delivered the opinion of the court.
Frаnk Mat Lipscombe filed in the trial court a motion for judgment against his uninsured motorist carrier, Security Insurance Company of Hartford. In the motion, Lipscombe sought to recover from Security $25,000, the amount of a judgment he had previously secured against James Elwood Brown, an uninsured motorist, for injuries sustained in an automobile collision. Code § 38.1-381 (b). *82 Security tendered pаyment into court of $20,000, claiming that was the limit of its liability under its policy, and the amount so tendered was paid to Lipscombe. The trial court ruled that Security was liable for $20,000 only and denied Lipscombe any further recovery. We granted him a writ of error.
At the time of the collision in question, Lipscombe was the named insured in a “Family Combination Automobile Policy” issued by Security. The policy covered two vehicles which were separately listed, an Oldsmobile and a Rambler. Lipscombe was operating the Oldsmobile when he was injured.
The poliсy contains standard uninsured motorist provisions providing coverage of $20,000 “each person” and $30,000 “each accident.” A separate, equal premium was charged for еach of the two automobiles listed in the policy.
Lipscombe contends that he should be permitted to “stack,” or combine, the uninsured motorist coverages on the two аutomobiles listed in the policy so as to provide total coverage of $40,000, enough to satisfy his $25,000 judgment. He bases his claim to “stack” upon an alleged ambiguity in the policy, the rеsult of which, he says, is to make it unclear whether he is entitled to the benefit of one coverage or two. This ambiguity should be construed against Security, Lipscombe argues, and “stacking” should be required.
Security contends, on the other hand, that its policy is not ambiguous. It relies upon the language of the “Declarations” portion of its policy where it is provided that the “limit of the company’s liability against each such coverage shall be as stated herein, subject to all the terms of this policy having reference thereto.” Seсurity then quotes a clause of the uninsured motorist provisions where it is provided that the “limit of liability . . . stated in the declarations as applicable to ‘each person’ [$20,000] is the limit оf the company’s liability for all damages . . . sustained by one person as the result of any one accident.” All this, Security says, fixes the limit of liability per person at $20,000. Thus, Security concludеs, Lipscombe is entitled to coverage of only $20,000 and should not be permitted to “stack.”
The same question presented by these contentions has been resolved today in
Cunningham
v.
Insurance Company of North America,
The holding in
Cunningham
and our embracement therein of
Sturdy
would conclude the question in this case except for an argument advanced by Security which was not made by the insurance carrier in
Cunningham.
Security goes back to our decision in
Surety Corporation v.
Elder,
Security states that although its policy contains a “two or morе automobiles” clause, that clause is expressly made inapplicable to the uninsured motorist portion of its policy. From this, Security argues that it has eliminated from its uninsured motоrist provisions the two-car, two-coverage concept which caused the ambiguity in Elder and has thereby “expressly excluded by clear and unequivocal language” any right to “stаck” the uninsured motorist coverages.
We agree that the “two or more automobiles” clause has been excluded from the uninsured motorist provisions of Security’s policy. But is this mеre exclusion sufficient to prevent “stacking”? Resolution of this question requires a consideration of the special nature of uninsured motorist coverage.
Uninsured motorist cоverage is designed to protect not vehicles, but persons,
i.e.,
the innocent victims of negligent uninsured motorists. A policy issued pursuant to the uninsured motorist statute, Code § 38.1-385 (b), provides to a person who is the named insured a broad
*84
reservoir of coverage. He is protected while occupying an insured vehicle
or otherwise.
An insured who is not the named insured is protected only while occupying an insured vehicle.
Insurance Company
v.
Perry, Adm'r,
Where, аs here, two vehicles are insured in the same policy and the named insured is injured while occupying one of the vehicles, it is clear that he is covered by the uninsured motorist prоvisions applicable to the occupied vehicle. But, is he not entitled to the coverage applicable to his other vehicle, upon which he has paid a full premium and as to which, at the time of his injury, he is in the “or otherwise” status? It is unclear from the policy whether he is so entitled, even with the “two or more automobiles” clause excluded. The
Sturdy
thesis, which we have adopted, is that it takes “plain, unmistakable language” to prevent “stacking” in this type case. However, Security’s mere exclusion of the ambiguous clаuse did not inform Lipscombe that he was entitled to only one coverage regardless of what status he occupied when injured and regardless of the number of vehicles insured.
See Hilton
v.
Citizens Insurance Company of New Jersey,
So an ambiguity exists in the policy before us which, according to familiar principles, must be construed against Security. Lipscombe is, therefore, entitled to “stack” coverages to the extent necessary to satisfy his judgment.-
This brings us to a subsidiary question raised by the assignments of error. Lipscombe, in his original action against the uninsured motorist, secured, as has been noted, a judgment for $25,000. Of that amount, $3,000 was for punitive damages. The question is whether Security is liable to Lipscombe for the punitive damage portion of the judgment. The trial court did not reaсh this question in view of its holding that Security was liable to Lipscombe for only $20,000.
Security contends that neither the uninsured motorist statute nor its policy requires it to pay the punitive damages. It аrgues that it would be against public policy to require insurance companies to pay punitive damages assessed against uninsured motorists because to do so would thwart thе purpose of awarding such damages, i.e., to discourage wrongdoing.
*85 It is true that the uninsured motorist statute does not mention punitive damages as such. And it is also true that the uninsured motorist provisions of Security’s policy state that the company is to pay only for damages “because of bodily injury, sickness or disease, including death resulting therefrom.”
But the uninsured motorist statute, Code § 38.1-381 (b), does providе that all automobile insurance policies issued in this state must contain “provisions undertaking to pay the insured all sums which he shall be legally entitled to recover as damages from thе owner or operator of an uninsured motor vehicle.” (Emphasis added.) We think this language was intended to include punitive damages.
Lipscombe has a valid judgment which includes $3,000 in punitivе damages. That amount is, accordingly, a sum which he was legally entitled to recover from the uninsured motorist and which under the statute he is entitled to recover from Security under its policy.
The uninsured motorist statute answers Security’s argument that to require insurance companies to pay punitive damages in this type case would thwart the public purpose оf discouraging wrongdoing. Code § 38.1-381 (f) provides that any insurer paying a claim under uninsured motorist provisions shall be subrogated to the rights of the insured against the person “causing such injury, death or damage” (Emрhasis added.) Thus, Security may pursue and place upon the uninsured motorist the burden of the punitive damages. Therefore, the requirement that Security pay Lipscombe for the рunitive damage portion of his judgment does not contravene public policy.
For the reasons assigned, the judgment of the trial court denying recovery to Lipscombe beyond the $20,000 paid to him by Security will be reversed and final judgment will be entered here in his favor against Security for $5,000, the balance of his judgment against the uninsured motorist.
Reversed and final judgment.
Notes
The same result was reached in
Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co.
v.
Wolfe,
