Sweetser v. South Carolina Department of Insurance Reserve Fund

703 S.E.2d 509, 390 S.C. 632
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 20, 2010
Docket26905
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 703 S.E.2d 509 (Sweetser v. South Carolina Department of Insurance Reserve Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sweetser v. South Carolina Department of Insurance Reserve Fund, 703 S.E.2d 509, 390 S.C. 632 (S.C. 2010).

Opinion

Acting Chief Justice PLEICONES.

Appellant was injured when his employer’s vehicle in which he was riding as a passenger collided with a vehicle driven by an uninsured driver. Appellant has collected $13,520.21 in workers’ compensation benefits, and has a tort suit pending against the uninsured driver. Respondent issued an automobile liability policy to employer. It provides for $15,000 in uninsured motorist (UM) coverage, but also has an offset clause for compensation benefits. Fifteen thousand dollars is the minimum coverage under the UM statute. S.C.Code Ann. § 38-77-150 (2002).

Appellant filed this declaratory judgment action seeking a determination whether his tort recovery can be offset against his compensation award if the result of that offset would be to reduce his recovery under the UM provision below $15,000. The trial court granted respondent summary judgment, hold *634 ing that the policy’s offset clause 2 was “valid and enforceable” even if the effect were to reduce appellant’s recovery below the statutorily mandated minimum coverage. Appellant appeals. We affirm.

ISSUE

Can a workers’ compensation offset clause be applied so as to reduce an employee’s recovery under an employer’s automobile liability policy’s UM coverage below the statutory mandatory minimum?

ANALYSIS

All motor vehicles required to be registered in South Carolina must be insured. S.C.Code Ann. § 56-10-10; § 56-10-220 (2004). Pursuant to South Carolina’s automobile insurance statute, “No automobile insurance policy ... may be issued or delivered unless it contains a provision by endorsement or otherwise [providing] uninsured motorist [UM]” coverage. § 38-77-150(A). 3 However, this chapter also contains S.C.Code Ann. § 38-77-220, titled “Additional liability which automobile insurance policy need not cover,” which provides:

The automobile policy need not insure any liability under the Workers’ Compensation Law nor any liability on account of bodily injury to an employee of the insured while engaged in the employment, other than domestic, of the insured, or while engaged in the operation, maintenance, or repair of the motor vehicle nor any liability for damage to property owned by, rented to, in charge of, or transported by the insured.

This case presents the novel question whether, when an employer chooses to cover its non-domestic employee under an automobile liability policy, the employee’s recovery under the policy’s mandatory UM coverage can be reduced by, or offset *635 against, the workers compensation benefits received by the employee.

When an employer has chosen to insure his non-domestic employees under his automobile liability policy, and a part of that policy has voluntary underinsured (UIM) coverage, that policy may lawfully provide for a set-off of UIM benefits against the compensation benefits received by an injured employee. Williamson v. U.S. Fire Ins. Co., 314 S.C. 215, 442 S.E.2d 587 (1994).

In Williamson, the Court was asked whether an employer’s automobile liability policy which contained a workers’ compensation offset provision would apply to an employee claim for UIM benefits. The Williamson opinion noted that in Ferguson v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 261 S.C. 96, 198 S.E.2d 522 (1973), the Court struck down a provision in an employee’s own policy which purported to offset workers compensation benefits against the employee’s UM recovery. In Ferguson, the Court stated:

The public policy declared by our uninsured motorist statute imposes an obligation on insurers to provide protection to their insureds against loss caused by wrongful conduct of an uninsured motorist, and any limiting language in an insurance contract which had the effect of providing less protection than made obligatory by the statutes is contrary to public policy and is of no force and effect.

There is no mention of the predecessor to § 38-77-220 in the Ferguson decision. Appellant relies on this passage from Ferguson to argue for reversal.

Williamson distinguished Ferguson because the policy in Ferguson was the employee’s own while Williamson involved the employer’s policy. The Williamson opinion also states “The same statute and public policy does not operate in cases where voluntary coverage has been provided by an employer.” It is not immediately clear what “same statute” or “voluntary coverage” the Williamson court is referring to here. We conclude, and appellant agreed at oral argument, that the reference to a statute is to § 38-77-220. Moreover, the reference to voluntary coverage is not to UIM coverage, but rather to the employer’s voluntary decision to purchase bodily injury coverage for its non-domestic employees.

*636 The parties make much of the fact that the predecessor to § 38-77-220 was not cited in Ferguson. We find the omission easily explainable as that statute applies only to employers who are purchasing automobile insurance policies. 4 Section 38-77-220 first permits an automobile policy to exclude “any liability under the Workers’ Compensation Law.” Second, the statute permits an employer to exclude an employee, other than a “domestic,” altogether from bodily injury coverage under the policy. Williamson, supra; see also State Farm Mut. Ins. Co. v. James, 337 S.C. 86, 522 S.E.2d 345 (Ct.App. 1999) (repeating this holding).

Section 38-77-220 can only apply to employers as only they can “insure any liability under” compensation law or have employees. Williamson also holds that one of the policies underlying § 38-77-220 is to relieve the employer of paying double premiums, one to its workers’ compensation carrier and one to its automobile liability policy carrier, a policy consideration which is not applicable to employees. Read in context, and made somewhat more clear in the next paragraph of the opinion, Williamson holds not only that § 38-77-220 did not apply in Ferguson, but that also the public policy against permitting an offset against UM benefits expressed in Ferguson does not apply to employer-purchased liability policies.

Appellant also relies on the following passage from Williamson to argue that the compensation offset is only available to an employer who voluntarily purchases UIM coverage and not to the statutorily mandated UM coverage:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
703 S.E.2d 509, 390 S.C. 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweetser-v-south-carolina-department-of-insurance-reserve-fund-sc-2010.