Kevin and Debra Knowlton (“the Knowl-tons”) and Edward Martel appeal from a Superior Court (York County, Brennan, J.) summary judgment declaring that the plaintiff, Maine Bonding and Casualty Company (“the Insurer”) is not required to defend or indemnify the Knowltons in a personal injury suit brought by Martel. The Superior Court found that the Insurer’s notice of cancellation, although defective under the governing statute, effected a termination of the Knowltons’ policy sometime before the date of Martel's injury. Because we interpret the statute differently, we vacate and remand.
Martel was injured in a motorcycle accident near the Knowltons’ home on July 31, 1989. The Knowltons claim that they were insured as of that date under a homeowner’s policy underwritten by the Insurer. There is no dispute that such a policy was issued on March 16, 1989, with a one year term. Sometime after March 24, 1989, however, Debra Knowlton received a letter from the Insurer that read in pertinent part, “the Ins. will stop April 4, 1989.” The specified effective date was less than twenty days from the time the notice was received. Later, the Knowltons received a
The sole issue on this appeal is the construction of 24-A M.R.S.A. § 3050 (1990). The statute provides:
No notice of cancellation of a policy shall be effective unless received by the named insured at least 20 days prior to the effective date of cancellation.
Id. The parties agree that the statute is applicable to the policy and that the Knowl-tons received the notice less than twenty days before its stated effective date. The dispute concerns whether the statute rendered such a notice ineffective as of the time of the accident, or delayed its effect until the Knowltons had 20 days notice.
The Superior Court read the statutory language as meaning that a cancellation will become effective 20 days after received. We review the Superior Court’s conclusions for errors of law. St. Louis v. Hartley’s Oldsmobile-GMC, Inc.,
The first step in statutory construction is to determine the intent of the legislature. Raymond v. State,
The term “effective date” must refer to the effective date stated in the notice. This is the interpretation implicitly adopted in our earlier cases. See Savings & Loan Assoc. of Bangor v. Tear,
The legislature’s use of the word “unless” is indicative of its intent to require that insurers comply strictly with the statute’s terms in order to effect a policy cancellation. “No notice of cancellation shall be effective unless ...” plainly means that a notice can be effective only if it complies with the statutory prerequisites. See Savings & Loan Assoc. of Bangor v. Tear,
The entry is:
Summary judgment vacated. Remanded for further proceedings consistent with the opinion herein.
All concurring.
Notes
. Some states have adopted a strict compliance approach to such statutes, rendering defective notice fatal to an attempted cancellation. Steinmetz v. V & E Dress, Inc.,
. See Scanlon v. Empire Fire and Marine Ins. Co.,
