John Smith, the appellant, appealed a ruling by the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia which granted Smith’s insurer, appellee Employers’ Fire Insurance Co., priority over Smith in recovering from the insurer of Jimmy Carter, the tortfeasor who injured Smith in a car wreck. The United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit subsequently certified the following question to this court: “Is a no-fault insurer which has paid personal injury benefits to its insured injured in a 1981 motor vehicle accident, entitled, under Georgia law, to a right of action by subrogation against the tortfeasor’s liability insurer before its [insured] is fully compensated for uncompensated economic and non-economic losses?” We respond in the negative.
A truck driven by Carter, which weighed over 6500 pounds, ran into a stationary car occupied by Smith, causing Smith personal injuries and medical expenses, he alleges, in excess of $100,000. Employers’ paid Smith $50,000 pursuant to his no-fault policy. Carter owned a policy with appellee Canal Insurance Co. for $50,000 coverage. When Smith and his insurer both claimed the right to recover from Carter’s policy, Canal filed an interpleader action to determine its rights and liabilities relative to Smith and Employers’.
The District Court, citing
McGlohon v. Ogden,
As the appellee notes, the legislature has set out separate procedural and substantive rules for dealing with financially responsible and financially irresponsible tortfeasors. Financially responsible means insured or self-insured. OCGA § 40-9-2. Since this case involves a financially responsible tortfeasor, we look to the portion of OCGA § 33-34-3 (d) (1) which governs actions involving that type of tortfeasor.
The original forerunner of present OCGA § 33-34-3 (d) (1) appeared as Section 5 (d) of the Reparations Act, Ga. L. 1974, p. 119. While this statute provided for subrogation, it did not establish priorities between insureds and insurers in situations such as the one found in this case. In 1976, the legislature amended Section 5 (d) to clearly place an injured insured before his insurance company as far as claims to the tortfeasor’s insurance were concerned, where the injured party had not been fully compensated by his own insurance policy. After this amendment this court ruled in
Blaylock v. Ga. Mut. Ins. Co.,
The legislature is charged with the knowledge of our interpretations of statutes.
Berman v. Berman,
Certified Question Answered.
Notes
The Court of Appeals stated, “[W]here ‘plaintiff’s no-fault insurer is entitled to subrogation, the plaintiff’s recovery from the tort-feasor must not include damages
for which the plaintiff has been compensated
by his or her no-fault insurer.’
McGlohon,
