This case raises a question of contract interpretation: in an insurance policy, does the phrase “limits of liability of this coverage” refer to the policy limit or to the insured’s total damages? We believe it is the former, but because this particular set-off would reduce the policy limit below the statutory minimum, we reverse the trial court.
Facts and Procedural History
Kathleen Wagner, an underinsured motorist, collided with an IndyGo city bus driven by Howard Justice. To compensate him for the damages he sustained as a result of the accident, Justice received $77,469.56 in workers’ compensation from IndyGo’s insurer, GAB Robbins. That workers’ compensation award comprised $51,829.81 paid to Justice’s medical providers, $18,939.75 for his lost wages and temporary disability, and $6,700 for his permanent partial impairment. Pursuant to those payments, GAB Robbins asserted a lien in the amount of $77,469.56 against Justice’s bodily injury claim. Justice settled this lien for $5,511.06, bringing his net workers’ compensation to $71,958.50. Justice also received $25,000 from Wagner’s insurer, bringing his total recovery to $96,958.50.
At the time of the accident, Justice carried an underinsured motorist policy issued by American Family Mutual Insur-
We will pay compensatory damages for bodily injury which an insured person is legally entitled to recover from the owner or operator of an underinsured motor vehicle. The bodily injury must be sustained by an insured person and must be caused by accident and arise out of the use of the underinsured motor vehicle.
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EXCLUSIONS
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Underinsured Motorists Coverage shall not apply to the benefit of any insurer or self-insurer under any workers’ compensation or disability benefits law or any similar law.
LIMITS OF LIABILITY
The limits of liability of this coverage as shown in the declarations apply, subject to the following:
1. The limit for each person is the maximum for all damages sustained by all persons as the result of bodily injury to one person in any one accident.
2. Subject to the limit for each person, the limit for each accident is the maximum for bodily injury sustained by two or more persons in any one accident. We will pay no more than these máxi-mums no matter how many vehicles are described in the declarations, insured persons, claims, claimants or policies or vehicles are involved in the accident.
The limits of liability of this coverage will be reduced by:
1. A payment made or amount payable by or on behalf of any person or organization which may be legally liable, or under any collectible auto liability insurance, for loss caused by an accident with an underinsured motor vehicle.
2. A payment under the Liability coverage of this policy.
3.A payment made or amount payable because of bodily injury under any workers’ compensation or disability benefits law or any similar law.
Appellee’s App. at 26 (emphasis added).
Justice submitted an underinsured motorist claim to American Family, which denied coverage. Justice subsequently sued American Family for breach of contract, arguing he was entitled, under the terms of the policy, to $25,000 — the difference between Justice’s underinsured motorist policy limit of $50,000 and the $25,000 he received from Wagner’s insurer. American Family moved for summary judgment, arguing Justice was not entitled to recover under the policy because the $71,958.50 he received in workers’ compensation benefits operated as a “setoff’ against the $50,000 policy limit, thus reducing American Family’s liability to zero. After a hearing, the trial court granted American Family’s motion.
Justice appealed, arguing: (1) the setoff should not apply at all because his policy expressly excluded coverage of injuries eligible for workers’ compensation benefits; (2) even if the setoff did apply, the plain language of the policy required it to apply against his total damages, not the policy limit; and (3) the policy language was ambiguous and should be construed in favor of the insured. A unanimous panel of our Court of Appeals agreed with Justice’s second argument and reversed.
Justice v. Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co.,
We granted transfer, thereby vacating the opinion below. Ind. Appellate Rule 58(A);
Justice v. Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co.,
Standard of Review
Where, as here, the relevant facts are not in dispute, we review the trial
Insurance contracts “are governed by the same rules of construction as other contracts.”
Colonial Penn Ins. Co. v. Guzorek,
A. The Workers’ Compensation Exclusion Clause Does Not Void the Setoff Provision.
Justice first argues the workers’ compensation setoff provision cannot apply to reduce benefits payable under his underin-sured motorist policy because the policy expressly excludes coverage of injuries eligible for workers’ compensation. In essence, Justice claims American Family voided the workers’ compensation setoff provision by excluding payments from applying to the benefit of a workers’ compensation insurer: “Underinsured Motorists Coverage shall not apply to the benefit of any insurer or self-insurer under any workers’ compensation or disability benefits law or any similar law.” Appellee’s App. at 26.
Justice cites
Walkup v. Wabash,
But the question we resolved in Walk-up — whether an employer or worker’s compensation insurer may assert a lien against funds an injured worker recovers from his uninsured motorist policy — is entirely distinct from the question before us today — whether an uninsured motorist insurer may apply the insured’s worker’s compensation recovery as a setoff against the policy’s liability limit. Walkup, based upon the language of the policy at issue in that case, answered the first question in the negative, but it was silent on the second. Thus, we do not find it instructive here.
B. The Policy Language Unambiguously Provides for a Setoff Against the Policy Limit.
Justice next argues the language in the “LIMITS OF LIABILITY” section of his policy is clear and requires the setoff be applied not against the policy limit but against his total damages. Alternatively, he argues the policy language is ambiguous and must therefore be construed in his favor — specifically, such that the setoff applies against his total damages and thus he may recover $25,000 from American Family. We are not convinced.
An insurance policy is a contract like any other,
Holiday Hospitality,
Both parties seem to agree that
Beam v. Wausau Ins. Co.,
A. COVERAGE
1. We will pay the sums the “insured” is legally entitled to recover as compensatory damages from the owner or driv-
er of an “uninsured motor vehicle” or an “underinsured motor vehicle.”
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C. EXCLUSIONS
This insurance does not apply to:
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2. The direct or indirect benefit of any insurer or self-insurer under any workers!”] compensation, disability benefits or similar law.
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D. LIMIT OF INSURANCE
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2. The Limit of Insurance under this coverage shall be reduced by all sums paid or payable by or for anyone who is legally responsible, including all sums paid under the Coverage Form’s LIABILITY COVERAGE.
3. Any amount payable for damages under this coverage shall be reduced by all sums paid or payable under any workers’ compensation, disability benefits or similar law.
Id. Beam appealed the deduction, arguing that Section D3 of the policy was ambiguous because it was unclear whether the “amount payable for damages under this coverage” referred to the $1 million policy limit or to his $701,371 damage award; that ambiguity, he contended, should be construed in his favor. Id. at 527-28. We affirmed, concluding the contract unambiguously used the phrase “amount payable for damages” to mean “damages” and thus the trial court’s calculations were correct. Id. at 530-31. In so holding, we reasoned “that when the policy attempts to reduce limits, as opposed to damages, it chooses language that does precisely that,” as it did in Section D2, which “by reducing the ‘limit of insurance,’ unmistakably provides that any reduction is to be taken from the policy limit.” Id. at 531.
We find the policy language at issue in this case analogous to the language of Section D2 in Beam. Here, the American Family policy expressly and unambiguously states that the “limits of liability of this coverage will be reduced by ... [a] •payment made or amount payable by or on behalf of any person or organization which may be legally liable [and] ... [a] payment made or amount payable because of bodily injury under any workers’ compensation or disability benefits law.” Appellee’s App. at 26 (emphasis added). The phrase “limits of liability of this coverage” clearly refers to the $50,000 policy limit, not to Justice’s total damages. In application, this means the “limits of liability of this coverage,” $50,000, will be reduced by the $25,000 payment Justice received from a “legally liable” entity — Wagner’s insurer— and by the $71,958.50 Justice received in workers’ compensation and disability benefits. The equation works out as follows: $50,000.00 policy limit — $25,000.00 from Wagner’s insurer — $71,958.50 + $46,958.50. Thus, the policy limit is reduced to zero.
C. The Set-Off Provision Contravenes Indiana Code § 27-7-5-2.
But our inquiry cannot end there. So long as the policy language comports with our state statutes, it will control,
Medley v. Am. Econ. Ins. Co.,
1. Indiana’s Uninsured/Underinsured Motorist Statute
Our state uninsured/underinsured motorist statute, Ind.Code § 27-7-5-2(a) (2008) provided,
2
in pertinent part: “un-
The statute was originally enacted in 1965,
see
1965 Ind. Acts. ch. 138, § 1, and it required insurers to offer uninsured motorist coverage in an amount equal to the statutory minimum financial responsibility requirements.
DePrizio,
Since the statute was enacted, insurers have tried to circumvent its minimum coverage requirement in various ways — but always unsuccessfully. In
Patton v. Safeco Ins. Co. of Am.,
2. Instructive Precedent
Here, Justice’s policy limit was $50,000, which is the minimum amount the statute allows. But the worker’s compensation set-off provision, as the above equations demonstrate, operates to reduce that policy limit to zero. And so we must today decide whether Ind.Code § 27-7-5-2(a) permits such a reduction.
Although this question is new to us, our Court of Appeals has addressed it on two prior occasions and answered it in the negative. In
Leist v. Auto-Owners Ins. Co.,
Similarly, in
Hardiman v. Govt’l Interins. Exch.,
3. The American Family Policy Set-Off Provision
Justice, unlike the employee in Hardiman, did not receive the full statutory minimum from the tortfeasor’s insurer; the minimum was $50,000, but Justice received only $25,000. If Wagner had carried the required amount of liability insurance, Justice would have received $50,000, and the purpose of our uninsured/underin-sured motorist statute is to put him in that position. Thus, in light of that statutory purpose and the holdings of Leist and Hardiman, we conclude Justice is entitled to recover the remaining $25,000 from American Family. Any policy provision to the contrary is unlawful and unenforceable.
Conclusion
We therefore reverse the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to American
Notes
. Then and now, Ind.Code § 22-3-2-13 (2007 & Supp.2013) authorizes such a lien: "If the injured employee ... shall agree to receive compensation from the employer ... the employer ... shall have a lien upon any settlement award, judgment or fund out of which the employee might be compensated from the third party.” See also P.L. 260-1977, § 1, 1977 Ind. Acts 1089 (amending this section).
. The accident at issue in this case took place on March 27, 2008. Ind.Code § 27-7-5-2 has been amended several times since that date.
See
P.L. 124-2009, § 1, 2009 Ind. Acts 1127;
.
See, e.g., Vantine v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.,
