American National Property & Casualty Co. v. Gardineer, No. 20-15826 (9th Cir. 2022)
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Gardineer was involved in an automobile accident. She sued the other driver, Lynette Hill, and the vehicle owner, Dennis Hill (Lynette’s father-in-law). Dennis had both a primary insurance policy and an umbrella policy with ANPAC. After Dennis’s death, the parties reached a settlement wherein ANPAC paid Gardineer the policy limit of Dennis’s automobile insurance policy. Gardineer reserved the right to assert that ANPAC had a duty to indemnify Hill under Dennis’s umbrellas policy for Hill’s liability. ANPAC sought a declaration that it had no duty to indemnify Hill under the umbrella policy.
The Ninth Circuit affirmed summary judgment in favor of ANPAC. The umbrella policy, by its plain and unambiguous terms, did not provide coverage for Lynettel’s liability arising from her use of Dennis’s vehicle. The term “insured” meant Dennis, his wife, and any “relative” – defined as a related person living in the household. Lynette did not reside in Dennis’s household; she was not a “relative” and not an “insured” under the policy.
Court Description: Insurance Law The panel affirmed the district court’s summary judgment in favor of American National Property and Casualty Company (“ANPAC”) in a diversity insurance coverage action arising under Nevada law. The appellant, Brittney Gardineer, was involved in an automobile accident, and she sued the other driver, Lynette Hill (“Hill”), and the vehicle owner, Dennis Hill. Dennis Hill had both a primary insurance policy and an umbrella policy with ANPAC. After Dennis’s death, the parties reached a settlement wherein ANPAC paid Gardineer the policy limit of Dennis’s automobile insurance policy, and Gardineer reserved the right to assert that ANPAC had a duty to indemnify Hill under Dennis’s umbrellas policy for Hill’s liability. ANPAC filed this action seeking a declaration that it had no duty to indemnify Hill under the umbrella policy. The panel held that Dennis Hill’s umbrella policy, by its plain and unambiguous terms, did not provide coverage for Lynette Hill’s liability arising from her use of Dennis’s vehicle. The panel first considered the terms of the “Coverage” section in Dennis’s umbrella policy, and held that it extended coverage to Hill’s liability for damages only if Hill is an “insured” within the meaning of the policy. The term “insured” meant Dennis, his wife, and any “relative” – defined as a related person living in the household. Because it was undisputed that Hill did not reside in Dennis’s ANPAC V. GARDINEER 3 household, Hill was not a “relative” and not an “insured” under the policy. Hill alleged that coverage for her liability arose under “Exclusion 29” of the umbrella policy. The panel rejected Gardineer’s argument that Exclusion 29 created an ambiguity as to whether Hill’s liability was covered under Dennis’s umbrella policy. The panel held that Gardineer’s construction of Exclusion 29 was not based on a reasonable reading of the text. This conclusion was reinforced by a substantial body of caselaw from other jurisdictions that, in the panel’s view, the Nevada Supreme Court would likely follow. Under the panel’s reading of the plain language of the policy, Exclusion 29’s exception did not expand the policy’s coverage beyond its underlying coverage terms. Because those terms did not extend coverage to Hill’s liability, it followed that Dennis’s umbrella policy did not require ANPAC to indemnify Hill for her liability from the accident with Gardineer.
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