Appellant, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company (hereinafter State Farm Mutual), appeals the trial court’s order granting directed verdict to appellee Astro Leasing, Inc. et al. in a declaratory judgment action.
Appellee Richard Meagher (hereinafter Meagher) entered into a rental agreement with appellee Astro Leasing, Inc. d/b/a Budget Rent-A-Car of Athens, Georgia (hereinafter Astro). The rental contract listed additional drivers as “NONE.”
Astro was insured by Reliance Insurance Company under а policy *516 which, with certain exceptions not here applicable, listed Astro and anyone else using an Astro automobile with Astrо’s permission as “insured” under the terms of the policy. Moreover, the Astro policy contained an exclusion pertinently stating “This policy does not apply: (a) to the rentee while such auto is used or operated in violation of the terms and conditions of thе rental agreement under which such auto is rented.” The rental agreement expressly provided that “Vehicle shall not be used or operated by any person: (a) Other than Renter or any Additional Driver who is shown on the other side and; has Renter’s prior permission.” The agreement further provided that “All of the benefits given to Renter and all of BUDGET’S obligations under this Agreement, including but not limited to insurance covеrage, are void if Vehicle is used or operated in violation of this Agreement.”
Meagher is a named insured under a State Farm Mutual policy that provides for automobile liability coverage with bodily injury limits of $100,000 each person and $300,000 each accident, and property damage limits of $25,000.
Subsequently, Meagher gave his wife permission to drive the rental vehicle, and she was involved in a collision while driving it. Certain people are alleged to have been injured in this collision, and they have initiated suit. State Farm Mutual, while admitting its obligation аt least as an excess insurer and its duty to defend Meagher, asserted that Astro’s insurer is the primary insurer under the terms of its policy with Astro. Astro contested any such obligation, and State Farm Mutual initiated a suit for declaratory judgment which is the. subject of this appeal. Reliancе Insurance Company was not made a party to the declaratory judgment action. Held:
Appellant State Farm Mutual asserts that the trial court erred in dismissing its complaint for lack of standing because its action can be properly maintained under the deсlaratory judgment act.
The trial court in granting directed verdict for Astro, by implication concluded appellant has no standing to sеek declaratory judgment, and based its ruling on
Eberhardt v. Unigard Mut. Ins. Co.,
Atlantic Wood Indus,
is distinguishable from the facts before us, as in that case declaratory judgment was brought by the
insured
to determine the obligation of the insurers to defend an action pending
*517
against the insured. The holding in
Atlantic Wood Indus,
was narrow in scope, establishing that “insureds should have the same opportunity as insurers to determine in advance the scope of policy provisions.” Id. at 801. In the case sub judice, declaratory judgment was sought by an insurer, not by an insured. Moreover,
Atlantic Wood Indus,
does not expressly overrule either of the cаses relied upon by the trial court. By implication,
Atlantic Wood Indus,
overruled the holding of this court in
United States Cas. Co. v. Ga. S. &c. R. Co.,
In
United States Fidelity &c. Co.,
supra at 751, this court held that “where the only question at issuе is whether the plaintiff is a primary insurer or only liable as an excess carrier, the petition [for declaratory judgment] shows no cаuse of action because it does not show that its action in the premises would jeopardize any of its rights. [Cit.] Whether it be a primary оr excess carrier, its obligation to defend its insured is the same.” In
Eberhardt,
supra at 103, this court, citing
National Surety Corp. v. Dunaway,
We are satisfied, that the pertinent princiрle of law contained in
Eberhardt, Zurich Ins. Co.,
and
United States Fidelity &c. Co.
is controlling in view of the facts in the case sub judice. Under the doctrine of stare decisis “ ‘when [a] court has . . . laid down a principle of law as applicable to a certain state of facts, it will adhere to that principle, and apply it to all future cases, where facts are substantially the same.’ ”
Norris v. Atlanta &c. R. Co.,
In view of this holding, we need not address appellant’s remaining enumerations of error.
Judgment affirmed.
