Tanner v. Phoenix Insurance Co.

799 P.2d 231, 145 Utah Adv. Rep. 21, 1990 Utah App. LEXIS 151, 1990 WL 149284
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedOctober 5, 1990
Docket890521-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 799 P.2d 231 (Tanner v. Phoenix Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tanner v. Phoenix Insurance Co., 799 P.2d 231, 145 Utah Adv. Rep. 21, 1990 Utah App. LEXIS 151, 1990 WL 149284 (Utah Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

JACKSON, Judge:

This declaratory judgment action involves a claim for minimum personal injury protection benefits mandated by Utah Code Ann. § 31A-22-307 (Supp.1990), a part of Utah’s no-fault automobile insurance statute. 2 The trial court granted “summary judgment” to The Phoenix Insurance Company (Phoenix), without explanation, and ordered the dismissal of Tanner’s complaint, based on its view of the meaning of the household services benefit provision in section 31A-22-307(l)(b)(ii). Under this section, personal injury protection benefits must include

a special damage allowance not exceeding $20 per day for a maximum of 365 days, for services actually rendered or expenses reasonably incurred for services that, but for the injury, the injured *232 person would have performed for his household....

Because we conclude that the trial court erroneously interpreted the statute, we vacate the order entered below and remand.

The parties presented the following undisputed facts to the trial court. After Tanner was injured in an automobile accident on June 16, 1988, she filed claims with Phoenix for household services benefits. In determining Tanner’s benefits, Phoenix used a “Household Services Worksheet” that shows forty-five dates from June 17 through August 8 on which services had been rendered to Tanner’s household that, but for her injury, she would have rendered to the household herself. For each date services were actually rendered, the type of service (housework, meal preparation, yard work, child tending, or cleaning and laundry), the name of the service provider, the hours spent, and the hourly rate for the services are shown. The cost of each particular service (hours X hourly rate) is also listed, as is the daily total cost of all services rendered on each specified date. On some listed days, enough hours of services were provided to Tanner’s household to result in a daily total cost of more than $20. For some dates, the cost of all services rendered was less than $20. No substitute services were rendered on five days in July and on three days in August before August 8, the last date on which the worksheet indicates any substitute services were rendered to the Tanner household.

Phoenix processed Tanner’s claim by using the total cost of all services rendered on each day any service was rendered. If the total cost on a day was less than $20, Phoenix used this lesser amount as the allowance payable to Tanner for that day. Phoenix did not carry over the unused portion of a day’s $20 allowance and apply it to the cost of services rendered on another day that exceeded $20. Likewise, if the cost of all services rendered on one day was more than $20, only $20 was calculated as the amount payable. The excess was not carried over to another day of disability when no substitute services, or less than $20 worth of substitute services, were actually provided to Tanner’s household.

For example, no substitute services were provided the Tanner household on July 30, but on July 31 the total cost of services rendered was $30. For these two days, Phoenix calculated the benefit payable as $20 — nothing for July 30 and the daily cap of $20 for July 31 — because it interpreted section 31A-22-307(l)(b)(ii) as setting a benefit limit of $20 per day only for each day any substitute services were actually rendered to an injured insured’s household, even though Tanner was presumably just as unable to perform any household services on July 30 as she was on July 31.

Tanner filed this declaratory judgment action to challenge Phoenix’s interpretation of the household benefits provision as imposing a limit of $20 for each day services are actually rendered. 3 Instead, she contended, the statute limits the household services benefit to an aggregate maximum of $20 for each day the injured insured is disabled, i.e., unable to perform services for the household, up to 365 days. The trial court accepted Phoenix’s construction of section 31A-22-307(l)(b)(ii), 4 and Tanner *233 appealed. Because the trial court’s ruling on the meaning of the statute presents a question of law, we review it for correctness, giving no deference to the trial court’s conclusion. State of Utah v. Rio Vista Oil, Ltd., 786 P.2d 1343, 1347 (Utah 1990).

A statute is ambiguous if it can be understood by reasonably well-informed persons to have different meanings. Kimberly-Clark Cory. v. Public Servs. Comm’n, 107 Wis.2d 177, 320 N.W.2d 5 (Ct.App.1982), aff'd, 110 Wis.2d 455, 329 N.W.2d 143 (1983). In such a circumstance, the role of a court is to determine the legislature’s intent in light of the entire statute’s purpose. P.I.E. Employees Fed. Credit Union v. Bass, 759 P.2d 1144, 1151 (Utah 1988). Because an ambiguous statute should be interpreted in a reasonable manner, Roberts v. Clark County Fire Protection Dist. No. 4, 44 Wash.App. 744, 723 P.2d 488, 490 (1986), it is also appropriate to look to the effect each plausible meaning of statutory language will have in practical application. See Stanton Transp. Co. v. Davis, 9 Utah 2d 184, 341 P.2d 207, 209 (1959).

We hold that section 31A-22-307(l)(b)(ii) is ambiguous because it is reasonably susceptible to the two conflicting meanings attributed to it by Tanner and Phoenix. The references in that provision to “services actually rendered or expenses reasonably incurred” as well as to an insured’s “inability to perform [household] services” makes it uncertain whether the “$20 per day” benefit limitation means “$20 per day services are rendered” or “$20 per day of disability.”

Other parts of the no-fault statute give no guidance about how to resolve this ambiguity. However, one express purpose of the insurance code is to ensure that claimants are treated fairly and equitably. Utah Code Ann. § 31A-1-102(2) (1986). 5 With this in mind, we conclude that the legislature intended to establish the minimum household services benefit as $20 per day of disability, up to a maximum of 365 days of disability.

The reasonableness of our interpretation is apparent when the two plausible meanings are applied to the following example of two claimants who are unable to perform household services on two consecutive days because of their automobile accident injuries.

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Bluebook (online)
799 P.2d 231, 145 Utah Adv. Rep. 21, 1990 Utah App. LEXIS 151, 1990 WL 149284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tanner-v-phoenix-insurance-co-utahctapp-1990.