dissenting.
This is another case illustrating the procedural difficulties of trying to serve judicial economy while at the same time protecting the parties in a negligence action from the injection of insurance into the suit. The legislature and the courts have been at it a long time and have constructed a balanced scheme of procedures. OCGA § 33-7-11. See, insofar as relevant to this case, Home Indem. Co. v. Thomas, 122 Ga. App. 641 (178 SE2d 297) (1970); Moss v. Cincinnati Ins. Co., 154 Ga. App. 165 (268 SE2d 676) (1980); Tennessee Farmers Mut. Ins. Co. v. Wheeler, 170 Ga. App. 380 (317 SE2d 269) (1984); Smith v. Phillips, 172 Ga. App. 459 (323 SE2d 669) (1984). The joint effort at fine-tuning so as to protect all interests is exemplified by Allstate Ins. Co. v. McCall, 166 Ga. App. 833 (305 SE2d 413) (1983) of this court, which was affirmed by the Supreme Court, McCall v. Allstate Ins. Co., 251 Ga. 869 (310 SE2d 513) (1984), and the statute thereafter revised, Ga. L. 1984, p. 839, OCGA § 33-7-11 (j).
In this case, as in many arising out of motor vehicle collisions involving an uninsured motorist, there were four potential claims. One, Johnson, as an injured party, against Amerson as the tortfeasor. Two, Amerson, as an injured party, against Johnson as the tortfeasor. Three, Johnson as insured against his insurer for fulfillment of the policy coverage (or a declaratory judgment action by the insurer *78against the insured to establish contract liability1). Four, insurer against the tortfeasor by way of subrogation of the rights of its insured, pursuant to OCGA § 33-7-11 (f).
The first cause of action was pressed. The second, which would be a counterclaim, was not. However, Amerson filed his defense that the collision was Johnson’s own fault, and Johnson’s insurer joined Amerson by filing a defense in its own name asserting that its insured was at fault. This it was permitted to do by OCGA § 33-7-11 (d).
The third cause of action, of course, has not accrued because Johnson did not obtain a judgment against Amerson. Such a judgment is a condition precedent to such a suit by the insured against his uninsured motorist carrier, unless the carrier elects to become a party to the tort action and there is no issue of coverage or the issue of coverage is resolved against it. That is to say, if it were a party and thus before the court, and the jury gave an award to its insured against the tortfeasor on the issue of negligence and also against it on the issue of coverage (or there was no issue of coverage made), there would be no reason not to enter judgment against it to the extent of the policy limits. See Smith, supra at 465. However, such judgment would be limited to the amount of the judgment against the tortfeasor and the policy limits, because the insured must bring a separate action for bad faith penalty and attorney fees. OCGA § 33-7-11 (j) provides: “The question of bad faith, the amount of the penalty, if any, and the reasonable attorney’s fees, if any, shall be determined in a separate action filed by the insured against the insurer after a judgment has been rendered against the uninsured motorist in the original tort action.”
The fourth cause of action is the insurer’s right of subrogation. It is a statutory cause granted in OCGA § 33-7-11 (f). By the clear terms in the statute, it arises when the insurer pays its insured: “An insurer paying a claim . . . shall be subrogated to the rights of the insured to whom the claim was paid ... to the extent that payment was made
Thus the cross-claim filed by the insurer in this case was premature. It had not paid its insured anything, as is evident from the very words and nature of its cross-claim. It seeks a judgment against Amerson “for any amounts which it may be obligated to pay” its insured by virtue of a judgment in its insured’s favor. It had no right of action unless and until it paid, either in advance of judgment2 or after its insured won a judgment from the uninsured motorist. The in*79surer’s efforts to avoid first having to pay, and then seeking recovery against the uninsured tortfeasor, while financially commendable insofar as its interests are concerned, is simply not allowed by the law which creates its cause of action, i.e., subsection (f). And for good reason. Whereas in other types of cases, cross-claims are allowed by the CPA (OCGA § 9-11-13 (g)) when “the party against whom it is asserted is or may be liable to the cross-claimant,” so as to serve judicial economy, yet in the type of case here at issue the legislature has chosen to serve a higher interest. That is the non-insertion of insurance into the tort suit. The significance of guarding against this inherently prejudicial factor is acknowledged in Smith, supra at 463-464, and it quotes Moss, supra, on this point, with emphasis. The legislature prevents insurance’s insertion by delaying the accrual of a right of action until the insurer has paid.
Consequently, the court erred in allowing this cross-claim, which did not assert a claim at all because any cause of action which insurer might acquire had not yet matured, to be brought into the trial of this case. And with this empty cross-claim came its damaging baggage of the factor of insurance, evidence which was inherently prejudicial to the interests of Johnson in the determination of tort liability. What was said in Smith, supra at 464, underscores a commonly understood principle: “the trial court should have granted the motion (for mistrial) or rebuked or reprimanded offending counsel in a manner reasonably sufficient to remove the harmful effect had upon the jury. Ga. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Willis, 140 Ga. App. 225 (5) (230 SE2d 363) (1976).”3
The purpose of allowing the plaintiff’s uninsured motorist carrier to defend in its own name is “to facilitate the administration of litigation” by allowing the tort liability and the insurer’s contract liability to be resolved in the same lawsuit. Moss, supra at 169. By defending in its own name, the insurer acquires the right to litigate not only the tort liability of the uninsured motorist (which right it also would have by filing and defending in the uninsured motorist’s name, thereby maintaining its non-party status), but also the right to litigate the issue of its liability for coverage. If it elects to defend in its own name so as to litigate coverage, of course, it takes the chance of prejudicing itself by its presence before the jury in the lawsuit; the jury then knows that if it finds the tortfeasor (who is sometimes a pitiable defendant) liable, the insurance company will have to pay. The choice of whether to defend directly or indirectly is left up to the insurer, by the legislature. OCGA § 33-7-11 (d). But where that issue of coverage does not exist, there is no basis or reason for the insurer to defend in *80its own name, other than to inject insurance into the case.
Decided April 24, 1986 Rehearing denied May 12, 1986 James D. Hudson, for appellant. Dewey N. Hayes, Sr., 0. Wayne Ellerbee, for appellees.The court in Moss, supra at 170, said: “if the insurer takes the position that, regardless of tort liability, there is no liability to the insured under the policy, it may plead in its own name and receive an adjudication on that issue without resorting to an action for declaratory judgment or being put to the expense of defending two lawsuits.” (Emphasis supplied.)
In this case the issue of coverage does not exist and the subject of insurance should not have been introduced before the jury. Allowing it contravenes the intent of the legislature which is evidenced by the carefully balanced scheme laid out in the statute. The plaintiff tried at least seven different ways to keep the subject out: motion at pretrial conference, motion in limine, motion for partial summary judgment, motion to sever, objections to jury charges, objections to argument, and objection to form of verdict.
It not having been done, I would reverse.
I concur in Division 3 of the opinion.
I am authorized to state that Chief Judge Banke concurs in the judgment only of this dissent.
Once this tort action was commenced and insurer served, however, that alternative was foreclosed. (See Tennessee Farmers, supra).
Which it is not obligated to do, see Allstate, supra, 166 Ga. App. at 834, which point is not affected by the statute revision.
The fact that the verdict favored the defendant in the instant case does not answer the appellant’s complaint against jury charges relating to the cross-claim, for the very reason that they infected that verdict.