736 N.E.2d 502 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1999
OPINION.
We are again presented with a conundrum involving uninsured-motorist coverage. Our court has yet to rule on the issue: when, if ever, is prejudgment interest properly awarded on uninsured-motorist claims?
On March 22, 1993, plaintiff-appellant Angie Lynn Bowman was injured in a car crash caused by Lawrence Engel, an uninsured motorist. In March 1995, Bowman and her husband filed suit against defendant-appellee Progressive Casualty Insurance Company for recovery of uninsured-motorist benefits. The Bowmans had three automobile policies with Progressive, which the parties had agreed could be stacked for a total of $300,000 in uninsured-motorist coverage. (The Bowmans were residents of Kentucky, and the parties applied Kentucky law regarding stacking.) Progressive had not disputed that the Bowmans were entitled to coverage, and the parties agreed that damages fell somewhere within this coverage. But they could not agree on a specific amount.
The case went to trial, and the court granted a directed verdict against the Bowmans, holding that they had failed to establish that Mrs. Bowman's injuries *261 were caused by the accident. This court reversed the trial court and remanded the case for further proceedings.1
The case proceeded until January 7, 1999, when the parties signed a consent judgment in which Progressive agreed to pay the Bowmans $112,500. The parties also agreed that the trial court would determine whether the Bowmans were entitled to prejudgment interest. There was no bad-faith claim against Progressive, and the parties agreed that R.C.
The trial court held that the Bowmans were not entitled to prejudgment interest under R.C.
The Bowmans now appeal. In their sole assignment of error, they assert that the court erred in denying them prejudgment interest. They raise two issues. First, they argue that the court erred in holding that this case is based on tort, not on contract. We need not address this issue because Progressive concedes that the trial court erred. In fact, the Ohio Supreme Court has held that uninsured-motorist claims are contract claims and that prejudgment interest can be granted under R.C.
Here, the key issue is determining when benefits under the Bowmans' uninsured-motorist coverage became "due and payable"3 under R.C.
In Royal Elec. Constr. Corp. v. Ohio State Univ.,5
the Ohio Supreme Court interpreted R.C.
Later, in Landis v. Grange Mutual Ins. Co.,8the Ohio Supreme Court specifically addressed the issue of prejudgment interest in the context of uninsured/underinsured-motorist (UM) claims. In that case, the court determined that an insured was entitled to prejudgment interest on a UM claim. The court, though, declined to determine when the claim became due: "Whether the prejudgment interest in this case should be calculated from the date coverage was demanded or denied, from the date of the accident, from the date at which arbitration of damages would have ended if Grange had not denied benefits, or some other time based on when Grange should have paid Landis is for the trial court to determine."9 *263
The fact that the Landis court did not set forth a rule regarding when UM benefits become due — and, instead, remanded the case to the trial court — has caused confusion in subsequent decisions. One case, Myers v. Central Ins. Cos.,10 in dicta, attempted to clarify when UM benefits become due under R.C.
Thus, regarding prejudgment interest in uninsured-motorist cases, courts do not treat the issue uniformly. In fact, as summarized by Judge Brogan in Craig v. Grange Ins. Co.,14 appellate courts have taken at least three different views: (1) some courts have held that benefits became due at the time of the injury,15 (2) other courts have concluded that benefits became due at the time that the parties, a court, or an arbitrator determined that there was coverage,16 (3) and another court has held that prejudgment interest could not be awarded, because benefits did not become due until there was a verdict.17 Judge Brogan opined that the wide variance in these cases demonstrates that trial courts should have broad discretion in determining when benefits become due.18
We believe that counsel for both the insurer and the insured are entitled to more guidance from the courts. If each case must proceed to judgment before the issue of prejudgment interest is determined in the discretion of the trial *264 court — or perhaps worse, if trial courts each develop their own policy toward prejudgment interest — the parties are left without an intelligent basis on which to resolve the issue. Also, identical cases could reach different results in different courtrooms. We would prefer a "bright-line rule" so that the decisional cost would be diminished.
One problem, though, with developing such a rule is that there are many permutations of the problem. Different cases present different scenarios. We recognize the difficulty of creating a rule that could encompass all situations, and we recognize that any rule we create might be subject to exceptions and limitations. With that in mind, we believe that, in general, there are two differing situations that are relevant to crafting our rule: (1) cases where the determined amount of coverage for the insured is less than his or her damages, and (2) cases where the determined amount of coverage for the insured exceeds his or her damages.
In the former cases — where the amount of coverage is less than the insured's damages — prejudgment interest should be due from the date of the accident. This rule makes sense because the insured will never be fully compensated for his or her injuries. Because the damages exceed the insurance available, the date of the accident is the most reasonable date to pick. Every day after the accident, the real amount of coverage shrinks, and the insured will receive less with each passing day. The prejudgment interest thus helps to "make the aggrieved party whole," as required byRoyal Electric.19 In other words, the prejudgment interest will help put the insured closer to the amount of recovery he or she would have received if the tortfeasor had been adequately insured.20 This was the situation in Landis, and upon remand the trial court awarded prejudgment interest.21
On the other hand, in the latter cases — where the insured's coverage exceeds his or her damages — the above rule makes less sense. If the amount of coverage is determined by an arbitrator or at trial, for instance, the arbitrator or factfinder should take into consideration all damages, past and future, and the judgment should be discounted to present value so that the damages awarded at the time of the judgment will fully compensate the insured — just as in the normal tort case. Allowing prejudgment interest in such situations would grant the insured a double recovery. Thus, we conclude that, in such cases, where the *265 insured's coverage exceeds his or her damages, prejudgment interest should generally not be awarded. This rule is buttressed by analogy to the normal tort claim — prejudgment interest is not awarded unless the trial court finds that the insurer has failed to make a good-faith attempt to settle.22 Also, the rule is in accord with the principle that the purpose of uninsured-motorist coverage is to put the insured in the same position as if the tortfeasor were insured, not a better one.23 A rule that prejudgment interest runs from the accident date would put a person injured by an uninsured driver in a better position than if he or she were injured by a person with adequate insurance — that person would receive the damages as if the other party were insured, plus interest.
Similarly, in cases where the insured's coverage exceeds his or her damages, a settlement between the parties should necessarily resolve the issue of what will make the insured whole. In other words, the issue of prejudgment interest should be resolved along with all other issues of damages. Thus, we conclude that, in the instance of a settlement, prejudgment interest is simply not an issue.
Here, the parties settled the case on the amount of damages, and the coverage was more than sufficient. Applying the above rule regarding settlements, we hold that, under R.C.
We note that the general rules that we enunciate in this opinion should apply to cases such as this one — cases where there are no allegations of bad faith. We recognize that, in cases where bad faith is alleged, the determination of when benefits become due should be more fact-specific. In such cases, trial courts might want to analogize to R.C.
But here, such an analogy and fact-specific analysis was not necessary, as we conclude that the settlement between the parties should have made the Bowmans whole. Therefore, we affirm the trial court, albeit on a different rationale.
Judgment affirmed. Hildebrandt, P.J., and Winkler, J., concur.