Court issues opinion impacting direct action against insurers,
corporate officer liability
If an accident occurs in the state, direct action state applies even if
the insurance policy was delivered or issued for delivery outside the
state. In addition, corporate officers could be personally liable for
negligent acts impacting third parties.
By Joe Forward, Legal Writer,
State Bar of Wisconsin
July
26, 2011 – The Wisconsin Supreme Court recently overturned prior
case law that interpreted Wisconsin’s direct action statute to
require a liability insurance policy to be delivered or issued for
delivery in the state for a party to sue an insurer directly.
In addition, the supreme court ruled in Casper
v. American International South Ins. Co., 2011 WI 81 (July 19,
2011), that a corporate officer may be liable for non-intentional torts
committed in the scope of his or her employment, depending on public
policy considerations.
In 2003, the Casper family minivan was stopped at an intersection in
Brown Deer when Mark Wearing’s truck struck it from behind going
40 miles per hour. All five passengers in the Casper minivan were
injured, including the Caspers’ son,
Michael, who was rendered a quadriplegic.
Wearing, co-employed at Bestway Systems Inc.
(Bestway) and Transport Leasing/Contract Inc.
(TLC) at the time of the accident, was under the influence of several
prescription drugs when the accident occurred. The Caspers ultimately filed suit against multiple
parties.
Direct action statute
TLC’s excess insurer, National Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh
(National Union), was a named defendant in the original complaint.
However, National Union moved for summary judgment, arguing the claims
were not permissible because the excess insurance policy covering TLC
was not delivered or issued for delivery in Wisconsin as required by
state statute.
Wis. Stat. section 632.24, known as the direct
action statute, states that any insurance policy covering liability to
others for negligence makes the insurer liable. Thus, it allows a party
to sue the insurer directly when an insured is alleged to have been
negligent.
But section 631.01(1) states, in pertinent part, that ch.
631 (Insurance Contract Generally) and ch. 632 (Insurance
Contracts in Specific Lines) “apply to all insurance policies
… delivered or issued for delivery in this state, on property
ordinarily located in this state, on persons residing in this state when
the policy or certificate is issued, or on business operations in this
state.”
National Union argued that the direct action statute only applies if
the insurance policy is delivered or issued for delivery in the state
in addition to delivery or issuance on property located in the
state, persons residing in the state, or on business operations in the
state.
The circuit court relied on Kenison v. Wellington
Ins. Co., 218 Wis. 2d 700, 582 N.W.2d 69 (Ct. App. 1998), in granting summary
judgment to National Union, and the appeals court affirmed. The appeals
court ruled in Kenison that
section 631.01 limits the application of the direct action statute,
section 632.24, to insurance policies delivered or issued for delivery
in the state.
But supreme court – in opinion written by Justice David Prosser
– unanimously reversed the appeals court and overruled Kenison, accepting the Caspers’ argument that the direct action
statute does not require a policy to be delivered or issued for delivery
in the state in order for a plaintiff to sue the allegedly negligent
party’s insurer directly.
“We hold only that Wis. Stat. § 632.24
applies to any policy of insurance covering liability, irrespective of
whether that policy was delivered or issued for delivery in Wisconsin,
so long as the accident or injury occurs in this state,” Justice
Prosser wrote.
Personal liability of a corporate officer
The Casper’s filed suit against Jeffrey Wenham, the chief
operating officer for Bestway, claiming
negligent supervision and hiring as well as a violation of the Federal
Motor Carrier Safety Act.
Although Wenham was not involved in the hiring or supervision of
Wearing, he approved the allegedly illegal tri-state trucking route
Wearing took when the accident occurred.
Ultimately, the circuit court allowed just one claim to stand,
pertaining to Wenham’s allegedly negligent approval of the illegal
trucking route, which passed through three states, including Wisconsin,
and allegedly violated trucking safety standards set by federal law.
Wenham argued that it was not foreseeable that Wearing would take
powerful prescription drugs while driving, so finding him liable would
be against public policy.
And even if he acted negligently, Wenham argued, a corporate officer
cannot be held personally liable for negligence committed within the
scope of his employment.
If personal liability for negligence is allowed, “every CEO and
officer of a trucking company can now be subjected to personal liability
for every vehicular accident based upon virtually any negligence theory
of liability,” Wenham argued.
The supreme court unanimously declined to hold that corporate officers
can never be held personally liable for negligent acts committed in the
scope of employment, and noted that the business judgment rule, which
allows some latitude for wrong decisions, only protects corporate
officers and directors for negligent acts that impact shareholders, not
third parties.
However, a supreme court majority (6-2) ruled that public policy
considerations preclude liability in this case.
“[E]ven if Wenham approved the route driven by
Wearing and even if such approval was negligent in light of federal
safety regulations, the Caspers’ injury
is simply too remote to make him personally liable as an
individual,” Justice Prosser.
Justice Ann Walsh Bradley (joined by Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson) dissented on this point, concluding
that the “facts are not sufficiently developed at this stage to
determine whether Wenman’s
negligence was too remote from the cause of the accident to impose
liability."