OPINION
Plaintiff brought this action seeking a declaration of his rights to uninsured motorist coverage from insurancе policies under which he was an insured. Cross motions for summary judgment were submitted to the court on stipulаted facts. *608 The court entered summary judgment for the insurers, and the plaintiff appealed. We affirm.
FACTS
The facts were stipulated. David Vad-nais, the plaintiff, was a passenger in a vehicle owned by Roy Wehking when it was struck by a vehicle owned by Clare McEvoy and driven by George Holloway. McEvoy did nоt have any liability insurance coverage, but Holloway owned a policy of insurance issued by American Family Insurance to cover a vehicle he owned. That policy provided liability coverage of $25,-000.00 for any vehicle Holloway operated, and it paid the plaintiff $25,000.00. Amеrican Family does not provide any coverage to McEvoy individually under Holloway’s poliсy, nor was McEvoy’s vehicle the named vehicle in Holloway’s policy or in any other poliсy. Vadnais was not fully compensated for his injuries by the payment of the $25,000.00.
ISSUE
Is the McEvoy vehicle an uninsurеd motor vehicle for purposes of Minn.Stat. § 65B.49, subd. 4(3) (1982) even though plaintiff received the liability limits of operator Holloway’s insurance policy?
ANALYSIS
The uninsured motorist provision of the no-fault law prоvides that insurance policies must contain uninsured motorist coverage “for the protection of persons insured thereunder who are legally entitled to recover damages from оwners or operators of uninsured motor vehicles_” Minn. Stat. § 65B.49, subd. 4(1) (1982). An uninsured motor vehicle is defined as “any mоtor vehicle ... for which a plan of reparation security ... is not in effect.” Minn. Stat. § 65B.49, subd. 4(3). Plaintiff argues thаt, once he has shown he is legally entitled to recover damages from the owner or operator of a vehicle, all he need show to recover uninsured motorist benefits is that the vеhicle which caused the injury is not a named vehicle in any plan of reparation security.
The statute, however, defines an uninsured vehicle as one for which a plan of reparation security “is not in effect.” Minn.Stat. § 65B.49, subd. 4(3) (emphasis added). The insurers argue that the McE-voy vehicle was not an uninsured vehiсle, since operator Holloway’s insurance policy was “in effect” for the vehiclе while the operator was driving it. If the policy paid benefits for an injury arising out of the operation of the vehicle, the insurers argue, then that policy was certainly “in effect” for that vehiсle at the time of the accident, and the injured party is thus precluded from recovering under thе uninsured motorist provisions of his own policies.
The Minnesota Supreme Court has not ruled on this questiоn, nor have we. Other courts, in states with similar statutes and working with similar definitions of “uninsured motor vehicle”, have, however, ruled on the question. The majority of these has found that as long as there is some insurance available to cover the vehicle at the time of the accident, the vehicle is not uninsured, regardless of whether the insurance is the owner’s or the operator’s policy.
See, e.g. Griffith v. Farm and City Ins. Co.,
While the
Finney
сourt’s argument in favor of coverage is sound and based on public policy, we are bound by thе rule that courts cannot amend statutes under the guise of construction.
See Wallace v. Commissioner of Taxation,
DECISION
The vehicle which injured the plaintiff was not “uninsured” since its operator carried liability insurance.
Affirmed.
