Garrow v. Pennsylvania General Insurance

603 P.2d 1175, 288 Or. 215, 1979 Ore. LEXIS 1224
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1979
DocketA7707-09382, CA 11092, SC 26267
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 603 P.2d 1175 (Garrow v. Pennsylvania General Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garrow v. Pennsylvania General Insurance, 603 P.2d 1175, 288 Or. 215, 1979 Ore. LEXIS 1224 (Or. 1979).

Opinion

*217 HOLMAN, J.

This is a proceeding for a declaratory judgment that defendant insurance company’s policy of automobile liability insurance provides plaintiff with hospital, medical, and disability benefits (known in the trade as PIP coverage). The trial court ruled that defendant’s policy provided no such coverage for plaintiff. The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that the policy did provide coverage. 40 Or App 23, 594 P2d 415 (1979). This court granted review.

Plaintiff is the son of Paul Garrow, who is the named insured under defendant’s policy. The issue is whether the provisions of ORS 743.800 provide plaintiff with PIP coverage under his father’s policy. The statute provides:

"Every motor vehicle liability policy issued for delivery in this state that covers any private passenger motor vehicle other than a motorcycle shall provide to the person insured thereunder and members of his family residing in the same household injured in a motor vehicle accident, passengers injured while occupying the insured motor vehicle and pedestrians struck by the insured motor vehicle, the following hospital, medical, disability and funeral benefits for each accident:
"* * * * (Emphasis added.)

The liability policy issued to plaintiff’s father covered a private passenger motor vehicle registered to the father. Plaintiff was injured while riding his own motorcycle. At the time of his injury he was married and had a child. Plaintiff and his wife and child were living with his parents, and plaintiff was paying his parents $100 per month for room and board, which amount was inadequate to cover such expenses. Apparently, plaintiff had married about the time he went into the armed forces and he and his wife moved in with his parents. The only separate household he ever established with his wife was in California while he was in basic training there. Upon his separation from the service he did not secure a job and the *218 monthly payments to his parents came out of unemployment compensation.

Two contentions are made by defendant in its petition for review: (1) There was no PIP coverage because plaintiff was riding upon a motorcycle at the time of his accident, which was not a vehicle covered by his father’s liability insurance; and (2) plaintiff was not a member of his father’s family residing in his father’s household.

Assuming for the moment that plaintiff was a member of his father’s family residing in his father’s household, the Court of Appeals properly decided that the statute provided coverage despite plaintiff’s being injured while riding a motorcycle not covered by the policy. To paraphrase the statute, the liability policy covered a "private passenger motor vehicle other than a motorcycle” belonging to plaintiff’s father, the named insured. In addition, plaintiff was injured in "a motor vehicle accident,” in that a motor vehicle is defined by ORS 743.800 as "a self-propelled land motor vehicle or trailer” with certain exceptions not applicable here. By definition, a motorcycle is a motor vehicle under the statute. The exclusion of motorcycles which appears in the statute does not disqualify plaintiff from PIP coverage because it refers only to the kind of vehicle covered by liability insurance and is not a limitation upon the kind of vehicle in which one must be injured in order to have PIP coverage. There is no prerequisite to PIP coverage for members of the named insured’s family residing in his household that they be injured while occupants of or having anything to do with an insured vehicle. Persons who were passengers in an insured vehicle also have PIP coverage by another provision of the statute, and the family-member-residing-in-the-household provision would have been unnecessary and surplusage if one seeking coverage under the provision were also required to be an occupant of an insured vehicle.

*219 Defendant argues as follows:

"The statute, ORS 743.800, says that as to the owner of a motorcycle, even if he carries liability insurance, neither the owner, nor any member of his family, nor anyone using the motorcycle with his permission, is provided the mandatory PIP (Personal Injury Protection).
"It would indeed be strange that the legislature would have intended to permit such coverage by some indirect means, having barred it by any direct means.”

Defendant’s assumption is not necessarily correct. If the policy covers a private passenger vehicle other than a motorcycle (and it does), there is nothing in the statute which limits PIP coverage for a member of the named insured’s family living in his household except that the injury be suffered in a motor vehicle accident (which it was). If these qualifications are met, plaintiff is covered whether he is injured while riding his own, his father’s or someone else’s motorcycle, and it makes no difference whether such motorcycle is covered by liability insurance or not. The statute can be construed to mean only that if the liability policy is issued upon a motorcycle alone, there will be no PIP coverage under it for anyone. While the reasons for making such distinctions in a statute are obscure and are not within our knowledge, they could be so varied and peculiar to the insurance industry that we cannot conclude, as defendant does, that it brings about an irrational state of affairs.

Defendant argues that because the policy issued by it contains the following provision, plaintiff is excluded from coverage:

"This insurance does not apply:

"* * *(f) bodily injury sustained by a relative while occupying any automobile [an automobile is defined by the policy to include a motorcycle] owned by such relative * * * and not insured for Oregon Personal Injury Protection benefits.”

*220 There is no provision of the statute which permits such language in PIP coverage. Defendant asserts, however, that this provision has been approved by the Insurance Commissioner for inclusion in policies issued pursuant to the statute. He argues that such approval necessarily involves a construction by the Commissioner that the statute does not require PIP coverage in a situation covered by the quoted language. The answer to this contention is that the language of the statute cannot be logically construed in this manner, and it is the words of the statute, not the provisions of the policy or the Commissioner’s construction, which prevail. Peterson v. State Farm Ins. Co., 238 Or 106, 393 P2d 651 (1964).

The remaining issue is whether plaintiff was a member of his father’s family, residing in his father’s household, as required by the statute. 1 There is no dispute in the evidence relative to this problem.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
603 P.2d 1175, 288 Or. 215, 1979 Ore. LEXIS 1224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrow-v-pennsylvania-general-insurance-or-1979.