*763 OPINION
Aрpellant challenges the district court’s ruling that a household exclusion in respondent’s umbrella liability policy is void and unenforceable. Because we hold the exclusion does not violate the no-fault act, we reverse.
FACTS
Benjamin Bundul resided with his parents, Michael and Carol Bundul. On November 28, 2003, he was driving his parents’ car, with their permission, when he collided with a parked fire truck. Carol Bundul, a passenger in the car, was fatally injured.
At the time of the collision, Michael and Carol Bundul were the named insureds in two insurance policies. The first was written by Charter Oak Fire Insurance Company and covered automobile liability up tо $500,000. The second was a personal liability umbrella policy written by appellant Travelers Indemnity Company. Benjamin Bundul was classified as an insured under both policies.
In a wrongful-death action against Benjamin Bundul, Charter Oak paid its policy limit in settlement. But when the trustee for Carol Bundul’s next of kin sought benefits under the umbrella policy, Travelers denied liability coverage altogether, citing an exclusion for injury to any person related by blood to an insured who is also a resident of the same household as the injured person.
The trustee then brought this declaratory judgment action to have the exclusion declared void and unenforceable. Travelers moved for summary judgment. The district court denied the motion, ruled that the so-called “household exclusion” is invalid and unenforceable under Minnesota’s no-fault act, and ordered that the trustee “shall recover insurance coverage up to the $1,000,000.00 PLUS policy limit.” Contending that the district court erred аs a matter of law in its ruling and order, Travelers appealed.
ISSUE
If an underlying primary automobile insurance policy provides the coverages mandated by the Minnesota No-Fault Automobile Insurance Act, does a “household exclusion” in an umbrella personal liability policy contravene either the purpose or the language of the act?
ANALYSIS
Travelers contends that its clear “household exclusion” in the Bunduls’ umbrella insurance policy does not violate any rule or principle of law and is legally enforceable. The trustee argues that Minnesota’s abolition of family tort immunity was assimilated intо the Minnesota Automobile Insurance No-Fault Act, thus making Travelers’ household exclusion, which bars recovery of insurance benefits for an intrafamily tort, unenforceable. The trustee also urges that the exclusion conflicts with the no-fault act’s underlying public policy of “compensating victims of automobile accidents.”
There are no facts in dispute and, thus, we “need only review the [district] court’s application of the law” to the umbrella insurance policy.
Interstate Fire & Cas. Co. v. Auto-Owners Ins. Co.,
Insurance policies are cоntracts to which the general rules of contract law apply unless a statutory provision dictates otherwise.
Waseca Mut. Ins. Co. v. Nosk
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a,
At issue is a provision in an umbrella liability policy of insurance. The supreme court has described the nature of an umbrella policy as providing coverage over and above the limit of an underlying policy:
An umbrella policy, typically, requires the insured to carry underlying liability insurance up to a certain limit with a different insurance company. The umbrella insurer then provides an “umbrella” over this underlying coverage by agreeing to pay that part of any claim against the insured that exceeds the limits of the underlying coverage up to the limits of the umbrella. This аrrangement enables the umbrella insurer to offer high limits at a relatively modest premium.
Jostens, Inc. v. Mission Ins. Co.,
The Bunduls were insured under a primary policy with limits that exceeded those required by law. The Travelers umbrella policy provided coverage of “$1,000,-000 Per Occurrence.” But the umbrella policy contained an exclusion frоm coverage — referred to as a “household exclusion” — for any injury to, or death of, “any person who is related by blood ... to an ‘insured’ and who is a resident of the household of that person.” The trustee does not appear to dispute either the existence or the clarity of the household exclusion but rather contends that it is unenforceable. Under general contract law, as applied to insurance policies, the parties are free to agree to exclude from coverage particular risks, losses, or persons.
Bobich v. Oja,
Despite the express agreement of insurer and insured, no exclusion will be valid and enforceable if it contravenes the law because the subject matter of any сontract must be legal.
Hertz Corp. v. State Farm Mut. Ins. Co.,
The trustee argues that the household exclusion is precluded by express statutory language and by public policy. As to the latter basis for preclusion, the trustee contеnds that “Minnesota has a well established public policy of compensating victims of automobile accidents.” Indeed, an express purpose of the no-fault law is “to relieve the severe economic distress of uncompensated victims of automobile accidents.” MinmStat. § 65B.42(1). To accоmplish this purpose, the no-fault act requires “automobile insurers to offer and automobile owners to maintain automobile insurance policies or other pledges of indemnity which will provide prompt payment of specified basic economic loss benefits to victims of automobile accidents without regard to whose fault caused the aceident[.]” Id. Furthermore, to accomplish the purpose of ensuring that there will be no “uncompensated victims” of automobile accidents, the no-fault act specifies the levels of compensation the insurer *765 must provide in two categories of coverage: (1) basic economic loss benefits and (2) residual liability insurance. Minn.Stat. § 65B.49, subds. 2, 3. The basic economic loss benefits “subject to any applicable ... exclusions” cover, among other losses, medical and funeral expenses and “surviv- or’s replacement services loss.” Minn. Stat. § 65B.44, subd. 1. The minimum rеquired liability insurance limits are stated in the no-fault act as $30,000 as to one person in one accident, and $60,000 as to two or more persons in any one accident. Minn.Stat. § 65B.49, subd. 3. Thus, the amounts of coverage necessary to satisfy the state’s public policy of preventing automobile accident victims frоm being “uncompensated” are those amounts required by the act. Arguably, once the required amounts have been made available to an accident victim, the underlying purpose and public policy of the no-fault act have been fulfilled.
The Bunduls’ primary policy exceeded the mandatory minimum coverage and provided a liability limit of $500,000. The primary insurer paid the entire policy limit, with $487,436.12 being paid to the survivors of Carol Bundul, and the balance to the fire department’s insurer for damage to the fire truck. Thus, strictly in terms of the fundamental public policy on which the trustee premises his first argument, there has been no violation of the no-fault act here. The next of kin of Carol Bundul are not “uncompensated victims” of an automobile accident. Rather, they have been compensated beyond the level of the express statutory requirements that embody the public policy that the trustee urges in arguing the invalidity of thе household exclusion.
Nothing in the no-fault act addresses the issue of the specific amount of compensation for automobile accident victims beyond the stated mínimums. That issue is left open for resolution through the tort system. Beyond the stated mínimums, no public policy concern is melded to any particular sum of money. We do not intend to suggest, however, that the statutory minimum insurance limits will necessarily be sufficient compensation for the loss of a loved one, but only that those limits satisfy the express public policy goal of the no-fault act of ensuring that automobile accident victims will not go “uncompensаted.”
Minimum insurance coverages for injury, death, and other specified losses resulting from automobile accidents in Minnesota are governed by the no-fault act. This act is remedial in nature and is to be liberally construed to accomplish its purposes.
Miklas v. Parrott,
The' no-fault act does not distinguish between primary insurance and umbrella coverage but rather uses the term “plan of reparation security” to describe any “contract ... under which there is an obligation to pay” basic economic loss and residual liability benefits. Minn.Stat. § 65B.43, subd. 15. Whatever it is сalled and however it is classified by the contract, a plan of reparation security must provide the benefits required by the no-fault act to *766 be valid. Once the statutory requisites have been met, nothing in the no-fault act addresses the issue of further coverage, such as that provided by an umbrella liability pоlicy.
As a contractual condition of the umbrella coverage, the Bunduls were required to obtain and maintain primary liability insurance in various amounts, all of which satisfied, and exceeded, the no-fault mandatory liability mínimums. Thus, we cannot view the umbrella policy separately from the primary policy. Noting thаt the no-fault act does not distinguish between types of coverage, and recognizing that the umbrella policy cannot stand alone but must by express agreement be positioned on top of primary liability insurance, these policies together clearly satisfy the no-fault requirement of a “plan of reparation security” that provides the mandated insurance coverage.
The trustee argues that, to be valid, an automobile insurance policy cannot contain a household exclusion because the policy would thereby preclude coverage of a class of accident victims. The no-fault act makes no distinctions among accident victims. But the trustee’s argument is too broad. No class of accident victims may be precluded from the mandated coverages. However, no language in the no-fault act renders invalid an exclusion of a particular class of аccident victims from coverage beyond that mandated by the act. Once an insurance policy alone, or a primary and an umbrella policy together, has satisfied the coverage mandate, no further no-fault act regulation of coverages exists.
Through a combination of poliсies, the insurers here provided primary coverage that fully satisfied the no-fault law and additional insurance that is not addressed by the no-fault act. Nothing in the umbrella policy denied or infringed the insureds’ contractual and statutory right to recover the mandated benefits. The household exclusion did not affect thоse mandated benefits but rather operated only as to additional insurance to which the parties agreed. The household exclusion in Travelers’ umbrella policy is valid and enforceable, and the district court erred in ruling to the contrary.
See Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co. v. Ryan,
Quoting the Kentucky case of
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Marley,
The
Marley
court, interpreting a Kentucky law similar to Minnesota’s no-fault act, invalidated a household exclusion even in an umbrella policy as being contrary to public policy. But unlike Minnesota’s express purpose of ensuring that there will
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be no “uncompensated victims” of automobile accidents — thereby stating the act’s underlying
policy
— Marley noted that the “public policy of Kentucky is to ensure that victims of motor vehicle accidents on Kentucky highways are
fully
compensated.”
Id.
at 36 (emphasis added). Furthermore, thе Minnesota Supreme Court has stated that the object of the no-fault law is “to fully compensate the insured to the
extent of the mandated insurance.” Scheibel v. III. Farmers Ins. Co.,
Finally, in our recent holding in
Frey,
we considered the enforceability of a “drop-down” clause in the liability coverage of an automobile insurance policy, that is, a clause that reduced, but did not preclude, liability coverage in certain situations.
DECISION
The district court erred in declaring that the household exclusion in respondent’s umbrella liability was void and unenforceable under the no-fault act, when the primary automobile insurance policy fully complied.
Reversed.
