OPINION OF THE COURT
We are called upon to decide whether the placement of a “Relation of Earnings to Insurance” (REI) clause within the “General Provisions” of a disability insurance policy complies with Insurance Law § 3216. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that it does.
I.
Defendant Connecticut General Life Insurance Company issued a 10-page form disability income insurance policy to plaintiff Bruce Friedman, a citizen and resident of New York, on July 19, 1983. The first section of the policy, entitled “Policy Specifications,” sets forth a “Monthly Indemnity for Total Dis
In its “Benefit Provisions,” the policy declares plaintiff eligible for a “Monthly Indemnity for Total Disability” of $2,500 upon proof of his total disability while the policy is in force. The REI clause, included within the “General Provisions,” specifies, however, that
“[i]f the total amount of loss of time benefits promised for the same disability under all valid loss of time coverage upon the Insured exceeds the greater of (a) the Insured’s monthly earnings at the time disability commenced or (b) the Insured’s average monthly earnings for the 2-year period immediately preceding a disability for which claim is made, the Company will be liable only for a reduced amount of the benefits under the policy. Such reduced amount will be (a) such proportion of the benefits otherwise provided under the policy as the amount of such monthly earnings or average monthly earnings bear to the total amount of monthly benefits for the same disability under all valid loss of time coverage upon the Insured at the time such disability commences, plus (b) a pro rata refund of the premiums paid during such 2-year period for benefits not paid. This provision, however, will not operate to reduce the total monthly amount of benefits payable under all valid loss of time coverage upon the Insured below the lesser of: (a) the sum of $300 or (b) the sum of the monthly benefits specified in such coverages. This provision will not be effective with respect to any renewal of the policy after Age 65. ‘Valid loss of time coverage’ means all loss of time coverage provided by any government, or agency thereof, or any Insurance company, organization or fund.”
In June 1998, plaintiff became totally disabled within the meaning of the policy.
1
He had paid all the premiums due since the policy’s issuance and had otherwise complied with its terms
In a summons and complaint dated June 18, 2001, plaintiff sued Connecticut General in Supreme Court on behalf of himself and a putative class. He alleged eight causes of action arising out of the company’s use of REI clauses in its insurance policies in New York and elsewhere.
Plaintiffs first and third causes of action asserted class claims under other states’ statutes proscribing deceptive acts or practices in business or trade and other states’ statutes and regulations governing insurance respectively. A second cause of action alleged that Connecticut General’s “conduct in the marketing and sale of’ the policies was “materially unfair, misleading, and constituted a deceptive act or practice in the conduct of [its] business or trade” under General Business Law § 349. As a fourth cause of action, plaintiff alleged that Connecticut General was “in violation of New York insurance statutes and regulations.” Plaintiffs fifth cause of action alleged breach of contract; his sixth cause of action alleged that the policy was unconscionable because of its REI clause. As remedies for the above causes of action, plaintiff principally sought damages amounting to the difference between the amount paid and the benefit amount of $2,500, and a declaration that the REI clause was void or unenforceable.
A seventh cause of action sought the statutory penalty under Insurance Law § 4226 for alleged violation of insurance regulations: a refund of premiums paid. In his eighth and final cause of action, plaintiff alleged that even if the REI clause was enforceable, Connecticut General had still underpaid him. Plaintiff therefore sought to be awarded a sum equal to the difference between the amount he considered to be due and payable and the lesser amount that he had, in fact, received.
The thrust of the complaint was that the REI clause’s location in the policy was “unfair, deceptive, and misleading” to plaintiff and purported class members. Specifically, plaintiff
On August 3, 2001, Connecticut General moved to dismiss the complaint on grounds that plaintiffs claims were either time-barred or failed to state a cause of action. Supreme Court denied the motion in its entirety, agreeing with plaintiff that section 3216 (c) (7) mandated placing the REI clause with the benefit provision to which it applied,
“to wit, the Total Disability Benefit. Instead, [Connecticut General] placed it in the ‘General Provisions’ section of the policy along with ‘general’ terms such as claim forms, proof of loss, payment of claims, etc. . . . [T]he Specification Page, which is the first substantive page of the policy, describes the benefit provided by the policy as $2500 without making any mention of the prior earnings ‘cap.’ ”
Supreme Court went on to address plaintiffs eighth cause of action, although he did not need to reach it. Relying on an out-of-state case where the REI language was written by an insurance company rather than a legislature, the court opined that “it would appear that even if the clause were enforceable, plaintiff would still be entitled to the full benefit amount of the policy, in the absence of a showing that he has another disability policy providing loss of time benefits.”
On May 30, 2003, plaintiff moved by order to show cause to certify a class consisting of “[a] 11 insureds, owners, and beneficiaries under disability policies of insurance underwritten and sold by [Connecticut General] that contain a Relation of Earnings to Insurance Provision.” On July 29, 2003, Connecticut General moved for summary judgment to dismiss the complaint. In support of its motion, the company supplied documentation to establish that the form policy issued to plaintiff had been reviewed and approved by the New York State Insurance Department for use in New York. Further, Connecticut General emphasized that
“[t]he purpose of the REI provision is to reduce or restrict loss of time benefits if the insured was over-insured at the time of claim. Application of the provision does not deprive the insured of benefits towhich he was entitled. To the extent premiums were paid for a greater benefit than actually received, such premiums are returned to the policyholder.”
On behalf of himself and the putative class, plaintiff on October 6, 2003 cross-moved for partial summary judgment on certain of his causes of action.
As an initial matter, Supreme Court determined that Connecticut General’s “motion for summary judgment [was], in essence, a motion to reargue the prior motion to dismiss” and treated the prior order as law of the case (
Connecticut General appealed; plaintiff cross-appealed the denial of class certification. In addition, plaintiff contended that in the event the Appellate Division reversed the order granting him summary judgment on his fifth and seventh causes of action, it should reinstate the other claims dismissed by Supreme Court.
First, the Appellate Division faulted Supreme Court for regarding Connecticut General’s motion for summary judgment as a motion to reargue the motion to dismiss, and for “treating the prior [order] as law of the case . . . since the scope of review on the two motions differs” (
“[t]his error was compounded by the prior motion court’s erroneous construction of the policy language. The breach of contract claim was based upon the insurer’s enforcement of its [REI] clause, which was alleged to be unenforceable under the contract due to failure to comply with statutory requirements. Specifically, the policy allegedly failed tonotify the insured that his monthly benefit would be less than the policy’s stated monthly benefit, because the location in the policy of its REI clause did not accord with the statutory requirements” ( 30 AD3d at 350 ).
The Appellate Division rejected Supreme Court’s interpretation of section 3216, holding that “the location of the REI clause in the policy did not violate the statute, as a matter of law” (id. at 351). The court denied plaintiffs cross motion in its entirety and dismissed plaintiff’s fifth and seventh causes of action, ultimately directing the clerk to enter judgment in favor of defendant and dismiss the complaint. The Appellate Division did not discuss the four causes of action dismissed by Supreme Court as duplicative and/or moot based on that court’s contrary interpretation of section 3216, but instead simply affirmed this part of Supreme Court’s order.
Plaintiff then moved for leave to appeal to us. We granted his motion except insofar as he sought to appeal from the portion of the Appellate Division’s order denying class certification, which we dismissed on the ground of finality
(see
II.
Plaintiff’s breach-of-contract claim is premised upon a clause in the policy entitled “Conformity with State Statutes.” This clause, which comes directly after the REI clause in the section captioned “General Provisions,” states that “[a]ny provision of the Policy ... in conflict with the statutes of the state in which the Insured resides ... is hereby amended to conform to the minimum requirements of such statutes”
(see also
Insurance Law § 3103 [a] [“in all respects in which (an insurance policy’s) provisions are in violation of the requirements or prohibitions of (the Insurance Law) it shall be enforceable as if it conformed with such requirements or prohibitions”]). Consequently, if Connecticut General’s REI clause does not comply with the requirements of New York’s Insurance Law, the reduction of
Insurance Law § 3216 (c) (7) provides that
“[n]o policy of accident and health insurance shall be delivered or issued for delivery to any person in this state unless: . . .
“[t]he exceptions and reductions of indemnity are set forth in the policy and, except those which are set forth in subsection (d) of this section, are printed, at the insurer’s option, either included with the benefit provision to which they apply, or under an appropriate caption such as ‘EXCEPTIONS’, or ‘EXCEPTIONS AND REDUCTIONS’, provided that if an exception or reduction specifically applies only to a particular benefit of the policy, a statement of such exception or reduction shall be included with the benefit provision to which it applies” (emphasis added).
Plaintiff argues that section 3216 (c) (7)’s closing proviso—i.e., “provided that if an exception or reduction specifically applies only to a particular benefit of the policy, a statement of such exception or reduction shall be included with the benefit provision to which it applies”—should control the placement of the REI clause, which concededly applies solely to the “particular benefit” of “Total Disability Benefit.” Governing principles of statutory construction, as applied to the language of subsections (c) (7), (d) (2), and (d) (4), however, counsel otherwise.
First, section 3216 (c) (7) begins by explicitly “except[ing] those [exceptions and reductions of indemnity] which are set forth in subsection (d) of this section” from its further requirements as to location of exceptions and reductions of indemnity. Subsection (d) (2), in turn, states as follows:
“Other provisions. No such policy delivered or issued for delivery to any person in this state shall contain provisions respecting the matters set forth below unless such provisions are in the words (not including the designation by number or letter) in which the same appear in this paragraph except that the insurer may, at its option, use in lieu of any such provision a corresponding provision of different wording approved by the superintendent [of Insurance] which is not less favorable in any respectto the insured or the beneficiary. Any such provision contained in the policy shall be preceded individually by the appropriate caption appearing herein or, at the option of the insurer, by such appropriate individual or group captions or subcaptions as the superintendent may approve.”
Subparagraph (F) in subsection (d) (2), captioned “RELATION OF EARNINGS TO INSURANCE,” recites the precise wording used by Connecticut General in the REI clause that is the subject of this litigation. Thus, Connecticut General’s REI clause, as an exception or reduction in indemnity “set forth in subsection (d)” of section 3216, is explicitly excepted from the requirements of section 3216 (c) (7) by the plain language of that statutory provision.
Plaintiff nonetheless argues that the “subsection (d)” exception within subsection (c) (7) modifies only the phrase “either included with the benefit provision to which they apply, or under an appropriate caption such as ‘EXCEPTIONS’, or ‘EXCEPTIONS AND REDUCTIONS’.” Thus, he contends that subsection (c) (7)’s further proviso (i.e., “provided that if an exception or reduction specifically applies only to a particular benefit of the policy, a statement of such exception or reduction shall be included with the benefit provision to which it applies”) modifies subsection (d) exceptions or reductions in indemnity. In short, plaintiff maintains that subsection (c) (7)’s final proviso is unqualified by that subsection’s earlier, explicit limitation relating to subsection (d) enumeration.
“The purpose of a proviso is to restrain the enacting clause, to except something which would otherwise have been within it, or in some measure to modify it” (McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 1, Statutes § 212). “The operation of a proviso is usually and properly confined to
the clause or distinct portion of the enactment which immediately precedes it
and does not, in the absence of a manifestly shown intent, extend to or qualify other sections or portions of the statute”
(id.,
Comment [emphasis added]). Thus, under traditional principles of statutory construction, the proviso so heavily relied upon by plaintiff modifies only “the clause or distinct portion of the enactment which immediately precedes it.” The end result is that subsection (c) (7) commands that,
where no subsection (d) exception or reduction in indemnity applies,
any other exception or reduction in indemnity that pertains only to a particular policy benefit must be included with the benefit provision to which it applies.
Further, subsection (d) sets forth its own requirements for placement and captioning of the exceptions or reductions in indemnity that it enumerates. This lends additional support to our reading of section 3216 (c) (7). Specifically, section 3216 (d) (4) provides that
“[t]he provisions which are the subject of paragraphs one and two of this subsection, or any corresponding provisions which are used in lieu thereof in accordance with such paragraphs, shall be printed in the consecutive order of the provisions in such paragraphs or, at the option of the insurer, any such provision may appear as a unit in any part of the policy, with other provisions to which it may be logically related, provided the resulting policy shall not be in whole or in part unintelligible, uncertain, ambiguous, abstruse, or likely to mislead a person to whom the policy is offered, delivered or issued” (emphasis added).
Because of this explicit direction relating to placement of subsection (d) exceptions and reductions, interpreting subsection (c) (7)’s ending proviso to govern the REI clause would inevitably create superfluity if not a downright conflict within section 3216. A court must consider a statute as a whole, reading and construing all parts of an act together to determine legislative intent
(see
McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 1, Statutes § 97), and, where possible, should “harmonize [ ] [all parts of a statute] with each other . . . and [give] effect and meaning ... to the entire statute and every part and word thereof’
(id.
§ 98;
see also People v Mobil Oil Corp.,
III.
Plaintiff alleges in his eighth cause of action that even if the REI clause is enforceable, Connecticut General has not calculated his benefits correctly. He contends that once this cause of action is no longer moot, it must be reinstated because it has never been considered on its merits by any court.
The record makes clear that between Supreme Court’s initial order, which was addressed solely to the pleadings, and its subsequent order, which disposed of Connecticut General’s and plaintiffs motions for summary judgment and partial summary judgment respectively, neither party submitted additional facts on the subject of the eighth cause of action. Connecticut General’s motion for summary judgment and its supporting memoranda, exhibits, and affirmations merely reassert the argument made in its earlier motion to dismiss; that is, that plaintiff insufficiently alleged a mistake. For his part, plaintiff did not cross-move for summary judgment on this particular cause of action. Instead, he simply took the position that there were material issues of fact regarding Connecticut General’s misapplication of the REI clause, assuming it to be enforceable. As a result, plaintiffs eighth cause of action requires further adjudication. Plaintiffs arguments to support revival of his other causes of action are without merit.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division, insofar as appealed from, should be modified, without costs, by reinstating the eighth cause of action and remitting to Supreme Court for further proceedings on that cause of action, and, as so modified, should be affirmed.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Ciparick, Graffeo, Smith, Pigott and Jones concur.
Order, insofar as appealed from, modified, etc.
Notes
. Plaintiffs premiums for the policy were waived on June 8, 1998.
. According to plaintiff’s counsel, at some point Connecticut General increased his monthly benefit from $543.33 to an amount over $1,900. According to Connecticut General’s counsel, plaintiff paid about $14,000 over a 15-year period in premiums and, as of November 2003, had collected roughly $98,000 in benefits.
. The prior motion was decided by a different Justice, who had retired by the time Connecticut General moved for summary judgment.
. An order denying class certification is not reviewable on appeal from a final order because it does not necessarily affect the final determination (see Karger, The Powers of the New York Court of Appeals § 4:6, at 61 [rev 3d ed 2005]).
