United Fire and Casualty Company appeals a declaratory judgment voiding part of its policy that reduces the $300,000 uninsured motorist (UM) coverage by the sums already paid or payable to its insured, Gayle Kleppe, by her employer's workers' compensation carrier. 1 The trial court declared that the UF& C policy violates sec. 632.32(4)(a), Stats., that requires motor vehicle insurance policies to provide minimum mandatory UM coverage of $25,000 per person and $50,000 per accident. The court did not reach the issue of whether the same limit of liability clause violates the collateral source rule.
Because Kleppe's damages are undetermined, it is premature to decide whether enforcement of the UF&C policy's limit of liability provision has the effect of violating the mandatory UM coverage statute. We also con- *847 elude that the collateral source rule has no application here. We therefore reverse the declaratory judgment.
Gayle Kleppe, an elementary school principal, was injured in the course of her employment as the result of a motor vehicle accident with an uninsured motorist. Kleppe and her husband, Beau Wold, (collectively Kleppe), made a claim for all of their damages under a UF&C motor vehicle insurance policy that provides UM benefits with a limit of $300,000 per accident. The extent of Kleppe's damages have not been established. In the meantime, Kleppe collected and will continue to collect workers' compensation from Employers Insurance of Wausau in payment of certain of her damages. 2 Because Kleppe sought recovery for her medical bills paid or payable by worker's compensation insurance, UF&C sought a declaratory judgment enforcing the "limit of liability" provision in its policy. The policy provides as follows:
PART C — UNINSURED MOTORISTS COVERAGE
*848 LIMIT OF LIABILITY
B. Any amounts otherwise payable for damages under this coverage [uninsured motorist] shall be reduced by all sums:
1. Paid ... by or on behalf of persons . . . who may be legally responsible. This includes all sums paid under Part A [liability coverage]; and
2. Paid or payable because of the "bodily injury” under any of the following or similar law:
a. workers' compensation law . . ..
C. Any payment under this coverage will reduce any amount that person is entitled to recover for the same damages under Part A [liability coverage].
The circuit court held this reciprocal reducing clause to be invalid, citing prior case law interpreting sec. 632.32(4), Stats. Prior decisions have held reducing clauses virtually identical to the clause found in this policy in violation of the mandatory UM coverage of sec. 632.32(4)(a). 3 Those decisions, however, were expressly grounded upon the fact that reduction in coverage would have breached the legislative policy underlying the UM statute. The legislature intended to guarantee coverage to the injured party as if the uninsured motorist had been insured by the statutory minimums, presently $25,000 per person and $50,000 per accident. In each decision holding the clause unenforceable, the insured *849 suffered damages greater than the minimum mandatory coverage provided by the policy, and the reducing clause had the effect of lowering policy payments below those minimums.
In
Nicholson v. Home Ins. Cos.,
The
Nicholson
court recited the plaintiffs argument: Her damages were in excess of the combined total
*850
of the separate liability and uninsured motorist coverages, and the reducing clause
effectively
violated the mandate of the UM statute and was therefore unenforceable, even though the actual reduction was applied to the liability coverage.
Id.
at 590-91,
Contrary to Kleppe's arguments,
Nicholson
does not declare the reducing clause invalid for all purposes: "Sec. 632.32(4)(a) is silent about reducing clauses; it neither authorizes nor prohibits them."
Id.
at 591,
This court applied
Nicholson
to a different fact situation in
Niemann v. Badger Mut. Ins. Co.,
Because it declared the limit of liability clause void for violation of the UM coverage statute, the circuit court declined to decide whether the collateral source rule entitled Kleppe to collect her medical expenses a second time. The issue could surface again, however, if Kleppe's damages, after subtraction of her workers' com *852 pensation benefits, do not reduce UM coverage below the $25,000/$50,000 mínimums.
The rationale for the collateral source rule is that an injured party's investment in insurance should not inure to the benefit of the tortfeasor.
Campbell v. Sutliff,
The collateral source rule has no application to the present circumstances. This is not an attempt by a tortfeasor to obtain a benefit from the insured's investment in insurance. This dispute is strictly a matter of contract between the insurer and its insured. It has been said that the collateral source rule arises only in tort cases and is not used at all in contract claims. Dan B. Dobbs, Handbook on the Law of Remedies, § 8.10 at 587 (1973) (citing
United Protective Workers v. Ford Motor Co.,
Further, even in those tort cases where the rule is otherwise applicable, the insurer has the right to expressly contract to avoid double coverage. This right is recognized in the seminal case invoking the collateral source rule,
Gatzweiler v. Milwaukee Elec. Ry. & Light
*853
Co.,
Kleppe finally suggests that the reducing clause violates the stacking statute, sec. 631.43(1), Stats. This statute provides:
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.
This statute has no application here. The "insured" under a workers' compensation policy is the employer, and the employee is an applicant or claimant. See
Van Valin v. Industrial Comm'n,
In summary, UF&C may limit its liability and reduce its coverage to the extent of Kleppe's workers' compensation benefits, provided the reduction does not effectively violate sec. 632.32(4)(a), Stats. We therefore *854 reverse as premature the judgment voiding the limit of liability clause.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed.
Notes
This is an expedited appeal under Rule 809.17.
Employers Insurance originally sought a subrogation recovery against UF&C pursuant to sec. 102.29, Stats., but stipulated to dismiss its claim. The stipulation was apparently based upon a recognition that the worker's compensation recovery statute is limited to tort actions against third parties, and the UM payment to Kleppe under the UF&C policy is purely a matter of contract. Although the stipulation and order of dismissal do not set forth the reasoning, the dismissal followed the filing of briefs alluding to authority for the proposition that sec. 102.29(1), provides the workers' compensation carrier a cause of action against the tortfeasor only.
See Bergren v. Staples,
Section 632.32(4)(a) provides:
Required Uninsured Motorist and Medical Payments Coverages. Every policy of insurance subject to this section . . . shall contain therein . . . provisions . . . [f]or the protection of persons injured who are legally entitled to recover damages from owners or operators of uninsured motor vehicles ... in limits of at least $26,000 per person and $50,000 per accident.
The minimum mandatory UM coverage of sec. 632.32(4)(a), Stats. (1979), in effect at the time of the Nicholson decision, was $15,000 per person and $30,000 per accident. Although it is irrelevant to our decision in this case, we note for the sake of accuracy that the uninsured motorist in Nicholson was ultimately exonerated of any negligence by a jury. The Nicholson court noted that the jury's finding had no bearing on the appeal because the insurance company paid the uninsured motorist coverage of $15,000 prior to trial and the parties agreed that Home Insurance could not seek to recoup payment on those grounds.
While we distinguish prior case law invalidating the reducing clause found here, so far as we can determine, our supreme court has never had the occasion to address the clause in context of these facts. Because there are significant public policy and insurance contract considerations at stake, a final resolution by the supreme court would be salutary.
