Valley Forge Insurance Company appeals a summary judgment denying its property damage subrogation claim against Home Mutual Insurance Company and its insured, Joseph Ropson. The trial court concluded that
Garrity v. Rural Mutual Insurance Co.,
*366 On review of a summary judgment, an appellate court applies the same standards as the trial court. Summary judgment is appropriate if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories and admissions on file, together with any affidavits, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Messner v. Briggs & Stratton Corp.,
The parties stipulated to the facts. Mcllrath and two passengers in his vehicle were seriously injured, and his wife was killed in an auto accident caused by Rop-son’s negligence. Mcllrath had auto insurance with Valley Forge, which paid for his vehicle loss. Valley Forge notified Home Mutual that it had paid the collision loss, asserted subrogation rights for the amount paid, and requested payment in that amount from Home Mutual. Ropson’s Home Mutual policy provided that it would pay damages for which Ropson was legally liable because of bodily injury or property damage. For bodily injury, it agreed to pay up to $25,000 per person and $50,000 per occurrence. For property damage, it agreed to pay up to $25,000. Other than the funds that were available through his liability insurance, Ropson possessed no nonexempt assets. He has been discharged in bankruptcy.
Home Mutual paid $25,000 to the two injured passengers in the Mcllrath vehicle and $25,000 to Mcllrath, exhausting coverage under its bodily injury liability coverage, and paid Mcllrath $6,000 under its property dam *367 age liability provisions. 1 Mcllrath’s injuries exceed the amounts paid him. Home Mutual paid what it owed under its property damage liability coverage to Mcllrath rather than to Valley Forge at the insistence of Mcllrath’s attorney, who claimed that because Mcllrath had not been wholly compensated for his damages, Valley Forge had no subrogation rights based upon Rimes and Garrity.
The settlement agreement between Mcllrath and Home Mutual required Mcllrath to indemnify Home Mutual “from any... liability... that it may suffer as a result of claims ... made by [Valley Forge] 2 ... as a result of collision loss....”
Valley Forge argues that the result of the trial court’s decision is a double recovery by Mcllrath. It relies in support of its claim upon the statement in
Rimes,
The following language from
Garrity
and
Rimes
supports our decision: “Subrogation is to be allowed only when the insured is compensated in full by recovery from the tortfeasor.”
Rimes,
Valley Forge has directed our attention by letter to two decisions issued after this case was submitted for resolution:
Vogt v. Schroeder,
Keeping in mind that “subrogation is an equitable doctrine and depends upon a just resolution of a dispute under a particular set of facts,”
Vogt,
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
Notes
There is a minor discrepancy between the amount paid to Mcllrath by Home Mutual for his vehicle and the amount paid to him by Valley Forge, as well as in the amount claimed in the subro-gation complaint. Neither party claims that the error has any bearing on this appeal and, as did the trial court, we believe it unimportant to the resolution of this case.
Valley Forge belongs to the Continental Casualty Group, also known as CNA Insurance Company, whose official name appears in the release.
Approximately 40 other states agree with this proposition.
See
cases collected at Annot.,
