Court Opinion

ID: 9621711
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-22 06:04:09.311315+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:05:07.699468
License: Public Domain

LAURA DENVIR STITH, Judge.
Steve and Anita Ritchie sued Allied Property and Casualty Insurance Company seeking $300,000 in underinsured motorist coverage under their Allied policy for the wrongful death of their daughter, Kelsey Ritchie. The trial court held that the Ritchies were entitled to recover this amount, finding the anti-stacking and set-off provisions of the policy unenforceable.
This Court affirms, but on different grounds. Allied’s other insurance provi*134sion states that where the insured was injured while in a non-owned vehicle, then “[a]ny coverage we provide ... shall be excess over any other collectible underin-sured motorist coverage.” This clause reasonably can be interpreted to permit stacking of underinsured motorist coverages where, as here, the insured was injured while in a non-owned vehicle. To the extent that other provisions of the policy could be read in isolation to prohibit such stacking, they at best create an ambiguity that, under settled law, must be resolved in favor of coverage. Similarly, this Court rejects Allied’s argument that it is always entitled to a set-off for the amounts received by the insured from third parties. As this Court recently noted in Jones v. Mid-Century Ins. Co., 287 S.W.3d 687 (Mo. banc 2009), such an interpretation in effect would mean that Allied never would pay the full amount of its purported limits of liability and, so, would be in conflict with the policy’s coverage provisions. Instead, applying Jones, the set-off provision in the policy is not applicable where, as here, the insureds’ damages exceed the amount of coverage even after deduction of amounts previously paid by other parties.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Steve and Anita Ritchie are the parents of Kelsey Ritchie.1 While Kelsey was a passenger in a vehicle driven by Noah Heath, it collided with a vehicle driven by Adam Tomblin. Numerous people were injured in the accident, and Kelsey was killed. Kelsey’s parents sued both Mr. Heath and Mr. Tomblin for wrongful death. Following trial, a judgment was entered in favor of the Ritchies and against Mr. Heath and Mr. Tomblin (the tortfeasors) for $1.8 million for the wrongful death of Kelsey. At the time of the accident, Kelsey was insured under a personal automobile policy the Ritchies purchased from Allied. The Allied policy insured three vehicles owned by the Rit-chies. The Ritchies paid three separate premiums for these vehicles, including un-derinsured motorist coverage for each vehicle of $100,000 per person and $300,000 per accident.
Both Mr. Heath and Mr. Tomblin were underinsured. Mr. Heath’s insurer, OMNI Hartford, provided liability limits of $25,000 per person and $50,000 per accident. Mr. Tomblin’s vehicle was insured by Progressive Insurance Company, with liability limits of $50,000 per person and $100,000 per accident. Because these per accident liability limits had to be shared among the multiple persons injured in the accident, the Ritchies received only $20,000 from Mr. Heath’s insurer and $40,000 from Mr. Tomblin’s insurer toward their $1.8 million damage award. The Rit-chies, therefore, sought recovery from Allied under their underinsured motorist coverage. They asserted that they were entitled to the full $100,000 per person underinsured coverage for each vehicle, for a total of $800,000.
Allied countered that its underinsured motorist policies could not be stacked, thereby permitting only a single recovery of up to $100,000. It further argued that “the maximum per-person recovery under the underinsured motorist coverage policy [of] $100,000” was not just the most it would pay, but was also the most that the Ritchies were entitled to recover in total from all sources. This meant, it argued, that it was entitled to a set-off of the *135$60,000 that the Ritchies already had recovered from the tortfeasors’ insurers.
Believing that such a set-off was improper and that the language of their particular policy entitled them to stack the three underinsured motorist coverages, the Rit-chies filed the instant suit. The trial court found that the anti-stacking and set-off provisions in the policy were “confusing, duplicitous, vague, ambiguous and inconsistent” and unenforceable and that the Ritchies were entitled to recover the full $300,000 of underinsured motorist coverage. Allied appeals. Following a decision by the court of appeals, this Court granted transfer. Mo. Const, art. V, sec. 10.

II. STANDARD OF REVIEW

Interpretation of an insurance policy is a question of law that this Court determines de novo. Seeck v. Geico General Ins. Co., 212 S.W.8d 129, 132 (Mo. banc 2007). “In construing the terms of an insurance policy, this Court applies the meaning which would be attached by an ordinary person of average understanding if purchasing insurance, and resolves ambiguities in favor of the insured.” Id.; Martin v. United States Fid. & Guar. Co., 996 S.W.2d 506, 508 (Mo. banc 1999). Such “ambiguity exists when there is duplicity, indistinctness, or uncertainty in the meaning of the language in the policy. Language is ambiguous if it is reasonably open to different constructions.” Seeck, 212 S.W.3d at 132; Gulf Ins. Co. v. Noble Broadcast, 936 S.W.2d 810, 814 (Mo. banc 1997). Courts should not interpret policy provisions in isolation but rather evaluate policies as a whole. Seeck, 212 S.W.3d at 133.

III. DISCUSSION

A. The Right to Stack Underinsured Motorist Coverage Is Determined bg the Language of the Policg

“‘Stacking’ refers to an insured’s ability to obtain multiple insurance coverage benefits for an injury either from more than one policy, as where the insured has two or more separate vehicles under separate policies, or from multiple coverages provided for within a single policy, as when an insured has one policy which covers more than one vehicle.” Niswonger v. Farm Bureau Town & Country Ins. Co. of Missouri, 992 S.W.2d 308, 313 (Mo.App.1999). Missouri law requires that all automobile insurance policies issued in this state provide uninsured motorist coverage of at least the statutory minimum amount of $25,000. § 379.203, RSMo 2000. Flowing from this statutory requirement, this Court has recognized that where multiple policies or multiple uninsured motorist coverages are in place, insurers are prohibited from including policy language precluding stacking of the coverage provided under multiple policies or coverage provisions. Niswonger, 992 S.W.2d at 313.
By contrast, and unlike many other states, Missouri statutes do not also mandate underinsured motorist coverage. See 16 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS, § 49.35 (1th ed. 2009) (contrasting the requirements of various states in regard to underinsured motorist coverage). Consequently, “the existence of the [underin-sured motorist] coverage and its ability to be stacked are determined by the contract entered between the insured and the insurer.” Rodriguez v. Gen. Acc. Ins. Co. of Am., 808 S.W.2d 379, 383 (Mo. banc 1991). This means that if the policy language is unambiguous in disallowing stacking, the anti-stacking provisions are enforceable. Seeck, 212 S.W.3d at 132. “If, however, policy language is ambiguous [as to stacking], it must be construed against the insurer,” and stacking will be allowed. Id.; Gulf Ins. Co., 936 S.W.2d at 814.
*136Here, all agree that the Ritchies suffered damages of $1.8 million, that they recovered $60,000 from the tortfeasors, and that each of the Ritchies had underin-sured motorist coverage with Allied for the three vehicles in the amounts of $100,000 per person and $300,000 per accident. All agree that Kelsey died as a result of an accident while riding in a non-owned vehicle. All also agree this means that the Ritchies’ damages exceed the $60,000 in damages they have been paid under the tortfeasors’ insurance policies and that the Ritchies are entitled to recover some additional damages under their underinsured motorist coverage with Allied, which states in part:
INSURING AGREEMENT
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.
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We will pay under this coverage only if the limits of liability under any applicable bodily injury liability bonds or policies have been exhausted by payment of judgments or settlements.
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B. Ambiguities in Other Insurance and Limit of Liability Clause

The issue before this Court is the amount the Ritchies are owed and how that amount relates to possible conflicts within the other insurance provision and between the other insurance provision and the limit of liability provision. Allied argues that the limit of liability provision prohibits stacking of underinsured motorist coverages, so that the total potential limit of its liability is $100,000. Allied further argues that the policy provisions entitle it to a $60,000 set-off from this total because the Ritchies already have recovered $60,000 from the tortfeasors’ insurers. Therefore, Allied says, it owes the Ritchies only $40,000.
The Ritchies argue that even if the limit of liability provision could be so interpreted, the other insurance provision creates an exception and permits stacking where, as here, the insured was injured while riding in a non-owned vehicle. To the extent these policy provisions are inconsistent, they create an ambiguity that, under Missouri law, must be construed in favor of the insured. Gulf Ins. Co., 936 S.W.2d at 814. The Ritchies further argue that as in Jones, 287 S.W.3d at 690-93, the set-off language is inconsistent with the coverage provision stating that $100,000 in coverage will be provided, for in fact Allied’s corporate representative admitted that amount of coverage never will be provided and, so, creates an ambiguity that similarly must be resolved in favor of coverage.2
The pertinent language from the Allied policy on which both parties rely in support of these arguments is as follows:
LIMIT OF LIABILITY
A. The limit of liability shown in the Declarations for each person for Underinsured Motorists coverage is our maximum limit of liability for all damages for case, loss of services, or death arising out of “bodily injury” sustained by any one person in any one accident. Subject to this limit for each person, the limit of liability shown in the Sched*137ule or in the Declarations for each accident for Underinsured Motorists Coverage is our maximum limit of liability for all damages for “bodily injury” resulting from any one accident. This is the most we -will pay regardless of the numbers of:
1. “Insureds;”
2. Claims made;
3. Vehicles or premiums shown in the Declarations; or
4. Vehicles involved in the accident.
B. The limit of liability shall be reduced by all sums: ... [p]aid because of ‘bodily injury’ or by or on behalf of persons organizations who ■ may be legally responsible ...
OTHER INSURANCE

If there is other applicable underin-sured motorists coverage available under one or more policies or provisions of coverage:

1. Any recovery for damages may equal but not exceed the highest applicable limit for any one vehicle under this insurance or other insurance providing coverage on either a primary or excess basis. In addition, if any such coverage is provided on the same basis, either primary or excess, as the coverage we provided under this endorsement, we will pay only our share. Our share is the proportion that our limit of liability bears to the total of all applicable limits for coverage provided on the same basis.

2. Any coverage we provide with respect to a vehicle you do not mm shall be excess over any other collectible underinsured motorist coverage.

(emphasis added in italics).
As the issues of stacking and set-off payments concern different subsections of the Allied policy, this Court will address each separately.

C. The Other Insurance Clause Authorizes Stacking

Considered in isolation, the limit of liability provision and clause (1) of the other insurance provision could be interpreted to prohibit stacking to the extent they state that the “limit of liability shown in the declarations for each person for Underinsured Motorists coverage is our maximum limit of liability” and that any recovery “may equal but not exceed the highest applicable limit for any one vehicle.”
As noted earlier, however, courts should not interpret policy provisions in isolation but rather evaluate policies as a whole. Seeck, 212 S.W.3d at 133. Allied’s proposed interpretation of the above two subsections is inconsistent with subsection (2) of the other insurance provision, which states that “[a]ny coverage we provide with respect to a vehicle you do not own shall be excess over any other collectible underinsured motorist coverage” (emphasis added).
Kelsey was injured while riding in a vehicle not owned by her or her parents. Subsection (2) of the other insurance provision, therefore, is applicable. As just quoted, this means the underinsured coverage under the policy “shall be excess over any other collectible underinsured motorist coverage” when, as in this case, an insured is injured while riding in a non-owned vehicle.
When subsection (2) is read together with the provisions in which Allied relies, the three subsections suggest “that the policy’s anti-stacking provisions, which might normally and otherwise apply, do not apply in the special situation where the insured is injured while occupying a non-*138owned vehicle.” Niswonger, 992 S.W.2d at 315. Rather, an “ordinary person of average understanding,” McCormack Baron, 989 S.W.2d at 171, reasonably could interpret this other insurance provision to mean that when an injured insured is occupying a non-owned vehicle and there are multiple underinsured motorist coverages, as it is conceded there are here, then each of the underinsured motorist coverages are excess to the other, and, therefore, may be stacked.
Seeck is directly on point. In that case, this Court followed a long line of precedent “holding that conflicts between underin-sured motorist policy limits ... and the provision of excess coverage in an excess or other insurance clause renders an insurance policy ambiguous.” 212 S.W.3d at 133. This Court found the interplay between a limit of liability provision and an other insurance provision created ambiguity, as excess coverage was promised at one point and taken away at another. Id. This reasoning is directly applicable here.3
The Allied other insurance provision reasonably could be interpreted as superseding the limit of liability provision and making coverage available to the insureds through their own additional under-insured motorist coverages with Allied. Niswonger, 992 S.W.2d at 318.4 Any conflict between these provisions creates an ambiguity that is resolved in favor of the insureds. Chamness v. Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co., 226 S.W.3d 199, 207 (Mo.App.2007).5
*139Allied attempts to distinguish its other insurance provision from that in Seeck by noting that the provision in Seeck said coverage was “excess over any other insurance,” whereas here, Allied’s policy says coverage is excess over “any other collectible underinsured motorist coverage.” While this difference in language might be dispositive in some other fact situation,6 Allied fails to note that in the present matter the Ritchies, in fact, are claiming the coverage is excess over other collectible underinsured motorist coverage. As such, Seeck’s reasoning is fully applicable.7
This also distinguishes Farm Bureau Town & Country Ins. Co. of Mo. v. Barker, 150 S.W.3d 103, 108 (Mo.App.2004), the key case on which Allied relies. While the other insurance provision in Barker states that any insurance with respect to a non-owned vehicle will be “excess” over “primary” coverage provided by insurance that applies to the occupied motor vehicle, the Allied policy provides “excess” coverage over “any other collectible underinsured motorist coverage.” In this way, the language in the Allied policy is more likely to create the impression that underinsured motorist coverages can be stacked when injury occurs in a non-owned vehicle. In any event, no other court has cited Barker in any of the numerous underinsured motorist decisions since it was handed down. To the extent Barker is inconsistent with Seeck and the cases Seeck cites with approval, it no longer should be followed.8

D. Allied Is Not Entitled to a Set-off

Allied argues that, regardless of whether this Court accepts its argument as to stacking, it is entitled to a $60,000 set-off against the total liability it owes the Ritchies because that is the amount the Ritchies already have collected from the tortfeasors’ insurers.9 In support, Allied *140points the Court to subsection B of the limit of liability provision, which states in relevant part that the “limit of liability shall be reduced by all sums ... [p]aid because of ‘bodily injury’ or by or on behalf of persons organizations who may be legally responsible.... ”
A nearly identical argument recently was rejected by this Court on similar facts in Jones, 287 S.W.3d at 691. The policy in that case said “[t]he amount of UNDERin-sured Motorist Coverage we will pay shall be reduced by any amount paid or payable to or for an insured person.” Considered in isolation, this clause could be read to permit the insurer to set off the amount already received from others from the amount stated in its limit of liability. But, Jones noted, if a contract “promises something at one point and takes it away at another, there is an ambiguity ... [and if] policy language is ambiguous, it must be construed against the insurer.” 287 S.W.2d at 690, quoting Seeck, 212 S.W.3d at 132.
Jones held that such an ambiguity was present in that case because the set-off provision on which the insurer relied conflicted with the clear statement in other portions of the policy that the stated limit of liability was “the most we will pay” and that “we will pay up to the limits of liability shown in the schedule.” Id. at 690-91. Yet because the provision at issue provided underinsured motorist coverage, not uninsured motorist coverage, the insured always would have recovered at least the statutorily required amount of coverage. Therefore, the insurer never would pay out the full amount of its stated limits of liability, making its statements that it would do so misleading.
Jones resolved this conflict by giving an alternative construction to the limit of liability provision that would give meaning to all policy provisions without conflict. It found the statement that underinsured motorist coverage would be “reduced by any amount paid or payable to or for an insured person” simply to mean “that in determining the total damages to which the underinsured motorist coverage will be applied, the amount of money already received from the tortfeasor must be deducted.” Id. at 693. The provision, therefore, precludes a double recovery — one recovers the policy limits only if, after deducting the amounts already paid, damages equaling or exceeding those limits are still outstanding.
This analysis applies directly here. Both the declarations page for the policy and the limit of liability provision state that coverage is provided up to $100,000 per person, $300,000 per accident, for each of the three vehicles the Ritchies owned and, in multiple places, states that “this is the most we will pay” and that this limit of liability is the maximum it will pay. Yet, as Allied’s corporate representative conceded below, Allied in fact never will pay out its full amount under its interpretation of “limit of liability” subsection B. It always will be reduced by the amounts already paid, even where, as here, the plaintiffs still had $1.74 million in damages unpaid.
Subsection B does not cure or avoid this coverage language, but, if interpreted as Allied requests, subsection B does conflict with it. And as previously noted, it is *141well-settled that where one section of an insurance policy promises coverage and another takes it away, the contract is ambiguous. Seeck, 212 S.W.3d at 133.
As in Jones, however, an alternative construction can be placed on subsection B giving meaning to all subsections of the policy.10 In stating that “[t]he limit of liability shall be reduced by all sums ... [p]aid because of ‘bodily injury1 or by or on behalf of persons or organizations who may be legally responsible,” subsection B “simply means that in determining the total damages to which the underinsured motorist coverage will be applied, the amount of money already received from the tortfeasor must be deducted. In this way, it avoids a double recovery.” Jones, id. at 693. As applied to this case, this means that if the Ritchies had suffered only $140,000 in damages and had recovered $60,000 from other tortfeasors, then the $60,000 would be deducted from the total damages, and Allied would be responsible for only the remaining $80,000, thereby avoiding a double recovery. In fact, this is how Allied’s own adjuster interpreted the policy, stating that Allied’s own web site declared “this coverage typically pays the difference between the amount recovered from the other driver and the amount of the damages, up to the limit of the policy,” and that this definition applied to the Ritchies’ policy.
Applying these principles here, the Rit-chies suffered $1.8 million in damages, and received only $60,000 from the tortfeasors. Deducting this $60,000 from the $1.8 million in damages still leaves unsatisfied damages of $1.74 million. This is far more than the policy limits. Accordingly, Allied must pay its full policy limits of $300,000.

IV. CONCLUSION

For all the reasons stated above, the circuit court’s judgment is affirmed.
TEITELMAN, RUSSELL, WOLFF, BRECKENRIDGE and FISCHER, JJ, concur.
PRICE, C.J., dissents in separate opinion filed.

. For the sake of clarity, the opinion hereafter will refer to Kelsey individually by her first name and to her parents as "the Ritchies."

. The Ritchies also request that this Court consider particular wording as allowing them to recover $600,000 because there were two uninsured drivers involved in the accident. The Ritchies did not cross-appeal in accordance with Rule 81.04(b), however, and, so, no issue in this regard is presented for the Court to consider on appeal.

.Specifically, Seeck held that ambiguity existed in an insurance policy containing the following other insurance provision:
When an insured is occupying a motor vehicle not owned by the insured ... this insurance is excess over any other insurance available to the insured and the insurance which applies to the occupied motor vehicle is primary.
212 S.W.3d at 132. Accord, Goza v. Hartford Underwriters Insurance Co., 972 S.W.2d 371, 374-375 (Mo.App.1998) (conflicts between a similar other insurance provision and limit of liability provision "might reasonably be interpreted by an average lay person ... to mean that [the other insurance provision] prevailed over the preceding and apparently conflicting language contained in the policy's ... Limits of Liability sections ... ”); Ware v. Geico Gen. Ins. Co., 84 S.W.3d 99, 103 (Mo.App.2002) ("[A] reasonable layperson may have concluded that the ‘Other Insurance' provision prevailed over the preceding and apparently conflicting ‘Limit of Liability’ provisions in that the 'Other Insurance' provision applies to a specific situation setting it apart, namely, when an insured is occupying a motor vehicle not owned by the insured ... ”). See also Lutsky v. Blue Cross Hosp. Serv., Inc., 695 S.W.2d 870, 875 (Mo. banc 1985); Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co. v. Ragsdale, 213 S.W.3d 51, 54 (Mo.App.2007); Zemelman v. Equity Mut. Ins. Co., 935 S.W.2d 673, 677-78 (Mo.App.1996).

. While, as Allied notes, Niswonger, 992 S.W.2d at 316, found that the use of the word "however” before the excess clause for non-owned vehicles furthered the impression that it set out an exception to the anti-stacking rule, Allied misapprehends the power of conjuncts. Niswonger nowhere suggested that simply removing the word "however” by itself would eradicate all contradictions between the two provisions. Conjuncts, after all, are not part of the propositional content but rather are a way of linking a sentence with previous discourse. Where clauses conflict, it is up to the insurer to correct the contradiction through clear, ordinary language. Seeck, 212 S.W.3d at 134, fn. 3. An ambiguity has been found even in the absence of such words of exclusion, see, e.g., Seeck, 212 S.W.3d at 132, and this Court again so finds here.

. The dissent suggests that Seeck was wrongly decided and that this Court should read limitation of liability clauses completely independently of other insurance clauses, thereby avoiding the ambiguity present here and in Seeck of one clause seemingly giving coverage while another excludes it. As noted above, however, Missouri has long followed the rule that an insurance policy must be read as a whole, not provision by provision. Although insurers often seek to have courts interpret each provision independently, that is not consistent with Missouri's long-standing ap*139proach. Seeck is only the latest case to apply this rule to a situation such as this where the other insurance clause appears to provide coverage that the limitation of liability clause is argued to prohibit; any resulting ambiguity will be construed against the insurer. See cases cited in notes 3, 4, 6 and 7 herein.

. See Niswonger 992 S.W.2d at 315 (“While the [underinsured motorist] 'anti-stacking' provisions of the policy here in question might perhaps have to be deemed unambiguous in nearly any other factual situation, that does not necessarily mean they are unambiguous in the particular factual situation now before us ...").

. See also Ragsdale, 213 S.W.3d at 56; Niswonger, 992 S.W.2d at 315 ("[A] reasonable lay person could interpret the sentence to specifically allow stacking of [underinsured motorist] coverages provided in their separate vehicle policies, for which separate [underin-sured motorist] premiums have been paid, in the special situation where an accident occurs while the insured is occupying a non-owned vehicle.”).

. In fact, a prior version of the Allied policy did use language more similar to that in Barker, stating;
A. Any recovery for damages under all such policies or provisions of coverage may equal, but not exceed, the highest applicable limit for any one vehicle under any insurance providing coverage on either a primary or excess basis.
B. Any insurance we provide with respect to a vehicle you do not own shall be excess over any collectible insurance providing coverage on a primary basis.
Here, of course, the Ritchies argue that the Allied policies can be stacked because they say they provide excess coverage over other collectible underinsured motorist coverage, not over other primary coverage, so Barker is not on point.

. In support of this argument, Allied cites to Green v. Federated Mut. Ins. Co., 13 S.W.3d 647, 648-649 (Mo.App.1999), in which the court of appeals held no conflict, and, therefore, no ambiguity, existed between an other insurance provision and a limit of liability provision. Green found that a change in the insurer's other insurance clause eliminated a conflict noted in prior cases between that *140clause and the limit of liability clause regarding set-off. 13 S.W.3d at 648. Green did not address the separate ambiguity found in Jones, 287 S.W.3d at 689, between the provision promising coverage limits of liability of $100,000 when the policy in fact would not pay out that amount due to the set-off provisions. As the Ritchies rely on the Jones analysis, Green is not helpful to the set-off issue's determination in this case.

. The dissent is incorrect in characterizing this opinion as holding that limitation of liability clauses are never enforceable. A policy that plainly states it only will pay the difference between the amount recovered from the underinsured motorist and $100,000 is enforceable. In such a case, the mere fact that $100,000 will never be paid out is not misleading, for the policy never suggests that this is its liability limit and never implies that it may pay out that amount. That is not the case here, however. The policy says it provides $100,000 in underinsured motorist coverage but, in fact, under the insurer’s interpretation of the policy, it will never pay that amount. That creates an ambiguity resolved by giving the language on which the insurer relies an alternative interpretation that will give effect to all of the policy provisions, as the Court holds above and as it held in Jones, 287 S.W.3d at 690.