Terry v. Auto-Owners Insurance

908 P.2d 60, 184 Ariz. 246, 205 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 15, 1995 Ariz. App. LEXIS 270
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedDecember 5, 1995
Docket1 CA-CV 94-0268
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 908 P.2d 60 (Terry v. Auto-Owners Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Terry v. Auto-Owners Insurance, 908 P.2d 60, 184 Ariz. 246, 205 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 15, 1995 Ariz. App. LEXIS 270 (Ark. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

VOSS, Judge.

Appellant Beverly Terry (Terry) was injured in a collision with an uninsured motorist. Because she was on the job at the time of the accident, she received workers’ compensation payments. Under the employer’s uninsured motorist coverage, the insurer was entitled to reduce the uninsured motorist payment by the amount of workers’ compensation benefits paid. Terry challenged this reduction, although she does not contend that the uninsured motorist coverage and workers’ compensation benefits did not fully compensate her for her damages. The trial court ruled that the policy offset provision is enforceable in this case. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

In October, 1987, Terry sustained serious and permanent injuries in an automobile accident in which an uninsured motorist was at fault. Terry was driving a vehicle owned by her employer, L & S Report Service, Inc. (L & S). L & S insured the vehicle with appellee Auto-Owners Insurance Company (Auto-Owners). The uninsured motorist provisions of the policy, which had a $500,000 limit, covered Terry’s damages. Because Terry was acting in the course and scope of her employment when the accident occurred, she also was entitled to workers’ compensation benefits.

Terry and Auto-Owners settled her uninsured motorist claim for $257,684.96. Because the policy issued to L & S provided that any amount paid under uninsured motorist coverage would be reduced by any amount paid for the same injury under workers’ compensation law, Auto-Owners withheld $47,684.96, the amount Terry had received in workers’ compensation benefits. Accordingly, Auto-Owners paid Terry $210,-000. The settlement agreement allowed Terry to seek a judicial determination of whether Arizona law allowed Auto-Owners to take *247 an offset for workers’ compensation benefits paid to Terry.

Terry filed an action seeking a judgment declaring that the offset provision in the policy was invalid and contrary to Arizona statutes and public policy. Auto-Owners moved for summary judgment, arguing that under Arizona law, particularly Schultz v. Farmers Insurance Group of Companies, 167 Ariz. 148, 805 P.2d 381 (1991), a non-duplication clause is enforceable so long as it does not deprive the insured of full recovery for the loss.

Terry’s response to the motion and her cross motion for summary judgment argued that Schultz merely recognized that where the same insurer provides both medical payment and uninsured motorist coverage in the same policy, an offset is permissible so long as the insured receives full compensation. Terry asserted that the offset sought by Auto-Owners is prohibited in Arizona by Allied Mutual Insurance Co. v. Larriva, 19 Ariz.App. 385, 507 P.2d 997 (1973), and State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Karasek, 22 Ariz.App. 87, 523 P.2d 1324 (1974). Both of those cases held that provisions reducing uninsured motorist coverage by the amount of workers’ compensation received are invalid and against the public policy of the state.

The trial court granted Auto-Owners’ motion for summary judgment and denied Terry’s cross motion. Citing Schultz, it found the general rule to be that an insurance policy non-duplication provision is enforceable if applying the provision does not deprive the insured of full recovery for the loss.

The court entered judgment dismissing Terry’s complaint. She timely appealed from the judgment. We have jurisdiction over Terry’s appeal pursuant to Arizona Revised Statutes Annotated (AR.S.) section 12-2101(B).

DISCUSSION

On appeal, Terry argues that Schultz does not support the trial court’s conclusion because Schultz held only that an insurer may offset uninsured motorist benefits by the amount of medical payments made from the same policy. In Terry’s view, the Schultz court did not overrule Larriva or Karasek, but instead confirmed their holdings by stating that if the plaintiff had been in an accident with an insured motorist, she could have had double recovery of her medical expenses. Terry thus concludes that the holding in Schultz is limited to situations in which uninsured motorist payments are offset by the amount of medical expenses already paid under the same policy, and that workers’ compensation offsets are governed by Karasek and Larriva,

The question before us is whether the conclusion in Schultz applies to a workers’ compensation offset, notwithstanding Larriva and Karasek. We start our analysis with an examination of the case on which the holdings in Larriva and Karasek were based—Bacchus v. Farmers Insurance Group Exchange, 106 Ariz. 280, 475 P.2d 264 (1970).

In Bacchus, the issue was much like the one considered in Schultz: can an insurer deduct the payments it has made to its insured under the medical payments provision of the policy from payments it is obligated to make under the policy’s uninsured motorist coverage? The uninsured motorist coverage in Bacchus was the statutory minimum amounts of $10,000 per person and $20,000 per occurrence. 106 Ariz. at 280-81, 475 P.2d at 264-65. One plaintiff was awarded $8,200 and the other $10,000. The insurer paid the awards but withheld $2,339.28 that it had already paid under the medical payments provision of the policy. Id. at 281, 475 P.2d at 265.

The Arizona Supreme Court held that the insurer was not entitled to take the offset. It concluded that a policy addition that provided extra protection for an additional premium could not be used by the insurer to reduce mandatory minimum coverage. In the court’s opinion, the Legislature’s intent in enacting the uninsured motorist coverage statute was “that each insured who availed himself of uninsured motorist coverage would have available not less than $10,000 per person and $20,000 per occurrence. Any attempt, by contract or otherwise, to reduce *248 any part of this amount is violative of the statute.” Id. at 283, 475 P.2d at 267.

In Larriva, the plaintiffs husband, while on the job, was killed in a collision with an uninsured motorist who was at fault. 19 Ariz.App. at 386, 507 P.2d at 998. The plaintiffs damages were in excess of $10,000. She made a claim under her husband’s uninsured motorist coverage, which had the statutory minimum limit of $10,000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
908 P.2d 60, 184 Ariz. 246, 205 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 15, 1995 Ariz. App. LEXIS 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terry-v-auto-owners-insurance-arizctapp-1995.