672 N.E.2d 734 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1996
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *552 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *553 This matter is before this court upon appeal of plaintiff, Employers Reinsurance Corporation, from a judgment of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas requiring plaintiff to indemnify defendants, Worthington Custom Plastics, Inc., Buckeye International, Inc., Buckeye Steel Castings, Inc., The May Department Stores Co., The Mead Corporation, and Forest City Enterprises, Inc., for payments made by defendants into the Disabled Workers' Relief Fund ("DWRF").
Upon appeal, plaintiff sets forth eight assignments of error:
"I. The trial court erred in determining and declaring that the specific excess workmens' compensation agreements in question are `known as the Insurance Policies,' and in construing them in favor of the defendant-appellees.
"II. The trial court erred in determining and declaring that the amounts paid by defendants pursuant to Sec.
"III. The trial court erred in determining and declaring that the 1986 amendment to
"IV. The trial court erred in determining and declaring that the amounts paid pursuant to Sec.
"V. The trial court erred in determining and declaring that the risks assumed by both parties under the specific excess workmen's compensation reinsurance agreements may be increased by the amendment of a statute subsequent to the date the reinsurance agreements became effective.
"VI. The trial court erred in determining and declaring that the amendment of Sec.
"VII. The trial court erred in determining and declaring that Sec.
"VIII. The trial court erred in determining and declaring that payments made by the self-insured employer Defendants pursuant to Section
In 1953, the General Assembly enacted R.C.
From 1953 to 1959, DWRF was funded from the state's general revenues. In 1959, the General Assembly enacted R.C.
Effective August 22, 1986, the General Assembly amended R.C.
Defendants are self-insured employers under the Ohio Workers' Compensation Act and pay workers' compensation benefits directly to their employees who are disabled as the result of occupational injury or disease. Because defendants bear the risk of workers' compensation claims made by their own employees, defendants chose to spread some of this risk by purchasing insurance from plaintiff, a workers' compensation reinsurance company. In exchange for a premium, plaintiff agrees to reimburse defendants for workers' compensation payments made by the defendants in excess of a specified retention amount. Thus defendants bear the risk of payments below the retention amount but guard against payments in excess of that amount. Plaintiff provided reinsurance to defendants under various specific excess workers' compensation agreements in effect from approximately 1953 to 1981.
Prior to 1986, defendants were subject to the DWRF payroll assessment pursuant to R.C.
On November 19, 1993, plaintiff filed a complaint seeking a declaratory judgment that it is not required to indemnify defendants for DWRF payments made by defendants pursuant to R.C.
As plaintiff's first, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth and eighth assignments of error are all interrelated, we will address them together.
Section I of the agreement, entitled "Application ofAgreement," provides, in part:
"This agreement applies to loss sustained by the Employer because of liability imposed upon the Employer by:
"(a) the workmen's compensation act of [Ohio.]
"* * * *556
"[O]n account of personal injuries and occupational diseases sustained, by employees employed by the Employer and engaged in business operations specified in the Schedule or in such other business operations of the Employer as are incidental to those specified, as a result of occurrences taking place at or after the effective date specified in the Schedule."
Section IV defines the terms "occurrence" and "loss" as follows:
"(e) `[O]ccurrence', as applied to personal injuries, shall mean `accident.' Occupational disease sustained by each employee shall be deemed to be a separate occurrence and the occurrence shall be deemed to take place on the date upon which the employee ceases work as a result of such occupational disease;
"(f) `loss' shall mean only such amounts as are actually paid in cash by the Employer in payment of benefits under the applicable workmen's compensation act, in settlement of claims, or in satisfaction of award or judgments; but the word `loss' shall not include claim expenses nor salaries paid to employees of the Employer[.]"
Under the express terms of the agreements, plaintiff is required to indemnify defendants for "loss sustained by [defendants] because of liability imposed upon [defendants] by * * * the workmen's compensation act of [Ohio] * * * on account of personal injuries and occupational diseases sustained, by employees employed by [defendants]." Plaintiff contends that DWRF payments do not fall within the language of the agreements. We disagree.
R.C.
The agreements define "loss" as "such amounts as are actually paid in cash by [defendants] in payment of benefits under the applicable workmen's compensation act." DWRF payments fall within this definition. First, the DWRF payments are amounts paid in cash by defendants. The agreements do not require defendants to make payments directly to the injured employee as a condition of coverage. To the contrary, the agreements state that plaintiff will cover "losses" imposed "because" of liability imposed by the Workers' Compensation Act. Although the DWRF payments made by defendants since August 22, *557 1986 have been sent to the bureau rather than directly to defendants' eligible employees, it is undisputed that the payments made to the bureau are specifically attributable to the individual workers' compensation claims of defendants' former employees and are in an amount exactly equal to that received by those employees from the bureau. In short, the bureau merely acts as a clearinghouse for the DWRF payments.
Second, DWRF payments made by defendants are "in payment of benefits." Plaintiff contends that DWRF payments are not "benefits" but are "assessments." However, in Armco, Inc. v. N.Assur. Co. of Am. (1994),
"`I. Application of Policy. This policy applies to loss sustained by the insured [Armco] on account of:
"`A. compensation and other benefits required of the insured [Armco] by the workmen's compensation law * * *.
"`* * *
"`as a result of injury (1) by accident occurring during the policy period * * *.
"`* * *
"(f) Loss. The word "loss" shall mean only such amounts as are actually paid in cash by the insured [Armco] in payment of benefits under the workmen's compensation law, in settlement of claims or in satisfaction of awards or judgment; but the word "loss" shall not mean claim expenses, salaries paid to employees of the insured, nor [sic] annual retainers.'" (Emphasis sic.)
The court reasoned that, while DWRF payments are not "workers' compensation," they are "other benefits required of the insured [Armco] by the workmen's compensation law" within the meaning of the reinsurance policy because DWRF was created by the General Assembly pursuant to Section
The language in the agreements at issue is nearly identical to that construed in the Armco case. Thus, applying the holding of Armco to the facts of the instant case, we conclude that DWRF payments constitute benefits within the meaning of plaintiff's agreements.
Plaintiff characterizes defendants' payments to the bureau as "assessments," rather than "benefits," based on the fact that the bureau pays DWRF benefits to *558 employees and is then reimbursed by defendants. Plaintiff's characterization focuses on the method of payment of DWRF benefits by defendants rather than on the fact that the DWRF payments constitute benefits to the employees who receive the payments. The DWRF payments are liabilities or losses to defendants, but are benefits to the employees who receive them. Even if DWRF payments could be described as assessments, they are certainly within the definition of "losses" to defendants and "benefits" to the employees who receive them and are thus covered under the agreements.
In addition to characterizing DWRF payments as assessments, plaintiff suggests that the term "benefits" should be construed as having the same meaning as that contained in R.C.
We cannot agree that the term "benefits" as it is used in the agreements at issue must be limited to the definitions used in the foregoing statutory sections. The agreements neither define the term "benefits" nor refer to either R.C.
Ambiguities in a contract of insurance "should be construed strictly against the insurer that authored its terms and liberally to favor the insured's coverage." Ambrose v. StateFarm Fire Cas. (1990),
Plaintiff has based its denial of coverage of DWRF payments entirely on limitations, exclusions and qualifications to policy coverage that have no basis in the language of the agreements at issue. Thus, we conclude that the language of the agreements pertaining to benefits clearly includes DWRF payments within the scope of coverage.
Plaintiff further contends that it should not be required to indemnify defendants for the DWRF payments because defendants became liable for the payments as a result of the 1986 amendment to R.C.
In Aas v. Avemco Ins. Co. (1976),
However, in the instant case, the reinsurance agreements drafted by plaintiff do contain such broad promise of indemnity. As noted previously, the express terms of the agreements require plaintiff to indemnify defendants for "loss sustained by the [defendants] because of liability imposed upon [defendants] by * * * the workmen's compensation act of [Ohio]." Plaintiff, as drafter of the agreements, could have included language expressly limiting coverage to include only losses sustained by defendants because of liability imposed by the Workers' Compensation Act as it existed at the time the agreements were executed or only as long as the policies remained in effect. As a result of plaintiff's failure to include such limiting language, plaintiff took the risk that the Workers' Compensation Act would impose greater liability than was contemplated at the time the agreements were issued.
Furthermore, in an area of law as highly regulated as the area of workers' compensation law, plaintiff could reasonably have been expected to realize that *560
further legislation upon the topic of workers' compensation was highly probable, if not a virtual certainty. However, plaintiff chose to use only the broad language "the workmen's compensation act" in defining the extent of its liability and did not include language limiting its liability to the Workers' Compensation Act at the time the agreements were executed. Because we must construe language in a contract of insurance in favor of the insured and against the party drafting the contract, we conclude that the language "the workmen's compensation act" must be construed to include the 1986 amendment to R.C.
Plaintiff also contends that the language used in Section XIII of the agreement limits its liability only to changes made by endorsement issued by plaintiff. That section states:
"CHANGE OR WAIVER. The terms of this agreement shall not be waived or changed except by endorsement issued to form a part hereof, signed by a duly authorized representative of the Corporation."
Section I of the agreement is where defendants would ordinarily look to find the extent of coverage provided. If plaintiff had meant to limit coverage to include only losses under the Workers' Compensation Act as it existed at the time the agreements were executed or only as long as the policies remained in effect, it could have so stated within the coverage clause itself. Having failed to do so, we conclude that greater weight should be given to the language within the coverage clause than to the general limiting language of Section XIII.
Accordingly, the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth and eighth assignments of error are not well taken.
By the seventh assignment of error, plaintiff contends that the application of amended R.C.
Plaintiff further argues that R.C.
Both the United States and the Ohio Constitutions prohibit the state from enacting legislation that impairs the obligation of contracts. Even though the Contract Clause language is unequivocal, the provisions and limitations it imposes are not absolute and must be accommodated to the state's inherent police power to promote the public welfare. Energy Reserves Group, Inc.v. Kansas Power Light Co. (1983),
In Energy Reserves, the United States Supreme Court set forth a three-step balancing test to examine legislation under the Contract Clause. First, a court must inquire whether the legislation has, in fact, operated as a substantial impairment of a contractual obligation. Second, if a substantial impairment exists, those urging the constitutionality of the statute must show that a significant and legitimate public purpose behind the legislation exists. Third, the court must examine the legislature's action in light of the statute's public purpose to see whether the adjustment of the rights and liabilities of the contracting parties is based upon reasonable conditions and is of a character appropriate to the public purpose justifying the statute's adoption.
In making the determination regarding the first part of the test, the court must decide whether the impairment of the contract is substantial by examining the extent to which "reasonable expectations under the contract are disrupted."Id.,
We conclude that plaintiff's reasonable expectations under the agreements were not disrupted by the 1986 amendment to R.C.
Having determined that plaintiff has failed to establish that amended R.C.
Accordingly, plaintiff's seventh assignment of error is not well taken.
For all the foregoing reasons, plaintiff's assignments of error are overruled and the judgment of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas is hereby affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
LAZARUS and STRAUSBAUGH, JJ., concur.
DEAN STRAUSBAUGH, J., retired, of the Tenth Appellate District, was assigned to active duty under authority of Section