In this underinsurance-benefits case involving multiple claimants, defendant appeals by right the stipulation and final judgment entered by the *523 trial court in favor of plaintiffs against defendant in the amount of $75,000 for each plaintiff. The stipulation expressly provides that defendant may appeal the trial court’s earlier order granting plaintiffs’ motion for summary disposition. We affirm.
This case involves an underinsured motorist insurance coverage dispute arising from a motor vehicle accident. Plaintiff Janna Frank was driving a vehicle in which Paul Wilkie was a passenger when a vehicle driven by Stephen Ward crossed the center line and collided with their vehicle. Both Ward and Wilkie were killed in the collision, and Frank was seriously injured. The Ward vehicle was insured by Citizens Insurance Company under a policy that had a $50,000 single limit of liability, which was split equally between the two plaintiffs. Defendant Auto-Owners Insurance Company insured the Wilkie vehicle under a policy that provided underinsured motorist coverage, with policy limits of $100,000 a person, not to exceed $300,000 total.
There is no dispute that еach plaintiff’s damages exceeded the coverage amount. Defendant asserted that it owed each plaintiff $50,000, consisting of the $100,000 policy limit minus the $50,000 coverage of the Ward policy. Plaintiffs asserted that defendant owed each of them $75,000 because they equally split the Ward policy proceeds of $50,000 (i.e., $100,000 policy limit under defendant’s policy minus the $25,000 received under Ward’s policy equals $75,000). The trial court granted plaintiffs’ motion for summary disposition, finding that only the amount actually received by each plaintiff ($25,000), and not the entire policy limits ($50,000), should be set off against the amount available to each plaintiff under the underin-
*524
sured motorist coverage provision. After a review de novo of the trial court’s grant of summary disposition to plaintiffs,
Spiek v Dep’t of Transportation,
Underinsured motorist coverage is not required by law, but is offered as an option by a number of insurance companies. Because such insurance is not mandated by statute, the scope, coverage, and limitations of underinsurance protection are governed by the insurance contract and contract law.
Rohlman v Hawkeye-Security Ins Co,
*525
Concomitant with the rules of cоnstruction is the rule of reasonable expectation. When determining the existence or extent of coverage under the rule of reasonable expectation, a court examines whether a policyholder, upon reading the contract, was led to reasonably expect coverage.
Gelman Sciences, Inc v Fidelity & Casualty Co,
The policy section at issue provides in relevant part:
2. Coverage
a. We will pay compensatory damages any person is legally entitled to recover:
(1) from the owner or operator of an underinsured automobile;
*
4. Limit of Liability
a. Our Limit of Liability for Underinsured Motorist Coverage shall not exceed the lowest of:
(1) the amount by which the Underinsured Motorist Coverage limits stated in the Declaratiоns exceed the total limits of all bodily injury liability bonds and policies available to the owner or operator of the underinsured automobile-, or
* * *
*526 b. The Limit of Liability is not increased because of the number of
* * *
(2) claims made or suits brought;
(3) persons injured .... [Emphasis in original.]
In this case, each plaintiff submitted a claim that exceeded the $100,000 a person limitation under the policy issued by defendant. As plaintiffs explain, defendant’s exposure was thus $200,000. Examining the policy language at issue, the primary question in this case is what is the limit of the policy available to the owner or operator of the underinsured automobile. The limit of that policy was $50,000, which was split equally between the two plaintiffs in this case. Defendant would treat the $50,000 as the limit available in regard to “each” plaintiff. However, defеndant’s interpretation of the policy provisions would allow it to benefit from a credit not received by plaintiffs. Another interpretation of the policy language at issue, as found by the trial court, is that only the amount actually received by each plaintiff ($25,000) from the insurance coverage available to Ward, and not the entire Ward pоlicy limit ($50,000), should be set off against the amount available to each plaintiff under the underinsured motorist coverage provision in the policy issued by defendant. While defendant argues that the provision contained in section b of its policy (i.e., that the limit of liability is not increased because of the number of claims made, suits brought, or persons injured) supports its claim, this provision is more appropriately applied to the policy limits indicated in the endorsement of defendant’s policy. Defendant’s liability is limited to $100,000 a person, *527 and $300,000 total, and cannot be increased by the number of claims made, suits brought, or persons injured. Because the policy language in question can be interpreted in at lеast two ways, we conclude that it is ambiguous and should be construed against defendant, the insurer. Clevenger, supra.
In addition, defendant’s position is inconsistent with reasonable expectations of coverage. Diehl, supra. An insured could reasonably expect that the policy limits of the underinsured motorist coverage would be available to him, less the amount received from the underinsured motorist. No one can predict with certainty how much coverage will be available from an underinsured motorist. The premium amount for the underinsured coverage was the same as the premium amount for uninsured coverage, and the same policy limits applied to both coverages. The reasonable expectation would be that the insured has contracted to have the amount of the policy limits available to him, whether paid by the underinsured motorist, or by the insured’s policy.
Further, contrary to defendant’s assertion, the Michigan cases defendant relied on do not support its position that the insurance policy language clearly and unambiguously provides that thе applicable limit for the claim is $50,000. In
Nankervis v Auto-Owners Ins Co,
Defendant’s maximum liability for underinsured coverage is limited to the difference betweеn its insured’s coverage and the other motorist’s coverage, provided that its insured’s damages exceed the amount of the other motorist’s coverage. That is, any benefits due shall be reduced by all amounts paid by the driver’s insurer. [Id. at 265-266.]
The present case is distinguishable from Nankervis. Unlike Nankervis, plaintiffs in this case are not claiming that the amount they actually received from the underinsured driver’s insurer should not be offset against their recovery from defendant. Rather, the question presented in this case involves the applicability of the setoff clause in the underinsured motorist provision where the claimant can receive only a portion of the liability policy proceeds because there are multiple claimants. Thus, any reliance on Nankervis is misplaced.
Defendant’s reliance on
Auto-Owners Ins Co v Leefers,
This Court in Leefers determined that, while the term “available” was ambiguous because it could be construed in different ways, it “agree[d] with those jurisdictions . . . that have construed the term to mean that which is ‘actually’ or ‘reasonably’ available to the insured.” Id. at 11-12. However, even though this Court construed the term “available” against the insurer, it concluded that “Cash has failed to establish that the underinsured motorist benefits under the Leefers policy were not ‘actually’ or ‘reasonably’ available to her under the facts of this case, such that the exclusion under the Hall policy would be inapplicable.” Id. at 12.
Defendant claims that Leefers is distinguishable from the instant case because the policy language in Leefers stated “available to the insured,” while the policy language in the present case states “available *530 to the owner or operator” of the underinsured vehicle. Thus, defendant claims that what is “available” to plaintiffs is what Ward was entitled to under the policy, namely, $50,000 in underinsured benefits. However, we agree with plaintiffs that defendant’s claim rests on a “distinction without a difference” because “what is ‘available’ to the insured is the same thing that is ‘available’ to the tortfeasor.” Here, what is “available” to each plaintiff is not the “theoretically or hypothetically available” amount of $50,000, Leefers, supra at 11, but, rather, what was “actually” or “reasonably” available to each plaintiff, the amount of $25,000, which each actually received from the insurer of the Ward vehicle. Thus, contrary to defendant’s claim, the reasoning in Leefers supports affirmance of the trial court’s decision.
Finally, cases from other jurisdictions support the trial court’s decision in the present case.
1
In
Gust v Otto,
Goughan v Rutgers Casualty Ins Co,
238 NJ Super 644;
Gonzales v Millers Casualty Ins Co of Texas, 923 F2d 1417 (CA 10, 1991), also supports the trial court’s decision in the present case. In Gonzales, Claro Gonzales and two other passengers were injured, and Tomasa Gonzales was killed, when Claro Gonzales’ vehicle was struck by a vehicle driven by Michael Woehrl, whose negligence was the proximate causе of the accident. Id. at 1418. Woehrl had liability coverage of $100,000 an occurrence, which was distributed evenly among the four claimants, with each receiving $25,000. Id. The plaintiffs, Claro Gonzales and the personal representative of Tomasa Gonzales’ estate, who each claimed damages in excess of $25,000, sought compensation under the underinsured motorist provisions of Claro Gonzales’ insurance policy, which insured Claro and Tomasa Gonzales each for $75,000 against bodily injury or death caused by an underinsured motorist. Id. When the insurer denied further liability, the plaintiffs filed a declaratory action, arguing that they were each entitled to $50,000 in liability coverage. Id. The district court ruled that the plaintiffs could look to the insurer to compensate them under the underinsured motorist policy provisions for any additional loss, subject to the coverage limits, or $50,000. Id. at 1419. On appeal, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals, interpreting a New Mexico underinsured motorist coverage statute, affirmed the judgment of the district court, holding that underin-sured motorist recovеry in a multiple claimant context was determined by the amount of liability pro *534 ceeds actually available to the injured insured, rather than the face amount of the tortfeasor’s policy. Id. at 1422-1423.
In summary, because of the ambiguity in the defendant’s insurance policy and the fact that an insured reading the contract would reasonably expect coverage under the circumstances of this case involving multiple claimants, we hold that the amount actually received by each plaintiff and not the entire policy limits should be set off against the amount available to each plaintiff under the underinsured motorist coverage provision. The trial court properly granted summary disposition in favor of plaintiffs.
We affirm.
Notes
In addition to the cases we will discuss, several other decisions from other jurisdictions also support the instant trial court’s decision. See
State Farm Mut Automobile Ins Co v Valencia,
