GILLETTE, P. J.
This is a personal injury case in which plaintiff, the victim of an automobile accident, and a liability insurance company dispute whether and to what extent the company, in paying a settlement to plaintiff, may offset either (1) the amount it has already advanced to plaintiff or (2) the amount it has reimbursed plaintiffs own insurer for personal injury protection (PIP) benefits. The trial court held that the advances could be offset, but the PIP reimbursement could not. Both parties appeal. We affirm.
Plaintiff was seriously injured when his car collided with one driven by defendant Weigandt. Plaintiff received personal injury protection (PIP) benefits of $11,931.15 from Fireman’s Fund, his insurance company. He received an additional $8,683.84 from defendant United Services Automobile Association (USAA), Weigandt’s liability insurer, as advance payments under ORS 18.500
et seq.
Both the PIP benefits and the advance payments were for his medical expenses and lost wages. Fireman’s Fund demanded reimbursement of its PIP payments from USAA pursuant to ORS 743.825(1); USAA concedes its liability for the reimbursement. Plaintiff sued Weigandt for his damages, including the medical expenses and lost wages covered by the payments and substantial general damages. The parties ultimately agreed to settle the case for USAA’s policy limits of $100,000, but they were unable to agree whether USAA’s advance payments to plaintiff or its PIP reimbursement liability to Fireman’s Fund apply to reduce those policy limits. USAA therefore paid plaintiff $79,385.01, the amount of its liability limits less the disputed amounts, and USAA and plaintiff stipulated that the court could decide USAA’s liability for the rest. Plaintiff accepted the payment and the stipulation as a satisfaction of his claim against Weigandt. From the stipulation it appears that plaintiffs general damages alone are at least equal to USAA’s policy limits. The trial court held that USAA was entitled to offset the advance payments against its policy limits but that it could not do so with the PIP reimbursement. After the court ruled, USAA was added as a defendant. It appeals the denial of the offset for the PIP reimbursement; plaintiff cross-appeals the granting of the offset for the advance payments.
While the two issues presented by this case are straightforward, the statutory scheme under which they must
be resolved is not. We turn first to examine that scheme. There are three ways by which a PIP insurer can recover its PIP payments from the negligent party or the negligent party’s insurer: interinsurer reimbursement under ORS 743.825;
a lien under ORS 743.828;
and subrogation under
ORS 743.830.
See State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company v. Sommerholder, supra,
n 1. Both the lien and
subrogation statutes specifically provide for the PIP insurer to recover its payments from either a settlement or a judgment and, under both, the liability insurer will pay no more than its policy limits. ORS 743.825, in contrast, has no provision covering these subjects, and ORS 18.510,
which allows a liability insurer to apply its PIP reimbursement to reduce a
judgment
entered against its insured, does not mention a
settlement.
USAA and
amicus
Oregon Association of Defense Counsel argue that it is implicit in the legislative purpose and the statutory scheme that a liability insurer’s PIP reimbursement is within liability limits in a settlement as well as in a judgment. USAA essentially asks us to rewrite 18.510(2) to comply with this supposed legislative purpose. We decline to do so. The only legislative purpose we discern is that of preventing the injured party from receiving payments from the PIP insurer and the negligent party’s insurer which together are greater than the injured party’s damages. The legislature amended the PIP statutes in 1975; in the same act it-amended ORS 18.510 to provide a method for applying the PIP reimbursement directly to a judgment against the insured. The change and the problems addressed were explained as follows:
“[ORS 743.835] in the existing law was intended to prevent double recovery by the injured person from a liability insurer on his own uninsured motorist policy in addition to the PIP or health insurance benefits he received. Various problems in connection with this section are believed to be taken care of in section 8,9 and 14 of the 1975 Act. Thus, only the case of the coexistent payments from the uninsured motorist and PIP provisions of the injured person’s policy need be treated in this amended section.” (Minutes, House Committee on Labor & Business Affairs, April 22, 1975, Exhibit H, page 6).
This explanation focuses entirely on preventing the injured party from receiving a double recovery. It does not claim to resolve a case, such as this one, when the total of the liability limits and the PIP payments is less than the injured party’s damages and there is no danger of a double recovery.
We note that, although there is no legal basis for applying PIP reimbursement to the liability limits before a judgment, reimbursement will still as a practical matter be considered during settlement negotiations. Whether or not the legislature intended this result, it has provided a method to apply PIP reimbursement against the insurer’s policy limits in a settlement context. Understanding how it did so requires a closer look at the three methods by which a PIP insurer may obtain reimbursement and at the role the liability insurer
plays in each of those methods. We first consider the lien and subrogation procedures and then examine interinsurer reimbursement. The results for all parties may vary significantly, depending on which procedure is used.
Under ORS 743.828, a PIP insurer may assert a lien against the injured person’s recovery.
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GILLETTE, P. J.
This is a personal injury case in which plaintiff, the victim of an automobile accident, and a liability insurance company dispute whether and to what extent the company, in paying a settlement to plaintiff, may offset either (1) the amount it has already advanced to plaintiff or (2) the amount it has reimbursed plaintiffs own insurer for personal injury protection (PIP) benefits. The trial court held that the advances could be offset, but the PIP reimbursement could not. Both parties appeal. We affirm.
Plaintiff was seriously injured when his car collided with one driven by defendant Weigandt. Plaintiff received personal injury protection (PIP) benefits of $11,931.15 from Fireman’s Fund, his insurance company. He received an additional $8,683.84 from defendant United Services Automobile Association (USAA), Weigandt’s liability insurer, as advance payments under ORS 18.500
et seq.
Both the PIP benefits and the advance payments were for his medical expenses and lost wages. Fireman’s Fund demanded reimbursement of its PIP payments from USAA pursuant to ORS 743.825(1); USAA concedes its liability for the reimbursement. Plaintiff sued Weigandt for his damages, including the medical expenses and lost wages covered by the payments and substantial general damages. The parties ultimately agreed to settle the case for USAA’s policy limits of $100,000, but they were unable to agree whether USAA’s advance payments to plaintiff or its PIP reimbursement liability to Fireman’s Fund apply to reduce those policy limits. USAA therefore paid plaintiff $79,385.01, the amount of its liability limits less the disputed amounts, and USAA and plaintiff stipulated that the court could decide USAA’s liability for the rest. Plaintiff accepted the payment and the stipulation as a satisfaction of his claim against Weigandt. From the stipulation it appears that plaintiffs general damages alone are at least equal to USAA’s policy limits. The trial court held that USAA was entitled to offset the advance payments against its policy limits but that it could not do so with the PIP reimbursement. After the court ruled, USAA was added as a defendant. It appeals the denial of the offset for the PIP reimbursement; plaintiff cross-appeals the granting of the offset for the advance payments.
While the two issues presented by this case are straightforward, the statutory scheme under which they must
be resolved is not. We turn first to examine that scheme. There are three ways by which a PIP insurer can recover its PIP payments from the negligent party or the negligent party’s insurer: interinsurer reimbursement under ORS 743.825;
a lien under ORS 743.828;
and subrogation under
ORS 743.830.
See State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company v. Sommerholder, supra,
n 1. Both the lien and
subrogation statutes specifically provide for the PIP insurer to recover its payments from either a settlement or a judgment and, under both, the liability insurer will pay no more than its policy limits. ORS 743.825, in contrast, has no provision covering these subjects, and ORS 18.510,
which allows a liability insurer to apply its PIP reimbursement to reduce a
judgment
entered against its insured, does not mention a
settlement.
USAA and
amicus
Oregon Association of Defense Counsel argue that it is implicit in the legislative purpose and the statutory scheme that a liability insurer’s PIP reimbursement is within liability limits in a settlement as well as in a judgment. USAA essentially asks us to rewrite 18.510(2) to comply with this supposed legislative purpose. We decline to do so. The only legislative purpose we discern is that of preventing the injured party from receiving payments from the PIP insurer and the negligent party’s insurer which together are greater than the injured party’s damages. The legislature amended the PIP statutes in 1975; in the same act it-amended ORS 18.510 to provide a method for applying the PIP reimbursement directly to a judgment against the insured. The change and the problems addressed were explained as follows:
“[ORS 743.835] in the existing law was intended to prevent double recovery by the injured person from a liability insurer on his own uninsured motorist policy in addition to the PIP or health insurance benefits he received. Various problems in connection with this section are believed to be taken care of in section 8,9 and 14 of the 1975 Act. Thus, only the case of the coexistent payments from the uninsured motorist and PIP provisions of the injured person’s policy need be treated in this amended section.” (Minutes, House Committee on Labor & Business Affairs, April 22, 1975, Exhibit H, page 6).
This explanation focuses entirely on preventing the injured party from receiving a double recovery. It does not claim to resolve a case, such as this one, when the total of the liability limits and the PIP payments is less than the injured party’s damages and there is no danger of a double recovery.
We note that, although there is no legal basis for applying PIP reimbursement to the liability limits before a judgment, reimbursement will still as a practical matter be considered during settlement negotiations. Whether or not the legislature intended this result, it has provided a method to apply PIP reimbursement against the insurer’s policy limits in a settlement context. Understanding how it did so requires a closer look at the three methods by which a PIP insurer may obtain reimbursement and at the role the liability insurer
plays in each of those methods. We first consider the lien and subrogation procedures and then examine interinsurer reimbursement. The results for all parties may vary significantly, depending on which procedure is used.
Under ORS 743.828, a PIP insurer may assert a lien against the injured person’s recovery. If it does so, it is entitled to recover from a judgment
or
settlement in favor of the injured party the amount of its PIP payments, less its proportional share of the cost of achieving the judgment or settlement. Because of the PIP insurer’s lien, there will be no double recovery; the injured party will only be reimbursed once for expenses that PIP covers. Because the PIP insurer deals only with the injured party, the liability insurer will be at no greater risk of having to pay in excess of its policy limits than in any other case. Indeed, the existence of a liability insurer is irrelevant to the lien under ORS 743.828; the lien extends to everything the injured party actually collects, whether the source is a liability insurer, the negligent party directly or both. The PIP insurer does not have any legally provided role in the settlement negotiations or the trial, nor does it need one. The injured party and the injured party’s attorney have full control of the case and the insurer, through its lien, rides piggy-back — not shotgun — on their efforts.
If the PIP insurer asserts its subrogation right under ORS 743.830, the result is similar. The insurer is again entitled to the proceeds of any settlement or judgment to the extent of its PIP payments, subject to its proportional share of the cost of recovery. The injured person must also take reasonable steps to produce a recovery for the PIP insurer. The injured party will recover only once for PIP-covered losses, and the liability insurer will not normally pay beyond its policy limits.
In contrast to the foregoing procedures, direct reimbursement from the negligent driver’s liability insurer as provided in ORS 743.825 follows significantly different procedures, whose differences are not limited to its effect on the liability insurer’s policy limits. The injured party plays no role in this method; all disputes between the insurers, including liability and the amount of reimbursement due, are resolved by arbitration. The liability insurer’s obligation is directly to the PIP insurer and is for the full amount of the PIP paid,
reduced in proportion to the injured party’s fault rather than to the cost of the recovery. The provisions of ORS 18.510 prevent double recoveries: the interinsurer reimbursement, reduced in proportion to the injured party’s comparative fault, is credited on a judgment against the negligent driver. The amount of reimbursement under ORS 743.825 will only coincidentally be the same as the amount the PIP insurer will recover under the other methods.
The statute does not explain the effect of the amount credited against the judgment on the liability insurer’s policy limits. It is even possible that, in applying the statutory formula, the amount credited against the judgment will be less than the amount of the reimbursement.
However, the practical workings of the tort system and the wording of liability insurance policies show how insurers may achieve the results USAA hoped to achieve in this case.
USAA’s policy, a typical liability insurance policy, includes a promise to pay damages for which its insured “becomes legally responsible because of an auto accident.”
The insured’s legal responsibility, of course, cannot be determined until a judgment is entered or there is a binding settlement. Thus, when the liability insurer reimburses the PIP insurer before a judgment or settlement, it is not paying anything under the policy. Rather, it is discharging a direct obligation which ORS 743.825 places on the liability insurer; the
company,
not the insured, is legally responsible for the amount paid. After the insured’s legal responsibility is determined by a judgment, the company, by complying with the requirements of ORS 18.510, may use its PIP reimbursement payment to reduce its insured’s liability. At that time, the insured receives a benefit from the PIP payments, because they then reduce a liability for which the insured is legally responsible. USAA will have paid under the policy and, thus, be entitled to a reduction of its policy limits corresponding to the amount credited on the judgment.
There is no need for a direct credit against the policy limits during settlement negotiations, and the legislature did not need to provide one. Parties negotiating a settlement do so with an eye to what they could gain from a trial. If the plaintiff knows that the maximum the insurer will have to pay after a judgment is its policy limits less a credit for its PIP reimbursement, the plaintiff will necessarily lower its sights by what it expects the amount of the credit to be, and the insurer will likewise treat its limits for settlement purposes as being reduced by the amount it expects the credit to be.
The reason for the differences between this situation and the lien/subrogation situation is that, in the latter, the PIP insurer must rely on the injured party’s success in the tort system for its reimbursement and is unable to deal with the liability insurer
directly. Without a right to share in any recovery whatever, by whatever means it is obtained, the PIP insurer may be left out in the cold. In the interinsurer reimbursement situation, the PIP insurer does not need to rely on the plaintiff or on the tort system. After the reimbursement, the PIP insurer is out of the picture, and the proper treatment of the reimbursement for settlement purposes can safely be left to the injured party and the liability insurer.
In this case, the parties did not negotiate a settlement in the light of USAA’s right to apply its payment against any judgment. Instead, they presented to the trial court the bald issue of whether USAA’s reimbursement to Fireman’s Fund legally reduces the policy limits without a judgment. In doing so, they asked the court to solve a matter the legislature implicitly left to them alone. Because (1) USAA’s policy commits it to pay whatever its
insured
becomes liable to pay up to its policy limits, (2) before a judgment, its reimbursement of the PIP carrier is not in law a payment of the insured’s liability, and (3) the amount that will be applicable to a judgment may not yet be known, USAA is not entitled to a pre-judgment credit for that reimbursement. The trial court was correct in holding that USAA owes plaintiff the amount of the PIP payments.
USAA argues that this result produces a classification with no rational connection to any legitimate legislative purpose and thus violates the Equal Privileges standards of Article 1, section 20, of the Oregon Constitution and the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. USAA did not raise this argument below, and we do not consider it. We note, however, that in an area of pure economic regulation the legislature has considerable leeway and that the rationality of its actions need only be minimal.
See Williamson v. Lee Optical of Oklahoma, Inc.,
348 US 483, 75 S Ct 461, 99 L Ed 563 (1955);
see also City of Klamath Falls v. Winters,
289 Or 757, 619 P2d 217 (1980).
The issue on plaintiffs cross-appeal is whether USAA may offset the advance payments it made to plaintiff against its policy limits. Advance payments are defined as “compensation for the injury or death of a person or the injury or destruction of property prior to determination of legal
liability therefor.” ORS 18.500. ORS 18.510(1) provides a method for crediting advance payments on the judgment which is similar to the method for crediting PIP reimbursement, except that there is no reduction for the injured party’s comparative fault. ORS 18.510(3)(a). There is, however, a crucial distinction between the two kinds of payments. Advance payments are prepayments
on the defendant’s liability,
made by the defendant’s liability insurer directly to the injured party. They are voluntary on the insurer’s part, and no insurer would make them if they did not apply against its policy limits. By making them, USAA has not reduced its liability or its insured’s liability but has paid part of that liability before a judgment. They are thus directly applicable to its policy limits before or after judgment. The trial court was correct in denying plaintiff recovery for that amount.
Affirmed.