTUAL )
INSURANCE COMPANY, )
)
Respondent. )
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF JACKSON COUNTY
Honorable Marco A. Roldan, Judge
Opinion issued February 3, 2015
Adam Dutton appeals the trial court’s entry of judgment in favor of American
Family Mutual Insurance Company on Mr. Dutton’s claim that coverage was provided
for an accident caused by American Family’s insured under two policies purchased by
the insured, one on a Nissan owned by the insured and that the insured was driving at the
time of the accident and the other on a Ford also owned by the insured but not involved in
the accident. The policy on the vehicle not involved in the accident by its terms does not
provide coverage because the policy contains a specific exclusion for other vehicles
owned by the insured but not insured under that policy. But Mr. Dutton argued that the
Motor Vehicle Financial Responsibility Law (MVFRL), section 303.010 to section
303.390, 1 required American Family to pay the statutory minimum of $25,000 as a matter
of public policy, which could not be negated by an exclusion.
The trial court rejected this argument as to the policy on the vehicle not involved
in the accident. This Court agrees and affirms. The MVFRL by its terms only requires
coverage of specifically designated vehicles and of other vehicles used by the insured but
that are not owned by the insured. Therefore, the Ford policy does not cover the Nissan
because it was owned but not designated in the Ford policy.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Barbara Hiles owned two vehicles: a 2007 Nissan Maxima and a 2003 Ford F-250.
Ms. Hiles is the named insured on separate American Family insurance policies she
purchased on each of these owned vehicles (“the Nissan policy” and “the Ford policy”).
Both policies are identical, and each has a policy limit of $25,000 per person/$50,000 per
accident.
On May 25, 2009, Mr. Dutton was injured in a motor vehicle accident when
Ms. Hiles’ Nissan collided with his vehicle at or near the intersection of NE Adams Dairy
Parkway and NE Napoleon Drive in Blue Springs. Ms. Hiles’ Ford was not involved in
the accident. It is undisputed that Ms. Hiles was at fault for the collision. On December
2, 2010, Mr. Dutton filed a lawsuit against Ms. Hiles in the Jackson County circuit court
for damages related to the May 25, 2009, accident. Although the Ford was not involved
in the accident, Mr. Dutton made a settlement demand of $50,000, which was the
combined policy limits of the Nissan policy added to what he claims are the minimum
1
All statutory references are to RSMo 2000 unless otherwise noted.
policy limits required under the MVFRL for the Ford policy issued to Ms. Hiles by
American Family.
On March 30, 2011, Mr. Dutton, Ms. Hiles, and American Family entered into a
settlement of Mr. Dutton’s claims against Ms. Hiles under which Mr. Dutton received
$25,000 under the Nissan policy and was assigned Ms. Hiles’ right to sue American
Family for any coverage provided by the Ford policy.
On April 4, 2011, Mr. Dutton filed a declaratory judgment action against
American Family seeking a determination whether the Ford policy provides $25,000
coverage for the injuries sustained by Mr. Dutton in the May 25, 2009, accident (in
addition to the $25,000 provided by the Nissan policy). Mr. Dutton moved for summary
judgment, arguing that every owner’s liability policy issued in Missouri must meet the
minimum requirements of the MVFRL and, therefore, the Ford policy must cover an
accident in the Nissan even though the Ford was not involved in the accident.
The trial court entered judgment for American Family, explaining in relevant part:
The Court, after considering the parties’ positions, and it appears as
a matter of law that: (1) while every owner’s liability policy issued in
Missouri must meet the minimum requirements of the Missouri Motor
Vehicle Financial Responsibility Law, MVFRL, § 303.190.2, RSMo, there
is no requirement in the MVFRL that each owner’s liability policy must
provide the minimum limits under the MVFRL when the motor vehicle
covered by such owner’s policy is not involved in an accident; …
Mr. Dutton appealed. 2 Following an opinion by the court of appeals, this Court granted
transfer. Mo. Const. art. V, § 10.
2
Mr. Dutton also argued in the trial court that the “other insurance” clause in the Ford
policy is ambiguous and conflicts with other anti-stacking language in the Ford policy
3
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Because the propriety of summary judgment is an issue of law, this Court reviews
the grant of summary judgment de novo. It considers the record in the light most
favorable to the party against whom judgment was entered, without deference to the trial
court’s findings, and accords the non-movant “the benefit of all reasonable inferences
from the record.” ITT Commercial Fin. Corp. v. Mid–Am. Marine Supply Corp., 854
S.W.2d 371, 376 (Mo. banc 1993). The interpretation of an insurance policy is a question
of law that this Court also determines de novo. Rice v. Shelter Mut. Ins. Co., 301 S.W.3d
43, 46 (Mo. banc 2009). In construing the terms of the policy, this Court applies the
meaning an ordinary person of average understanding would attach if purchasing
insurance and resolves ambiguities in favor of the insured. Id.
III. THE MVFRL DOES NOT REQUIRE COVERAGE
The issue before the Court on this appeal is whether, when an individual has
purchased two separate policies of insurance, one on each of two automobiles owned by
her, and only one of those owned vehicles is involved in an accident, the MVFRL
requires the policy on the uninvolved vehicle to provide the minimum $25,000 statutory
limit of liability even though the accident vehicle was not listed as a covered vehicle and
even though the policy specifically excluded from coverage the insured’s use of another
owned but undesignated vehicle. On these facts, this Court determines that the
and that it contains a broad grant of coverage with no limitations or qualifying language.
The trial court found no ambiguity. Mr. Dutton appealed this ruling but, because this
Court finds that the Ford policy does not provide coverage, there is only one applicable
policy and the stacking issue is irrelevant.
4
MVFRL’s minimum statutory limit of liability coverage simply does not require
coverage by the policy on the vehicle that was not involved in the accident. Mr. Dutton’s
argument to the contrary improperly mixes the concepts and requirements of the MVFRL
for vehicles designated by an owner’s policy with the requirements of the MVFRL for
vehicles that are not designated in the policy but are used by the insured. 3
A. The Ford Policy Does Not Provide Coverage for Use of the Nissan
Ms. Hiles is the named insured in the Ford policy. The Ford policy defines “your
insured car” as “[a]ny car described in the declarations and any private passenger car …
you replace it with.” (Emphasis added.) The Ford policy’s coverage provision states:
“We will pay compensatory damages an insured person is legally liable for because of
bodily injury and property damage due to the use of a car or utility trailer.” 4 The Ford
policy’s declarations page describes only the Ford F-250, and that vehicle has not been
replaced. Therefore, the Ford F-250 is the only insured car under the Ford policy. But
the policy is written so that Ms. Hiles is also insured for her use of other, non-designated
private passenger cars, except as limited by various exclusions. Exclusion 9 excludes
coverage for “[b]odily injury or property damage arising out of the use of any vehicle,
other than your insured car [the Ford F-250], which is owned by or furnished or available
3
The parties disagree as to whether Mr. Dutton adequately raised below his specific
contentions in this argument to preserve it for review. This Court need not resolve that
issue because, assuming for the purposes of this appeal that it was preserved, this Court
finds that the argument is not meritorious for the reasons set out in this opinion.
4
Some of the terms in these provisions were bolded to indicate that they were defined
elsewhere in the policy, but to avoid confusion, that bolding is not repeated here so as to
avoid giving the impression that each of the bolded terms is significant for present
purposes. Significant terms are instead italicized in this opinion.
5
for regular use by you or any resident of your household.” (Emphasis added.) In other
words, the coverage provided to Ms. Hiles under the Ford policy for her operation of cars
other than the Ford does not extend to other cars owned by her but not insured by her
under the Ford policy. The Nissan, which is the car that she was operating when she had
the accident for which coverage is sought, is owned by her but not insured under the Ford
policy. The plain language of the Ford policy does not provide coverage for the property
damage or personal injury caused by Ms. Hiles’ use of the Nissan.
The reason why other owned but undesignated vehicles are excluded previously
has been explained by this Court:
The purpose of the ‘drive other cars’ provision in an automobile liability
policy is to cover occasional or incidental use of other cards [sic] without
the payment of an additional premium, but to exclude the habitual use of
other cars, which would increase the risk on the insurance company
without a corresponding increase in the premium.
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. W. Cas. & Sur. Co., 477 S.W.2d 421, 424 (Mo. banc
1972) (internal citation and quotations marks omitted) (emphasis added). That is, one
cannot simply buy a policy of insurance on one vehicle and then argue that the policy
covers other vehicles that the insured also owns but chose not to insure. The policy only
provides coverage of owned cars that are insured under a policy as well as an insured’s
operation of other cars so long as they are not owned and uninsured by the policy.
B. The MVFRL Does Not Read Into an Owner’s Policy Coverage of
Another Vehicle Owned by the Insured but not Insured Under the Policy
Mr. Dutton concedes that the terms of the Ford policy do not cover the accident in
the Nissan for the above reasons. He contends that the MVFRL nevertheless requires
6
that American Family provide coverage under the Ford policy for the accident involving
the Nissan up to the MVFRL’s mandatory statutory minimum limit of liability coverage
of $25,000. 5 This Court, therefore, turns to consider the language of the MVFRL.
The MVFRL’s purpose “is to ensure that persons injured on Missouri’s highways,
whether they be owners, operators, occupants of the insured’s vehicle, occupants of other
vehicles, or pedestrians, may collect at least minimal damage awards against negligent
motor vehicle operators.” Am. Standard Ins. Co. v. Hargrave, 34 S.W.3d 88, 90 (Mo.
banc 2000). Section 303.025.1 mandates “financial responsibility” of motor vehicle
owners, explaining that “[n]o owner of a motor vehicle registered in this state … shall
operate, register or maintain registration of a motor vehicle … unless the owner maintains
the financial responsibility which conforms to the requirements of the laws of this state.”
Mr. Dutton asks this Court to look to the Ford policy’s broad coverage provision, 6
quoted above, to find that coverage is provided for Ms. Hiles’ use of any private
passenger car. Mr. Dutton acknowledges that Exclusion 9 clearly says that this coverage
does not apply to other owned vehicles like the Nissan, but he argues that the MVFRL
only looks to a policy’s coverage provision in isolation and not to the policy’s exclusions
in determining whether the MVFRL mandates coverage. 7
5
Because only Mr. Dutton was injured, the pertinent minimum limit of liability coverage
under the MVFRL is that requiring $25,000 in coverage per person. § 303.190.2(2).
6
“We will pay compensatory damages an insured person is legally liable for because of
bodily injury and property damage due to the use of a car or utility trailer.”
7
In support, Mr. Dutton cites to Karscig v. McConville, 303 S.W.3d 499 (Mo. banc
2010), which he says required coverage despite an applicable exclusion. As explained
below, Karscig concerned an operator’s policy and a non-owned vehicle and so is not
applicable here.
7
Mr. Dutton’s request for this truncated consideration of portions of the Ford policy
is unavailing. “Insurance policies are read as a whole, and the risk insured against is
made up of both the general insuring agreement as well as the exclusions and
definitions.” Todd v. Missouri United Sch. Ins. Council, 223 S.W.3d 156, 163 (Mo. banc
2007).
Of course, policies will not be construed inconsistently with governing statutes
such as the MVFRL. But Mr. Dutton cites to nothing in the MVFRL that says only
portions of an insurance policy will be considered in determining whether a policy
complies with the MVFRL. Rather, it is well-settled that to effectuate the purpose of the
MVFRL, the MVFRL supplements every insurance policy in Missouri even if the express
terms of the policy do not provide coverage. See, e.g., Cashon v. Allstate Ins. Co., 190
S.W.3d 573, 576 (Mo. App. 2006) (finding that the legislature intended that “the
minimum coverage required by the MVFRL becomes a part of the insurance contracts to
which it applies, as fully as if such provisions were written into the policies”) (internal
quotation marks and citation omitted). In other words, if the MVFRL requires a policy
issued in Missouri to provide coverage, and if the policy as a whole excludes such
coverage, then a provision providing such coverage will in effect be read into the policy,
up to the MVFRL’s minimum statutory limit of liability coverage.
Here, it is evident that the Ford policy excludes coverage for injuries caused by the
insured’s use of an owned vehicle not designated by that policy. The Court, therefore,
turns to the MVFRL to determine whether it requires that coverage be provided in such
circumstances; if so, then such a coverage provision will be written into the policy up to
8
the $25,000 limits set out in the MVFRL despite the clear exclusion of such coverage by
the policy language.
The MVFRL contains separate requirements for coverage depending on whether
the coverage is based on ownership or operation of a vehicle. 8 This Court examines each
set of requirements to determine whether either mandates coverage.
Here, Ms. Hiles owned both vehicles. This Court looks first to the language of the
MVFRL’s owner’s policy provisions. Section 303.190.2(1) states that an owner’s policy
“[s]hall designate by explicit description or by appropriate reference all motor vehicles
with respect to which coverage is thereby to be granted.” (Emphasis added.) Section
303.190.2(1) concerns not which individuals are covered by an owner’s policy but,
rather, what vehicles are covered by that policy. Covered vehicles must be designated
expressly either by listing them explicitly or by other reference that identifies which
vehicles are covered. As to those designated vehicles, section 303.190.2(2) explains that
the owner’s policy:
Shall insure the person named therein and any other person, as insured,
using any such motor vehicle or motor vehicles with the express or implied
permission of such named insured, against loss from the liability imposed
by law for damages arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use of
such motor vehicle or motor vehicles within the United States of America
or the Dominion of Canada, subject to limits, exclusive of interest and
costs, with respect to each such motor vehicle, as follows: twenty-five
8
Section 303.020 defines an “operator” as “a person who is in actual physical control of
a motor vehicle” and an “owner” in relevant part as “a person who holds the legal title to
a motor vehicle ….” The MVFRL does not define “owner’s policy” or “operator’s
policy,” but this Court has previously defined those terms. “An ‘owner's policy’ insures
a person who owns a vehicle, while an ‘operator's policy’ insures a person who operates a
vehicle owned by another. … Ownership or non-ownership is the crux of the distinction.”
Karscig, 303 S.W.3d at 503 (internal citation omitted).
9
thousand dollars because of bodily injury to or death of one person in any
one accident …[.]
(Emphasis added.) In other words, the MVFRL’s minimum limit of liability coverage on
an owner’s policy applies only when the damages arise out of the insured’s use of “such”
designated motor vehicle.
Here, the damages to Mr. Dutton arose out of Ms. Hiles’ use of the Nissan. But
the only vehicle explicitly described in the declarations of the Ford policy is the Ford
itself. No other vehicles are referred to on the declarations page, and in particular the
Nissan is not designated or otherwise mentioned. Therefore, the MVFRL’s provisions
governing owner’s policies do not require the Ford policy to provide coverage for an
accident in the Nissan, for the Nissan neither is designated in the Ford policy as an
insured car nor did the damages arise out of the use of the vehicle that was designated in
the Ford policy – that is, the Ford.
Mr. Dutton contends that this is too narrow a reading of what constitutes a
“designated vehicle.” This argument is based on his contention, already rejected above,
that a court must quit reading the policy at the coverage provisions and ignore any
exclusions in determining whether the MVFRL requires coverage. Because the coverage
provisions say they cover the designated vehicle and use of all passenger vehicles, and
the Nissan is a passenger vehicle, the MVFRL requires coverage, he argues.
The Court rejects this argument. First, as just noted, the MVFRL does not state
that one should read a policy’s coverage provisions in isolation, without regard to
exclusions. Rather, if the policy as a whole, including exclusions, would deny coverage
10
otherwise required by the MVFRL, then such coverage will be read into the policy. Here,
the policy as a whole does exclude use of other owned but undesignated vehicles, but as
just explained, this is not inconsistent with the MVFRL, which requires owners to have
coverage only for designated vehicles. Therefore, the MVFRL does not require reading
such coverage into the Ford policy.
Second, to stop reading the policy at the coverage provisions, without regard to
exclusions, would lead to absurd results, for the coverage provision on which Mr. Dutton
relies says that the policy will pay damages “an insured person is legally liable for … due
to use of a car” and that this means all cars are considered “designated” under a policy
and so covered. But this argument goes too far. It would mean that all cars were
required to be covered for accidents. Owners and insurers alike would be surprised to
learn that their purchase of insurance on a single motor vehicle made them the insurer of
all passenger cars. This is not the case. 9 In any event, the MVFRL does not contain any
provision requiring an owner’s policy to cover all cars owned by the insured, even if no
premium is paid for those other cars and they are not designated by description or
otherwise in the policy. It requires coverage only of designated vehicles. § 303.190.2(1).
Similarly, the MVFRL does not require all cars used by the insured to be covered
by an owner’s policy. Coverage for such purposes is limited to designated vehicles.
9
At oral argument, counsel suggested that this overbreadth could be avoided if this Court
assumed that only other owned passenger cars are intended to be included in the phrase
“passenger cars” but there is nothing in the policy language to support such a limitation
on the words “passenger cars.” This Court cannot insert such a limitation simply because
otherwise Mr. Dutton’s reading would lead to the absurdity that every passenger car is
designated.
11
The MVFRL does require that an insured be covered for the insured’s use of other
cars, but that is in its operator’s provisions, which govern operation of motor vehicles.
This is the more potentially applicable basis for claiming the applicability of the MVFRL,
for although Ms. Hiles owned both cars, Mr. Dutton is relying on language in the Ford
policy that says that the insurer will pay damages “an insured person is legally liable for
… due to use of a car.” (Emphasis added.) In other words, Mr. Dutton’s argument is not
that the Nissan is covered by the Ford policy but that Ms. Hiles was covered under the
Ford policy for her use of the Nissan. Mr. Dutton, therefore, is claiming operator’s
coverage, so this Court turns to section 303.190.3 of the MVFRL, governing operator’s
policies. It states that:
[An] operator's policy of liability insurance shall insure the person named
as insured therein against loss from the liability imposed upon him or her
by law for damages arising out of the use by him or her of any motor
vehicle not owned by him or her, within the said territorial limits and
subject to the same limits of liability as are set forth above with respect to
any owner's policy of liability insurance.
(Emphasis added.) The operator’s policy provision of the MVFRL thereby requires
minimum coverage for any car used by the person insured, but only if the “motor vehicle
[is] not owned by him or her.” Id. (emphasis added). Because Ms. Hiles owned the
Nissan, the MVFRL’s operator’s coverage provision does not require the Ford policy to
cover her operation of the Nissan.
Mr. Dutton’s argument to the contrary is based on an inappropriate attempt to get
around this limitation on operator’s coverage by mixing the provisions governing car
ownership with car use and upon a misreading of Hargrave. In that case, Ms. Hargrave
12
was a permissive user of her father’s Ford Escort at the time she had an accident in which
she and her children were hurt. Hargrave, 34 S.W.3d at 89. All agreed that, as a
permissive user of the Escort, the injuries to her children were covered under her father’s
owner’s policy up to the $25,000 minimum required by the MVFRL. Id. The question
was whether the MVFRL also required $25,000 in coverage under her husband’s policy
on their own family car, even though she was not driving the family car, when her
husband’s policy had a “household exclusion clause” that denied coverage of injuries to
persons in the household of the liable party – and in this instance, Ms. Hargrave was the
liable party. Id. 10
The insurer conceded in Hargrave that this Court had invalidated household
exclusion clauses in Halpin v. American Family Mutual Insurance Co., 823 S.W.2d 479,
483 (Mo. banc 1992), up to $25,000, on the basis that the operator’s policy provisions of
the MVFRL required that coverage be provided for use of a non-owned vehicle up to
$25,000, but the insurer argued that because the father’s policy already had provided
$25,000 in coverage, the MVFRL was satisfied. Hargrave, 34 S.W.3d at 89. This Court
rejected that argument, holding that each policy purported to provide coverage and so
each must provide the minimum MVFRL coverage of $25,000 to Ms. Hargrave’s child.
Id. at 91-92.
Hargrave was correctly decided, but it is not applicable in this case. In Hargrave,
the insured did not own the vehicle in which she had the accident. Id. at 89. It was
10
The purpose of a household exclusion is to prohibit recovery by the insured’s relatives
who reside in the insured’s household when the insured is the negligent party. Kellar v.
Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co, 987 S.W.2d 452, 454 (Mo. App. 1999).
13
owned by her father. Therefore, the exclusion in question here for other vehicles owned
by the insured but not covered under the policy was inapplicable. Moreover, in Hargrave
this Court stated that it was conceded that direct coverage was provided for the accident
vehicle under her husband’s owner’s policy, even though he did not own the Escort. Id.
How that was the case is not explained in the published opinion, although it is worth
noting that this would be the situation if the accident vehicle was being used as a
substitute for the husband’s own vehicle; in such a case, the accident vehicle would
become an insured vehicle under the husband’s policy as well.
In this case the accident vehicle was not an insured vehicle under the policy on the
non-accident vehicle, and both vehicles in this case were owned by the insured. For both
of these reasons, Hargrave simply is not on point.
Karscig v. McConville, 303 S.W.3d 499 (Mo. banc 2010), the other case relied on
by Mr. Dutton, is similarly unavailing. Karscig held that coverage was required to be
provided under two separate policies that (like in Hargrave) were owned by separate
individuals. Id. at 504. By their terms, both policies covered the same accident vehicle.
The policy purchased by the owner of the accident vehicle applied to that vehicle. Id. at
501, n.1. The other policy applied because the insured under that policy was operating
the accident vehicle and she did not own the accident vehicle so the MVFRL required her
to be covered for her operation of that non-owned car. Id. at 501-04.
By contrast, as just noted, Ms. Hiles owned both cars, so the MVFRL did not
require operator’s coverage and the owner’s coverage did not apply to other owned but
undesignated vehicles. Karscig, therefore, also is not on point.
14
IV. CONCLUSION
The Ford policy’s plain language does not require American Family to provide
coverage for an accident involving the Nissan, and the MVFRL does not require
American Family to pay the minimum statutory limit of liability coverage on the Ford
policy for an accident involving the Nissan because it is another owned but undesignated
vehicle. For these reasons, this Court affirms the trial court’s judgment.
_________________________________
LAURA DENVIR STITH, JUDGE
Russell, C.J., Breckenridge, Fischer, Draper
and Wilson, JJ., concur; Teitelman, J., dissents.
15