Lead Opinion
Opinion of the Court by
Pennsylvania resident Karen Hodgkiss-Warrick brought suit to recover for injuries she sustained in a motor vehicle accident near Mt. Vernon, Kentucky while riding in a vehicle driven by her daughter, Heather, also a Pennsylvania resident. Because her daughter’s liability coverage was insufficient to fully compensate Hodg-kiss-Warrick, she included a claim against her own insurance carrier, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, for underinsured motorist coverage pursuant to a policy issued in Pennsylvania and covering a vehicle that Hodgkiss-Warrick registered, garaged and used exclusively in Pennsylvania. This underinsured motorist (UIM) claim against State Farm by a Pennsylvania resident injured in Kentucky gives rise to the choice of law and public policy issues which are now before us.
Under longstanding choice of law principles recognized by this Court, Pennsylvania law governs the dispute between Hodgkiss-Warrick and her carrier regarding policy coverage, and both the trial court and Court of Appeals ruled accordingly. However, the two courts reached entirely different results. Applying the plain language of the insurance contract and Pennsylvania law, the trial court concluded that .Hodgkiss-Warrick was not entitled to underinsured motorist coverage because her policy disallowed coverage when she was injured in an underinsured vehicle owned or regularly used by a “resident relative.” Hodgkiss-Warrick resided
RELEVANT FACTS
The underlying facts are not in dispute. On May 17, 2008, Karen Hodgkiss-War-rick suffered serious injuries in a two-vehicle accident in Mt. Vernon, Kentucky, at the intersection of Kentucky Highway 25 and' the northbound entrance ramp to Interstate 75. Hodgkiss-Warrick was a passenger in a vehicle leased, insured, and operated at the time by her twenty-three year-old daughter, Heather Warrick. Also in the car were two friends, Pamela and Heather Reynolds, another mother-daughter pair. The four women, all Pennsylvania residents, had traveled from Pennsylvania to Burnside, Kentucky, where Hodgkiss-Warrick hoped to buy a special breed of puppy. They were on their way back to Pennsylvania when the accident occurred. Pamela and. Heather Reynolds were also injured in the accident, as was the driver of the other car, Natalie Bussell, a resident of Brodhead, Kentucky. Hodgkiss-Warrick, the Reyn-oldses, and Bussell all brought tort actions against Heather Warrick in the Rockcastle Circuit Court, and those claims were eventually settled for the limits of Heather’s liability insurance coverage with GEICO— $25,000 per person and $50,000 per accident, the minimum liability coverage required under Kentucky law. Kentucky Revised Statute (KRS) 304.39-100 and KRS 304.39-110. It is undisputed that Hodgkiss-Warrick’s share of the settlement fell far short of the medical expenses she incurred.
Given that shortfall, Hodgkiss-Warrick included with her tort claim a claim for underinsurance benefits pursuant to two policies issued by State Farm. One of the policies was issued to Hodgkiss-Warrick in November 2007 for her own vehicle, and it provides underinsured motorist benefits of up to $50,000 per person and $100,000 per accident. The other policy was first issued to Hodgkiss-Warrick’s husband, John Warrick, in 2001, and was certified to have been in effect when the accident occurred in May 2008. That policy, covering John Warrick’s vehicle and under which he is the only named insured, also provides UIM benefits of up to $50,000 per person and $100,000 per accident.
State Farm denied both claims. With respect to John Warrick’s policy, the company noted that an “insured” under that policy’s underinsurance provisions is defined, in pertinent part, as “(1) you [and] (2) resident relatives.” In pertinent part, the policy defines “you” as “the named insured ... [and] the spouse of the first person shown as a named insured if the spouse resides primarily with that named insured.” Similarly, “resident relatives” are limited to persons who “reside[] primarily with the first person shown as a named insured on the Declarations Page.”
As for the second policy, Hodgkiss-War-rick’s own State Farm policy, she does not contend that she is entitled to underin-sured benefits under the plain terms of the insurance contract. The policy provides that the company “will pay compensatory damages for bodily injury an insured is legally entitled to recover from the owner or driver of an underinsured motor vehicle,” but it plainly excludes from the definition of “underinsured motor vehicle” “a land motor vehicle: ... (2) owned by, rented to, or furnished or available for the regular use of you or any resident relative.”
ANALYSIS
I. Under Our Choice of Law Principles, Pennsylvania Law Governs the Insurance Coverage Dispute.
The questions presented are all purely legal ones concerning the scope of coverage provided by an insurance contract. Our standard of review, therefore, is de novo. Dowell v. Safe Auto Ins. Co.,
[t]he rights and duties of the parties with respect to an issue in contract are determined by the local law of the state which, with respect to that issue, has the most significant relationship to the transaction and the parties under the principles stated in § 6.
Restatement (Second) Conflict of Laws § 188(1) (1971). Among the factors a court making that determination should consider are the place or places of negoti
Here, Hodgkiss-Warrick, a Pennsylvania resident, entered into an auto insurance contract in Pennsylvania that makes specific reference to Pennsylvania law and that covers, primarily, the vehicle she registered, garaged, and used exclusively in Pennsylvania.
II. Kentucky Public Policy Does Not Prohibit the Policy Provision at Issue and, Therefore, Kentucky Law Does not Override Pennsylvania Law in this Case.
Hodgkiss-Warrick- maintains that there is such a compelling reason to refrain from applying Pennsylvania law, namely Kentucky public policy disfavoring the type of policy exclusion which precludes her recovery of UIM benefits. As noted above, § 188 of the Restatement (Second) provides that the rule of that section is to be applied in light of the more general choice-of-law principles listed in § 6. That section provides that choice-of-law rules are to be applied in accord with the forum state’s relevant policies and with basic policies underlying the particular field of law.
[t]he poweb of the federal courts to enforce the terms of private agreements is at all times exercised subject to the restrictions and limitations of the public policy of the United States .... Where the enforcement of private agreements would be violative of that policy, it is the obligation of courts to refrain from such exertions of judicial power.
Our Kentucky courts adhere to this same principle. See, e.g., Bishop v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
Courts will not disregard the plain terms of a contract between private parties on public policy grounds absent a clear and certain statement of strong public policy in controlling laws or judicial precedent. The United States Supreme Court has stated that under federal law public policy will render a contract term unenforceable only if the policy is “‘explicit,’ ‘well defined,’ and ‘dominant,’ [and may] be ‘ascertained ‘by reference to the laws and legal precedents and not from general considerations of supposed public interests.’ ’ ” Eastern Associated Coal Corp. v. United Mine Workers of America, District 17,
Our law is in complete accord. In Zeitz v. Foley,
The “public policy” Hodgkiss-Warrick would have us apply does not meet this standard. Indeed, although Hodgkiss-Warrick refers broadly to our Motor Vehicle Reparations Act (MVRA), KRS 304.39-010 et seq., as somehow implying the “policies” upon which she relies, neither she nor the Court of Appeals panel has identified any specific provision of the MVRA as forbidding the sort of exclusion from un-derinsured motor vehicle coverage at issue here. In fact, the plain language of the MVRA and our case law precedent are to the contrary.
While the MVRA mandates that Kentucky motorists have minimum liability coverage, KRS 304.39-100 and .39-110, the MVRA unequivocally provides that under-insured motorist coverage is optional. KRS 304.39-320, the section of the MVRA addressing underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage, states in pertinent part as follows:
Every insurer shall make available upon request to its insureds underinsured motorist coverage, whereby subject to the terms and conditions of such coverage not inconsistent with this section the insurance company agrees to pay its own insured for such uncompensated damages as he may recover on account of injury due to a motor vehicle accident because the judgment recovered against the owner of the other vehicle exceeds the liability policy limits thereon, to the extent of the underinsurance policy limits on the vehicle of the party recovering.
KRS 304.39-320(2). Even assuming, doubtful as the assumption may be, that this subsection was intended to apply to insureds with no connection to Kentucky, it is clear that while underinsured motorist coverage must be made available if requested, such coverage is optional in Kentucky and may be waived by the insured. The coverage that must be made available, moreover, may be limited by terms and conditions not inconsistent with the remainder of KRS 304.39-320.
Indeed, we have held that in statutes providing for optional vehicle coverages, the statutory allowance for “terms and conditions” permits reasonable exclusions from coverage. Preferred Risk Mut. Ins. Co. v. Oliver,
The result would be the same, moreover, even were we to construe KRS 304.39-320 as establishing a policy against the sort of UIM exclusion at issue here. The question would then become whether the public policy was so strong as to require a Kentucky court to interject Kentucky law into a dispute having none but a fortuitous connection with Kentucky. As our predecessor Court noted in R.S. Barbee & Company v. Bevins,
Hodgkiss-Warrick, of course, takes issue with this result and raises two arguments against it, one primarily legal and one primarily factual. The legal argument runs something like this: In a series of cases, beginning with Bishop v. Allstate,
The Court of Appeals panel agreed with that analysis and opined that Marley implicitly overruled Glass and the Court of Appeals cases relying on Glass. The panel found what it deemed support for that conclusion in Williams v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
The appellate panel’s and Hodgkiss-Warrick’s reliance on Bishop, Lewis, and Marley is similarly wide of the mark. As we explained in Kentucky Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co. v. Thompson, the family exclusion provisions deemed unenforceable in Bishop and Lewis and by extension in Marley, ran afoul not of some general public policy against family exclusion clauses per se, but rather the express provisions of the MVRA mandating that all vehicles operating in the Commonwealth be covered by at least a certain minimum amount of liability insurance. The pertinent public policy, we noted, “was expressly stated by the legislature, and was limited to motor vehicle liability insurance contracts.” Thompson,
As noted above, and as noted in Glass and the related Court of Appeals cases, the MVRA evinces no similar policy mandating UIM coverage. It requires only that UIM coverage be made available and allows its availability to be made subject to reasonable terms and conditions. Even if, as Hodgkiss-Warrick argues, the regular use exclusion at issue here has much the same effect as would a family or household exclusion, it is not rendered invalid for that reason. This is so because the MVRA does not invalidate such clauses per se, but only such clauses as tend to defeat the Act’s mandates, and the exclusion here, applicable to no more than a handful of the thousands of potentially underinsured vehicles to which Hodgkiss-Warrick might be exposed, clearly does not deprive her of meaningful UIM coverage.
Moreover, although it is true, as Hodg-kiss-Warrick notes, that UIM coverage can be conceived as a sort of liability insurance the UIM insured imputes to the un-derinsured tortfeasor, that theoretical characterization does not turn UIM insurance into liability insurance under Lewis and Marley. It in no way alters the statutory distinction between the two types of coverage, one of which is mandated and the other of which is not. Nor does it account for the underwriting differences between the two types of coverage, liability generally posing the greater risk and so costing more to cover. That is the point of the regular use exclusion. Generally at least, household vehicles, by virtue of their proximity and availability to the insured, pose a substantially greater risk to the insured than do non-household vehicles. It is not unreasonable for an insurer to segregate those different types of risk; to limit UIM coverage as was done here to, essentially, non-household vehicles; and thus to discourage relatives residing together from attempting to shift the higher household risk from liability insurance to the less costly UIM insurance. This was our conclusion in Glass, and nothing in Bishop, Lewis, or Marley, all liability rather than UIM insurance cases, changes that result.
This Court finds no reason to discriminate between those with minimum coverage required by law and those with higher, optional coverage. See Lewis at 833. An umbrella insurance policy must be considered in accordance with the nature of the claims that it is called upon to cover. An umbrella policy was purchased to serve as an extension of the automobile policy limits and any distinction between the automobile liability and an umbrella liability policy is a distinction without a difference.
We determine that there is no difference between the security provided by an optional umbrella policy and the security provided by mandatory minimum liability coverage. It is clear that the public policy of Kentucky is to ensure that victims of motor vehicle accidents on Kentucky highways are fully compensated. The household exclusion in the umbrella policy as it applies to automobile liability coverage violates that public policy and is void and unenforceable.
Clearly, the “minimum” coverage referred to is minimum liability coverage; Lewis, on which Marley. relies, was a case about liability coverage only; and the Marley Court construed the umbrella policy “in accordance with the nature of the claims that it is called upon to cover,” i.e., a liability claim. Id. Indeed, the Court referred to the particular umbrella policy at issue as an “extension” of the family’s automobile liability policy.' Although Kentucky public policy ensuring vehicle accident victims are fully compensated is referenced, that public policy is the one reflected in the “mandatory” liability provisions of the MVRA. Id. In sum, Marley speaks solely to liability insurance applicable to motor vehicle accidents and its statement of Kentucky public policy must be read accordingly not as some overarching pronouncement applicable to any and all optional, non-liability coverages such as the underinsured motorist coverage at issue here.
Hodgkiss-Warrick’s factual argument against this result is that even if an insured ordinarily should not be allowed to substitute UIM coverage for liability coverage, that is not what happened here. Heather leased her car and insured it before she and her mother moved in together. Hodgkiss-Warrick had nothing to do with the amount of liability coverage Heather obtained, and neither did she make regular use of Heather’s vehicle, the trip to Kentucky marking only the second time she had ever been a’ passenger in it.
The exclusion, however, addresses the incentives of a typical household as a whole, not only those of the UIM insured. Without the exclusion, some members of the household could be induced to purchase less liability coverage in reliance on other members’ UIM coverage. Regardless of the potential for such incentives, moreover, the exclusion also addresses the
III. Under Pennsylvania Law, the Regular Use Exclusion in the UIM Insurance Contract Is Enforceable.
In granting summary judgment to State Farm, the trial court applied Pennsylvania law and determined that the regular-use exclusion in Hodgkiss-Warrick’s policy is enforceable in Pennsylvania. Hodgkiss-Warrick did not challenge that construction of Pennsylvania law before the Court of Appeals and did so before this Court only to the extent of questioning the conclusiveness of the specific Pennsylvania Supreme Court case the trial court relied upon. Arguably, therefore, Hodgkiss-Warrick has waived the issue, but even if not, we are convinced that the trial court’s application of Pennsylvania law was correct.
The trial court relied on Burstein v. Prudential Property and Casualty Ins. Co.,
Although the Pennsylvania case law, as does ours, presents a variety of factual scenarios, it includes cases, like this one, in which one household vehicle, the vehicle the insured occupied when injured, was excluded from UIM coverage under the policy insuring another household vehicle, and the exclusion was upheld. See, e.g., Baker,
CONCLUSION
In contract actions, the law of the state with the most significant contacts with the parties and the transaction is to be chosen absent an explicit, well-defined and dominant public policy that overrides that general choice of law rule. While our General Assembly, through the MVRA, has en-vinced an overriding public policy in the area of automobile liability coverage, a mandatory form of insurance, there is no comparable public policy regarding under-insured motorist coverage, an optional coverage which may be purchased on the “terms and conditions” agreed to by the parties. Pennsylvania law governs this contract dispute and the Court of Appeals erred when it declined, on perceived public policy grounds, to apply that state’s law. The regular use provision applicable to Hodgkiss-Warrick’s UIM coverage is enforceable and State Farm properly denied UIM benefits to her. Accordingly, we reverse the Court of Appeals Opinion and reinstate the Judgment of the Rockcastle Circuit Court. • '
Notes
. This type of provision is generally referred to as a "regular use” provision.
. One policy was issued to the Indiana drivér, James Lewis, and the second policy belonged to his uncle, who was the guardian of James and his brother, the other injured party. The brothers resided with their uncle.
. According to Hodgkiss-Warrick's response to State Farm’s Motion for Summary Judgment, her trip to Kentucky marked the first time Hodgkiss-Warrick had ever been outside Pennsylvania.
. § 6. Choice-of-Law Principles
(1) A court, subject to constitutional restrictions, will follow a statutory directive of its own state on choice of law..
(2) When there is no such directive, the factors relevant to the choice of the applicable rule of law include
(a) the needs of the interstate and international systems,
,(b) the relevant policies of the. forum,
(c) the relevant policies of other interested states and the relative interests of those states in the determination of the particular issue,
id) the protections of justified expectations,
(e)the basic policies underlying the particular field of law,
(f) certainty, predictability and uniformity of result, and
(g) ease in the determination and application of the law to be applied.
. Other subsections of the section include subrogation provisions and, as quoted, subsection (2) precludes any set off from the underinsured policy limits for the available liability coverage. See Motorists Mut. Ins. Co. v. Glass,
. Edwards involved a claim for both liability and UIM benefits under the same policy.
. The parties in Marley, Indiana residents injured in Kentucky and their Indiana insurer, stipulated to the application of Kentucky law. The choice of law issue, therefore, although referred to by the Court, was not before it.
. In Williams, two young brothers were killed in a vehicle owned and operated by one of the brothers, Aaron. The estate of the brother-passenger was allowed to recover UIM benefits under the parents' policy because the excluded underinsured vehicles were limited to ones "furnished for” the regular use of a relative. This Court held that the parents did not "furnish” the vehicle involved in the accident to Aaron; he owned it. The Court noted the important distinction between the common exclusion of vehicles “owned by or furnished for” a relative and an exclusion limited to vehicles "furnished for” a relative. The insurance contract’s language was determinative of the outcome. Public policy was never mentioned.
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting.
I strongly dissent from the majority’s opinion which, applying Pennsylvania law, does not allow Karen Hodgkiss-Warrick to recover from her underinsured motorist (UIM) policy.
Karen had resided with her adult daughter, Heather, for less than a year when she suffered debilitating injuries due to Heather’s negligence which caused an accident in Kentucky in Heather’s leased car. Karen’s recovery from Heather’s insurance company was $60,000 shy of the amount necessary for Karen’s extensive medical bills. To close this deficit, Karen filed claims "against her own insurance carrier, State Farm, on two UIM policies — one on her own vehicle and another on her estranged husband’s. However, because Karen’s UIM policy excluded vehicles owned by or leased to a resident relative, State Farm denied the claim on her policy. Furthermore, because Karen and her husband were separated at the time of the accident and not residing together, State Farm denied Karen’s claim under her husband’s UIM policy.
In short, Karen could not recover under her policy because of whom she was living with and could not recover under her husband’s policy because of whom she was not living with. Had Heather moved in across the street or next door to Karen, or had the two not shared their duplex as a single
It seems to me the insurance contract makes an arbitrary distinction based solely on Karen and Heather’s familial relationship and the fact that they lived in the same household at the time of the accident. It is certainly not based on the fact that Karen had the opportunity to ensure that her twenty-three-year-old daughter had higher limits on her liability policy. She clearly had no such control.
The exemption in Karen’s policy excludes UIM coverage when the underin-sured vehicle is “owned by, rented to, or furnished or available for the regular use of you or any resident relative.” The “regular use” part of the exemption has no bearing on this case. Karen did not regularly use her daughter’s car, nor was it available for her regular use. She had her own car. In fact, the day of the accident marked only the second time Karen had ever ridden in Heather’s car. Yet, she was denied coverage because she was living with her daughter at the time of the accident, making her a “resident relative.” If Karen and Heather had not been related, but had been living together, the terms of Karen’s UIM policy would have allowed recovery.
Thus, I see the real issue’ in this case as whether a family or household exclusion is permissible in Kathy’s UIM policy under the facts of this case. Plainly, such ah exclusion would not be allowed in a liability policy. Lewis by Lewis v. W. Am. Ins. Co.,
While the parties to this action do have the most significant contacts with Pennsylvania, and therefore, under our conflicts of laws analysis, Pennsylvania law would be applicable, “Kentucky courts have traditionally refused to apply the law of another state if that state’s law violates a public policy as declared by the Kentucky legislature or courts.” State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Marley,
I believe Kentucky’s public policy is violated in this instance, as the exclusion in the current case is like that in Marley, id. One of the issues raised in Marley was whether a family exclusion in an umbrella policy was valid and enforceable in Kentucky. This Court was tasked with determining whether the umbrella policy was, in fact, an automobile policy under the MVRA. We held: “[t]he insurance policy in this case covers automobile accidents. The mere fact that the policy is labeled as an umbrella policy and written separately from the underlying automobile policy, or that it covers claims other than automobile accidents, does not validate an exclusion provision of this nature.” Id. at 35-36. Like the UIM coverage in the case at bar, the umbrella policy in Marley was over- and-above the minimum liability coverage required by the MVRA and was entirely optional. Certainly, if the family exclusion was unenforceable in this extra, optional policy, it is unenforceable as to Karen’s UIM policy under the facts of her case.
The majority cites several cases which are readily distinguishable from the case at bar. For example, in Preferred Risk Mut. Ins. Co. v. Oliver,
The majority also argues that, in Motorists Mut. Ins. Co. v. Glass,
The majority also relies on Burton v. Kentucky Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co.,
Further, in Edwards v. Carlisle,
Finally, in Murphy,
Absent from any of the cases relied upon by the majority is a factual situation such as that in the present case. Kathy, the party seeking relief, had no control over the limits of Heather’s liability policy. Heather’s car was not available for her mother’s regular use. In fact, the day of the accident was only the second time Kathy had ridden in her daughter’s car. This is not a case in which the loss resulted from Kathy’s “failure to purchase sufficient liability insurance.” Glass,
In closing, I would like to reiterate the inequities caused by the family or household exclusion this Court recognized in Lewis:
First, every day in our Commonwealth parents participate in car pools and drive their children and their neighbor’s children to school, social, and recreational events. However, if the parents’ negligence results in an automobile collision equally and seriously injuring all passengers, only the neighbor’s children can be fully compensated. The policy holders’ children, despite the severity of their injuries are limited to the minimum mandated insurance coverage.
Second, when two married couples drive to dinner in the driver’s car and all are injured by the driver’s negligence, the driver’s friends are protected by the full amount of insurance coverage but not the driver’s spouse. If one of the friends operates the automobile, the friend’s spouse is provided full insurance protection, but not the owner or owner’s spouse.
Third, it is commonplace for two neighborhood families to drive to a common destination with the children from both families intermingled in both cars. Unfortunately, if the cars negligently collide, only those children who happen to be riding with their neighbor can be fully compensated.
It is for these reasons that I dissent and would affirm the Court of Appeals under this factual scenario.
CUNNINGHAM, J., joins.
. The duplex had separate living quarters on each side, including a bedroom and living room. However, the kitchen and dining area was shared between the two.
