Document ID: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca10-15-06051/USCOURTS-ca10-15-06051-0/pdf.json

Parties Involved:
Alice Burgess
Appellant
Daniel Cosar
Appellant
Patrick Dooley
Appellant
Marcus Allen Moore
Appellant
Raymond Roberts
Not Party
Universal Underwriters Insurance Company
Appellee
Tammy Winton
Appellant

Document Text:

PUBLISH 

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS 

FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT 

_________________________________ 

UNIVERSAL UNDERWRITERS 

INSURANCE COMPANY, 

 Plaintiff - Appellee, 

v. 

TAMMY WINTON, individually and as 

representative of the estate of Brant 

Matthew Winton, deceased; MARCUS 

ALLEN MOORE; DANIEL COSAR; 

ALICE BURGESS, individually and as copersonal representative of the estate of 

Rebekah Jane Burgess, deceased; 

PATRICK DOOLEY, as co-personal 

representative of the estate of Rebekah 

Jane Burgess, deceased, 

 Defendants – Appellants, 

and 

RAYMOND ROBERTS, as personal 

representative of the estate of Sofia 

Roberts, deceased, 

 Defendants. 

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

PHOENIX INSURANCE COMPANY, 

 Plaintiff - Appellee, 

and 

No. 15-6051 

No. 15-6052 

FILED 

United States Court of Appeals

Tenth Circuit 

April 8, 2016

Elisabeth A. Shumaker 

Clerk of Court

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2 

NATIONAL UNION FIRE INSURANCE 

COMPANY OF PITTSBURGH, PA, 

 Intervenor Plaintiff - Appellee, 

v. 

TAMMY WINTON, individually and as 

representative of the estate of Bryant 

Matthew Winton, deceased; ALICE 

BURGESS, individually and as co-personal 

representative of the estate of Rebekah 

Jane Burgess, deceased; PATRICK 

DOOLEY, as co-personal representative of 

the estate of Rebekah Jane Burgess, 

deceased; MARCUS ALLEN MOORE; 

DANIEL COSAR, 

 Defendants - Appellants, 

and 

RAYMOND ROBERTS, 

 Defendant. 

_________________________________ 

Appeal from the United States District Court 

for the Western District of Oklahoma 

(D.C. Nos. 5:13-CV-01215-R & 5:14-CV-00095-R)

_________________________________ 

Melissa S. Hedrick, Hedrick Law Firm, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and Blake Sonne, 

Sonne Law Firm, PLC, Norman, Oklahoma (Jose Gonzales, Jose Gonzales, PC, Purcell, 

Oklahoma, Steven L. Parker, Tecumseh, Oklahoma, Kirk A. Olson, Olson Law Firm, 

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and Joe E. White and Charles C. Weddle, III, White & 

Weddle, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, with them on the briefs), for Defendants-Appellants. 

Brittan Lance Buchanan, Buchanan DiMasi Dancy & Grabouski, Austin, Texas (Laura J. 

Grabouski, Buchanan DiMasi Dancy & Grabouski, Austin, Texas, and Daniel K. Zorn, 

Collins Zorn & Wagner, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, with him on the brief), for PlaintiffAppellee in 15-6051. 

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Jacqueline McCormick, Pierce Couch Hendrickson Baysinger & Green, Oklahoma City, 

Oklahoma, and Barbara Michaelides, Nicolaides, Fink, Thorpe, Michaelides & Sullivan, 

LLP, Chicago, Illinois (D. Lynn Babb, Pierce Couch Hendrickson Baysinger & Green, 

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Matthew J. Fink, Wen-Shin Cheng, and Jared K. Clapper, 

Nicolaides, Fink, Thorpe, Michaelides & Sullivan, LLP, Chicago, Illinois, with them on 

the brief), for Plaintiffs-Appellees in 15-6052. 

_________________________________ 

Before HARTZ, BACHARACH, and PHILLIPS, Circuit Judges. 

_________________________________ 

HARTZ, Circuit Judge. 

_________________________________ 

In the early morning of Sunday, November 11, 2007, Sofia Roberts caused a 

motor-vehicle accident that killed five people (including herself) and severely injured two 

others. She was driving a Chrysler 300 that she had obtained from the Marc Heitz Auto 

Valley automobile dealership (Heitz) on November 9, 2007. The Chrysler had been 

delivered to Heitz by Bob Moore Auto Group (Moore) earlier that day. Her estate was 

sued by the estates of Brant Winton and Rebecca Burgess (two of the others killed in the 

accident) and two survivors, Daniel Cosar and Marcus Moore (collectively, the Victims). 

The suits were settled with judgments of $3,000,000 each for the survivors and the 

Winton estate and $5,000,000 for the Burgess estate. 

Allstate Insurance Company (Allstate), the insurer on Roberts’s personal 

automobile-liability policy, contributed its policy limit of $50,000. The judgment limited 

execution to other applicable insurance policies. Three insurance carriers (for the Heitz 

or Moore dealerships)—Universal Underwriters Insurance Company (Universal), 

Phoenix Insurance Company (Phoenix), and National Union Fire Insurance Company of 

Pittsburgh, PA (National) (collectively, the Insurers)—then sued the Victims in the 

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United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma under diversity 

jurisdiction, see 28 U.S.C. § 1332, seeking declaratory judgments that their policies did 

not cover Roberts for the accident. 

The district court granted summary judgment to the Insurers. The Victims 

appeal.1

 They argue that Heitz still owned the Chrysler at the time of the accident and 

that Universal is therefore responsible under the “garage” and “umbrella” coverages of its 

policy for Heitz. Alternatively, the Victims argue that Moore owned the vehicle at the 

time of the accident and that Phoenix and National are liable under their policies for 

Moore. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm the district court’s 

judgments. We agree with the court that (1) Universal is not liable under its garage 

coverage because it indemnifies a Heitz customer only to the extent that the customer’s 

personal liability policy does not provide the statutory mandatory coverage of $50,000 

(which the Allstate policy provided), (2) the Universal umbrella policy does not cover 

customer liability, and (3) Phoenix and National are not liable under their policies 

because Moore did not own the Chrysler at the time of the accident. 

I. DISCUSSION 

Our review of a summary judgment is de novo, applying the same standard as the 

district court is to apply. See Automax Hyundai S., LLC v. Zurich Am. Ins. Co., 720 F.3d 

798, 803 (10th Cir. 2013). Summary judgment is proper “if the movant shows that there 

is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a 

 

1

 The district court entered summary judgment in two separate cases—one in which 

Universal was plaintiff and one in which Phoenix and National were plaintiffs. We 

have consolidated the appeals from the two judgments. 

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matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). All agree that the issues before us are to be 

resolved under Oklahoma state law. See Automax Hyundai, 720 F.3d at 804 (federal 

court applies law of forum state in diversity actions). 

 “Under Oklahoma law, an insurance policy is a contract and is interpreted 

accordingly.” Id. “We accept the contract language in its plain, ordinary, and popular 

sense.” Broom v. Wilson Paving & Excavating, Inc., 356 P.3d 617, 628 (Okla. 2015) 

(internal quotation marks omitted). While ambiguities in a policy are construed against 

the insurer, see id. at 629, “[i]nsurance contracts are ambiguous only if they are 

susceptible to two constructions,” id. at 628 (internal quotation marks omitted). “We do 

not indulge in forced or constrained interpretations to create and then to construe 

ambiguities in insurance contracts.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). 

A. The Universal Policy 

1. The Garage Coverage 

Universal has raised several grounds for why it owes no duty to indemnify the 

Roberts estate under its garage coverage. We need address only one. In our view, the 

policy provided coverage to Heitz customers only up to $50,000 (the minimum liability 

coverage required by Oklahoma law) and only to the extent that the customer’s personal 

policy did not provide that amount. Because the Allstate policy provided $50,000 in 

coverage, there was no obligation left for the garage coverage. For purposes of this 

argument, Universal concedes the Victims’ assertion that Heitz owned the Chrysler at the 

time of the accident. 

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Garage coverage (Part 500 of the Universal policy) protects against liability for 

damages for injury “caused by an OCCURRENCE arising out of GARAGE 

OPERATIONS or AUTO HAZARD.” Universal Underwriters Ins. Co. v. Winton, No. 

15-6051, Aplt. App. (Universal App.), Vol. I at 212. Relevant here is Auto Hazard, 

which the policy defines to include “the ownership, maintenance, or use of any AUTO 

YOU own . . . and . . . furnished for the use of any person.” Id. (The word YOU refers to 

the named insureds, which include Heitz.) 

For Auto Hazard coverage the “WHO IS AN INSURED” section provides that the 

insureds include: 

(1) YOU; 

(2) Any of YOUR partners, paid employees, directors, stockholders, 

executive officers, a member of their household or a member of YOUR 

household, while using an AUTO covered by this Coverage Part, or when 

legally responsible for its use. The actual use of the AUTO must be by 

YOU or within the scope of YOUR permission; 

(3) Any CONTRACT DRIVER; 

(4) Any other person or organization required by law to be an INSURED 

while using an AUTO covered by this Coverage Part within the scope of 

YOUR permission. 

Id. at 215 (emphasis added). Ms. Roberts would have been an insured under part (4). 

The extent of her liability coverage is set by the “MOST WE WILL PAY” section under 

garage coverage. The relevant language of that section is: 

THE MOST WE WILL PAY – Regardless of the number of INSUREDS 

or AUTOS insured or premiums charged by this Coverage Part, persons or 

organizations who sustain INJURY or COVERED POLLUTION 

DAMAGES, claims made or SUITS brought, the most WE will pay is: 

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(1) With respect to GARAGE OPERATIONS and AUTO HAZARD, the 

limit shown in the declarations [$300,000], for any one OCCURRENCE. 

. . . . 

With respect to the AUTO HAZARD part (4) of WHO IS AN INSURED, the 

most WE will pay is that portion of such limit needed to comply with the 

minimum limits provision law in the jurisdiction where the OCCURRENCE 

took place. When there is other insurance applicable, WE will pay only the 

amount needed to comply with such minimum limits after such other 

insurance has been exhausted. 

Id. at 218–19 (emphasis added). The emphasized language makes clear that the purpose 

of the garage coverage under part (4)—which is what applies to Ms. Roberts—is to 

ensure that the driver will be protected up to the statutory minimum liability coverage for 

Oklahoma drivers: if other coverage does not reach that minimum, Universal will supply 

the remainder needed. In Oklahoma the applicable statutory minimum is $50,000. See 

47 Okla. Stat. § 7-324(b)(2) (2004). The Victims do not dispute that the above provisions 

would limit the coverage of Ms. Roberts to $50,000; and because Allstate paid $50,000 

under its policy, Universal would owe nothing. 

The Victims contend, however, that another policy provision overrides that limit 

in the “MOST WE WILL PAY” section. They rely on an amendment to the policy 

applicable in Oklahoma (called the “Oklahoma State Amendatory Part” (the 

Amendment)), which modifies the “OTHER INSURANCE” section in the garage 

coverage. To understand this argument, we start with the garage coverage’s original 

“OTHER INSURANCE” condition. It states that garage coverage for part (4) insureds is 

“excess,” instead of “primary”: 

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The insurance afforded by [the garage coverage] is primary, except it is

excess: . . . (2) for any person or organization under part (3) or (4) of WHO 

IS AN INSURED with respect to the AUTO HAZARD. 

Universal App., Vol. I at 221 (emphasis added). The Amendment limits the 

circumstances in which a dealer’s liability coverage can be excess over the coverage 

provided by a customer’s personal policy. It states: 

Coverage Part 500 – GARAGE is changed as follows; 

The OTHER INSURANCE Condition is changed by adding the 

following: 

When two policies providing liability coverage apply to an AUTO 

and: 

(a) One provides coverage to a named INSURED who is an 

authorized motor vehicle dealer, and 

(b) The other provides coverage to a person not engaged in that 

business, and 

(c) At the time of an ACCIDENT a person described in (b) is 

operating the AUTO then that person’s liability insurance is 

primary and the dealer’s liability insurance is excess over any 

insurance available to that person, provided: 

(1) The person is operating the AUTO with the permission of the 

dealer, and 

(2) The change in financial responsibility is evidenced by a 

release signed by the person operating the AUTO, and 

(3) No fee or lease charge has been made by the dealer for the 

use of the AUTO. 

Id. at 107 (emphasis added). 

 The Victims do not dispute that the conditions required for the garage coverage to 

be excess were satisfied here, and hence that the garage coverage was excess coverage in 

relation to Ms. Roberts’s Allstate policy. Rather, they seem to be arguing that the garage 

coverage is excess but, in light of the Amendment, it is no longer governed by the 

“MOST WE WILL PAY” provision. 

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They begin by claiming that the “MOST WE WILL PAY” provision is an “escape 

clause” (that is, a provision that “disclaims any and all liability if other insurance is 

available,” Equity Mut. Ins. Co. v. Spring Valley Wholesale Nursery, Inc., 747 P.2d 947, 

954 (Okla. 1987)) rather than an “excess clause” (that is, one under which there is 

coverage only after primary coverage has been exhausted, see id.). As best we can tell, 

they believe it is an escape clause because Universal escapes any liability if another 

policy provides the statutory minimum, even when the driver’s liability exceeds that 

minimum. They say the Amendment, however, creates an ambiguity in the policy 

because it states that the policy (if the conditions are satisfied) is what the Victims would 

apparently consider a “pure” excess policy (that is, one without any escape-clause 

character), while the “MOST WE WILL PAY” provision is an escape clause. As a result 

of the ambiguity created by this conflict, they argue, we must limit the “MOST WE 

WILL PAY” provision and construe the policy, as amended, to provide the general policy 

limit of $300,000 above (in excess of) what another policy (in this case, the Allstate 

policy) provides. 

We are not persuaded. The “MOST WE WILL PAY” provision is not ambiguous. 

It could not be clearer in providing coverage only so far as necessary to ensure that the 

driver has the minimum coverage required by law. The Victims would alter that 

language by referring to an amendment that does not even mention the “MOST WE 

WILL PAY” provision. The Amendment says only that it is changing the “OTHER 

INSURANCE” condition. And the change has nothing to do with the alleged “escape” 

character of the “MOST WE WILL PAY” provision. The change simply modifies the 

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unqualified statement in the original other-insurance provision that coverage “is excess,” 

Universal App., Vol. I at 221, by adding the Amendment’s language that the coverage is 

excess only if certain requirements are satisfied. Somehow the Victims believe that the 

term excess in the Amendment has an effect (overriding the escape component of the 

“MOST WE WILL PAY” provision) that the term did not have in the original otherinsurance provision.2

 We reject the contention that this fanciful construction of policy 

language is a reasonable interpretation that creates an ambiguity in the Universal policy. 

We affirm the district court’s ruling that once Allstate paid the $50,000, Universal owed 

nothing further under the garage coverage. 

2. The Umbrella Coverage 

The Universal policy also provided umbrella coverage with a $15 million limit. 

The Victims argue that Ms. Roberts was an insured under this coverage. We disagree. 

The umbrella part of the policy states that it “applies only to those insureds . . . 

designated for each coverage as identified in declarations item 2 by letter(s) or number.” 

Id. at 248. Also, it defines the insureds as follows: 

WHO IS AN INSURED 

. . . . 

With respect to any AUTO or watercraft: 

(a) YOU; 

With respect to (1) any AUTO or watercraft used in YOUR business or (2) 

personal use of any AUTO owned or hired by YOU: 

 

2

 The Victims never argue that the word excess in the original other-insurance 

provision created an ambiguity. But even if they did, we would reject the argument. 

Again, the “MOST WE WILL PAY” provision could not be clearer. 

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(a) any person or organization shown in the declarations for this 

Coverage Part as a “Designated Person”. 

Universal App., Vol. I at 251. The policy defines “YOU” as “the person or organization 

shown in the declarations as the Named Insured.” Id. at 178. The Victims do not, and 

could not, dispute that Ms. Roberts is not listed by name (or even category) in 

“declarations item 2,” id. at 248, “in the declarations . . . as a ‘Designated Person,’” id. at 

251, or “in the declarations as the Named Insured,” id. at 178. We conclude that Ms. 

Roberts was not an insured. 

The Victims nevertheless argue that Heitz was covered (which is undisputed) and 

that Ms. Roberts was covered because “WHO IS AN INSURED” includes “YOU . . . 

with respect to (1) any AUTO . . . used in YOUR business or (2) personal use of any 

AUTO owned or hired by YOU,” id. at 251. They point out that the Chrysler was used in 

Heitz’s business and was a car owned by Heitz that was being personally used. But they 

are confusing what is covered with who is covered. They may have an argument that 

there is coverage with respect to Ms. Roberts’s accident, but that would mean only that 

Heitz itself would be covered if it were found liable with respect to the accident (for 

negligent entrustment or the like). That is far different from saying Ms. Roberts’s

liability is covered. Ms. Roberts is not an insured under the umbrella coverage, and it is 

irrelevant that she is not included in the list of excluded insureds. 

The Victims also argue that our reading of the “WHO IS AN INSURED” 

provision is “nonsensical,” noting that this reading would even exclude most Heitz 

employees. We see nothing nonsensical about such a reading. Most people would be 

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adequately protected by the $300,000 limit of the garage coverage. Only those with the 

most assets require the higher limits of the umbrella policy. We are unpersuaded by the 

unexplained contrary view expressed in Empire Fire & Marine Ins. v. Keifer, 483 F. 

Supp. 2d 591, 594 (N.D. Ohio 2007) (“[L]eav[ing] employees uncovered . . . makes no 

sense.”). We are also unpersuaded by the other case cited in support by the Victims: 

Empire Fire & Marine Ins. v. Archer, 2005 WL 3005772, at *7 (N.J. App. Ct. Nov. 10, 

2005). In that case the policy included a follow-form provision incorporating the 

coverage conditions of the underlying policy. The provision stated: “Unless a provision 

to the contrary appears in our policy, all the conditions, definitions, agreements, 

exclusions and limitations of the ‘underlying insurance’, including changes by 

endorsement, will apply to our Policy.” Id. at *2. The Universal umbrella coverage, 

however, does not contain such a follow-form provision. On the contrary, it is quite 

explicit about who is covered, as noted above. 

B. The Phoenix and National Policies 

The Victims concede that Ms. Roberts was covered under Moore’s primary policy 

issued by Phoenix and its umbrella policy issued by National only if Moore owned the 

Chrysler at the time of the accident. Although it is undisputed that Moore delivered the 

Chrysler to Heitz on Friday, November 9, 2007, two days before the accident, the 

Victims rely on the failure of Moore to transfer the vehicle certificate of title until the day 

after the accident. We hold that Moore did not own the vehicle even though it had not 

transferred the title certificate. 

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Under the Oklahoma version of the Uniform Commercial Code, “Unless otherwise 

explicitly agreed title passes to the buyer at the time and place at which the seller 

completes his performance with reference to the physical delivery of the goods, despite 

any reservation of a security interest and even though a document of title is to be 

delivered at a different time or place . . . .” 12A Okla. Stat. § 2-401(2) (1961) (emphasis 

added). Thus, in Medico Leasing Co. v. Smith, 457 P.2d 548, 551 (Okla. 1969), the 

Oklahoma Supreme Court held that despite failure to convey a certificate of title, “[t]he 

sale of [an] automobile [is] complete upon delivery of the car with the intent to sell.” It is 

undisputed that the facts here satisfy the statute and Medico. 

The Victims argue, however, that these authorities were overridden by the later 

enactment of the Oklahoma Vehicle and License Registration Act (OVLRA), which 

states: “It is the intent of the Legislature that the owner or owners of every vehicle in this 

state shall possess a certificate of title as proof of ownership and that every vehicle shall 

be registered in the name of the owner or owners thereof.” 47 Okla. Stat. § 1103 (1985). 

In support they cite Mitchell Coach Mfg. Co. v. Stephens, 19 F. Supp. 2d 1227, 1233 

(N.D. Okla. 1998), which said that Medico had been superseded by OVLRA and now 

“certificates of title are ‘proof of ownership.’” 

We have no quarrel with the ultimate decision in Mitchell; but it did not accurately 

predict what the Oklahoma courts would rule with regard to the effect of a certificate of 

title on transfer of ownership after enactment of OVLRA. In Green v. Harris, 70 P.3d 

866, 867 (Okla. 2003), the plaintiff sued a minor’s parents for negligent entrustment of a 

vehicle to a minor. The mother argued she had no ownership interest in the vehicle, and 

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therefore was not liable, because her name was not on the title. See id. at 870. In 

rejecting her argument, the Oklahoma Supreme Court cited pre-OVLRA opinions in 

support of the proposition that “[m]otor vehicle certificates of title in Oklahoma are 

documents of convenience and are not necessarily controlling of ownership of an 

automobile.” Id. at 871. More closely in point is Sutton v. Snider, 33 P.3d 309 (Okla. 

App. Ct. 2001). The owner of a motorcycle had permitted a dealer to display it for sale. 

Id. at 310. But when the motorcycle was purchased, the original owner sued for 

possession of the vehicle, relying on the fact that he held the title. See id. Citing Medico, 

the court stated that it is “unnecessary for a dealer to deliver a certificate of title before 

conveying ownership and that the absence of the certificate of title does not invalidate the 

sale.” Id. at 312. Sutton distinguished Mitchell, saying that it “addresses the issue of 

perfecting security interests, a circumstance not involved in the instant case.” Id.3

 

The ownership of the Chrysler passed to Heitz from Moore when Heitz took 

possession on November 9, 2007. Because Moore was not the owner of the vehicle at the 

time of the accident, the Phoenix and National policies did not cover Ms. Roberts. 

 

3

 The Victims also make a passing reference to 47 Okla. Stat. § 1107.4 (2005) as 

supporting their argument. They point out that when someone transfers a vehicle and 

files a written notice of the transfer with the state tax commission or a motor-license 

agent, the transferee is rebuttably presumed to be the owner (and subject to civil and 

criminal liability arising out of ownership). See id. § 1107.4(C). They assert that 

Moore is the presumed owner of the vehicle at the time of the accident because it had 

not filed such a notice by then. We are not persuaded. Such filing is permissive, not 

mandatory, see id. § 1107.4(A) (“the transferor may file a written notice of transfer” 

(emphasis added)); see also id. § 1107.4(D) (statute does not impose liability on 

person who transfers ownership but does not file a notice of transfer). 

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II. CONCLUSION 

We AFFIRM the judgments of the district court. 

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