RENDERED: OCTOBER 21, 2022; 10:00 A.M.
TO BE PUBLISHED
Commonwealth of Kentucky
Court of Appeals
NO. 2021-CA-0699-MR
CARROL CHEATWOOD APPELLANT
APPEAL FROM HARDIN CIRCUIT COURT
v. HONORABLE KELLY MARK EASTON, JUDGE
ACTION NO. 18-CI-01884
KENTUCKY FARM BUREAU
MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY APPELLEE
OPINION
AFFIRMING
** ** ** ** **
BEFORE: CLAYTON, CHIEF JUDGE; ACREE AND TAYLOR, JUDGES.
ACREE, JUDGE: Carrol Cheatwood appeals the Hardin Circuit Court’s June 16,
2021 order granting summary judgment in favor of Kentucky Farm Bureau Mutual
Insurance Company. Finding no error, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
Ronnie Cheatwood was operating his motorcycle when an
underinsured motorist struck him. He was thrown from his motorcycle, suffered
severe injuries, and it was necessary to amputate his left leg below the knee. His
motorcycle was insured by a company other than Farm Bureau; that insurance did
not include underinsured motorist coverage.
But Mr. Cheatwood and his wife, Carrol, are also parties to, and
named insureds on, a policy with Farm Bureau covering a 2007 Chevrolet truck.
That policy does include underinsured motorist benefits. The parties and the
circuit court focused attention on Part C/1 of the policy addressing “Underinsured
Motorists Coverage,” and particularly the subpart entitled “Exclusions.” It says:
A. We do not provide Underinsured Motorists
Coverage for bodily injury sustained by any insured:
....
4. While occupying or operating a motorcycle
owned by any insured.
(Emphasis original.) Mr. Cheatwood did not claim coverage for bodily injury
under Part C/1 of the policy, but Mrs. Cheatwood claimed coverage for loss of
consortium. Farm Bureau denied the claim of coverage.
Mrs. Cheatwood argued before the circuit court that this provision did
not expressly identify loss of consortium as an exclusion from coverage. Based on
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that fact, she argued the underinsured motorist coverage of the Farm Bureau policy
on the 2007 Chevrolet truck was broad enough to cover her claim.
Both parties moved for summary judgment, and the circuit court
entered judgment in favor of Farm Bureau. Citing Kentucky Farm Bureau Mutual
Insurance Company v. Armfield, No. 2014-CA-001559-MR, 2016 WL 748388
(Ky. App. Feb. 26, 2016), as persuasive, the circuit court said:
LOC [loss of consortium] is related, derivative, or
dependent on a valid bodily injury claim of the
spouse . . . .
It is not a reasonable interpretation of the [Farm
Bureau] policy to hold Mrs. Cheatwood would expect
UIM [underinsured motorist] coverage for a LOC claim
arising from this bodily injury to her husband. Mr.
Cheatwood was occupying or operating a motorcycle, and
any claim for bodily injury while doing so is excluded
from the [Farm Bureau] policy.
The circuit court thus held the policy’s exclusion operated to exclude coverage for
Mrs. Cheatwood’s loss of consortium claim. Mrs. Cheatwood now appeals.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
“The issues having been presented as pure questions of law arising
from stipulated facts, our standard of review is de novo.” Commonwealth v.
Interstate Gas Supply, Inc. for Use and Benefit of Tri-State Healthcare Laundry,
Inc., 554 S.W.3d 831, 834 (Ky. 2018) (citation omitted).
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ANALYSIS
The parties filed their stipulations to material facts on August 6, 2020,
and the briefs do not suggest there are other, genuine issues regarding any other
material fact that would prevent the application of law to decide the case.
Mrs. Cheatwood insists that although the policy expressly excludes
bodily injury claims, a loss of consortium claim is not expressly excluded;
therefore, coverage exists for this different, independent, and separate claim. On
the other hand, Farm Bureau argues a loss of consortium claim only exists as
derivative of Mr. Cheatwood’s bodily injury claim, which is expressly excluded
and, therefore, Mrs. Cheatwood’s loss of consortium claim is likewise excluded.
We begin our analysis by noting that “an exclusion cannot grant
coverage . . . .” Kemper Nat’l Ins. Cos. v. Heaven Hill Distilleries, Inc., 82 S.W.3d
869, 873 (Ky. 2002). So, what provision does grant coverage in this case?
Answering that question aids the Court in assessing Mrs. Cheatwood’s argument
for reversal.
The parties’ stipulations do not address the question of the underlying
coverage. The circuit court said nothing more on the question than that the policy
“provides UIM coverage for claims ‘because of bodily injury’” before proceeding
to address the exclusion provision. We prefer not to put the cart before the horse;
we start by considering the preliminary question of the origin of coverage.
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Coverage is granted in Part C/1, “Underinsured Motorists Coverage,”
immediately preceding the exclusion provision. The specific subpart is titled
“Insuring Agreement” and states:
A. We will pay compensatory damages which an
insured is legally entitled to recover from the owner
or operator of an underinsured motor vehicle because
of bodily injury:
1. Sustained by an insured; and
2. Caused by an accident.
. . . .[1]
B. Insured as used in this Coverage Part C/1 –
Underinsured Motorists Coverage means:
1. You or any family member.
. . . .[2]
3. Any person for damages that person is entitled to
recover because of bodily injury to which this
coverage applies sustained by a person described in
B.1 . . . .
(Emphasis original.) If we apply to this coverage provision the rationale Mrs.
Cheatwood applies to the exclusion provision – failure to expressly identify loss of
1
The redacted language here merely states the bodily injury must result from the use of an
underinsured motor vehicle, defined later in subpart C.
2
In this subpart, B.2., an insured is defined to include “[a]ny other person while occupying your
covered auto.” This part of the policy is irrelevant to this appeal.
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consortium claims – , we cannot avoid concluding there is no coverage in the first
place, making the exclusion provision irrelevant. This is cause to doubt Mrs.
Cheatwood’s argument.
On the other hand, applying Farm Bureau’s rationale yields the
conclusion that there would be coverage under the “Insuring Agreement” because,
although a loss of consortium claim is not expressly listed, such claims are
derivative of the expressly covered bodily injury claim. Mrs. Cheatwood’s
dilemma is that this Court cannot ascribe to her claim the characteristic of being
derivative of her husband’s bodily injury to find coverage under one provision, but
then hold the characteristic does not exist for purposes of the next – the exclusion
provision. “A court should interpret the contract in a manner that makes the
contract internally consistent.” 17A AM. JUR. 2D Contracts § 367 (2022).
We believe this analysis would suffice even without supporting
jurisprudence. Either there is no coverage in the first place (if not derivative), or
the claim is excluded (if derivative). It is the classic conundrum that Mrs.
Cheatwood cannot have her cake and eat it, too. However, there is applicable
jurisprudence, as the circuit court sufficiently set out in its order.
In effect, the circuit court held that, in the context of insurance,
coverage for a loss of consortium claim is implied only if the associated bodily
injury claim is covered, and impliedly excluded if the bodily injury claim is
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excluded. Relying on jurisprudence that focuses on insurance contract exclusion
provisions, the circuit court noted the interrelation between bodily injury and any
resultant, ancillary, or derivative loss of consortium claim and determined that loss
of consortium coverage is not separate and apart from the bodily injury coverage.
We agree.
In Moore v. State Farm Mutual Insurance Company, an individual
sustained serious injury during a car accident. 710 S.W.2d 225 (Ky. 1986). The
at-fault driver was insured under a State Farm policy which included a $50,000
coverage limit per person and a $100,000 limit per accident. Id. The injured
insured presented a bodily injury claim for $50,000 and his wife claimed the
balance of the $100,000 per accident limit to satisfy her loss of consortium claim.
State Farm argued the total coverage should have been capped at the $50,000 per
person limit. The Supreme Court agreed based on the following rationale:
Under policies fixing a maximum recovery for “bodily”
injury to one person, . . . the limitation [is] applicable to
all claims of damage flowing from such bodily injury, and
that therefore it is immaterial that some part of the
damages may be claimed by a person other than the one
suffering the bodily injuries. In other words, all damage
claims, direct and consequential, resulting from injury to
one person, are subject to the [per person] limitation.
Id. at 226 (quoting Construction and application of provision in liability policy
limiting the amount of insurer’s liability to one person, 13 A.L.R.3d 1228, 1234
(originally published in 1967)). The significance of Moore to the instant case is
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that a loss of consortium claim for insurance contract coverage is a consequence of
the direct claim of bodily injury; i.e., it is derivative and dependent upon initial
coverage for the original, superior, independent bodily injury claim. That principle
must hold true notwithstanding the nature of the provision – coverage or exclusion
– implicating the relationship between the bodily injury and loss of consortium
claims.
The Supreme Court reaffirmed its rule that a loss of consortium claim
is not independent of the bodily injury claim in Daley v. Reed, 87 S.W.3d 247 (Ky.
2002). In Daley, a motorist was struck and killed while driving, and her husband
filed a complaint on behalf of the decedent’s four minor children seeking damages
for loss of parental consortium. Id. at 248. The Supreme Court again determined
the loss of consortium claims were subject to an insurance policy’s per person
coverage limit rather than its per accident limit. Id. Putting a fine point on the
interconnectivity of bodily injury and loss of consortium claims, the Court said,
“[V]irtually every jurisdiction that has addressed this issue has concluded that loss
of consortium is not a separate ‘bodily injury’ but is derivative of the injured
party’s bodily injury claim[.]” Id. at 248-49 (citations omitted).
So too, here, Mrs. Cheatwood’s loss of consortium claim is subsumed
within the scope of State Farm’s exclusion for bodily injury incurred during a
motorcycle accident. Both Moore and Daley illustrate the point that a loss of
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consortium claim is derivative of the bodily injury claim and, therefore, is not an
independently insured injury. Because a loss of consortium claim is dependent
upon a bodily injury claim, an insurance provision limiting or excluding coverage
for one individual’s bodily injury claim also operates to limit or exclude a related
individual’s derivative loss of consortium claim. Applying this principle to the
Cheatwoods’ policy and Mrs. Cheatwood’s loss of consortium claim of insurance
coverage, the circuit court did not err in denying her claim based on the applicable
exclusion provision found in Part C/1.
Notwithstanding such analysis, Mrs. Cheatwood asks the Court to rely
on Hoskins v. Kentucky Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company, an unpublished
opinion of this Court involving an exclusion provision identical to that in the case
now before the Court. No. 2011-CA-001454-MR, 2012 WL 4841094, at *6-7 (Ky.
App. Oct. 12, 2012).3 That opinion concluded that the bodily injury exclusion did
not operate to exclude the loss of consortium claim. Id.
3
Hoskins’ procedural history indicates the Court of Appeals designated the opinion for
publication. However, the Kentucky Supreme Court granted discretionary review on June 12,
2013. By operation of Kentucky Rule of Civil Procedure (CR) 76.28(4)(a), the Court of Appeals
opinion was ordered not to be published. One of the Supreme Court’s seven Justices recused,
leaving only six to engage in appellate review. On December 19, 2013, the Supreme Court,
whose remaining six Justices were evenly divided, entered an order, rather than an opinion,
affirming the Court of Appeals opinion by operation of statute. Kentucky Revised Statutes
(KRS) 21A.060 (“If the Supreme Court is equally divided in the decision of a case, the
judgment, order or decree of the lower court shall stand affirmed.”).
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Of course, unpublished opinions are not precedent and only “may be
cited for consideration by the court if there is no published opinion that would
adequately address the issue before the court.” CR 76.28(4)(c). The circuit court
considered Hoskins but was more persuaded by Kentucky Farm Bureau Mutual
Insurance Company v. Armfield, another unpublished opinion in which this Court
determined spouses could not recover for loss of consortium when bodily injuries
were expressly excluded from coverage under an auto insurance policy. 2016 WL
748388, at *1.4 The case now before this Court differs from Armfield only
because, in that case, both husband and wife were on the motorcycle at the time of
the accident. The legal issue is the same.
Justice VanMeter, writing for this Court at the time, noted that
Hoskins – besides lacking binding effect as an unpublished opinion – “ignored the
published precedent of both the Kentucky Supreme Court and this court, and is not
therefore persuasive.” Id. at *2. Justice VanMeter’s opinion applied Daley and
Moore to determine there is no loss of consortium coverage if the underlying
bodily injury claim is excluded. The Court said:
4
Armfield’s procedural history reveals that, like Hoskins, the Court of Appeals designated the
opinion to be published. The Kentucky Supreme Court granted discretionary review on August
17, 2016, and, as with Hoskins, the opinion was ordered not to be published by operation of CR
76.28(4)(a). On March 10, 2017, the Supreme Court granted the parties’ joint motion to dismiss
but denied their motion to order publication of the Court of Appeals opinion. Justice VanMeter,
who took office on the Kentucky Supreme Court on January 3, 2017, recused from review of his
own opinion, of course.
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KFB’s policy clearly and unambiguously excluded UIM
coverage for bodily injury sustained by an insured while
occupying an owned motorcycle. Neither spouse has a
substantive, bodily injury claim against KFB under the
policy. Recognizing that they were not covered in this
instance, the Armfields attempted an “end run” and filed a
complaint based solely on each spouse’s loss of
consortium with the other due to the other’s non-covered,
non-compensable bodily injury. [The] Armfields are not
entitled to coverage under the KFB policy for their “bodily
injury,” and consequently neither may recover for loss of
consortium as a result of the bodily injury to the other
spouse.
Id. at *3 (footnote omitted). We find Armfield and its analysis of Daley and Moore
persuasive, just as the circuit court did.
CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing, we affirm the Hardin Circuit Court’s June 16,
2021 order granting summary judgment in favor of State Farm.
ALL CONCUR.
BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT: BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:
Aaron D. Smith Reford H. Coleman
Bowling Green, Kentucky Eric A. Hamilton
Elizabethtown, Kentucky
Michael D. Risley
Louisville, Kentucky
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