The issue in Johnson v. American United Life Insurance Co., decided last week by the Fourth Circuit. was whether the Plaintiff’s husband’s death from a car wreck while driving intoxicated was an "accident" under his life insurance policy from Defendant American United which provided "Accidental Death and Dismemberment" coverage .

The policy didn’t contain a definition for an "accident," making it necessary for the Court to interpret the term. It noted in passing that     "[t]here are probably not many words which have caused courts as much trouble as ‘accident’ and ‘accidental.’" Op. at n.1.

In the end, Judge Traxler ruled that the dead husband was covered by the policy, though he said that:

Reaching this result gives us no great pleasure. Drunk driving is reckless, irresponsible conduct that produces tragic consequences for the thousands it touches annually. But our task in this case is not to promote personal responsibility or enforce good driving habits. We must focus on the terms of the policies issued under the Plan and determine whether Richard died as a result of an accident without ‘allowing our moral judgments about drunk driving to influence our
review.’

Op. 3-4.

The Court’s analysis began with two competing definitions of the term "accident."  The Plaintiff argued that the "most natural and common understanding of the term . . . is an unintentional, unplanned incident that occurs as a result of a careless error."  Op. at 12.  She said that unless an intoxicated driver intended to crash his car and die, that his death would be an accident under the policy.

Another definition of "accident" would "exclude any incident where the consequences of intentional conduct are expected or reasonably forseeable."  Op. at 13.

Finding the term ambiguous, the Court applied "the rule of contra proferentum and construed the term[] strictly in favor of the insured." Op. at 15.   It found no evidence that the driver intended to have an accident and deemed the insured’s death to be an accident.

The District Court had ruled that a death caused by intoxication was not an "accident."  It relied on Section 58-3-30(b) of the North Carolina General Statutes, which says that

"Accident", "accidental injury", and "accidental means" shall be defined to imply "result" language and shall not include words that establish an accidental means test.  "

You might not be familiar with some of those terms.  I wasn’t.  The "accidental means" definition provides that there is no coverage when the loss "occurs by reason of an insured’s intentional act" or "is the natural and probable consequence of a voluntary actor course of conduct."  Op. at 21 (quoting Collins v. Life Ins. Co. of Va., 393 S.E.2d 342, 343 (N.C. Ct. App. 1990)).

The "accidental result" standard is more liberal. 

a policy that pays benefits based on an ‘accidental result’ standard does not categorically exclude from the definition of ‘accident’ losses resulting from intentional acts; rather, "accidental" under this standard means a loss occurred ‘fortuitously without intent or design’ and was ‘unexpected, unusual and unforeseen.’

Op. at 21 (quoting Henderson v. Hartford Accident & Indem. Co., 150 S.E.2d 17, 20 (N.C. 1966)).

Judge Traxler looked to a 1992 North Carolina Supreme Court decision — North Carolina Farm Bureau Mutual Ins. Co. v. Stox, 412 S.E.2d 318 (N.C. 1992) — which held:

Continue Reading The Fourth Circuit On “Accidents” And Drunken Driving

When I last wrote about SCI North Carolina Funeral Services, LLC v. McEwen Ellington Funeral Services, Inc., Judge Murphy had entered a TRO against the Defendants for trademark infringement over their use of the McEwen name in their funeral home business.  The case seemed cut and dried then, and it looked like that the Defendants had no defense to the infringement claim.

Last week, Judge Murphy entered a preliminary injunction in the same case in 2013 NCBC 11, this time over the Defendants’ vigorous defense.  The second time around was a much closer call. 

The case involves the McEwen name, which is the middle name of Defendant Carl Ellington. When the Defendants sold the funeral homes that they had operated under the McEwen name to the Plaintiffs, they included in the sale the rights to all "trademarks, tradenames (including all trade names under which [they] did business."  McEwen was the last name of Carl J. McEwen, the founder of McEwen Funeral Services, Inc.

Several years after their sale, the Defendants opened a new, competing funeral home under the McEwen name and this trademark infringement lawsuit ensued.

Continue Reading Developments In NC State Trademark Law

It’s hard to like the result in Wake County v. Hotels.com, LP, 2012 NCBC 61.  The case is a consolidation of cases brought by several North Carolina counties (Mecklenburg, Wake, Dare, and Buncombe) against Hotels.com and other internet travel sites (like Orbitz.com, priceline.com, and travelocity.com).  Hotels.com, the first named Defendant, is an online booking service that promises the lowest available rates for a multitude of hotels.

The NC County Plaintiffs allege that Hotels.com and the other Defendants contract with hotels for rooms at a discounted rate, and then sell the rooms to consumers at a higher rate.  Their beef is over the non-payment by hotels.com of the Occupancy Tax ordinarily paid by hoteliers.  They allege that Hotels.com and the other Defendants charge their customers for tax at the higher rate at which the hotels actually sell the room, but then only remit taxes based on the discounted rate they pay the hotel operator.

What happens to the difference?  Hotels.com and the other Defendants pocket it.  Shouldn’t they pay the excess collected to the counties or the North Carolina Department of Revenue?  The Counties thought so.

But the upshot of Judge Murphy’s decision in the Wake County case is that the Counties had no cause of action against the Defendants.  He granted summary judgment in favor of the Defendants.

The why of it took 30 pages of statutory analysis of North Carolina’s taxation scheme.  The Occupancy Tax is not contained in the General Statutes.  Instead, the General Assembly passed statutes authorizing counties to levy an Occupancy Tax.  The counties levy the Occupancy Tax via resolutions or ordinances.

So the cases turned on the counties’ ordinances, and upon whom they placed the obligation to collect the tax.  In Mecklenburg and Wake Counties, it was the "operator of a taxable establishment."  In Dare and Buncombe Counties, it was the "operator of a business subject to a room occupancy tax."

Judge Murphy concluded that the Defendants were not responsible for collecting the Occupancy Tax.  If you are curious about how he reached that conclusion — and you must be a state taxation junkie if you are — you can read about it in Paragraphs 33 through 53 of the Opinion.

Other Interesting Things About This Opinion

For those of you who aren’t enamored  by the Occupancy Tax, you might find interesting Judge Murphy’s discussion of Rule 8 of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure and his disposition of a conversion claim.

Continue Reading Hotels.com And Other Online Travel Vendors Don’t Have To Pay Occupancy Taxes To North Carolina Counties