Lead Opinion
OPINION
¶ 1 Wе granted review to determine the validity of a policy provision that eliminates underinsured motorist coverage (“UIM”) for an insured injured in his or her own vehicle as a result of the negligence of another person insured under the same policy. We conclude that an insured is covered up to the face amount of the applicable UIM insurance, less any sums recovered under the liability coverage of the same policy.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶ 2 Nellie Taylor (“Plaintiff’) was riding in the family car driven by her husband, whose negligent driving caused a collision that killed him and injured her and four people in the other vehicle. The Taylors had a $300,000 single-limit liability policy issued by Travelers, with UIM coverage in the same amount. Mr. Taylor was the named insured, and Plaintiff was insured as a family member.
¶ 3 Travelers denied the claim based on an exclusion that provided:
We do not provide Underinsured Motorists Coverage for “bodily injury” sustained by any person:
Who has received any payment for such “bodily injury” under Coverage A [liability]....
¶ 4 Plaintiff then filed a declaratory judgment action. Travelers argued to the trial judge that its denial of the claim was supported by Preferred Risk Mutual Insurance Co. v. Tank,
¶ 5 The trial judge granted summary judgment to Travelers and Plaintiff appealed. The court of appeals reversed, finding the policy provision that prohibited paying UIM to a person who received payment under the liability coverage was void because it was not permitted by the following provision of the UIM statute:
“Underinsured motorist coverage” includes coverage for a person if the sum of the limits of liability under all bodily injury or death liability bonds and liability insurance policies applicable at the time of the accident is less than the total damages for bodily injury or death resulting from the accident. To the extent that the total damages exceed the tоtal applicable liability limits, the underinsured motorist coverage provided in subsection B of this section is applicable to the difference.
A.R.S. § 20-259.01(G) (Supp.1999)
¶ 6 The court of appeals limited Tank to cases in which the UIM claimant makes a claim on both the host driver’s UIM coverage and the UIM coverage of someone else’s policy, thus concluding the case was inapplicable when the claimant sought recovery only under her policy. It held, therefore, that Plaintiffs UIM claim on. her own policy could not be denied on the ground that shе had already made a partial recovery under the liability portion of her own policy. See Taylor v. Travelers Indem. Co.,
DISCUSSION
¶ 7 Travelers’ basic argument in this court is that an insured is not permitted to collect UIM coverage after collecting any portion of liability coverage under the same policy. It reasons, as did the court in Tank, that an insured permitted to collect any amount under both coverages would be stacking coverages and would, in effect, transform inexpensive UIM coverage into additional liability limits for which an adequate premium had not been paid. Review of thе statutory language, legislative intent, and case law regarding UM/UIM coverage, however, leads us to disagree.
A. The statutory provision
¶9 Travelers argues that the statutory permission for insurers to limit stacking coverages applies, thus qualifying or limiting the broad language of subsection (G) and permitting Travelers to insert the offset or exclusion provisions at issue. But the anti-stacking provision of the statute reads:
Uninsured and underinsured motorist coverages are separate and distinct and apply to different accident situations. Underin-sured motorist coverage shall not provide coverage for a claim against an uninsured motorist in addition to any applicable uninsured motorist coverage. If multiple policies or coverages purchased by one insured on different vehicles apply to an accident or claim, the insurer may limit the coverage so that only one policy or coverage, selected by the insured, shall be applicable to any one accident.
A.R.S. § 20-259.01(H) (emphasis added).
¶ 10 Thus, the statute applies only when multiple vehicles are insured by multiple policies or coverages. Plaintiff is not attempting to add the coverage provided for one vehicle to the coverage provided on another. Nor is she attempting to add UIM coverage to the UM limits. See id. The statute therefore does not support Travelers’ attempt to limit coverage. The applicable subsection provides, in all-inclusive language, that when the “total damages exceed the total applicable liability limits the [UIM] coverage ... is applicable to the difference.” A.R.S. § 20-259.01(G). The broad language does not contain exceptions.
¶ 11 Thus, we have held that UM and UIM statutes have a remedial purpose and must be construed liberally in favor of coverage, with strict and narrow construction given to offsets and exclusions. See Calvert v. Farmers Ins. Co.,
¶ 12 Our eases have applied these principles from the very inception of UM and UIM coverage plans. When an injured victim was unable to collect the statutory minimum because the liability limits were divided among multiple claimants, we allowed the victim to recover under his own UM coverage to the extent necessary to reach the statutory minimum. See Porter,
Where the insured has paid premiums for a particular limit that the [Uninsured Motorist Act] entitles him to purchase, the statute contains no exception permitting an insurer to set a different limit by eliminating or reducing recovery below actual damages simply because another policy fortuitously also provides some coverage.
Rashid v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
¶ 13 As a result of the broad, remedial interpretation we have given the statute mandating UM and UIM coverage, we have long held that exceptions to coverage not permitted by the statute are void. We found the “other vehicle”
¶ 14 Subsection (G) of A.R.S. § 20-259.01 explicitly entitles an insured to UIM coverage if the sum of the limits of all applicable liability policies is less than the total damages resulting from the accident. The total amount of liability coverage available to Plaintiff was less than her total damages. In such a situation, each injured victim is entitled to fill the gap by seeking recovery under her own UIM policy. This is exactly what Plaintiff is doing. As Travelers concedes, Plaintiff could recover on her policy’s UIM coverage to fill the gap if she had been injured while driving her own car, riding in someone else’s car, or even walking on the sidewalk. The statute contains no exception for injuries occurring when Plaintiff is a passenger in her own car. Because the policy provisions cannot override the statute, Travelers’ policy exclusion should be read solely to limit duplication of recovery, as opposed to completely eliminating UIM coverage. See Rashid,
B. Legislative intent
¶ 15 As we have noted and as Tank mentioned, the text of the UM/UIM statute does not permit the exclusion in question, nor any of the many others raised over the years. See supra Part A and Tank,
¶ 16 We have reiterated these principles in many cases interpreting the statute in question, and none of our holdings restricts the interpretation to cases in which the insured makes her UIM claim on someone else’s policy. To the contrary, our language has been broad: “General liability insurance is separate and distinct from the first party coverage provided by either UM or UIM insurance.” Wilson,
¶ 17 We see nothing in the text or goals of the statute that would support the concept that the legislature had some unexpressed intent to allow insurers to preclude UM or UIM coverage merely because the policy purchaser was injured in her own car by another person insured under the same policy. No doubt this is a frequently encountered risk because we may safely assume that the insured’s family members, such as a spouse or children, ordinarily spend a significant amount of time riding in the insured’s car. Why would the legislature permit an insurer to exclude such a risk when the only reason for the consumer to buy UM and UIM is to protect against injury to his or her own family and guests as well as to the named insured himself? Travelers cannot provide a good answer, and we can conceive of none. We reject Tank’s unsupported assumption of legislative intent as contrary to the obvious goal of the legislature and one that would destrоy, to a great extent, the basic purpose of the legislation.
¶ 18 This can be seen even more clearly by a moment’s reflection on the pragmatic results of adopting Travelers’ position. First, as previously noted, the purpose of UM and UIM coverage is to enable the consumer to protect himself and family members against the possibility that, in any given accident, there will be no or insufficient liability coverage to compensate for the actual damages sustained. The only protection available is UM and UIM. Let us assume an intelligent consumer wished to protect against the risk of family members being injured while riding as passengers in someone else’s car, while a pedestrian or bicyclist, or while sitting on a park bench.
¶ 19 One might think that the consumer could provide the necessary protection by buying higher liability limits. But if Travelers is correct, there would be no way under existing law in which an insured could protect his family from this risk. Many policies contain the very common clause described as the household exclusion, which excludes coverage under the liability portion of the policy when a family member is injured by the negligence of another family member driving the insured vehicle. See 8 Couch on Insurance 3d § 114:24; 3 A. Widiss, supra § 33.5. We considered a challenge to the validity of the household exclusion in Arceneaux v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.,
¶ 20 While this fantasy may well have been the subject of judicial and legislative challenge, the issue became moot with the adoption in 1981 of UIM coverage, which allowed the insured to fill the gap when there was insufficient liability coverage. And, unlike liability coverage, the financial responsibility laws do not provide a $15,000 minimum limit for UM and UIM coverage. The UM and UIM statutes do not permit the same conclusion that this court reached in Arceneaux because, at the option of the insured, the minimum amount of UM and UIM coverage is equal to the amount of liability coverage the insured purchases. See A.R.S. § 20-259.01. Thus, the only manner in which an insured could protect family members against the commonly encountered risk of being injured while riding in the family ear, driven by another family member, is through the purchase of UM and UIM coverage and not the purchase of liability coverage. Otherwise, family members injured in the family car are limited to $15,000 in coverage of any type.
¶ 21 While all of this may be clear to those able to read Sanskrit, we must assume, of course, that the legislature certainly was aware of the case law, the types of coverage needed by consumers, and the limited possibilities by which consumers could protect themselves against this commonly encountered risk. Given that assumption, we cannot possibly conclude that the broad words of A.R.S. § 20-259.01(G), requiring UIM to cover the difference between the available liability coverage and the actual damages sustained in the аccident, contain some implicit, unarticulated permission for insurers to exclude situations in which an insured or a family member was injured due to the negligent driving of the family car by another insured family member. If the legislature had or has such an intent, it can certainly insert the appropriate words. Until and unless that happens, we do not believe it appropriate to recognize and validate exclusions not mentioned in the statute.
¶22 Thus, a moment’s reflection about this situation and others that could be hypothesized leads us to the conclusion that A.R.S. § 20-259.01 means what it says: Where there is insufficient liability coverage available to compensate for the actual damages sustained, the named insured or a family member injured in or by the family car and by the negligence of another insured may turn to his or her UIM coverage to
C. Basic purpose of UIM destroyed
¶ 23 If Travelers’ argument were accepted, Plaintiff would be unable to receive the amount of desired UIM coverage to which the law entitled her when the full limits of an insured’s liability coverage were not available because of multiple claimants, as in the present case, if the household exclusion discussed above applies,
¶ 24 Thus, the provision on which Travelers relies in the present case to .prohibit all UIM recovery when there has been any recovery from the liability coverage in the same policy undercuts the very purpose for which an insured buys separate UIM coveragе — to protect himself and his household when a tortfeasor’s liability limits are insufficient to pay all the damage inflicted. Travelers argues, however, that this result is exactly what is permitted by ease law.
D. Case law
¶25 The first of the two cases on which Travelers primarily relies is Duran v. Hartford Insurance Co. (Duran I),
The goal of providing indemnification for the injuries sustained by motor vehicle accident victims ... would be well served by employing setoffs so they apply to avoid the duplication of benefits, rather than to reduce liability for the insurer when the tortfeasоr’s liability insurance is not adequate to provide full indemnification____
The public interest would be well served by two changes ... setoffs would be determined on the basis of reducing the insurer’s liability only in relation to the amount of damages for which the claimant has actually been compensated.
[UIM] should be made available to purchasers as a coverage which is not restricted by the amount of liability insurance which the purchaser selects.
Id. § 41.7, Comment, at 304-05 (emphasis added). But, Widiss argues, when, as in Duran I but not in Taylor, the injured person has recovered the full amount of the liability insurance, there is no persuasive reason to allow her also to collect under the UIM coverage if an offset provision is clear and unambiguous. See id. § 41.8, at 305-06.
¶26 Therefore, Duran I is easily distinguished from Taylor. The full amount of liability insurance purchased was paid out to Lisa Duran, and under Widiss’ argument, collection of UIM benefits would provide the insured with more than she purchased.
¶27 There was no petition for review of the court of appeals’ opinion in Tank. The present case is thus a case of first impression for this court. Though Tank was decided fifteen years ago and the legislature
E. Stacking
¶ 28 Travelers argues that, irrespective of statutory authorization, the policy exclusion in question is designed to accomplish the permissible object of forbidding stacking of coverage. We do not agree that the present case involves a true stacking situation.
The right to stack concurrent coverages for a single loss addressed here must also be distinguished from the right of an insured to recover under more than one type of coverage for a given loss. Although occasionally described as ‘stacking’ the latter issue is more a question of the risks that fall within a particular type of coverage, and insureds generally are allowed to receive recovery under more than one coverage as long as they do not receive more than the amount of their loss, even when the policy contains an anti-stacking clause.
For the most part, the right to recover under two different coverage types for the sаme type of injury is left to the contract language regarding set-offs, and the like, of which there are many.
12 Couch on Insurance 3d § 169:6, at 169-18 to 169-19 (1998) (emphasis added). To this we must add, of course, the corollary that such policy language must conform to statutory goals and language. Here, Plaintiff is trying to recover under two different coverage types with the appropriate offset to avoid duplication of benefits.
¶29 If Plaintiff were trying tо recover $600,000 under the combined liability and UIM coverage of the policy, she would be trying to stack limits. Cf. Duran I,
F. Prospective versus retrospective application
¶30 Travelers argues that the court of appeals’ opinion breaks with the
1. The opiniоn establishes a new legal principle by overruling clear and reliable precedent or by deciding an issue whose resolution was not foreshadowed;
2. Retroactive application would adversely affect the purpose behind the new rule; and
3. Retroactive application would produce substantially inequitable results.
Lowing v. Allstate Ins. Co. Inc.,
¶ 31 Not one of these factors points to prospective-only application of this opinion. This is a case of first impression in our court; thus we have not overruled clear and reliable precedent. The result has been foreshadowed by previous interpretations of insurance coverage limitations discussed above, and retroactive application does not adversely affect the purpose of the new rule. Substantially inequitable results would occur if we did not apply the rule to all who find themselves in Plaintiffs situation. Insureds would belatedly discover that they are not covered by statutory UIM coverage to the limits they specified and for which they paid a premium if they are a passenger in a vehicle driven by another insured member of their household. Travelers has made no showing that it justifiably relied on Tank in setting rates. Consumers are entitled, on the other hand, to get what they buy. The equities here are on the consumers’ side. Thus, the usual rule between retroactive and prospective application applies.
CONCLUSION
¶ 32 Assuming her totаl damages are equal to or exceed $300,000, Plaintiff is entitled to additional UIM coverage to fill the gap between the amount she received from all applicable liability coverages and her UIM coverage limits. The gap exists when the full amount of liability coverage is unavailable to a UIM claimant who is also an insured under the same policy. In that event, UIM coverage may be used to cover the difference between the liability payment available to the insured and the amount of the insured’s damages or the limits of UIM, whichever is less. Under the facts of this case and the principle established in Duran I, Plaintiff is therefore entitled to $300,000 less $183,500 or $116,500 of UIM coverage from Travelers.
¶33 The court of appeals’ opinion is approved except as modified by this opinion, the trial court’s judgment is reversеd, and the ease is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The policy defined an "insured" as:
1. You or any "family member.”
2. Any other person "occupying” "your covered auto.”
3. Any person for damages that person is entitled to recover because of "bodily injury” to which this coverage applies sustained by a person described in 1. or 2. above.
Insuring Agreement, Part B, Coverage D-l [UIM] of Endorsement A02041. Travelers stipulated that Plaintiff was a family member of Mr. Taylor.
. Throughout this opinion, we use the subsection lettering that appears in the 1999 amendments to A.R.S. § 20-259.01. The relevant text of the 1999 version of the statute is identical to that in effect at the time of Plaintiff's accident.
. So far as relevant to this case, policy considerations applying to UM coverage and UIM coverage are identical. Consequently, coverage questions for both are generally treated in the same manner. Thus, our analysis throughout this opinion will refer to decisions dealing with UM as well as UIM coverage. See Brown v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
. For a history of UM/UIM insurance in Arizona, see: State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Wilson,
. The "other vehicle” exclusion would deny UM and UIM coverage to insureds who suffer injury in a vehicle they own but have elected to insure under a different policy. See Higgins,
. See Calvert,
. We presume the Taylors’ policy did not contain a household exclusion, or if it did, for some reason it was not applied. The record does not contain the policy issued by Travelers.
. We do not address the reasonable expectation test of Darner Motor Sales, Inc. v. Universal Underwriters Ins. Co.,
. Class I insureds generally are the named insured and others, such as family members, with a direct relationship to the named insured or the vehicle, while Class II insureds generally have a more marginal relationship, such as being a passenger or permissive user of a vehicle for a limited time. The status of the insured is usually treated as relevant, with Class I insureds more likely to have higher reasonable expectations due to their payment of premiums for the insurance in question. See 12 Couch on Insurance 3d § 169:15, at 169-33 (1998).
. We have not been asked to re-examine Duran I. But see Mihalsky, supra, 22 Ariz. St. L J. at 522-23. We therefore do not address the question of whether the reasoning of Duran I, which allowed an offset against UIM for liability coverage paid, can co-exist with Duran II, which precludes ex-elusions not specifically allowed by statute. The dissent argues that under our reading of A.R.S. § 20-259.01, Duran was wrong and should be overruled. See dissent at ¶ 40. We do not address that question because neither party asked us to do so.
. The Travelers policy contains the following provision:
Any amounts оtherwise payable for damages under this coverage shall be reduced by all sums:
1) Paid because of the "bodily injury” by or on behalf of persons or organizations who may be legally responsible. This includes all sums paid under Coverage A [Liability] of this policy....
Insuring Agreement, Part C, Coverage D-l [UIM] Limit of Liability of Endorsement A02041. Plaintiff has not questioned the validity of this clause.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
¶ 34 The fundamental issue here is whether the tortfeasors against whom underin-sured motorist coverage is purchased include one’s spouse, with whom the claimant either made decisions about limits, or had an opportunity to do so. It is a difficult question, because, for the most part, just as policyholders buy liability insurance to protect their assets from the claims of third parties, they buy underinsured motorist coverage to protect themselves against injuries caused by underinsured third pаrties. I do not believe most policyholders consider the possibility that the third party might be the person with
¶35 So when the majority asks “[w]hy would the legislature permit an insurer to exclude such a risk when the only reason for the consumer to buy UM and UIM is to protect against injury to his or her own family and guests as well as to the named insured himself?”, ante, at ¶ 17, the answer is likely to be that the plaintiff is, at the very least, a person who acquiesced in the limits chosen. Ordinarily, insurance does not cover that which is in the control of the insured.
¶ 36 On the other hand, suppose the claimant were not the wife of the named insured but instead the child of the named insured, a person who could not possibly have participated in or acquiesced in decisions about limits. The case in favor of coverage becomes much stronger, and yet under Travelers’ approach there would still be no coverage. The majority properly notes this gap in coverage. A policyholder could buy reasonable limits for liability, uninsured motorist, and underinsured motorist, and yet family members may be left out in the cold in the event of catastrophic loss.
¶ 37 The majority says that this difficult issue is resolved by reference to A.R.S. § 20-259.01(G). But that subsection merely defines underinsured motorist coverage. It does not purport to define the extent of that coverage. These are words of description, not applicability. On the other hand, our opinion in Duran v. Hartford Insurance Co.,
¶38 So how does the majority avoid this result herе? It does so because Taylor had to share in the liability limits with other claimants. It allows Taylor to recover UIM but reduces that coverage by any amount received on the liability portion of the policy. It does not allow Taylor to recover her full damages. But this is inconsistent with the idea that drives the decision in the first place. The majority says that coverage is required under A.R.S. § 20-259.01(G) whenever the total damages exceed the total applicable liability limits and there are no exceptions. Ante, at ¶ 10. Well, Taylor’s damages exceed the total applicable liability limits and yet she is not allowed to recover those damages under the UIM policy. She is not treated as other legitimate liability and UIM claimants are treated.
¶ 39 In its attempt to distinguish this case from Duran, the majority says “[t]he full amount of liability insurance purchased was paid out tо Lisa Duran.” Ante, at ¶ 26. But the full amount of liability insurance purchased was paid out in this case too. So the majority states that it is not enough for the carrier to pay the full liability limits — those limits must all be paid to the claimant. If there are no other claimants, and the full liability limits are paid to the claimant, there is no underinsured motorist coverage, even though the claimant’s injuries exceed the liability limits. On the other hand, if there are multiple claimants, and the claimant must share in the full liability limits with others, then there is underinsured motorist coverage but it is reduced by any payments made under the liability portion of the policy.
¶41 If I shared the majority’s view that A.R.S. § 20-259.01(G) rendered the policy exclusion invalid, I would allow Taylor to recover against the UIM coverage that part of her total loss that was not satisfiеd by the liability payment. Because, however, I cannot bring myself to hold that A.R.S. § 20-259.01(G) does any more than define UIM coverage, I conclude that Travelers’ policy exclusion is not in conflict with the statute. I respectfully dissent.
. In this case, the UIM limit is the same as the liability limit. But for this, the outcome might have been wholly inconsistent with the majority’s attempt to distinguish Duran. For example, the Taylors might have opted to purchase less than the maximum UIM coverage offered. Had they
