This case presents a question of insurance law. The issue is whether our uninsured motorist insurance statute requires an insurance company to provide uninsured motorist coverage to one using an insured vehicle where the named insured is a corporation and the user is an employee of the cоrporation. The trial court granted a summary judgment to appellee, United States Fire Insurance Company (U.S. Fire), holding the policy issued to the corporate employer provided coverage to the employee only if he were occupying the covered vehicle at the time of the injury, and concluding that in this case the employee was not an occupant. We hold that our statute which deals with uninsured motorist coverage requires that a company issuing liability insurance on a vehicle must also issue uninsured motorist coverage to one using the insured vehicle. We conсlude the employee in this case was using the insured vehicle at the time the accident occurred, and we therefore need not consider whether he would have been covered under the terms of the policy as an occupant of the vehicle. The summary judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded.
The appellant, First Security Bank of Searcy, Arkansas, is the executor of the estate of Darrell Wayne James. It brought this wrongful death action on behalf of James’s estate. James was co-driver of a tractor-trailer rig owned by B & D Transport, Inc. The rig was insured under a policy issued by U.S. Fire, naming B & D Transport, Inc., as the insured.
James and his stepfather, who was his co-driver, had driven the truck to Santa Clara, California. James got out of the truck and was standing in a street directing the backing of the truck to a loading dock when he was struck by one or more hit-and-run drivers and killed. The hit-and-run driver or drivers remain unidentified. If the uninsured motorist coverage applies to James, there is no question that a hit-and-run driver qualifies as an uninsured motorist.
1. The terms of the policy
The general provisions of the basic liability policy make it clear that coverage extends to persons, including employees of B & D Trucking, Inc., using the vehicle with permission. The uninsured motorist endorsement, however, describes “who is insured,” in pertinent part as follows: “1. You [the named insured] or any family member. 2. Anyone else occupying a covered auto . . . .” U.S. Fire successfully argued to the trial court that, as James had dismounted the truck and was standing some six to eight feet away from it at the time he was hit and killed, he was not cоvered by the uninsured motorist provisions because he was not occupying the vehicle when he was killed.
We have not had occasion to define the term “occupying” in the context presented here. In Southern Farm Bureau Cas. Ins. Co. v. Fields,
We need not determine whether James was “occupying” the vehicle, however, because we agree with the bank’s argument that he was covered by the policy аs a user of the vehicle because our statute requires it.
2. The statutory requirement
The statute in question, Ark. Code Ann. § 23-89-403 (1987), is as follows:
23-89-403. Bodily injury coverage required.
(a) No automobile liability insurance covering liability arising out of the ownership, maintenance, or use of any motor vehicle shall be delivered or issued for delivery in this state with respect to any motor vеhicle registered or principally garaged in this state unless coverage is provided therein or supplemental thereto and is not less than limits described in § 27-19-605, under provisions filed with and approved by the Insurance Commissioner, for the protection of persons insured thereunder who are legally entitled to recover damages from owners or operators of uninsured motor vehicles because of bodily injury, sickness, or disease, including death, resulting therefrom.
(b) However, the coverage required under this section shall not be applicable where any insured named in the policy shall reject the coverage, and this rejection shall continue until withdrawn in writing by the insured.
Subsection (a) of the statute requires uninsured motorist coverage if the policy covers liability arising from use of a vehicle. The policy in question undoubtedly covered liability resulting from the use of the vehicle by a B & D employee. We cоnclude the statute expressed the intent of the general assembly to include in uninsured motorist coverage the persons included in liability coverage. The uninsured motorist coverage requirement is for the protection of “persons insured . . . who are legally entitled to recover damages from оwners or operators of uninsured motor vehicles. . . .” Darrell Wayne James was such a person.
Our decision is supported by cases from other courts. First, we note the general rule that a statute governing insurance coverage becomes part of a policy affected by it. Our court of appeals has stated the principle, Carner v. Farmers Ins. of Arkansas,
We have found cases from other jurisdictions in which there was a statute similar to § 23-89-403(a) where it was held that uninsured motorist coverage was required with respect to a person injured while using a covered vehicle regardless of the terms of the insurance policy. In National Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, Penn. v. Olson,
In Oberkramer v. Reliance Ins. Co.,
Other examples include Hartford Accident & Indent. Co. v. Booker,
We agree with the cases holding that a statute like § 23-89-403 (a) requires uninsured motorist coverage for the user of a vehicle insured against liability, and that is our holding here.
3. U.S. Fire’s arguments
a. Named insured
U.S. Fire argues that a corporation’s employees cannot be its “family members,” and thus James does not qualify for uninsured motorist coverage because he is not a named insured. While we might agree that James did not qualify as a “family member” of the corporation which purchased the insurance, our determination that our statute requires that he be covered because he was a user of the vehicle answers the argument.
b. Purchaser
U.S. Fire points out that in Howard v. Grain Dealers Mut. Ins. Co.,
c. Rejection
U.S. Fire argues that § 23-89-403(b) permits only a named insured to reject uninsured motorist coverage, and thus it is clear that the statute intended only that the named insured be protected. The conclusion simply does not follow the premise. The focus of the insurance is on the insured vehicle. If, by not rejecting it, the owner of the vehicle purchases the coverage, the question becomes what has he or she bought. Our holding is that he or she has purchased at least the coverage contemplated by § 23-89-403(a), for the reasons stated above, and that includes coverage for one using the insured vehicle.
d. Users of uninsured vehicles
In Crawford v. Emcasco Ins. Co.,
U.S. Fire argues that if an insurer can limit coverage in that manner it follows a fortiori that it can limit uninsured motorist coverage, as in the policy in this case, only to occuрants of the insured vehicle. “A fortiori” is a term of logic meaning “with stronger reason” or “much more.” Black’s Law Dictionary (5th ed. 1979), p. 56. Our decision in the Crawford case made it clear why it follows not at all. There we stated clearly that the insurance coverage required by the statute is, as noted in part 3. c. оf this opinion, not personal insurance but vehicle insurance. We were not required in that case to consider a possible exception to that conclusion with respect to coverage of the named insured and his or her family members.
e. Non-user cases
U. S. Fire quotes language from Mullis v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
Also cited is Allstate Ins. Co. v. Graham,
Other cases cited by U.S. Fire include Polzin v. Phoenix of Hartford Ins. Companies,
We find nothing in any of these cases to raise any doubt about our conclusion that our statute requires uninsured motorist coverage be provided an employee using his employer’s vehicle which is insured with uninsured motorist coverage.
Conclusion
In the Fields case we held there was nothing to preclude an insurer from limiting uninsured motorist coverage to occupants of the insured vehicle as far as passengers were concerned. Here we draw a distinction between users, who are protected by the statute, and passengers who are not, and we hold that uninsured motorist insurance coverage may not be limited so as to exclude a user of an insured vehicle.
Reversed and remanded.
