08/05/2022
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT NASHVILLE
May 17, 2022 Session
CHRISTOPHER MCCOY v. KATELYN CONWAY ET AL.
Appeal from the Circuit Court for Wilson County
No. 2020-CV-40 Michael Wayne Collins, Judge
___________________________________
No. M2021-00921-COA-R3-CV
___________________________________
The plaintiff was injured when his car was hit by an uninsured driver. The plaintiff was
initially paid $5,000.00 from the medical payments coverage of his automobile policy. A
jury then found the plaintiff’s compensatory damages to total $80,000.00. The plaintiff’s
uninsured motorist carrier then paid the plaintiff $45,000.00, representing the policy limit
of $50,000.00 less the prior $5,000.00 payment. The plaintiff then sought to compel the
uninsured motorist carrier to pay the additional $5,000.00 owed under the uninsured
motorist policy. The trial court agreed and ordered the uninsured motorist carrier to pay
the plaintiff an additional $5,000.00, resulting in total payment by the carrier to the plaintiff
of $55,000.00. The uninsured motorist carrier appeals. We reverse the decision of the trial
court.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Reversed and
Remanded
J. STEVEN STAFFORD, P.J., W.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ARNOLD B.
GOLDIN and CARMA DENNIS MCGEE, JJ., joined.
Jay R. McLemore and Donald R. Ferguson, Franklin, Tennessee, for the appellant, Allstate
Property and Casualty Insurance Company.
Neal Agee, Jr., Lebanon, Tennessee, for the appellee, Christopher McCoy.
OPINION
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY1
1
The parties in this case filed a Joint Stipulation for the Record in the Circuit Court of Wilson
On September 7, 2019, Plaintiff/Appellee Christopher McCoy was driving his car
in Mt. Juliet, Tennessee, when he was rear ended by a vehicle driven by Katelyn Conway
and owned by Courtland Douglas, neither of whom carried liability insurance coverage.
Ms. Conway was intoxicated and eventually pled guilty to the charge of driving under the
influence. Mr. McCoy filed a personal injury complaint against Ms. Conway and Mr.
Douglas, who were served but failed to defend the lawsuit. At the time of the collision, Mr.
McCoy was insured under an automobile liability insurance policy issued by
Defendant/Appellant Allstate Property and Casualty Insurance Company (“Allstate”). Mr.
McCoy’s policy included bodily injury limits of $50,000.00 per person for Automobile
Liability Insurance coverage and $50,000.00 per person for Uninsured Motorists Insurance
coverage. Mr. McCoy’s automobile liability insurance policy also included an optional
Automobile Medical Payments benefit with coverage of $5,000.00 per person.
Mr. McCoy served Allstate notice of the personal injury complaint as his uninsured
motorist carrier. In answering and defending the suit, Allstate pleaded its right to a credit
or setoff for any payments made under Automobile Medical Payments coverage. Mr.
McCoy’s medical expenses resulting from the collision were in excess of $5,000.00. On
December 4, 2020, Mr. McCoy filed itemized medical expenses in the total amount of
$16,090.24 pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 24-5-113(b). Before the trial
occurred, Allstate tendered a check for $5,000.00 to Mr. McCoy, in satisfaction of the
limits of his medical payments coverage. Mr. McCoy cashed the $5,000.00 check for
medical payments on December 30, 2020.
On March 18, 2021, default judgment was entered against Ms. Conway and Mr.
Douglas for failure to answer. On March 30, 2021, Mr. McCoy filed a Motion to Amend
Complaint, seeking to withdraw his claim for medical expenses from the initial complaint,
which motion was granted without objection. A jury trial occurred on April 13 and 14,
2021. Ms. Conway and Mr. Douglas did not appear. Mr. McCoy was present and
represented by counsel. Allstate was also present, electing to defend in its own name. Mr.
McCoy did not offer proof of or seek judgment for medical expenses, past or future. The
jury returned the following verdict: “Physical pain and mental suffering — past $15,000;
Physical pain and mental suffering — future $20,000; Permanent injury - $15,000; Loss of
enjoyment of life — past $10,000 and Loss of enjoyment of life — future $20,000.” Thus,
the total verdict of compensatory damages was $80,000.00. The jury then returned a verdict
for $40,000.00 in punitive damages. On April 26, 2021, the trial court entered judgment in
favor of Mr. McCoy against Ms. Conway and Mr. Douglas for $80,000.00 in compensatory
damages, and against Ms. Conway for $40,000.00 in punitive damages.
After the trial court entered judgment, Allstate paid Mr. McCoy $45,000.00. On
May 25, 2021, Mr. McCoy filed a Motion to Compel Payment, requesting from Allstate an
County (the “trial court”), from which we have taken most of the following factual and procedural history.
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additional $5,000.00, or the balance of his uninsured motorist coverage, for a total of
$50,000.00. Mr. McCoy argued that Allstate was not entitled to an offset for medical
payments previously made to him and Allstate was required to pay $50,000.00 toward the
judgment. Allstate argued that its $50,000.00 uninsured motorist policy limits were offset
by the $5,000.00 in medical payments to Mr. McCoy, thereby reducing its obligation to
$45,000.00. A hearing on the motion occurred in the trial court on July 12, 2021. On July
15, 2021, the trial court entered an order granting Mr. McCoy’s motion to compel payment
and ordering Allstate to pay an additional $5,000.00.2 Allstate appealed this order
compelling payment.
II. ISSUES PRESENTED
The sole issue in this appeal is whether the trial court erred in ordering Allstate to
pay Mr. McCoy an additional $5,000.00 as full satisfaction of the uninsured motorist
coverage.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
In a similar case, this Court described the relevant standard of review as follows:
The issue in this appeal requires us to interpret both the language of the
Allstate insurance policy, and the relevant Tennessee uninsured motorist
statutes. Accordingly, our analysis is guided by several well-established
principles. First, Tennessee law is clear that questions regarding the extent
of insurance coverage present issues of law involving the interpretation of
contractual language. Clark v. Sputniks, LLC, 368 S.W.3d 431, 436 (Tenn.
2012); Maggart v. Almany Realtors, Inc., 259 S.W.3d 700, 703 (Tenn.
2008). Likewise, questions regarding the interpretation of a statute involve
issues of law. In re Estate of Trigg, 368 S.W.3d 483, 490 (Tenn. 2012).
Therefore, our standard of review is de novo with no presumption of
correctness afforded to the conclusions reached by the trial court. U.S. Bank,
N.A. v. Tenn. Farmers Mut. Ins. Co., 277 S.W.3d 381, 386 (Tenn. 2009).
Powell v. Clark, 487 S.W.3d 528, 531–32 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2015).
IV. ANALYSIS
Allstate argues that the trial court erred in denying its right to an offset of the medical
payments it made to Mr. McCoy, which Allstate asserts it is entitled to under its contract
with Mr. McCoy, Tennessee’s uninsured motorist act, and established case law.
2
The trial court’s order provides no reasoning for its decision. Although we are aware of no law
that requires a trial court to provide detailed reasoning when adjudicating motions of this type, such
reasoning is helpful in facilitating appellate review.
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Specifically, Allstate argues that it is entitled to reduce its uninsured motorist coverage
limit of $50,000.00 by the amount it paid Mr. McCoy under the medical payment coverage
policy ($5,000.00), such that its obligation to Mr. McCoy is satisfied by paying only an
additional $45,000.00 to Mr. McCoy. In contrast, Mr. McCoy argues that the trial court
correctly ordered Allstate to pay the full amount of the uninsured motorist coverage limit,
$50,000.00, without an offset for the $5,000.00 in medical payments.
Here, the Automobile Medical Payments Coverage portion of the policy issued by
Allstate to Mr. McCoy states, in part, as follows:
Non-Duplication
There will be no duplication of payments made under the Automobile
Medical Payments coverage of this policy and any other coverage of this
policy. All payments made to or on behalf of any person under this coverage
will be considered as advance payments to that person. Any amount payable
for bodily injury to an insured person under any other coverages of this
policy will be reduced by that amount.
Further, the Tennessee Uninsured Motorists Insurance endorsement on the policy
issued by Allstate to Mr. McCoy states, in part, as follows:
Limits of Liability
* * *
Limits payable will be reduced by all amounts paid or payable by the owner
or operator of the uninsured motor vehicle or anyone else responsible. This
includes all sums collected or collectible under the bodily injury liability
coverage of this or any other policy and all sums collected or collectible
under the uninsured motorist coverage of this or any other policy.
The Uninsured Motorists Insurance limits apply to each insured auto as
shown on the Policy Declarations. These limits are the maximum we will pay
for any one motor vehicle accident regardless of the number of:
1. premiums paid;
2. premiums shown on the Policy Declarations;
3. claims made;
4. vehicles or persons shown on the Policy Declarations; or
5. vehicles involved in the accident.
In no event shall our liability under this coverage be more than the limits
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of the Uninsured Motorists insurance provided.
2. Damages payable will be reduced by:
a) all amounts paid by or on behalf of the owner or operator of the
uninsured motor vehicle, including an underinsured motor vehicle,
or anyone else responsible. This includes all sums paid under the
bodily injury liability coverage or property damage liability
coverage of this or any other auto policy.
b) all amounts paid or payable under any workers’ compensation law,
disability benefits law, or similar law, Automobile Medical
Payments, or any similar medical payments coverage under this or
any other auto policy. If the accident arises from the use of an
uninsured motor vehicle, we aren’t obligated to make any payment
under this coverage until the limits of liability for all liability
protection in effect and applicable at the time of the accident have
been exhausted by payment of judgments or settlements.
Clearly, then, Allstate wrote its insurance contract to allow it to do what it is
attempting to do in this case: reduce its uninsured motorist liability by any amounts that it
pays under its separate medical payments coverage. When considering issues of insurance
coverage, however, we must consider more than just the contract between an insurer and
insured. Uninsured/underinsured motorist “statutes, as a matter of law, become provisions
of all automobile insurance policies issued for delivery in Tennessee. Where there is a
conflict between a statutory provision and a policy provision, the statutory provision must
prevail.” Powell, 487 S.W.3d at 532 (quoting Sherer et al. v. Linginfelter et al., 29 S.W.3d
451, 454 (Tenn. 2000) (citing Fleming v. Yi, 982 S.W.2d 868, 870 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998))).
Therefore, we will proceed to consider whether Allstate’s insurance contract comports with
Tennessee’s uninsured motorist act, as it has been interpreted by case law.
Tennessee’s uninsured motorist act is contained within Tennessee Code Annotated
sections 56-7-1201 through -1206. “Through the uninsured motorist act, the General
Assembly intended to provide ‘protection’ to the insured under the insured’s own policy
of insurance.” Clark v. Shoaf, 302 S.W.3d 849, 855 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2008) (emphasis in
original) (citation omitted). To that end, section 56-7-1201 of Tennessee’s uninsured
motorist act states, in pertinent part, as follows:
(a) Every automobile liability insurance policy delivered, issued for delivery
or renewed in this state, covering liability arising out of the ownership,
maintenance, or use of any motor vehicle designed for use primarily on
public roads and registered or principally garaged in this state, shall include
uninsured motorist coverage, subject to provisions filed with and approved
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by the commissioner, for the protection of persons insured under the policy
who are legally entitled to recover compensatory damages from owners or
operators of uninsured motor vehicles because of bodily injury, sickness or
disease, including death, resulting from injury, sickness or disease.
(1) The limits of the uninsured motorist coverage shall be equal to the bodily
injury liability limits stated in the policy.
* * *
(d) The limit of liability for an insurer providing uninsured motorist coverage
under this section is the amount of that coverage as specified in the policy
less the sum of the limits collectible under all liability and/or primary
uninsured motorist insurance policies, bonds, and securities applicable to the
bodily injury or death of the insured. . . .
Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 56-7-1201(a)(1), (d).
Section 56-7-1205 goes on to state:
Nothing contained in this part shall be construed as requiring the forms of
coverage provided pursuant to this part, whether alone or in combination
with similar coverage afforded under other automobile liability policies, to
afford limits in excess of those that would be afforded had the insured under
the policies been involved in an accident with a motorist who was insured
under a policy of liability insurance with the minimum limits described in §
55-12-107, or the uninsured motorist liability limits of the insured’s policy if
the limits are higher than the limits described in § 55-12-107. The forms of
coverage may include terms, exclusions, limitations, conditions, and offsets
that are designed to avoid duplication of insurance and other benefits.
And section 56-7-1206(i) provides that “[t]he uninsured motorist insurance carrier shall be
entitled to credit for the total amount of damages collected by the insured from all parties
alleged to be liable for the bodily injury or death of the insured whether obtained by
settlement or judgment and whether characterized as compensatory or punitive damages.”
Although the parties put forth arguments concerning all of the above statutes, in our
view, the crux of this dispute concerns section 56-7-1205. Under the plain language of this
statute, the uninsured motorist carrier is not required to provide coverage “in excess” of the
policy limits “whether alone or in combination with similar coverage afforded under other
automobile liability policies.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 56-7-1205. In this case, there is no
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dispute that the policy limit of Mr. McCoy’s uninsured motorist policy is $50,000.00.3 In
order to effectuate that purpose, the uninsured motorist carrier may impose, inter alia,
“offsets that are designed to avoid duplication of insurance and other benefits.” In an
unreported case, the Tennessee Supreme Court has held that the predecessor to this statute
does not prohibit insurance contracts that provide for offsets of uninsured motorist
coverage for medical payments under a separate insurance policy held by the insured. See
Terry v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 510 S.W.2d 509, 511 (Tenn. 1974) (citing Jenkins v. State
Farm (Tenn. Aug. 3, 1970) (holding that “it is clear beyond argument that the legislature
intended by these provisions to authorize the offset” of medical payments for uninsured
motorist coverage when such is included in the insurance policy at issue)). Allstate
contends that it may therefore offset its payment of uninsured motorist coverage by the
amounts that Mr. McCoy received under the medical payments coverage, a type of “similar
coverage afforded” by Mr. McCoy’s insurance policy, so that it is not required to pay in
excess of the $50,000.00 limit on coverage required by the statute.
Mr. McCoy argues, however, that this interpretation and application of section 56-
7-1205 is at odds with the plain language of the statute and the caselaw interpreting it. We
will consider each of these arguments in turn.
First, Mr. McCoy contends that Allstate’s argument ignores section 56-7-1205’s
requirement that offsets be permitted only so long as they prevent “duplication of insurance
and other benefits.” Because the damages Allstate sustained in this accident totaled well
over $55,000.00, he contends that there can be no duplication of benefits so as to bring this
case within the ambit of section 56-7-1205. In essence, he argues that because he was not
made whole by the $55,000.00 to which he asserts he is entitled, there should be no offset.
Respectfully, we disagree.
In order to resolve this dispute, we must consider the nature of uninsured motorist
insurance in Tennessee. In 1974, the Tennessee Supreme considered the two schools of
thought applicable to uninsured motorist coverage:
Under our research there appears to be two theories in regard to offset
provisions in policies containing uninsured motorist coverage based on the
legislative intent in the enactment of uninsured motorist statutes. The first
theory is based on a finding the legislative purpose of such statutes is to
provide full coverage up to the policy limits so long as payments under the
uninsured motorist coverage, plus any payments received from other sources,
3
As previously discussed, under the current iteration of the uninsured motorist statutes, the limit
defined by statute is not static, but depends on the amount of coverage the insured has purchased for bodily
injury liability coverage. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 56-7-1201(a)(1). So while the statute still provides the
basis for calculating the limit of uninsured motorist coverage required, we must look to the specific
insurance contract at issue to calculate that actual minimum amount of coverage required. The resulting
amount is therefore both a statutory and a contractual minimum.
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do not exceed insured’s actual damage. This is termed broad coverage and
any offsets in the policies inhibiting such full coverage are held void. The
second theory is based on a finding the legislative purpose of such statutes is
to provide insured a recovery only up to the statutory minimum required
without regard to insured’s actual damages, unless such be less than the
statutory minimum. This is termed limited coverage and under such, by
virtue of set-off provisions in a policy, an insured’s statutory minimum
coverage can be reduced by amounts received from other sources.
Terry, 510 S.W.2d at 513. Comparing these two theories to the predecessor to section 56-
7-1205, our high court concluded that “that enactment of this section ‘denote[d] a
legislative purpose to provide less than broad coverage.’” Green v. Johnson, 249 S.W.3d
313, 321 (Tenn. 2008) (quoting Terry, 510 S.W.2d at 513). So the supreme court explained
that:
[B]y the enactment of [Tennessee Code Annotated section 56-7-1205] as a
section of our uninsured motorist statutes, it is the legislative purpose to
provide an insured motorist a right of recovery under the uninsured motorist
provisions of his policy only up to the statutory required minimum [] and
provisions in such policies, approved by the Commissioner of Insurance,
operating to reduce such coverage where other coverage or benefits are
available to the insured arising from accident causing the loss, are valid if
such provisions do not operate to deny payments to an insured of less than
the statutory minimum.
Id. (citing Terry, 510 S.W.2d at 513) (alterations made by the Green court). And the
Tennessee Supreme Court explained that despite slight alterations to section 56-7-1205
over the years, “the legislative purpose of this section has not changed,” and compels the
conclusion that the rule in Terry remains intact.4 In other words, “[t]he legislative purpose
of [section 56-7-1205] . . . is to allow uninsured motorist carriers to limit their liability
when an insured is able to collect monies elsewhere, no matter the source.” Green, 249
S.W.3d at 322 (emphasis added). As such, monies received by a plaintiff from another
source related to the accident caused by an uninsured motor vehicle are “duplicative” to
the monies owed under the uninsured motorist policy and therefore “are subject to setoff.”
Id. at 323.
Applying this rule to the facts of the case, the Tennessee Supreme Court held that
that the plaintiffs were not entitled to receive any funds from its uninsured motorist carrier
because the plaintiffs had already received in excess of their uninsured motorist policy
limits from one of the at-fault parties to the case. Id. Specifically, the uninsured motorist
policy provided the same limits as this case—$50,000.00 per individual. The amount of
4
The language of section 56-7-1205 remains the same today as it was when Green was decided.
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the settlement was not specified except that the parties stipulated that it was over
$50,000.00. The plaintiffs’ compensatory damages, however, totaled into the millions. Id.
at 315. But the court held that the monies were duplicative without any analysis as to
whether the payment from the at-fault party was less than the plaintiffs’ actual damages.
Id. at 315. So the Green case makes clear that monies may be duplicative regardless of the
fact that an offset results in an insured being made less than whole. Or as another court has
explained it, while the broad rule calculates the uninsured motorist carrier’s obligation by
subtracting offsets from the “actual damages of the insured,” the limited rule subtracts
“those amounts from the coverage limits under the uninsured motorist policy” Boyce v.
Geary, No. 01-A-01-9409-CV00410, 1995 WL 245389, at *3 (Tenn. Ct. App. Apr. 28,
1995). The Terry opinion and its progeny make clear that the second, more limited rule is
applicable in Tennessee. Terry, 510 S.W.2d at 513 (expressly choosing the limited
coverage rule). So the plaintiff need not be made whole in order for offsets to apply in the
context of limited uninsured motorist coverage, so long as he or she receives the minimum
uninsured motorist coverage applicable from the uninsured motorist carrier, “alone or in
combination” with other sources. Tenn. Code Ann. § 56-7-1205.
Applying this rule to the case-at-bar indicates that Mr. McCoy is not entitled to the
additional $5,000.00 payment he sought in the trial court. Here, there is no dispute
Allstate’s uninsured motorist insurance policy has a maximum pay out of $50,000.00.
Under the policy, Allstate is entitled to an offset of this amount for any payments made
from other sources, including medical payments coverage. Pursuant to section 56-7-1205,
Terry, and Green, Allstate is entitled to offset its payment under the uninsured motorist
policy by any amounts that it received from “other coverage or benefits” without respect
to the actual damages suffered by Mr. McCoy, so long as the offsets do not deny Mr.
McCoy of at least his statutory minimum. Here, the $45,000 payment under the uninsured
motorist policy, “in combination with similar coverage afforded under” the medical
payments coverage, provide Mr. McCoy with the statutory minimum amount required in
this particular case. So the $5,000.00 medical benefit payment is duplicative of the amounts
Mr. McCoy was to receive under the uninsured motorist policy and Allstate is entitled to
offset that prior payment to meet the statutory minimum under section 56-7-1205, Terry,
and Green.
Other caselaw cited by Mr. McCoy does not lead us to a different conclusion. For
example, Mr. McCoy cites Powell v. Clark, 487 S.W.3d 528 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2015), which
did not allow an offset despite the insurance policy employing the exact same language at
issue here. In Powell, Ms. Powell was a passenger in a car driven by Ms. Collins, which
was struck by a car driven by Ms. Clark, who was undisputedly 100% at fault for the
accident. Id. at 529. Ms. Clark was uninsured and never appeared in the case. Id. Ms.
Powell maintained an uninsured motorist policy with a limit of $100,000.00 with State
Farm, and Ms. Collins maintained an uninsured motorist policy with a limit of
$100,000.00, and a medical payments coverage policy with a limit of $2,000.00, with
Allstate. Id. Allstate was the primary uninsured motorist carrier with respect to the accident
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and paid Ms. Powell $2,000.00 under the medical payments portion of Ms. Collins’ policy,
while State Farm paid medical payments on behalf of Ms. Powell in the amount of
$70,021.32 pursuant to her own insurance policy. Id. at 529–30. Ms. Powell and her
husband then sued Ms. Clark and Allstate, as the uninsured motorist carrier for Ms. Collins.
Id. at 530. The trial court determined that Allstate had paid the plaintiffs $2,000.00 “under
the Medpay provisions of the uninsured motorist coverage applicable to this case,” and the
plaintiffs were entitled to judgment against Allstate for the entire $100,000.00 uninsured
motorist limit. Id. at 531. Therefore, the trial court entered judgment against Allstate in the
amount of $98,000.00.5 Id. The trial court further determined that Allstate was not entitled
to offset its uninsured motorist limits with the medical payments made by State Farm. Id.
In the end, we agreed with the trial court. In support, we cited several statutes and
the language of the uninsured motorist insurance policy itself. For example, Tennessee
Code Annotated section 56-7-1204(a) provides for subrogation of “the proceeds of any
settlement or judgment resulting from the exercise of any rights of recovery of the person
against any person or organization legally responsible for the bodily injury or property
damage for which payment is made[.]” Likewise, the uninsured motorist insurance policy
expressly stated that damages paid would be reduced by “all amounts paid by or on behalf
of the owner or operator of the uninsured auto, including an uninsured auto or anyone else
responsible.” Id. at 534.
As the statutes and the insurance contract were to be read in pari materia, we
concluded that Allstate was not entitled to an offset for payments made by a party who was
not responsible for the damages, regardless of the limited coverage offered by Tennessee
uninsured motorist act:
[T]here is also a more subtle concept of legal liability at play in the statutes
and caselaw. This idea of liability is not specifically fault-based; rather, it
rests upon the equitable notion that various offsets, although broadly
construed to give effect to the limited coverage scheme our Legislature has
adopted, should nonetheless be allowed only if such payments are made by
the party at fault for the accident, or the person or entity legally responsible.
5
It is interesting to note that the trial court in Powell, without apparent dispute, did exactly what
Mr. McCoy is arguing should not be done in this case. The offset for medical payments was not raised as
an issue in Powell, and was therefore not considered by this Court. As such, we cannot conclude that it
provides binding authority that an offset for medical payments by the insured’s own insurance carrier is
authorized by the uninsured motorist statutes. See Harrison v. Wilkerson, 56 Tenn. App. 188, 194–95, 405
S.W.2d 649, 652 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1966) (“It is axiomatic that an opinion in a former case is authority only
for the points actually decided and that general expressions in the opinion are to be taken and understood
as made in connection with the case under consideration. Language which was not decisive in the former
decision is not binding as a precedent.”).
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Powell, 487 S.W.3d at 536. Because State Farm was not “the legally responsible insurer”
for Ms. Powell’s injuries, we held that the Allstate could not offset payments made by that
company. Cf. Sherer v. Linginfelter, 29 S.W.3d 451, 454 (Tenn. 2000) (holding that
Tennessee’s uninsured motorist statutes, taken together “allow[] the insurer to recover from
its insured only those amounts received from the person or entity causing those same
damages”); Elsner v. Walker, 879 S.W.2d 852, 855 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1994) (refusing an
offset for medical payments by the plaintiff’s medical insurance company).
But Powell is no help to Mr. McCoy in this case. Distilled to its essence, the rule
established by Powell is that, in the context of that case, the uninsured motorist carrier was
not entitled to an offset unless the payment sought to be set off was made by a party legally
responsible for the insured’s injuries.6 While Ms. Conway and Mr. Douglas may be the
tortfeasors in this case, Powell makes clear that in light of the uninsured motorist coverage,
Allstate is the legally responsible party in this case. Id. (“[B]y statute, Allstate is the legally
responsible uninsured motorist carrier in this case.”). Allstate fulfills the exact same role
in this case as it did in Powell—as the primary uninsured motorist carrier with respect to
this accident. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 56-7-1201(b)(3)(A) (“The uninsured motorist
coverage on the vehicle in which the insured was an occupant shall be the primary
uninsured motorist coverage[.]”). And although an uninsured motorist carrier does not
actually insure the uninsured motorist, Clark v. Shoaf, 302 S.W.3d 849, 855 (Tenn. Ct.
App. 2008) (quoting Thompson v. Parker, 606 S.W.2d 538, 540 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1980)),
the “uninsured motorist coverage places the insured’s insurance carrier ‘in the role of a
liability carrier for the uninsured motorist.” Id. (quoting Cavalier Ins. Corp. v.
Osment, 538 S.W.2d 399, 403 (Tenn. 1976)). Thus, while the uninsured motorist carrier is
not the uninsured motorist’s insurer in reality, the statutes have the effect of making “the
insurance carrier stand as the insurer of the uninsured motorist.” Dunn v. Hackett, 833
S.W.2d 78, 82 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1992) (citing Stallcup v. Duncan, 684 S.W.2d 643 (Tenn.
Ct. App. 1984)); see also Glover v. Tennessee Farmers Mut. Ins. Co., 225 Tenn. 306, 313,
468 S.W.2d 727, 730 (Tenn. 1971) (“The whole intent and purpose of the uninsured
motorist act, is, in essence, to provide [p]rotection by making the insurance carrier stand
as the insurer of the uninsured motorist[.]”); Marler v. Scoggins, 105 S.W.3d 596, 598
(Tenn. Ct. App. 2002) (characterizing this statement in Dunn as “correct[]”). Thus,
Powell’s prohibition against seeking offsets from parties without legal responsibility is
completely inapposite here, where Allstate is the legally responsible insurance carrier and
6
Tennessee courts have previously found no authority to prohibit an uninsured motorist carrier
from offsetting its payments by the amount of workers’ compensation benefits received by the insured. See
Sherlin v. Hall, 237 S.W.3d 647 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2007). Although the legal responsibility issue was not
raised in Sherlin, it is self-evident that a workers’ compensation carrier is legally responsible for the
payment of benefits pursuant to its policy. This fact lends some support to our holding that a legally
responsible party for purposes of uninsured motorist coverage includes more than just the tortfeasor,
discussed infra.
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it is seeking to offset payments made under its own policies so as not to pay anything more
than the maximum of $50,000.00.7
The fact that Mr. McCoy will recover the maximum $50,000.00 even with the offset
also distinguishes this case from other cases cited by Mr. McCoy. For example, both Boyce
v. Geary, No. 01-A-01-9409-CV00410, 1995 WL 245389 (Tenn. Ct. App. Apr. 28, 1995),
and Bayless v. Pieper, No. M2008-01073-COA-R3-CV, 2009 WL 2632763 (Tenn. Ct.
App. Aug. 26, 2009), involved an effort by the uninsured motorist carrier to double its
offset for a single payment by a third party to the insured. See Boyce, 1995 WL 245389, at
*3 (“[I]f we adopted the position advanced by the appellant, the insured would suffer a
double reduction in his benefits as the result of a single payment made by the tortfeasor’s
insurance company.”); Bayless, 2009 WL 2632763, at *2 (“[L]iability insurance proceeds
used to reimburse a workers’ compensation subrogation lien are not regarded as
“duplicate” payments such that a UM carrier may claim a double offset for overlapping
benefits.”). Here, there is no allegation that the $5,000.00 medical payment made to Mr.
McCoy is subject to a third party’s subrogation lien or that Allstate is seeking a double
offset in this case. So these cases provide no support for Mr. McCoy’s position in this case.
In sum, section 56-7-1205 and the construing caselaw permit an insurer to offset its
payment of uninsured motorist coverage by the amounts that the insured receives from
other legally responsible parties. Here, Allstate, a legally responsible party, paid Mr.
McCoy $5,000.00 in satisfaction of the medical payments coverage he purchased. Pursuant
to Mr. McCoy’s insurance policy and the uninsured motorist statutes, Allstate is allowed
an offset for this amount, reducing the amount it owes Mr. McCoy under the uninsured
motorist coverage purchased by Mr. McCoy. To require Allstate to pay Mr. McCoy an
additional $5,000.00 would be to mandate payment by Allstate “in excess” of that
established by the uninsured motorist statutes and Mr. McCoy’s insurance policy. Tenn.
Code Ann. § 56-7-1205. Consequently, the trial court erred in requiring Allstate to pay
$5,000.00 in excess of its coverage limits. The trial court’s ruling is therefore reversed.
V. CONCLUSION
The judgment of the Circuit Court of Wilson County is reversed, and this case is
remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this Opinion. Costs of
this appeal are taxed to Appellee Christopher McCoy, for which execution may issue if
necessary.
7
Of course, Mr. McCoy’s uninsured motorist insurance policy likewise contemplates that the
uninsured motorist coverage can be offset by payments made by a responsible party either under the same
policy or an outside policy, as it provides for offsets for sums collected under “this or any other policy and
all sums collected or collectible under the uninsured motorist coverage of this or any other policy.”
Although Powell held that this broad language is limited by the party responsible rule, that rule is simply
satisfied here where the offset is for payments made by the legally responsible uninsured motorist carrier.
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S/ J. Steven Stafford
J. STEVEN STAFFORD, JUDGE
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