Lonnie C. Simmons, Esq.
Franklin S. Fragale, Jr., Esq.
Fragale and Simmons
Charleston, West Virginia
Attorneys for Matthew Edwards
L. Dante DiTrapano, Esq.
J. Timothy DiPiero, Esq.
DiTrapano, Barrett & DiPiero
Charleston, West Virginia
Attorneys for James D. Wood
C. Michael Bee, Esq.
Hill, Peterson, Carper, Bee
& Deitzler, PLLC
Charleston, West Virginia
Attorneys for Jessica Lynn Spradling, et al.
Robert L. Massie, Esq.
Marc E. Williams, Esq.
Huddleston, Bolen, Beatty, Porter
& Copen, LLP
Charleston, West Virginia
Attorneys for Appellant Bestway
Trucking, Inc.
Franklin L. Gritt, Jr., Esq.
Winfield, West Virginia
Attorney for Albert Victor Mays
Gary E. Pullin, Esq.
Pullin, Knopf, Fowler & Flanagan
Charleston, West Virginia
Attorney for State Farm Insurance
Company
David L. Wyant, Esq.
Patricia K. Gaudoin, Esq.
Bailey & Wyant, PLLC
Wheeling, West Virginia
Attorneys for Appellee Sentry Select
Insurance Company
The Opinion of the Court was delivered PER CURIAM.
This Court reviews
the circuit court's final order and ultimate disposition under an abuse of
discretion standard. We review challenges to findings of fact under a clearly
erroneous standard; conclusions of law are reviewed de novo.
Syllabus Point 4, Burgess v. Porterfield, 196 W. Va. 178, 469
S.E.2d 114 (1996).
Per Curiam:
This is an appeal by Matthew
Edwards, Personal Representative of the Estate of Jeremy Matthew Edwards;
Donald Ray Wood, Personal Representative of the Estate of Jennifer Dawn Wood;
James D. Wood, Personal Representative of the Estate of Deborah Sue Mays;
and Jessica Lynn Spradling, from an order entered by the Circuit Court of
Kanawha County in a personal injury action.
(See footnote 1) The circuit court ruled that
a general umbrella liability insurance policy issued by John Deere Insurance
Company, the predecessor of the appellee Sentry Insurance Company, did not
cover a vehicle driven by Albert Victor Mays at the time of a vehicle accident
which killed Jeremy Matthew Edwards, Jennifer Dawn Wood, and Deborah Sue Mays,
and which severely injured Jessica Lynn Spradling. On appeal, the appellants
claim that the circuit court's ruling was erroneous and that the court should
have ruled that the policy did cover Mr. Mays at the time of the accident
in question.
Albert Victor Mays, one
of the parties in the present action, was a manager of Vision Automotive Group,
LLC, and also sold vehicles outside the Elkins, West Virginia, area for the
operation. To assist Mr. Mays in selling its automobiles, Vision Automotive
Group, LLC, provided him with demonstrator vehicles.
Vision Automotive Group,
LLC, maintained a commercial umbrella/excess liability insurance policy with
John Deere Insurance Company, the predecessor of appellee Sentry Insurance
Company, a mutual company. The commercial umbrella/excess liability insurance
policy provided:
If the following are employed
by you or are acting on your behalf in the conduct of your business to which
this insurance applies, they are also insureds:
10. Any
person . . . using an auto which you own . . . providing the actual
. . . use is by you or with your permission.
The phrase conduct of your business was not defined in the policy.
On January 30, 2000, Albert Victor Mays, while driving a demonstrator vehicle which had been provided by Vision Automotive Group, LLC, was involved in an accident near the Nitro-St. Albans I-64 bridge outside of Nitro, West Virginia. At the time, Mr. Mays
was driving a group of individuals to church. Jeremy Matthew Edwards, Jennifer
Dawn Wood and Deborah Sue Mays, who were in the vehicle, were killed. Jessica
Lynn Spradling, another passenger, sustained severe personal injuries.
Following the accident,
a question arose as to whether the general umbrella liability insurance policy
issued by John Deere Insurance Company covered Albert Victor Mays at the time
of the accident. To resolve the question, the personal representatives of
the Estates of Jeremy Matthew Edwards, Jennifer Dawn Wood, and Deborah Sue
Mays, as well as Jessica Lynn Spradling, in the present personal injury action
prayed that the Circuit Court of Kanawha County issue a declaratory ruling
relating to coverage. Following the filing of the action, various briefs,
exhibits and depositions were submitted to the court and the case was orally
argued. Ultimately, the court ruled that the coverage under the commercial
general umbrella policy did not cover Albert Victor Mays' vehicle at the time
of the accident since he was not, in fact, on his way to sell or meet
with a potential customer on the day of the accident.
In reaching its decision, the court noted that Mr. Mays had testified in his deposition that he did not have a potential specific customer for the vehicle at the church on the day of the accident. The court noted that the testimony proceeded as follows:
Q. Now,
do I understand your testimony earlier that you didn't have a particular customer
on the jeep that you were operating on the day of the accident?
A. [Mr.
Mays] Not the day of the accident.
Q. What
I'm getting at is, you weren't taking that vehicle to church for the purpose
of providing it to show to somebody or try to sell?
A. No,
sir.
Q. And
you were going to church at the time of the accident?
A. Yes,
sir.
The court concluded from this:
The record is clear that what
we have here factually is a father/husband taking his family to church at the
time of the accident. This purely private endeavor does not rise to the level
of acting in the conduct of [his] business [within the meaning of
the policy in question].
In the present proceeding,
the appellants claim that the trial court erred in concluding that the coverage
of the general commercial umbrella liability policy in question was not available
to Albert Victor Mays at the time of the accident in question.
Reduced to its essentials,
the Court believes that the issue in this case is whether the policy issued
by John Deere Insurance Company covers the accident in the present case. The
specific language of the policy provides: If the following . . . are
acting on your behalf in the conduct of your business . . . they are also
insureds: . . . Any person . . . using an 'auto' which you
own . . . providing the actual . . . use is . . . with your permission.
According to the operating
agreement of Vision Automotive Group, LLC, the purpose of Vision Automotive
Group was: To develop, acquire and operate automobile sales operations
in West Virginia and other states and to engage in any lawful business or
activity which may be conducted by a limited liability company organized under
the Act.
The undisputed evidence developed
showed that Vision Automotive Group, LLC, was in the business of selling automobiles,
and further that Albert Victor Mays was regularly given demonstrator automobiles
to drive as a means of marketing and selling vehicles outside the Elkins, West
Virginia area. Mr. Mays normally drove each demonstrator automobile until it
had 5,000 miles on it, at which time he returned it to Vision's operation at
Elkins, and received a new demonstrator vehicle. Mr. Mays had sold as many as
60 to 70 Vision Automobile vehicles prior to the accident which gave rise to
this case. One sale was the sale of a vehicle to the pastor of his church.
There is no question, and,
in fact, the trial court found that Vision Automotive Group, LLC, regularly
allowed and encouraged Mr. Mays, as well as other members of the operation,
to drive demonstrator vehicles to market and generate sales outside the Elkins,
West Virginia, area. In effect, the evidence showed that on the day of the
accident, Mr. Mays was using the vehicle involved in the accident with the
permission of Vision Automotive Group, LLC.
Looking at the facts, this
Court believes that they plainly support the conclusion that Albert Victor
Mays was using an auto owned by Vision Automotive Group, LLC,
with the permission of Vision Automotive Group, LLC, on the day of the accident.
The only real question in this case is whether Albert Victor Mays was acting
on your [Vision Automotive Group's] behalf in the conduct of your [Vision Automotive
Group's] business.
Under West Virginia's law,
an insurance policy is considered to be ambiguous if it can reasonably be
understood in two different ways or if it is of such doubtful meaning that
reasonable minds might be uncertain or disagree as to its meaning. Hamric
v. Doe, 201 W. Va. 615, 499 S.E.2d 619 (1997); and Prete v. Merchants
Property Insurance Company of Indiana, 159 W. Va. 508, 223 S.E.2d
441 (1976).
In the context of the present
case, this Court believes that the policy language, conduct of your
business, is somewhat ambiguous in the sense that it is not clear to
a reasonable mind whether the driving of a vehicle on a Sunday, under the
circumstances presented in this case, involved an action in the conduct of
Vision Automotive's business.
Where the language in an
insurance policy is ambiguous, this Court has recognized that the doctrine
of reasonable expectations applies. That doctrine holds that the
objectively reasonable expectation of applicants and intended beneficiaries
regarding the terms of insurance contracts will be honored even if a painstaking
study of the policy terms would negate those expectations. National Mutual
Insurance Company v. McMahon & Sons, Inc., 177 W. Va. 734, 356 S.E.2d 488 (1987). See also, State
Bancorp, Inc. v. United States Fidelity and Guaranty Insurance Company,
199 W. Va. 99, 483 S.E.2d 228 (1997).
In the present case, Albert
Victor Mays testified that it was his understanding and expectation that any
person who had permission to drive a vehicle owned by Vision Automotive Group,
LLC, was entitled to be protected by the full coverage of the policy issued
by John Deere Insurance Company. Common sense suggests that this would be
a reasonable and appropriate expectation for an individual with business knowledge
who was aware of the existence of insurance and who undertook to drive a vehicle
owned by another.
Another principle of insurance
law holds that if an insurance policy term is ambiguous, it should be strictly
construed against the insurer and in favor of the insured. National Mutual
Insurance Company v. McMahon & Sons, Inc., supra. When the
present policy language is strictly construed against the insurer and in favor
of Mr. Mays, the Court believes that it covers the type of accident involved
in the present case. Thus, the application of this rule to the language in
question also supports a finding that the policy provided coverage to Albert
Victor Mays at the time of the accident giving rise to this case.
Overall, the Court believes
that when the policy provision in issue is properly construed, it provides coverage
to Albert Victor Mays at the time of the accident in question. The Court also
believes that the circuit court erred in not so finding.
For the reasons stated,
the judgment of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County is reversed, and this
case is remanded with directions that the circuit court hold that the umbrella
liability insurance policy issued by John Deere Insurance Company, the predecessor
of Sentry Insurance Company, did cover the vehicle driven by Albert Victor
Mays at the time of the accident involved in this case.