On Denial of Respondents’ Petition For Rehearing.1
Putting aside what I wrote in February of this year, I have started anew with Justice Shepard’s opinion in Sullivan I, and tracked through the case down to and including Judge Magnuson’s dismissal order, and beyond into our opinion of May 2, 1989, following the first hearing at which the Court membership was comprised of Justices Bakes, Shepard, Huntley, Johnson, and Judge Towles, sitting Pro Tem. On rereading Justice Huntley’s opinion, it is seen that his views were soundly presented, with Justice Johnson and Judge Towles accordingly concurring. Both Justices Shepard and Bakes dissented, seizing onto the words “with prejudice” which they-do without any regard for the highly singular fact that in writing his own decision, Judge Magnuson carefully stated HIS grounds for dismissing, which only had to do with the action being brought prematurely, and he did not use the words “with prejudice.” In drawing the order of dismissal, facially it appears that chief counsel for Allstate inserted those two words. Nothing in the record shows that counsel advised the Judge that counsel had taken the liberty of inserting those two words. If that be true, counsel was either extremely presumptuous or careless. Moreover, where the dismissal was based on failure to have completed arbitration, the only effect of “with prejudice” would be to bar a subsequent action attempting to get into the good faith issue without passing through arbitration.
The Court has audaciously withdrawn Justice Huntley’s opinion. Three votes can do such a thing, and there are four votes. Those in that majority in my view are all too willing to accept as gospel two statements which are totally unacceptable, both at page 2 of the majority slip opinion. First, there is the statement that: “The district court granted Allstate’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed Sullivans’ complaint with prejudice.” The glaring fault in that statement is in leaving the reader with the clear impression that Allstate “moved to dismiss with prejudice.” Nothing could be further from the truth. The record is before us, and I have read the Allstate motion. Second, there is the statement that at the reconsideration hearing “the district court reaffirmed his intent to dismiss the action with prejudice.” If Justice Boyle or anyone can show me something to sustain the veracity of that statement, I shall consider abjectly and humbly withdrawing from further participation in this particular case. Judge Magnuson’s comprehensive and well-thought out memorandum decision did not contain any “intent” language, nor did he at the reconsideration hearing state anything whatever relative to reaffirming an intent to dismiss with prejudice. Additionally, reviewing Allstate’s extremely well-written respondent’s brief in Sullivan I, at page 6, discloses this statement: “Ultimately, the court granted Allstate’s motion for summa*887ry judgment, R. Vol. III, 127, and entered an order accordingly, R. Vol. III, 142.” Obviously, competent counsel read the order as did Judge Magnuson, namely at a glance, and taking for granted that trial counsel would indeed have drawn an order which was according to Judge Magnuson’s direction, and in the eyes of both beholders — the judge and the brief writer — “with prejudice” went unnoticed.
The district judge, whose trial court determination four members of this Court have precipitately reversed, may be chagrined to learn from them how he (and I) misread the Queen’s English. Speaking of Allstate’s motion for summary judgment, the Court’s opinion would have its readers believe that there was not any intervention of defense counsel’s inadvertent or diabolical hand involved in the manner of the termination of Sullivan I, “[t]he district court (Judge Magnuson) granted Allstate’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed Sullivan’s complaint with prejudice.” As I have taken pains to point out, beginning some time ago (February 15, 1990), “that ain’t the way it happened.” The district court, Judge Cogswell, had before him the clerk’s record and the same transcripts as are available to the five of us, and undoubtedly finds it remarkable that, as the Court says it happened, “Sullivan objected to the dismissal with prejudice____” I feel certain that Judge Cogs-well would join me in noting that there was no such unitary act of dismissing with prejudice, and that “Sullivan objected ...” simply did not happen.
Judge Magnuson’s memorandum decision was dated April 16, 1985. Three days thereafter Sullivan’s counsel filed a motion, not an objection, with the court, and that motion was to reconsider (in that one respect the majority commendably reads the record accurately) its memorandum decision, “and to delay entry of the Order on Summary Judgment, for the reasons that the defendant had requested this matter be stayed pending an arbitration which has not yet been completed, and the matter herein is premature.” R. 138 (emphasis added). That one and only motion made no mention of a dismissal with prejudice, or that it was objected to by plaintiff.
Making the majority’s lack of conversancy with the record all the more remarkable, it was apparently a full eleven days later that Allstate’s counsel placed on the desk of Judge Magnuson the order which counsel had drafted but which was not according to the court’s direction, which puts me poles apart from the other justices. This is not mere nitpicking, but serious business. Any attorney knows that we win some, and we lose some — all in the name of the game. But when a loss is suffered, it comes with poor grace to be confronted with such a misportrayal of the record as is so glaringly visible here. The district judge, whose correct decision is being carelessly overturned, cannot be overly pleased on learning that the facts and circumstances as set forth in the record can be, by judicial divine right, distorted so that an opinion will read very smoothly indeed.
The Court’s first opinion in this case issued on May 2, 1989. As pointed out by Justice Huntley in that opinion, the case had been before us one prior time. See Sullivan v. Allstate Ins., 111 Idaho 304, 723 P.2d 848 (1986). The Court’s 1986 opinion reflects the following facts: Julie Sullivan’s injuries on being struck by an uninsured motorist were found by three arbiters to total $292,851.13; her share of negligence was set at 35 percent; and the uninsured motorist’s share of the negligence then would be 65 percent. Allstate’s uninsured motorist coverage was a maximum exposure of $20,000, which it paid on receiving the award of the arbiters, it also paid $2,000 under the medical payments coverage of the same policy (purchased by Julie’s parents). While the arbitration process was going on, the Sullivan parents and Julie brought an action against Allstate, alleging negligence in the handling and investigation of the Sullivans’ claim, plus bad faith as to its responsibilities, with resultant emotional distress visited upon the Sullivans. Allstate moved the district court, Judge Magnuson, for summary judgment of dismissal, or alternatively for entry of a stay order until the arbitration process was concluded.
*888The ruling of Judge Magnuson as reported by Justice Shepard was:
The district court initially granted the motion for summary judgment, concluding that where an insurance policy requires arbitration in the event of disagreement involving an uninsured motorist claim, an insured is required to pursue arbitration prior to bringing an action against the insurer. We do not disagree.
Sullivan, 111 Idaho at 305, 723 P.2d at 849 (emphasis added). On any reading of the foregoing, it is clear beyond cavil that this Court upheld Judge Magnuson’s dismissal of the action, and that this Court then and there further understood that the dismissal was predicated upon the premature filing of the Sullivans’ action before the arbitration process was concluded.
For unknown reasons, Justice Shepard being in an expansive mood, he wrote on and on with a general discussion of the law regarding uninsured motorist coverage in first party insurance contacts or policies, finally concluding that: “In any event, the Sullivans do not here contest the arbitrator’s finding of 35 percent negligence on the part of Julie Sullivan ... we deem it clear that Allstate’s denial of liability upon the grounds that Julie Sullivan’s own negligence was the proximate cause of her damages, was not taken in bad faith.” Sullivan I, 111 Idaho at 306, 723 P.2d at 850. In retrospect, I deem that four justices who joined that opinion were guilty of indifference in not suggesting or requiring that the opinion terminate with this Court’s conclusion that the summary judgment was correctly entered. In particular, Justice Shepard was correct in stating as holding “that the trial court was correct in issuing summary judgment in the absence of any genuine issue of material fact____” 111 Idaho at 307, 723 P.2d at 852. The balance of that sentence was not holding: it was gratuity, and not required to reach the holding which was reached.
As to Justice Shepard’s observation that “the Sullivans do not here contest the arbitrator’s finding of 35 percent negligence on the part of Julie Sullivan,” it is correctly stated. 111 Idaho at 306, 723 P.2d at 850. Counsel for the Sullivans did not on their appeal contest or in any way challenge that observation; they were not that inept. Having not challenged that finding of the arbitrators in district court proceedings, counsel knew that it could not be raised for the first time at the appellate level. Case law is abundant for that proposition. Moreover, the total damages were staggering, and, had Allstate sold uninsured motorist coverage up to $100,000, it would have found itself picking up the tab for almost $90,000.
The arbiters arrived at total damages of $292,851.00, and Julie’s share of comparative negligence was set at 35 percent, so that left 65 percent chargeable to the uninsured motorist, with a net recovery to Julie of 65 percent of the total, which computes out to $190,353.15. Allstate’s limitation of coverage was $20,000, making it all the more understandable why the Sullivans and their counsel believed that Allstate’s delay in paying its limits was based on nothing but refusing to investigate and arrive at a damage total, which coupled with its delay was a good example of insurance company bad faith.
Moreover, there was no opportunity to challenge that finding, and no challenge was made. One need only pause to examine the brief which counsel for Allstate provided to Judge Magnuson to understand that there was no reason whatever for Justice Shepard’s insertion in his opinion that on the appeal the Sullivans’ made no contest to the 35 percent of negligence which the arbitrators assessed against Julie: “In the alternative, we submit that until the pending arbitration hearing is complete and liability is adjudicated or admitted, defendant insurer has no duty to the plaintiffs as the insureds and that this cause of action is therefore premature.” R., Sullivan I, 125-26 (emphasis added). Dated January 30, 1985, Allstate’s brief was signed by three of its counsel, Samuel Eismann, Frank H. Johnson, and Teresa A. Sherman. R., Sullivan I, 126.
*889That brief is immediately followed by Judge Magnuson’s written decision, salient portions of which are:
The record in this case shows, without any dispute to the contrary, the uninsured motorist insurance provisions contained a clause calling for arbitration. Section 7-901 of the Idaho Code provides such a provision is valid, enforceable and irrevocable, save upon such grounds as exist at law or in equity for the revocation of any contract. It should be noted the plaintiffs have not alleged or contended the existence of any such grounds.
There is no contention on the part of the plaintiffs the arbitration clause was waived. In Idaho, arbitration is strongly favored. - It should be noted also that the plaintiffs were the first to invoke the arbitration clause of the insurance policy, which culminated in a signed agreement to arbitrate.
The Court has reviewed the pleadings and affidavits on file herein and finds there does not exist any genuine issue of material fact.
R., Sullivan I, 131.
The real issue in this case is whether the insured can bring an action against the insurer for refusal to pay an uninsured motorist claim before the liability of the uninsured motorist is determined by agreement of the parties or by arbitration. The Idaho Appellate Courts have not dealt with this issue beyond their holding in the Carter [v. Cascade Ins. Co.] case, 92 Id. 136 [438 P.2d 566 (1968)].
This Court concludes a cause of action based on an insurer’s refusal to pay an uninsured motorist claim cannot exist until the liability of the uninsured motorist is admitted or adjudicated and the insurer then refuses to pay the claim.
This Court concludes the insured should be required to first go through arbitration of an uninsured motorist claim, as required by the automobile policy, prior to bringing an action against the insurer for a bad faith claim. Mendelson vs. State Farm, (Oregon 1979) [285 Or. 269] 590 Pac.2d 726 [1979]. This reasoning appears to be a logical extension of our Supreme Court’s reasoning in the Carter case, supra.
This Court concludes there exists a different relationship between the insured and the insurer in an uninsured motorist insurance situation. In the uninsured motorist context, the uninsured motorist carrier becomes, in effect, the insurer of the uninsured; thereby creating an adversarial relationship between the insured and the insurer in the uninsured motorist insurance policy.
The Mendelson case (590 P.2d 726) recites a set of facts that are almost identical to those before this Court. It presents claims in the same fashion as those herein. The Oregon court had little difficulty in determining the insurer must go through arbitration as required by the policy.
R., Sullivan I, 134-35 (emphasis in original and added).
Therefore, this Court concludes the defendant is entitled to summary judgment dismissing plaintiffs’ cause of action against the defendant, as a matter of law.
R., Sullivan I, 137. The Order of Dismissal, as drawn by Mr. Eismann, provided:
On December 27, 1984, this matter came on regularly for hearing on Motion for Summary Judgment by Defendant Allstate Insurance Company. The plaintiffs were represented by David A. Manko and Bruce A. Kaiser; the defendant was represented by Samuel Eismann, Frank H. Johnson and Teresa A. Sherman. The Court heard the argument of counsel on the date previously noted, and has considered the Motion on file herein, including attachments thereto consisting of the affidavit of Mr. Eismann, the Arbitration Agreement entered into between the parties and their respective counsel in 1984, the rules of the American Arbitration Association, and the Demand for Arbitration dated September 21, 1984; the Court having also reviewed and considered the records and files herein on *890file in the above-entitled case and having issued and filed herein its Memorandum Decision, and good cause appearing therefor;
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment is hereby granted and Plaintiffs’ Complaint is hereby dismissed with prejudice and without costs or attorneys’ fees to either party.
DONE IN OPEN COURT this_
day of_, 1985.
District Judge Presented by:
/s/ Samuel Eismann Samuel Eismann Attorney for Defendant R., Sullivan I, 142-43.
As has been previously noted some time ago, in Bistline, J.’s opinion of February 15, 1990, the arbitration award itself did not surface in the courtroom or court proceedings until the court convened with counsel at 2:15 p.m. to hear and deny the plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration of the dismissal which occurred by virtue of Judge Magnuson’s memorandum decision and the order prepared by Allstate’s counsel and signed by Judge Magnuson. The arbitration award was not considered by Judge Magnuson. He did consider the agreement to arbitrate, however.
In addition to the minutes of the hearing on May 23, 1985, it is now found that we have a reporter’s transcript of that short hearing. The transcript is more illuminating than the minutes which were part of the clerk’s transcript. As the hearing was drawing to a conclusion and Allstate’s counsel terminated his presentation by commenting: “I reviewed very carefully the court opinion that Your Honor handed down ... I think it’s very well reasoned; nothing that comes up [today] that would address the points raised by the Court, or would certainly indicate that those should be in any way altered____” Sullivan I, Tr. Vol. 1, 13.. Judge Magnuson, at that time, asked counsel if he had a copy with him, as he, the Judge, did not. Counsel obliged the judge with a copy, and the judge read it. The following then took place and brought the hearing to a close:
THE COURT: For the record, I am not taking judicial notice of the House of Representatives Bill 193, or whatever it was. Its existence will not play a role in my determination of this case.
Okay, the Court [has] had an opportunity to review its Memorandum Decision and an opportunity before this hearing to review plaintiffs’ brief in support of this Motion For Reconsideration. And upon reflecting, I am going to stand by my original decision.
This is an interesting field. I wasn’t aware of these decisions that Mr. Eismann brought into court today.2 They are interesting to read. But I’ve got to say in all candor, my determination was made before I was aware of them. So, they do not play a role in the decision. And I have reviewed the Order that I have prepared, and that’s what I meant to do by the decision is to dismiss the action.
Would you prepare such an order? Thank you.
MR. MANKO: Is that all causes of action?
THE COURT: Dismiss the action.
(Thereupon the proceedings came to a close.)
Sullivan I, Tr. Vol. 1, 13-14. Neither the Court minutes nor the transcript give any suggestion that Judge Magnuson was aware that the drawn order to which he had affixed his signature differed from the directive of his memorandum decision given to counsel for Allstate in his eleven-page decision:
*891. Therefore, this Court concludes the defendant is entitled to summary judgment dismissing plaintiffs’ cause of action against the defendant, as a matter of law.
The attorney for the defendant is hereby requested to prepare a suitable Order granting Summary Judgment to the defendant, as provided herein.
This Court directs each party shall be responsible for their own attorneys’ fees herein. The Court finds this matter has not been brought or defended, by either party, frivolously or unreasonably or without foundation.
BE IT SO ORDERED.
Dated at Wallace, Idaho, this 16th day of April, 1985.
R., Sullivan I, 137 (emphasis added).
Counsel for Allstate obediently put in his drafted order a provision for dismissal, and a provision for no costs or attorneys’ fees, but a secretary, perhaps, must have inadvertently sandwiched in the two words “with prejudice,” such being almost a matter of rote where more often than not most dismissals are with prejudice, although some are specifically without prejudice, and some are simply dismissals. Of course, it is well-recognized that a dismissal which is not based on the merits of the alleged controversy does not operate as a dismissal with prejudice. In this case the court simply concluded that the decision to dismiss, which was made in the memorandum decision prior to the arbitration award appearing in his courtroom, would nevertheless stand.
In conclusion, to this day, Justice Huntley’s opinion is better reasoned than what the Court has offered, and portions of it have been the nucleus of my views which concur with his. Particularly we are both aware that Judge Cogswell was the first to conclude that the decision of Judge Magnuson was “to hold that the Complaint in Case No. 23040 [Sullivan /] was prematurely filed in that a cause of action had not then arisen because of the arbitration proceedings [which had not proceeded and which had not been waived].”
Although the first sentence of Justice Boyle’s opinion acknowledges that the appeal is from an order denying summary judgment, which he again mentions in later pages, the opinion never, never, never shows any concern for the rules pertinent to summary judgment proceedings, namely that the facts are to be liberally construed in favor of the party at whom the motion is directed and the nonmoving party is given the benefit of all favorable inferences which might reasonably be drawn from the facts and circumstances. What has happened here is that the majority has jumped the gun, and wholly unmindful of the rule, which goes unmentioned, has redecided the defendant's motion for summary judgment, and grants it. Not one word in the clerk’s record, or in the reporter’s transcript can seriously be contended as standing for the proposition that the arbitration award was indeed by Judge Magnuson considered as a part of the record before him, when he wrote his own decision of April 16, 1985. As was well illustrated by his remarks: “[u]pon reflecting, I am going to stand by my original decision ... and that’s what I meant to do by the decision is to dismiss the action.” Period means period, and under summary judgment rules it ill-behooves four members of this Court to construe language against the party resisting a motion for summary judgment which, of all things, was only for a dismissal.
. In a final effort to dissuade my brothers on the Court from the error of their ways, it is concluded that sheer repetition may bridge the communication gap.
. The cases in question, which counsel for Allstate furnished to the court, consisted of a Fourth Judicial District, Ada County, decision of Judge Newhouse in United First Federal Savings & Loan Ass’n. v. Transamerica Ins. Co., and a ruling in an unnamed case made by U.S. District Judge Harold Ryan, and Judge Haman’s decision in Nichols v. Kon Tiki, Inc., et al., First District Court, Kootenai County.