MOYLAN, J.
A grant of permission to use a motor vehicle can pass swiftly from a named insured to a first permittee to a second permittee. The liability coverage under a policy's omnibus clause, however, may not replicate so facile a transfer, as if passing easily from Tinker to Evers to Chance. The grant of permissive use may sometimes stop at Evers and never make it all the way to Chance. Even should the permissive use get into the hands of Chance, however, his status may be discounted as that of a mere agent or chauffeur of Evers. Tinker, by and large, will be free of troubles. In any event, insurance law can be a more sluggish arena than Wrigley Field.
At approximately three p.m. on February 11, 2008 on Route 202 in Prince George's County, the automobile then being driven by the appellant, David J. Payne, Sr., was struck by a 1995 Subaru Legacy being driven by Ameen Ragher Abdulkhalek. The appellant sued, inter alia, Abdulkhalek. The 1995 Subaru Legacy, however, was owned by Alan Dwyer. The appellee, Erie Insurance Exchange, had issued a policy of automobile liability insurance to Alan Dwyer for the Subaru Legacy. The only issue before us is whether coverage under the omnibus clause of Erie's insurance policy extended from Alan Dwyer to Abdulkhalek.
Under the policy, Alan Dwyer was the named insured. In defining precisely who received liability protection under the policy, the omnibus clause spelled out:
(Emphasis in original).
The 1995 Subaru Legacy that figures in this case had been purchased by Alan Dwyer primarily for the use of his 34-year-old daughter, Karen Dwyer. Karen, along with her three children, lived at home with her mother and father. Karen suffered periodically from Lupus. For purposes of analyzing the policy coverage on the Subaru Legacy, Karen generally had the unlimited permission of her father to use the Legacy as she wished, with one significant prohibition. Karen was the first permittee for using the insured vehicle.
The one significant prohibition imposed by Alan Dwyer on the use of the Legacy was with respect to Abdulkhalek. Dwyer absolutely forbade Karen's allowing Abdulkhalek to drive the car. Abdulkhalek, though he did not live with Karen, was the biological father of her three children. Two of Karen's and Abdulkhalek's three children attended the St. Ambrose private school, which is located within the same residential community where the Dwyers live. Normally, Karen makes the two minute drive to pick the two up from school. On February 11, 2008, however, Karen was feeling ill with Lupus and asked Abdulkhalek to take the Legacy and pick the children up. Instead of going directly to the school, which is only two blocks away, Abdulkhalek for some unknown reason drove out onto Md. 202 and to an Exxon station, where he remained for approximately three minutes. Whether the detour was to gas up the car or simply to pick up a pack of cigarettes, we are not told. In any event, it was after leaving the Exxon station that, at a traffic light on Md. 202, Abdulkhalek hit the rear of the car driven by David Payne.
When this case came on for a pretrial hearing before Judge John P. Davey in the Circuit Court for Prince George's County on February 15, 2013, Judge Davey denied the appellant's motions for a declaratory judgment and for summary judgment but granted Erie's motion for summary judgment. This appeal timely followed.
The appellant relies primarily on Maryland Indemnity Insurance Co. v. Kornke, 21 Md.App. 178, 319 A.2d 603 (1974). In Kornke, the named insured of a vehicle was the father and the first permittee was the father's teenaged son. At the very outset of the opinion, this Court pointed out that we were dealing with the extent of the coverage of a policy's omnibus clause.
21 Md.App. at 180, 319 A.2d 603 (footnotes omitted; emphasis supplied).
In Kornke the named insured of a 1960 Chevrolet hardtop was William T. Kornke, Sr. His 18-year-old son, a high school student living at home, used the car regularly for purposes of going to school and to work and drove the car "almost every day." When the son would wish to use the car for a date or other social purpose, however, he would generally ask for special permission from his father. On the critical date in the case, the son, with his
After examining the case law and observing that "use and operation are not synonymous," 21 Md.App. at 186, 319 A.2d 603, this Court's opinion held that the son was, indeed, using the car even though someone else was behind the wheel. Our holding clearly stated that the son was using the car even though he was not driving it, but also that his actual presence in the car was nonetheless a sine qua non for extending the liability coverage.
21 Md.App. at 192, 319 A.2d 603 (emphasis supplied).
After analyzing earlier Maryland cases, our opinion pointed out for the first time in this state that the scope of the permission ordinarily granted by the named insured to the first permittee is not simply the entitlement to operate the vehicle but, more broadly, an entitlement to use the vehicle for a permitted purpose even though the literal operation of the vehicle is delegated to someone else.
The actual presence of the first permittee in the vehicle, however, is a sine qua non for any coverage of the actual driver as a second permittee. It is the first permittee who is deemed to be actually using the car and the second permittee, who is driving, is considered to be the mere agent (or chauffeur) of the first permittee. The Maryland case law has never extended coverage under an omnibus clause to an absentee use of the vehicle by the first permittee, such as sending the second permittee on an errand while the first permittee stays home. The rationale energizing Kornke's expanded interpretation of a "permitted use" as opposed to a more restricted "permitted operation" of the vehicle is that the first permittee is present in the car as the master of the ship even when not literally standing at the helm. Under all circumstances, the first permittee must be on board. On this critical issue, Kornke relied heavily on the earlier Maryland decision of Hardware Mutual Casualty Co. v. Mitnick, 180 Md. 604, 26 A.2d 393 (1942).
21 Md.App. at 185, 319 A.2d 603 (emphasis supplied).
The second earlier Maryland opinion that Kornke relied upon was Melvin v. American Automobile Insurance Co., 232 Md. 476, 194 A.2d 269 (1963). In that case, Judge (later Chief Judge) Henderson made it clear that although the actual user
232 Md. at 478-79, 194 A.2d 269 (emphasis supplied).
As the case law about the extent of coverage authorized by the typical omnibus clause developed, this Court's opinion in Kornke was a major landmark in that evolution.
Kornke's recognition of the passive modality of being driven in a vehicle for a permitted purpose was a logical expansion of liability coverage, but the expansion was not without its limits. The first permittee's use of the automobile contemplates an actual use and not a mere constructive use. If the first permittee is actually driven to the pharmacy to pick up her medicines, the expanded liability coverage travels with her and with her driver as well. If, on the other hand, the first permittee's trip to the pharmacy is only a constructive one, as she stays at home and sends her driver in her stead, the expanded liability coverage stays home with her. The permitted use of a vehicle contemplates that the first permittee, who is the first and last recipient of the grant of permission by the named insured, actually be present in the vehicle. It is not enough that the vehicle is being used for her purposes or benefit. It is required that the first permittee be the actual user and not simply the beneficiary of the use. The chain of permissive use does not extend to an absentee user. The expanded liability coverage adheres to the person of the first permittee. To enjoy coverage derivatively from the first permittee, the second permittee must be within the first permittee's penumbra.
The failure to appreciate that a permitted use demands the first permittee's presence as well as being for the first permittee's benefit is the fatal flaw in the appellant's argument. He looks only to the fact that the trip to pick up the children from school was for Karen's benefit. He utterly discounts the requirement of Kornke, and all of the other cases, that Karen must have been in the vehicle for the expanded coverage to attach to the vehicle.
In Federal Insurance Co. v. Allstate Insurance Co., 275 Md. 460, 341 A.2d 399 (1975), the Court of Appeals held that under the omnibus clause of an automobile liability policy issued by Allstate to a named insured, the coverage extended to a
275 Md. at 470, 341 A.2d 399 (emphasis supplied).
Frank, the first permittee, was covered because each of two necessary conditions was satisfied. The car was being used for the specific purpose for which the permitted use had been granted by the named insured, to wit, getting the car to Florida. The second requirement was also satisfied. Notwithstanding the fact that Frank was not driving, he was physically in the car and in charge of the mission. It was he, therefore, who was using the car, albeit not driving it.
275 Md. at 470-71, 341 A.2d 399 (emphasis supplied).
In then going on to hold that the driver, Straz, was also covered as a second permittee, the indispensable element was that Frank, the first permittee, was physically present in the car. The first permittee was the captain, and the captain has to be on board.
275 Md. at 472, 341 A.2d 399 (emphasis supplied).
In discussing the general disfavor of second permittees but the exception to that general disfavor when the first permittee is actually in the car, the Court of Appeals quoted from 7 Am.Jur.2d:
275 Md. at 471, 341 A.2d 399 (emphasis supplied).
Nationwide General Insurance Co. v. Government Employees Insurance Co. ("Geico"), 81 Md.App. 104, 566 A.2d 1117 (1989), reechoed the requirement that for a second permittee to enjoy coverage, the first permittee must be present in the vehicle. The named insured in that case gave his teenaged daughter a broad grant of permission to use a family car, particularly for the purpose of driving to school. The father specifically instructed his daughter that "she was not to let anyone else drive the car," expressly including her boyfriend, Stephen. On a trip to school, however, Stephen was driving when an accident occurred.
This Court held that Stephen, as a second permittee, enjoyed coverage notwithstanding the directive of the named insured to his daughter that Stephen not be permitted to drive the car. This Court took advantage of the two ameliorating circumstances that the Court of Appeals had simply recognized as theoretical possibilities in Bond v. Pennsylvania National Mutual Casualty Co., 289 Md. 379, 424 A.2d 765 (1981). A significant finding was that the trip to school was for the benefit of the daughter and was unquestionably for the purpose for which the permissive use had been granted. The absolutely critical criterion was that the daughter, as first permittee, was present in the car at the time of the accident. This circumstance in Geico was expressly contrasted with the contrary circumstance in Bond.
81 Md.App. at 113, 566 A.2d 1117.
That distinction was critical to our allowing of that first ameliorating exception to extend the policy's coverage from the first to the second permittee.
81 Md.App. at 115, 566 A.2d 1117 (emphasis supplied).
We also pointed out that our view was in line with the broad consensus of sister jurisdictions.
81 Md.App. at 117, 566 A.2d 1117 (emphasis supplied). Lest there be any doubt, we concluded the opinion with the following square holding:
81 Md.App. at 123, 566 A.2d 1117 (emphasis supplied).
Quite aside from the fact that Karen, the first permittee, was not in the car when the accident occurred, a second, independent, and self-sufficient reason why Abdulkhalek did not enjoy coverage under the omnibus clause was that the person
For his part, Abdulkhalek was fully aware of the prohibition on his driving of the car.
(Emphasis supplied).
Bond v. Pennsylvania National Mutual Casualty Insurance Co., 289 Md. 379, 424 A.2d 765 (1981), was stern in its insistence that if the limits placed by the named insured on the grant of permissive use are unambiguous, those scope limitations are not to be ignored. Judge Digges's opinion for the Court of Appeals, quoting National Grange Mutual Insurance v. Pinkney, 284 Md. 694, 704-05, 399 A.2d 877 (1979), stated at the outset that an insurance policy is a contract and that the normal rules for construing a contract apply to a contract of insurance:
289 Md. at 384, 424 A.2d 765.
In Bond, 289 Md. at 383, 424 A.2d 765, even as in the present case, the named insured had expressly directed that the ultimate driver of the vehicle, by name, was not to be permitted to drive it.
In defining the scope of a grant of permissive use, moreover, the focus must be on the relationship between the named insured and the first permittee and not on the relationship between the first permittee and the second permittee.
289 Md. at 385, 424 A.2d 765 (emphasis supplied).
It is true that when the admonition by the named insured is from a parent to a teenaged child and is simply a generic "Do not let anyone else drive the car," the courts have sometimes been willing to find an overriding implied consent by the named insured under various sets of reasonably persuasive circumstances. The Bond opinion is steadfast, however, that such tolerant inferential factfinding is inappropriate in the face of an unambiguous
289 Md. at 385-86, 424 A.2d 765 (emphasis supplied). The circumstantially implied consent that may trump a modest admonition does not have the same force against an unequivocal command.
The Bond opinion did, however, note two possible situations in which a stern adherence to the named insured's prohibition might be ameliorated.
289 Md. at 386 n. 1, 424 A.2d 765 (emphasis supplied).
Just as neither of those ameliorating circumstances was present in the Bond case, so too was neither present in this case. We have already discussed at length the dispositive fact that Karen, the first permittee, was not present in the Subaru Legacy when the accident occurred.
Coverage was foreclosed for yet a second reason. The appellant has not advanced an argument that Karen and Abdulkhalek were responding to an emergency when she, incapacitated by Lupus, sent him in the Legacy to pick up their children at school. The testimony of Alan Dwyer, Karen's father, would have obliterated any such argument had it been made. In terms of whether the school pick-up constituted any arguable emergency, one of several factors that might be pertinent, Alan Dwyer was asked on deposition what would ordinarily happen if and when Karen could not herself pick the children up. He replied that they would simply walk home, because home was but two blocks from school.
(Emphasis supplied). An inconvenience is not an emergency.
Even when the cast of characters is unobjectionable, the plot itself must still pass muster. The mere fact that the first permittee is present in the insured vehicle does not, in and of itself, extend the coverage of the policy to a second permittee who is driving at the request of the first permittee. The use of the vehicle must still be for the specific purpose for which the permissive use was granted by the named insured in the first instance.
The opinion of this Court in Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. v. Maryland Automobile Insurance Fund, 154 Md.App. 604, 841 A.2d 46 (2004), is squarely on point. The named insured in that case received a telephoned request from his ex-wife, asking if their son could pick her up in the family car and drive her to work. The named insured felicitously acquiesced. He instructed the son, the first permittee, to use the car to drive the mother to work, but then to bring the car back. There were no further instructions given.
On his way to pick his mother up, the son gratuitously picked up a friend, Leo Stevenson. He then picked his mother up and delivered her to her place of work. After dropping the mother off, however, the pair decided to visit a mutual friend in Washington. Because the son did not know his way around the neighborhood, he asked Stevenson to drive the car. Stevenson thus became a second permittee. Stevenson, while driving, struck a parked truck which was propelled forward into a pedestrian.
The opinion for this Court by Judge (now Chief Judge) Krauser pointed out the scope of the permitted use granted by the named insured had been exceeded in two respects. Although the father had not expressly instructed his son on this occasion that no one but he should drive the car, there was a long-term understanding between father and son to that effect.
154 Md.App. at 611, 841 A.2d 46 (emphasis supplied).
The use of the vehicle exceeded the scope of the permission granted in yet a second respect. Judge Krauser pointed out:
154 Md.App. at 612-13, 841 A.2d 46 (emphasis supplied).
Our opinion was very clear that the scope of a permitted use is a factor that will not be lightly ignored nor loosely interpreted.
154 Md.App. at 616, 841 A.2d 46 (emphasis supplied). See also American Home Assurance Co. v. Erie Insurance Exchange, 252 Md. 116, 121-22, 248 A.2d 887 (1969) (The accident occurred two and one-half hours after the driver borrowed it for a trip that was not to have taken more than 45 minutes, and the permittee had not yet picked up his wife which was his intended purpose.); Cohen v. American Home Assurance Co., 255 Md. 334, 349, 258 A.2d 225 (1969) (The mother-owner gave the car keys to her son with the understanding that a friend, not the son, would drive. When the son drove the car, that was not within the scope of the permission granted by the mother.); Goodwin v. Home Indemnity Co., 255 Md. 364, 367, 258 A.2d 220 (1969) (The permission granted to the permittee was for a repair pick up on Saturday morning, "not a Friday night (or early Saturday morning) escapade," which occurred.).
A trip to the Exxon station in this case, for whatever purpose, was not within the scope of a two-block trip to a school to pick up two children. A deviation is a deviation, be it large or small.
In analyzing the coverage of the typical omnibus clause, the phrase "second permittee" has been a two-edged sword, with unquestioned pluses but also troublesome minuses. It conveniently identifies the status of one who takes the wheel at the behest of a first permittee and it helps to distinguish a second permittee's more restricted permissive scope (generally limited to operating the car) from the broader discretionary scope typically enjoyed by a first permittee.
On the other hand, the phrase can be an analytic snare. Because of their parallel structures, there is an almost hypnotic impulse to analogize "second permittee" to "first permittee." Those who write law school examination questions might even dream of a third permittee or, yea perchance, a fourth. It is a treacherous frame of mind to slip into, however, because the two (or three or four) permissive phenomena are not truly analogous. We may not attribute the rules that govern and the characteristics of the first grant of permission to the second, because the second is no mere second-generation replication of the first. It is a distinct and more narrow grant with tighter rules and more limited characteristics of its own.
Although the use of the ordinals "first" and "second" inevitably suggest a sequence, we actually deal with a one-step process and not a two-step process. It is not the case that a grant of a permissive use is made by the named insured to the first permittee and later regranted from the first permittee to the second permittee in a second transfer of permission. It is rather the case that the grant is made on a single occasion from the named insured to the first permittee and, implicitly, because the first permittee need not drive the car himself, to whatever agents or servants the first permittee may subsequently procure to do the driving for him. The grant may well have contemplated such a possible agency from the beginning.
When the first permittee designates an agent to drive him or her some place, that is not a second grant of a permissive use. It is only an incident or implementation by the first permittee of the original grant of the use. The so-called "second permittee" is simply an agent for the limited purpose of driving. The very term "second permittee" is, to be sure, very convenient. It may well be indispensable. It nonetheless requires sensitive handling and vigilant awareness of the danger of over-analogizing.
Under the terms of the omnibus clause in this case, the coverage of the policy did not extend to Abdulkhalek, the ostensible second permittee, who was expressly prohibited from driving the car, who nonetheless did so without the necessary presence of the first permittee, and who in any event exceeded the scope of any even implicitly permitted use.