Signal Variety, Inc. v. Patriot Insurance Company
Filing
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///ORDER granting 16 defendant's motion for summary judgment; and denying 18 plaintiff's motion for partial summary judgment. So Ordered by Judge Steven J. McAuliffe.(lat)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Signal Variety, Inc.,
d/b/a Signal Variety,
Plaintiff
v.
Case No. 15-cv-452-SM
Opinion No. 2016 DNH 136
Patriot Insurance Company,
Defendant
O R D E R
In September of 2015, Signal Variety filed suit against
Patriot Insurance Company in state court, seeking a declaratory
judgment that, under the terms of an insurance policy issued to
it by Patriot, Signal Variety is entitled to both a defense in,
and coverage for any liability arising from, an underlying state
tort action.
Signal also sought damages for Patriot’s alleged
breach of that insurance policy.
Patriot removed the case,
invoking this court’s diversity jurisdiction.
Pending before
the court are the parties’ cross motions for summary judgment.
For the reasons discussed, Signal Variety’s motion for
partial summary judgment (on the coverage issue) is denied, and
Patriot’s motion for summary judgment is granted.
Standard of Review
I.
Summary Judgment.
When ruling on a motion for summary judgment, the court
must “constru[e] the record in the light most favorable to the
non-moving party and resolv[e] all reasonable inferences in that
party’s favor.”
(1st Cir. 2014).
Pierce v. Cotuit Fire Dist., 741 F.3d 295, 301
Summary judgment is appropriate when the
record reveals “no genuine dispute as to any material fact and
the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Civ. P. 56(a).
Fed. R.
In this context, “a fact is ‘material’ if it
potentially affects the outcome of the suit and a dispute over
it is ‘genuine’ if the parties’ positions on the issue are
supported by conflicting evidence.”
Int’l Ass’n of Machinists &
Aerospace Workers v. Winship Green Nursing Ctr., 103 F.3d 196,
199-200 (1st Cir. 1996) (citations omitted).
CN8, 656 F.3d 71, 76 (1st Cir. 2011).
See also Nolan v.
Nevertheless, if the non-
moving party’s “evidence is merely colorable, or is not
significantly probative,” no genuine dispute as to a material
fact has been proved, and “summary judgment may be granted.”
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 249-50 (1986)
(citations omitted).
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II.
Insurance Policy Coverage.
In a declaratory judgment action to determine the scope of
coverage provided by an insurance policy, “the burden of proof
is always on the insurer, regardless of which party brings the
petition.”
606 (2012).
Rivera v. Liberty Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 163 N.H. 603,
See also N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. (“RSA”) 491:22-a
(“the burden of proof concerning the coverage shall be upon the
insurer whether he institutes the petition or whether the
claimant asserting the coverage institutes the petition.”).
Interpretation of an insurance policy’s language “is a question
of law for [the] court to decide.”
Carter v. Concord General
Mut. Ins. Co., 155 N.H. 515, 517 (2007).
Moreover, “[i]f more
than one reasonable interpretation is possible, and an
interpretation provides coverage, the policy contains an
ambiguity and will be construed against the insurer.”
Cogswell
Farm Condo. Ass’n v. Tower Group, Inc., 167 N.H. 245, 248
(2015).
Whether an insurer is obligated to defend its insured
depends upon both the scope of coverage provided by the policy,
and the nature of the underlying claim(s) against the insured.
As the New Hampshire Supreme Court has noted:
An insurer’s obligation to defend its insured is
determined by whether the cause of action against the
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insured alleges sufficient facts in the pleadings to
bring it within the express terms of the policy. In
considering whether a duty to defend exists based on
the sufficiency of the pleadings, we consider the
reasonable expectations of the insured as to its
rights under the policy. An insurer’s obligation is
not merely to defend in cases of perfect declarations,
but also in cases where, by any reasonable intendment
of the pleadings, liability of the insured can be
inferred, and neither ambiguity nor inconsistency in
the underlying writ can justify escape of the insurer
from its obligation to defend. In cases of doubt as
to whether the writ against the insured alleges a
liability of the insurer under the policy, the doubt
must be resolved in the insured’s favor.
Northern Sec. Ins. Co. v. Connors, 161 N.H. 645, 650 (2011)
(citations and internal punctuation omitted).
Background
In the fall of 2014, Noah Campbell was an employee of
Signal Variety.
On November 1 of that year, he was driving an
automobile in which Christopher Hall and Evan McLoughlin were
passengers.
Campbell apparently lost control of the vehicle and
struck a tree.
I.
Hall and McLoughlin were injured as a result.
The Underlying State Court Action.
In the wake of that accident, Hall and McLoughlin filed
suit in Strafford County Superior Court against several
defendants - including Signal Variety - seeking compensation for
their injuries.
In their complaint, Hall and McLoughlin allege
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the following facts that are material to the current coverage
dispute:
1.
On November 1, 2014, McLoughlin drove Hall and
three other young men to Rochester, New Hampshire. On the
way, they telephoned Noah Campbell, who instructed them to
meet him at the Signal Variety Store. Campbell was, at
that time, an employee of Signal Variety.
2.
When the young men arrived at the store, Campbell
came out from behind a dumpster and gave them a cardboard
box containing four six-packs of wine coolers and hard
lemonade.
3.
Signal Variety “allowed” Campbell to take the
alcoholic beverages from the store.
4.
McLoughlin and the passengers in his car then
drove to a house party in Rochester. They arrived at
approximately 9:00 PM and shared the alcohol with friends.
5.
Campbell arrived at the party at 10:50 PM. Very
shortly thereafter, McLoughlin asked Campbell to drive him,
Hall, and some friends to a local store. Campbell agreed.
6.
At approximately 11:10 PM, as Campbell was
driving the young men from the store and back to the party,
he lost control of his vehicle and struck a tree.
7.
Rochester police officers responded to the scene
and smelled alcohol on Campbell’s breath. Campbell
admitted he had been drinking that evening. He was charged
with Aggravated Driving While Intoxicated.
8.
That evening, Campbell had consumed alcohol he
had obtained from Signal Variety.
9.
At the time, Campbell was sixteen years old.
See Complaint, Hall v. Campbell, et al., (document no. 1,
exhibit 1) (“State Court Complaint”).
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In the underlying state court action, Hall and McLoughlin
advance two claims against Signal Variety.
The first is a claim
under RSA 507-F:4, which provides that “a defendant who
negligently serves alcoholic beverages to a minor . . . is
liable for resulting damages.”
The second claim against Signal
Variety asserts that: (1) Signal Variety “owed a duty to adhere
to responsible business practices;” (2) it breached that duty
and “allowed Noah Campbell access to alcohol which Campbell
subsequently consumed and shared with other minors;” and (3) as
a direct and proximate consequence of Signal Variety’s breach of
duty, Hall and McLoughlin were injured.
See State Court
Complaint at paras. 61-64.
II.
The Relevant Insurance Policy Language.
The insurance policy provides coverage to Signal Variety
for “bodily injury,” provided it is caused by an “occurrence.”
Patriot Insurance Policy (the “Policy”), Section II.A.1.b., at
36 of 57 (document no. 17-1).
The Policy defines an occurrence
as “an accident, including continuous or repeated exposure to
substantially the same general harmful conditions.”
Id. at
Section II.F.13., 52 of 57.
The Policy, however, also contains a “Liquor Liability
Exclusion,” which exempts coverage for:
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“Bodily injury” or “property damage” for which any
insured may be held liable by reason of:
(1) Causing or contributing to the intoxication
of any person;
(2) The furnishing of alcoholic beverages to a
person under the legal drinking age or under the
influence of alcohol; or
(3) Any statute, ordinance or regulation
relating to the sale, gift, distribution or use
of alcoholic beverages.
The Policy at Section II.B.1.C., 39 of 57.
Patriot asserts that the Policy does not provide coverage
for damages sought in the underlying state court action for
several reasons, including that the Liquor Liability Exclusion
specifically exempts coverage for the injuries plaintiffs
sustained.
Signal Variety, on the other hand, insists that the
Policy provides coverage (and a defense) for both claims
asserted against it.
Discussion
I.
Negligent Service of Alcoholic Beverages - RSA 507-F:4.
In Count Three of the underlying State Court Complaint,
Hall and McLoughlin seek to impose liability upon Signal Variety
for “negligent service of alcoholic beverages” to a minor,
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pursuant to RSA 507-F:4.
In support of that claim, Hall and
McLoughlin allege that:
On November 1, 2014, Campbell was an employee of
Signal Variety, Inc. At the time he was sixteen (16)
years old. . . . Signal Variety allowed him to take
alcoholic beverages from the store and deliver the
alcohol to other underage individuals.
Through information and belief, Campbell further
consumed alcohol obtained from Signal variety.
Thereafter, Campbell operated his motor vehicle under
the influence of alcohol resulting in a serious motor
vehicle accident.
* * *
Accordingly, pursuant to RSA 507-F:[4], Signal Variety
is liable for the damages sustained by the Plaintiffs.
State Court Complaint, at paras. 54-58 (emphasis supplied).
The statute invoked by Hall and McLoughlin provides that,
“A defendant who negligently serves alcoholic beverages to a
minor . . . is liable for resulting damages.”
RSA 507-F:4, I.
It then defines “service” of alcohol to mean “any sale, gift, or
other furnishing of alcoholic beverages.”
RSA 507-F:1, IX.
The
statute goes on to provide that service of an alcoholic beverage
to a minor “is negligent if the defendant knows or if a
reasonably prudent person in like circumstances would know that
the person being served is a minor.”
RSA 507-F:4, II.
Plainly,
then, RSA 507-F:4 prescribes the relevant standard of care and
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allows an injured party to recover damages from a defendant who
negligently serves, sells, gives, or furnishes alcohol to a
minor.
See generally Gauthier v. Manchester Sch. Dist., 168
N.H. 143, 147 (2015) (discussing the “roles a statutorilyprescribed standard of conduct may play in establishing civil
liability”).
Equally plain is that Count Three of the State Court
Complaint seeks to impose liability upon Signal Variety “by
reason of” that statute.
See Liquor Liability Exclusion, The
Policy at Section II.B.1.C., 39 of 57.
That is to say, the
underlying plaintiffs have brought a negligence claim against
Signal Variety and are invoking the standard of care established
by RSA 507-F:4.
Indeed, plaintiffs captioned the count,
“Negligent Service of Alcoholic Beverages, RSA 507-F:4.”
Whether plaintiffs have actually stated a viable cause of
action against Signal Variety is unclear and, for purposes of
this case, irrelevant.
What is important is that the underlying
plaintiffs seek to hold Signal Variety liable “by reason of” a
New Hampshire statute “relating to the sale, gift, distribution
or use of alcoholic beverages.”
39 of 57.
The Policy, Section II.B.1.c.3,
Coverage for the claim asserted in Count Three is,
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therefore, excepted from the scope of the Policy under its
Liquor Liability Exclusion provision.
II.
Negligence.
In Count Four of their complaint, Hall and McLoughlin
advance what appears to be a common law negligence claim against
Signal Variety.
In it, they allege the following:
Signal Variety owed a duty to adhere to responsible
business practices to include those policies,
procedures and actions which an ordinary prudent
business would follow in like circumstances.
Signal variety breached its duty and allowed Noah
Campbell access to alcohol which Campbell subsequently
consumed and shared with other minors.
As a direct and proximate result of the defendant’s
conduct Christopher Hall [and, presumably, Evan
McLoughlin] has been damage[d].
State Court Complaint, at paras. 62-64 (emphasis supplied).
In
addition to alleging that Signal Variety “allowed Noah Campbell
access to alcohol,” the State Court Writ also alleges that
Signal Variety “allowed [Campbell] to take alcoholic beverages
from the store.”
Id. at para. 54 (emphasis supplied).
Additionally, the complaint alleges that Campbell actually
“consumed alcohol obtained from Signal Variety” (which,
presumably caused or contributed to his impairment that
evening).
Id. at para. 55.
See also Id. at para. 63.
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And,
finally, the complaint alleges that after obtaining and
consuming the alcohol from Signal Variety, “Campbell operated
his motor vehicle under the influence of alcohol, resulting in a
serious motor vehicle accident.”
Id. at para. 56.
See also Id.
at para. 82 (“Noah Campbell caused a motor vehicle accident as a
result of driving while being intoxicated.”).
Patriot asserts that the claim(s) in Count Four of the
underlying State Court Complaint unambiguously fall within the
terms of the Liquor Liability Exclusion.
In particular, Patriot
says the state court plaintiffs seek to impose liability upon
Signal Variety for “causing or contributing to the intoxication”
of Noah Campbell.
57.
See The Policy at Section II.B.1.C.(1), 39 of
In others words, says Patriot, no matter how one interprets
the negligence claim(s) asserted in Count Four, Signal Variety
can only be liable if its wrongful conduct proximately caused
Noah Campbell to become intoxicated to the point that his
alcohol-induced impairment was causally related to the motor
vehicle accident in which Hall and McLoughlin were injured.
Signal Variety counters that whether Campbell was
“intoxicated” or merely “impaired” is an unknown, but outcome
determinative, fact.
By using the word “intoxication,” Signal
Variety argues, the Liquor Liability Exclusion contemplates “a
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certain level of inebriation due to consuming alcoholic
beverages” before the exclusion applies.
Memorandum (document no. 18-1) at 7.
Signal Variety’s
Consequently, says Signal
Variety, “even if it is established that Noah Campbell had been
drinking alcohol that night, this does not mean that he was
‘intoxicated’ so as to preclude coverage under the Policy.”
Id.
And, says Signal Variety, because Campbell’s criminal case is
still pending, 1 and because he has not yet been adjudged guilty
of driving while intoxicated, it remains possible that he was
merely “under the influence” of alcohol at the time of the
accident, and not legally intoxicated.
As noted above, New Hampshire law provides that ambiguous
language contained in an insurance policy must be interpreted to
give effect to the “reasonable expectations of the insured.”
Connors, 161 N.H. at 650.
See also Bartlett v. Commerce Ins.
Co., 167 N.H. 521, 531, 114 A.3d 724, 733 (2015).
But, even
assuming that the Liquor Liability Exclusion’s use of the word
“intoxication” is ambiguous, Signal Variety’s proposed
construction is not reasonable.
Given the unmistakable Liquor
Liability Exclusion in its policy, Signal Variety could not have
plausibly believed Patriot’s obligation to defend and indemnify
1
Campbell was charged with committing the offense of
“aggravated driving while intoxicated.”
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would turn on whether the tort-feasor (Campbell) was inebriated
beyond some legal limit of blood-alcohol content
(“intoxicated”), or whether he was merely “impaired” by alcohol,
or “buzzed,” or “tipsy,” or “woozy,” or simply “under the
influence” of alcohol.
The distinction Signal Variety would
draw between “intoxication” and “under the influence” does not
seem reasonable.
Indeed, the New Hampshire Supreme Court seems
to have equated the term “intoxicated” with the phrase “under
the influence” when interpreting a similar liquor liability
exclusion.
See New Hampshire Ins. Co. v. Hillwinds Inn, Inc.,
117 N.H. 350, 351 (1977) (holding that liquor liability
exclusion exempting coverage if insured “causes or contributes
to the intoxication of any person” applied to preclude coverage
where underlying writ alleged that insured “served alcoholic
beverages to the customer, causing her to be under the influence
thereof and thereby causing the accident.”). 2
See also RSA 507-
F:1 IV (defining “intoxication” to mean “an impairment of a
2
It is probably worth noting that the liquor liability
exclusion in Hillwinds also exempted coverage if liability was
imposed on the insured by reason of “selling, serving, or giving
of any alcoholic beverage to a person under the influence of
alcohol,” 117 N.H. at 351 (emphasis supplied) - language not
present in the liability exclusion at issue in this case. But,
given the factual allegations of the underlying complaint in
Hillwinds (i.e., serving alcohol to a customer that “caused her
to be under the influence thereof,” rather than serving alcohol
to a person already under the influence - as contemplated by
that exclusion in the policy), it seems that the court equated
the term “intoxicated” with the phrase “under the influence.”
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person’s mental or physical faculties as a result of drug of
alcoholic beverage use so as to diminish that person’s ability
to think and act in a manner in which an ordinary prudent and
cautious person, in full possession of his faculties and using
reasonable care, would act under like circumstances.”).
But, it is not necessary to dwell on the proposed
distinction, or to define precisely what is meant by the word
“intoxication” as it is used in the Policy.
The underlying
complaint plainly and unambiguously alleges that Noah Campbell
was intoxicated, not merely inebriated, impaired, or under the
influence of alcohol.
See, e.g., State Court Complaint at para.
82 (“Noah Campbell caused a motor vehicle accident as a result
of driving while being intoxicated.”); id. at para. 33 (“Noah
Campbell was criminally charged with Aggravated Driving While
Intoxicated, a felony currently pending in Strafford County.”).
It also alleges that, through its negligence (in whatever form
it might have taken), Signal Variety “caused or contributed” to
Campbell’s intoxication.
See, e.g., Id. at para. 63 (alleging
that Signal Variety “allowed Noah Campbell access to alcohol
which Campbell subsequently consumed.”).
It cannot be denied that the plaintiffs in the underlying
state court action seek to impose liability on Signal Variety
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for its having caused or contributed to Noah Campbell’s
intoxication, which resulted in their injuries.
Consequently,
the Liquor Liability Exclusion operates to preclude insurance
coverage for the claim(s) advanced in Count Four of the State
Court Complaint.
Parenthetically, the court notes that, as is the case with
Count Three, it is not entirely clear whether Count Four of the
State Court Complaint states a viable common law negligence
claim against Signal Variety.
The precise contours of Signal
Variety’s alleged duties are unspecified.
Similarly, the State
Court Complaint fails to describe the alleged breach, and does
not articulate a clear causal connection between Signal
Variety’s alleged breach of its duties and the injuries
sustained by Hall and McLoughlin.
Perhaps the vagueness with
which that claim was pled is intentional and represents an
effort by plaintiffs to “artfully plead” around the Liquor
Liability Exclusion and trigger coverage under the policy.
But,
many courts that have considered the scope and applicability of
this (or a substantially similar) liquor liability exclusion
have properly concluded that plaintiffs cannot circumvent the
liability exclusion through creative pleading of their claims.
When the claim - regardless of how it is pled or captioned - is
“inexorably intertwined” with conduct that is plainly covered by
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the exclusion, the exclusion applies.
See. e.g., State Auto.
Mut. Ins. Co. v. Lucchesi, 563 Fed. Appx. 186, 189-90 (3d Cir.
2014); Colony Ins. Co. v. Events Plus, Inc., 585 F. Supp. 2d
1148, 1155 (D. Ariz. 2008); Prop.-Owners Ins. Co. v. Ted's
Tavern, Inc., 853 N.E.2d 973, 982-83 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006).
Such is the case here.
Regardless of whether one
interprets Count Four as advancing a claim for negligent failure
to supervise, or negligent hiring, or negligent operation of a
variety store, or negligent failure to adopt certain alcoholrelated policies, or negligent failure to lock the beer cooler,
or any similar claim, the underlying plaintiffs seek to impose
liability for conduct or inaction that is inexorably intertwined
with their assertion that Signal Variety somehow “caused or
contributed to” Noah Campbell’s intoxication on the night of the
accident.
The Liquor Liability Exclusion plainly excepts
coverage for such occurrences.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the court concludes that the
Liquor Liability Exclusion provisions of the insurance policy
issued by Patriot Insurance Company to Signal Variety, Inc.
excepts coverage for both claims asserted against Signal Variety
in the underlying state court action.
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Accordingly, Patriot’s
motion for summary judgment (document no. 16) is granted, and
Signal Variety’s motion for partial summary judgment (document
no. 18) is denied.
The Clerk of Court shall enter judgment in accordance with
this order and close the case.
SO ORDERED.
____________________________
Steven J. McAuliffe
United States District Judge
August 12, 2016
cc:
William P. Rose, Esq.
Richard E. Heifetz, Esq.
Laura M. Gregory, Esq.
Matthew J. Kennedy, Esq.
Anthony J. Antonellis, Esq.
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