OPINION
I. INTRODUCTION
At issue in this case are the coverage limits associated with underinsured motorist (UIM) insurance and whether coverage provided under disputed insurance policies complies with the requirements of Alaska insurance statutes. The respondent families hold UIM policies. They allege that they have suffered emotional distress and loss of consortium as a result of a collision that killed one family's child and severely injured the other family's child. The insurer accepts that the policyholders incurred damages. However, it contends that the families have already exhausted the coverage limits available to them under the UIM policies because the family members seeking damages were not "in" the fatal collision.
The superior court concluded that the families had not exhausted their UIM coverage under Alaska insurance statutes and reformed the insurance policies to allow the emotional distress claims to proceed to arbitration. The superior court dismissed the families' loss of consortium claims as outside the coverage of the policies. Because we conclude that the families have exhausted the coverage limits available under their policies and that these policies are consistent with statutory requirements, we reverse the superior court's decision to reform the policies. Because coverage limits are exhausted, we decline to consider whether loss of consortium is covered under the policies.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
This is a dispute over insurance coverage arising from an automobile accident in which Nolan Houle was killed and Caroline Noel sustained significant injuries. The accident took place in August 2001 near the intersection of O'Malley Road and New Seward Highway in Anchorage. Nolan and Caroline were passengers in a car driven by Ryan Schubert. Schubert, who is not a party in this case, turned left in front of a bus that slammed into his car. The parties do not dispute that the injuries in this ease resulted from Schubert's driving and that the families' claims triggered coverage under Schubert's liability insurance policy.
Schubert was insured by State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company. Schubert's liability policy covered claims up to a per-person limit of $100,000
The Houle family had three automobile insurance policies with State Farm. Each policy provided underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage to the members of the Houle household up to a per-person limit of $250,000 and a per-accident limit of $500,000. The Noel
Pursuant to the Houle and Noel UIM poli-cles, Caroline Noel, the estate of Nolan Houle, and the respondent family members presented State Farm with claims for various medical and economic costs resulting from the August 2001 accident, as well as punitive damages. State Farm paid $750,000 on account of Nolan Houle's UIM coverage and $300,000 on account of Caroline Noel's UIM coverage. These payments exhausted the stacked per-person limits of the families UIM policies. But State Farm's payments did not exhaust the aggregate per-accident limits of the Houle and Noel UIM policies.
That is the origin of this dispute. The respondent family members believed that they were entitled to additional coverage based on the claims they had filed with State Farm. In other words, they believed that the injuries Caroline's and Nolan's parents and siblings had suffered as a result of the August 2001 accident triggered UIM coverage subject to separate per-person limits for each injured family member. But State Farm refused to make additional payments under the UIM policies, believing that any injuries suffered by the respondent family members were subject to the single per-person limits triggered by Caroline's and Nolan's injuries. Thus, State Farm filed an action for declaratory judgment, asking the superior court to declare that the Noel and Houle families' coverage limits had been exhausted. The families sought a stay of the declaratory judgment action and appointment of an arbitrator to hear their claims and resolve any factual disputes.
The superior court carefully addressed three rounds of summary judgment and several other motions concerning procedure and discovery. It responded to new developments in the governing law, including the release of our opinion in State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Dowdy (Dowdy II).
State Farm then filed a petition for review, arguing that its UIM policy is consistent with the requirements of Alaska statutes and should not have been reformed. We granted the petition and authorized a cross-petition. The families cross-petitioned, urging us to address their loss of consortium claims and to reconsider our ruling in Dowdy II. We have considered the issues raised by both petitions.
IIL - STANDARD OF REVIEW
This case "involves a ruling on summary judgment and presents a question of law. We therefore apply a de novo standard of review, 'adopting the rule of law that is most persuasive in light of precedent, reason, and policy'"
IV. DISCUSSION
Taken together, State Farm's petition and the families' cross-petition ask us whether Nolan Houle's and Caroline Noel's family members are entitled to separate per-person coverage under the terms of State Farm's UIM policies, whether the terms of the policies are consistent with the requirements of Alaska insurance statutes, whether the families' loss of consortium claims and emotional distress claims should be treated differently under the governing rules, and whether our decision in Dowdy II governs the outcome of the case.
The parties do not dispute that the Houle and Noel family members incurred damages as a result of the August 2001 car accident. They disagree about whether the injuries to these family members triggered per-person limits separate from Nolan Houle's and Caroline Noel's per-person limits.
State Farm argues that the applicable coverage limits have been exhausted and that the UIM policies are consistent with statutory requirements. According to State Farm, any covered injuries incurred by Nolan's and Caroline's family members are covered only under the per-person limits paid in respect of Nolan Houle and Caroline Noel.
The family members assert that separate per-person limits should apply to their claims. They also argue that while the superior court properly reformed the policy to cover the parents' emotional distress claims, there is no principled reason to distinguish the emotional distress claims from the loss of consortium claims. According to the families, all of these claims should proceed to arbitration.
Dowdy II governs the interpretation of the UIM policy language in this case. We decline to reconsider the ruling of that case and conclude that coverage has been exhausted under the terms of the Houles' and Noels' UIM policies. Because coverage has been exhausted, we need not consider whether loss of consortium claims could satisfy the policies' definition of "bodily injury." Reformation of the policies is unnecessary because the terms of the policies are consistent with statutory requirements.
A. The UIM Policies Do Not Provide Separate Per-Person Coverage For The Family Members' Emotional Distress Claims.
In addressing the proper interpretation of an insurance policy, we look to "(1) the language of the disputed provisions in the
Insurance policies are construed in such a way as to honor a lay insured's reasonable expectations. Policy language is construed in accordance with ordinary and customary usage. Ambiguities in ... insurance policies are to be construed most favorably to an insured, but ambiguities only exist when there are two or more reasonable interpretations of particular policy language.[12 ]
These rules of construction provide a general guide for interpreting disputed policy language.
Notably, we have already applied these rules of construction to the policy language at issue in this case. State Farm's UIM policy provides in relevant part:
The amount of coverage for bodily injury is shown on the declarations page under "Limits of Liability-UI-Bodily Injury, Each Person, Each Accident". Under "Each Person" is the amount of coverage for all damages due to bodily injury to one person. "Bodily injury to one person " includes all injury and damages to others resulting from this bodily injury. Under "Bodily Injury-Each Accident" is the total amount of coverage, subject to the amount shown under "Each Person", for all damages due to bodily injury to two or more persons in the same accident.
When we refer to "per-person" and "per-accident" limits in State Farm's UIM policy, we refer to the parameters established for "Each Person" and "Each Accident" in the passage above.
In both Lawrence and Dowdy II, we construed basically the same policy language that is before us today.
In Lawrence, we identified two requirements that must be met in order for separate coverage limits to apply under the terms of the policy: (1) the claimant must have suffered "bodily injury"; and (@) that injury must have been suffered "in the same accident."
Dowdy II left open the possibility that some bystander emotional distress claims could meet the "in the same accident" requirement.
In this case, none of Nolan Houle's or Caroline Noel's family members were vehicle occupants or pedestrians in the collision that took place at the intersection of O'Malley Road and New Seward Highway. Nor did any of the family members see the August 2001 accident take place. The family members saw Nolan and Caroline for the first time at the hospital. Following Dowdy II's interpretation of the term "accident," the undeniable emotional distress suffered by Nolan's and Caroline's family members was not incurred "in the same accident" that injured Caroline and Nolan.
The families draw attention to cases in which we allowed family members' emotional distress claims to trigger separate per-person coverage. In Lawrence, we allowed the parents' claims of emotional distress to trigger separate per-person coverage limits; but we noted that the insurer had waived the arguments that the emotional distress claimed by the parents did not constitute "bodily injury" and did not meet the policies' requirement of having been "in the same accident" as their son.
Nor is a different result compelled by the new evidence presented in this case. Through discovery, the families obtained evidence that State Farm has, at times, paid emotional distress claimants under separate per-person limits. The families argue that
The families also argue that State Farm's limits of liability clause does not include limiting language found elsewhere in the State Farm policy. They cite to C.P. ex rel. M.L. v. Allstate Insurance Co.,
B. Alaska Insurance Statutes Do Not Require Separate Per-Person Coverage For Family Members' Emotional Distress Claims.
The next question to consider is whether State Farm's policy is consistent with the requirements of Alaska's insurance statutes. If a policy does not provide statutorily required coverage, it will be reformed to conform with statutory requirements.
According to the families, these statutes, particularly AS 28.20.440, require insurers to provide UIM coverage for each family member injured as a result of an accident and do not permit any restrictions on that coverage unless specifically authorized by statute. The families argue that a separate per-person coverage limit is triggered for each family member who was injured as a result of the August 2001 accident. - Because several members of each family suffered injuries in this case, the families insist that the aggregate per-accident limit has not been exhausted. To the extent that the terms of State Farm's policy fall short of this coverage, the families argue that reformation of the policy is required.
State Farm contends that in order to secure UIM coverage under the statutory scheme, an injured family member must be injured in an accident, not simply as a result of the accident. In turn, the insurer argues that because only Nolan Houle and Caroline Noel were in the August 2001 accident, only one per-person coverage limit was activated for each family, and as a result, any covered damages suffered by other family members are subject to the single per-person caps. Based on its interpretation of the statutes, State Farm argues that reformation is not required because its payments have exhausted the single per-person limits for all six of the Houle and Noel policies, the full extent of statutory required coverage.
Dowdy II is instructive in addressing this dispute. That case did not address the interpretation of the insurance statutes laid out above, and it does not directly control the question of statutory construction before us now.
State Farm urges us to interpret the statute's "in one accident" language and "in any one accident" language in the same way that we interpreted the phrase "in the same accident" in Dowdy II. State Farm suggests that the meaning of the words "in one accident" and "in any one accident" is effectively indistinguishable from the phrase "in the same accident" interpreted in Dowdy II. State Farm argues that ordinary and customary usage should control the interpretation of the statute. We agree.
The families rightly note that ordinary usage does not always govern statutory interpretation. We construe "words and phrases according to their 'common and approved
Alaska Statute 21.96.020, which requires insurers to offer UIM coverage, is intended to protect insured persons from suffering uncompensated damages.
The families emphasize that the legislature mandated "coverage ... for the protection of persons insured under the policy who are legally entitled to recover damages from owners or operators of uninsured or underin-sured motor vehicles because of bodily injury or death."
The families also argue that the so-called "mirror-image rule" requires State Farm to provide the same seope of coverage under its UIM policy that it provides under the liability policy. We have explained that "automobile insurance companies must offer insureds UM/UIM coverage that mirrors the insureds' liability."
We see no reason to stray from generally accepted usage in interpreting the insurance statutes in this case. Looking to accepted usage, we conclude that the respondent family members were not injured "in the same accident" as Nolan and Caroline. Because Alaska's underinsured motorist statute does not require separate per-person coverage for these family members, reformation is unnecessary.
v. CONCLUSION
Because neither AS 21.96.020, AS 28.20.440, nor AS 28.22.101 requires coverage that is unavailable under the disputed insurance policies, we REVERSE the decision to reform the policies and REMAND for the superior court to enter judgment for State Farm.
Notes
. We consider the arguments before us in order to interpret the disputed provisions of the families' UIM policies; this case does not conclusively interpret obligations or limitations under Schubert's liability policy.
. See Buack's Law Dictionary 1440 (8th ed. 2004) (defining "stacking" as "[the process of obtaining benefits from a second policy on the same claim when recovery from the first policy alone would be inadequate"); see also Irvin E. ER & Wiuuiam J. ScHermer, Avtromosice Lisiity InsurAncE § 29:1, at 29-3 (4th ed. 2004).
. The full extent of the damages suffered by the Houles and Noels is not known. The record suggests that Caroline was in a coma for a week; spent 12 days in intensive care; had approximately 30 days of post-traumatic amnesia; and suffered a severe traumatic brain injury that caused, at least for some time, cognitive and memory deficits, hemiparesis, migraine headaches, knee-buckling, and full-body spasms. We have no doubt that the loss and injury of loved ones may have devastating physiological effects on close family members. In this case, the families assert that they were prepared to present evidence of asthma, depression, trouble sleeping, anxiety attacks, and chronic stress that Caroline's and Nolan's family members suffered as a result of the tragic car accident. State Farm has not contested before this court the amount of the families' damages as a factual matter. Under the policies, the extent of monetary damages would be resolved in arbitration if coverage limits were not exhausted.
. State Farm has asserted that its payments "totaled in excess of $688,000 to the Noel family and $1.288 million to the Houle family," which (according to State Farm) exhausted the stacked policy limits of both families' UIM coverage. State Farm claims that these sums include "interest ... and add[-Jons." Nevertheless, the sums that State Farm reports paying to the Noel and Houle families fall short of the $900,000 and $1.5 million stacked per-accident limits in the families' respective UIM policies.
.
. Id. at 998 (quoting State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Lestenkof,
. Id. (citing Simmons v. Ins. Co. of N. Am.,
. See State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Lawrence,
. Allstate Ins. Co. v. Teel,
. C.P. ex rel. M.L. v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
. Teel,
. Dowdy II,
. See Lawrence,
. See Lawrence,
. See Lawrence,
. Id. at 1077-78 (concluding that State Farm had waived the relevant arguments about interpretation of the policy).
. Dowdy II,
. Id. at 995.
. Id. at 1001-02.
. Id. at 999-1002.
. Id. at 999.
. Id. at 1001.
. Testing the logic of Dowdy II's definition of "accident," the respondent family members ask: If they were not injured in the same accident as Caroline and Nolan, in what accident were they injured? But Dowdy II made clear that not all compensable injuries are incurred "in" a covered accident under the terms of State Farm's UIM policy. Id. ("[It is not possible to say that all plaintiffs with NIED claims that are valid under Alaska law are necessarily injured in the same accident as their injured relatives."). The family members were injured "as a result" of the accident but not ""in" the accident.
. Lawrence,
. Allstate Ins. Co. v. Teel,
. See Pratt & Whitney Can., Inc. v. Sheehan,
.
. Id. at 1227-28.
. See, e.g., Dowdy II,
. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Harrington,
. AS 21.96.020(c) (requiring "coverage ... for the protection of the persons insured under the policy who are legally entitled to recover damages for bodily injury or death from owners or operators of an uninsured or underinsured motor vehicle").
. Id.; see also AS 28.20.440 (identifying liability coverage that automobile insurers are required to provide); AS 28.22.101 (identifying general coverage requirements with which automobile insurers must comply).
. This language appears in two sections of the insurance statute: AS 21.96.020(c)(2)(A)-(B) (requiring coverage where damages arise "because of bodily injury to or death of two or more persons in one accident'"); and AS 28.22.101(d) (requiring coverage where damages arise "because of bodily injury to or death of two or more persons in - any - one - accident'). AS 28.20.440(b)(2) describes per-accident liability coverage in roughly the same language: "coverage ... because of bodily injury to or death of two or more persons in any one accident." Neither party has addressed specifically whether the word "any" in AS 28.20.440(b)(2) necessitates interpreting that statute differently from AS 28.22.101(d) and AS 21.89.020(c) We see no reason to distinguish these phrases in this case. The parties have not suggested that there is any significant difference between these statutory phrases.
. - State Farm argued before the superior court, and seems to suggest here, that our decision not to reform the insurance policies in Dowdy II should be read as a statement that the policies are consistent with statutory requirements. But this argument overlooks our policy of addressing only those issues that have been properly presented and briefed. See, e.g., State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Lawrence,
. - Dowdy II,
. Seeid.
. Lynch v. McCann,
. Hillman v. Nationwide Mut. Fire Ins. Co.,
. In a variety of contexts, we have noted that statutes should be construed liberally to give effect to their purpose. See, e.g., Imperial Mfg. Ice Cold Coolers, Inc. v. Shannon,
. Dowdy II,
. Id. at 1002 ("[I]t seems plain that the 'in the same accident' language of the policy cannot reasonably be construed to cover the Dowdys' NIED claim.").
. AS 28.20.440(b)(3); see also AS 21.96.020(c).
. The families also characterize this as an impermissible "exclusion" from coverage.
. - State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Lawrence,
. Lawrence,
. Harrington,
