¶2 In this case, the insured and insurer explicitly agreed to have the same judge, who confirmed the arbitration award and reduced it to judgment, also decide whether an offset was appropriate. We conclude that these parties, under the facts of this case, orally amended their pleadings to include a prayer for declaratory relief and that the trial court had authority and jurisdiction to resolve the offset dispute. We also conclude that for purposes of offsetting previously paid personal injury protection (PIP) benefits from underinsured motorist insurance (UIM) benefits, “full compensation” does not mean the amount recoverable under UIM after a reduction for comparative fault. Instead, insureds are fully compensated when they have made a complete recovery of the actual losses suffered as a result of an automobile accident as determined by a court or arbitrator. In this case, the insured will not be fully compensated for his damages as determined by an arbitrator, and the insurance company has no right to an offset. We affirm the Court of Appeals and remand to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
¶3 In April 2001, Kevin Sherry, a pedestrian, was struck by a car driven by an uninsured motorist.
¶4 Sherry and FIC were unable to agree on the proper amount of UIM benefits Sherry was entitled to and took their dispute to arbitration. The arbitrator ultimately held that Sherry had suffered damages of $143,127.92 ($53,127.92 in medical bills and $90,000.00 in general damages). In a written letter accompanying the award, the arbitrator explained that Sherry bore the “lion’s share” of fault because he could have simply stepped out of the way of the oncoming car. The arbitrator found that the lion’s share of fault was 70 percent and reduced Sherry’s damage and award accordingly to $42,938.38.
¶5 Sherry moved to confirm the award in Pierce County Superior Court under former RCW 7.04.190 (1943).
¶6 The trial court acknowledged that the letter of the law seemed to contemplate a separate declaratory judgment action to determine any offset. See Price v. Farmers Ins. Co. of Wash.,
¶7 Sherry appealed. The Court of Appeals ruled that by agreeing to have the trial judge decide the coverage issues, the parties had effectively joined a declaratory judgment action to the action to confirm the award. The court below also held that insurance companies are entitled to take a PIP offset only when insureds are fully compensated for their actual damages, not merely their UIM damages, which may be reduced by the insureds’ share of fault.
¶8 Only questions of law are presented. Our review is de novo. Parents Involved in Cmty. Schs. v. Seattle Sch. Dist. No. 1,
III
¶9 We must first decide whether the trial judge improperly considered both the petition to confirm and reduce the arbitration award to judgment and the insurance company’s request for an offset in one action. In Price, we held that the confirmation and reduction to judgment of an arbitration award was a special proceeding under former chapter 7.04 RCW, not a proceeding under the trial court’s general jurisdictional powers. We concluded that the court did not have authority to consider an offset during an action to confirm an arbitration award and instructed parties to resolve questions outside the scope of arbitration either by negotiation or in a declaratory judgment action. Price,
¶10 In Price, we were considering a case where, under only the trial court’s power to confirm an arbitration award, the parties asked the court to decide legal issues. Id. at 500. Price never questioned, and in fact explicitly affirmed, that superior courts in Washington have the jurisdiction and power to decide coverage issues. Id. at 497, 502. We simply held that these general powers were outside the scope of a superior court’s statutory power to reduce arbitration awards to judgment. Id. at 497, 502. Whether, in one proceeding, a trial court could act pursuant both to its general jurisdiction powers and its ministerial power under the arbitration act was not brought before the court that day.
¶11 For clarity, it would have been better practice for the parties before us to have pleaded a declaratory judgment action either in this cause of action or another. However, under the facts of this case where neither party objected and both parties treated the matter as if they had joined a
IV
¶12 We now turn to whether FIC was entitled to offset earlier PIP payments against the arbitrator’s UIM award. It is well established in Washington that insureds are not entitled to double recovery, and thus after an insured is “fully compensated for his loss,” an insurer may seek an offset, subrogation, or reimbursement for PIP benefits already paid. Thiringer v. Am. Motors Ins. Co.,
¶13 Turning briefly to the contract, it allows for an offset. It provides: “[t]o determine the amounts payable to an insured person under [the UIM] coverage part, we will first credit against the insured person’s damages . . . [a]ny amounts paid under other Parts of this policy.” Clerk’s Papers at 20 (emphasis added).
¶14 Sherry argues that “full compensation” within the meaning of the rule announced in Thiringer means the insured has made a complete recovery of the actual losses he or she suffered as a result of an automobile accident. FIC argues that an insured receives “full compensation” by receiving the amount to which he or she is legally entitled
¶15 Our approach must recognize that UIM and PIP insurance are both creatures of public policy: coverages that every insurer writing automobile policies within the state must, by law, offer their insureds. Our jurisprudence in this field is based largely on public policy and, where subrogation-like concepts are involved, equitable principles. Cf. Thiringer,
¶16 Generally “while an insurer is entitled to be reimbursed to the extent that its insured recovers payment for the same loss from a tortfeasor responsible for the damage, it can recover only the excess which the insured has received . . . after the insured is fully compensated for his loss.” Thiringer,
¶17 In Thiringer, this court spoke of a policy favoring “the adequate indemnification of innocent automobile accident victims.” Thiringer,
¶18 This court has never limited full recovery to the amount recoverable under UIM coverage. Rather, our opinions suggest insureds are not fully compensated until they have recovered all of their damages as a result of a motor vehicle accident. See, e.g., Thiringer,
the proceeds of the settlement should be applied first toward the payment of the insured’s general damages and then, if any excess remained, toward the payment of his special damages covered by the PIP provision. The principle upon which this holding was based was that the insured was entitled to be made whole, and that only after he had made a full recovery for his damages did the insurer’s right of subrogation arise.
Id. at 218. We rejected the insurance company’s narrow approach and adopted a broad view of full compensation.
¶19 Adopting the approach urged by FIC would result in a very narrow view of what damages must be recovered before duplication occurs, and one that is not consistent with the general policy that insureds receive full compensation before an insurer can seek reimbursement. It is important to remember that UIM is unique among insurance. Its purpose and focus are very narrow. Rather than full compensation, UIM coverage simply provides additional insurance to cover any judgment that might be entered in favor of the insured against an underinsured motorist. Brown,
¶20 This court examined UIM coverage in the context of a double recovery in Brown,
The court has also said that the purpose of UIM coverage is to provide the insured with a second layer of protection which “floats” on the top of recovery from other sources. The second layer of protection is not without limits. As the majority in Tissell noted, the UIM statute provides a “second floating layer of protection in every case in which the insured is legally entitled to recover’ damages from the negligent tortfeasor.”
Id. at 757 (citing and quoting Blackburn v. Safeco Ins. Co.,
¶22 Additionally, as we said in Winters and again in Hamm, where an insurer has written two separate auto insurance coverages and received two separate premiums for those separate coverages, the insured should not be worse off simply because both were purchased from the same insurer. Hamm,
¶23 We hold that an insurer is entitled to reduce an UIM arbitration award by previously paid PIP benefits only when its insureds are fully compensated for their actual damages, without reduction to account for the insureds’ fault.
¶24 A petition to confirm an arbitration award and reduce it to judgment is heard at a special proceeding under chapter 7.04 RCW. A judge does not have authority in such a proceeding to resolve coverage disputes, and coverage disputes are appropriately resolved by negotiation or in separate or joined declaratory judgment action. We hold under the facts of this case, the Court of Appeals correctly concluded the parties effectively amended their pleadings pursuant to CR 15(a) to include a prayer for declaratory relief. We further hold that for purposes of offsetting PIP benefits from UIM benefits, “full compensation” within the meaning of the Thiringer rule contemplates that the insured has made a complete recovery of the actual losses suffered as a result of an automobile accident without regard to fault. In this case, the insured did not receive full compensation for his damages. We affirm the Court of Appeals and remand to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Alexander, C.J.; C. Johnson, Madsen, Sanders, Owens, Fairhurst, and J.M. Johnson, JJ.; and Brown, J. Pro Tem., concur.
Notes
Financial Indemnity Company (FIC) several times describes this accident as something like a “Johnny Knoxville jackass video attempt,” referring to an MTV (music television) show where various dangerous stunts are shown. FIC strongly implies that Sherry was intentionally, rather than negligently, at fault for his own injuries. E.g., Wash. State Supreme Court oral argument, Sherry v. Fin. Indem. Co., No. 78667-4 (Mar. 29, 2007), audio recording by TVW, Washington State’s Public Affairs Network, available at http:/Avww.tvw.org. However, the arbitrator found that Sherry was only 70 percent at fault and did not find that Sherry acted intentionally. FIC’s policy excludes PIP coverage if the insured acts intentionally, and of course UIM benefits would not be available. Because FIC does not argue its intentional act exclusions, and because there is no finding in the arbitrator’s award that Sherry acted intentionally, we do not consider the implication that Sherry acted intentionally. We also decline to consider facts recited in the briefs but not supported by the record. Cf. RAP 10.3(a)(5), 13.4(c).
The 2005 legislature repealed Washington’s former uniform arbitration act, ch. 7.04 RCW, and replaced it with a revised uniform arbitration act, ch. 7.04A RCW. See Laws of 2005, ch. 433, §§ 1-32, 50.
Damage award $42,938.38
Plus UIM attorneys fees + $6,344.00
Plus filing fee + $110.00
Less PIP payments - $14,600.00
Entered award $34,792.38
See Verbatim Report of Proceedings at 14; Clerk’s Papers at 95.
Sherry had also argued that his insurer was entitled to reimbursement only of PIP payments reduced by his share of fault.
Such clauses are enforceable only to the extent that they prevent double recovery of damages, regardless of policy limits. See Keenan v. Indus. Indem. Ins. Co. of the Nw.,
This court was unanimous, though Justice Andersen concurred in result only.
We do not find support in our jurisprudence that only the fault free should benefit from insurance. Much insurance is intended to insure against the negligent acts of the insured. Innocent, in the context of insurance, often refers to “clean hands.” Generally, one who intentionally causes harm is not innocent.
Under FIC’s approach, taken to its logical extreme, the insured in Sayan might be required to reimburse the insurance company for PIP payments to prevent a “double recovery” of the UIM benefits of nothing. However, that would fly in the face of the general policy of PIP insurance, which is to provide immediate funds regardless of fault. See generally RCW 48.22.085. Counsel for FIC during oral argument did reject the suggestion that FIC would pursue reimbursement of PIP payments under those facts.
FIC argues that 7bison is inconsistent with the opinion of the court below. Tolson v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
FIC’s counsel conceded in oral argument that under its interpretation, its insured would, under these circumstances, be worse off by buying PIP coverage from FIC instead of medical and disability coverage from another insurer.
