delivered the Opinion of the Court.
The United States District Court for the District of Montana has certified two questions to this Court for instructions concerning Montana law.
First Bank Billings has been named a defendant in three wrongful repossession cases, two of which have been filed in the District Court of the Thirteenth Judicial District, Yellowstone County, and one in the United States District Court for the District of Montana. Transamerica has undertaken the defensе of First Bank, but has reserved its rights under its insurance contract with the bank and has denied any coverage for punitive damages under this contract. Transamerica argues that the public policy of Montana forbids such coverage. On motion of First Bank, the United States District Court has certified the following questions to this Court:
(1) Does the public policy of Montana permit insurance coveragе of punitive damages?
(2) If the public policy of Montana does not generally permit insurance coverage of punitive damages, would it nevertheless permit coverage for punitive damages for which a banking corporation is or could be held liable by reasons of the acts of its employees?
For the reasons stated below, we conclude in response to the first question that insurance coverage of punitive dаmages is not a violation of public policy. Thus, we need not address the substance of the second question.
Counsel for First Bank have presented ten considerations in support of permitting insurance coverage of punitive damages. Transamerica has mounted a strong challenge to
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all of these considerations. We recognize that there is considerable authоrity supporting the positions of both parties. See generally Annot.,
Before proceeding to the critical issues, we must first address a disagreement between the parties concerning the focus of our review. First Bank has urged this Court to center on what it claims are the “blanket terms” of the insurance contract, wherein Transamerica agrees to “pay on behalf of the insured all sums which the insured shall be legally obligated to pay as damages because of personal injury or advertising injury to which this insurance applies . . .” First Bank inferentially asks this Court to answer the certified question in light of this contract language. Specifically, we are asked to decide whether public policy bars coverage even when the contract supposedly provides indemnification for “all sums” arising from liability.
We reject the approach suggested by First Bank. Transamerica correctly notes that the certified questions forwarded by the Federal District Court do not call for an interpretation of contract language. We are asked only to decide whether public policy permits or bars coverage of punitive damages, regardless of the сontract language. We leave the threshold issue of contract interpretation for the Federal District Court to decide. For similar reasons, we *96 also decline to review allegations by First Bank that Transamerica is attempting to “wriggle out” of its negotiated insurance contract. That, too, is a matter for decision by the District Court.
SOURCES OF PUBLIC POLICY IN MONTANA
“Public policy is that principle of law which holds thаt no citizen can lawfully do that which has a tendency to be injurious to the public or against public good.”
Spaulding v. Maillet
(1920),
PUBLIC POLICY AS EXPRESSED IN THE CONSTITUTION AND STATUTES
We find nothing in the Montana Constitution declaring a public policy on the question before us. We therefore turn to relevant statutes and case law construing the same.
Prior to adoption of this state’s cоmprehénsive insurance code, Sections 33-1-101 et. seq., MCA, the law of Montana' provided that “[a]n insurer is not liable for a loss caused by the willful act of the insured; but he is not exonerated by
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the negligence of the insured, or of his agents or others.” Section 40-604, R.C.M. 1947 [repealed 1959]. This statute was based on Cal.Ins.Code Section 533 (West 1972), which has been construed to prohibit insurance coverage of punitivе damages in most instances in California. See, e.g.,
City Products Corp. v. Globe Indent. Co.
(1979),
Our attention is also directed to the punitive damages law, Section 27-1-221, MCA, which provides that: “[i]n any аction for a breach of an obligation not arising from contract where the defendant has been guilty of oppression, fraud, or malice, actual or presumed, the jury, in addition to the actual damages, may give damages for the sake of example and by way of punishing the defendant.”
There is nothing in this statute amounting to an express statement on the public policy issue before us. Nevertheless, Transamerica reasons syllogistically that, because punishment is an explicit aim of applying punitive damages, and because punishment, to be such, must cause its recipient to suffer, there can be no punishment if a defendant is permitted to, in effect, “shift” the financial burden of the imposed punishment to his or her insurance carrier. Transamerica thus concludes that a public policy against coverage emanates from the concept of punishment as embodied in the statute. This is the conclusion reached by courts in *98 some states with the same or similar punitive damage laws, see, e.g., City Products, supra (construing Cal.Civ.Code Section 3294, which contains virtually the same language as Section 27-1-221). Although we are impressed with the reasoning behind Transamericа’s argument, we reject it, for reasons discussed infra, as an inaccurate expression of the practical consequences of applying punitive damages law in some cases in Montana.
Transamerica also directs our attention to Section 28-11-302, MCA, which provides that “[a]n agreement to indemnify a person against an act thereafter to be done is void if the act be known by such person, at the time of doing it, to be unlawful.” Transamerica reasons that, because insurance is a contract of indemnity, Section 28-11-302 operates as an express policy against coverage for tortious acts warranting imposition of punitive damages. We reject this interpretation.
Modern insurance contracts typically provide coverage for a host of tortious activities, with the assurance that the insured will be indemnified at least for compensatory damages arising from unlawful conduct by the insured; e.g., libel and slander, malicious prosecution, etc. Even Transamerica would not argue that Section 28-11-302 erects a bar to liability insurance for compensatory damages, be they awarded for ordinary negligence or maliciоus, fraudulent or oppressive conduct. The need to reduce financial risks and promote economic stability in modern society has rendered this statute applicable only to conduct defined as criminal.
In summary, we find no express policy by the legislature on the subject of insurance coverage for punitive damages. Although reasoned arguments can be made for rеading some kind of prohibition into the language of the punitive damages statute, we decline to do so without first examining judicial construction of that statute and then considering. the practical consequences of awarding punitive damages.
PUBLIC POLICY IN LIGHT OF JUDICIAL DECISIONS.
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As noted above, a major aim of awarding punitive damages is punishment of the defendant for oppressive, fraudulent or malicious conduсt. We have also recognized that an award of punitive damages can serve as a deterrent to like conduct by other individuals.
First Security Bank v. Goddard
(1979),
Several courts have followed the lead of the Court of Appeals of the Fifth Circuit and have concluded that the mutual goals of punishment and deterrence are defeated if coverage is permitted. In
Northwestern Nat’l Gas. Co. v. McNulty
(5th Cir. 1962),
“Where a person is able to insure himself against punishment he gains a freedom of misconduct inconsistent with the establishment of sanctions against such miscоnduct. It is not disputed that insurance against criminal fines or penalties would be void as violative of public policy. The same public policy should invalidate any contract of insurance against the civil punishment that punitive damages represent.
“The policy considerations in a state where . . . punitive damages are awarded for punishment and deterrence, would seem tо require that the damages rest ultimately as well as nominally on the party actually responsible for the wrong. If that person were permitted to shift the burden to an insurance company, punitive damages would serve no useful purpose. Such damages do not compensate the plaintiff for his injury, since compensatory damages already have made the plaintiff whole. And there is no point in punishing the insurance company; it has done no wrong. In actual fact, of course, and considering the extent to which the public is insured, the burden would ultimately come to rest *100 not on the insurance companies but on the public, since the added liability to the insurance companies would be passed along to the premium payers. Society would then be punishing itself for the wrong committed by the insured.”
Upon reflection, we grant the intellectual appeal of Judge Wisdom’s reasoning, and recognize that it has been both praised and followed in other jurisdictions. Nevertheless, we find that this reasoning does not address the substance of punitive damages law as applied in Montana. To determine public policy concerning insurance coverage оf punitive damages solely on deductive conclusions like those articulated by Judge Wisdom “is to lean upon a slender reed.”
Missouri v. Holland
(1920),
Oregon Supreme Court Justice Hans Linde correctly observed in his concurring opinion in
Harrwell,
supra, that “[a] court-made public policy against otherwise lawful liability insurance can be defended, not
because
the purpose of punitive damages is always deterrence and
because
insurance will always destroy their deterrent effect, but only
when
these considerations apply.” (Emphasis his.)
In the instant dispute, First Bank fears that its insurance contract with Transamerica will become virtually worthless if it is exposed to punitive damage awards without the possibility of coverage. The Bank also claims that such a fine line exists between conduct not justifying such damages that permitting coverage is not in violation of public policy. Both arguments warrant serious attention.
The contrаct issued by Transamerica to First Bank is not unlike many insurance agreements. It includes coverage for false arrest, detention, or imprisonment, malicious prosecution, wrongful entry or eviction, libel and slander, racial or religious discrimination, and wrongful repossession. All of these torts give rise to claims for punitive damages; on this there is no dispute. In many cases involving these torts, actual damages may be minimal, but the punitive damages extremely high. Indeed, many claims for relief are not made financially worthwhile without the prospect of recovering punitive damages. See
Harrell,
supra,
The “fine-line” problem raised by First Bank also suggests that a public policy against coverage would have less than desirable results, especially where the defendant is again assessed a particularly large punitive damage award. A consistent theme running through cases holding that public policy
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does not forbid insurance coverage is that juries and judges typically award punitives for a broad range of conduct not often described as willful or wanton, but as merely reckless or unjustifiable. When combined with the possibility that different fact finders in similar fact situations may reach differing conclusions as to the availability of punitive damages, the argument for denial of coverage becomes difficult to sustain. See
Skyline Harvestore Systems, Inc. v. Centennial Ins. Co.
(Iowa 1983),
We have recently attempted to come to grips with the problem of uncertainty in the area of punitive damages. In
Owens v. Parker Drilling Co.,
(Mont. 1984), [
“When a person knows or has reason to know of facts which create a high degree of risk of harm to the substantial interests of another, and either deliberately proceeds to act in conscious disregard of or indifference to that risk, or recklessly proceeds in unreasonable disregard of or indifference to that risk, his conduct meets the standard of willful, *103 wanton, and/or reckless to which the law of this State will allow imposition of punitive damages on the basis of presumed malice.”
Owens,
supra,
Even though we are further down the road to refining the concept of punitive damages than are many other state courts, the law is still in such a state of flux as to warrant caution on the issue of whether public policy prohibits coverage of punitive damages in all cases. We therefore decline the opportunity to define limits fоr insurance coverage of punitive damages. Insurance companies are more than capable of evaluating risks and deciding whether they will offer policies to indemnify all or some conduct determined by judges or juries to be malicious, fraudulent or oppressive. A likely response to this opinion by some carriers may be the drafting of specific exclusions of coverage of punitive damages. However, the fact that some individuals may be willing to pay higher premiums for such coverage may convince carriers to extend coverage in some situations. It is conceivable that a combination of different approaches by insurance companies may result in a delineation of the limits of coverage better than anything this Court сould establish.
CONCLUSION
We find that providing insurance coverage of punitive damages is not contrary to public policy. Transamerica ad *104 mittedly has set forth a strong argument in support of an opposite holding, but we find the consequences of adopting that position unacceptable. The problems posed by insurance coverage of punitive damages are unquestionаbly like those inherent in the Gordian Knot. Unlike Alexander the Great, however, we cannot make a clean slice through our version of the Knot, in order to unravel all the aspects of the question before us, without working an injustice to many policy holders. Alexander dealt only with an inanimate object; we deal with people. Use of the judicial sword therefore is inappropriate in this case. Here, we must “untie” the knot, painstaking as the process may be. Until such time that the law of punitive damages is more certain and predictable, or until the legislature alters the law of punitive damages or expressly declares a policy against coverage in all cases, we leave the decision of whether coverage will be permitted to the insurance carriers and their customers.
