In this appeal we hold that seven State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company policies provide coverage for the accident. As a result, all seven State Farm policies shall be prorated with a single Continental Casualty Company (CNA) policy in determining the amount each insurer shall contribute to pay the injured claimant's agreed damages. We reverse the trial court's declaratory summary judgment which held that only one State Farm policy should be prorated.
FACTS
The Policies and the Accident
The facts are straightforward and are not disputed. At the time of the accident, Thomas Wieland was the
During October 1989, Thomas and his son, Carl, were en route to Wyoming on a hunting trip using a vehicle owned by Wieland Manufacturing and therefore covered under CNA's liability policy. The vehicle broke down in Minnesota and the mechanic hired to repair the vehicle reported that substantial repairs were needed. Wishing to continue their trip, Thomas and Carl rented the mechanic's personal vehicle.
On October 15, while Carl was operating the rented vehicle near Casper, Wyoming, he lost control of the vehicle, causing serious injuries to Thomas. The rented vehicle was uninsured.
At the time of the accident, Thomas was the named insured on seven separate State Farm automobile liability policies. Each policy insured a different vehicle owned by Thomas. Each policy carried limits of $100,000. 1
Thomas made claims against both CNA and State Farm. Preserving their claims against each other, both insurers paid moneys in settlement of Thomas' claim: State Farm contributed $100,000; CNA paid the balance. 2 This declaratory action ensued.
The Language of the Policies
The parties agree that the relevant provisions of the single CNA policy and the seven State Farm policies, although using different terminology, are functionally the same. All policies contain a "nonowned vehicle" pro
The Trial Court's Ruling
The trial court adopted State Farm's argument that only one of its policies afforded coverage in this case. The court acknowledged that the question was "close" but ultimately concluded that the intent of State Farm and its insured, Thomas, was to contract for coverage under only one of the policies in a situation involving the operation of a nonowned vehicle by the insured. CNA appeals.
ANALYSIS
State Farm does not dispute that the language of any one of its multiple policies affords coverage in this case. Rather, State Farm disputes the extent of that coverage, arguing that only one of its policies should contribute to the claim.
Stacking in Proration Actions Between Insurers
State Farm makes a threshold argument that stacking or aggregating insurance coverage is not permitted in actions to prorate liability between competing insurers. State Farm argues that this is the holding of
Heritage Mutual Insurance Co. v. St. Paul Mercury Insurance Co.,
In
Heritage, St.
Paul Mercury Insurance Company sought to quadruple the $25,000 policy limit in a Heri
We held that sec. 631.43(1), Stats., did not apply to disputes between insurers in a proration action.
Heri
tage,
However, we did not say in
Heritage
(as State Farm implies) that stacking is prohibited as a matter of law in a proration action. Rather, we held that an insurer may not look to sec. 631.43(1), Stats., as authority for stacking the other insurer's multiple coverage. Instead, we look to the language of the respective insurance policies when determining each company's pro rata share.
See Heritage,
The construction of insurance contract provisions and statutes are questions of law which this court reviews
de novo. West Bend Mut. Ins. Co. v. Playman,
Here, State Farm issued seven separate liability insurance policies to Thomas. Each policy covers a different vehicle. For each policy, Thomas paid State Farm a separate premium for the separate risk assumed. Each policy states a separate and discrete policy limit of $100,000. These facts markedly set this case off from
Heritage
where there was but one policy insuring multiple vehicles with a single policy limit.
Heritage,
This same reasoning sets this case off from
Agnew v. American Family Mutual Insurance Co.,
Such is not the case here. The vehicle Carl was operating was a nonowned vehicle. Thus, the coverage question is governed by the nonowned provisions of the policies, not those provisions relating to coverage of the vehicle specified in the policy.
The insured sought to stack the underinsured coverage. The insurer invoked its "other insurance" clause to limit its liability to the policy limits of $300,000. The supreme court ruled that the effect of the policy and its structure was to separately insure against the same loss. "Where an insured pays separate premiums, he or she receives separate and stackable uninsured motorist protections whether the coverage is provided in one or more than one policy."
Id.
at 41,
Although we may not invoke sec. 631.43(1), Stats., under Heritage, this case otherwise is like Playman. In fact, it is stronger because here State Farm has issued separate policies reciting separate and discrete policy limits. These separate policies each insure the operation of a nonowned vehicle, a risk for which State Farm has been separately compensated by Thomas' separate premium payments.
While we agree that the multiple coverage triggered by the facts of this case was fortuitous, we disagree that this result is unreasonable or illogical when examining the language of the policies and the intent of the contracting parties. The resolution of any coverage dispute is necessarily governed by the terms of the policy as negotiated by the parties. Here, State Farm consciously chose to issue seven separate liability policies to Thomas. In each policy, State Farm promised to indemnify an insured for any liability resulting from the operation a nonowned vehicle. In exchange for these separately made promises, State Farm was paid seven separate premiums, each calculated to compensate for the risk. We see nothing unreasonable or illogical in our holding State Farm to its separate promises under such circumstances. The law of insurance coverage is not governed by the fortuity of events and whether stacking results. Rather it is governed by the contract of the parties. 5
Notes
One State Farm policy named both Thomas and Carl as insureds.
The parties do not advise us as to the amount of the settlement or the amount paid by CNA.
Section 631.43(1), Stats., provides in relevant part:
Other insurance provisions. (1) General. When 2 or more policies promise to indemnify an insured against the same loss, no "other insurance" provisions of the policy may reduce the aggregate protection of the insured below the lesser of the actual insured loss suffered by the insured or the total indemnification promised by the policies if there were no "other insurance" provisions.
Although the stacking case law to date has addressed only uninsured and underinsured coverages, we see no basis in the law for limiting stacking to such instances. Coverage questions (stacking or otherwise) are properly determined by construing the language of the insurance contract(s) and applying the applicable law.
Each policy's "other insurance" clause provides that the insurer's share of the liability is the proportion that the liability limit of the subject policy bears to the total of the liability limits of all applicable policies. Thus, the total of the liability limits under the multiple State Farm policies and the single CNA policy is $1,200,000 (CNA's $500,000 limits plus State Farms seven separate $100,000 limits). State Farm's seven separate $100,000 pol
