RALPH R. BEISTLINE, District Judge.
The estate of Yong Suk Chong ("the Estate") has filed the present action against National Continental Insurance Company ("NCIC") seeking compensation from an automobile insurance policy's uninsured motorist coverage. NCIC filed a counterclaim for declaratory relief arguing that there was no uninsured motorist coverage applicable under the terms of the policy of insurance.
NCIC has filed a Motion for Summary Judgment at
Yong Suk Chong and Yun Yi were domestic partners living in Bethel, Alaska, where Mr. Yi owned and operated a taxi business with Ms. Chong employed as a cab driver. NCIC issued business automobile insurance policy number 71244561 ("the Policy") to Mr. Yi and Ms. Chong was listed as an authorized driver on the Policy. The Policy was in effect at all times relevant to this matter.
In the early morning hours of January 31, 2012, Kyle Motgin ("Motgin") was in Bethel and called for a taxi to pick him up.
On February 1, 2012, the Taxicab was located in Napakiak, Alaska, and Ms. Chong's dead body was found in the backseat of the vehicle. Motgin was later arrested and pled guilty to murder in the second degree for killing Ms. Chong. He was sentenced to 80 years in prison with 35 years suspended.
The Estate has brought the present suit seeking uninsured motorist coverage under the Policy covering Ms. Chong's Taxicab for damages the Estate suffered as a result of Motgin's actions. The Policy provides that NCIC will pay compensatory damages an insured is entitled to recover from the driver of an uninsured motor vehicle for injury or death when the liability for these damages results from the use of the vehicle.
Summary judgment avoids unnecessary trials when there is no dispute as to the facts in the matter before the court.
The Court recognizes that Alaska substantive law governs this diversity action. When interpreting an insurance policy, Alaska law instructs courts to look to the language of the disputed provision, other provisions in the policy, extrinsic evidence, and case law interpreting similar provisions.
As an initial matter, the Court finds there to be two separate acts at issue here. First, Motgin's assault on Ms. Chong with his knife ("the Assault") and second, his subsequent placement and transportation of her wounded body in back of the Taxicab ("the Transportation"). The Court finds that Motgin was not operating a vehicle during the Assault, nor did Ms. Chong suffer any further injuries at the hands of Motgin during the Transportation.
NCIC asserts that the Estate is not entitled to uninsured motorist benefits because language in the Policy provide that "an uninsured motor vehicle" means a vehicle for which no liability policy applies at the time of the accident. Because the Taxicab was insured for liability claims, NCIC argues it could not meet the definition of an "uninsured motor vehicle."
The Estate argues that because Motgin's use of the Taxicab was unauthorized, liability coverage would not apply. Accordingly, the Taxicab should therefore be considered an "uninsured motor vehicle." Moreover, the Estate argues that the only restriction on uninsured motorist coverage is that the party seeking coverage must be "an insured" who is injured by another who is not insured.
However, in order to provide coverage, the uninsured party must also have been a motorist. As the Estate points out, AS 28.20.445 is entitled "Uninsured and underinsured motorists coverage," not uninsured and underinsured vehicle coverage.
Even if Motgin was found to be an uninsured motorist and the Taxicab was an uninsured vehicle at the time of Ms. Chong's injuries, the injuries must result from the use of the Taxicab for the Policy to provide coverage. The Alaska Supreme Court has addressed this aspect of uninsured motorists coverage before.
This Court recognizes that in Alaska there are three factors which a court should consider when deciding whether, based on the facts of a particular case, an injury arises from the "use" of a vehicle which is sufficient to implicate uninsured motorist coverage. These factors are:
In Alaska, the vehicle must be an "active accessory" for there to be an adequate causal relationship.
In the present matter, the Taxicab and its use were only the subject of the fight. Motgin entered the Taxicab to discuss a potential use of the Taxicab. Ms. Chong and Motgin, while sitting in the parked Taxicab, disagreed over whether or not Ms. Chong would use the Taxicab to drive Motgin to Napakiak. Motgin repeatedly stabbed Ms. Chong after she refused to use her Taxicab as he requested and attempted to force him from the Taxicab. The Estate has argued that the Transportation must be included in evaluating the "use" of the Taxicab in this matter. As discussed previously, there has been no indication that any bodily injury occurred after the Assault. While the Court acknowledges that the Transportation prevented Ms. Chong from receiving medical treatment and may have made Motgin liable for negligence, this does not serve as a causal link between the automobile and the actual injury that led to her death.
The Court finds that the Taxicab was not an active accessory to Ms. Chong's injury and accordingly, the extent of causation between the Taxicab and Ms. Chong's injury weighs against coverage under the Policy.
As discussed previously, the Court finds there to be a delineation between the Assault and the Transportation in this matter. This clear distinction already suggests a lack of a causal link between the use of the Taxicab and Ms. Chong's bodily injuries. An evaluation of Motgin's violent assault on Ms. Chong as an act of independent significance only further disputes a causal link.
An act of violence can break the causal nexus between the "use" of a vehicle and the injuries inflicted.
The parties seem to agree that coverage should exist only if the injuries resulted from the Taxicab being used for transportation purposes.
The parties have made no assertion that Ms. Chong was obligated to transport Motgin and so Motgin presumably entered Ms. Chong's Taxicab to negotiate for transportation.
While the use of the Taxicab for transportation can be connected to the events that led to Ms. Chong's bodily injuries and eventual death, the negotiation of transportation is not a type of use of an automobile this Court finds sufficient to support coverage under the Policy.
For the reasons set forth above, the Court finds that the Taxicab was not uninsured nor was Motgin an uninsured motorist when Ms. Chong suffered her bodily injuries, and even if they were, the bodily injuries suffered by Ms. Chong did not arise out of the use of the Taxicab. Accordingly, NCIC's Motion for Summary Judgment at
The hearing scheduled for June 28, 2016, is hereby VACATED.