Plаintiff Champlain Casualty Company of Vermont appeals a Washington Superior Court order granting summary judgment to defendant Agency Rent-A-Car, in a dispute over liability for damages caused by the lessee of one of Agency’s vehicles. Champlain is the lessee’s insurer under a comprehensive automobile liability policy. The trial court held that Agency’s self-insurance obligation, created to comply with Vermont’s Motor Vehicle Financial Responsibility Law, 23 V.S.A. §§ 800-810, dоes not constitute “other collectible insurance” and consequently, Champlain is responsible for providing primary liability coverage. Champlain appeals. We affirm, but on grounds different from those employed by the trial court.
The facts of this case are largely undisputed. On November 9,1993, Alex Roberts of Stowe, Vermont, rented a car from Agency and signed a rental contract. While driving the rented car, Roberts collided with a vehicle driven by Patricia Allеy. Roberts died as a result of injuries he suffered in the crash. Alley was injured, and she and her husband later filed suit against Roberts and his estate.
The parties in the underlying suit looked to both Champlain and Agency to defend and indemnify. This led to the litigation before us, in which Champlain sought a declaratory judgment that Agency was obligated to defend and pay any claim against Roberts’ estate. Agency responded that Champlain had the duty to defend and indemnify.
*93 Champlain’s responsibility is based оn a comprehensive automobile liability insurance policy it issued to Roberts. The policy covered Roberts’ operation of a nonowned automobile, but stated that:
If there is other applicable similar insurance we will pay only our share of the loss. Our share is the proportion that our limit of liability bears to the total of all applicable limits. However, any insurance we provide with respect to a vehicle you do not own shаll be excess over any other collectible insurance.
Agency’s responsibility is based on Vermont’s financial responsibility law. No owner of an automobile may permit the operation of the vehicle upon the highways of the state without having in effect an automobile liability policy or bond, in the amount specified in the statute and covering persons killed or injured in an accident and property damage. See 23 V.S.A. § 800(a). In lieu thereof, the ownеr may file self-insurance in the amount of $100,000. See id. § 801(c). The Commissioner of Motor Vehicles may issue a self-insurance certificate to a person when the Commissioner is satisfied that the person has “at least $100,000.00 of unencumbered net worth.” Id. The statute goes on to provide:
A certificate of self-insurance obtained by a self-insurer shall insure every person operating a motor vehicle, owned by said self-insurer, with his express or implied permission, against loss within statutory limits from the liability imposed by law upоn such person arising out of the operation of said motor vehicle and shall be for the benefit of any person suffering personal injuries or property damage arising out of the use of such motor vehicle with such express or implied permission.
Id.
Agency obtained a certificate of self-insurance from the Commissioner of Motor Vehicles. Agency does not offer insurance to those who rent ears from it. In fact, the rental agreement entered into between Roberts and Agency required that Roberts have his own liability insurance covering his operation of Agency's vehicle. The rental agreement provided that Roberts’ “valid and collectible liability and personal injury protection insurance coverage maintained with Champlain shall be primary.” The agreement explained that Agency was self-insured and provided:
*94 If required by the financial responsibility laws of the state in which this agreement wаs executed the company shall settle or defend, up to the minimum limits required for any one rental vehicle per occurrence, as it considers appropriate, any claim or suit for bodily injury and/or property damage arising out of the authorized use of this vehicle by the renter, renter’s spouse or listed additional licensed driver. . . . These protections, if required, shall be excess over any self-insurance certificate, surety bond, financial responsibility bond, cash deposit, or insurance policy or benefit including but not limited to: health and accident, medical, dental insurance and/or disability benefit available to any individual making a claim under this agreement.
Champlain argues that the “other collectible insurance” clause contained in its policy with Roberts made Agency the primary insurer. Alternatively, it argues that both it and Agency should be treated as excess carriers, and the loss should be aрportioned between them. Meanwhile, Agency argues that its self-insurance status is not “other collectible insurance,” and, as a result, Champlain is responsible for primary coverage. Alternatively, it argues that even if the “other collectible insurance” clause applies, the nature of its relationship with Roberts is such that its liability should be secondary. The trial court agreed with Agency’s first argument holding that self-insurance is not insurance for purposes of Champlain’s “other collectible insurance” clause. Thus, the court determined that Champlain was the primary insurance provider, requiring Champlain to defend and indemnify the estate of Alex Roberts up to its policy limits, before Agency is required to indemnify under the financial responsibility laws.
Both parties have framed the issue in this case as whether self-insurance is “other collectible insurance.” As the briefing reflects, other jurisdictions are split on this issue. Compare
White v. Howard,
The Texas cases provide good examples of relevant factors.
Home Indemnity
is perhaps the leading case for the proposition that self-insurance is not insurance for purposes of an “other collectible insurance” clause. See
A Standard policy calls fоr the assumption of many obligations other than the payment of a judgment rendered against the insured — among which, and probably the most important, is to indemnify the insured against loss, even as against his own negligence. The guarantee by a self-insurer to pay any judgment that an insurance carrier would have to pay can operate only for the benefit of the State of Texas and the injured party and cannot in any sense of the word be *96 construed to opеrate for the benefit of the negligent driver (even though he be an employee), and deprive the self-insurer of his right to judgment over against him. And, in the event of a judgment over against the negligent driver, [plaintiff’s policy] would operate to indemnify the negligent driver against such loss, for indemnification against loss to the insured is precisely what the policy contract of [plaintiff] has provided it will do.
Id. at 866.
The court in Home Indemnity found that the critical relationship was that between the self-insurer and the tortfeasor because the self-insurer was not independently liable and its obligation arose solely from the financial responsibility laws. For two reasons, it found that this relationship was not one of insurance: (1) the self-insurer was not obligated to indemnify the tortfeasor because it could recover from the tortfeasor any damages it paid the injured party; and (2) the self-insurer’s obligation did not operate for the benefit of the tortfeasor. See id. at 865-66.
The
Hartford Casualty
case is more similar to the one here in the sense that the defendant was a rental car company and the tortfeasor was a lessee of one of its cars. See
For a variety of reasons, the instant case is far closer to Hartford Casualty than to Home Indemnity. The combination of the obligations under the Vermont Financial Responsibility Act and the rental car contract negates the characteristics Home Indemnity found critical and has most of the characteristics found critical in Hartford Casualty. Under 23 V.S.A. § 801(c), the central obligation of the self-insurer is to “insure every person operating a motor vehicle, owned by said self-insurer, with his express or implied permission, against loss within statutory limits from the liability imposed by law *97 upon such person arising out of the operation of said motor vehicle . . . .” (Emphasis supplied.) The statute provides a relationship between the self-insurer and the tortfeasor and describes it as insurance against the tortfeasor’s loss. It describes an obligation to indemnify. Although the rental car contract requires the tortfeasor to indemnify Agency for any payments above the financial responsibility minimum, as well as for any payments Agency is not required to make, it does not provide that Agency may recover from the tortfeasor any damages it pays the injured party. Unlike Hartford Casualty, Agency’s obligation in this case is described as excess over the tortfeasor’s insurance, but that difference does not go to whether Agency has an insurance relationship with the tortfeasor. Instead, it goes to the consequences of that relationship.
Insurance is defined as a “contract whereby, for a stipulated consideration, one party undertakes to compensate the other for loss on a specified subject by specified perils.” Black’s Law Dictionary 721 (5th ed. 1979). The rental car contract between Agency and Alex Roberts, along with the obligation established by 23 V.S.A. § 801(c), creates exactly this relationship. See
Grand Rent A Car Corp. v. 20th Century Ins. Co.,
This conclusion does nоt, however, end this case. We are left with two insurance obligations, which are described as excess of other coverage which is primary. Since both such contractual terms cannot be enforced, we must decide the consequences of the conflict. This is an issue of first impression in Vermont.
In looking at the cases from other jurisdictions, we find a number of approaches to resolving this conflict. The majority rule is that conflicting excess “other insurаnce” clauses are mutually repugnant, and each is void. The result of that rule is to prorate the loss between
*98
insurers in accordance with the jurisdiction’s method of proration.
1
See
Indiana Ins. Co. v. Mission Nat’l Ins. Co.,
There are other methods. For example, the Minnesota courts use a closeness-to-the-risk analysis to determine which excess insurance policy should be primary. Under this analysis, the courts consider which policy describes the accident-causing instrumentality, which premium reflects the greater exposure, and which policy insures the primary risk. See Federal Ins. Co. v. Prestemon, 153 N.W2d 429, 436 (Minn. 1967). In State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Budget Rent-A-Car Systems, Inc., 359 N.W2d 673, 676 (Minn. Ct. App. 1984), the Minnesota Court of Appeals applied this analysis to a rental car case and held that the insurance company for the lessor was primarily liable because it insured the vehicle involved in the accident, and its policy was written to cover business losses. 2
Other courts have held that when an insured is driving a vehicle he does not own, and the owner’s insurance policy provides liability coverage, the owner’s policy will be considered primary over that of the driver, even if both policies contain excess “other insurance” clauses. In simplistic terms, the automobile insurance “follows the automobile, rather than the driver,” and thus the owner’s policy is
*99
primary.
Allstate Ins. Co. v. State Auto. Mut. Ins. Co.,
We need not choose a general rule to resolve excess coverage conflicts in this case because the unique characteristics of the situation before us would take it out of any general rule. As set out above, Agency’s responsibility to insure was created by the compulsory insurance provision of Vermont’s financial responsibility law. Also as set out above, Agency took numerous steps to make its obligation secondаry to any other insurance obligation. Agency offered no insurance coverage to its lessees. Its general rental contract language said that its obligation “shall be excess” over any other available insurance. The rental contract said in bold language on the front: “INSURANCE COVERAGE TO BE PROVIDED BY RENTER’S INSURANCE.” It had a section to specify the lessee’s insurance company, which Roberts completed in this case so it read:
THE RENTER AGREES THAT HIS VALID & COLLECTIBLE LIABILITY AND PERSONAL INJURY PROTECTION INSURANCE COVERAGE MANDATED WITH Champlain Casualty Co. SHALL BE PRIMARY. SUCH INSURANCE SHALL BE PRIMARY FOR THE LIMITS OF LIABILITY & PERSONAL PROTECTION
*100 COVERAGE AS REQUIRED BY SECTION 627.7263 FLA. STAT. 4
The sole consequence of this dispute is to determine the priority of payments under the insurance obligations of the parties. Our decision will affect neither the amount of recovery of the injured party and her spouse, nor the obligations of the estate of the tortfeasor. Indeed, depending upon the size of any judgment or settlement obtained by the injured party and her spouse, our decision in this case may not even determine the ultimate financial exposure of the parties to this litigation.
We conclude under these circumstances that Champlain is primarily liable. This is not a case of conflict between general excess coverage clauses. Here, the contract between Agency and its lessee specifically requires the lessee to obtain or maintain insurance and requires that insurance to impose the primary responsibility to indemnify.
We are also influenced by the fact that Agency’s responsibility is one imposed by law; its contractual responsibility is to comply with
*101
the requirements of the law and no more. Nothing in our financial responsibility and compulsory insurance laws requires that the insurance requirements imposed be primary with respect to other available insurance. Because the purpose of our financial responsibility and compulsory insurance laws is to protect the public, see
Wright v. Malloy,
We cannot give effect to both the excess coverage clause in Champlain’s policy and the various clauses making Champlain’s coverage primary, as contained in Agency’s rental contract. For the above reasons, we hold in these circumstances that “[wjhere the lease specifically requires that the lessee obtain his own insurance, the lessee’s policy is primary.”
6
16 G. Couch, Couch on Insurance § 62:63, at 518 (2d ed. 1983); see
Kaneshiro,
Although Agency’s self-insurance obligations under our financial responsibility and compulsory insurance laws, and its rental car contract, are “other collectible insurance” as provided in Champlain’s *102 insurance policy, wе agree with the trial court that Champlain has the primary obligation to indemnify in this case.
Affirmed.
Notes
If the policies provide for a method of apportioning loss, we will honor that method. See
American Fidelity Co. v. North British & Mercantile Ins. Co.,
In State Farm, the lessor Budget Rent-A-Car Systems, Inc., was self-insured for the first $100,000 of its liability and had an insurance policy for the remainder up to $1,000,000. The court held that Budget had primary responsibility for the first $100,000 of liability because “[t]o treat Budget as anything other than an insurer for the first $100,000 would create a windfall for Budget.” 359 N.W2d at 676.
The false conflict arises because both the vehicle owner’s policy and the vehicle operator’s policy provide excess coverage only if the operator is driving a nonowned vehicle. Since the vehicle is owned by the insured under the owner’s policy, the excess coverage provision of that policy does not apply even though the operator is not the owner of the vehicle. Thus, the vehicle owner’s policy provides primary coverage, and the vehicle operator’s policy provides excеss coverage. See
Universal Underwriters Ins. Co.,
Florida has answered the question before us by statute. Fla. Stat. Ann. § 627.7263 (West 1996). The statute provides:
§ 627.7263. Rental and leasing driver’s insurance to be primary; exception
(1) The valid and collectible liability insurance or personal injury protection insurance providing coverage for the lessor of a motor vehicle for rent or lease is primary unless otherwise stated in at least 10-point type on the face of the rental or lease agreement. Such insurance is primary for the limits of liability and personal injury protection coverage as required by §§ 324.021(7) and 627.736.
(2) If the lessee’s coverage is to be primary, the rental or lease agreement must contain the following language, in at least 10-point type: “The valid and collectible liability insurance and personal injury protection insurance of any authorized rental or leasing driver is primary for the limits of liability and personal injury protection coverage required by §§ 324.021(7) and 627.736, Florida Statutes.”
The rental ear contract in this case contained the disclosure mandated by an earlier version of § 627.7263(2).
Although the Florida statute does not apply to an automobile lease entered into in Vermont, we have reached a conclusion that is consistent with it in this case, relying in part on Florida decisions issued before the statute came into effect. See
Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Lauderdale Rent-A-Car, Inc.,
We recognize the contrary decision of the Michigan Supreme Court in State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co. v. Enterprise Leasing Co., 549 N.W2d 345, 349-50 (Mich. 1996), interpreting the requirements of the Michigan no-fault insurance act. The court found “the no-fault act requires car owners to be primarily responsible for insurance coverage on their vehicles.” Id. at 349. We find no similar requirement in our compulsory insurance and financial responsibility laws.
We are not holding that the lease contract between Agency and its lessee can bind Champlain. See Enterprise Leasing Co., 549 N.W2d at 350. The outcome of this case cannot be determined by contract law because the governing contractual provisions conflict. Instead, we are attempting to resolve the conflict with a practical decision that is most consistent with the expectations of the parties and the lessee-tortfeasor.
