Summit Timber Company (Summit) and the Department of Labor and Industries (Department) seek to enforce their respective hens against the proceeds received by respondent Edwin E. Stamp from the Oregon Insurance Guaranty Association (OIGA). OIGA's enabling statute prohibits OIGA funds from being recovered by "any reinsurer, insurer, insurance pool or underwriting association as subrogated recoveries or otherwise". Or. Rev. Stat. (hereinafter ORS) § 734.510(4)(b)(B) (1991). We must decide if Summit,
The facts of this case are relatively stráightforward and have been stipulated to by both parties. Respondent Edwin Stamp, a Washington resident, sustained an industrial injury while employed by Summit, a Washington corporation acting as a self-insured employer. Stamp filed a claim pursuant to the Industrial Insurance Act, RCW Title 51. Summit paid him $112,839.55 in benefits and also asserted a hen against any third party recovery by Stamp pursuant to RCW 51.24-.060. The Department paid Stamp $1,195.75 in benefits and similarly asserted its lien.
Stamp brought a products liability action in federal court in 1985 against Lumber Systems, Inc. (Lumber Systems), an Oregon corporation. Lumber Systems was the designer, manufacturer, and installer of the sawmill equipment which injured Stamp. Lumber Systems had $500,000 in primary coverage through Mission Insurance, which became insolvent in 1987. As a result, OIGA 2 stepped in to provide a statutory maximum of $300,000 to cover. Stamp's claim.
Stamp, Lumber Systems and OIGA settled Stamp's claim for $350,000. OIGA paid $300,000, Lumber Systems paid
Both Summit and the Department asserted their statutory right to reimbursement against Stamp's recovery. Accordingly, the Department issued an order distributing the recovery as follows: $135,624.26 to Stamp's attorney for fees and costs, $151,809.85 to Stamp himself, $61,370.14 to Summit, and $1,195.75 to the Department. The order also provided that no benefits would be paid until the excess recovery of $45,987 was expended for costs incurred as a result of the injury.
Stamp appealed this order to the Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals (Board). The Board affirmed the Department's distribution order. Stamp then appealed to the Snohomish County Superior Court, which reversed the Board's order and remanded to the Department to issue a new order excluding any reimbursement from the OIGA recovery. The Superior Court first determined that both Summit and the Department qualified as "insurers" for purposes of the Industrial Insurance Act, RCW Title 51. It then held that Oregon law should apply and that under such law, an insurer is forbidden from sharing in the recovery paid by OIGA. Hence, Summit and the Department were both forbidden to enforce their hens against that portion of the settlement paid by OIGA. However, recovery was allowed to these two parties from the sums contributed to the settlement by Lumber Systems and its excess insurer. The Department and Summit appealed to the Court of Appeals. This court, on its own motion, transferred the case here.
As a threshold matter, the parties contend that there is a conflict between Oregon and Washington law which necessitates engaging in choice of law analysis to determine which state's law to apply. Indeed, the Superior Court undertook
An actual conflict between the law of Washington and that of another state must be shown before this court will engage in a conflict of law analysis.
International Tracers of Am. v. Estate of Hard,
The purpose of this chapter is to provide a mechanism for the payment of covered claims under certain insurance policies to avoid excessive delay in payment and to avoid financial loss to claimants or policyholders because of the insolvency of an insurer, to assist in the detection and prevention of insurer insolvencies, and to provide an association to assess the cost of such protection among insurers.
RCW 48.32.010. 3 Both acts also exclude from a covered claim payable by its insurance guaranty association amounts due to any reinsurer, insurer, insurance pool, or underwriting association, either as subrogation or otherwise. Compare RCW 48.32.030(4) with ORS § 734.510(4)(b) (1991). Neither guaranty act defines the emphasized terms.
Hence, under either Oregon or Washington law, the interests are the same. If either party is found
not
to be an "insurer", then under either the Oregon or the Washington
Nonetheless, respondent Stamp contends that the Oregon courts have already adjudged a state workers' compensation fund to be an "insurer" for purposes of the Oregon insurance guaranty statute, and that, therefore, a conflict exists.
See Corvallis Aero Serv., Inc. v. Villalobos,
Neither
Villalobos
nor any other Oregon case or statute has determined the status of our unique workers' compensation fund or that of a self-insurer for purposes of a guaranty statute. The determination of the status of the Oregon state fund in
Villalobos
was based upon clear evidence that the fund's enabling statute, ORS § 656.752(1) (1991), defined it as an insurer.
Villalobos,
at 140 n.3. However, the Washington workers' compensation fund is significantly different in both function and scope.
Villalobos
is not determinative of its status.’
Washington Ins. Guar. Ass'n ex rel. Bloch v. Department of Labor & Indus.,
We have already determined that the Department does not act as an "insurer" for purposes of Washington's similar insurance guaranty act. Bloch, at 532-33. The Oregon guaranty act's covered-claim exclusion is identical to that of Washington, and the Department's status for purposes of that act remains the same. The Department is not an insurer and therefore can assert its lien against the proceeds received by Stamp.
Turning to the self-insurance question, our recent decision in
Kyrkos v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
State Farm urges a broad understanding of the term "insurance policy" so as to include self-insurance. However, such a reading is specifically foreclosed by RCW Title 48, which defines "insurance' as "a contract whereby one undertakes to indemnify another or pay a specified amount upon determinable contingencies." RCW 48.01.040. ... By its very nature, self-insurance does not involve this type of third party arrangement.
(Citations omitted.)
Kyrkos,
at 674. Although the
Kyrkos
opinion deals with self-insurance in the automobile liability
Moreover, decisions from other states agree with the conclusion that self-insurance is not insurance for purposes of the guaranty act.
Zinke-Smith, Inc. v. Florida Ins. Guar. Ass'n,
It is analogous to the more common types of direct insurance such as automobile collision coverage or major medical coverage, wherein there is usually a stated deductible amount, the effect of which is, in simplest terms, to make the insured "self-insured["] for any loss up to the amount of the deductible. No one has yet to suggest in such instances that the insured, being self-insured up to the amount of the deductible, is an "insurer" who has merely "reinsured" the risk above a certain limit.
Zinke-Smith,
In keeping with a majority of jurisdictions which have considered the status of self-insurers under an insurance guaranty act, we hold that employers which self-insure their work
Andersen, C.J., and Utter, Brachtenbach, Dolliver, Smith, Guy, Johnson, and Madsen, JJ., concur.
Notes
Washington Ins. Guar. Ass'n ex rel. Bloch v. Department of Labor & Indus.,
OIGA was created to provide limited coverage to policyholders in the event of the insolvency of their insurer. ORS 734.520. It operates similarly to our own Washington Insurance Guaranty Association.
See
RCW 48.32.
See also Washington Ins. Guar. Ass'n ex rel. Bloch v. Department of Labor & Indus.,
This language is nearly identical to that found in the Model Bill. See NAIC State Post-Assessment Insurance Guaranty Association Model Bill in 1970 Proceedings of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners 253. The Oregon statute differs only in that it removes the phrase "a mechanism”, and adds the clause "and to assist in the liquidation of insurers as provided in this chapter". ORS § 734.520 (1991). -
Given the interests of OIGA in protecting its guaranty funds, we find it curious that Stamp should be asserting the guaranty act's covered claim exclusions as a "defense" in this action. Assuming, arguendo, that either entity were an insurer, OIGA would be obligated to offset Stamp's recovery by the amount of his workers’ compensation benefits. ORS § 734.640 (1991). Hence, the amount of the disputed lien belongs to either OIGA or the appellants here — not Stamp. Nevertheless, this conundrum has not been briefed or argued by either party, and will not be a factor in our decision.
Even were it necessary to undertake a conflict of laws analysis, Washington law would be used to determine the status of the two appellants here. Summit is a Washington corporation which is permitted to self-insure via RCW 51.14. The Department is an agency of the State of Washington. Both were created, and are regulated, under Washington law. Washington has a paramount interest in defining the status of such state-created entities. The liens asserted by these entities are created under Washington's workers' compensation statute. RCW 51.24.060. Oregon’s only interest here is in ensuring that its state insurance guaranty fund moneys are not paid out, by subrogation or otherwise, to an insurer. Just as we will look to Oregon law to determine the status of its state-created fund, we rely solely on Washington law to determine the nature of our own workers' compensation scheme.
The Kyrkos decision engendered a persuasive and well-reasoned dissent which may have questioned the majority's assertion that self-insurance is not insurance. Nonetheless, the precedential value of the majority's view cannot be denied, and principles of stare decisis dictate that we now adopt that perspective in the workers' compensation arena.
