SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-5093-96T2
UNIVERSAL UNDERWRITERS INSURANCE
COMPANY,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
CNA INSURANCE COMPANY,
Defendant-Respondent.
________________________________________
Submitted January 21, 1998 - Decided February 20, 1998
Before Judges Long, Kleiner and Kimmelman.
On appeal from the Superior Court of
New Jersey, Law Division, Union County.
Ciarrocca & Ciarrocca, attorneys for
appellant (Mark P. Ciarrocca, of counsel
and on the brief).
Granstrand & Caiati, attorneys for
respondent (Arthur Arnold, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
KIMMELMAN, J.A.D.
The issue on appeal arises under circumstances in which each
of two insurance carriers afforded primary coverage for the
happening of the same accidental injury. This court is asked to
determine what percentage of liability each carrier must bear to
cover the loss.
Plaintiff insures Mr. Goodlube, an automobile service center,
with liability coverage in the amount of $1,000,000. Defendant
insures the leased car of a particular Mr. Goodlube customer with
liability coverage in the amount of $300,000. After completing the
servicing work on that car, a Mr. Goodlube employee backed it out
of the garage and accidentally struck and injured a pedestrian.
The injured pedestrian made claims against both Mr. Goodlube and
its employee and the owner of the car.
Plaintiff insured Mr. Goodlube and its employee for the
happening of the accident. Defendant insured the authorized driver
and the car which accidentally struck the pedestrian. Both
carriers acknowledge that their policies afforded primary coverage
for the injuries sustained by the pedestrian, who has commenced a
legal action. Plaintiff argues that the two carriers should
contribute equally to payment of the claim. Defendant argues that
the payment of the claim should be on a pro rata basis, determined
by the respective policy limits. Since the total available primary
coverage is $1,300,000 ($1,000,000 from plaintiff plus $300,000
from defendant), defendant claims responsibility for
$300,000/$1,300,000 or 23" against 77" for plaintiff.
On plaintiff's motion for summary judgment in its declaratory
judgment action to determine the parties' respective responsibility
for payment of the injured pedestrian's claim, the trial court
rejected plaintiff's contention and ruled that the carriers must
share responsibility on a pro rata basis. Plaintiff appeals.
the meaning and purpose of each with respect to responsibility for
payment of the claim in question. See Royal Ins. Co. v. Rutgers
Cas. Ins. Co.,
271 N.J. Super. 409, 416 (App. Div. 1994). Where
two carriers are each primarily liable, we must examine the "Other
Insurance" clause of each policy to determine whether there exists
language which may govern the contribution each party should make
to payment of the claim when adjusted.
Under the heading "Other Insurance," plaintiff's policy is
silent as to the method of sharing responsibility when other
coverage is available. It simply provides: "The insurance
afforded by this policy is primary[.]" No exception or limitation
is provided in plaintiff's policy regarding the payment of the
claim here involved. On the other hand, defendant's policy is more
specific. It provides under its "Other Insurance" clause, in
pertinent part, as follows:
8. Other Insurance.
When there is other applicable insurance,
we will provide coverage as follows:
. . .
b. During the first and subsequent years
of this policy for those exposures
shown effective in the coverage
summary, we will pay only our share of
the loss. Our share is the proportion
that our limit of liability bears to
the total of all applicable limits.
Co.,
28 N.J. 554 (1959). In Cosmopolitan, a leased vehicle being
used in the business of a news delivery company was involved in an
accident while being operated by one of its employees. At the time
of the accident, the news company and its employee were covered by
a liability insurance policy issued by Cosmopolitan and the leased
vehicle was covered by a policy issued by Continental. Id. at 556-57. Both policies extended coverage for the accident, but each
policy contained an "Other Insurance" clause which provided that
the carrier's coverage would be excess insurance over any other
valid and collectible insurance. Id. at 558. Our Supreme Court
observed that:
If literal effect were given to both clauses
the result would be that neither policy
covered the loss. Such a result would produce
an unintended absurdity which neither party
urges.
[Cosmopolitan, supra, 28 N.J. at 559].
The Court further said:
[I]n the present case the two policies appear
to us to be equally specific. Each would
furnish coverage if the other did not exist.
The Continental policy insured the specific
truck involved in the accident. On the other
hand, the Cosmopolitan policy specifically
insured Essex County News Company which was
responsible for the accident under the
doctrine of respondeat superior.
[Id. at 560].
In conclusion, the Court held:
As applied to the facts of the present case, both policies provide that they shall be "excess" insurance. However, it is obvious that there can be no "excess" insurance in the absence of "primary" insurance. Since neither policy by its terms is a policy of "primary"
insurance, neither can operate as a policy of
"excess" insurance. The excess insurance
provisions are mutually repugnant, and as
against each other are impossible of
accomplishment. Each provision becomes
inoperative in the same manner that such a
provision is inoperative if there is no other
insurance available. Therefore, the general
coverage of each policy applies and each
company is obligated to share in the cost of
the settlement and expenses. We think that
such a conclusion affords the only rational
solution of the present dispute.
. . .
We . . . conclude that as both companies stand
on an equal footing equity requires an equal
apportionment of the amount of the settlement
and expenses.
[Id. at 562, 564].
Other jurisdictions have reached the same conclusion as
Cosmopolitan; holding that, where the excess coverage provisions of
two policies are mutually repugnant, they are to be disregarded.
The carriers are therefore held to stand on an equal footing, with
each sharing the payment of liability equally until the limit of
the smaller policy is exhausted. See e.g., York Mut. Ins. Co. v.
Continental Ins. Co.,
560 A.2d 571 (Me. 1989); Beattie v. American
Auto Ins. Co.,
156 N.E.2d 49 (Mass. 1959); Arditi v. Massachusetts
Bonding & Ins. Co.,
315 S.W.2d 736 (Mo. 1958).
However, where the "Other Insurance" clause of each policy
contains a pro rata provision stipulating that each shall bear a
proportion of the loss to the extent of the applicable insurance,
then the policies are not considered to be mutually repugnant and
each carrier must bear its respective proportionate share of the
loss. Such is the result reached in Selected Risks Ins. Co. v.
Nationwide Mutl. Ins. Co.,
133 N.J. Super. 205, 212 (App. Div.
1975), and in other jurisdictions. See e.g., Transport Ins. Co. v.
Employers Cas. Co.,
434 S.W.2d 704, (
9 Tex. Civ. App. 1968),
aff'd,
444 S.W.2d 606 (Tex. 1969); Clow v. National Indemn. Co.,
339 P.2d 82 (Wash. 1959); Celina Mut. Cas. Co. of Ohio v. Citizens
Cas. Co. of N.Y.,
71 A.2d 20 (Md. 1950).
The facts in Cosmopolitan differ from those presented in this
case in that the policies here do not each contain excess coverage
provisions within their "Other Insurance" clauses which would
literally tend to cancel out one policy in favor of the other. Nor
does each "Other Insurance" clause contain a pro rata method of
payment for the claim. See Cosmopolitan, supra, 28 N.J. at 558.
There is a clear difference in the wording of the policies. As we
have indicated, plaintiff's policy contains no express language
limiting its share of liability where other insurance covers the
same claim. Plaintiff's policy states, without more, that it shall
be "primary." On the other hand, defendant's policy states that,
where there is other applicable insurance, defendant will pay only
that share which equals the proportion its policy bears to the
total of all applicable limits. The decision in Cosmopolitan did
not address this issue.
In the absence of controlling precedent, we are constrained to
adhere to the specific language of the policies, which will be
given its ordinary meaning. Longobardi v. Chubb Ins. Co. of N.J.,
121 N.J. 530, 537 (1990). Each policy must be enforced as written.
Ibid. The applicable rule is stated in Couch on Insurance as
follows:
. . . [t]he liability of insurers under
overlapping coverage policies is to be
governed by the intent of the insurers as
manifested by the terms of the policies which
they have issued. Thus, it has been said that
where two or more liability policies overlap
and cover the same risk and the same accident,
the respective liabilities of the insurers
must rest upon a construction of the language
employed by the respective insurers[.]
[16 Couch on Ins. § 62.44 (2d Rev. Ed. 1983).]
We find no ambiguity in the respective language employed in
the policies and, of course, we cannot make a better contract for
either party than they themselves have made. Royal Ins. Co.,
supra, 271 N.J. Super. at 416 (quoting Flynn v. Hartford Fire Ins.
Co.,
146 N.J. Super. 484, 488 (App. Div.), certif. denied,
75 N.J. 5 (1977), and citing Kamph v. Franklin Life Ins. Co.,
33 N.J. 36
(1960); Kook v. American Sur. Co. of N.Y.,
88 N.J. Super. 43
(1965)).
The language of the policies is not mutually repugnant, as in
Cosmopolitan, so that the excess coverage clause of each would
cancel out the other and neither would apply to the claim. In
order to prevent an unintended absurdity, our Court in Cosmopolitan
arrived at an equitable result, requiring each carrier to bear the
loss in equal proportion. But here, plaintiff has contractually
bound itself to afford primary coverage with no condition attached,
whereas defendant has also bound itself to afford primary coverage,
but with the condition that its liability be prorated. Clearly,
both policies may be enforced as written without diminishing the
coverage due the injured claimant. Defendant, by virtue of its pro
rata proviso, has agreed to be responsible for a proportion
amounting to twenty-three percent of the claim, up to the limit of
its policy. Plaintiff did not insert such a condition into its
"Other Insurance Clause." It does no violence to the language of
plaintiff's policy to find plaintiff responsible for the balance of
the claim less defendant's pro rata share, because plaintiff's
policy does not provide otherwise. In its policy, defendant
specifically refused consent to the equal apportionment urged by
plaintiff. Consequently, the "Other Insurance" clauses of both
policies may be given effect.
For the reasons expressed, the order for judgment entered on
March 21, 1997, is affirmed substantially for the reasons expressed
by Judge Menza in his oral opinion of the same date.