Court Opinion

ID: 4092370
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-10-25 09:34:01.500342+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:08:41.933328
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TENNESSEE
                           AT NASHVILLE
                              February 10, 2016 Session

              EDWARD MARTIN V. GREGORY POWERS ET AL.

                  Appeal by Permission from the Court of Appeals
                       Circuit Court for Williamson County
                    No. 2013-347   James G. Martin III, Judge

              No. M2014-00647-SC-R11-CV – Filed October 24, 2016

HOLLY KIRBY, J., dissenting.

      I respectfully dissent from the majority opinion in this case.

       The majority concludes that the Policy exclusion for any vehicle “owned or
operated by a self-insurer under any applicable motor vehicle law” is ambiguous. I
disagree. As explained below, under the plain Policy language, the rental car driven by
the Defendant was not an “uninsured motor vehicle” because it was owned by a “self-
insurer” under Tennessee’s Financial Responsibility Act. For this reason, I would
conclude that the Policy does not provide UM coverage to the Plaintiff in this case.

      In this case, the Policy provides for UM coverage when the insured’s injuries are
caused by an “uninsured motor vehicle.” The Policy contains the proviso that the term
“uninsured motor vehicle”

      does not mean a vehicle . . . owned or operated by a self-insurer under any
      applicable motor vehicle law, except a self-insurer which is or becomes
      insolvent.

Concomitantly, Tennessee Code Annotated section 56-7-1202 provides that an
“uninsured motor vehicle”

      does not include a motor vehicle . . . [s]elf-insured within the meaning of
      the Tennessee Financial Responsibility Law, compiled in title 55, chapter
      12, or any similar state or federal law.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 56-7-1202(a)(2)(C) (2008). While the Policy tracks the language of
the statute, the statute is more specific in that it identifies one such “applicable motor
vehicle law,” namely, the Tennessee Financial Responsibility Law. As pointed out by the
majority, “any statute applicable to an insurance policy becomes part of the policy and
such statutory provisions override and supersede anything in the policy repugnant to the
provisions of the statute.” Hermitage Health & Life Ins. Co. v. Cagel, 420 S.W.2d 591,
594 (Tenn. 1967).

        It is undisputed in this case that Enterprise is certified as a self-insurer under the
Tennessee Financial Responsibility Law and that Enterprise owned the Rental Car used
to inflict injuries upon the Plaintiff. Thus, reading the Policy and the statute together, the
Rental Car was clearly not an “uninsured motor vehicle” because it was “owned . . . by a
self-insurer under [an] applicable motor vehicle law,” i.e., the Tennessee Financial
Responsibility Law. Accordingly, under the plain Policy language, I would conclude that
UM coverage must be denied.

        Certainly I am sympathetic to the Plaintiff, and the result reached by the majority
is consonant with the overall aim of the UM statutes. However, I think that this case does
not present an ambiguity in either the statutes or the insurance Policy. Rather, it
highlights a “hole” in the statutes and, consequently, in the Policy language that tracks
the statutes. It seems likely that the legislature simply did not contemplate this scenario,
where a vehicle can be considered “insured” if owned by a self-insurer, even though the
owner/self-insurer cannot legally be held liable for the damages caused by the vehicle
operator based on federal law or otherwise. Neither the statutes nor the Policy provide
for this situation.

        Accordingly, I would apply the Policy as written, and I would leave it to the
legislature to fix any hole in the applicable statutes. For this reason, I respectfully
dissent.

                                                   ________________________
                                                   HOLLY KIRBY, JUSTICE

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