Shamey et al., Appellants,
v.
State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania.
*217 Bеfore WATKINS, P.J., JACOBS, HOFFMAN, CERCONE, PRICE, VAN DER VOORT, and SPAETH, JJ.
Robert B. Truel, with him Blair J. Harkett, and Truel and Ploeger, for appellants.
C. Leon Sherman, with him Harry W. Miller, and Miller and Sherman, for appellee.
OPINION BY CERCONE, J., June 21, 1974:
This appeal arises from the lower court's granting of State Farm's motion for a summary judgment which resulted in dismissal of the Shameys' suit in assumpsit. The facts are as follows:
On a snowy evening in December of 1963, the Shameys were returning home from a visit with their relatives. The route they took required that they negotiate a hill on Babcock Boulevard in Allegheny County, which had become very slippery because of impacted snow and ice. With tires spinning as they started their climb, their car could not pull the grade, and it came to a standstill short of the hilltop. A car driven by a Mr. McFarland then appeared at the crest of the hill and began its descent. It apparently skidded and struck the Shamey car, spinning it 180 degrees, so thаt the Shameys' car was then facing downhill. The Shamey *218 car had just stopped its half revolution when a third vehicle, driven by a Mr. Osborn who was also descending the hill struck their car. While Mr. McFarland carried liability insurance, Mr. Osborn was uninsured. The Shameys subsequently filed suit against McFarland who joined Mr. Shamey and Osborn as additional defendants. At the instance of State Farm, the Shameys also filed suit against the uninsured Osborn.
The Shameys were insured by the defendant herein, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, аnd their policy contained the standard Uninsured Motorists Clause as required by the Act of August 14, 1963, P.L. 909, § 1, as amended, Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 40, § 2000. Payment under the Uninsured Motorists Clause was not unconditional, however. There were conditions precedent to State Farm's duty to рay thereunder, the most important of which was the exclusion of coverage for "bodily injuries . . . with respect to which . . . any person entitled to payment under this coverage . . . without written consent of the company, [shall] make any settlement. . . ."
In May of 1967, State Farm and the Shameys reached a compromise under the Uninsured Motorists Clause whereby State Farm tendered a check for $6,500 in return for the Shameys' execution of an instrument entitled, "Release and Trust Agreement." In pertinent part the Release and Trust Agreement provided:
"Received of State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company . . . the sum of . . . $6,500.00 in full settlement and final discharge of all claims under the above numbered policy because of bodily injuriеs known and unknown and which may have resulted or may in the future develop and property damage sustained by Lois Ann Shamey by reason of an accident or occurrence arising out of the ownership or operation of an uninsured аutomobile by Thomas Osborn. . . .
. . .
*219 "For consideration aforesaid, and to the extent of any payment made thereunder, the undersigned agrees to hold in trust for the benefit of the Company all rights of recovery which he shall have against any pеrson or organization legally liable for such bodily injuries and property damage and assigns to the Company the proceeds of any settlement with or judgment against such person or organization.
. . .
"The undersigned further warrants that he has madе no settlement with, given any release to or prosecuted any claim to judgment against any person or organization legally liable for such bodily injuries and property damage, and that no such settlement will be made, no such releаse will be given, and no such claim will be prosecuted to judgment without the written consent of the Company."
The Shameys did not cash the check; and, in June, they settled their suit against McFarland for $4,500, releasing McFarland and his insurer, Aetna Insurance Comрany.[1] When State Farm learned of the settlement, it stopped payment on its check for $6,500. The Shameys thereupon instituted this action based upon both the insurance policy and the check. However, the lower court granted Stаte Farm's motion for summary judgment, and the Shameys appealed.
The Shameys' principal argument on this appeal is that State Farm's subrogation rights are limited to Osborn, the uninsured motorist, or anyone who may be liable for his negligence. Henсe, the Shameys contend that the settlement with McFarland and Aetna did not *220 affect State Farm's subrogation rights. In support of this contention the Shameys refer us to the Release and Trust Agreement set forth above, which states that the settlemеnt was for "bodily injuries known and unknown which have resulted or may in the future develop. . . sustained by Lois Ann Shamey by reason of the accident or occurrence arising out of the ownership or operation of an uninsured automobile by Thomas Osborn. . . ."
In rebuttal State Farm argues that the promises not to settle or prosecute to judgment refer to "all rights of recovery which [Lois Ann Shamey] shall have against any person or organization legally liable for such bodily injuries and property damage. . . ." Since McFarland and Aetna may be legally liable for all or part of the bodily injuries and property damage sustained by Lois Ann Shamey with regard to which State Farm settled the insurance claim, State Farm argues that its subrogation rights included them. We disagree.
First, as a matter of public policy, the statute requiring insurers to include uninsured motorists clausеs in automobile insurance contracts is "designed to give monetary protection to that ever changing and tragically large group of persons who while lawfully using the highways themselves suffer grave injuries through the negligent use of those highways by othеrs:" Harleysville Mut. Cas. Co. v. Blumling,
Despite the contention of the insurance company to the contrary, the phrase, "such bodily injuries," which *222 appears in the subrogation clause of the release, requires analysis. The Shameys contend that that phrase refers only to bodily injuries for which the uninsured Osborn is liable, since the Release and Trust Agreement limits payment to "bodily injuries . . . which have resulted . . . by reason of an accident . . . arising out of the ownership or operation of an uninsured automobile by Thomas Osborn." State Farm argues that the phrase refers to liability for the injuries themselves rеgardless of whether Osborn was responsible. Lending force to State Farm's argument is the possibility that McFarland, and not Osborn, may have been negligent. Hence, had the Shameys prosecuted their claim to judgment against McFarland, State Farm's $6,500 рayment would constitute a surplus in the nature of a double recovery.
The issue raises a question of first impression in Pennsylvania, and the other jurisdictions which have wrestled with this issue have reached different conclusions. See Widiss, A Guide to Uninsured Motоrist Coverage § 5.10 (1969). State Farm refers us to Kisling v. MFA Mut. Ins. Co.,
We, however, find no such clarity in the expression "such bodily injury;" and find the interpretation suggested by the Shameys to be at least equally reasonable as that proffered by State Fаrm. See Michigan Mut. *223 Liab. Co. v. Karsten,
Finally, State Farm mentions in passing that the instant fact situation indicates thаt there was "only one accident." The facts clearly indicate the contrary. There were two separate collisions by two allegedly negligent drivers, and each will only be responsible for the injuries caused by his negligence: McAllister v. Pennsylvania R.R. Co.,
Order of the lower court dismissing the plaintiffs' cоmplaint is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
VAN DER VOORT, J., dissents.
NOTES
Notes
[1] State Farm had previously notified all the interested parties that it had compromised the Shameys' claim under the Uninsured Motorists provision in thеir policy. They also informed the parties that the compromise included a subrogation agreement, and that any settlement with the Shameys, without the written consent of State Farm, would be "at their peril."
[2] In Rhault v. Tsagarakos,
[3] See Restatement of Torts, Second, § 433A, Comment c & Illustration 2.
