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CASES (2023)

Allied Premier Ins. v. United Financial Casualty Co.

Supreme Court of California

July 24, 2023, Opinion Filed

ALLIED PREMIER INSURANCE, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. UNITED FINANCIAL CASUALTY COMPANY, Defendant and Appellant.

Prior History:  [*1] Ninth Circuit, No. 20-55099.

Central District of California, No. 5:18-cv-00088-JGB-KK.

Allied Premier Ins. v. United Fin. Cas. Co., 991 F.3d 1070, 2021 U.S. App. LEXIS 8257, 2021 WL 1082862 (9th Cir. Cal., Mar. 22, 2021)

Core Terms

canceled, endorsement, insurer, insurance certificate, insurance policy, certificate, coverage, carrier’s, notice, motor carrier, cancellation notice, terms, equitable contribution, written notice, financial responsibility, obligations, expired, full force, provisions, insurance coverage, surety bond, reimbursement, termination, Effective, indemnify, damages, italics, trucker, renew, underlying policy

Case Summary

Overview

HOLDINGS: [1]-In answering “no” to a certified question from the Ninth Circuit, the Supreme Court held that the terms of an insurance contract generally determine the duration of the policy’s coverage. Although an endorsement can amend the policy, neither the California’s Motor Carriers of Property Permit Act nor the specific endorsement it requires extend coverage beyond the underlying policy’s expiration date. Under the Act, a commercial automobile insurance policy does not continue in full force and effect until the insurer cancels a corresponding certificate of insurance on file with the DMV. The duration of the policy’s coverage is regulated by its terms and those of any endorsement or amendment to the policy itself.

Outcome

Certified question answered.

LexisNexis® Headnotes

Insurance Law > … > Coverage > Compulsory Coverage > Motor Carriers

HN1  Compulsory Coverage, Motor Carriers

The terms of an insurance contract generally determine the duration of the policy’s coverage. Although an endorsement can amend the policy, neither the California Motor Carriers of Property Permit Act, Veh. Code, § 34600 et seq., nor the specific endorsement it requires extend coverage beyond the underlying policy’s expiration date.

Insurance Law > Claim, Contract & Practice Issues > Allocation

Insurance Law > Claim, Contract & Practice Issues > Coinsurance > Contribution

Insurance Law > … > Business Insurance > Commercial General Liability Insurance > Multiple Insurers

Insurance Law > Types of Insurance > Excess Insurance > Apportionment of Liability

HN2  Claim, Contract & Practice Issues, Allocation

Equitable contribution is the right to recover, not from the party primarily liable for the loss, but from a co-obligor who shares such liability with the party seeking contribution. In the insurance context, the right to contribution arises when several insurers are obligated to indemnify or defend the same loss or claim, and one insurer has paid more than its share of the loss or defended the action without any participation by the others. Where multiple insurance carriers insure the same insured and cover the same risk, each insurer has independent standing to assert a cause of action against its coinsurers for equitable contribution when it has undertaken the defense or indemnification of the common insured. Equitable contribution permits reimbursement to the insurer that paid on the loss for the excess it paid over its proportionate share of the obligation, on the theory that the debt it paid was equally and concurrently owed by the other insurers and should be shared by them pro rata in proportion to their respective coverage of the risk.

Insurance Law > Claim, Contract & Practice Issues > Allocation

Insurance Law > Claim, Contract & Practice Issues > Coinsurance > Contribution

Insurance Law > … > Business Insurance > Commercial General Liability Insurance > Multiple Insurers

Insurance Law > Types of Insurance > Excess Insurance > Apportionment of Liability

HN3  Claim, Contract & Practice Issues, Allocation

The reciprocal contribution rights of coinsurers who insure the same risk are based on the equitable principle that the burden of indemnifying or defending the insured with whom each has independently contracted should be borne by all the insurance carriers together, with the loss equitably distributed among those who share liability for it in direct ratio to the proportion each insurer’s coverage bears to the total coverage provided by all the insurance policies. The right to equitable contribution is predicated on the commonsense principle that where multiple insurers or indemnitors share equal contractual liability for the primary indemnification of a loss or the discharge of an obligation, the selection of which indemnitor is to bear the loss should not be left to the choice of the loss claimant, and no indemnitor should have any incentive to avoid paying a just claim in the hope the claimant will obtain full payment from another coindemnitor. Equitable contribution thus assumes the existence of two or more valid contracts of insurance covering the particular risk of loss and the particular casualty in question.

Insurance Law > … > Coverage > Compulsory Coverage > Certificates of Insurance

HN4  Compulsory Coverage, Certificates of Insurance

Veh. Code, § 34631.5, subd. (b)(3), provides that the certificate of insurance, evidencing the protection, shall not be cancelable on less than 30 days’ written notice to the California Department of Motor Vehicles.

Governments > Legislation > Interpretation

HN5  Legislation, Interpretation

A court generally infers a change in meaning from a change in statutory language. An essential change in the phraseology of a statutory provision would indicate an intention on the part of the legislature to change the meaning of such provision rather than interpret it. This is especially true if a court has construed the old statute as having a particular meaning. An amendment materially changing a statute following a court decision interpreting the statute in its original form is to be regarded as an indication of legislative intent to change the meaning of the law. The court should therefore reject an interpretation of the statute which would leave the prior judicial construction in effect.

Insurance Law > … > Coverage > Compulsory Coverage > Certificates of Insurance

Insurance Law > … > Motor Vehicle Insurance > Cancellation & Renewal > Statutory Requirements

HN6  Compulsory Coverage, Certificates of Insurance

The California Motor Carriers of Property Permit Act, Veh. Code, § 34600 et seq., prohibits cancellation of a certificate of insurance without notice to the California Department of Motor Vehicles. Veh. Code, § 34630, subd. (b); 34631.5, subd. (b)(3). The Act does not speak to cancellation or termination of the underlying policy, which embodies the agreement between the parties. As a result, the Act does not prevent cancellation or termination of an insurance policy under the terms of the contract.

Insurance Law > Liability & Performance Standards > Good Faith & Fair Dealing > Duty to Defend

Insurance Law > Liability & Performance Standards > Good Faith & Fair Dealing > Indemnification

HN7  Good Faith & Fair Dealing, Duty to Defend

Insurance coverage is generally understood to mean an obligation on the insurer to defend and indemnify the insured against loss resulting from specified activities.

Insurance Law > … > Coverage > Compulsory Coverage > Certificates of Insurance

Insurance Law > Claim, Contract & Practice Issues > Policy Cancellation, Denial & Nonrenewal > Notice Requirements

Insurance Law > … > Coverage > Compulsory Coverage > Motor Carriers

HN8  Compulsory Coverage, Certificates of Insurance

An uncancelled certificate of insurance that remains on file with the California Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) does not cause the corresponding insurance policy to remain in effect in perpetuity. But that is not to say that an uncancelled certificate of insurance imposes no obligation of any kind on the responsible insurer. The statutory scheme suggests otherwise. For example, Veh. Code, § 34631.5, subd. (d), provides that every insurance certificate or equivalent protection to the public shall contain a provision that the certificate or equivalent protection shall remain in full force and effect until canceled. Further, under the Act, an insurer remains obligated to promptly notify the DMV at least 30 days before a certificate of insurance is cancelled. This obligation is an important part of the statutory scheme, alerting the DMV of the need to suspend a motor carrier‘s permit until new insurance coverage is acquired.

Insurance Law > … > Coverage > Compulsory Coverage > Certificates of Insurance

Insurance Law > … > Coverage > Compulsory Coverage > Motor Carriers

Insurance Law > … > Coverage > Compulsory Coverage > Proof of Financial Responsibility

HN9  Compulsory Coverage, Certificates of Insurance

There is a linkage between an insurance policy subject to the California Motor Carriers of Property Permit Act, Veh. Code, § 34600 et seq., the certificate of insurance required by the Act, and the endorsement required by the California Department of Motor Vehicles’ regulations. But the documents are not one and the same. Rather, each serves its own function within the regulatory framework. An insurance policy is an agreement between an insurer and its insured. If a motor carrier complies with the Act by obtaining insurance, the certificate is evidence tendered to the Department that the insurer agrees to be bound by the terms of the endorsement and therefore provides sufficient protection to satisfy the Act’s financial responsibility requirements. The certificate thus demonstrates the carrier’s financial responsibility by virtue of its contractual arrangement with the insurer. It is the document that supports issuance of the carrier’s permit, and its cancellation triggers the Department’s duty to suspend that permit. The certificate, however, does not govern the obligations between the parties. The endorsement, meanwhile, serves to ensure that the policy complies with the Act’s financial responsibility requirements and amends the policy to the extent of the endorsement’s terms.

Governments > Legislation > Interpretation

HN10  Legislation, Interpretation

In construing a statute, the court considers first the words of the statute as the most reliable indicator of legislative intent.

Governments > Legislation > Interpretation

HN11  Legislation, Interpretation

A change in statutory language can, itself, be an indication of the legislature’s intent.

Insurance Law > … > Coverage > Compulsory Coverage > Certificates of Insurance

Insurance Law > … > Coverage > Compulsory Coverage > Motor Carriers

HN12  Compulsory Coverage, Certificates of Insurance

Under the California Motor Carriers of Property Permit Act, Veh. Code, § 34600 et seq., a commercial automobile insurance policy does not continue in full force and effect until the insurer cancels a corresponding certificate of insurance on file with the California Department of Motor Vehicles. The duration of the policy’s coverage is regulated by its terms and those of any endorsement or amendment to the policy itself.

Headnotes/Summary

Summary

CALIFORNIA OFFICIAL REPORTS SUMMARY

The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit certified to the Supreme Court the following question: Under California’s Motor Carriers of Property Permit Act (Veh. Code, § 34600 et seq.), does a commercial automobile insurance policy continue in full force and effect until the insurer cancels the corresponding Certificate of Insurance on file with the Department of Motor Vehicles, regardless of the insurance policy’s stated expiration date?

The Supreme Court answered “no” to the certified question. The court held that the terms of an insurance contract generally determine the duration of the policy’s coverage. Although an endorsement can amend the policy, neither the act nor the specific endorsement it requires extend coverage beyond the underlying policy’s expiration date. Under the act, a commercial automobile insurance policy does not continue in full force and effect until the insurer cancels a corresponding certificate of insurance on file with the Department of Motor Vehicles. The duration of the policy’s coverage is regulated by its terms and those of any endorsement or amendment to the policy itself. (Opinion by Corrigan, J., expressing the unanimous view of the court.)

Headnotes

CALIFORNIA OFFICIAL REPORTS HEADNOTES


CA(1) (1)

Insurance Contracts and Coverage § 28—Commercial Automobile Insurance Policy—Duration—Beyond Underlying Policy’s Expiration Date.

The terms of an insurance contract generally determine the duration of the policy’s coverage. Although an endorsement can amend the policy, neither the California Motor Carriers of Property Permit Act (Veh. Code, § 34600 et seq.) nor the specific endorsement it requires extend coverage beyond the underlying policy’s expiration date.

[Cal. Forms of Pleading and Practice (2023) ch. 88, Automobiles: Automobile Insurance, § 88.16.]


CA(2) (2)

Insurance Contracts and Coverage § 120—Equitable Contribution—Multiple Insurers—Same Loss or Claim.

Equitable contribution is the right to recover, not from the party primarily liable for the loss, but from a co-obligor who shares such liability with the party seeking contribution. In the insurance context, the right to contribution arises when several insurers are obligated to indemnify or defend the same loss or claim, and one insurer has paid more than its share of the loss or defended the action without any participation by the others. Where multiple insurance carriers insure the same insured and cover the same risk, each insurer has independent standing to assert a cause of action against its coinsurers for equitable contribution when it has undertaken the defense or indemnification of the common insured. Equitable contribution permits reimbursement to the insurer that paid on the loss for the excess it paid over its proportionate share of the obligation, on the theory that the debt it paid was equally and concurrently owed by the other insurers and should be shared by them pro rata in proportion to their respective coverage of the risk.


CA(3) (3)

Insurance Contracts and Coverage § 120—Equitable Contribution—Multiple Insurers—Equal Contractual Liability.

The reciprocal contribution rights of coinsurers who insure the same risk are based on the equitable principle that the burden of indemnifying or defending the insured with whom each has independently contracted should be borne by all the insurance carriers together, with the loss equitably distributed among those who share liability for it in direct ratio to the proportion each insurer’s coverage bears to the total coverage provided by all the insurance policies. The right to equitable contribution is predicated on the commonsense principle that where multiple insurers or indemnitors share equal contractual liability for the primary indemnification of a loss or the discharge of an obligation, the selection of which indemnitor is to bear the loss should not be left to the choice of the loss claimant, and no indemnitor should have any incentive to avoid paying a just claim in the hope the claimant will obtain full payment from another coindemnitor. Equitable contribution thus assumes the existence of two or more valid contracts of insurance covering the particular risk of loss and the particular casualty in question.


CA(4) (4)

Insurance Contracts and Coverage § 28—Commercial Automobile Insurance Policy—Cancellation—Notice.

Veh. Code, § 34631.5, subd. (b)(3), provides that the certificate of insurance, evidencing the protection, shall not be cancelable on less than 30 days’ written notice to the Department of Motor Vehicles.


CA(5) (5)

Statutes § 28—Construction—Language—Legislative Intent—Change in Meaning.

A court generally infers a change in meaning from a change in statutory language. An essential change in the phraseology of a statutory provision would indicate an intention on the part of the Legislature to change the meaning of such provision rather than interpret it. This is especially true if a court has construed the old statute as having a particular meaning. An amendment materially changing a statute following a court decision interpreting the statute in its original form is to be regarded as an indication of legislative intent to change the meaning of the law. The court should therefore reject an interpretation of the statute which would leave the prior judicial construction in effect.


CA(6) (6)

Insurance Contracts and Coverage § 28—Commercial Automobile Insurance Policy—Cancellation—Notice.

The California Motor Carriers of Property Permit Act (Veh. Code, § 34600 et seq.) prohibits cancellation of a certificate of insurance without notice to the Department of Motor Vehicles (Veh. Code, § 34630, subd. (b); 34631.5, subd. (b)(3)). The act does not speak to cancellation or termination of the underlying policy, which embodies the agreement between the parties. As a result, the act does not prevent cancellation or termination of an insurance policy under the terms of the contract.


CA(7) (7)

Insurance Contracts and Coverage § 44—Insurer’s Obligation—Defend and Indemnity Insured—Specified Activities.

Insurance coverage is generally understood to mean an obligation on the insurer to defend and indemnify the insured against loss resulting from specified activities.


CA(8) (8)

Insurance Contracts and Coverage § 28—Commercial Automobile Insurance Policy—Full Force and Effect Until Cancelled.

An uncancelled certificate of insurance that remains on file with the California Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) does not cause the corresponding insurance policy to remain in effect in perpetuity. But that is not to say that an uncancelled certificate of insurance imposes no obligation of any kind on the responsible insurer. The statutory scheme suggests otherwise. For example, Veh. Code, § 34631.5, subd. (d), provides that every insurance certificate or equivalent protection to the public must contain a provision that the certificate or equivalent protection must remain in full force and effect until canceled. Further, under the act, an insurer remains obligated to promptly notify the DMV at least 30 days before a certificate of insurance is cancelled. This obligation is an important part of the statutory scheme, alerting the DMV of the need to suspend a motor carrier‘s permit until new insurance coverage is acquired.


CA(9) (9)

Insurance Contracts and Coverage § 28—Commercial Automobile Insurance Policy—Endorsement—Carrier’s Financial Responsibility.

There is a linkage between an insurance policy subject to the California Motor Carriers of Property Permit Act (Veh. Code, § 34600 et seq.), the certificate of insurance required by the act, and the endorsement required by the California Department of Motor Vehicles’ regulations. But the documents are not one and the same. Rather, each serves its own function within the regulatory framework. An insurance policy is an agreement between an insurer and its insured. If a motor carrier complies with the act by obtaining insurance, the certificate is evidence tendered to the department that the insurer agrees to be bound by the terms of the endorsement and therefore provides sufficient protection to satisfy the act’s financial responsibility requirements. The certificate thus demonstrates the carrier’s financial responsibility by virtue of its contractual arrangement with the insurer. It is the document that supports issuance of the carrier’s permit, and its cancellation triggers the department’s duty to suspend that permit. The certificate, however, does not govern the obligations between the parties. The endorsement, meanwhile, serves to ensure that the policy complies with the act’s financial responsibility requirements and amends the policy to the extent of the endorsement’s terms.


CA(10) (10)

Statutes § 29—Construction—Legislative Intent.

In construing a statute, the court considers first the words of the statute as the most reliable indicator of legislative intent. A change in statutory language can, itself, be an indication of the Legislature’s intent.


CA(11) (11)

Insurance Contracts and Coverage § 28—Commercial Automobile Insurance Policy—Full Force and Effect until Cancelled.

Under the California Motor Carriers of Property Permit Act (Veh. Code, § 34600 et seq.), a commercial automobile insurance policy does not continue in full force and effect until the insurer cancels a corresponding certificate of insurance on file with the Department of Motor Vehicles. The duration of the policy’s coverage is regulated by its terms and those of any endorsement or amendment to the policy itself.

Counsel: Patrick Howe Law, Patrick M. Howe; Horvitz & Levy, Lisa Perrochet and Peder K. Batalden for Defendant and Appellant.

Booth, Hillary Arrow Booth and Ian P. Culver for Plaintiff and Respondent.

Judges: Opinion by Corrigan, J., with Guerrero, C. J., Liu, Kruger, Groban, Jenkins, and Evans, JJ., concurring.

Opinion by: Corrigan, J.

Opinion

CORRIGAN, J.CA(1) (1) The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has certified1 the following question for our review: Under California’s Motor Carriers of Property Permit Act (Veh. Code, § 34600 et seq.; the Act),2 does a commercial automobile insurance policy continue in full force and effect until the insurer cancels the corresponding Certificate of Insurance on file with the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV or Department), regardless of the insurance policy’s stated expiration date? The answer is no. HN1 The terms of an insurance contract generally determine the duration of the policy’s coverage. Although an endorsement can amend the policy, neither the Act nor the specific endorsement it requires extend coverage beyond the underlying policy’s expiration date.

In Transamerica Ins. Co. v. Tab Transportation, Inc. (1995) 12 Cal.4th 389 [48 Cal. Rptr. 2d 159, 906 P.2d 1341] (Transamerica), this court interpreted an earlier permitting system codified in the Public Utilities Code. We held that the [*2]  policy endorsement required by that scheme did extend insurance coverage until notice of cancellation was provided to the Public Utilities Commission. However, the language in the Public Utilities Code, on which we relied in Transamerica, was not carried over when later legislation replaced the Public Utilities Code permitting scheme and amended the Vehicle Code to add the Act at issue here. As a result, Transamerica‘s holding does not control the answer to the certified question.


I. BACKGROUND

The facts are taken from the parties’ joint stipulation of facts and exhibits as well as the judgment of the United States District Court, Central District of California.

A. The Act

Commercial trucker Jose Porras is a “‘motor carrier of property’” (motor carrier or carrier). (§ 34601, subd. (a).) Under the Act, a motor carrier cannot operate on public highways without securing a DMV permit, which requires proof of the carrier’s financial responsibility. (§§ 34620, subd. (a), 34630, subd. (a).) A carrier can satisfy that requirement by obtaining a policy of insurance.3 (§ 34631.) If a carrier does so, the insurer must submit a certificate of insurance to the Department as evidence that the “protection required under [section 34631.5,] subdivision (a)” is provided. (§ 34631.5, subd. (b)(1).)

The Department has published forms to facilitate [*3]  the administration of the Act’s financial responsibility requirement. Two of those forms are a “Certificate of Insurance” and an “Insurance Policy Endorsement.” (See Cal. Code Regs., tit. 13, § 220.06, subds. (a), (b).) When a motor carrier complies with the Act by obtaining an insurance policy, a DMV regulation requires that the “Insurance Policy Endorsement … , amending the insurance policy to comply with insurance requirements imposed by the [Act], … be attached to and made part of, the insurance policy insuring the motor carrier.” (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 13, § 220.06, subd. (b).)

The Act requires that “proof of financial responsibility … be continued in effect during the active life” of the permit issued to the motor carrier. (§ 34630, subd. (b).) This requirement prohibits cancellation of a certificate of insurance without notice to the DMV by the insurer.4 (Ibid.) When an insurer gives notice that a certificate will be cancelled because the policy will lapse or be terminated, the DMV must “suspend the carrier’s permit effective on the date of lapse or termination unless the carrier provides evidence of valid insurance coverage” pursuant to section 34630, subdivision (a). (§ 34630, subd. (c).) This procedure ensures that only financially responsible carriers are permitted to operate on public highways.

B. The Facts

Effective May [*4]  2, 2013, United Financial Casualty Company (United) began insuring Porras under a commercial automobile insurance policy with an eight-digit policy number ending in 772 (the United policy or Policy 772). The policy provided that, in return for Porras’s premium payment, United would, up to the policy limit, pay specified damages Porras became responsible for as a result of an accident “arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use of” an insured vehicle. The policy also provided that United would, at its option, settle or defend any covered claim and that, if Porras failed to pay the premium to renew, the policy would “automatically terminate at the end of the current policy period.”

As required by the Act, United filed a certificate of insurance, identifying United as the insurer and Porras as the insured and giving the policy number ending in 772. United certified that a “fully executed endorsement, on a form authorized by the [DMV], is attached to the referenced policy to conform to the requirements of the [Act]” and that “[t]his Certificate … shall not be canceled on less than thirty (30) days notice from the Insurer to the DMV and written on a Notice of Cancellation form [*5]  authorized by the DMV.”

United attached the required Insurance Policy Endorsement to the United policy (the Endorsement). Under the Endorsement, United agreed: (1) to “pay, consistent with the minimum insurance coverage required by [section] 34631.5 … any legal liability of insured for bodily injury, death, or property damage arising out of the operation, maintenance, or use of any vehicle(s) for which a motor carrier permit is required”; (2) that “[n]o provision, stipulation, or limitation contained in the attached policy or any endorsement shall relieve insurer from obligations arising out of this Endorsement or the Act, regardless of the insured’s financial solvency, indebtedness[,] or bankruptcy”; (3) that the “Certificate of Insurance shall not be canceled on less than thirty (30) days notice from the Insurer to the DMV”; and (4) that, “[e]xcept as specified in this endorsement, the terms, conditions, and limitations of this policy remain in full force and effect.”5 One of the terms in the policy was the termination date. The Endorsement also permitted United to seek “reimbursement from [Porras] for any payment made by [United] solely on account of the [Endorsement’s] provisions.”

United provided [*6]  coverage for Porras through the original or renewed Policy 772 from May 2, 2013 through April 12, 2015. During that period, it appears that United filed at least three certificates of insurance and two cancellation notices, one of which the Department returned to United as an “incomplete filing.” It appears that, as the end of a policy period approached, United would file a cancellation notice with the DMV, noting the policy number and giving the date the policy would lapse. The timing of the notice made the DMV aware that, if Policy 772 was not renewed, it would lapse on the date provided, triggering the DMV’s duty to suspend Porras’s operating permit. If the policy was subsequently renewed, United would send a new certificate of insurance as evidence that Porras continued to have the required protection under Policy 772. The new certificate would indicate the date on which the new policy period began. As noted, one of United’s cancellation notices was rejected by the Department as an incomplete filing. After that filing was returned, however, United filed a new certificate of insurance, covering the ensuing period. As relevant here, United submitted its final cancellation notice [*7]  on February 6, 2015, informing the Department that “the [United] policy, including applicable endorsement and certifications” is cancelled “effective thirty (30) days after the date” it was either received by the DMV, or on April 12, 2015, whichever was later. Every certificate and cancellation notice in the record bears both the 772 policy number and the number of Porras’s permit.

By April 12, 2015, Porras had not paid the premium required to renew the United policy. Effective April 13, 2015, Allied Premier Insurance (Allied) began to insure Porras under a policy that provided the required coverage. Allied submitted a certificate of insurance to the Department four days later. The record contains no indication that, when it assumed coverage and filed its own certificate, Allied was aware that United’s earlier certificate remained uncancelled because the DMV had rejected United’s cancellation notice.

On September 1, 2015, Porras was driving a truck covered by the Allied policy when he collided with a car driven by Jennifer Jones. Jones died as a result of the accident, and her parents sued Porras for wrongful death. Porras tendered his defense to Allied, which retained counsel to defend [*8]  him and settled the parents’ claim for its policy limits of $1 million. United was not a party to the Jones suit, did not defend Porras in that action, and did not contribute to the settlement.

C. The Action at Issue Here

After the settlement, Allied sued United for declaratory relief, equitable contribution, and equitable subrogation, seeking reimbursement for half the amount it paid to resolve the Jones litigation. It argued that, because one of United’s cancellation notices was rejected by the Department as incomplete, United continued to have an active certificate of insurance on file with the DMV. That circumstance, according to Allied, meant United’s policy remained in effect on the date of the collision between Porras and Jones.

United urged that it had no obligation to reimburse Allied because its policy had expired when Porras failed to renew. United acknowledged one of its certificates of insurance remained on file with the DMV because a cancellation notice had been returned. However, it argued the certificate was not an insurance policy. At most, it created a surety-like obligation, providing a “safety net” for members of the public injured by commercial motor carriers. Because [*9]  the certificate of insurance did not function to make United a co-insurer of Porras, United argued it was not required to contribute to the settlement.

The case was removed to federal court. The parties filed a joint stipulation of facts and exhibits and then filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The district court ruled for Allied, finding that, because United “failed properly to submit a Notice of Cancellation, its policy remained in effect” on the date of the accident, “even though [the policy] may have lapsed under its own terms or been cancelled by the parties.” Based on that finding, the court concluded that Allied and United both provided “insurance coverage on the same risk,” and that Allied was “entitled to equitable contribution in the amount of $500,000.”6

United appealed to the Ninth Circuit, which certified the question of law to this court. (Allied Premier Ins. v. United Financial Cas. Co. (9th Cir. 2021) 991 F.3d 1070, 1071.) In the Ninth Circuit’s view, the appeal turns on the following question of statutory interpretation: “If the [Act] requires a commercial auto insurance policy to remain in effect indefinitely until the insurer cancels the certificate of insurance on file with the DMV, then Allied must prevail. If not, United must prevail.” (Id. at p. 1073.) [*10]  We hold that the Act does not require the policy to remain in effect indefinitely.


II. DISCUSSION

HN2 CA(2) (2) Equitable contribution is the “right to recover, not from the party primarily liable for the loss [here, Porras], but from a co-obligor who shares such liability with the party seeking contribution [here, United].” (Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co. v. Maryland Casualty Co. (1998) 65 Cal.App.4th 1279, 1293 [77 Cal. Rptr. 2d 296] (Fireman’s Fund).) “In the insurance context, the right to contribution arises when several insurers are obligated to indemnify or defend the same loss or claim, and one insurer has paid more than its share of the loss or defended the action without any participation by the others. Where multiple insurance carriers insure the same insured and cover the same risk, each insurer has independent standing to assert a cause of action against its coinsurers for equitable contribution when it has undertaken the defense or indemnification of the common insured. Equitable contribution permits reimbursement to the insurer that paid on the loss for the excess it paid over its proportionate share of the obligation, on the theory that the debt it paid was equally and concurrently owed by the other insurers and should be shared by them pro rata in proportion to their respective coverage of the risk.” (Ibid. [*11] )

HN3 CA(3) (3) The “reciprocal contribution rights of coinsurers who insure the same risk are based on the equitable principle that the burden of indemnifying or defending the insured with whom each has independently contracted should be borne by all the insurance carriers together, with the loss equitably distributed among those who share liability for it in direct ratio to the proportion each insurer’s coverage bears to the total coverage provided by all the insurance policies.” (Fireman’s Fund, supra, 65 Cal.App.4th at p. 1294.) The right to equitable contribution “is predicated on the commonsense principle that where multiple insurers or indemnitors share equal contractual liability for the primary indemnification of a loss or the discharge of an obligation, the selection of which indemnitor is to bear the loss should not be left to the … choice of the loss claimant, and no indemnitor should have any incentive to avoid paying a just claim in the hope the claimant will obtain full payment from another coindemnitor.” (Id. at p. 1295.)

“Equitable contribution thus assumes the existence of two or more valid contracts of insurance covering the particular risk of loss and the particular casualty in question.” (Fireman’s Fund, supra, 65 Cal.App.4th at p. 1295, italics added.) This assumption lies at the [*12]  heart of the Ninth Circuit’s question. Allied’s entitlement to equitable contribution depends on whether United was obligated to indemnify Porras for any damages due to the Jones accident. Allied is entitled to equitable contribution only if it can show that United was a “co-obligor who shares … liability” with Allied for the loss resulting from that event. (Id. at p. 1293.) Allied must show that United was “obligated to indemnify or defend the same loss or claim” as Allied. (Ibid.) Resolution of this question turns on an interpretation of the Act’s requirements.

A. The Act Does Not Extend the Policy Beyond the Term Contained in the Contract

As mentioned, the district court concluded that the United policy’s coverage remained in effect, not based on the policy’s terms, but because United had not cancelled all certificates of insurance on file with the DMV. The court relied on Transamerica, supra, 12 Cal.4th 389 in reaching that conclusion. Transamerica does not control here because it interpreted a different statutory scheme.

Transamerica addressed the application of the Act’s predecessor, the Highway Carriers’ Act of 1951 (Pub. Util. Code, former § 3501 et seq.; HCA). The Legislature repealed the HCA in 1996 and replaced it with the Act, transferring primary regulatory authority over commercial truckers to the DMV. (See [*13]  Hill Brothers Chemical Co. v. Superior Court (2004) 123 Cal.App.4th 1001, 1005 [20 Cal. Rptr. 3d 530]; see also Stats. 1996, ch. 1042, § 53, p. 6562.) Like the Act that replaced it, the HCA prohibited commercial truckers from operating on public highways without a permit issued by the Public Utilities Commission (PUC). To obtain a permit, a commercial trucker had to show it carried “‘adequate protection’ against liability.” (Transamerica, supra, 12 Cal.4th at p. 397, fn. omitted.) This could “be achieved by means of an insurance policy, a surety bond, or evidence … of the carrier’s qualification as a self-insurer.” (Ibid.) Proof of insurance coverage could be submitted to the PUC “in the form of ‘a certificate of insurance.’” (Id. at p. 398.)

As to cancellation of a policy, the HCA provided that “‘protection against liability shall be continued in effect during the active life of the [trucker’s] permit,’ and that ‘[t]he policy of insurance or surety bond shall not be cancelable on less than 30 days’ written notice to the [PUC], except in the event of cessation of operations as a highway carrier as approved by the [PUC].’” (Transamerica, supra, 12 Cal.4th at p. 398, quoting Pub. Util. Code, former § 3634, italics omitted.) To promote the continuous protection requirement and prohibition on cancellation without notice, the PUC promulgated General Order No. 100, which required the following provisions to be included in any policy subject [*14]  to the HCA: (1) “‘A policy of insurance, or surety bond, evidencing such protection, shall not be cancelable on less than thirty (30) days’ written notice to the Public Utilities Commission’”; and (2) “‘Every insurance policy, surety bond or equivalent protection to the public shall contain a provision that such policy, surety bond or equivalent protection will remain in full force and effect until canceled in the manner provided’” by the General Order. (Transamerica, at p. 398, italics added.) The regulatory scheme also required “a standard PUC form endorsement” be “attached to every policy of insurance purchased by a highway carrier.” (Id. at pp. 394, 398.) The endorsement certified “that a liability policy issued to a highway carrier [would] continue ‘in full force and effect until canceled’” by written notice to the PUC. (Id. at p. 394, italics added.)

The dispute in Transamerica was between a commercial trucking company (Tab) and its liability insurer (Transamerica). In 1980, Tab purchased a one-year term liability insurance policy from Transamerica to comply with the HCA. (Transamerica, supra, 12 Cal.4th at p. 395.) Transamerica filed a certificate of insurance with the PUC. The certificate provided that the “policy was ‘Effective 2-1-80 Until Canceled.’” (Ibid.) Tab did not renew the [*15]  Transamerica policy and, in the ensuing years, obtained insurance policies from Federal Insurance Company (Federal) and Home Indemnity Company (Home). (Ibid.) Both Federal and Home filed certificates of insurance representing their policies with the PUC. (Ibid.) However, “neither Transamerica nor Tab ever notified the PUC of the cancelation of the Transamerica policy.” (Ibid., fn. omitted.)

In 1989, a Tab truck collided with a train, causing multiple injuries and deaths. (Transamerica, supra, 12 Cal.4th at p. 395.) The plaintiffs sued Tab for various claims and sought $6 million in damages. (Id. at p. 396.) Tab demanded coverage from Transamerica, Federal, and Home under the three policies mentioned above. (Ibid.) Federal and Home “each contributed [their] policy limits (a total of $1.6 million) to a global settlement in which Tab admitted liability.” (Ibid.) Transamerica did not participate in the settlement. (Ibid.)

Transamerica then sued Tab, seeking a declaratory judgment that it was not liable for damages from the 1989 collision because its policy had previously expired. (Transamerica, supra, 12 Cal.4th at p. 396.) Tab cross-complained, asserting entitlement to coverage under the policy because the certificate of insurance Transamerica filed with the PUC “expressly stated [*16]  its policy was ‘Effective 2-1-80 Until Canceled.’” (Ibid.) Because Transamerica never notified the PUC that its policy was canceled, Tab argued the policy “continued in effect.” (Ibid.) The trial court granted Tab’s motion for summary adjudication of the coverage issue. Transamerica appealed, and the Court of Appeal reversed, concluding that the Transamerica policy had “expired of its own terms [in] 1981, and that Transamerica therefore had no obligation to give 30 days’ written notice to the PUC of its intent to cancel the policy.” (Id. at pp. 396–397.)

On review, this Court reversed the Court of Appeal’s judgment and concluded that Transamerica’s policy was still “in effect at the time of the 1989 accident, thus providing coverage for Tab.” (Transamerica, supra, 12 Cal.4th at p. 400.) We reasoned that the “policy must be read in light of its original provisions as well as those added to the policy by the PUC’s standard form endorsement.” (Id. at p. 399.) We then described the policy and endorsement as follows: “As initially written, the Transamerica policy was to remain in effect for one year only, from February 1, 1980, until February 1, 1981. But … the policy was amended by the standard PUC endorsement, which provides for inclusion in the policy [*17]  of the PUC’s General Order No. 100 … . [¶] Incorporation of General Order No. 100 … into the provisions of the Transamerica policy added to the provisions the requirement … that ‘such policy … will remain in full force and effect until canceled … .’ This language, of course, is in direct conflict with the language of the policy as originally written stating that the policy was to expire in February 1981.” (Id. at pp. 399–400.) We concluded that “incorporation into the policy of the PUC’s General Order No. 100 language requiring the policy to remain in ‘full force and effect until canceled’ converted the policy from a one-year term policy to a policy that was to remain in effect ‘until canceled.’” (Id. at p. 400.) It was undisputed that there was “no compliance with the notice requirements” in former section 3634 of the Public Utilities Code and General Order No. 100. Therefore, we held that the policy was “still in effect” at the time of the 1989 collision. (Transamerica, at p. 400.)

Under its terms, the HCA provided that “‘protection against liability shall be continued in effect during the active life of the permit,’ and that ‘[t]he policy of insurance or surety bond shall not be cancelable on less than 30 days’ written notice to the [PUC], except in the [*18]  event of cessation of operations as a highway carrier as approved by the [PUC].’” (Transamerica, supra, 12 Cal.4th at p. 398, quoting Pub. Util. Code, former § 3634, original italics omitted, italics added.) So, the terms of the HCA required that protection against liability, which was provided by the policy, remain in effect until the motor carrier‘s permit was cancelled. To effectuate that requirement, the HCA and the required endorsement prohibited the policy from being cancelled without notice.

CA(4) (4) The Act is different. It provides that “[p]roof of financial responsibility shall be continued in effect during the active life of the motor carrier permit,” and that the “certificate of insurance shall not be cancellable on less than 30 days’ written notice from the insurer to the [DMV] except in the event of cessation of operations as a permitted motor carrier of property.” (§ 34630, subd. (b), italics added.) HN4[] Likewise, section 34631.5, subdivision (b)(3) provides that the certificate of insurance, “evidencing the protection, shall not be cancelable on less than 30 days’ written notice” to the DMV. Thus, while the HCA specifically prohibited cancellation of an insurance policy without notice, the Act only prohibits cancellation of a certificate of insurance without notice. This prohibition helps to ensure that [*19]  “proof of financial responsibility” remains “in effect during the active life” of the permit. (§ 34630, subd. (b).)

The difference in statutory language is significant. Under the HCA and the endorsement required by General Order No. 100, the underlying policy could not be cancelled without notice to the PUC. As a result, Transamerica remained obligated. Its policy with Tab had been amended by the endorsement, which “converted the policy from a one-year term policy to a policy that was to remain in effect ‘until canceled.’” (Transamerica, supra, 12 Cal.4th at p. 400.) But under the new language of the Act only the certificate of insurance remains active until cancelled. Cancellation of a certificate triggers the DMV’s obligation to suspend the motor carrier‘s permit. The statute does not say that the underlying policy remains active beyond the period called for in the contract between the parties. There is no language that “converts” the stated term of the policy.

Transamerica was decided against the backdrop of a general rule that an insurance company “incurs no liability for an accident that occurs after the policy period has ended.” (Transamerica, supra, 12 Cal.4th at p. 394.) This Court concluded in Transamerica that the HCA created an exception to that general rule. The coverage provided by an insurance [*20]  policy subject to the HCA could not be canceled, regardless of its stated expiration date, without written notice of the policy’s cancellation to the PUC. (Transamerica, at p. 401.) This exception was based on explicit statutory language in the HCA prohibiting cancellation of a “‘policy of insurance, or surety bond’” without notice to the PUC. (Transamerica, at p. 398, quoting Pub. Util. Code, former § 3634.)

That language was not carried over into the Act. The change does not appear inadvertent. Like the HCA, an early draft of the Act would have conditioned a motor carrier‘s “[r]egistration” with the Department on the filing of either “a policy of insurance,” a surety bond, or other evidence of insurance. (Assem. Bill 1683 (1995–96 Reg. Sess.) § 55, as amended Aug. 30, 1995.) The same draft would have required that “protection against liability … be continued in effect during the active life of the registration.” (Ibid.) In later drafts, that language was removed from the relevant provisions and replaced with requirements that: (1) a “certificate of insurance” be filed with the Department; and (2) “proof of financial responsibility … be continued in effect during the active life of the permit.” (Assem. Bill 1683 (1995–96 Reg. Sess.) § 53, as amended July 7, 1996.) These were [*21]  the requirements the Legislature ultimately approved. (§ 34630, subds. (a), (b).)

HN5 CA(5) (5) We generally infer a change in meaning from a change in statutory language. An “‘essential change in the phraseology of a statutory provision would indicate an intention on the part of the legislature to change the meaning of such provision rather than interpret it.’” (Estate of Todd (1941) 17 Cal.2d 270, 274–275 [109 P.2d 913].) This is especially true if a court has construed the old statute as having a particular meaning. (See Benson v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd. (2009) 170 Cal.App.4th 1535, 1557 [89 Cal. Rptr. 3d 166] (Benson).) As O’Brien v. Dudenhoeffer (1993) 16 Cal.App.4th 327 [19 Cal. Rptr. 2d 826] explained, an “amendment materially changing a statute following a court decision interpreting the statute in its original form is to be regarded as an indication of legislative intent to change the meaning of the law.” (Id. at p. 335.) We should therefore “reject an interpretation of the statute which would leave the prior judicial construction in effect.” (Ibid.)

HN6 CA(6) (6) The Act prohibits cancellation of a certificate of insurance without notice to the DMV. (§ 34630, subd. (b); § 34631.5, subd. (b)(3).) Unlike the HCA, it does not speak to cancellation or termination of the underlying policy, which embodies the agreement between the parties. As a result, the Act does not prevent cancellation or termination of an insurance policy under the terms of the contract.

It is undisputed that at least one certificate of [*22]  insurance that United filed during the period it covered Porras remained uncancelled at the time of the accident. The question remains: What impact does a certificate of insurance remaining on file with the DMV have with respect to the coverage that an insurer owes to its insured? Again, we return to the language of the United policy, the certificate of insurance, and the endorsement.

B. The Effect Upon Coverage of the Certificate of Insurance and the Required Endorsement

HN7 CA(7) (7) Insurance coverage is generally understood to mean an obligation on the insurer “to defend and indemnify the insured against loss resulting from specified activities.” (2 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (11th ed. 2017) Insurance, § 210, p. 329.) The certificate of insurance required by the Act mentions neither of these obligations. They are, instead, imposed by the terms of the United policy and by the Endorsement, though the obligations are described differently in each document.

In its certificates of insurance, United affirmed that Porras was covered by Policy 772, that the policy covered all vehicles for which Porras’s permit was required, and that a fully executed endorsement was attached to the policy. It also agreed [*23]  the certificate was not cancellable without 30 days’ written notice to the Department.

The United policy promised that, if Porras “pa[id] the premium for liability coverage for the insured auto involved,” then United would pay damages up to the policy limits. The policy also provided that United would “settle or defend, at [its] option, any [covered] claim or lawsuit for damages.” Thus, so long as Porras paid the required premium, the policy required United to (1) defend or settle any covered claim against Porras and (2) indemnify Porras for any damages, up to the limits of liability. If Porras did not pay the required premium, however, the policy would “automatically terminate at the end of the current policy period.”

The Endorsement also addressed United’s duties to defend and indemnify Porras, but it altered some of the obligations United and Porras owed to each other under the terms of the underlying policy. In the Endorsement, United promised to “pay, consistent with the minimum insurance coverage required by [section 34631.5], and consistent with the limits it provides herein, any legal liability of [Porras] for bodily injury, death, or property damage arising out of the operation, maintenance, [*24]  or use of any vehicle(s) for which a motor carrier permit is required.” United also promised that “[n]o provision, stipulation, or limitation contained in the attached policy or any endorsement [would] relieve [United] from obligations arising out of this Endorsement or the Act, regardless of insured’s financial solvency, indebtedness or bankruptcy.” However, the Endorsement’s “coverage” excluded any “costs of defense or other expense that the policy provide[d].” And the Endorsement specifically stated that it did “not prevent [United] from seeking reimbursement from [Porras] for any payment made by [United] solely on account of the [Endorsement’s] provisions.” Thus, the Endorsement promised that United would pay Porras’s legal liability up to the statutorily required minimum amount notwithstanding any provision or limitation in the policy. But it also allowed United to seek reimbursement from Porras for any payment United made solely on account of its provisions, and it specifically excluded the costs of Porras’s defense from its coverage. More importantly for our purposes, the Endorsement was an amendment to the United policy. Unlike the HCA and the endorsement applying General Order [*25]  No. 100 in Transamerica, nothing in the Act or the Endorsement provides that the policy must remain effective until cancellation of the certificate of insurance.

CA(8) (8) We emphasize that the question before us is a narrow one. HN8 We hold that an uncancelled certificate of insurance that remains on file with the DMV does not cause the corresponding insurance policy to remain in effect in perpetuity. But that is not to say that an uncancelled certificate of insurance imposes no obligation of any kind on the responsible insurer. The statutory scheme suggests otherwise. For example, section 34631.5, subdivision (d) provides that “[e]very insurance certificate or equivalent protection to the public shall contain a provision that the certificate or equivalent protection shall remain in full force and effect until canceled.” Further, under the Act, an insurer remains obligated to promptly notify the DMV at least 30 days before a certificate of insurance is cancelled. This obligation is an important part of the statutory scheme, alerting the DMV of the need to suspend a motor carrier‘s permit until new insurance coverage is acquired.

United has suggested in the federal litigation, and before this court, that an uncancelled certificate of insurance [*26]  could impose on the insurer something akin to a surety obligation to members of the public. The Ninth Circuit has not asked us to, and we need not, resolve whether such an obligation is created and the scope of any such obligation. We express no opinion on those questions. The character, nature, and extent of the obligations owed by a company that does not properly cancel a certificate of insurance are matters that can be clarified by further litigation and/or legislative action.

C. Allied’s Counterarguments Fail

In Allied’s view, the coverage provided by an insurance policy subject to the Act cannot lapse or be canceled until the insurer files a cancellation notice with the DMV. Indeed, Allied’s primary argument is that the insurance policy, the endorsement, and the certificate of insurance are all inseparable parts of a single whole, none of which can exist or be canceled without an effect on the others.

In support of this position, Allied points to section 34630, subdivision (a), which refers to “the policy represented by the certificate,” and section 34631.5, subdivision (b)(1), which refers to the certificate of insurance as “evidence[]” of the “protection required” by the Act. Allied contends that, because the certificate is evidence of and “represents [*27]  the policy,” it “cannot exist without an underlying policy.” Allied argues that “even if the policy … is set to expire on a certain date, the [certificate] and the policy it represents will remain in effect until 30 days after written notice is given to the DMV.”

Allied also relies on language in the certificate of insurance, in which United certified under penalty of perjury that Porras “is covered” by the United policy. Allied urges the use of the verb “is” means that the policy must remain active until the certificate is canceled. According to Allied, if a policy can be canceled while the corresponding certificate remains active, then the insurer would be subject to penalties for perjury. Allied argues the certificate would become “a hollow document” that “would certify a falsehood—i.e. that there is insurance available.” To support its position that the policy and the endorsement are inseparable, Allied relies on language in the Endorsement providing that it is “attached to and made a part of” the United policy. Finally, Allied points to the cancellation notice, urging that it provides notice of cancellation of all three documents: policy; certificate; and endorsement. Allied [*28]  argues there is “no separate mechanism for canceling only one or two of the three … . [E]ither all are active or all are canceled.”

HN9 CA(9) (9) There is, of course, a linkage between an insurance policy subject to the Act, the certificate of insurance required by the Act, and the endorsement required by the DMV’s regulations. But the documents are not one and the same. Rather, each serves its own function within the regulatory framework. As explained, an insurance policy is an agreement between an insurer and its insured. If a motor carrier complies with the Act by obtaining insurance, the certificate is evidence tendered to the DMV that the insurer agrees to be bound by the terms of the endorsement and therefore provides sufficient protection to satisfy the Act’s financial responsibility requirements. The certificate thus demonstrates the carrier’s financial responsibility by virtue of its contractual arrangement with the insurer. It is the document that supports issuance of the carrier’s permit, and its cancellation triggers the Department’s duty to suspend that permit. The certificate, however, does not govern the obligations between the parties. The endorsement, meanwhile, serves to ensure [*29]  that the policy complies with the Act’s financial responsibility requirements and amends the policy to the extent of the endorsement’s terms.

Allied’s argument, that an insurer might be subject to a perjury charge for failing to cancel a certificate of insurance when a policy expires, raises an interesting potentiality, but it does not establish that the certificate, the policy, and the endorsement are inseparable or cannot exist without one another. Indeed, the premise that the three documents are indivisible is flawed. On the contrary, a carrier can contract for coverage with an insurer, and that coverage can become legally binding on the parties without any endorsement and before any certificate is filed. The fact a certificate “remains on file” with the DMV does not act to extend the policy’s coverage beyond its expiration date. As for the Endorsement, its language clearly indicates that the nature of coverage it describes is different from that provided by the policy. The Endorsement amended the policy in several ways. If applicable, it would impose no duty to defend, and it would allow United to seek reimbursement from Porras under certain circumstances. But, unlike the endorsement [*30]  in Transamerica, supra, 12 Cal.4th 389, it did not change the duration of coverage, a subject to which it did not speak. Therefore, the Endorsement did not convert the policy from one with an agreed-upon term to one which remained in effect until cancelled.

Next, Allied argues there is no indication that the Legislature intended “to modify the financial responsibility requirements for motor carriers” or to change the rule from Transamerica, supra, 12 Cal.4th 389. Rather, the Legislature’s purpose in passing the Act, according to Allied, was to conform state law to a newly enacted federal law that preempted parts of the HCA. Allied points out that neither the Act nor its legislative history singles out Transamerica for “disapproval.” According to Allied, the change in statutory language was simply based on a change in the documentation required to be filed with the Department.7

HN10 CA(10) (10) In construing a statute, we consider first the words of the statute as the most reliable indicator of legislative intent. (California Building Industry Assn. v. State Water Resources Control Bd. (2018) 4 Cal.5th 1032, 1041 [232 Cal. Rptr. 3d 64, 416 P.3d 53].) Here, the HCA previously prohibited cancellation of an insurance policy without notice to the PUC. In the Act, that prohibition has been removed and replaced with a prohibition on the cancellation of a certificate of insurance without notice to the DMV. If the Legislature [*31]  intended to perpetuate Transamerica‘s holding, relating to the continuation of the underlying policy itself, it could have simply used the same language it used in the HCA. Allied cites no authority for the proposition that the rule from Transamerica must survive because the Legislature failed to specifically disapprove it in the new statute or to specifically note such an intention as part of its legislative history. HN11 Well established authority supports the conclusion that a change in statutory language can, itself, be an indication of the Legislature’s intent. (See O’Brien v. Dudenhoeffer, supra, 16 Cal.App.4th 327, 335, and cases cited therein; see also Benson, supra, 170 Cal.App.4th at p. 1557.) Finally, that the Legislature sought to avoid federal preemption does not mean it did not act with other purposes in mind as well.

Allied’s final argument is that, if we adopt United’s “position that the expiration of a policy eliminates the insurance company’s obligation under the policy despite [the] lack of notice to the DMV,” then “the entire system of financial responsibility for motor carriers [will] be eviscerated.” The argument, though a bit hyperbolical, is related to a policy argument we raised in Transamerica. There, we stated the “certificate of insurance that an insurance company files with the PUC serves [*32]  as proof of a highway carrier’s adequate protection against liability … . [A] long-term PUC employee testified at trial that the PUC looks to the certificate as proof of a highway carrier’s compliance with the financial responsibility obligations imposed by the statutory scheme: When a certificate for a policy of insurance is on file, the PUC assumes that the policy is still in effect, thus providing coverage for the highway carrier. [¶] In addition to providing an efficient means for the PUC to administer the [HCA‘s] financial responsibility requirements … , the certificate of insurance on file with the PUC serves as assurance that the public is protected in the event of an accident involving a particular highway carrier.” (Transamerica, supra, 12 Cal.4th at p. 403.) Allied contends that, if we hold that an insurance policy subject to the Act can be canceled without notice to the DMV, then the public will be left unprotected if a motor carrier without insurance, but with an active certificate of insurance representing an expired policy, is involved in an accident.8

It is true that commercial trucking is a business affecting the public interest and that one goal of the regulating legislation is to ensure that truckers [*33]  do not improperly seek to reduce costs by carrying inadequate insurance. (Transamerica, supra, 12 Cal.4th at p. 397.) Transamerica reasoned that, as between an insurer who failed to properly notify the PUC of a policy’s expiration and a member of the public injured by an inadequately insured trucker, the insurer should bear the risk of loss. (Id. at pp. 403–404.) The Act’s legislative history indicates that it was also intended to “enhance public safety.” (See, e.g., Sen. Com. on Energy, Utilities and Communications, analysis of Assem. Bill. No. 1683 (1995–1996 Reg. Sess.) as amended July 7, 1996, p. 2.) However, the extension of insurance coverage beyond the underlying policy’s expiration date is not the only way to achieve these public protection goals.

As discussed above, further litigation or legislative action may clarify the particulars of how the overall statutory scheme will operate to protect the public. That important policy question need not be resolved here. The certified question arises only in the context of claims for equitable contribution and subrogation between two insurance companies. It bears repeating that the plaintiffs in the underlying lawsuit were compensated to the full limits of Allied’s policy under the terms of their settlement and that, at all relevant times, Porras properly maintained an active operating permit.


III. CONCLUSION

HN12 CA(11) (11) Under the Act, a commercial automobile [*34]  insurance policy does not continue in full force and effect until the insurer cancels a corresponding certificate of insurance on file with the DMV. The duration of the policy’s coverage is regulated by its terms and those of any endorsement or amendment to the policy itself.

Guerrero, C. J., Liu, J., Kruger, J., Groban, J., Jenkins, J., and Evans, J., concurred.


End of Document


California Rules of Court, rule 8.548.

All undesignated statutory references are to the Vehicle Code.

Section 34631.5, subdivision (a), establishes the required minimum amount of liability protection for bodily injury, death, and property damage. (§ 34631.5, subd. (a)(1)–(4).) The proof of financial responsibility required under section 34630 must “be evidenced by the deposit with the [DMV], covering each vehicle used or to be used under the motor carrier permit … , of one of the following”: (1) a certificate of insurance issued by an insurance company; (2) a surety bond issued by a company licensed to write surety bonds in the state; (3) evidence of qualification as a self-insurer; or (4) evidence that coverage is provided by a charitable risk pool. (§ 34631, subds. (a)–(d).)

To effectuate this requirement and prohibition, the Act requires that “[e]very insurance certificate or equivalent protection to the public … contain a provision that the certificate or equivalent protection shall remain in full force and effect until canceled in the manner provided by [section 34631.5, subdivision (b)(3)].” (§ 34631.5, subd. (b)(4).) Section 34631.5, subdivision (b)(3) provides that a certificate of insurance “shall not be cancelable on less than 30 days’ written notice to the [DMV].” California Code of Regulations, title 13, section 220.06, subdivision (c) provides that “[w]ritten notice of cancellation of [a] Certificate of Insurance, required under [section 34630, subdivision (b)], shall be submitted by the insurer to the department on a Notice of Cancellation of Insurance.” This form is referred to herein as a cancellation notice.

Unlike the policy, the “coverage provided by the endorsement exclude[d] any costs of defense or other expense that the policy provides.”

The district court also addressed and rejected United’s argument that a certificate of insurance that “remains on record after a policy lapses functions as a surety, through which the insurer ‘promises to pay up to $750,000 towards a judgment against the trucker [for harm to a third party] where coverage for some reason is unavailable under an actual insurance policy.’” The Ninth Circuit has not asked us to assess the propriety of that ruling, and we express no view on it.

Under the HCA, an insurer was required to “‘deposit’” a “‘policy of insurance’” with the PUC as proof of a trucker’s financial responsibility (Pub. Util. Code, former § 3632), though with the PUC’s consent the insurer could file a certificate of insurance “in lieu of the policy” (Transamerica, supra, 12 Cal.4th at p. 408 (dis. opn. of Baxter, J., citing Pub. Util. Code, former § 3633). Under the Act, an insurer need only file a certificate of insurance to prove a motor carrier‘s financial responsibility. (§ 34631.5, subd. (b)(1).)

We conclude that a policy can be cancelled even if the corresponding certificate of insurance remains on file. Accordingly, we need not consider whether a subsequent, and properly filed, certificate of insurance supersedes the vitality of any previously filed certificate relating to the same policy.

Ye v. GlobalTranz Enters.

United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit

December 5, 2022, Argued; July 18, 2023, Decided

No. 22-1805

YING YE, as Representative of the Estate of SHAWN LIN, deceased, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. GLOBALTRANZ ENTERPRISES, INC., Defendant-Appellee.

Prior History:  [*1] Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 1:18-CV-01961 — Elaine E. Bucklo, Judge.

Core Terms

brokers, motor vehicle, motor carrier, negligent hiring, state law, transportation, regulations, brokerage services, preemption, motor vehicle safety, hired, saved, preempted, driver, freight, district court, express preemption provision, direct link, Authorization, provisions, route, preemption provision, regulatory authority, significant economic, effects, highway, interpretations, intrastate, indirect, shipping

Case Summary

Overview

HOLDINGS: [1]-Where the plaintiff sought to recover against the defendant, a freight broker, for her husband’s  highway accident death, alleging that the defendant negligently hired the motor carrier that employed the driver of the truck that caused the accident, the express preemption provision in the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act, 49 U.S.C.S. § 14501(c)(1), barred the claim, and the § 14501(c)(2)(A) safety exception did not save the claim; [2]-The negligent hiring claim had a direct relationship to broker services under the Act and subjecting such decisions to a common-law negligence standard would have significant economic effects such that § 14501(c)(1) expressly preempted this claim; [3]-The Act’s § 14501(c)(2)(A) safety exception did not preclude preemption because Congress required motor carriers—not brokers—to bear responsibility for motor vehicle accidents.

Outcome

Decision affirmed.

LexisNexis® Headnotes

Civil Procedure > … > Federal & State Interrelationships > Federal Common Law > Preemption

Constitutional Law > Supremacy Clause > Federal Preemption

Constitutional Law > Supremacy Clause > Supreme Law of the Land

HN1  Federal Common Law, Preemption

Federal preemption doctrine owes its existence to U.S. Const. art. VI, which makes the Constitution, and federal law enacted pursuant to it, the supreme Law of the Land. U.S. Const. art. VI, cl. 2. In short, the Supremacy Clause precludes courts from giving effect to state laws that conflict with federal laws. Courts recognize three types of federal preemption: express preemption, field preemption, and conflict preemption.

Business & Corporate Compliance > … > Transportation Law > Air & Space Transportation > State & Local Regulation

Transportation Law > Air & Space Transportation > US Federal Aviation Administration > Authorities & Powers

Business & Corporate Compliance > … > Transportation Law > Interstate Commerce > State Powers

Transportation Law > Air & Space Transportation > Maintenance & Safety

Transportation Law > Interstate Commerce > Federal Preemption

HN2  Air & Space Transportation, State & Local Regulation

The safety exception to the express preemption provision in the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act, provides that the express preemption provision in 49 U.S.C.S. § 14501(c)(1) shall not restrict the safety regulatory authority of a State with respect to motor vehicles, the authority of a State to impose highway route controls or limitations based on the size or weight of the motor vehicle or the hazardous nature of the cargo, or the authority of a State to regulate motor carriers with regard to minimum amounts of financial responsibility relating to insurance requirements and self-insurance authorization. § 14501(c)(2)(A).

Business & Corporate Compliance > … > Transportation Law > Air & Space Transportation > State & Local Regulation

Transportation Law > Air & Space Transportation > US Federal Aviation Administration > Authorities & Powers

Business & Corporate Compliance > … > Transportation Law > Interstate Commerce > State Powers

Transportation Law > Interstate Commerce > Federal Preemption

Transportation Law > Air & Space Transportation > Maintenance & Safety

HN3  Air & Space Transportation, State & Local Regulation

In the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act, 49 U.S.C.S. § 14501(c)(1), Congress broadly disallowed state laws that impede its deregulatory goals, but it made a specific carveout for laws within a state’s safety regulatory authority with respect to motor vehicles, even though such laws may burden interstate commerce.

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HN4  Air & Space Transportation, State & Local Regulation

In the preemption context, the U.S. Supreme Court understands “related to” or “relating to” in the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act, 49 U.S.C.S. § 14501(c)(1), as having a “broad preemptive purpose.” To be “related to” broker services, the state law in question need only have a “connection with, or reference to” these services. A state law may be preempted even if the law’s effect on broker services “is only indirect.” But state laws with indirect effects still require a clear, articulable connection. The Act does not preempt state laws that impact broker services in only a “tenuous, remote, or peripheral” manner.

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HN5  Air & Space Transportation, State & Local Regulation

The party seeking to establish preemption under the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act, 49 U.S.C.S. § 14501(c)(1), must show both that a state enacted or attempted to enforce a law and that the state law relates to broker rates, routes, or services either by expressly referring to them, or by having a significant economic effect on them.

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HN6  Air & Space Transportation, State & Local Regulation

Common law tort claims fall comfortably within the language of the preemption provision of the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act, 49 U.S.C.S. § 14501(c)(1), that, by its terms, applies to state laws, regulations, or other provisions having the force and effect of law.

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HN7  Air & Space Transportation, State & Local Regulation

A common law negligence claim enforced against a broker is not a law that is with respect to motor vehicles under the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act, 49 U.S.C.S. § 14501(c)(1).

Governments > Legislation > Interpretation

HN8  Legislation, Interpretation

It is a fundamental principle of statutory interpretation that absent provisions cannot be supplied by the courts.

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HN9  Air & Space Transportation, State & Local Regulation

The Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act, 49 U.S.C.S. § 14501, text makes clear that Congress views motor vehicle safety regulations separately and apart from those provisions imposing obligations on brokers.

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HN10  Air & Space Transportation, State & Local Regulation

The Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act, 49 U.S.C.S. § 14501(c)(2)(A), requires state laws to have a direct link to motor vehicles to be saved from the preemption provision in § 14501(c)(1).

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HN11  Air & Space Transportation, State & Local Regulation

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit joins the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit in holding that the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act, 49 U.S.C.S. §§ 14501(c)(2)(A), requires a direct link between state laws and motor vehicle safety and that negligent hiring claims against brokers fall short of having that direct link.

Counsel: For YING YE, as Representative of the Estate of SHAWN LIN, deceased, Plaintiff – Appellant: Michael Cowen, Attorney, COWEN, RODRIGUEZ, PEACOCK, P.C., San Antonio, TX; Kenneth H. Levinson, Attorney, LEVINSON & STEFANI, Chicago, IL; Adina Hyman Rosenbaum, Attorney, PUBLIC CITIZEN LITIGATION GROUP, Washington, DC.

For GLOBALTRANZ ENTERPRISES, INC., Defendant – Appellee: William P. Ryan, Attorney, Matthew Koch, Attorney, MARWEDEL, MINICHELLO & REEB P.C., Chicago, IL.

For COYOTE LOGISTICS, LLC, ECHO GLOBAL LOGISTICS, INC, UBER FREIGHT LLC, UBER FREIGHT US LLC, C.H. ROBINSON WORLDWIDE, INCORPORATED, Amicus Curiaes: Jason Orleans, Attorney, ORLEANS CANTY NOVY, LLC, Chicago, IL.

Judges: Before BRENNAN, SCUDDER, and ST. EVE, Circuit Judges.

Opinion by: SCUDDER

Opinion

Scudder, Circuit Judge. This appeal presents a question of preemption under the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act. Ying Ye seeks to recover against GlobalTranz Enterprises, a freight broker, following the death of her husband in a highway accident. Ye claims GlobalTranz negligently hired the motor carrier [*2]  that employed the driver of the truck that caused the accident. The district court concluded both that the Act’s express preemption provision in 49 U.S.C. § 14501(c)(1) bars Ye’s claim and that the Act’s safety exception in § 14501(c)(2)(A) does not save the claim. We agree and affirm.


I

GlobalTranz is a freight broker that provides transportation logistics services to parties seeking to ship goods. In 2017 a company contacted GlobalTranz to provide such services for goods to be transported from Illinois to Texas. Global-Tranz hired the motor carrier Global Sunrise, Inc. to provide that shipping service. This arrangement meant that Global Sunrise provided the driver and vehicle to complete the shipping.

On November 7, 2017, the truck completing that shipping route, driven by a Global Sunrise employee, collided with a motorcycle driven by Ying Ye’s husband, Shawn Lin, on an interstate highway near Conroe, Texas. Lin sustained serious injuries and died two weeks later.

As Lin’s surviving spouse, Ye brought a diversity suit against Global Sunrise in its capacity as the motor carrier that employed the truck driver involved in the crash. Ye brought two Illinois tort claims—one for negligent hiring and another for vicarious liability—against [*3]  the motor carrier.

Ye later amended her complaint to add two Illinois tort claims against GlobalTranz for its role as the broker that hired Global Sunrise. Ye’s first claim—negligent hiring—alleged that GlobalTranz “was negligent in selecting Global Sunrise Inc. to transport freight on its behalf as they knew, or should have known, that Global Sunrise Inc. was an unsafe company with a history of hours of service and unsafe driving violations that would’ve alerted a reasonably prudent person to the same” and that this negligence proximately caused Lin’s death. Ye’s second claim—vicarious liability—alleged that GlobalTranz “exercised sufficient control over Global Sunrise” such that GlobalTranz “is vicariously liable for the negligence of Global Sunrise” and its driver.

Counsel for Global Sunrise withdrew from the litigation in May 2019. After more than two years passed without entry of new counsel, Ye moved for default judgment. The district court granted Ye’s motion and entered default judgment against Global Sunrise on both of Ye’s claims against the motor carrier. Following a hearing in April 2022, the court awarded Ye $10 million in survival damages and wrongful death damages against [*4]  Global Sunrise. No aspect of this appeal relates to Ye’s claims against Global Sunrise.

Meanwhile, Ye continued to litigate her separate claims against GlobalTranz. In November 2019 GlobalTranz moved to dismiss the claims, which the district court construed as a motion for judgment on the pleadings. The district court granted the motion as to Ye’s negligent hiring claim, finding the claim to be barred by the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act. The court determined Ye’s negligent hiring claim was prohibited under the Act’s express preemption provision in 49 U.S.C. § 14501(c)(1) and not saved by any of the Act’s exceptions, including the safety exception in § 14501(c)(2)(A). The court did not dismiss the vicarious liability claim on the pleadings, but after one year of discovery entered summary judgment for GlobalTranz on the merits of that claim.

Ye now appeals the district court’s dismissal of her negligent hiring claim against GlobalTranz.


II

HN1 Federal preemption doctrine owes its existence to Article VI of the U.S. Constitution, which makes the Constitution, and federal law enacted pursuant to it, the “supreme Law of the Land.” U.S. Const. art. VI, cl. 2. In short, the Supremacy Clause precludes courts from “giv[ing] effect to state laws that conflict with federal laws.” Nationwide Freight Sys., Inc. v. Illinois Com. Comm’n, 784 F.3d 367, 372 (7th Cir. 2015) (alteration [*5]  in original) (quoting Armstrong v. Exceptional Child Ctr., Inc., 575 U.S. 320, 324, 135 S. Ct. 1378, 191 L. Ed. 2d 471 (2015)).

Today’s law recognizes three types of federal preemption: express preemption, field preemption, and conflict preemption. See, e.g., Wigod v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., 673 F.3d 547, 576 (7th Cir. 2012). Given that the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act “states explicitly what states may and may not do with respect to” motor carriers and brokers, this case concerns express preemption. Nationwide Freight, 784 F.3d at 373. Our task is one of statutory construction—to determine whether Ye’s state law claim falls within the Act’s express prohibition in § 14501(c)(1) and, if so, whether any of the Act’s exceptions save her claim from preemption.

We take a fresh look at Ye’s complaint to determine whether the district court correctly dismissed her negligent hiring claim against GlobalTranz. See Costello v. BeavEx, Inc., 810 F.3d 1045, 1050 (7th Cir. 2016). In doing so, we owe no deference to the district court’s legal determination that the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act preempts her claim.

A

In 1994 Congress enacted the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act (which the parties call “F Quad A,” but which we refer to as the Act) as part of a greater push to deregulate interstate transportation industries. The initial effort began in 1978 with a focus on deregulating domestic air travel. See Dan’s City Used Cars, Inc. v. Pelkey, 569 U.S. 251, 255-56, 133 S. Ct. 1769, 185 L. Ed. 2d 909 (2013). With the [*6]  passage of the Act in 1994, Congress turned its attention to the trucking industry “upon finding that state governance of intrastate transportation of property had become ‘unreasonably burden[some]’ to ‘free trade, interstate commerce, and American consumers.'” Id. at 256 (alteration in original) (quoting City of Columbus v. Ours Garage & Wrecker Service, Inc., 536 U.S. 424, 440, 122 S. Ct. 2226, 153 L. Ed. 2d 430 (2002)). The Act includes several provisions barring such burdensome state regulations. See, e.g., 49 U.S.C. § 14501(a)(1), (b)(1), (c)(1).

Ye’s appeal requires a close look at the Act’s express preemption provision and exceptions in 49 U.S.C. § 14501(c), which governs “Motor Carriers of Property.” By its terms, § 14501(c) provides that a state

may not enact or enforce a law, regulation, or other provision having the force and effect of law related to a price, route, or service of any motor carrier … or any motor private carrier, broker, or freight forwarder with respect to the transportation of property.

49 U.S.C. § 14501(c)(1). Several exceptions then follow. See id. § 14501(c)(2), (3), (5).

We will come to focus on the so-called safety exception in § 14501(c)(2)(A). HN2[] Under this exception, the express preemption provision in § 14501(c)(1)

shall not restrict the safety regulatory authority of a State with respect to motor vehicles, the authority of a State to impose highway route controls or limitations based on the size or weight of [*7]  the motor vehicle or the hazardous nature of the cargo, or the authority of a State to regulate motor carriers with regard to minimum amounts of financial responsibility relating to insurance requirements and self-insurance authorization.

Id. § 14501(c)(2)(A).

Notice, then, the overarching statutory structure: HN3[] Congress broadly disallowed state laws that impede its deregulatory goals, but it made a specific carve-out for laws within a state’s “safety regulatory authority … with respect to motor vehicles,” even though such laws may burden interstate commerce. See Ours Garage, 536 U.S. at 441 (observing that “a State could, without affront to the statute, pass discrete, nonuniform safety regulations” because the Act’s preemption provision in § 14501(c)(1) and its safety exception in § 14501(c)(2)(A) achieve different goals).

B

Interpreting these statutory provisions, the district court first concluded that Ye’s negligent hiring claim against GlobalTranz falls within § 14501(c)(1)‘s express prohibition on the enforcement of state laws “related to a … service of any … broker … with respect to the transportation of property.” 49 U.S.C. § 14501(c)(1). We agree.

As always, we begin with the Act’s text, “which necessarily contains the best evidence of Congress’ pre-emptive intent.” Dan’s City Used Cars, 569 U.S. at 260 (quoting CSX Transp., Inc. v. Easterwood, 507 U.S. 658, 664, 113 S. Ct. 1732, 123 L. Ed. 2d 387 (1993)). [*8]  HN4[] In the preemption context, the Supreme Court understands “related to” or “relating to” as having a “broad preemptive purpose.” See Morales v. Trans World Airlines, Inc., 504 U.S. 374, 383, 112 S. Ct. 2031, 119 L. Ed. 2d 157 (1992) (interpreting an identical provision of the Airline Deregulation Act); see also Rowe v. New Hampshire Motor Transp. Ass’n, 552 U.S. 364, 370-71, 128 S. Ct. 989, 169 L. Ed. 2d 933 (2008) (explaining that interpretations of the Airline Deregulation Act directly apply to the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act). To be “related to” broker services, the state law in question need only have a “connection with, or reference to” these services. Rowe, 552 U.S. at 370 (emphasis removed) (quoting Morales, 504 U.S. at 384). A state law may be preempted even if the law’s effect on broker services “is only indirect.” Id. (quoting Morales, 504 U.S. at 386). But state laws with indirect effects still require a clear, articulable connection. The Act does not preempt state laws that impact broker services in only a “tenuous, remote, or peripheral” manner. Id. at 371 (quoting Morales, 504 U.S. at 390).

Our court has implemented the Supreme Court’s instructions in Morales and Rowe with a two-part test. As HN5[] the party seeking to establish preemption, GlobalTranz must show both that a state “enacted or attempted to enforce a law” and that the state law relates to broker “rates, routes, or services ‘either by expressly referring to them, or by having a significant economic effect [*9]  on them.'” Nationwide Freight, 784 F.3d at 373-74 (quoting Travel All Over the World, Inc. v. Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, 73 F.3d 1423, 1432 (7th Cir. 1996)).

Ye brought her negligent hiring claim against GlobalTranz under Illinois’s common law of negligence. HN6[] Common law tort claims “fall comfortably within the language of the [ ] preemption provision” that, by its terms, “applies to state ‘law[s], regulation[s], or other provision[s] having the force and effect of law.'” Northwest, Inc. v. Ginsberg, 572 U.S. 273, 281-82, 134 S. Ct. 1422, 188 L. Ed. 2d 538 (2014) (alterations in original) (citation omitted). So the first preemption requirement is easily met.

The question then becomes whether the Illinois law underlying Ye’s claim expressly refers to or has a significant economic effect on broker services. See Nationwide Freight, 784 F.3d at 373-74. Nothing in Illinois tort law expressly refers to broker services. Rather, Ye roots her claim in a theory of negligent hiring more generally. Our focus must therefore be on whether Ye’s proposed enforcement of Illinois’s common law of negligence would have a significant economic effect on broker services.

Like the district court, we conclude the answer is yes. Ye alleges GlobalTranz “was negligent in selecting Global Sunrise Inc. to transport freight on its behalf.” As a broker, GlobalTranz offers services in the form of “selling, providing, or arranging for, transportation by motor carrier for compensation.” [*10]  49 U.S.C. § 13102(2) (defining “broker”). By its terms, Ye’s claim strikes at the core of GlobalTranz‘s broker services by challenging the adequacy of care the company took—or failed to take—in hiring Global Sunrise to provide shipping services.

In our view, enforcement of such a claim—and the accompanying imposition of liability—would have a significant economic effect on broker services. By recognizing common-law negligence claims, courts would impose in the name of state law a new and clear duty of care on brokers, the breach of which would result in a monetary judgment. This is exactly what Ye seeks here against GlobalTranz. To avoid these costly damages payouts, GlobalTranz and other brokers would change how they conduct their services—for instance, by incurring new costs to evaluate motor carriers. Then, by changing their hiring processes, brokers would likely hire different motor carriers than they would have otherwise hired without the state negligence standards. Indeed, that is the centerpiece of Ye’s claim: that GlobalTranz should not have hired Global Sunrise.

In our view, then, Ye’s negligent hiring claim has much more than a tenuous, remote, or peripheral relationship to broker services. The [*11]  relationship is direct, and subjecting a broker’s hiring decisions to a common-law negligence standard would have significant economic effects. So Ye’s claim is expressly preempted by § 14501(c)(1).

Our conclusion is consistent with the two other circuit courts that have considered this issue. See Miller v. C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc., 976 F.3d 1016, 1024 (9th Cir. 2020) (“[A] claim that imposes an obligation on brokers at the point at which they arrange for transportation by motor carrier has a ‘connection with’ broker services.”); Aspen Am. Ins. Co. v. Landstar Ranger, Inc., 65 F.4th 1261, 1267 (11th Cir. 2023) (“[T]he [Act] makes plain that [the plaintiff’s] negligence claims relate to a broker’s services.”).

Ye’s arguments to the contrary are unpersuasive. She contends that the effects of enforcing negligent hiring claims against brokers are too tenuous to be “related to” broker services because negligent hiring laws regulate a broker’s broader duty to the public, not its narrower relationships with its customers. Ye insists this public—private distinction is important because she believes that Congress intended to preempt state laws regulating only a broker’s market relationships, not a broker’s relationship with the public. And she sees GlobalTranz as having breached a duty of care owed to a member of the public—her husband who was killed by [*12]  a Global Sunrise employee—and not a duty owed to its freight customer.

We find no support in § 14501(c)(1)‘s express preemption provision for Ye’s position. The purpose of Illinois tort law—whether aimed at a broker’s duty to the public or to private actors—has no bearing on the significant economic effects that will result by imposing state negligence standards on brokers. And these significant effects are what matter in determining that § 14501(c)(1) expressly preempts Ye’s Illinois tort claim rooted in a theory of negligent hiring. See Nationwide Freight, 784 F.3d at 373-76.

C

That brings us to the Act’s safety exception. Even if Ye’s claim is expressly preempted, it may be saved by one of several provisions excluding claims from § 14501(c)(1)‘s broad reach. Ye points us to the safety exception in § 14501(c)(2)(A), which provides that laws within a state’s “safety regulatory authority … with respect to motor vehicles” are not preempted. Here, too, we agree with the district court that the Act’s safety exception does not save Ye’s claim from preemption.

To start, Ye asks us to examine the first half of the safety exception’s text and conclude that a state’s tort law is part of its “safety regulatory authority.” There is much to say in support of this argument, and many courts [*13]  agree with Ye’s line of reasoning. See, e.g., Miller, 976 F.3d at 1026-29; Aspen, 65 F.4th at 1268-70. But we do not need to reach this issue because we conclude that Ye’s claim fails to satisfy the second half of the safety exception’s text. HN7[] In short, a common law negligence claim enforced against a broker is not a law that is “with respect to motor vehicles.”

1

The Supreme Court has broadly interpreted “with respect to” to mean “concern[s].” See Dan’s City Used Cars, 569 U.S. at 261. But more crucial to our analysis is Congress’s specification limiting the excepted laws to those that concern “motor vehicles.” Our focus, then, is on the entire phrase “with respect to motor vehicles”—language the Supreme Court has determined “massively limits the scope” of the safety exception. Id. (quoting Ours Garage, 536 U.S. at 449 (Scalia, J., dissenting)). We must decide whether Ye’s negligent hiring claim is one “with respect to motor vehicles.” We conclude it is not because, in our view, the exception requires a direct link between a state’s law and motor vehicle safety. And we see no such direct link between negligent hiring claims against brokers and motor vehicle safety.

Once again we start with the statutory text. We first recognize Congress’s express use in § 14501(c)(2)(A) of a statutorily defined term—”motor vehicles.” [*14]  By limiting the safety exception to apply to state laws “with respect to motor vehicles,” Congress narrowed the scope of the exception to those laws concerning a “vehicle, machine, tractor, trailer, or semitrailer … used on a highway in transportation.” 49 U.S.C. § 13102(16) (defining “motor vehicle”). We see no mention of brokers in the safety exception itself or in Congress’s definition of motor vehicles, which suggests that such claims may be outside the scope of the exception’s plain text. See Dan’s City Used Cars, 569 U.S. at 261-62 (concluding that a state’s law was not “with respect to transportation of property” under § 14501(c)(1) where it concerned post-towing storage, which does not constitute “transportation” as defined in § 13102(23)(B)).

Looking beyond the clause containing the safety exception, § 14501(c)(2)(A) goes on to preserve a state’s authority “to impose highway route controls or limitations based on the size or weight of a motor vehicle or the hazardous nature of the cargo” and to regulate motor carriers’ “insurance requirements.” Notice the specificity throughout § 14501(c)(2)(A): after broadly preempting state laws related to the prices, routes, and services of brokers and motor carriers in § 14501(c)(1), Congress carefully excepted state laws for motor vehicle safety, cargo loads, and [*15]  motor carrier insurance.

Now notice what is missing from § 14501(c)(2)(A)—any reference to brokers or broker services. While it listed broker services in § 14501(c)(1)‘s express preemption provision, Congress declined to expressly mention brokers again in reference to states’ safety authority. Reading further, we see the same omission of brokers from § 14501(c)(2)‘s other savings provisions for “intrastate transportation of household goods” and “tow truck operations.” Id. § 14501(c)(2)(B), (C).

Remember, too, that § 14501(c) sets forth federal authority over “Motor Carriers of Property”—not brokers—so Congress’s inclusion of brokers in one subsection and exclusion in another suggests that the omission was intentional. See Rotkiske v. Klemm, 140 S. Ct. 355, 361, 205 L. Ed. 2d 291 (2019) (“Atextual judicial supplementation is particularly inappropriate when, as here, Congress has shown that it knows how to adopt the omitted language or provision.”). Congress could have chosen to save state safety laws enforced “with respect to motor carriers and brokers,” but it did not. We hesitate to read broker services into parts of the statute where Congress declined to expressly name them, especially when it contemplated them elsewhere within the same statutory scheme. See id. at 360-61 (HN8[] “It is a fundamental principle of statutory interpretation [*16]  that ‘absent provision[s] cannot be supplied by the courts.'” (alteration in original) (quoting Antonin Scalia & Bryan Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 94 (2012))).

Congress’s omission of brokers from the exceptions to § 14501(c)(1)‘s preemptive sweep is even more pronounced when we take a step back and examine other provisions within § 14501. What most stands out is § 14501(b), titled “Freight Forwarders and Brokers.” In § 14501(b)(1) Congress directly addressed state regulation of brokers by prohibiting states from enacting or enforcing laws “relating to intrastate rates, intrastate routes, or intrastate services of any freight forwarder or broker.” Following this broad preemption provision, however, Congress did not include a safety exception—another telling omission given that Congress included safety exceptions to the parallel preemption provisions for motor carriers of property (at issue here) and motor carriers of passengers. See id. § 14501(a)(2), (c)(2)(A). Here, too, Congress’s decision not to write a safety exception for the broker-specific preemption provision indicates a purposeful separation between brokers and motor vehicle safety.

That brings us back to Ye’s claim. Absent unusual circumstances, the relationship [*17]  between brokers and motor vehicle safety will be indirect, at most. No better example than Ye’s complaint. She alleged that GlobalTranz was “negligent in selecting Global Sunrise” as the motor carrier and that Global Sunrise was the one “negligent in its entrustment of a tractor-trailer” to an unsafe driver. Ye’s allegations mirror practical realities: GlobalTranz does not own or operate motor vehicles like Global Sunrise does. Seeing the connection between GlobalTranz as a broker and motor vehicle safety requires an extra link to connect the alleged chain of events: GlobalTranz‘s negligent hiring of Global Sunrise resulted in Global Sunrise’s negligent entrustment of a motor vehicle to a negligent driver who, in turn, caused a collision that resulted in Shawn Lin’s death.

In our view, this additional link goes a bridge too far to bring Ye’s negligent hiring claim against GlobalTranz within the Act’s safety exception in § 14501(c)(2)(A). HN9[] The Act’s text makes clear that Congress views motor vehicle safety regulations separately and apart from those provisions imposing obligations on brokers. And this separateness counsels a reading of “with respect to motor vehicles” that requires a direct connection [*18]  between the potentially exempted state law and motor vehicles. Any other construction would expand the safety exception’s scope without a clear, text-based limit. So we agree with the district court that the connection here—between a broker hiring standard and motor vehicles—is too attenuated to be saved under § 14501(c)(2)(A).

To be sure, Ye is right to observe that, at a higher level of generality, motor vehicles have some relationship to brokers and, in turn, to considerations of motor vehicle safety. But we do not see how Congress authorized such a broad reading of the safety exception, and Ye offers no limiting principle of her own. It is difficult to conclude that the same Congress that prescribed specific—often itemized—regulations for motor vehicle safety intended something broader than “motor vehicle” in a safety exception that immediately follows an express preemption provision regulating “motor carriers.” So we draw the line where Congress did—at state safety regulations directly related to “motor vehicles.”

2

Looking beyond § 14501 to the other provisions of Title 49 further reinforces our narrow reading of the phrase “with respect to motor vehicles” in § 14501(c)(2)(A)‘s safety exception. See FDA v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., 529 U.S. 120, 132, 120 S. Ct. 1291, 146 L. Ed. 2d 121 (2000) (“[A] reviewing [*19]  court should not confine itself to examining a particular statutory provision in isolation [because] [t]he meaning … of certain words or phrases may only become evident when placed in context.”); see also Sackett v. EPA, 143 S. Ct. 1322, 1338, 215 L. Ed. 2d 579 (2023) (considering the broader context of the Clean Water Act to derive the meaning of “wetlands” in one provision of the Act (citing Brown & Williamson Tobacco, 529 U.S. at 132)). We look to Title 49 for the limited purpose of informing our understanding of “motor vehicles” as Congress used the phrase in the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act and find that the broader statutory context underscores our conclusion that only state laws with a direct connection to motor vehicles are saved from the Act’s express preemption provision.

Where Congress regulates motor vehicle safety in Title 49, it addresses motor vehicle ownership, operation, and maintenance—but not broker services. Take, for instance, Subtitle VI, which covers “Motor Vehicle and Driver Programs.” Here Congress defined “motor vehicle safety” to mean “the performance of a motor vehicle or motor vehicle equipment in a way that protects the public against unreasonable risk of accidents occurring because of the design, construction, or performance of a motor vehicle.” 49 U.S.C. § 30102(a)(9). [*20]  Congress went on to give the Secretary of Transportation authority to, among other things, set “standards for inspection of commercial motor vehicles,” id. § 31142(b); “ensure that commercial motor vehicles are maintained, equipped, loaded, and operated safely,” id. § 31136(a)(1); and “issue and require the display of an identification plate on a motor vehicle used in transportation,” id. § 31504(a)(1). These regulations, and many others, concern the ownership and operation of the vehicles themselves—without reference to broker services.

The regulation of motor carriers throughout Title 49 further illustrates the lack of evidence that Congress sees a direct link between brokers and motor vehicles. For example, § 113 created the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration and empowered its Administrator to “carry out duties and powers related to motor carriers or motor carrier safety.” Id. § 113(f)(1). The Administration has imposed standards for commercial motor vehicle drivers’ licenses, see 49 C.F.R. § 383.1; operation of motor vehicles, see id. §§ 392.3-392.5; and inspection of motor vehicle equipment, see id. § 392.7. The regulations apply to motor carriers and their drivers, without mention of brokers or other entities. See, e.g., id. § 392.4(b) (“No motor carrier shall require [*21]  or permit a driver to [drive under the influence of drugs].”). Congress also created a Motor Carrier Safety Assistance Program to fund state efforts to promote and enforce “effective motor carrier, commercial motor vehicle, and driver safety regulations and practices consistent with Federal requirements.” 49 U.S.C. § 31102(b)(3); see also id. § 31104. The Program, too, makes specific mention of motor carriers with respect to motor vehicle safety regulation, but not brokers. See 49 C.F.R. §§ 350.101-350.417.

Indeed, we find no evidence in Title 49 that Congress sees a direct relationship between broker services and motor vehicles. Its regulation of brokers instead seems to address the financial aspects of broker services, not safety. For instance, brokers must file a “surety bond, proof of trust fund, or other financial security” with the Secretary of Transportation to secure against any “claim against a broker arising from its failure to pay freight charges under its contracts, agreements, or arrangements for transportation.” 49 U.S.C. § 13906(b)(1)(A), (2)(A). Compare that approach with Congress’s regulation of the financial security of motor carriers in that same section. Where brokers need only secure against a failure to perform logistics services, motor carriers must [*22]  obtain liability insurance that covers “final judgment against the [motor carrier] for bodily injury to, or death of, an individual resulting from the negligent operation, maintenance, or use of motor vehicles.” Id. § 13906(a)(1). Put differently, Congress required motor carriers—not brokers—to bear responsibility for motor vehicle accidents.

We see, too, that the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration—which is tasked with motor vehicle safety as its top priority—requires brokers to maintain records of their transactions, abide by certain advertising standards, and avoid conflicts of interest with shippers. See 49 C.F.R. §§ 371.3, 371.7, 371.9. But nowhere do we see any indication that the Administration imposes safety standards on broker hiring or otherwise recognizes a relationship between brokers and motor vehicles.

A clear conclusion emerges from this broader review of Title 49 and the regulatory landscape: Congress’s references to motor vehicle safety do not impose obligations on brokers. Accordingly, when it comes to interpreting the Act’s safety exception, only those laws with a direct link to motor vehicles fall within a state’s “safety regulatory authority … with respect to motor vehicles.” Brokers are noticeably [*23]  absent from motor vehicle safety regulations throughout the statutory scheme, just as they are absent from the ambit of the safety exception in § 14501(c)(2)(A). Our initial text-based determination therefore remains the same: HN10[] § 14501(c)(2)(A) requires state laws to have a direct link to motor vehicles to be saved from the preemption provision in § 14501(c)(1).

We thus conclude that Ye’s negligent hiring claim against GlobalTranz does not fall within the scope of § 14501(c)(2)‘s safety exception. The claim is preempted and therefore properly dismissed by the district court.


III

Our conclusion aligns squarely with the Eleventh Circuit’s recent decision in Aspen American Insurance Co. v. Landstar Ranger, Inc., 65 F.4th 1261 (11th Cir. 2023).

In Aspen, the Eleventh Circuit also considered a negligent hiring claim against a freight broker. Tessco Technologies hired the broker Landstar Ranger to transport cargo. While rendering its services, Landstar mistakenly gave Tessco’s cargo to an entity pretending to be a motor carrier, and the fraudulent entity ran off with Tessco’s goods. Tessco was reimbursed by its insurance company, Aspen American Insurance, who in turn brought a state tort claim against Landstar for its negligent selection of the thieving motor carrier. Landstar argued that the Act preempted Aspen’s negligent hiring claim. [*24]  See 65 F.4th at 1264-65.

The Eleventh Circuit first held, as we do here, that negligent hiring claims against brokers are expressly preempted by § 14501(c)(1) under the Supreme Court’s broad reading of “related to.” See id. at 1268 (citing Morales, 504 U.S. at 386). The Aspen court then went on to analyze the safety exception in § 14501(c)(2)(A). The panel divided over whether to reach the question of whether a state’s “safety regulatory authority” includes state tort law, see id. at 1273 (Jordan, J., concurring) (declining to reach this issue), but the full panel concluded that negligent hiring claims against brokers are not “with respect to motor vehicles” and therefore not saved by the Act’s safety exception. See id. at 1270-72.

The court’s approach grounded itself in the language of § 14501(c). Using canons of construction to avoid redundancy and surplusage, the court concluded that the “phrase ‘with respect to motor vehicles’ limits the safety exception’s application to state laws that have a direct relationship to motor vehicles.” Id. at 1271 (emphasis in original). In cases of negligent hiring claims against brokers—regardless of whether the injury is lost property (as in Aspen) or bodily injury (as here)—the court held that “a mere indirect connection between state regulations and motor vehicles will not [*25]  invoke the [Act]’s safety exception.” Id. at 1272.

Our reasoning similarly roots itself in the language Congress employed in § 14501(c)(1) and § 14501(c)(2)(A), and we go one step further by taking a broader look at the surrounding regulatory scheme in the Act and within Title 49 more generally. HN11[] In the end, then, we join the Eleventh Circuit in holding that § 14501(c)(2)(A) requires a direct link between state laws and motor vehicle safety and that negligent hiring claims against brokers fall short of having that direct link.

The only other circuit court to have considered the issue presented is the Ninth Circuit. The dispute in Miller v. C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc., 976 F.3d 1016 (9th Cir. 2020), arose from near-identical facts to those here: Allen Miller sought to recover damages from a freight broker that he alleged was negligent in hiring an unsafe motor carrier whose driver caused a highway accident leaving Miller a quadriplegic. See id. at 1020. Consistent with our analysis, the court first held that negligent hiring claims against brokers are expressly preempted by § 14501(c)(1) under its view that “related to” requires a broad construction. See id. at 1021-25.

From there, however, the court found Miller’s claim against the broker to be saved by the Act’s safety exception in § 14501(c)(2)(A). The Ninth Circuit interpreted “with respect to motor vehicles” [*26]  broadly to support exemption of state laws with an indirect link to motor vehicles, including negligent hiring claims against brokers. See id. at 1030-31. We see three major analytical differences that account for our opposing interpretations of § 14501(c)(2)(A).

First, in our view, the Ninth Circuit unduly emphasized Congress’s stated deregulatory purpose in passing the Act at the expense of the insights that come from an analysis of the broader statutory scheme. Consideration of congressional purpose is wholly appropriate. But given the plain meaning and import of the text, both in § 14501(c) itself and throughout the rest of Title 49, we do not see how Congress’s deregulatory goals can overcome the clear statutory mandate that the exception in § 14501(c)(2)(A) saves only those safety regulations directly concerning motor vehicles. See id. at 1031 (Fernandez, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (“[A broker] and the services it provides have no direct connection to motor vehicles or their drivers. … That attenuated connection is simply too remote for the safety exception to encompass [the] negligence claim.”).

A second difference is the Ninth Circuit’s reliance on a presumption against preemption to resolve any ambiguity in the breadth [*27]  of the safety exception’s scope. See id. at 1021. In a later Ninth Circuit case, however, the court acknowledged that its reliance on the presumption against preemption—in Miller v. C.H. Robinson specifically—stood in direct conflict with the Supreme Court’s instruction to “focus on the plain wording of the clause” instead of “invok[ing] any presumption against pre-emption.” R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. v. County of Los Angeles, 29 F.4th 542, 553 n.6 (9th Cir. 2022) (quoting Puerto Rico v. Franklin California Tax-Free Tr., 579 U.S. 115, 125, 136 S. Ct. 1938, 195 L. Ed. 2d 298 (2016)). Consistent with Franklin, we focus on the text of § 14501(c)(2)(A), which is “the best evidence of Congress’ preemptive intent,” 579 U.S. at 125 (quoting Chamber of Com. v. Whiting, 563 U.S. 582, 594, 131 S. Ct. 1968, 179 L. Ed. 2d 1031 (2011)), and come to a different outcome than the Ninth Circuit. We cannot be sure how the Ninth Circuit would interpret § 14501(c)(2)(A) absent such a presumption against preemption.

Finally, we disagree with the Ninth Circuit’s conclusion that the phrase “with respect to” in § 14501(c)(2)(A) is “synonymous” with “relating to.” Miller, 976 F.3d at 1030 (citing Cal. Tow Truck Ass’n v. City & Cnty. of San Francisco, 807 F.3d 1008, 1021 (9th Cir. 2015)). We read the Supreme Court’s decision in Dan’s City Used Cars to say that “with respect to” more narrowly means “concerns.” See 569 U.S. at 261. Given Congress’s choice in § 14501(c)(1) to use “relating to,” its use of “with respect to” in § 14501(c)(2)(A) implies a different scope. No doubt “with respect to” is broad, but we decline to equate it to “relating to.” Our different view of this phrase offers another reason why our construction of the safety exception [*28]  is narrower than the Ninth Circuit’s.

* * *

In the end, the plain text and statutory scheme indicate that 49 U.S.C. § 14501(c)(1) bars Ye’s negligent hiring claim against GlobalTranz and that the Act’s safety exception in § 14501(c)(2)(A) does not save it from preemption.

For these reasons, we AFFIRM.


End of Document

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