OPINION
The district court, concluding the action was barred by the statute of limitations, granted respondent’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed appellants’ action for underinsured motorist (UIM) benefits. We affirm.
PACTS
On January 24, 1991, Stanley Ringold’s automobile collided with Bonita Cattnach’s automobile, injuring her back. Cattnach and her husband sued Ringold and eventually settled their tort action in late 1993 or early 1994. In February 1996, a State Farm Insurance Company claims representative advised the Cattnachs that UIM benefits would be available under their policy “whenever” they needed such benefits. Some time later, Cattnach requested UIM benefits, but State Farm denied her claim.
The Cattnachs sued State Farm for UIM benefits on March 22, 1997. That was three years after they settled the tort action and received the available liability insurance proceeds, but it was six years and two months after the accident.
ISSUES
I. Did the district court err in concluding that the six-year statute of limitations began to run on the date of the accident and that the Cattnachs’ UIM action is barred?
II. Is State Farm estopped from denying UIM benefits because its agent represented to the Cattnachs that UIM benefits would be available whenever they needed those benefits?
ANALYSIS
I.
Whether the district court correctly calculated the limitations period is a question of law, and our review is de novo.
See Sargent v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
The parties agree that the applicable limitations period is six years.
See
Minn. Stat. § 541.05, subd. 1(1) (1996) (establishing six-year limitation period for contracts);
Sargent,
The supreme court has held that the limitations period for an insured’s cause of action
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for UIM benefits begins to run on the date of the motor vehicle accident causing the insured’s injury.
O’Neill v. Illinois Farmers Ins. Co.,
[Sjteps taken by a claimant in ascertaining what underinsured motorist benefits she might be entitled to, do not preclude the statute of limitations from beginning to run. At the time of the accident the injured person surveys her legal remedies and decides how best in the next 6 years to proceed, but the fact that the damages are unknown or unpredictable does not stop the 6 years from running.
Id. at 441 (citations omitted). The reason for having the date of the accident trigger the limitations period is, we believe, that the date of the accident is the date on which the statute of limitations begins to run on the tort claim that underlies and is a condition precedent to the recovery of UIM benefits.
The Cattnachs, however, cite
Sargent,
where the court examined the terms of a UIM policy and concluded that a cause of action for UIM benefits under that policy accrued on the date the insureds had settled with the tortfeasor.
Sargent,
The appropriate distinction is found in
Nelson v. State Farm Ins. Co.,
The policy in this case does not provide that there will be no coverage until other policy limits are exhausted. Absent a “no coverage until” clause like that in Sargent, there is no “contractual accrual date” for this court to adopt.
The Cattnachs also cite
Employers Mut. Cos. v. Nordstrom,
The Cattnachs rely on the statement in
Nordstrom
that, “[u]ntil there has been a recovery from the tortfeasor’s insurer, the claimant’s underinsured claim simply has not matured.”
We conclude that the Cattnaehs’ cause of action arose on the date of the motor vehicle accident, triggering the six-year statute of limitations. We point out that the Cattnaehs could have commenced their UIM action within the six-year period and then requested that trial be stayed until the tort action was either settled or litigated to completion, thus making the UIM action ripe for trial.
II.
In the alternative, the Cattnaehs argue that State Farm is estopped from relying on the statute of limitations because a State Farm agent represented that UIM benefits would be available to the Cattnaehs “whenever” they needed such benefits. The Catt-nachs cite
Hydra-Mac, Inc. v. Onan Corp.,
The
Hydra-Mac
court cautioned, however, that it must be “the very existence of the facts which establish the cause of action which- are fraudulently concealed.”
DECISION
The six-year limitations period for bringing a UIM action began to run on the date of Cattnach’s motor vehicle accident. State Farm is not estopped from relying on the statute of limitations.
Affirmed.
