Allstate Insurance Co. v. Wyoming Insurance Department

672 P.2d 810, 1983 Wyo. LEXIS 387
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1983
Docket83-52
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 672 P.2d 810 (Allstate Insurance Co. v. Wyoming Insurance Department) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allstate Insurance Co. v. Wyoming Insurance Department, 672 P.2d 810, 1983 Wyo. LEXIS 387 (Wyo. 1983).

Opinions

ROSE, Justice.

On February 11, 1983 the district court affirmed administrative orders of the hearing officer for the Wyoming Insurance Department dated December 13, 1982 and December 28, 1982. The hearing officer’s decisions upheld and affirmed an earlier order of the Wyoming Insurance Department which, on May 25, 1982, had the effect of withdrawing— for compulsory-insurance compliance purposes — the insurance commissioner’s pri- or approval of all automobile liability-policy forms containing what is known in the insurance business as the “household exclusion clause.” The policy forms in question contain household-exclusion language which excepts coverage from any loss to any insured or any spouse, relative or member of the family of an insured residing in the same household as the insured. It is stipulated that the exclusion clauses in the policies encompass persons who fall outside of and are in addition to the husband-and-wife, and parent-and-child categories, for which some courts have held that common-law immunity has traditionally existed. The hearing officer in his order of December 13, 1982, found and concluded that the household-exclusion clauses contained in the appellant insurance companies’ liability policies are not excepted by statute.1 He went on to reason that the policies therefore violate the plain language of the statutes and the public policy of the state of Wyoming as that language and public policy are contained in the compulsory insurance statute, § 31-4-120, W.S.1977, 1983 Cum.Supp., when the motor vehicle safety responsibility act, § 31-9-101, et seq., W.S.1977, (hereinafter referred to as the financial responsibility law), the compulsory insurance statute, § 31-4-120, supra, and the uninsured motor vehicles act, § 31-10-101, et seq., W.S.1977, are considered together.

The December 13 order made reference to the fact that the legislature, under the compulsory insurance statute, had directed that all motor vehicle owners in the state who operate or permit the operation of a motor vehicle must have an acceptable bond in effect or be insured against bodily-injury and property-damage liability. The automobile liability-insurance provision of § 31-4-120(a), W.S.1977, says:

“(a) No owner of a motor vehicle required to be licensed shall operate or permit the operation of the vehicle without having in full force and effect an automobile liability policy as provided by W.S. 31-9-403 * * *.”2

The hearing officer found that the household-exclusion clause had the effect of eliminating the minimum liability security [812]*812which is mandated by § 31-9-405(b)(ii) and § 31-9-102(a)(x), W.S.1977 of the financial responsibility law and § 31-10-101 of the uninsured motor vehicles act,3 and, to the extent of such minimum coverage, was void for any purposes contemplated by the compulsory insurance statute.4 The rule of Aim v. Hartford Fire Insurance Company, Wyo., 369 P.2d 216 (1962), to which the hearing officer had reference, supra n. 4, holds that the parties have the right to embody in their insurance contracts whatever lawful terms they wish. It was his judgment that the companies remained free to include in their policies any such provisions as were not inconsistent with the public policy and the statutes of the state of Wyoming.

In response, it is the contention of the appellant insurance companies that there is in fact an exception to Wyoming’s compulsory-insurance mandate which is made applicable through the provisions of § 31-9-405(b)(ii) and (c), supra n. 3, and the uninsured motor vehicles act, § 31-10-101, supra. These statutes provide in relevant part that the vehicle owner’s policy of liability insurance need only insure the named and other insureds “against [or from] loss from the liability imposed by law,” and that policies containing the household exclusionary clauses do in fact furnish the required coverage.

The insurance companies reason this way:

When the compulsory insurance statute (§ 31-4-120(a)) speaks of the automobile owner being possessed of such a public liability policy as is contemplated by § 31-9-403, supra n. 2, of the financial responsibility law, the legislature intended that the liability policy need only contain such cover[813]*813age as is envisioned by the financial responsibility law taken as a whole, including § 31 — 9—405(b)(ii) and (c) of that act (supra, n. 3), as well as the language of the uninsured motor vehicles act, and that any exclusions which are there contained and applicable to these provisions of the statute are, therefore, applicable to the compulsory insurance statute. It follows — say the appellants — that, if insurance policies containing the household exclusion are acceptable to the financial responsibility law and the uninsured motor vehicles act, they are, therefore, certifiable for compulsory — insurance purposes. This conclusion is reached through a course of logic which goes like this: Since this court has adopted the intra-family and inter-spousal immunity doctrine,5 the same policies which contained the household exclusionary clauses and were satisfactory for all purposes under the financial responsibility law and uninsured motor vehicles act, are also adequate for purposes of complying with the compulsory insurance statute for the reason that there is no possibility of “loss from the liability imposed by law” under either the financial responsibility law or the uninsured motor vehicles act as regards these family-household categories of individuals.

It follows, say the appellant companies, that the household-exclusion clauses of the policies are compatible with this court’s immunity decisions and, therefore, with the public policy announced in the compulsory insurance statute.

The insurance companies identify these following issues for our appellate consideration:

“I. DOES THE FAMILY EXCLUSION CLAUSE VIOLATE THE PUBLIC POLICY OF THE STATE OF WYOMING AS EMBODIED IN THE MOTOR VEHICLE SAFETY-RESPONSIBILITY ACT?
“II. DOES THE FAMILY EXCLUSION CLAUSE VIOLATE THE PUBLIC POLICY OF THE STATE OF WYOMING AS EMBODIED IN THE COMPULSORY INSURANCE STATUTE? “HI. DOES THE FAMILY EXCLUSION CLAUSE VIOLATE THE PUBLIC POLICY OF THE STATE OF WYOMING AS EMBODIED IN THE UNINSURED MOTORIST ACT?”

We perceive the main issue for decision to be more succinctly stated as follows:

Does the “loss from the liability imposed by law” language of the financial responsibility law and the uninsured motor vehicles act constitute an exception to the minimum coverage mandated by the compulsory insurance statute?

For purposes of this opinion, we agree with the insurance companies that all relevant provisions of both the financial responsibility law and the uninsured motor vehicles act must be considered together when ascertaining the public policy which has been announced by the legislature through the enactment of the compulsory insurance statute. This means that the “liability imposed by law” language of both the financial responsibility law and the uninsured motor vehicles act must be taken into account when attempting to identify the public policy contained in the compulsory law.

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Bluebook (online)
672 P.2d 810, 1983 Wyo. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allstate-insurance-co-v-wyoming-insurance-department-wyo-1983.