            IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS
                    WESTERN DISTRICT
 COLLIN KNIGHT, a Minor, By    )
 and Through His Next Friend,  )
 PAUL KNIGHT,                  )
                    Respondent,)
                               )
 v.                            )               WD82860
                               )
 NELSON KNIGHT and VIOLET      )               FILED: July 14, 2020
 KNIGHT,                       )
                 Respondents, )
 STATE FARM FIRE and           )
 CASUALTY COMPANY,             )
                    Appellant. )
                Appeal from the Circuit Court of Boone County
                   The Honorable J. Brouck Jacobs, Judge
            Before Division Three: Lisa White Hardwick, P.J., and
                  Alok Ahuja and Thomas N. Chapman, JJ.
      State Farm Fire and Casualty Company insured husband and wife Nelson

and Violet Knight under a personal liability umbrella policy. The Knights were

sued by their grandson, Collin Knight, for injuries which Collin suffered in a

watercraft accident while under the Knights’ supervision.1 State Farm refused to

defend the Knights, and disclaimed coverage for the accident, in reliance on a policy

exclusion. The Knights then entered into a settlement agreement with Collin under




       1       Because the underlying plaintiff and defendants share the same last name,
for sake of clarity we use Collin Knight’s first name to identify him. No familiarity or
disrespect is intended.
§ 537.065.2 In the agreement, Collin agreed to seek recovery solely from the

Knights’ insurance. The agreement also specified that, at Collin’s option, his claims

against the Knights would be resolved by binding arbitration.

       An arbitration was conducted at which (as required by the § 537.065

agreement) the Knights did not object to any of Collin’s evidence, cross-examine his

witnesses, or present evidence of their own. The arbitrator awarded Collin $6

million in damages against Nelson Knight; the arbitrator also found that Collin had

failed to prove his negligence claims against Violet Knight. After the arbitration

proceedings had concluded, the Knights notified State Farm of the § 537.065

agreement, and State Farm was granted leave to intervene in Collin’s lawsuit. The

circuit court later confirmed the arbitration award against Nelson Knight, over

State Farm’s objection.

       State Farm appeals. It argues that, under the current version of § 537.065, it

was entitled to a jury trial at which it could dispute Nelson Knight’s liability for

Collin’s injuries, and the extent of Collin’s damages. State Farm contends that, by

confirming the arbitration award, the circuit court denied State Farm its

constitutional rights to due process, to a jury trial, and to access the courts. State

Farm also argues that the arbitration award should not have been confirmed
because it was procured through “undue means” within the meaning of

§ 435.405.1(1), and because there was no existing controversy between the Knights

and Collin at the time of the arbitration.

       We affirm.

                                 Factual Background
       Collin was injured on August 1, 2015 in an accident on Thomas Hill Lake in

Randolph County, while he was operating a Jet Ski personal watercraft. Collin was

      2      Unless otherwise indicated, statutory citations refer to the 2016 edition of the
Revised Statutes of Missouri, updated through the 2019 Cumulative Supplement.


                                             2
a minor at the time. The Knights had taken Collin to the lake to spend time with

them and with other relatives. While out on the lake, the Knights gave Collin

permission to operate one of two Jet Skis to which the group had access. Before

Collin entered the water to ride the Jet Ski, another member of the group, who was

visibly intoxicated, was operating the other Jet Ski recklessly and erratically in the

same area. While Collin was operating his own Jet Ski, his intoxicated relative

struck Collin’s Jet Ski from the rear. Collin was seriously injured in the accident.

      Acting through his conservator, Collin filed suit against the Knights and

others for his injuries in the Circuit Court of Boone County. His initial and first

amended petitions asserted claims against the Knights and five other named

defendants. Collin later dismissed his claims against the other five defendants.

Collin’s second amended petition, filed on August 7, 2018, asserted claims only

against the Knights. The petition alleged that the Knights were negligent in

supervising Collin, when they gave him permission to operate a Jet Ski after

observing another person’s reckless and erratic operation of another Jet Ski in the

same area.

      On August 28, 2018, the Knights submitted the Second Amended Petition to

State Farm, who insured the Knights at the relevant time under a personal liability
umbrella policy. On September 19, 2018, State Farm sent the Knights a letter in

which it declined to defend or indemnify them under the policy. (State Farm had

previously refused to provide a defense or indemnity to the Knights in connection

with Collin’s original and first amended petitions.) In its letter, State Farm quoted

Exclusion 8 of the Knight’s policy, which provided in relevant part:

      There is no coverage under this policy for any:
      ....
      8.     loss arising out of:
             ....


                                           3
             b.     the supervision of, or the failure to supervise, any person
                    by any insured, with regard to the ownership,
                    maintenance or use . . .
             ....
             of any automobile, recreational motor vehicle, watercraft,
             aircraft or any other motorized vehicle, unless required
             underlying insurance applies to the loss and provides
             coverage that pays for the loss in the amount shown as
             Minimum Underlying Limits on the declarations page.
The policy separately provided that “watercraft liability” insurance was only

“required underlying insurance” “with respect to watercraft which are owned by or

available for the regular and frequent use of any insured.”

      Following State Farm’s refusal to defend or indemnify the Knights, Collin

and the Knights entered into a “Settlement Agreement and Agreement to Limit

Recovery to Certain Assets” in November 2018. The agreement did not itself

resolve Collin’s claims against the Knights. Instead, the parties agreed that, at

Collin’s discretion, his claims would be resolved by binding arbitration. The

Knights agreed that, in the arbitration, they would not object to Collin’s evidence,

cross-examine his witnesses, or offer any evidence of their own. The Knights also

agreed not to file any motions during the arbitration, not to oppose confirmation of

any arbitration award in the circuit court or to seek to have the award vacated, and

not to appeal any order or judgment entered by the circuit court. In return, Collin

agreed to seek satisfaction of any arbitration award or judgment solely from State

Farm or any other insurer which insured the Knights’ liability, and from any

recovery the Knights later obtained against State Farm or any other insurer for

their failure to defend and indemnify the Knights against Collin’s claims. The

parties agreed that the Knights would pursue a claim for bad faith (and any other

contractual or tort claims they might have) against State Farm based upon the

insurer’s failure to defend and indemnify the Knights, and would give Collin 75% of
any amount that they recovered from State Farm in that action. The parties also


                                          4
agreed that the Knights would notify State Farm of the agreement “no sooner than

thirty days before judgment is entered in the Lawsuit.”

       On January 10, 2019, the parties proceeded to arbitration before Arbitrator

Wally Bley. Both parties appeared with counsel. Collin called six witnesses and

entered seventeen exhibits into evidence. Consistent with the settlement

agreement, the Knights did not cross-examine any of Collin’s witnesses, object to

any of his evidence, or offer any evidence or argument of their own. On January 14,

2019, the Arbitrator issued his arbitration award, finding that Nelson Knight was

negligent and awarding Collin $6 million in compensatory damages. The Arbitrator

separately found that the evidence was “insufficient” to show “active negligence” by

Violet Knight, and therefore found her not to be liable for Collin’s injuries.

       On January 23, 2019, the Knights notified State Farm by certified letter of

the § 537.065 agreement. On February 21, 2019, State Farm filed a motion in the

circuit court to intervene in the pending lawsuit pursuant to § 537.065.2. The next

day, Collin filed a motion seeking to have the circuit court confirm the arbitration

award.

       The circuit court sustained State Farm’s motion to intervene on February 25,

2019. On March 1, 2019, State Farm filed an answer to Collin’s Second Amended
Petition, as well as a motion to vacate the arbitration award and other procedural

motions. On April 22, 2019, the circuit court entered its judgment confirming the

arbitration award.3

       3       In its motion to vacate the arbitration award, State Farm argued (among
other things) that § 537.065.2 gave it the “right to have this litigation tried to a jury,” and
that the arbitration award was procured by undue means because the § 537.065 agreement
was entered “intentionally to circumvent State Farm’s rights under Section 537.065.2 and
to prevent the full and fair trial of this case to a jury.” At the hearing on the motion to
confirm the award, the scope of State Farm’s rights under § 537.065.2 was extensively
argued, and the court recognized that “the threshold thing here is whether 537.065.2 is
complied with. If it’s not, then we don’t need to get to whether I’m going to even confirm
the arbitration award.” Although the circuit court’s judgment does not expressly refer to
State Farm’s arguments concerning its rights as an intervenor under § 537.065.2, none of


                                               5
       State Farm appeals.

                                       Discussion
       On appeal, State Farm asserts four separate Points. In its first two Points, it

argues that confirmation of the arbitration award (which establishes Nelson

Knight’s liability and the amount of Collin Knight’s damages) denies State Farm its

constitutional rights to due process, to a jury trial, and to access the courts. In its

final two Points, State Farm argues that the arbitration award should not have

been confirmed, because it was procured through “undue means” within the

meaning of § 435.405.1(1), and because there was no existing controversy between

the Knights and Collin at the time of the arbitration.

                                             I.
       Before reaching the merits of State Farm’s arguments, we must address

Collin’s claim that State Farm does not have standing to appeal the circuit court’s

judgment, because it is not an “aggrieved party.”4 See Underwood v. St. Joseph Bd.

of Zoning Adjustment, 368 S.W.3d 204, 212-13 (Mo. App. W.D. 2012) (noting that

“[r]egardless of the merits of appellants’ claims, without standing, the court cannot

entertain the action” (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)).

       In Missouri, the right to appeal a civil judgment exists only by statute. “An
appeal lacking a statutory basis confers no authority upon an appellate court except

to dismiss the appeal.” In Interest of A.N.L. v. Maries Cnty. Juvenile Office, 484

S.W.3d 328, 332 (Mo. App. S.D. 2016) (citation omitted). Under § 512.020, “[a]ny

party to a suit aggrieved by any judgment of any trial court in any civil cause” may


the parties disputes that the circuit court’s confirmation of the arbitration award
necessarily rejected the arguments State Farm now reasserts on appeal. We likewise
presume that the circuit court’s judgment rejected State Farm’s expansive view of its rights
under § 537.065.2, albeit sub silentio.
       4       Collin and the Knights have filed separate Respondent’s Briefs in this Court.
While their respective briefs are not identical, they largely make the same arguments. We
attribute all of the respondents’ arguments to Collin for clarity’s sake.


                                             6
appeal from a “[f]inal judgment in the case.” § 512.020(5). To have a right to appeal

under § 512.020, “the appealing party must be both a party to the action and

‘aggrieved’ by the particular judgment or order” which it seeks to challenge on

appeal. Stichler v. Jesiolowski, 547 S.W.3d 789, 793-94 (Mo. App. W.D. 2018)

(citations and internal quotation marks omitted).

      Accordingly, it is not enough that State Farm was allowed to intervene and

became a party to the action; rather, it must at the same time be aggrieved by the

judgment it challenges. Bi-State Dev. Agency of Missouri-Illinois Metro. Dist. v.

Ames Realty Co., 258 S.W.3d 99, 104-05 (Mo. App. E.D. 2008) (a statutory right to

intervene “is not synonymous with being an aggrieved party”); Charnisky v.

Chrismer, 185 S.W.3d 699, 702-03 (Mo. App. E.D. 2006) (appellant-intervenor

lacked standing to appeal the portion of a judgment that “resolve[d] issues solely

between other parties and d[id] not resolve the claims made by that appellant”).

      In arguing that State Farm is not “aggrieved” by the judgment, Collin

contends that State Farm will “neither gain[ ] nor lose[ ] from the direct operation of

the judgment against Nelson [Knight],” and that State Farm was not a party to the

arbitration proceeding, and therefore lacks standing to challenge the confirmation

of the arbitration award.
      Collin’s standing arguments cannot survive the General Assembly’s

enactment of the current version of § 537.065 in 2017. In particular, new

§ 537.065.2 expressly provides that,

      [b]efore a judgment may be entered against any tort-feasor after such
      tort-feasor has entered into a contract under this section, the insurer
      or insurers shall be provided with written notice of the execution of the
      contract and shall have thirty days after receipt of such notice to
      intervene as a matter of right in any pending lawsuit involving the
      claim for damages.
      Prior to the enactment of § 537.065.2 in 2017, Missouri courts had repeatedly
held that a liability insurer which refused to defend its insured did not have the


                                          7
right to intervene in an underlying tort action against the insured. As we explained

in Charles v. Consumers Insurance, 371 S.W.3d 892 (Mo. App. W.D. 2012):

              In the third party liability claim context, the insurance carrier
      has no right to intervene in litigation between its policyholder and the
      third party; the carrier can participate in the litigation only pursuant
      to its contractual obligation to defend the policyholder. This is true
      because the insurance carrier has no direct interest in a lawsuit for
      damages filed against its policyholder by a third party. In such cases,
      if the insurer has a right to participate in the litigation, it is a
      contractual right, not a right based on Rule 52.12(a). Thus, if the
      carrier wrongfully denies coverage, it has breached its contractual
      obligation, and, in turn, the policyholder is relieved of his obligations
      under the contract. Therefore, the carrier can no longer participate in
      the litigation absent the policyholder's consent. Rule 52.12, setting out
      the requirements for intervention of right, is not available to restore an
      insurance carrier to control of the defense of a third party liability
      claim when the carrier forfeited control by denying coverage. Nor can
      the insurer's breach and the insured's settlement in reliance thereon,
      create an interest where one does not otherwise exist.
Id. at 897-98 (citations omitted). The single case cited by Collin to support his claim

that State Farm’s interests are not directly affected by the judgment – Sherman v.

Kaplan, 522 S.W.3d 318, 326 (Mo. App. W.D. 2017) – applies this pre-2017,

common-law principle.

      By enacting new § 537.065.2, the General Assembly necessarily rejected the

judge-made rule that liability insurance carriers lack any direct interest in tort
litigation against their insureds, and therefore have no right to intervene in such

litigation. Instead, where an insured has entered into an agreement pursuant to

§ 537.065, the new statute gives insurers the statutory right to intervene. The

legislature presumably recognized that, where some or all of an insured’s personal

assets are protected from execution by a § 537.065 agreement, the insured may

have little incentive to assert a vigorous defense to an injured party’s claims, and

may even be contractually prohibited from mounting a defense. By enacting
§ 537.065.2, the legislature has declared that, where the insured has entered into



                                           8
an agreement limiting the assets against which a claimant may seek recovery, a

liability insurance carrier has a sufficient interest in the determination of the

insured’s liability to support the insurer’s intervention in the underlying litigation,

as a matter of right.

      In light of the enactment of § 537.065.2, courts may no longer deny a liability

insurer intervention in an underlying tort action, on the basis that the insurer “has

no direct interest in a lawsuit for damages filed against its policyholder by a third

party.” Charles, 371 S.W.3d at 897 (citation omitted). By the same token, it would

be inconsistent with § 537.065.2 for courts to hold that a liability insurer, who

meets the statute’s conditions for intervention, lacks the right to appeal a judgment

against the insured on the basis that the insurer is not “aggrieved” because the

adverse judgment does not “‘operate directly and prejudicially on [the insurer’s]

personal or property rights or interests.’” Tupper v. City of St. Louis, 468 S.W.3d

360, 375 (Mo. 2015) (citation omitted). Just as an insurer now has the right to

intervene in the circuit court to defend claims against its insured, so too that

insurer may appeal an adverse judgment entered following the insurer’s

intervention. The same statutorily-recognized interest which supports an insurer’s

intervention in the circuit court, likewise supports the insurer’s right to prosecute
an appeal where its arguments in the circuit court are unsuccessful.

                                           II.
      We turn to State Farm’s first two Points on appeal, which allege that

confirmation of the arbitration award denied State Farm its constitutional rights to

due process, to a jury trial, and to access the courts. Although framed as two

separate Points invoking three separate constitutional rights, State Farm’s first two

Points boil down to a single contention: that when the General Assembly enacted

§ 537.065.2, and granted insurers the right to intervene in litigation against their
insureds, it necessarily gave insurers the right to contest the insured’s liability, and


                                           9
the claimant’s damages, on the merits, whatever the status of the litigation at the

time of the insurer’s intervention.5 We do not agree that the 2017 amendments to

§ 537.065 can be interpreted so expansively, and accordingly reject State Farm’s

constitutional arguments.6

                                              A.
       As explained in § I, above, prior to 2017 Missouri courts repeatedly held that

a liability insurer, which had refused to defend its insured without reservation, had

no right to intervene in a tort action brought against its insured by an injured third

party. Instead, it was generally held that an insurer was entitled to participate in a

third party’s suit against an insured “only pursuant to its contractual obligation to

defend the policyholder.” Charles, 371 S.W.3d at 897.

       Since its original enactment in 1959, § 537.065 has permitted an injured

party and a tort-feasor to agree that, if the injured party obtains a judgment against

the tort-feasor, the injured party will seek to collect on the judgment only from “the

specific assets listed in the contract,” and from “any insurer which insures the legal

liability of the tort-feasor.” § 537.065.1. The General Assembly amended § 537.065

effective August 28, 2017. As explained by the Missouri Supreme Court in Desai v.

Seneca Specialty Insurance Co., 581 S.W.3d 596 (Mo. 2019), the amended statute

“allows for the same type of contracts as the 2016 statute.” Id. at 600. “[T]he

amended statute includes two noteworthy additions,” however. Id.

       First, the amended statute adds a prerequisite to the execution of a
       valid contract that did not previously exist. Under the amended

       5      In a similar vein, the Missouri Organization of Defense Lawyers, as amicus
curiae, argues that “[t]he revised version of Section 537.065 now requires that insurance
companies receive notice of an 065 agreement with time to litigate the dispute.” (Emphasis
added.)
         6      Collin argues, with some force, that State Farm failed to preserve some or all
of its constitutional arguments in the circuit court. Given our rejection of State Farm’s
interpretation of § 537.065.2 – which underlies each of its constitutional arguments – we
need not resolve Collin’s preservation arguments.


                                              10
       statute, a tortfeasor is able to enter into a contract only if the
       tortfeasor’s insurer or indemnitor “had the opportunity to defend the
       tortfeasor without reservation but refuse[d] to do so.” Section
       537.065.1, RSMo Supp. 2017. Additionally, the amended statute added
       the requirement that insurers be given written notice and the
       opportunity to intervene prior to judgment. Section 537.065.2, RSMo
       Supp. 2017.
Section 537.065.2, an entirely new provision added in 2017, provides:

              Before a judgment may be entered against any tort-feasor after
       such tort-feasor has entered into a contract under this section, the
       insurer or insurers shall be provided with written notice of the
       execution of the contract and shall have thirty days after receipt of
       such notice to intervene as a matter of right in any pending lawsuit
       involving the claim for damages.
       State Farm argues that § 537.065.2 gives it the unconditional right to contest

liability and damages on the merits. But the statute does not say that. Instead, it

is far more limited. Section 537.065.2 merely requires that insurers be provided

with notice of an agreement entered under § 537.065 “[b]efore a judgment may be

entered,” and that insurers have the opportunity to intervene in “any pending

lawsuit” for thirty days thereafter. The statute does not specify a time limit within

which an insurer must be notified of a § 537.065 agreement – other than that such

notice be provided before the entry of judgment. The statute does not require that

the insurer must receive notice, and an opportunity to intervene, before the

insured’s liability or damages are determined – it only requires that notice be

provided “before a judgment may be entered.”7 The statute does not require that a




       7       In Britt v. Otto, 577 S.W.3d 133 (Mo. App. W.D. 2019), this Court stated in
dictum that “there is little doubt that the General Assembly intended section 537.065.2 to
afford insurers a temporally limited right to intervene as a matter of right in third party
tort actions before liability and damages have been determined.” Id. at 141 n.7 As
explained in the text, however, the statute does not say that – it merely requires that an
insurer be given notice, and an opportunity to intervene, “before a judgment may be
entered.”
       The issuance of an arbitration award does not constitute the entry of the “judgment”
referenced in § 537.065.2. Caselaw establishes that


                                             11
lawsuit be pending at the time that an insurer receives notice of a § 537.065

agreement. Nor does the statute require that litigation between an injured party

and the insured be stayed after execution of an agreement, or after notice to an

insurer, until the insurer is permitted to intervene, or until its right to intervene

expires.

      We also note that it was open to the General Assembly to state explicitly

what State Farm now claims that it intended: that an intervening insurer would in

all instances have the right to defend the insured’s liability and damages on the

merits, regardless of the progress of the litigation against the insured at the time of

intervention. Or, the legislature could simply have declared that no judgment

entered against an insured following execution of a § 537.065 agreement would be

binding on an insurer. Of course, the General Assembly could also have repealed

§ 537.065 outright. Yet it chose none of those paths. Instead, the legislature simply

gave insurers the right to intervene – nothing more.

      In amending § 537.065, the General Assembly plainly intended to address the

scenario which played out innumerable times under the pre-2017 version of the

statute, in which: an injured party and an insured/tort-feasor enter an agreement

which eliminates the insured’s personal liability exposure; they then continue to
litigate the injured party’s claim in circumstances in which the insured may have


      a judgment is a legally enforceable judicial order that fully resolves at least
      one claim in a lawsuit and establishes all the rights and liabilities of the
      parties with respect to that claim. . . .
             Judgements are a subset of orders generally. As a result, a judgment
      must be in writing. In addition . . . a judgment must be denominated
      “judgment” and signed by the judge[.] . . . [A] judgment is “entered” when the
      writing denominated a judgment is signed by the judge and filed.
State ex rel. Malin v. Joyce, 584 S.W.3d 791, 793 (Mo. App. W.D. 2019) (citations and
internal quotation marks omitted). The Missouri Uniform Arbitration Act plainly
distinguishes between an “award” issued by an arbitrator, § 435.385, and the “judgment or
decree” or “order” issued by a court confirming an award, § 435.415, § 435.440(3), or the
court “order” vacating an award. § 435.440(5).


                                             12
little incentive to vigorously defend, and might even be contractually prohibited

from doing so; the injured party obtains a substantial money judgment against the

insured; and the injured party then seeks to bind the insured’s liability insurer to

the outcome of the litigation, even though the insurer did not participate in, and

might even have been unaware of, that litigation. In amending the statute in 2017,

it may be (as the dissent argues) that individual legislators intended to guarantee

insurers an absolute right to contest the insured’s liability, and the injured party’s

damages, on the merits, no matter what proceedings had taken place between the

injured party and the insured prior to the insurer’s intervention. But even if those

were the intentions of the General Assembly as a body (which we have no way of

confidently knowing), those intentions were not enacted into law. We can only

implement the statute the General Assembly actually enacted. That statute only

gave insurers two specific, limited rights: (1) the right to decide whether to defend

the insured in the underlying litigation, prior to the insured’s entry into a § 537.065

agreement; and (2) the right to intervene in “any pending lawsuit” within thirty

days of receiving notice of a § 537.065 agreement.

      By arguing that it has an absolute right to litigate Nelson Knight’s liability

on the merits, State Farm asks us to read provisions into § 537.065.2 which the
legislature did not itself include in the statute. But the Missouri Supreme Court

has repeatedly instructed that we “‘must be guided by what [our] legislature said,

not by what the Court thinks it meant to say.” Gash v. Lafayette Cnty., 245 S.W.3d

229, 233 (Mo. 2008) (quoting Metro Auto Auction v. Dir. of Revenue, 707 S.W.2d 397,

401 (Mo. 1986)). We “cannot supply that which the legislature has, either

deliberately, or inadvertently, or through lack of foresight, omitted from the

controlling statutes.” State ex rel. Mercantile Nat. Bank at Dallas v. Rooney, 402

S.W.2d 354, 362 (Mo. 1966). “In statutory construction, courts must give effect to
the statute as written and cannot add provisions which do not appear either


                                          13
explicitly or by implication.” Garza v. Valley Crest Landscape Maintenance, Inc.,

224 S.W.3d 61, 64 (Mo. App. E.D. 2007) (citation omitted).

      We have recognized the limited nature of the right of intervention afforded by

§ 537.065.2 in two prior decisions. In Britt v. Otto, 577 S.W.3d 133 (Mo. App. W.D.

2019), we held that an insurer’s rights under § 537.065.2 were not violated where

an insured gave the insurer notice of a § 537.065 agreement at a time when no

litigation was pending against the insured. We held that the insurer’s statutory

right to intervene had expired by the time litigation against the insured was

commenced more than thirty days after the notice. Id. at 140.

      Similarly, in Aguilar v. GEICO Casualty Co., 588 S.W.3d 195 (Mo. App. W.D.

2019), we held that an insurer’s rights under § 537.065.2 were not violated where

the insurer was given notice of an agreement while litigation was pending against

the insured; the insurer timely moved to intervene in that litigation; the litigation

was then voluntarily dismissed by the injured party; and a new lawsuit was then

filed more than thirty days thereafter. Although the insurer in Aguilar contended

that § 537.065.2 gave it a right to intervene in the re-filed action, we disagreed:

      The plain and unambiguous meaning of the statute requires that a
      tortfeasor and injured party give notice to the insurer of a section
      537.065 contract before a judgment may be entered, not that the
      insurer must be allowed to intervene before judgment may be entered.
      Any other interpretation ignores and renders superfluous the latter
      part of subsection two which requires that the insurer file its motion to
      intervene in a pending lawsuit thirty days after receipt of such notice.
             . . . [H]aving a statutory opportunity to intervene as a matter
      of right is not the same as an unconditional right to intervene before a
      judgment is entered. The time limitation must be complied with, and a
      lawsuit involving the claim must be pending.
Id. at 198 & n. 7.

      State Farm was afforded the rights granted by § 537.065.2. It was notified of
the § 537.065 agreement before the entry of judgment (and notably, it does not




                                          14
argue that the notice the Knights provided was itself untimely). State Farm was

given thirty days to intervene, and its timely motion to intervene was in fact

granted by the circuit court. Section 537.065.2 required nothing more.

       “The revisions to section 537.065 simply give an insurer the right to written

notice and an opportunity to intervene”; those revisions do not give an insurer “any

other rights beyond what any intervenor would have.” Desai, 581 S.W.3d at 606-07

(Stith, J., dissenting).8 We recognize that, after being allowed to intervene, State

Farm became a “party” to the lawsuit with the same rights of any other party. See,

e.g., City of St. Joseph v. Hankinson, 312 S.W.2d 4, 7 (Mo. 1958) (“Upon being

permitted to intervene, [intervenor] became a defendant . . . entitled to raise any

legitimate defenses which came within the general scope of the original suit, and

which the original defendants might have raised.”); Martin v. Busch, 360 S.W.3d

854, 858 (Mo. App. E.D. 2011) (“Upon intervention, the rights and responsibilities of

[Intervenor] will be the same as any other party to the litigation.” (citation

omitted)). But it is well established that “‘an intervenor must accept the action

pending as he finds it at the time of intervention.’” Martin, 360 S.W.3d at 858 n.5

(quoting Beard v. Jackson, 502 S.W.2d 416, 419 (Mo. App. 1973)).

       In essence, State Farm contends that when § 537.065.2 gave it an
opportunity to intervene before judgment was entered against the Knights, it

should be afforded greater rights than the Knights themselves had at the time of

State Farm’s intervention. By the time State Farm intervened, the Knights had

        8     Judge Stith’ dissenting opinion in Desai argued that an insurer – which had
sought to intervene following entry of judgment against its insured – should have an
opportunity to argue that its motion to intervene was timely, and that the judgment should
be set aside under Rule 74.06(b) because of the insured’s failure to comply with the notice
requirements of § 537.065.2. 581 S.W.3d at 607-08. Thus, contrary to the dissent’s
characterization (at 6 n.1), Judge Stith’s dissent in Desai recognized that “the insurer’s
rights would be necessarily limited by the timing of their intervention,” and by the
procedural posture of the case at that time. Judge Stith did not suggest that the insurer
could simply set up a defense to the underlying action, ignoring the fact that judgment had
been entered prior to its intervention.


                                            15
entered into a valid agreement to reduce their own financial exposure by limiting

Collin’s recovery to their insurance. As part of that agreement, they had agreed to

arbitration of Collin’s claims, and such an arbitration had in fact occurred. By the

time of State Farm’s intervention, Nelson Knight no longer had the right to contest

his liability to Collin, or the amount of Collin’s damages. State Farm points to

nothing in new § 537.065.2 which would give it broader rights than those possessed

by its insured, or than any other intervenor would possess.

                                              B.
       In cases involving uninsured or underinsured motorist insurance coverage,

an insurer is permitted to intervene when its insured sues the uninsured or

underinsured motorist, to contest the uninsured or underinsured driver’s liability,

or the extent of the insured’s damages. See Charles v. Consumers Ins., 371 S.W.3d

892, 898 (Mo. App. W.D. 2012). In the context of uninsured or underinsured

motorist coverage, the intervening insurer is generally entitled to assert defenses to

its insured’s claims, even though the uninsured or underinsured motorist may have

defaulted in the action.9

       Thus, in the uninsured or underinsured motorist context, insurers are

permitted to intervene to assert defenses which the party they seek to represent has

failed to assert on their own behalf. But the uninsured motorist cases are

distinguishable from the situation here. First, in those cases, at the time of the

insurer’s intervention, the third-party was merely “in default” for having failed to

file a timely answer,10 or had been the subject of an interlocutory “default and




       9       See, e.g., Julian v. Auto. Club Inter-Ins. Exch., 728 S.W.2d 321, 322 (Mo. App.
E.D. 1987); Potts v. Penco, Inc., 708 S.W.2d 222, 225 (Mo. App. E.D. 1986) (dictum); Beard
v. Jackson, 502 S.W.2d 416, 419 (Mo. App. 1973); State ex rel. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins.
Co. v. Craig, 364 S.W.2d 343, 346 (Mo. App. 1963).
       10     Julian, 728 S.W.2d at 321; Craig, 364 S.W.2d at 345.


                                             16
inquiry” order.11 Even where a “default and inquiry” order had been entered,

however, under the version of Rule 74.045 in effect at the time, the circuit court had

discretion to set aside the order for “good cause.” State ex rel. Aubuchon v. Jones,

389 S.W.2d 854, 859 (Mo. App. 1965). Thus, at the time of intervention, the party

whose interests the insurer sought to represent was not foreclosed from defending

the action on the merits. As we explain in § III below, an arbitration award can be

set aside only on far narrower grounds than an interlocutory default order, and is

binding on the insured in a way in which an interlocutory default judgment simply

is not.

          Unlike the case with defaulting uninsured or underinsured motorists, this is

not a case in which the insured has remained completely passive. Despite State

Farm’s failure to defend them, the Knights answered Collin’s original and second

amended petitions, and responded to and propounded written discovery. The

Knights then chose to enter into a § 537.065 agreement – as they were entitled to do

– which protected their non-insurance assets from execution, and which subjected

Collin’s claims to binding arbitration. Unlike in the uninsured/underinsured

motorist context, in this case the insureds’ liability, and the injured party’s

damages, had been determined on the merits in the arbitration proceeding, before
State Farm’s intervention. In that arbitration proceeding, the arbitrator sustained

Collin’s claim against Nelson Knight, but found his claim against Violet Knight to

be unproven. This is not a case in which claims for which the insurer might

ultimately be responsible were simply deemed admitted, based on the complete

inaction of the purportedly liable party.

          Moreover, there is a critical distinction between the liability insurance at

issue in this case, and uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage. Uninsured


          11    Potts, 708 S.W.2d at 224; Beard, 502 S.W.2d at 417.


                                              17
motorist insurance is first-party insurance coverage, which insures the insured

against losses which the insured suffers directly, as a result of negligent acts of an

uninsured or underinsured third party. Charles, 371 S.W.3d at 897; Shafer v. Auto.

Club Inter-Ins. Exch., 778 S.W.2d 395, 398 (Mo. App. S.D. 1989). Because an

insurer directly insures the insured for losses which the insured experiences at the

hands of a third party with whom the insurer has no relationship, Missouri courts

have long recognized that an insurer’s interests are directly affected by the

insured’s assertion of a claim against the third party. The insurer must accordingly

be permitted to intervene in the insured’s action against the third party, as its only

means to protect its own independent interests.

      The situation is fundamentally different with respect to third-party liability

insurance. In this context, an insurer has a contractual relationship with its

insured, the party claimed to be liable for a third party’s injuries. Under that

contract, the insured has an obligation to provide timely notice to its insurer, to

cooperate with its insurer, and to permit the insurer to assume the defense of the

action against the insured. The primary means by which a liability insurer “can

participate in the litigation” against its insured is “pursuant to its contractual

obligation to defend the policyholder.” Charles, 371 S.W.3d at 897. Under the
current version of § 537.065.1, an insured may only enter an agreement with the

injured party to limit the assets against which the injured party will seek to

recover, after the insurer has been given the opportunity to assume the defense of

the action, but declined to do so.

      Missouri courts have repeatedly recognized that, where an insurer has

refused to defend its insured, the insured is fully justified in seeking to protect its

own interests by whatever means it deems appropriate – including by entering a

§ 537.065 agreement.




                                           18
      Once an insurer unjustifiably refuses to defend or provide coverage,
      the insured may, without the insurer's consent, enter an agreement
      with the plaintiff to limit its liability to its insurance policies. Cf.
      Rinehart v. Anderson, 985 S.W.2d 363, 371 (Mo.App.1998) (recognizing
      that once an insurer unjustifiably refuses to defend or provide
      coverage, the insured is free to enter a settlement that releases it from
      liability). “[The insurer] cannot have its cake and eat it too by both
      refusing coverage and at the same time continuing to control the terms
      of settlement in defense of an action it had refused to defend.” Id.
Schmitz v. Great Am. Assur. Co., 337 S.W.3d 700, 710 (Mo. 2011).

      Therefore – and unlike litigation involving an uninsured or underinsured

driver – a liability insurer’s right of intervention under § 537.065.2 will only ever

arise, after the insurer has refused to avail itself of its contractual right to defend

the action, and the insured has been left to its own devices to defend its interests.

An insurer intervening in an uninsured/underinsured motorist case has no similar,

prior opportunity to control the litigation – its first (and only) opportunity to

participate occurs through intervention. In the context of liability insurance, it

would be unwarranted to permit an insurer who has intervened under § 537.065.2,

after having been given an earlier opportunity to defend its insured, to ignore or

“unwind” everything that has transpired in the litigation prior to the insurer’s

intervention. Adopting State Farm’s expansive interpretation of § 537.065.2 would

allow an insurer to “have its cake and eat it too,” by refusing to honor its insurance
contract and provide the insured with an unqualified defense, and yet retain all of

the rights it would have had if it had provided such a defense. As we have

explained in § II.A, above, nothing in the text of § 537.065.2 purports to grant an

insurer such a “do-over.” See Aguilar, 588 S.W.3d at 202 (in action governed by the

current version of § 537.065, holding that a third-party liability insurer “waived the

right to contest the cause of the accident or the extent of [the third party]’s injuries




                                           19
and damages by choosing not to defend [its insured] without reservation and

disclaiming any liability under . . . [its] policy”).12

       It is noteworthy that neither State Farm, nor its amicus the Missouri

Organization of Defense Lawyers, argues that State Farm’s position is supported by

the caselaw which allows an intervening uninsured motorist insurer to assert

merits defenses after a default by the tort-feasor. The fact that neither State Farm

nor its amicus cite to this caselaw suggests that they recognize that third-party

liability insurers which have refused to defend their insureds (like State Farm) are

in a fundamentally different posture than uninsured motorist carriers.13



       12    Indeed, in addressing the scope of an uninsured motorist insurer’s rights
upon intervention in underlying tort litigation, this Court distinguished uninsured motorist
coverage from third-party liability insurance like that at issue here:
               In considering this question, we must endeavor to determine what
       kind of insurance is involved. The terms of the insurance contract bind State
       Farm to pay all sums which the insured ‘shall be legally entitled to recover’
       from the uninsured motorist. The character of this coverage must be
       separated from the regular and customary liability insurance. The petitioner
       is not the insurer of the uninsured motorist. Neither, on the facts in this
       case, is it called upon to defend the insured against the claim made by the
       opposing party.
Craig, 364 S.W.2d at 346 (emphasis added).
       13     In addition to relying on the cases involving uninsured motorist coverage, the
dissenting opinion also argues that State Farm’s right to contest the merits is supported by
the Eastern District’s decision in Martin v. Busch, 360 S.W.3d 854 (Mo. App. E.D. 2011), a
wrongful death case. Martin merely held, however, that certain persons entitled to
prosecute a wrongful-death action should be permitted to intervene in an action brought by
another beneficiary, before a settlement of the wrongful-death action was approved by the
court. Although Martin did not say so explicitly, it appears that, upon their intervention,
the intervenors would be permitted to object to court approval of the settlement reached by
the other beneficiary. Martin does not suggest, as the dissent contends, that the
intervenors “did not have to accept the settlement but had every right . . . to assert their
own ‘affirmative cause or defense’ appropriate to the case.” Dissent at 11. Section
537.080.2 specifies that, although there may be multiple persons entitled to prosecute a
wrongful death action on behalf of a particular decedent, “[o]nly one action may be brought
under this section against any one defendant for the death of any one person.” And
§ 537.095.1 provides that, “if two or more persons are entitled to sue for and recover
damages as herein allowed, then any one or more of them may compromise or settle the
claim for damages with approval of any circuit court.” Under these provisions, a settlement
by one wrongful-death beneficiary bars another beneficiary from later bringing a separate
wrongful-death action, unless the second beneficiary obtains relief from the judgment


                                             20
                                           C.
      What we have said above disposes of the constitutional claims State Farm

asserts in its first two Points on appeal. At the time it intervened, Collin had filed a

motion to confirm the arbitration award. The scope of the issues which could be

considered in connection with such a motion is limited:

      Pursuant to section 435.400, upon application of a party to an
      arbitration proceeding, “the court shall confirm an award, unless
      within the time limits hereinafter imposed grounds are urged for
      vacating or modifying or correcting the award . . . .” The authorized
      grounds for vacating an award are limited, and do not include re-
      litigating the facts or legal issues determined by the award.
Britt, 577 S.W.3d at 144 (emphasis added by Britt; footnote omitted); see also, e.g.,

Cargill, Inc. v. Poeppelmeyer, 328 S.W.3d 774, 776 (Mo. App. S.D. 2010); Parks v.

MBNA Am. Bank, 204 S.W.3d 305, 310 (Mo. App. W.D. 2006).

      Under § 537.065.2, State Farm had only the rights of any intervenor in a

lawsuit; it was not given an unconditional right to litigate the injured party’s claims

on the merits. State Farm was required to “take the action as it found it” at the

time of its intervention. (We once again emphasize that State Farm makes no

argument that it should have been provided with notice, and given an opportunity

to intervene, at an earlier time.) At the time of State Farm’s intervention, the only

pending question in the litigation was whether the arbitration award should be

confirmed, or whether it was instead subject to vacation. At that time, it was not

open to State Farm to seek to relitigate the Knights’ liability to Collin, or the

amount of his recoverable damages. The circuit court’s confirmation of the

arbitration award did not violate State Farm’s rights to due process, a jury trial, or

to access the courts.

      Points I and II are denied.


approving the settlement. See Davis v. Wilson, 804 S.W.2d 392 (Mo. App. W.D. 1991).
Nothing in Martin purports to alter these established principles.


                                           21
                                          III.
      In its third and fourth Points, State Farm challenges the merits of the circuit

court’s judgment confirming the arbitration award. In its third Point, State Farm

argues that the arbitration award was procured by “undue means,” and was

therefore subject to vacation under § 435.405.1(1). In its fourth Point, State Farm

argues that the arbitration award should have been vacated because there was no

existing controversy between Collin and the Knights at the time of the arbitration;

instead, State Farm contends that the § 537.065 agreement aligned the interests of

Collin and the Knights, such that “there was in effect a joint venture between

them.”

      Section 435.405.1(1) provides that, “[u]pon application of a party, the court

shall vacate an award where . . . [t]he award was procured by corruption, fraud or

other undue means . . . .” In National Avenue Build Co. v. Stewart, 910 S.W.2d 334

(Mo. App. S.D. 1995), the Southern District held that

      “[U]ndue means . . . means something akin to fraud and corruption.
      ‘Undue means' goes beyond the mere inappropriate or inadequate
      nature of the evidence and refers to some aspect of the arbitrator's
      decision or decisionmaking process which was obtained in some
      manner which was unfair and beyond the normal process contemplated
      by the arbitration act.
Id. at 345 (quoting Ark. Dep’t of Parks & Tourism v. Resort Mgrs., Inc., 743 S.W.2d

389, 391 (Ark. 1988)). “Undue means” “connotes ‘some type of bad faith in the

procurement of the award.’” Id. (quoting Shearson Hayden Stone, Inc. v. Liang, 493

F. Supp. 104, 108 (N.D. Ill. 1980), aff’d, 653 F.2d 310 (7th Cir. 1981)).

      The problem with State Farm’s “undue means” argument is that the party

whose interests it seeks to assert – Nelson Knight – himself agreed to the very

procedures which State Farm now argues were fatally improper. A party may not

seek to vacate an arbitration award, on the basis that it was procured by “undue
means,” based on procedures to which it consented, and in which it voluntarily



                                           22
participated without objection. Indeed, caselaw holds that a party may not seek to

vacate an arbitration award on the basis of “undue means,” if it was aware of the

circumstances constituting the allegedly “undue means” during the arbitration

proceeding, and failed to object to them at that time. See MBNA Am. Bank, N.A. v.

Hart, 710 N.W.2d 125, 129 (N.D. 2006) (collecting cases); Ark. Dep’t of Parks &

Tourism v. Resort Mgrs., Inc., 743 S.W.2d 389, 392 (Ark. 1988). Obviously, Nelson

Knight was aware of the procedures to which State Farm now objects during the

arbitration proceeding, and raised no objection to those procedures. State Farm

cannot establish that the arbitration award was procured by “undue means” in

these circumstances.

       More fundamentally, State Farm’s arguments that the arbitration award

was procured by “undue means,” or in the absence of any real adversity of interests

between the parties, runs headlong into the Missouri caselaw which has specifically

held that judgments entered under similar procedures, following the entry of a

§ 537.065 agreement, are entitled to deference, and cannot be attacked for

unreasonableness. Thus, in Schmitz v. Great American Assurance Co., 337 S.W.3d

700 (Mo. 2011), an insured entered a § 537.065 agreement with the parents of an

injured minor, in which the parties agreed that the minor’s personal-injury claims
against the insured would be decided in a bench trial. At that trial, the insured

“neither objected to the entry of evidence nor offered any defense.” Id. at 704.

      The Missouri Supreme Court rejected the insurer’s argument that the results

of the bench trial were entitled to no deference, but that the insurer could instead

challenge the results of that proceeding when the injured party later sought

coverage from the insurer.

      The award of damages in this case was a judgment entered after a
      bench trial, yet Great American argues that this “trial” lacked any
      semblance of an adversarial proceeding because CPB[, the insured,]
      did not present a defense. What Great American ignores is that it had


                                          23
       an opportunity to present a defense but declined to do so. CPB entered
       into a section 537.065 agreement to limit its exposure to liability. The
       agreement did not admit liability or damages; instead, it simply
       limited the collection of any judgment against CPB to the insurance
       policies.
               The structure of the section 537.065 agreement actually gave
       Great American more protection than a settlement that admitted
       liability and determined damages. The parents still had the burden to
       prove liability and damages in a bench trial. Although the trial court
       found CPB liable and awarded the parents $4,580,076 in damages, it
       could have found that CPB was not liable or that no damages were
       suffered.
Id. at 709.

       We cannot find that the arbitration proceeding in this case employed methods

akin to fraud, or that it was so lacking in adversity that the award was rendered

void, when the Missouri Supreme Court has held that the results of a bench trial

conducted under similar procedures was presumptively reasonable, and could not

later be challenged on the merits by a liability insurer. See Aguilar, 588 S.W.3d at

202 (rejecting third-party liability insurer’s claim that arbitration award was

procured by “undue means” and “‘has been manufactured solely for purposes of

enhancing the damages to be alleged in a subsequent “bad faith” claim against [the

insurer]’”; “The actions that the parties took in entering a section 537.065

agreement and an agreement to submit their dispute to arbitration are authorized
by statute.”).

       Points III and IV are denied.14




        14     At various points in its briefing, State Farm contends that, in the
circumstances of this case, it cannot be bound by the results of the arbitration proceeding.
That issue is not properly raised in response to Collin’s motion to confirm the arbitration
award. Instead, State Farm may raise that issue in any proceeding in which Collin or the
Knights seek to collect on the judgment from State Farm. See Aguilar, 588 S.W.3d at 201;
Britt, 577 S.W.3d at 15 & n.11.


                                             24
                                    Conclusion
      The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.



                                       ______________________________________
                                       Alok Ahuja, Judge

Judge Hardwick concurs.
Judge Chapman dissents in separate opinion.




                                         25
                                              In the
                           Missouri Court of Appeals
                                        Western District


 COLLIN KNIGHT, A MINOR,           )
 BY AND THROUGH HIS NEXT FRIEND,   )
 PAUL KNIGHT,                      )
                        RESPONDENT,)                       WD82860
 V.                                )
                                   )                       FILED: JULY 14, 2020
 NELSON KNIGHT AND                 )
 VIOLET KNIGHT,                    )
                     RESPONDENTS, )
                                   )
 STATE FARM FIRE AND CASUALTY      )
 COMPANY,                          )
                        Appellant. )
                                   )



                                  DISSENTING OPINION

       I respectfully dissent. I would reverse the circuit court’s judgment confirming the

arbitration award, and remand the matter to the trial court, allow State Farm to conduct its

discovery, and allow it to contest liability and damages. As an intervenor of right under

amended section 537.065.2, State Farm had the right to protect its own interests in the suit, as

that right of intervention was not derived solely from its contractual relationship with its insureds

(Nelson and Violet Knight). By enacting the amendments to section 537.065.2, the legislature

allowed, under certain conditions, the insurer the right to reject its obligation to defend and
indemnify, to be notified of its insured’s section 537.065 agreement, and to then intervene in any

pending action involving the claim for damages. In previous decisions we have noted that the

legislature set very limited circumstances in which the right to intervene may be asserted by the

insurer, but we have not indicated that the narrow path to intervention limits the scope of its

rights upon intervention. Indeed, in Britt v. Otto, 577 S.W.3d 133, 141 n.7 (Mo. App. W.D.

2019), we recognized that “there is little doubt that the General Assembly intended section

537.065.2 to afford insurers a temporally limited right to intervene as a matter of right in third

party tort actions before liability and damages have been determined.” State Farm’s interests are

distinct from those of its insured and its right to assert them are no longer solely dependent on

recognizing its obligation to defend and insure (without reservation of rights). In fact, the right

of intervention under amended section 537.065.2 is conditioned upon the insurer having rejected

its obligation to insure, and having been notified of the insured’s execution of a section 537.065

agreement limiting the insured’s exposure – thus potentially leaving the insurer as the only party

in the suit that actually has an interest in limiting liability and damages.

       Section 537.065 now provides as follows:

       1. Any person having an unliquidated claim for damages against a tort-feasor, on
       account of personal injuries, bodily injuries, or death, provided that, such tort-
       feasor’s insurer or indemnitor has the opportunity to defend the tort-feasor
       without reservation but refuses to do so, may enter into a contract with such tort-
       feasor or any insurer on his or her behalf or both, whereby, in consideration of the
       payment of a specified amount, the person asserting the claim agrees that in the
       event of a judgment against the tort-feasor, neither such person nor any other
       person, firm, or corporation claiming by or through him or her will levy
       execution, by garnishment or as otherwise provided by law, except against the
       specific assets listed in the contract and except against any insurer which insures
       the legal liability of the tort-feasor for such damage and which insurer is not
       excepted from execution, garnishment or other legal procedure by such contract.
       Execution or garnishment proceedings in aid thereof shall lie only as to assets of
       the tort-feasor specifically mentioned in the contract or the insurer or insurers not
       excluded in such contract. Such contract, when properly acknowledged by the
       parties thereto, may be recorded in the office of the recorder of deeds in any
       county where a judgment may be rendered, or in the county of the residence of the
                                                   2
        tort-feasor, or in both such counties, and if the same is so recorded then such tort-
        feasor’s property, except as to the assets specifically listed in the contract, shall
        not be subject to any judgment lien as the result of any judgment rendered against
        the tort-feasor, arising out of the transaction for which the contract is entered into.

        2. Before a judgment may be entered against any tort-feasor after such tort-
        feasor has entered into a contract under this section, the insurer or insurers
        shall be provided with written notice of the execution of the contract and shall
        have thirty days after receipt of such notice to intervene as a matter of right in
        any pending lawsuit involving the claim for damages.

        3. The provisions of this section shall apply to any covenant not to execute or any
        contract to limit recovery to specified assets, regardless of whether it is referred to
        as a contract under this section.

        4. Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit an insured from bringing a
        separate action asserting that the insurer acted in bad faith.

(The pertinent 2017 amendments are emphasized.)

        In interpreting a statute, the appellate court is guided by the legislature’s intent, as

indicated by the plain language of the statute. Desai v. Seneca Specialty Ins. Co., 581 S.W.3d

596, 601 (Mo. banc 2019). “This [c]ourt must give meaning to every word or phrase in the

statute if possible.” Id.

       In construing statutes to ascertain legislative intent it is presumed the legislature is
       aware of the interpretation of existing statutes placed upon them by the state
       appellate courts, and that in amending a statute or in enacting a new one on the
       same subject, it is ordinarily the intent of the legislature to effect some change in
       the existing law. If this were not so the legislature would be accomplishing
       nothing, and legislatures are not presumed to have intended a useless act.
Kilbane v. Dir. of Dep’t of Revenue, 544 S.W.2d 9, 11 (Mo. banc 1976) (internal quotes and

citation omitted). Thus, when the legislature amends a statute, the amendment is presumed to

change the meaning of the law. State ex rel. Coleman v. Wexler Horn, 568 S.W.3d 14, 21 (Mo.

banc 2019).

        Interpreting the 2017 amendments to section 537.065, the Desai court observed:

        [T]he amended statute includes two noteworthy additions. First, the amended
        statute adds a prerequisite to the execution of a valid contract that did not
        previously exist. Under the amended statute, a tortfeasor is able to enter into a
                                                   3
        contract only if the tortfeasor’s insurer or indemnitor “had the opportunity to
        defendant the tortfeasor without reservation but refuse[d] to do so.” Section
        537.065.1. RSMo Supp. 2017. Additionally, the amended statute added the
        requirement that insurers be given written notice and the opportunity to intervene
        prior to judgment. Section 537.065.2. RSMo Supp. 2017.

Desai, 581 S.W.3d at 600.

        In Desai, the section 537.065 contract was executed by the plaintiff and tortfeasor/insured

(and the case was heard to determine liability and damages) before the effective date of the 2017

amendments to section 537.065. Id. at 597-98. In declining to retroactively apply the 2017

version of section 537.065, the Desai court observed that, due to newly imposed requirements,

the amendments referred to in “this [2017] section” did not refer to the statute’s prior version:

        While the amended [2017] statute retained much of the 2016 statute’s language,
        the amended statute’s added requirements pertain to the meaning of its phrase,
        “has entered into a contract under this section.” Under the 2016 statute, a contract
        could be created and cases could conclude without any insurer involvement.
        Indeed, under the 2016 statute it was not required for the insurer to be told the
        case existed. Conversely, under the amended statute, before a contract can be
        executed, insurers must have the opportunity to defend the tortfeasor and refuse to
        do so. In addition, prior to judgment, insurers must be provided with written
        notice and the opportunity to intervene.

Id. at 601.

        The 2017 amendments to section 537.065 permit the same type of contracts as its

predecessor. Id. at 600. Once an insurer refuses to defend or provide coverage, section

537.065.1 provides that the insured may enter into an agreement with the plaintiff to limit his or

her liability to the insurance policy limits. § 537.065.1. But the amended statute differs

substantively from the previous version in two ways. Desai, 581 S.W.3d at 600. First, the

amended statute adds a prerequisite to the execution of a valid 537.065 agreement—a tortfeasor

may enter into a contract only if the tortfeasor’s insurer or indemnitor had the opportunity to

defend the tortfeasor without reservation but refused to do so. Id.; § 537.065.1. Secondly, the



                                                 4
amended statute adds the requirement that insurers be given written notice and the opportunity to

intervene prior to judgment. Desai, 581 S.W.3d at 600; § 537.065.2.

        Before the amendment of section 537.065, “a contract could be created and cases could

conclude without any insurer involvement.” Desai, 581 S.W.3d at 601. In granting the right to

intervene in a case where the plaintiff and insured have agreed to limit the insured’s liability to

insurance proceeds, the legislature recognized that the insurer’s interests are no longer aligned

with its policyholder’s interests.

        The majority opinion likewise acknowledges that, in amending section 537.065, the

legislature granted the liability insurer the independent right to intervene, and that its interests are

distinct from its insured tortfeasor:

        By enacting new § 537.065.2, the General Assembly necessarily rejected the
        judge-made rule that liability insurance carriers have no right to intervene in
        underlying tort litigation against their insureds. Instead, where an insured has
        entered into an agreement pursuant to § 537.065, the new statute gives insurers
        the statutory right to intervene. The legislature presumably recognized that,
        where some or all of an insured’s personal assets are protected from execution by
        a § 537.065 agreement, the insured may have little incentive to assert a vigorous
        defense to an injured party’s claims, and may even be contractually prohibited
        from mounting a defense. By enacting § 537.065.2, the legislature has declared
        that, where the insured has entered into an agreement limiting the assets against
        which a claimant may seek recovery, a liability insurance carrier has a sufficient
        interest in the determination of the insured’s liability to support the insurer’s
        intervention in the underlying litigation, as a matter of right.

Majority at *9. However, the majority opinion then indicates that, because of the timing of State

Farm’s intervention in the lawsuit, it cannot expect to challenge the arbitrator’s determination of

liability and damages in the instant action. The majority acknowledges that, as an intervening

defendant in the lawsuit, State Farm had the same rights of any other party and was thus entitled

to raise any legitimate defenses which the original defendants might have raised. Martin v.

Busch, 360 S.W.3d 854, 858 (Mo. App. E.D. 2011). However, the majority nevertheless posits



                                                   5
that, because the instant action was for confirmation of an award (that had already determined

liability and damages), and (citing Judge Stith’s dissent in Desai) that because “an intervenor

must accept the action pending as he finds it at the time of intervention,” State Farm could not

turn back the clock and challenge liability and damages in the context of this lawsuit. But see id.

at 858 n. 5 (citing Beard v. Jackson, 502 S.W.2d 416, 419 (Mo. App. 1973)), and Desai, 581

S.W.3d at 607-08 (Stith, J., dissenting).1

        The majority suggests that, because the legislature did not explicitly spell out that an

intervening insurer could contest liability and damages when asserting its newly enacted right to

intervene, it must not have intended to allow it the opportunity to do so. The majority seems to



        1 In her dissenting opinion in Desai, Judge Stith asserted that the amendment to section

537.065.2, which allowed intervention within 30 days of notice to the insurer, actually would have
applied, as that portion of the statute referred to obligations imposed before entry of the judgment (which
had not yet occurred prior to the effective date of the amendments). Desai, 581 S.W.3d at 606. Judge
Stith went on to assert that the cause should be remanded to determine whether proper notice had been
afforded the insurer, and whether sufficient grounds were shown to set aside the judgment. In a portion of
her opinion Judge Stith indicated:


                 The revisions to section 537.065 do not purport to give an insurer an automatic
        right to set aside a judgment entered or any other rights beyond what any intervenor
        would have. As a party seeking intervention as of right after judgment had been entered,
        [Insurer] had a right to argue its motion to intervene was timely and, if it was timely, the
        circuit court should set aside the judgment due to the alleged failure to comply with the
        notice requirement of the 2017 version of section 537.065….


                For these reasons, I would reverse the judgment below and remand to the circuit
        court with directions to consider whether [Insurer’s] motion to intervene was timely filed
        within 30 days of when it received appropriate notice of the section 537.065 agreement.
        If the motion was timely filed, I would direct the circuit court to consider whether
        sufficient grounds were shown for sustaining the motion to set aside the judgment and
        for such other action as the circuit court would deem appropriate in light of the
        evidence, the law, and this opinion.


        Id. at 606-07 (emphasis added). Judge Stith did not indicate that, if the insurer were (upon
remand) entitled to intervene, the insurer’s rights would be necessarily limited by the timing of their
intervention, or by their denial of coverage. Rather, Judge Stith recognized that the intervening insurer
would not have “any other rights beyond what any intervenor would have.” Id.

                                                     6
operate from the position that, unless the legislature explicitly spells out the changes it intends,

we are not to presume the legislature intended any changes. However, we are, in fact, required

to presume that the legislature intends to change the law when it amends a statute. State ex rel.

Hillman v. Beger, 566 S.W.3d 600, 607 (Mo. banc 2017). “In construing a statute, the Court

must presume that the legislature was aware of the state of the law at the time of its enactment.”

Suffian v. Usher, 19 S.W.3d 130, 133 (Mo. banc 2000) (internal quotes and citation omitted). In

this instance, the state of the law prior to the amendment was that third party liability insurers

who had refused to indemnify or defend could not intervene in suits between their insured

tortfeasor and a claimant in order to contest liability and damages. The legislature is presumed

to have known this state of the law when it enacted section 537.065.2, allowing the insured to

intervene after it had refused coverage and within 30 days of being notified of the execution of

the section 537.065 agreement. The majority opinion not only fails to explain what was intended

by this change, but also takes it one step further, inferring that, because the legislature did not

spell out the rights of the intervening insurer, it necessarily had rights less than other similarly

situated intervenors of right. For example, the majority seeks to distinguish the instant action

from the rights of an uninsured or underinsured (UIM) insurance carrier to intervene, deny

liability, and assert defenses of the tortfeasor, even though that tortfeasor may have already

defaulted.2 The majority notes that UIM coverage is first party coverage, and that in those

circumstances the insurer has an independent right to intervene and defend its own

interests/exposure that is not derived from its contractual relationship with the tortfeasor;

whereas, in the instant action, the insurer provides third party coverage for the tortfeasor, where



        2
        Cases cited by the majority include Julian v. Auto. Club Inter-Ins. Exch., 728 S.W.2d 321, 322
(Mo. App. E.D. 1987); and State ex rel. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Craig, 364 S.W.2d 343, 346
(Mo. App. 1963).

                                                   7
its right to defend is derived from its contractual obligation with the tortfeasor. The majority

then cites Schmitz v. Great American Assurance Co., 337 S.W.3d 700 (Mo. banc 2011), for the

premise that, where an insurer refuses to defend its insured against a third party claim, the

insured can then enter into a section 537.065 agreement with the claimant, and thereafter the

insurer “cannot have its cake and eat it too by both refusing coverage and at the same time

continuing to control the terms of settlement in defense of an action it had refused to defend.”

Id. at 710. The majority concludes that because State Farm had refused coverage and then

intervened at a time that its insured had already contracted away its right to contest liability and

damages in the instant action, State Farm could no longer contest liability and damages, because

“nothing in new § 537.065.2…give[s] it broader rights than those possessed by its insured, or

than any other intervenor would possess.” Majority at *16.

        The majority appears to rely on the mistaken proposition that State Farm’s right to

intervene is solely derived from its contractual obligation to indemnify its insured, and, because

it had rejected that relationship, it could not expect to intervene and contest liability after the

insured had already taken actions that compromised the insured’s ability to contest liability and

damages. Tellingly, the majority relies on precedents (such as Schmitz) which interpreted an

insurer’s rights before enactment of the 2017 amendments to section 537.065.2. This ignores the

majority’s own conclusion that “[b]y enacting § 537.065.2, the legislature has declared that,

where the insured has entered into an agreement limiting the assets against which a claimant may

seek recovery, a liability insurance carrier has a sufficient interest in the determination of the

insured’s liability to support the insurer’s intervention in the underlying litigation, as a matter of

right.” Majority at *9.




                                                   8
           The amendments to section 537.065.2 do not just recognize that the insurer has a

“sufficient interest” to intervene; the amendments in fact only allow intervention once the

insured has entered into a section 537.065 agreement, which will have (at very least)

compromised the insured’s interest in disputing liability and damages (by limiting his financial

exposure), which may have (as in the instant action) compromised the insured’s very right to

contest liability and damages in a court of law, and in which (as in the instant action) the insured

and the third party claimant may have agreed to share in damages that might be awarded in a bad

faith action against the insurer. In short, amended section 537.065.2 only allows the insurer the

opportunity to intervene at a time that it has rejected its contractual obligations with its insured,

at a time that its interests are necessarily distinct from its insured, and at time that it may be the

only party that has any interest in contesting liability and damages.

           Yet the majority posits that, by only allowing the insurer to intervene after the insured has

notified it of its execution of a section 537.065 agreement, the legislature intended that the

intervenor must be bound to accept (as its own) the insured’s compromised position regarding

his ability to contest liability and damages. Nothing in section 537.065 expressly limits as such

the liability insurer’s rights upon intervention. The legal precedents cited by the majority do not

limit the right of an intervenor as such, and in fact indicate that, in general, intervenors are not so

limited in asserting their defenses,3 and, specifically, that insurers that provide UIM coverage,

though contesting first party coverage in a separate action, may nevertheless intervene and

defend a claim in spite of the procedural default of the uninsured (or underinsured) tortfeasor.4




3
    See Martin, 360 S.W.3d at 858 n.5, discussed infra.
4
    See Beard, 502 S.W.2d at 419.

                                                          9
        Ironically, having conceded that the 2017 amendments to section 537.065.2 now allow

the insurer an opportunity to intervene that is independent of its contractual obligations with its

insured, the majority cites pre-2017 precedents which indicated that, because an insurer’s interest

in the suit was then solely dependent on its contractual obligation to its insured, such precedents

now limit the scope of the non-contractual (statutory) right of intervention. Put another way, the

majority is, in effect, asserting that, even though the newly enacted right to intervene is not

derived from (and is actually contingent on the rejection of) the contractual relationship with an

insured, the rejection of that contractual relationship now limits the scope of its non-contractual,

statutory right to intervene.

        State Farm sought leave to intervene in the instant personal injury suit before Collin

Knight sought leave to approve the arbitration award. State Farm was then granted leave to

intervene, and subsequently filed its own answer to Collin’s Second Amended Petition

(contesting liability and damages) – all before the circuit court entered its judgment which

confirmed the arbitration award, which set liability damages, and which, in effect, denied State

Farm the opportunity to conduct its discovery and contest liability and damages.5 In seeking to

contest liability and damages, State Farm is not seeking to expand or “broaden” the rights

beyond that of its insured (who has purportedly worked out his own means of establishing

liability, damages, and limiting his own exposure); but is simply asserting its own rights as an

intervenor (independent of its contractual relationship with its inured) to contest liability and

damages, and to thus limit its potential exposure.



        5
          In its motion to vacate the arbitration award, State Farm also challenged the award, citing
several bases set forth under section 435.405, including allegations that the arbitration was not adversely
determined and that it was procured by corruption, fraud, and other undue means. Having been denied
the opportunity to conduct discovery, State Farm was also denied the opportunity to develop these
challenges to the arbitration award.

                                                    10
       In Martin v. Busch, 360 S.W.3d 854 (Mo. App. E.D. 2011), the issue was whether the

wrongful death statute, section 537.080, provided an unconditional right to intervene to all

persons in the class defined by subsection one of section one (spouse, children, and parents of the

deceased). Id. at 856-57. In Martin, the parents of the deceased filed motions to intervene in the

wrongful death action brought by their ex-son-in-law (as guardian of the deceased’s son, their

grandson), as they suspected collusion between their ex-son-in-law and the tortfeasor. Id. at 855.

Around the time of the filing of the motions to intervene, ex-son-in-law (as deceased’s son’s

guardian) filed a motion for approval of a settlement agreement. Id. The circuit court denied the

parents’ motions to intervene, and went ahead and approved the settlement. Id. at 856.

       The Eastern District concluded that while the wrongful death statute does not require the

joinder of all persons identified in that subsection to proceed with a wrongful death suit, if those

persons make a timely attempt to intervene, they are entitled to intervene as a matter of right. Id.

at 857. Given that the motions to intervene were filed within 21 days of the filing of the petition

and before the settlement had been approved by the circuit court, and that the parents had an

absolute right to intervene, the circuit court erroneously applied the law in denying the parents’

motions to intervene. Id. at 858. The case was remanded with an order that the circuit court

allow the parents to intervene and an explanation that upon intervention, the rights and

responsibilities of the parents will be the same as any other party to the litigation. Id. (citing

Beard, 502 S.W.2d at 419).

       Martin did not state that the intervenor parents were required to be bound by the

settlement of their grandson. In fact, it indicated:

       While it is true that an intervenor must accept the action pending as he finds it at
       the time of intervention his rights thereafter are as broad as those of any other
       parties to the action. Having been permitted to become a party in order to better



                                                  11
        protect his interest, an intervenor is allowed to set up his own affirmative cause or
        defense appropriate to the case and his intervention.

Id. at 858 n.5 (citing Beard, 502 S.W.2d at 419). Martin implicitly found that even though a

settlement had been reached between the ex-son-in-law and the defendant, the intervenor parents

did not have to accept the settlement but had every right to question it and to assert their own

“affirmative cause or defense” appropriate to the case. Though no specific statutory language in

the wrongful death statute set out the rights of an intervenor, in Martin the court inferred that

intervenor parents should not be denied the opportunity to intervene in their grandson’s wrongful

death suit in order to litigate liability and damages simply because the grandson’s guardian had

filed the wrongful death suit first and had executed a settlement (though statutorily authorized to

do so). Though the intervenor parents were required to take the case as it stood (with the same

rights and responsibilities of other litigants), they were not bound to the same position/settlement

of those already in the suit. 6

        In Beard v. Jackson, 502 S.W.2d 416 (Mo. App. 1973) (also cited by the majority), even

though the uninsured motorist carrier did not admit its obligation to provide coverage, it was

allowed to intervene in the lawsuit its insured had filed against a third party tortfeasor; and, even

though the third party defendant had been in default, it was allowed to then assert any defenses

that third party could have asserted regarding liability and damages. Id. at 418-19. In Beard, the

plaintiff (first party insured) appealed claiming the insurer should not have been allowed to

intervene and contest liability and damages, as it had failed to confirm its obligation to provide


        6
           I do not suggest (as the majority infers I suggest) that the intervening parents in Martin had a
right to upset an approved settlement in a separate suit, as that would indeed be contrary to the provisions
of sections 537.080.2 and 537.095. Rather, the Martin court reversed the judgment approving the
settlement; allowed intervention in the pending suit; and specifically noted, at footnote 1, that upon
remand the intervening parents could address their claims (including that of collusion) in challenging the
proposed settlement. Martin, 360 S.W.3d at 855 n.1. Similarly, I believe we should reverse the judgment
of the circuit court, and allow State Farm to contest liability and damages in this lawsuit.

                                                    12
UIM coverage; and, that, once allowed to intervene, it should not have been allowed to assert the

defenses that the defaulting third party had already waived. Id. In affirming the trial court,

Beard indicated as follows:

        [W]e hold that [Insurer] established that its representation by defendant [its third
        party tortfeasor] was inadequate and that it might be bound by a judgment in the
        plaintiff’s action…[and] therefore, [Insurer] had a right to intervene [as a matter
        of right]….

        Plaintiff argues that [Insurer] was improperly allowed to raise defenses which
        [third party] defendant…had not raised. This argument mistakes the basic scope
        of intervention. While it is true that an intervenor must accept the action pending
        as he finds it at the time of intervention his rights thereafter are as broad as those
        of any other parties to the action. Having been permitted to become a party in
        order to better protect his interest, an intervenor is allowed to set up his own
        affirmative causes or defense appropriate to the case and his intervention.

Id. at 419.

        In Charles v. Consumers Insurance, 371 S.W.3d 892 (Mo. App. W.D. 2012), we

determined that, even if a UIM insurer initially denied coverage, where it later acknowledges that

coverage may apply and where determination of liability may impair its ability to protect its

interests, it has the right to intervene and need not concede that it will be bound by the judgment:

“Rather, it is the potential for liability under an underinsurance clause that triggers the ‘interest’

recognized by Rule 52.12(a).” Id. at 899 (citing Beard, 502 S.W.2d at 418).

        In Charles, we were very clear that, because the UIM insurer’s right to intervene was a

matter of right under Rule 52.12(a) and was not contingent on its contractual relationship with its

insured, the cases respecting third party liability coverage did not apply:

        [First party UIM insured] cites us to numerous third party liability claim cases
        where courts have held that, by denying coverage, an insurer loses its own right to
        insist on the insured's compliance with the terms of the insurance contract. For
        example, when an insurer denies coverage after the insured has asked that it
        defend him against a lawsuit brought by a third party plaintiff, the insurer loses its
        contractual right to control litigation thereafter. Likewise, even when an insurer
        denies coverage in a first party liability coverage case, it may not thereafter insist

                                                  13
        on performance of a consent clause in the contract, whereby the insured agreed to
        obtain the insurer’s consent before settling with a third party. Those principles
        exist as a function of contract law: the right to control litigation and the right to
        have one’s consent obtained before settling are contractual rights. An insurer
        loses its contractual rights when it breaches the contract by wrongfully denying
        coverage. It would be incongruous to permit an insurer to insist on the insured’s
        strict performance of the contract while itself disavowing any obligations
        thereunder.

        But [the UIM insurer] is not attempting to assert any contractual right. Its right to
        intervene in this situation springs—not from the insurance contract—but from
        Rule 52.12(a). In the third party liability context, the insurer has no interest in the
        lawsuit, because, until judgment against its insured is actually rendered, it is not
        adverse to anyone in the case. In such cases, if the insurer has a right to
        participate in the litigation, it is a contractual right, not a right based on Rule
        52.12(a).
        By contrast, in the uninsured-underinsured motorist first party claim context, the
        insurer immediately steps into the shoes of the alleged uninsured/underinsured
        tortfeasor, and thus its interests are adverse to those of its insured at the time it
        seeks intervention. No reasonable person could deny that one standing in the
        shoes of an alleged tortfeasor has an interest in the litigation.

        Thus, in the third party liability claim context, the fact that an insurer has
        breached its contract by denying coverage is dispositive, for the insurer has no
        interest in the litigation under Rule 52.12(a) and can participate in the litigation
        only pursuant to its contractual right to do so, which evaporated the moment the
        insurer breached the contract.

        But when an insurer actually has an interest under Rule 52.12(a), which, as
        discussed, is typically the case in the uninsured-underinsured motorist first party
        claim context, its right to intervene is absolute. Failure to concede that coverage
        will ultimately apply does not divest the insurer of that interest.

Id. at 900-02 (internal quotes, citations, and explanatory parentheticals omitted).

        The majority argues that, because the rights of the UIM insurer’s intervention to contest

liability and damages is based on a first party insurance contract, they do not apply in examining

the rights of a liability insurer’s right to intervene where that right is based on a third party

contract. In the context of determining the right of intervention based solely on that contract

(before the 2017 amendments to section 537.065), I would agree, as did our court in Charles (in

refusing to apply third party liability insurer precedents when considering whether to deny UIM

                                                  14
insurer intervention). However, where the right of intervention is not derived from the liability

insurer’s contract with its insured, but is instead based on the statutory rights conferred under

amended section 537.065.2, the rights of the intervening liability insurer should be no more or

less than any other intervenor in “any pending lawsuit” (such as the instant action) which

establishes liability and damages adverse to its potential exposure.7 Like the UIM carrier in

Beard, State Farm should be allowed to conduct discovery which not only addresses liability and

damages, but which also addresses the grounds for challenging approval of an arbitration award.

Because the third party insurer’s right of intervention is independent of its relationship with its

insured, and because its interests necessarily diverge from that of its insured in the very limited

time frame in which it is allowed to intervene in “any pending suit” under section 537.065.2, the

insurer is not bound by the contractual settlement, default, or other compromised position its

insured has taken prior to its intervention. Regardless of the means the third-party compromised

their ability to control the determination of liability and damages, be it by default (as in Beard),

be it by direct settlement of liability and damages (as the son’s guardian did in Martin), or be it

by a contractual arrangement to determine damages by arbitration (as the insured did in this

instance), State Farm should have to opportunity “to set up [its] own affirmative cause or defense

appropriate to the case and [its right of] intervention” recognized by the legislature – a right of

intervention allowed by the legislature at a time insurers’ interests are necessarily distinct from



        7  The majority suggests that this interpretation of section 537.065.2 requires divining the intent of
individual legislators in order to allow insurers, like State Farm, to contest liability and damages; and that,
because the statute does not specifically spell out those rights, we cannot confidently interpret such
statutory intent. However, it seems a much more strained interpretation of amended section 537.065 to
conclude (as the majority does) that the legislature allowed such insurers the opportunity to intervene in
“any pending action” in order to do nothing. The majority correctly indicates that “[w]e can only
implement the statute as the General Assembly actually enacted,” but then incorrectly interprets section
537.065.2 in a manner that denies State Farm the right of other similarly situated intervenors.



                                                      15
those of their insureds who have executed a section 537.065 agreement. Martin, 360 S.W.3d at

858 n.5.

        Like the late intervening parents in Martin, and like the intervening UIM carrier in Beard,

State Farm was late to the show and, until granted the statutory right to intervene by the 2017

amendments to section 537.065, was not even allowed to intervene. After the enactment of

section 537.065.2, like the parents in Martin, and like the UIM carrier in Beard, State Farm’s late

arrival does not deny it the opportunity to intervene (in the narrow 30-day window). Like those

similarly situated intervenors, State Farm is entitled to assert its interests, which could include

challenging liability and damages. For these reasons, I would reverse the trial court’s judgment

confirming the arbitration award and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this

opinion.8


                                                 /s/Thomas N. Chapman
                                                 Thomas N. Chapman, Judge




        8
          The majority’s reliance on Britt v. Otto, 577 S.W.3d 133 (Mo. App. W.D. 2019), and Aguilar v.
GEICO Casualty, Co., 588 S.W.3d 195 (Mo. App. W.D. 2019), as a limitation on State Farm’s rights
upon intervention, is misplaced. Both cases are inapposite, as they involved situations where the insured
had sought to intervene more than 30 days after having been notified of the parties’ execution of a section
537.065 agreement, and in both cases our court refused to extend to the third party an unconditional right
to intervene before judgment had been entered. Neither Britt nor Aguilar addressed the rights of a third
party insurer who has successfully intervened within the narrow window recognized under amended
section 537.065.2.

                                                    16
