Mitchell v. State Auto. Mut. Ins.: Co., Unpublished Decision (12-13-2001)
Mitchell v. State Auto. Mut. Ins.: Co., Unpublished Decision (12-13-2001)
Opinion of the Court
OPINION
Plaintiffs-appellants, Lawrence and Loretta Mitchell and Linette Will, appeal from a judgment of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas granting the summary judgment motion of defendant-appellee, State Automobile Mutual Insurance Company ("State Auto"). Because the trial court properly granted summary judgment to State Auto, we affirm.The facts underlying the summary judgment motion are undisputed. On October 9, 1994, an uninsured motorist, Luz Camacho, negligently operated a motor vehicle, causing an accident that injured Lawrence Mitchell, Jr., the son of plaintiffs Lawrence and Loretta Mitchell and the brother of plaintiff Linette Will. The following day, October 10, 1994, Lawrence Mitchell, Jr. died from the injuries sustained in the accident.
On September 21, 1999, plaintiffs contacted State Auto to give notice of their claim. When correspondence between the parties failed to resolve the issue, plaintiffs on January 12, 2000, filed a complaint against State Auto, asserting claims for wrongful death, breach of contract, and failure to act in good faith.
Following State Auto's answer, the action was transferred to the Lorain County Common Pleas Court on a motion for change of venue that State Auto filed. While the case was pending in Lorain County, State Auto filed a motion for summary judgment. Before the motion was determined, plaintiffs filed a motion for change of venue, requesting that the action be returned to the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas. Plaintiffs' motion was granted, and the matter was returned to Franklin County.
Following full briefing on State Auto's summary judgment motion, the trial court granted the motion, finding plaintiffs' action was barred by the time constraints set forth in their contracts with State Auto. Plaintiffs appeal, assigning the following errors:
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NO. 1
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN GRANTING SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND FAILING TO HOLD THAT THE STATE AUTOMOBILE MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY POLICY'S TIME LIMITATION PROVISION, WHICH PROVIDED THAT SUIT MUST BE BROUGHT AGAINST IT WITHIN TWO YEARS OF THE DATE OF THE ACCIDENT, WAS CONTRARY TO R.C.
3937.18 PER MILLER V. PROGRESSIVE CAS. INS. CO. (1994), 69 OHIO ST.3d 619, AND WAS UNENFORCEABLE BECAUSE IT PROVIDED A LESSOR [sic] PERIOD OF TIME FOR THE INSUREDS TO INITIATE AN ACTION OR PROCEEDING AGAINST IT TO RECOVER BENEFITS THAN THE INSUREDS WERE STATUTORILY ENTITLED TO COMMENCE AN ACTION FOR WRONGFUL DEATH AGAINST THE TORTFEASOR (THEIR CAUSE OF ACTION FOR WRONGFUL DEATH NOT ARISING UNTIL THE DATE OF DEATH), AND THEREFORE THE PROVISION PREVENTS THESE INSUREDS FROM BEING PLACED IN THE SAME POSITION REGARDING RECOVERY OF THEIR DAMAGES THAT THEY WOULD HAVE ENJOYED HAD THE TORTFEASOR BEEN INSURED, WHEN THE POLICY PROVISION IS UNENFORCEABLE, THE TIME LIMIT FOR MAKING A CLAIM ON THE POLICY IS FIFTEEN YEARS.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NO. 2
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN GRANTING SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND FAILING TO HOLD THAT THE STATE AUTOMOBILE MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY'S TIME LIMITATION PROVISION WHICH APPLIES SOLELY TO UNINSURED MOTORIST COVERAGE AND DOES NOT APPLY TO LIABILITY COVERAGE, IS INVALID AND UNENFORCEABLE AS CONTRARY TO THE REQUIREMENT OF R.C.
3937.18 THAT UNINSURED MOTORIST COVERAGE EQUIVALENT TO THE LIABILITY COVERAGE BE PROVIDED.
Because plaintiffs' assignments of error are interrelated, we address them jointly. Together they assert the trial court erred in granting summary judgment to State Auto, as the provision in its contracts requiring that a legal action or arbitration proceeding be instituted within two years of the date of the accident is void and unenforceable.State Auto issued to Lawrence Mitchell a policy effective May 6, 1994 to November 6, 1994; Loretta Mitchell, his wife, was an insured under the policy. State Auto also issued to Jeffrey Will, husband of Linette Will, a policy effective from July 5, 1994 to January 5, 1995; Linette Will was an insured under the policy. Both policies contain the following language:
Under uninsured or underinsured motorist coverage of this policy, if provided, no legal action or arbitration proceeding may be brought against us unless the action or proceeding is begun within two years of the date of the accident.
Plaintiffs contend R.C.
In Miller, the Supreme Court addressed a provision in an insurance contract that limited the time for bringing an action on the contract to a period less than that prescribed by the general statute of limitations governing contract actions. Although the statute of limitations governing contract actions was fifteen years, and the statute of limitations governing actions for bodily injury allowed two years from the date of injury to commence the action, the policy in Miller provided only one year. The court acknowledged a contract validly may limit the time for bringing an action on the contract to "a period less than that prescribed in a general statute of limitations provided that the shorter period shall be a reasonable one." Id. at 624, quoting Colvin v. Globe Am. Cas. Co. (1982),
On the same day, the Ohio Supreme Court decided Kraly v. Vannewkirk (1994),
The Ohio Supreme Court determined that the "validity of a contractual period of limitations governing a civil action brought pursuant to the contract is contingent upon the commencement of the limitations period on the date that the right of action arising from the contractual obligation accrues." Id., paragraph two of the syllabus. Coupled with that conclusion, the court concluded that "[w]here the liability insurer of a tortfeasor has been declared insolvent, a right of action of an insured injured by the tortfeasor against his insurer under the uninsured motorist provision of his automobile insurance contract accrues on the date that the insured receives notice of the insolvency." Id., paragraph three of the syllabus. In explaining its holding, the Ohio Supreme Court noted that "[a] provision in a contract of insurance which purports to extinguish a claim for uninsured motorist coverage by establishing a limitations period which expires before or shortly after the accrual of a right of action for such coverage is per se unreasonable and violative of the public policy of the state of Ohio as embodied in R.C.
State Auto's policies do not violate R.C.
By contrast, had plaintiffs' decedent survived for a considerable period of time, but then died shortly before the limitations period of State Auto's policies was about to expire, plaintiffs' arguments would be more compelling and more in harmony with the rationale of Miller and Kraly. Those circumstances, however, are not the facts of this case. To apply plaintiffs' argument to the facts of this case would deviate from the analysis of Miller and Kraly, especially given that plaintiffs did not commence an action either within the two years set forth in State Auto's policy or within the two years and one day allowed under R.C.
We recognize that the Ohio Supreme Court in Kraly conditioned the validity of a contractual period of limitations at issue in that case on the limitations period commencing on the date that the right of action arising from the contractual obligation accrues. Literal application of that language suggests a violation of that principle here. Guided, however, by the facts of Kraly and Miller in applying the Ohio Supreme Court's pronouncements from those cases, we are compelled to conclude that the one-day difference between the statute of limitations for wrongful death and the period of limitations set forth in State Auto's policies is immaterial in determining the validity of State Auto's provision limiting the institution of the proceeding to two years from the date of the accident. See Ross v. Farmers Ins. Group (1998)
Judgment affirmed.
TYACK and PETREE, JJ., concur.
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