dissenting.
I regretfully and respectfully, but emphatically, dissent from the Majority’s granting of reargument. As a general proposition, after this Court issues a decision, we move forward to the next case. Despite the doomsday prognostications of Appellee Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company (“Nationwide”), the Insurance Commissioner, and the insurance defense bar, this case is no different. The pending Application is to be considered against the backdrop of Pa.R.A.P. 2543 just like any other case. Rule 2543 provides as follows:
Considerations Governing Allowance of Reargument *47Reargument before an appellate court is not a matter of right, but of sound judicial discretion, and reargument will be allowed only when there are compelling reasons therefor
Note: The following, while neither controlling nor fully measuring the discretion of the court, indicate the character of the reasons which will be considered:
(1) Where the decision is by a panel of the court and it appears that the decision may be inconsistent with a decision of a different panel of the same court on the same subject.
(2) Wdiere the court has overlooked or misapprehended a fact of record material to the outcome of the case.
(3) Where the court has overlooked or misapprehended (as by misquotation of text or misstatement of result) a controlling or directly relevant authority.
(4) WTiere a controlling or directly relevant authority relied upon by the court has been expressly reversed, modified, overruled or otherwise materially affected during the pendency of the matter sub judice, and no notice thereof was given to the court pursuant to Rule 2501(b) (change in status of authorities).
Pa.R.A.P. 2543.
Appellee Nationwide acknowledges this Court’s reluctance to grant reargument, but insists reargument is warranted based on the proposition that this Court has overlooked the consequences of the Saekett decision on the insurance industry, and failed to appreciate the distinctions between personal and commercial insurance practice. Saekett was a case concerning personal automobile insurance. Nationwide posits, from the insurer’s perspective, the costs and administrative burdens attendant to compliance with the Saekett decision are great. Nationwide further asserts that the cost of insurance will rise following Saekett, that this consequence could not have been intended by this Court, and such unintended consequences form the basis for reargument.
*48While recognizing the potential for costs to be affected by the Sackett decision (“As a practical matter, there will be some cost attendant to compliance with today’s holding”), the case was decided on statutory construction principles. Simply put, the statute there at issue, 75 Pa.C.S. § 1738, was unambiguous. Sackett v. Nationwide Mutual Ins. Co., 591 Pa. 416, 427, 919 A.2d 194, 201 (2007).
Nationwide’s concerns about the effect of Sackett on the insurance industry, especially the commercial lines, rest upon hypothetical situations and facts dehors the record. There is no contention that this Court has overlooked or misapprehended a fact of record or controlling authority. Rule 2543 does not provide a basis for reargument where a party simply disagrees with the outcome, and it most certainly does not do so where the applicant wishes to make arguments not developed in the appeal process or based upon facts not at issue in the appeal or made part of the record. Therefore, even if Nationwide’s predictions prove true, and heightened administrative and exposure costs result in an increase in the cost of insurance, this is no basis for reargument. In fact, that is the Legislature’s milieu.
Additionally, Nationwide disagrees with this Court’s interpretation of Section 1738. Disagreeing with this Court’s statutory construction analysis is, of course, very different from alleging that we overlooked or misapprehended precedent, which are proper bases for an application for reargument. The fact remains that this Court engaged in construction of a statute enacted by the General Assembly. In other words, the consequences that result from Sackett are those created by statute.
Upon receipt of Nationwide’s Application for Reargument, we invited the Insurance Commissioner to file an amicus curiae brief identifying bases for reargument. Instead, a Statement was filed that essentially reargues the case.1 Much *49like Appellee’s Application, nothing in the Statement illustrates that this Court overlooked or misapprehended a fact of record, or controlling or directly relevant authority.
The Insurance Commissioner’s position is that Sackett will have a broad and potentially complicated effect on the insurance industry and the Department’s regulation of it. The Insurance Commissioner conveys concern about the effect of Sackett, and disagrees with the legal analysis upon which a majority of this Court agreed. However, in Sackett this Court was not faced with questions related to lag time before reporting a vehicle purchase to the insurance company, or stacking of coverage in a commercial context.2 Arguments about whether the Legislature intended the MVFRL to treat commercial policies differently than non-commercial polices like that at issue in Sackett, whatever merit they may have, were not before this Court, on this record, or subject to resolution in the Sackett case.3
While I recognize that the illustrations given in the Note to Rule 2543 are not exhaustive, when faced with an application for reargument that falls outside the ambit of Rule 2543 altogether, and that seeks nothing more than another bite at the apple, there is no basis established upon which to revisit a decision reached by this Court. Here, Appellee has not presented a basis for granting reargument within the scope of Pa.R.A.P. 2543, precedent established by this or another court, or any authority at all.
*50Costs and consequences necessarily flow from decisions made by this and other courts. Such is the nature of our system. Establishing answers to unresolved questions of law is an inherent part of this Court’s raison d’etre. The consequences that result from Sackett are those created by statute. I remain of the opinion that Nationwide’s recourse following Sackett is properly through the legislative branch, given its policy-based argument that there is a better course for the future of UM/UIM stacking waivers in Pennsylvania. In this case, the losing party is simply dissatisfied with the outcome reached by this Court; however, disagreement does not a faulty analysis make.
An application for reargument in this Court is a decidedly different - animal than an appeal challenging a decision of a lower court. Stated otherwise, we do not take appeals from our own decisions. Today, a majority of my colleagues treat these two different mechanisms as though they serve the same function. This obviously invites losing parties to view a reargument application as the final step in every appeal, rather than the exceptional tool by which to bring to the Court’s attention law or facts that were overlooked, i.e. the bases for granting reargument in the past.
For these reasons, I would deny the Application for Reargument.
Chief Justice CAPPY joins this dissenting statement.. There is recognition of this in the Court’s instant order granting the Application for Reargument wherein it grants the Sacketts' Application to file a response. (“Appellants Victor M. Sackett and Diana L. Sackett are hereby Granted twenty (20) days to file a Brief in Response to the *49substantive points made in the Application for Reargument and the points made in the Insurance Commissioner's Amicus Statement.”) (emphasis added)
. The issue before the Court in Sackett was: “Does the Pennsylvania Motor Vehicle Financial Responsibility Law (the MVFRL), 75 Pa.C.S. §§ 1701-1799.7, require automobile insurers to provide first named insureds the opportunity to waive the stacked limits of uninsured/under-insured (UM/UIM) coverage for each instance an insured purchases UM/UIM coverage by adding a vehicle to an existing policy?” Sackett, 591 Pa. at 419, 919 A.2d at 196.
. I note that this Court recently granted allowance of appeal and heard oral argument in Everhart v. PMA Ins. Group, No. 12 WAP 2007, in which the issue is whether stacking is available in the context of a commercial fleet policy.