Lead Opinion
OPINION
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
Meridian Mutual Insurance Company ("Meridian") appeals from the entry of summary judgment in favor of Catherine Yoder, Marjorie H. Chestnut, Elizabeth Craig and their spouses, Benjamin C. Markham, individually and as administrator of the Estate of Sheila A. Markham, Auto-Owners Insurance Company, and United Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company (collectively "Auto-Owners"). This is an interpleader and declaratory judgment action arising from an accident between an automobile driven by Sheila Markham and a van driven, but not owned, by Larry Ramsey, Meridian's insured. At the time of the accident, Ramsey, Yoder, Chestnut, and Craig were traveling in the van owned by Gail Riggins. Meridian and Auto-Owners filed cross-motions for summary judgment on the issue of whether Meridian's policy provided excess coverage above the primary coverage on the van. The trial court granted Auto-Owners' motion and determined that coverage was not foreclosed under the Meridian policy, which excluded bodily injury claims resulting from the "use of a vehicle when used to carry persons or property for a fee" but which exeepted from this exclusion "[s}hared-expense car pools." We reverse.
ISSUE
The sole issue for review is whether the Meridian policy provides excess lability coverage on the van driven by Ramsey or whether the carrying for a fee exclusion applies.
FACTS
Gail Riggins regularly drove her van to commute between her home in Odon and her place of employment with Thomson Consumer Electronics in Bloomington. As many as eleven fellow employees would ride with her every working day for the 84-mile round trip. Each passenger paid Riggins $17.00 per week to ride in the van. When Riggins was unable to drive the group to work, she would ask a passenger to substitute and drive the van for her. When a substitute drove the van, his $17.00 payment was reduced by $5.00 for each day that he drove.
On February 18, 1992, Riggins made arrangements for Ramsey to drive the van. Ramsey and eight fellow employees were traveling on State Road 45 in Greene County when the van collided with an oncoming automobile driven by Sheila Markham. Ramsey and Markham died from injuries they sustained in the collision. All eight passengers in the van on that day were also injured. There were no passengers in Markham's vehicle.
The private passenger automobile policy that Meridian issued to Ramsey provided for excess lability coverage but contained an exclusion from coverage when the vehicle was "used to carry persons or property for a fee." "Shared-expense car pools" were excepted from the exclusion. The policy did not define these terms
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
Standard of Review
When reviewing a trial court's ruling on a motion for summary judgment this court performs the same inquiry as the trial
Summary judgment concerning the construction of an insurance contract is the conclusion, as a matter of law, that the contract is unambiguous and that it is unnecessary to employ the rules of contract construction in order to determine its meaning. Selleck v. Westfield Ins. Co. (1993), Ind.App.,
Where both parties have asserted in the trial court that there are no questions of material fact and the only remaining question is one of insurance contract construction, resolution of the construction question is a judicial function. B & R Farm Services, Inc. v. Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co. (1985), Ind.,
We determine that the exclusion is unambiguous and should be given its plain and ordinary meaning. Tate v. Secura Ins. (1982), Ind.,
Meridian's Excess Liability Coverage
Under Indiana Code § 27-8-9-7 a vehicle owner's insurance coverage is considered primary when the vehicle is used by a permittee within the seope of the permission granted. Here, Meridian's potential coverage is secondary to the coverage afforded by Riggins' Auto Owners policy on the van. The claims against the Meridian policy are excess liability claims arising from the accident. See IND.CODE § 27-8-9-7(c).
Meridian's private passenger automobile policy issued to Ramsey provides in pertinent part:
This coverage does not apply to:
1. Bodily injury or property damage arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use of a vehicle when used to carry persons or property for a fee. This exelusion does not apply to:
a. Shared-expense car pools; ....
Record at 47. Meridian contends that the trial court erred when it entered summary judgment in favor of Auto-Owners because the commuting arrangement constituted carrying persons for a fee and was not a shared-expense car pool. Thus, Meridian asserts that it had no duty to defend or indemnify under its policy. We agree.
The carrying for a fee exclusion is a general exclusion intended to limit liability coverage for the risks associated with vehicles used to carry paying passengers for a set fee, risks not typically covered by private passenger automobile insurance policies. See Johnson v. Allstate Ins. Co. (1987), Ala.,
In considering the carrying for a fee exclusion, we apply the four factors enumerated by the Alabama Supreme Court in Johnson and followed by this court in Martin.
Applying the Factors
When applied in the present case, the factors set forth in Johnson and Martin demonstrate that Riggins was carrying persons for a fee. First, as Auto-Owners concedes, the $17.00 Riggins charged was a definite amount. Riggins relaxed this weekly fee only when someone else drove the van. Fixed fees were found both in Johnson, where parents who wanted daily pick-up service transporting children to and from a day care center signed a form and were charged $1.00 each way, and in Martin, where a $5.00 fee was charged to bus passengers traveling to and from their place of employment. Johnson,
Second, the amount Riggins charged was not in proportion to the actual expenses of the trip. Although Riggins contends that she used the fees collected to defray expenses of operating the van, Riggins made no attempt to determine her actual costs. Initially, she simply adopted the amount that had been charged by the previous driver. Riggins continued to charge that amount over a substantial period of time regardless of her actual expenses.
As evidence of apportionment, Auto-Owners offers the fact that passengers paid the $17.00 even when they did not ride. A requirement that the passengers pay the fee when not commuting may have assured that Riggins would be compensated for her expenses, but that does not mean the expenses were ever apportioned. As noted in Johnson, "(tlhe actual use to which the amount collected by the driver was put, whether to defray expenses or otherwise, is not relevant ... Nor is it important whether the driver makes a profit on the journey." Johnson,
The third factor is whether the fee was voluntary. Auto-Owners argues that payment was voluntary because the passengers chose to continue participating in the commuting arrangement over an extended period of time. Auto-Owners misinterprets this factor. The question is not whether participation was voluntary, but whether the fee was paid voluntarily or was paid as consideration to the driver. Johnson,
Finally, we consider whether the participants engaged in a common enterprise. In Johnson and Martin, the drivers and passengers had no common interest other than reaching a common destination. Johnson,
The use of a vehicle to shuttle passengers to and from the same destination on a daily basis for a fixed fee or charge falls within the exclusion. Riggins charged a fee which was definite, arbitrary and involuntary. This was not a casual use but a regular, ongoing use of the vehicle to transport passengers for consideration under what was, in effect, a contractual arrangement. We conclude that the van was carrying persons for a fee when the accident occurred, an activity excluded from coverage under the Meridian policy.
The Shared-Expense Car Pool Exception
Auto-Owners contends that the commuter arrangement was a "shared-expense car pool" within the exception to the carrying for a fee exclusion. The typical "car pool" is an arrangement whereby drivers and vehicles are rotated without an exchange of money. See Johnson,
However, the critical feature of the phrase under consideration is that the term "car pools" is modified by the term "shared-expense." The plain meaning of "shared-expense car pool" is a ride sharing arrangement where the expenses are actually shared on a ratable basis.
The dissent construes the term "shared-expense car pools" in isolation when it contends that there is nothing in the policy to suggest that the expenses must be proportionally allocated among the passengers. The plain meaning of "shared-expense" is to apportion or allocate known expenses. See id. Without a requirement that actual expenses be shared on a ratable basis, the "shared expense" car pool exception would swallow the exclusion and render it meaningless.
An insurance contract must be construed as a whole. Stevens v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. (1981), Ind.App.,
For the "shared expense" car pool exception to serve its purpose within the policy, the passengers must not merely contribute but must contribute in proportion to the expenses actually incurred. Absent a proportionate allocation of expenses among the passengers, the owner is merely carrying passengers for a fee. Here, there is no evidence of expenses and, hence, no correlation between expenses and the amount paid by the passengers. There is no factual basis in the record to support a conclusion that the expenses were actually shared. The most that can be said is that the fee collected was simply used to defray the expenses of operating the van. That is not enough to invoke the exception. See Johnson,
A "shared-expense car pool" does not embrace cireumstances where, as here, Riggins operated a regular commuter service for many years and required that each passenger pay a definite sum that was assessed without reference to her actual expenses. The Meridian policy did not underwrite coverage for this type of risk.
Conclusion
We hold that Riggins was carrying persons for a fee and that the arrangement falls within the Meridian policy exclusion from coverage. Moreover, the enterprise is not excepted as a shared-expense car pool. The plain language of the Meridian policy precludes excess liability coverage for bodily injuries sustained in the collision. This is the only result consistent with the coverage afforded under Ramsey's private passenger automobile policy. The trial court is directed to vacate the summary judgment in favor of Auto-Owners, enter summary judgment in favor of Meridian, and conduct further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. The United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, citing Martin, recently applied the four factors under Indiana law. General Accident Ins. Co. of America v. Gonzales (N.D.Ind.1995),
. The record is unclear regarding the total number of years Riggins drove the van. Auto-Own
. We recognize that the apportionment of expenses will rarely be exact. Shared-expense car pools are likely to be informal arrangements meant to decrease the difficulties of travel without imposing significant accounting burdens on any individual.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. As a matter of law, the trial court correctly determined that the "carrying for a fee" exclusion did not apply
An insurer bears the burden of denying coverage through a policy exclusion. An insurer may limit liability only if the exclusion is plainly expressed in the insurance contract. Asbury v. Indiana Union Mutual Ins. Co. (1982), Ind.App.,
It is true that Martin v. Rivera (1989), Ind.App.,
I would affirm the decision of the trial court and enter summary judgment in favor of the appellees.
