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Vol. 73, No. 4, April 2000 |
Previous
Page
Court of Appeals Digest
by Prof. Daniel D. Blinka
& Prof. Thomas J. Hammer
| Arbitration | Damages | Family
Law |
| Insurance | Worker's Compensation
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Insurance
Comprehensive Liability Policies - Duty to Defend/Indemnify
Successor Entity
Red Arrow Products
Company Inc. v. Employers Insurance of Wausau, 2000 WI
App 36 (filed 19 Jan. 2000) (ordered published 23 Feb. 2000)
In May 1984 Red Arrow Products Company ("Old Red Arrow")
transferred and assigned certain of its assets and liabilities
to a new corporation referred to hereafter as New Red Arrow.
In this case New Red Arrow appealed from an order dismissing
its action requesting a declaration of the duty of Employers
Insurance of Wausau to defend and/or indemnify New Red Arrow
under liability policies issued by Wausau to Old Red Arrow. (Old
Red Arrow existed in a variety of corporate and partnership forms
prior to the 1984 transfer and assignment of assets and liabilities
to New Red Arrow). New Red Arrow argued that, by operation of
law, the benefits of Wausau's policies which were in effect
prior to New Red Arrow's existence were transferred to it.
In a decision authored by Judge Snyder, the court of appeals
concluded that New Red Arrow was not a named insured and was
never assigned the policies. The 1984 sale agreement gave New
Red Arrow various specified assets, but these did not include
the Wausau policies. The court further rejected New Red Arrow's
contention that the benefits of the Wausau policies were transferred
to it by operation of law.
UIM Coverage - Stacking
Meyer v. Michigan
Mutual Ins. Co., 2000 WI App 37 (filed 26 Jan. 2000)
(ordered published 23 Feb. 2000)
Meyer was seriously injured at work when a semi-trailer backed
into him. The truck was insured by Michigan Mutual, its policy
carrying limits of $1 million. Meyer also sought underinsured
motorist (UIM) coverage from Millers Classified Ins. Co. (Millers),
which insured two vehicles owned by his parents, each carrying
limits of $250,000. Meyer's parents also had an umbrella
(excess) policy for $1 million issued by Millers. The trial judge
ruled that Meyer was entitled to the UIM coverage and awarded
him $1.5 million from Millers.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Anderson,
affirmed. The umbrella policy contained no definition of UIM
coverage, thus forcing the court to consider the parties'
intentions. The umbrella policy required the Meyerses to maintain
the UIM coverage; thus, the Meyerses intended to add the $1 million
coverage to the underlying UIM coverage. The court also held
that the case law and the policy language dictated "that
the primary and umbrella policies should be considered together
for determining coverage." Adding the $1 million in excess
coverage to the underlying $250,000 in UIM coverage gave the
Meyerses at least a $1.25 million liability limit. Since this
exceeded the $1 million that covered the semi-trailer truck,
the Meyerses qualified for the "underinsured" coverage.
Finally, Meyer was permitted to "stack" the twin $250,000
UIM coverage because separate premiums were paid on each vehicle.
Exclusions - Permission to Drive - Implied Permission
Heaton v. Mountin,
2000 WI App 45 (filed 19 Jan. 2000) (ordered published 23 Feb.
2000)
Robert and his wife Diane owned a car insured by American
Family. Robert permitted his son, Travis, age 17, to drive the
car. Travis later permitted Mountin to drive the car. Mountin
struck Heaton's automobile raising the issue of whether
Mountin was covered under the American Family policy, which denied
coverage. The trial judge refused to grant summary judgment dismissing
American Family.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Hoover,
reversed. The policy contained two applicable exclusions: (#
1) "Any person other than a relative, using your insured
car without your permission, or that of an adult member of your
household;" (# 3) "Any person using a vehicle without
the permission of the person having lawful possession."
The court held that the exclusions must be applied separately.
Nothing in the policy prevented exclusion # 3 from applying to
a person using the insured car. Since Travis was in lawful possession
of the car and permitted Mountin to use it, Mountin was not excluded
under this provision. But exclusion # 1 did bar coverage. Neither
Robert nor Diane permitted Mountin to drive the car. Mountin
also raised the issue of their "implied permission"
to drive the car, but the summary judgment record raised disputed
issues of fact and the court remanded the case for further proceedings.
Worker's Compensation
Independent Contractors - Statutory Standards for Determining
Independent Contractor Status
Jarrett v. Labor
and Industry Review Commission, 2000 WI App 46 (filed
25 Jan. 2000) (ordered published 23 Feb. 2000)
This case concerns the test for determining whether a person
is an independent contractor within the meaning of the Worker's
Compensation Act. Wis. Stat. section
102.07(8)(b) articulates nine conditions that must be met
before a worker is considered an independent contractor. The
Labor and Industry Review Commission (LIRC) contended that this
statute is the exclusive test for determining independent contractor
status for worker's compensation purposes. The plaintiff
argued that the LIRC must first consider common law criteria
for determining whether a worker is an independent contractor
or an employee and, only if it first concludes under the common
law that the worker is an independent contractor, should it apply
the statutory criteria.
The court of appeals, in a decision authored by Judge Hoover,
agreed with the LIRC. It held that the nine criteria specified
in the statute cited above supplant the common law and provide
the sole test to determine independent contractor status under
the Worker's Compensation Act.
Prof. Daniel D. Blinka and Prof. Thomas
J. Hammer invite comments and questions about the digests. They
can be reached at the Marquette University Law School, 1103 W.
Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee, WI 53233, (414) 288-7090.
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