The question presented in this case of first impression in Iowa is whether an injured person whose loss may be indemnified by the liability insurance of another is a proper party in a declaratory judgment action between the insurer and insured regarding coverage. The trial court held he is not. We reverse.
Plaintiff Farm and City Insurance Company issued a motor vehicle liability insurance policy to defendant Richard S. Coover. Subsequently motor vehicles driven by Co-over and defendant Nick Bovis collided, and Bovis sued Coover for damages he alleged he sustained in the accident. Coover demanded that plaintiff defend and indemnify him pursuant to the insurance policy. Plaintiff denied coverage and brought this declaratory judgment action against Coover and Bovis seeking an adjudication that its policy did not cover Coover with respect to Bovis’ claim. Bovis moved to dismiss the petition as to him. The trial court sustained the motion on the ground no justicia-ble controversy existed between plaintiff and Bovis. We disagree.
We have recently restated the rules relating to the availability of declaratory judgment procedure. At issue here is the first requirement, the existence of a justiciable controversy between the parties. A declaratory judgment may not be sought against a party who does not hold a concrete adverse legal interest. The question in each case, admittedly one of degree, is whether there is a substantial controversy between parties having antagonistic legal interests of sufficient immediacy and reality to warrant declaratory judgment. Bechtel v. City of Des Moines,
We adopted our justiciable controversy standard from Maryland Casualty Co. v. Pacific Coal & Oil Co.,
Iowa’s direct action statute gives an injured person who obtains a judgment the right to proceed against the insurer if his execution against the judgment debtor is returned unsatisfied. § 516.1, The Code. This right does not accrue until after judgment is obtained and an execution is returned unsatisfied. McCann v. Iowa Mutual Liability Ins. Co.,
The general rule is that the injured-person’s interest in the liability insurance policy of the insured arising at the time of the injury under this kind of direct action statute is sufficient to make a coverage dispute between the insurer and insured a justiciable controversy between the insurer and the injured person. Id.; New Amsterdam Casualty Co. v. Murray,
We believe the general rule is supported by sound reasoning and is consistent with our justiciable controversy standard. We therefore adopt it.
Applying that rule, we conclude the trial court erred in holding there was no justicia-ble controversy between plaintiff and defendant Bovis in this case. The motion to dismiss should have been overruled.
Reversed.
