We granted discretionary review in this case to once again address the issue of whether and under what circumstances an injured party may aggregate or “stack” underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage. Specifically, we resolve the question of whether guest passengers who are not membеrs of the insured’s household may stack UIM coverage on all policies issued to the owner of the vehicle.
This case arose following an automobile accident in which driver Jackie James, Jr. and passenger Kenneth Duncan were killed, and passenger Charles Robert James was injurеd. The accident was caused by the negligence of another driver who was also killed in the collision. Jackie James was driving a car owned by his father-in-law, Omer Watkins. Watkins owned four vehicles and paid separate premiums for UIM coverage on each vehicle. Watkins’ policy сontained an anti-stacking provision which provided:
In no event will any insured other than you or a relative be entitled to more than the highest per person limit applicable to any one motor vehicle under this policy or any other policy issued by us.
Plaintiffs, the injured Charles Robert James, аnd the estates of the two men (Jackie James and Duncan) killed in the collision, brought an action against the estate of the tortfeasor. Because the judgment entered against the estate of the tortfeasor exceeded the limits of the tort-feasor’s insurance coveragе, the plaintiffs sought to stack the UIM coverage payable under the policy issued to Omer Watkins. Watkins’ insurer, Nationwide, argued the above-quoted anti-stacking provision precluded the plaintiffs from stacking the coverages and limited them to recovery only
A secondary issue which arises in this case is whether, at the time of the accident, Jackie James and his family were residents of Watkins’ household, thus placing Jackie James within the definition of “relative” under the policy issued to Watkins and еxempting him from the anti-stacking provision at issue here. After hearing testimony from Janice James and Watkins, the trial court found Jackie James was residing with Watkins at the time of the accident and therefore was a “relative” as defined by the Nationwide policy.
The Court of Appeals reversed. Citing Ohio Casualty Ins. Co. v. Stanfield, Ky.,
The first question for our consideration is whether guest passengers are entitled to stack UIM coverage in the same manner as insured persons and members of their family. In Allstate Ins. Co. v. Dicke, Ky.,
In Ohio Casualty Ins. Co. v. Stanfield, Ky.,
In Stanfield, we explained why insureds of the first class are entitled to stack coverages, but insureds of the second class are not:
The named insured in a policy receives coverage, and a contract benefit, for which he has paid a consideration. He seeks indemnity based on the payment of that premium and where he has paid separate premiums he is entitlеd to the additional coverages. However, the argument and reasoning does not apply to a permissive user of a vehicle who pays no premium and does not receive the broader uninsured motorist coverage of a named insured.
Id. at 558 (quoting Cunningham,
[B]y permitting the insured to stack his coverages [courts] “simply honor[ ] the reasonable expectations of the ‘named insured’ that his payment of an additional premium will result in increased coverage for those falling within the definition of the ‘named insured,’ and where an expectation of this nature is in conflict with a limiting clause in the policy, the resulting ambiguity must be resolved in favоr of the insured due to the nature of insurance contracts.” [S]inee an insured of the second class*114 was not a party to the contract his expectations as to extent of his coverage do not result in contract ambiguity and are not sufficient to avoid the effect of the pоlicy’s limiting clause.
Id. at 558-59 (quoting Lambert v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co.,
Although our discussion in Stanfield of the two classes of insureds arose in the context of a claim to stack uninsured motorist insurance (UM), its logic and reasoning apply equally to claims to stack under-insured motorist insurance (UIM). An wе stated in Allstate v. Dicke, Ky.,
We now address the contention of cross-Appellant Janice James, that her deceased husband Jackie James was a “relative” of Omer Watkins as that term is defined by Watkins’ insurance policy. If found to be Watkins’ relative, then Jackie James would not be subject to the anti-stacking provision of the policy which precludes second-class insureds from stacking UIM coverages. Rather, he would be a first-class insured entitled to stack coverage for all four vehicles insured by Watkins.
The policy here defines “relative” as “one who regularly lives in your household and who is related to you by blood, marriage or adoption (including a ward or foster child). A relative may live temporarily outside your household.” The Estatе of Jackie James contends that because Jackie James was Watkins’ son-in-law, and because James, his wife and children resided with Watkins at the time of the accident, he met the definition of “relative” under the policy. After hearing Watkins’ and Janice James’s testimony on the matter, the trial сourt found Jackie James resided with Watkins and was therefore his relative for purposes of the insurance coverage. As this is a factual determination, we cannot set it aside unless we find it to be clearly erroneous, as did the Court of Appeals. Lawson v. Loid, Ky.,
During the hearing before the trial court, both Janice James and Watkins testified that Janice and Jackie James were renting a house in Enterprise, Kentucky, but that the owner of the house intended to sell it and had given the Jameses notice that they needed to move. Both also testified the house the Jameses rented was dilapidated and uncomfortable to live in when the weather was extremely cold or extremely hot. Prior to the accident, the couple stayed in Watkins’ home three to five nights a week. However, the couple also stayed with Jackie James’s mother on occasion and also at their hоuse in Enterprise. As Watkins put it, the Jameses stayed “just wherever, you know, that they could find, you know, whenever it was real cold weather or anything like that.” This testimony certainly indicates that when the James family stayed in Watkins’ home, it was to escape unpleasant weather conditions, not because they considered Watkins’ house to be their home.
For the reasons set forth above, the decision of the Court of Appeals is hereby affirmed.
Notes
. As here, the Dicke case also involved a guest passenger. However, unlike in the instant case, that fact was not the focus of the opinion, and the parties failed to argue that the injured party's status as a guest passenger precluded stacking. Therefore, because we did not address the precise question which is before us today, Dicke is not dispositive of the issue at hand.
. Plaintiffs would have us distinguish Stan-field from the instant case because Stanfield involved an injured party’s desire to stack coverages under his employer’s fleet policy covering 63 vehicles, whereas the case at bar deals with a policy owned by an individual covering a far fewer number of vehicles. The distinction is irrelevant given that our holding in Stanfield was premised on the difference between first and second class insureds, not on the type of policy, the amount of premium paid, or the number of vehicles covered.
