This case, originally filed as a six-paragraph petition requesting damages for breach of contract and vexatious refusal to pay on an insurance policy, returns a fourth time for this court’s consideration. It raises an issue concerning the abuse or misuse of summary judgment motions that we have twice recently addressed.
See, Midwest Crane & Rigging, Inc. v. Custom, Relocation’s Inc.,
Factual and Procedural Background
Shirkey initiated this suit in 2001, alleging that Guarantee had refused to pay a total of $6240 due under an insurance policy. The first (and only) trial of this case resulted in a defense verdict, which was reversed on appeal.
Shirkey v. Guarantee Trust Life Ins. Co.,
This court’s review of the entry of summary judgment is “essentially de novo.”
ITT Commercial Fin. Corp. v. Midr-Am. Marine Supply Corp.,
Discussion
When this case arrived for a third time in the circuit court, it had already been through a bench trial, three appeals, writ proceedings, and the entry of a partial judgment. Thus, at the time the trial court considered the parties’ most recent cross-motions for summary judgment, the case’s extensive litigation history had reduced the live issues to the sole question of whether Guarantee was liable for vexatious refusal. That question was also at issue in the original bench trial of the case, but was not reached in the judgment rendered, as the trial court’s original decision regarding policy coverage made unnecessary any resolution of that issue. Nonetheless, all of the evidence necessary to resolve Shir-key’s vexatious refusal claim was offered during the original bench trial and remains available in the transcript thereof. In an apparent attempt to expedite resolution of that question, both parties filed motions for summary judgment, and the trial court ultimately granted Shirkey’s motion.
Guarantee’s cross-appeal requires us to review the grant of that motion. In order for the grant of summary judgment to be proper, the moving party must establish a right to judgment as a matter of law based upon undisputed facts. Id. Where the summary judgment movant is a claimant, as opposed to a defending party, his burden is to “establish that there is no genuine dispute as to those material facts upon which the ‘claimant’ would have had the burden of persuasion at trial.” Id. at 381.
At the trial of his vexatious refusal claim, Shirkey had the burden of persuading the finder of fact that: (1) he had a valid insurance policy with Guarantee; (2) Guarantee refused to pay him under that policy; and (3) that refusal to pay was “without reasonable cause or excuse.”
Dhyne v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co.,
In addressing this element of vexatious refusal, the statement of facts in Shirkey’s motion recites that, “[sjince the insurance company at the time of its denial had no viable grounds under its own policy and the law of Missouri to deny the claim of Mr. Shirkey, its refusal to pay was vexatious.” It is true that the grounds upon which Guarantee denied Shirkey’s claim proved not to be viable.
Shirkey I,
In order to prevail on a claim for vexatious refusal, “the insured must show
As a general rule, questions of reasonableness are questions of fact, not law.
Wunsch v. Sun Life Assurance Co. of Can.,
We are unable to find anything in Shir-key’s motion for summary judgment that establishes — as a matter of law — the unreasonableness of Guarantee’s actions.
Conclusion
The judgment of the trial court is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
