Safeco Insurance v. Laskey

985 P.2d 878, 162 Or. App. 1, 1999 Ore. App. LEXIS 1271
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 14, 1999
Docket16-97-09054; CA A101540
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 985 P.2d 878 (Safeco Insurance v. Laskey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Safeco Insurance v. Laskey, 985 P.2d 878, 162 Or. App. 1, 1999 Ore. App. LEXIS 1271 (Or. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

*3 HASELTON, J.

Defendant, Laskey (insured), appeals from the trial court’s judgment in favor of her insurer, Safeco of Illinois (Safeco), on cross-motions for summary judgment, declaring that insured was not entitled to recover underinsured motorist (UIM) benefits from Safeco for damages sustained in an auto accident, and dismissing her counterclaims. The trial court concluded that insured was precluded from litigating liability for the underlying accident because she had previously (and unsuccessfully) litigated that issue in a third-party action. We conclude that the trial court correctly applied issue preclusion and, particularly, correctly construed ORS 742.504(l)(b). Accordingly, we affirm.

On appeal, the material facts are undisputed: On March 19,1995, insured and her two sons were injured in an auto collision with a third party, Grange. Insured had a Safeco auto policy that included $10,000 in personal injury protection (PIP) coverage and $60,000 in UIM/UM coverage. Grange was insured under a policy with State Farm Insurance, with liability limits of $50,000.

On April 17,1996, insured filed a negligence action against Grange, seeking $24,000 in economic damages and $100,000 in noneconomic damages. Grange answered, alleging that the accident was the result of insured’s negligence. Ultimately, in December 1996, a jury determined that Grange was 39 percent at fault and insured was 61 percent at fault, and the court entered judgment for Grange.

In January 1997, insured made a claim for UIM benefits under her Safeco policy. Insured asserted that the judgment against her in the action with Grange was not binding with respect to her claim for UIM benefits from Safeco and, therefore, she was entitled to relitigate the issue of liability and damages to determine her entitlement to UIM benefits. Safeco denied that claim and, on September 30, 1997, filed this action against insured, seeking a declaration that its denial was proper and that it had no duty to arbitrate. Safeco contended, inter alia, that its denial of UIM benefits was proper because insured was barred by issue preclusion from relitigating the “issue of whether [she was] legally entitled to *4 recover [damages] from Grange, the alleged underinsured motor[ist, because the issue] already [had] been litigated to a final judgment.” 1

Insured answered, asserting, in part, that under ORS 742.504(l)(b), she was not barred from relitigating the issue of liability in her claim for UIM coverage with Safeco— that is, that the statute effectively precluded the insurer’s invocation of issue preclusion. Insured further contended that, in all events, application of issue preclusion would be inequitable. By way of counterclaim, insured sought enforcement of the insurance contract, asserting an entitlement to UIM benefits and attorney fees and costs, ORS 742.061.

The parties cross-moved for summary judgment. The trial court granted Safeco’s motion and dismissed insured’s counterclaims, concluding that insured had “already been adjudged to be more than fifty percent at fault for her injuries and [was] therefore precluded from recovering [UIM] benefits.” Judgment was entered, and this appeal followed.

On appeal, the first, and ultimately dispositive, question, see n 1, is whether issue preclusion, based on the apportionment of fault in the Grange litigation, bars insured’s entitlement to UIM benefits. Insured raises, principally, three alternative arguments in support of her position that issue preclusion does not apply: (1) ORS 742.504(l)(b) bars Safeco’s invocation of issue preclusion; (2) application of issue preclusion is inequitable under the circumstances presented here; and (3) the insurance policy barred resort to issue preclusion.

*5 We begin with insured’s statutory arguments. ORS 742.504 provides, in part:

“Every policy required to provide the coverage specified in ORS 742.502 [underinsured coverage] shall provide uninsured motorist coverage which in each instance is no less favorable in any respect to the insured or the beneficiary than if the following provisions were set forth in the policy. However, nothing contained in this section shall require the insurer to reproduce in such policy the particular language of any of the following provisions:
* * * *
“(l)(b) No judgment against any person or organization alleged to be legally responsible for bodily injury, except for proceedings instituted against the insurer as provided in this policy, shall be conclusive, as between the insured and the insurer, on the issues of liability of such person or organization or of the amount of damages to which the insured is legally entitled.” (Emphasis added.)

The statutory issue thus reduces to whether the judgment in Grange’s favor, and against insured, in the third-party litigation was a “judgment against any person or organization alleged to be legally responsible for bodily injury.” If the Grange judgment was such a judgment, then under ORS 742.504(l)(b), it would not be accorded preclusive effect in the present coverage dispute — and, particularly, Safeco could not offensively invoke the jury’s determination that insured was primarily responsible for the accident. In resolving that question, a question, of statutory construction, we adhere to the methodology prescribed in PGE v. Bureau of Labor and Industries, 317 Or 606, 610-11, 859 P2d 1143 (1993).

Insured makes two related, but alternative, statutory arguments. First, she asserts that, because Grange alleged an affirmative defense of comparative fault, she (insured) was a “person alleged to be legally responsible for bodily injury” and, because Grange prevailed on that defense, the judgment in the Grange litigation was “against” her. Second, insured argues that, even if she cannot be deemed a “person alleged to be legally responsible for bodily injury” for purposes of ORS 742.504(l)(b), the statutory term “against” should be construed as meaning “involving” — and thus, *6 because Grange was, doubtless, a “person alleged to be legally responsible” in the third-party action and because the judgment in that case obviously “involved” Grange, the Grange

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
985 P.2d 878, 162 Or. App. 1, 1999 Ore. App. LEXIS 1271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/safeco-insurance-v-laskey-orctapp-1999.