OPINION
The court of appeals affirmed dismissal of a suit for underinsured motorist (“UIM”) benefits because it was commenced more than six years after the accident in which the injury occurred. We are asked to determine whether the statute of limitations begins to run on a UIM claim on the date of the accident or at a later time. In the past, we have indicated that the claim accrues and the limitations period commences at the time of the accident that causes the injury.
See Weeks v. American Family Mut. Ins. Co.,
On October 7, 1998, appellants, Patricia and Gerald Oanes (collectively “the Oanes”), brought suit in Hennepin County District Court against respondent, Allstate Insurance Company (“Allstate”), seeking to recover UIM benefits under their Allstate policy for a March 18, 1992, automobile accident. Allstate moved for summary judgment, claiming that the Oanes’ claims were time barred. Agreeing with Allstate, the district court granted the motion and dismissed the action. The court of appeals affirmed.
The relevant facts from the record are as follows. Patricia Oanes was injured in a multi-vehicle, chain reaction collision on March 18, 1992, as a result of being rear-ended by a car driven by Jeffrey Giefer. Oanes suffered injuries to her head, neck and back. Oanes, along with her husband, Gerald, first brought a claim against Giefer. That claim was settled on August 12, 1995. In July 1995, before the settlement, the Oanes notified Allstate of their intent to seek underinsured motorist benefits under their Allstate policy. Under the policy, UIM benefits were not recoverable until all tortfeasors’ “limits of liability” had been exhausted by settlement or judgment. Allstate informed the Oanes that their claim was not ripe because they had not pursued a claim to settlement or judgment against Howard Theis, the driver of the car that rear-ended Giefer. As a result, on April 2, 1997, the Oanes commenced an action against Theis’ estate. That action was settled on August 26, 1998.
In a complaint filed on October 7, 1998, the Oanes commenced an action against Allstate seeking to recover UIM benefits. Allstate moved for summary judgment arguing that
O’Neill
and
Weeks
establish that the six-year statute of limitations for UIM claims begins to run on the date of the accident causing the injury for which recovery is sought and the Oanes’ action was therefore time-barred because it was commenced more than six years after the date of Patricia Oanes’ injuries. The Oanes responded that the
O’Neill-Weeks
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rule of accrual for UIM claims did not apply because under the language of their Allstate policy, the statute of limitations did not begin to run until the limits of all tortfeasors’ liability had been exhausted by settlement, which did not occur until August 26, 1998, less than six years before they commenced their UIM action. They relied on
Sargent v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.,
In their petition for review to this court, in addition to the policy-language argument presented to the district court and the court of appeals, the Oanes raised a new issue. For the first time, the Oanes asked the court to address the general issue of when a UIM claim accrues, independent of the specific language in their policy. Specifically, they presented the question of whether this court should reject the O’Neill-Weeks rule that the statute of limitations on a UIM claim begins to run on the date of the accident causing the injuries and instead hold that the statute of limitations for a UIM claim begins to run on the date the insurance contract is breached — that is, when a claim for UIM coverage is denied by the insurer.
I.
The first issue we must address is whether we should consider the claim accrual issue in light of the fact that it was raised for the first time in the petition for review. Generally, issues not raised below will not be considered on appeal.
See Thiele v. Stick,
The issue the Oanes first raised in their petition for review — when a UIM claim accrues — was pending before this court in another case when the Oanes filed their petition.
See Johnson v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
The petition for review in this case came before the court after the Johnson oral argument, but before the final determination that Johnson was moot. In order to preserve the claim accrual issue, we granted review in this case and stayed further proceedings pending final disposition in Johnson. Having dismissed the appeal in Johnson as moot,- we now address the claim accrual issue here.
II.
The substantive question that we must resolve is when an insured’s action against its insurer for UIM benefits accrues and starts the statute of limitations running. Although we have not previously ruled on this issue in this precise context, we have addressed related aspects of the issue. We held that, an action to imply UIM coverage in a policy and then to recover benefits under that implied-in-law coverage accrues on the date of the accident.
See O’Neill v. Illinois Farmers Ins. Co.,
Although none of these cases directly addressed the accrual date of a UIM claim, it is not surprising, especially given our language in
Weeks,
that the court of appeals and respondent interpret
O’Neill
and its progeny as establishing
that
a UIM claim accrues on the date of the accident. The issue before us is whether we should abandon that interpretation of
O’Neill-Weeks
and adopt the position taken by a majority of jurisdictions that a cause of action for the recovery of UIM benefits accrues not when the injury occurs, but when the insurance contract has been breached. As recently as
1998, we
declined to adopt that position.
See Weeks,
Although the
O’Neill
line of cases appears to establish a rule for accrual of UIM claims, there is another line of our
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cases that contradicts
O’Neül-Weeks
by holding that a claim for UIM benefits is not ripe until the underlying tort claim is resolved, either by settlement or judgment. We held that a UIM claimant is required to pursue his or her claim against the tortfeasor to settlement or judgment before seeking UIM benefits from the underinsurer.
See Employers Mut. Cos. v. Nordstrom,
These contradictory lines of cases can put a UIM claimant in an untenable position. The O’Neill-Weeks line tells the claimant that her claim must be brought within six years of the accident causing injury. The Nordstrom line tells her that settlement or adjudication of an action against the tortfeasor is a condition precedent to bringing the UIM claim. But there is no guarantee that the Nordstrom condition precedent will occur before the O’Neill-Weeks six-year statute has run. The disharmony between these two rules of law makes it possible for the statute of limitations on the UIM claim to run, as it did in Johnson and in this case, before it is known whether the tortfeasor is actually underinsured, and therefore, before a UIM claim could have been brought. Since our decision in Weeks, this court has received a number of petitions for review calling our attention to the resulting unfairness to UIM claimants who have paid a premium for UIM coverage and have diligently pursued the tortfeasor, but who are denied the benefit of that coverage through the operation of the two rules.
At the time of our decision in Weeks, the court did not have before it, and therefore did not consider, the interplay between the rule that the statute of limitations for UIM claims begins to run on the date of the accident that caused the claimant’s injuries and the rule precluding a UIM claimant from proceeding with a claim until the underlying tort action has been resolved by settlement or judgment. In fact, our analyses in these two sets of cases has unfortunately proceeded as if on parallel but separate tracks that never intersect; neither line has been addressed in the consideration of the other. But the rules do intersect in real cases, and with potentially disastrous impact. This interplay between the two rules creates the possibility that the statute of limitations may run on a valid UIM claim before the claimant can determine whether the claim exists. That result is inconsistent with our sense of justice and one we cannot abide.
It has been suggested that this undesirable result can be avoided by the approach laid out by the court of appeals in
Cattnach v. State Farm Insurance Co.,
Respondent argues that stare de-cisis should preclude abandonment of the
O’Neill-Weeks
claim accrual rule. The doctrine of stare decisis directs that we adhere to former decisions in order that there might he stability in the law.
See Naftalin v. King,
Accordingly, we reject the rule that a UIM claim accrues on the date of the accident that causes the injury. We overrule the O'Neill-Weeks line of cases to the extent that they articulate such a rule. We must now decide what is the appropriate alternative accrual event for UIM claims.
While we reject the ONeill-Weeks rule of claim accrual at the time of the accident because of its inconsistency with the Nord-strom rule and its potentially harsh consequences for UIM claimants, we are not unmindful of the concerns we articulated in ONeill and reiterated in Weeks that prompted us to adopt the date of the accident as the accrual date. Our concern in ONeill and Weeks was that, if the accrual date was the date of the breach of the insurance contract, that is, the date the claim was denied, the insured would be able to postpone the operation of the statute of limitations indefinitely. Consistent with this concern, we again decline to adopt the rule that commences the statute of limitations when the contract is breached.
We instead adopt a third option for the time a UIM claim accrues and the statute of limitations begins to run. This option is the date of settlement with or judgment against the tortfeasor.
See Wheeler v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co.,
*407 Using the date of settlement with or judgment against the tortfeasor as the accrual date for UIM claims is consistent with our Nordstrom decision. The UIM claim will accrue when the condition precedent to raising the UIM claim that we identified in Nordstrom has been satisfied, not before. The statute of limitations will not be triggered until the UIM claim becomes ripe, eliminating the possibility that the limitations period will have run before the claim could be brought.
Designating the date of settlement with or judgment against the tortfeasor as the accrual date for UIM claims is also consonant with our concern expressed in O’Neill and Weeks that the claimant not be enabled to forestall the commencement of the limitations period indefinitely by failing to assert the UIM claim. With the date of settlement or judgment as the accrual date, that cannot happen.
Adopting the date of settlement or judgment as the accrual date protects the interests of both the insured and the insurer. 3 Therefore, we reverse the court of appeals and remand to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. 4
Reversed and remanded to the district court.
Notes
. In
Sargent,
the court of appeals concluded that the language of the insurance policy at issue established a contractual accrual date ihat created an exception to the general rule that a UIM claim accrues at the time of the accident.
. Although these citations illustrate that other jurisdictions have applied the accrual rule we adopt to UM as well as UIM claims, the case before us involves only a UIM claim. There are differences between the two types of claims that may have a bearing on the appropriate accrual rule. For example, "[t]he condition precedent for bringing an
uninsured
motorist claim is different from the underin-sured claim. To bring an arbitration claim
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for [UM] benefits, the claimant does not have to recover first from the uninsured tortfeasor; the claimant need only show that the tortfea-sor was uninsured.”
Nordstrom,
. We similarly adopted a rule that accommodated the interests of both the UIM claimant and the UIM insurer in
Schmidt v. Clothier,
. Because of our resolution of the question presented with respect to the accrual date for UIM claims, we need not and therefore do not reach the question of whether the language of the Oanes’ insurance policy with Allstate created a contractual accrual date different from the O’Neill-Weeks rule.
