On May 5, 1972, an automobile driven by Eula Capps and occupied by her children, John, Heidi and Douglas Capps, was struck by Richard Klebs, an intoxicated and uninsured motorist. Eula and John were killed. Heidi and Douglas sustained permanent injuries. Charles *295 Capps, as administrator of the deceased Capps’ estates and as next friend of the minor Capps, brought an action against the uninsured motorist Richard Klebs and against Fred and Mildred Stewart d/b/a House of Stewart and Brass Rail Lounge (hereinafter Stewarts), the operators of a tavern at which Richard Klebs had become intoxicated. Prior to trial, settlement was negotiated between the Capps and the Stewarts pursuant to which the Capps received $60,000. A trial was held as to the remaining defendant, Klebs, and judgment was entered against him in the amount of $695,000. No portion of this judgment has been recovered by Capps, nor does it appear to be recoverable. At the time of the accident, the Capps family was insured by Trinity Universal Insurance Company (hereinafter Trinity). This insurance coverage included protection against an uninsured motorist up to $30,000. Since Klebs was an uninsured motorist, Trinity had paid the Capps family $30,000. Trinity intervened in the action claiming a right of subrogation in the amount of $30,000 against the $60,000 settlement received by the Capps from the Stewarts. The trial court held that Trinity was entitled to recover the $30,000 under its right of subrogation.
The sole issue presented to this court is whether the uninsured motorist’s carrier has a right to subrogate, pursuant to the terms of its policy and under IC 27-7-5-1, to the proceeds of a settlement its policyholders make with a tortfeasor before the policyholders have been fully compensated for their injuries. The issue is one of first impression. 1
*296 Appellants contend that IC 27-7-5-1, the uninsured motorist statute, is ambiguous since it can be interpreted in two ways:
1. The insurer is entitled to subrogate to the proceeds of any settlement only if the injured party has been fully compensated for his adjudged losses, or
2. The insurer may subrogate to the proceeds whether or not the injured party has been fully compensated for his adjudged losses.
Appellee contends that the second interpretation suggested by the appellants is the sole interpretation that can be gleaned from the statute since the language is clear and precise and imposes no conditions on the right of the insurance company to subrogate to the proceeds of any settlement or judgment from any person legally responsible up to the amount actually paid to the insured.
IC 27-7-5-1 provides in part:
“The policy or indorsement affording the coverage specified in this act may further provide that payment to any person of sums as damages under such coverage shall operate to subrogate the insurer to any cause of action in tort which such person may have against any other person or organization legally responsible for the bodily injury or death because of which such payment is made, and the insurer shall be subrogated, to the extent of such payment, to the proceeds of any settlement or judgment that may thereafter result from the exercise of any rights of recovery of such person against any person or organization legally responsible for said bodily injury or death for which payment is made by the insurer. Such insurer may enforce such rights in its own name or in the name of the person to whom payment has been made, as in their interest may appear, by proper action in any court of competent jurisdiction.” (emphasis supplied)
Part of the problem in these opposing interpretations revolves around the meaning of the word “subrogation,” which is not defined by the statute. Subrogation is “a legal fiction through which a person, who not as a volunteer or in his own wrong, and in absence of outstanding and superior equities, pays the debts of another, is substituted to all rights and remedies of the other.” Black’s Law Dictionary (4th Ed.). The general rule applicable to actions based on the
*297
ground of subrogation is that the right does not exist unless the whole debt has been paid.
Maryland Casualty Company of Baltimore v. Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad Company
(1919),
Thus, there is substantial authority in Indiana that Trinity is not entitled to the proceeds of the Stewart settlement until the Capps recover the $695,000 judgment against Klebs, unless the insurance policy and, more importantly, the uninsured motorist statute clearly and unequivocally provide for pro tanto subrogation. 2
In
White v. Nationwide Mutual Ins. Co.
(4th Cir. 1966),
*298 ‘ “The right of subrogation cannot be enforced until the whole debt is paid, and until the creditor be wholly satisfied, there ought to be and can be no interference with his rights or securities which might, even by bare possibility, prejudice or embarrass him in any way in the collection of the residue of his claim....’ Thus no paramount right of subrogation arises until the insured has received full satisfaction of his judgment against the uninsured driver.”361 F.2d at 787 .
Indiana had the opportunity to examine this language, “shall be subrogated, to the extent of payment, to the proceeds . ...” in a different context in the case of
Maryland Casualty Co. of Baltimore v. Cleveland, Cinn., and Chi. and St. Louis R.R. Co.
(1919),
“This [subrogation] provision must be considered in connection with the other portions of said policy, and when this is done, it is apparent that it should be construed as an attempt to confer the right of subrogation on appellant, only in the event it has paid the whole liability due in any given case, and not an attempt to provide for subrogation pro tanto.”74 Ind.App. at 276, 277 .
Obviously, the court did not feel the policy language provided clearly and unequivocally for pro tanto subrogation. Since the uninsured motorist statute and the policy in question here use the same language without any other expression of intent, Maryland Casualty Co. is authority for construing the language as intending to confer the right of subrogation only in the event the insured has been fully compensated for his adjudged losses.
Furthermore, Indiana follows the majority view that the uninsured motorist statute is remedial in nature and should be liberally construed in favor of the insured.
Patton v. Safeco Insurance Company
(1971),
The legislature mandated that every automobile insurance policy issued in Indiana include at least $15,000/$30,000 uninsured motorist coverage. It was intended that all persons be insured against the risk of uncompensated losses caused by uninsured motorists at amounts not less than the limits provided for in IC 9-2-1-15.
Leist v. Auto Owners Insurance Co.
(1974),
The purpose of the uninsured motorist statute is to require that a minimum amount of insurance be available to an injured insured which would place him in substantially the same position he would have occupied had the offending party complied with the minimum requirements of the financial responsibility act.
Bocek v. Inter-Insurance Exchange of Chicago Motor Club
(1977),
Finally, we note that other jurisdictions have considered this issue and reached the same conclusion.
3
In
Raitt v. National Grange Mutual Insurance Co.
(1971),
It is our opinion that appellants’ contention that the uninsured motorist statute is ambiguous is correct in light of Indiana’s interpretation of subrogation. A review of the legislative purposes and policies of the statute compels a finding that the legislature intended that subrogation was to be allowed only after the policyholder is fully compensated for his adjudged losses. Therefore, we hold that Trinity is not entitled to be subrogated to the extent of the $30,000 payment under the insurance policy until the $695,000 judgment is fully recovered.
Reversed.
Staton and Hoffman, JJ. concur.
NOTE — Reported at
Notes
.
Leist v. Auto Owners Ins. Co.
(1974),
. The trust agreement of Capps’ insurance policy provides:
“In the event of payment to any person under this part [the uninsured motorist coverage] the company [Trinity] shall be entitled, to the extent of such payment, to the proceeds of any settlement or judgment that may result from the exercise of any rights of recovery of such person against any person or organization legally responsible for the bodily injury because of which such payment is made.”
Trinity interprets this agreement as giving it subrogation rights as allowed under the uninsured motorist statute although the statutory word “subrogated” is replaced by the term “entitled to” in the policy. We agree with this interpretation.
. Trinity refers us to several decisions in other jurisdictions which allegedly reach the opposite conclusion. The majority of these cases do not deal with statutes similar to Indiana’s, or are concerned with other facets of the uninsured motorist statute or involve situations when the insured had been fully compensated for his loss. However,
Traders General Insurance Co. v. Reynolds
(Tex. App. 1972),
