Progressive Insurance Co. v. Simmons

953 P.2d 510, 1998 Alas. LEXIS 25, 1998 WL 66132
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1998
DocketS-7617
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 953 P.2d 510 (Progressive Insurance Co. v. Simmons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Progressive Insurance Co. v. Simmons, 953 P.2d 510, 1998 Alas. LEXIS 25, 1998 WL 66132 (Ala. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

In this appeal, we must decide whether recent statutory amendments expanding the scope of underinsured motorist coverage also impliedly repealed a facially unaltered statutory definition of “underinsured motor vehicle,” which narrowly restricts the circumstances triggering underinsured motorist coverage. We conclude that implied repeal must be found.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

The parties do not dispute the relevant facts. Fifteen-year-old Teisha Simmons suffered serious injuries in a single-car accident near Galena in 1992; Simmons was a passenger at the time. The car’s driver was insured under an automobile insurance policy with Progressive Northwestern Insurance Company (Progressive). The policy provided liability coverage for bodily injury in the amounts of $50,000 per person and $100,000 per accident, as well as uninsured motorists (UM)/underinsured motorists (UIM) protection in like amounts. For purposes of the policy’s UIM coverage, Simmons was deemed to be an insured person.

Simmons’s bodily injuries resulted in damages totaling more than $100,000. Through her mother, Simmons sought separate payments of policy limits from Progressive under both the liability and UIM policies. 1 Progressive tendered payment of policy limits under the liability portion of the policy but denied Simmons’s UIM benefits claim. Simmons and Progressive agreed to a partial settlement, pursuant to which Simmons accepted policy limits under the liability coverage, while reserving the right to litigate her UIM claim through a superior court action.

The parties eventually filed cross-motions for summary judgment on the UIM claim. Superior Court Judge John Reese granted Simmons’s motion, finding that Simmons was entitled to recover UIM payments in addition to the liability payments she had already received. The court entered judgment against Progressive for the full single-person limit of the UIM policy.

Progressive appeals the superior court’s determination that Simmons is entitled to UIM benefits.

III.DISCUSSION

A. Standard of Review

This appeal involves questions of statutory construction, which we resolve de novo by applying our independent judgment. See Deal v. Kearney, 851 P.2d 1353, 1356 n. 4 (Alaska 1993). In so doing, we have a “duty ... to adopt the rule of law that is most persuasive in light of precedent, reason, and policy.” Gain v. Ha, 591 P.2d 1281, 1284 n. 6 (Alaska 1979).

B. Did Simmons’s Accident Involve an “Underinsured Motor Vehicle" as that Term Was Defined in Former AS S8.20.US(h)?

Progressive asserts that the car Simmons was riding in when she was injured was not underinsured. Progressive further asserts that involvement of an underinsured motor vehicle is necessary to trigger UIM coverage. *513 Accordingly, in Progressive’s view, Simmons had no right to UIM payments. 2

Under AS 21.89.020(c), insurance companies writing automobile liability policies in Alaska must offer coverage for damages caused by drivers of “uninsured or underin-sured motor vehicles.” Here, as we have already indicated, it is undisputed that Simmons was an “insured person” under a Progressive policy providing liability and UIM coverage with $50,000/$100,000 per person/per accident limits.

To determine whether the car was an “un-derinsured motor vehicle,” we turn to former AS 28.20.445(h), which was in effect at the time of Simmons’s accident. This subsection defined the term to mean a car with liability coverage for bodily injury in an amount that

(1) is less than the limit for ... underin-sured motorists coverage under the insured’s policy; or
(2) has been reduced by payments to persons other than an insured, injured in an accident, to less than the limit for ... underinsured motorists coverage under the insured’s policy. 3

Under this definition, Simmons’s accident did not involve an underinsured motor vehicle: subparagraph (1) does not apply to Simmons, since the limits of Progressive’s liability coverage were equal to, not “less than,” those of its UIM coverage; subparagraph (2) likewise does not apply, since the only payment reducing the liability coverage available to Simmons was the payment to Simmons herself — an insured person under the policy rather than a “person[] other than an insured.” If this definition governed Simmons’s ease, Simmons would not have suffered damages caused by the driver of an underinsured motor vehicle; hence, her right to UIM benefits would never have been triggered.

C.' Did the 1990 Revision of the Uninsured and Underinsured Motorists Statute, AS 28.20M5(a) and (b), Impliedly Repeal the Definition of “Un-derinsured Motor Vehicle” in AS 28.20.U5(h)?

'While Simmons does not dispute that the car she was riding in would fad to qualify as an “[ujnderinsured motor vehicle” within the meaning of AS 28.20.445(h), she nonetheless insists that she was entitled to UIM coverage. Specifically, Simmons contend^ that changes to the UIM statute enacted by the Alaska Legislature in 1990 impliedly repealed subsection (h)’s definition of underin-sured motor vehicle.

1. Background of statutory changes

Before we address the particulars of Simmons’s implied repeal argument and Progressive’s response, it is appropriate to describe briefly the 1990 amendments and the law governing UIM coverage prior to their enactment.

*514 Alaska law formerly took a narrow approach to the compensation of those injured by underinsured motorists by adopting a “reduction” scheme of UIM coverage. As originally adopted in 1984, AS 28.20.445(a) and (b) fixed the maximum amount of an insurer’s liability on any given UIM policy by subtracting from the UIM policy limits any amount paid or payable to the insured from other sources, including liability coverage. 4 By subtracting from UIM policy limits all other payments, these provisions rendered UIM coverage superfluous to the extent of coverage under any liability policy. This narrow reduction approach thus precluded an injured person from combining, or “stacking,” liability and UIM coverages, even when neither coverage alone would fully pay the person’s damages.

In 1990, the Alaska Legislature considered CSHB 429, a proposal to broaden UIM coverage by substituting an “excess” approach for the original reduction approach. This broader approach sought to compensate the injured person for actual damages sustained in an accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
953 P.2d 510, 1998 Alas. LEXIS 25, 1998 WL 66132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/progressive-insurance-co-v-simmons-alaska-1998.