The portions of the insurance policy giving rise to this controversy are as follows:
Part A — Liability Coverage
Insuring Agreement
We will pay damages for bodily injury or property damage for which any insured becomes legally responsible because of an auto accident. Damages include prejudgment interest awarded against the insured.... In addition to our limit of liability, we will pay all defense costs we incur.
*112 Supplementary Payments
In addition to our limit of liability, we will pay on behalf of an insured:
3. All costs taxed against the insured and interest accruing after a judgment is entered in any suit we defend. Our duty to pay interest ends when we offer to pay that part of the judgment which does not exceed our limit of liability for this coverage.
(Emphasis in original.)
I. Prejudgment Interest
Defendant assigns as error the trial court’s finding that the policy is ambiguous, as well as the trial court’s ensuing interpretation of the terms of the policy to exclude prejudgment interest from the stated limits of defendant’s liability under the policy.
North Carolina’s Legislature has provided for prejudgment interest: “In an action other than contract, the portion of money judgment designated by the fact finder as compensatory damages bears interest from the date the action is instituted until the judgment is satisfied. Interest on an award in an action other than contract shall be at the legal rate.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 24-5(b) (1991). There is no statutory provision mandating that insurance carriers pay prejudgment interest that exceeds the stated limit of liability under the terms of the insurance contract.
Sproles v. Green,
The trial court found the language in the policy susceptible to more than one reasonable interpretation and therefore ambiguous. Our Supreme Court has explained that language in an insurance contract is ambiguous only if the language is “fairly and reasonably susceptible to either of the constructions for which the parties contend.”
Wachovia Bank & Trust Co. v. Westchester Fire Ins. Co.,
Plaintiffs assert that the language in the policy is ambiguous because 1) the policy defined “damages” to include prejudgment interest; 2) the policy stated that “in addition to our limit of liability, we will pay all defense costs we incur;” and 3) the policy stated that in addition to the limit of liability, defendant would pay “[a] 11 costs taxed against the insured.” The trial court agreed with plaintiffs that these provisions contradicted each other, giving rise to ambiguity. We disagree.
In
Lowe v. Tarble,
our Supreme Court construed an insurance contract in which the insurer expressly agreed to pay, in addition to its contractual limit of liability, “all costs taxed against the insured.”
In
Sproles v. Greene,
our Supreme Court determined that an insurer was not required to pay prejudgment interest beyond its limit of liability where the terms of the contract provided that the insurer would pay “all defense costs” in excess of the limit of liability.
In the policy before us, the “Insuring Agreement” expressly provides that prejudgment interest is calculable as a part of damages and is therefore included under the liability limits of the policy. Although the “Supplementary Payments” provision does not repeat the definition of damages, defendant is not obligated to pay prejudgment interest above the policy limit of liability.
See York Indus. Center, Inc. v.
*114
Michigan Mut. Liab. Co.,
We note further that even if the insurance policy itself had not defined damages to include prejudgment interest, our Supreme Court recently held that prejudgment interest is an element of damages because it compensates a plaintiff for the loss of the use of his or her money.
Baxley
at 8,
II.
Because we find that defendant is not liable to plaintiffs for prejudgment interest in addition to the limits of the policy, we need not address defendant’s remaining assignments of error. For the reasons stated above, we reverse the decision of the trial court ordering defendant to pay prejudgment interest in excess of its limit of liability under the policy.
Reversed.
