First Bank (N.A.) v. Transamerica Insurance

                                  No. 83-299
                 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA

                                        1984



FIRST BANK (N.A.)-BILLINGS,
                          Plaintiff ,


               INSURANCE CO. ,
TRAP;ISAfi5ERICA
a foreign corp.,
                          Defendant.




ORIGINAL PROCEEDING:



COUNSEL OF RECORD:
         For Plaintiff:


                 Moulton, Bellingham, Longo & Mather; Ward Swanser
                 and Greg Murphy argued for First Bank, Billings,
                 Montana

         For Defendant:

                 Crowley, Haughey, Hanson, Toole & Dietrich; Bruce
                 R. Toole and Carolyn Ostby argued for Transamerica
                 Ins. Co., Billings, Montana



                                  Submitted: Xovember 29, 1983

                                    Decided: April 3, 1984


Filed:
           APR   31384




                                  Clerk
Mr. Justice L.C.       Gulbrandson delivered the Opinion of the
Court.

         The United States District Court for the District of
Montana     has    certified   two   questions   to   this Court    for
instructions concerning Montana law.
         First Bank Billings has been named a defendant              in
three wrongful repossession cases, two of which have been
filed    in the District Court         of   the Thirteenth Judicial
District, Yellowstone County, and one in the United States
District Court for the District of Montana.              Transamerica
has undertaken the defense of First Bank, but has reserved
its rights under its insurance contract with the bank and
has denied any coverage for punitive damages under                 this
contract.      Transamer ica argues that the public policy of
Montana forbids such coverage.         On motion of First Bank, the
United States District Court has certified the following
questions to this Court:
         (1) Does the public policy of Montana permit insurance
coverage of punitive damages?
         (2) If the public policy of Montana does not generally
permit    insurance coverage of punitive damages, would              it
nevertheless permit coverage for punitive damages for which
a banking corporation is or could be held liable by reasons
of the acts of its employees?
         For the reasons stated below, we conclude in response
to the first question that insurance coverage of punitive
damages is not a violation of public policy.            Thus, we need
not address the substance of the second question.
         Counsel     for   First     Bank    have     presented    ten
considerations in support of permitting insurance coverage
of punitive damages.         Transamerica has mounted           a strong
challenge to all of these considerations.            We recognize that
there is considerable authority supporting the positions of
both parties.     See generally Annot., 16 ALR 4th 11 (1982)
(comparing and     contrasting      different    views    on    liability
insurance coverage as extending to liability for punitive or
exemplary damages).      We note, however, that most of the
important decisions, as well as the major arguments of the
parties,     emphasize   three       primary     considerations       as
ultimately dispositive of the questions before us.                 These
are   (1) public policy as expressed            in constitutions and
statutes; (2) the purpose of punitive damages; and (3) the
circumstances under which punitive damages become available
to aggrieved plaintiffs.       Although we address these matters
separately   in   this opinion, we        recognize      that   they are
interrelated to a high degree, and we therefore are careful
not to sever the important ties that bind them together.
      Before    proceeding    to    the   critical   issues, we must
first address a disagreement between the parties concerning
the focus of our review.       First Bank has urged this Court to
center on what it claims are the "blanket terms" of the
insurance contract, wherein Transamerica agrees to "pay on
behalf of the insured all sums which the insured shall he
legally obligated     to pay       as damages because of personal
injury or advertising injury to which this insurance applies
...    "   First Bank inferentially asks this Court to answer
the certified question in light of this contract language.
Specifically, we are asked to decide whether public policy
bars coverage even when the contract supposedly provides
indemnification for "all sums" arising from liability.
         We reject the approach suggested               by    First Bank.
Transamerica correctly notes that the certified questions
forwarded by the Federal District Court do not call for an
interpretation of contract language.               We are asked only to
decide whether public policy permits or bars coverage of
punitive damages, regardless of the contract language.                     We
leave the threshold issue of contract interpretation for the
Federal District Court to decide.               For similar reasons, we
also decline     to       review   allegations     by   First    Bank    that
Transamerica     is       attempting     to    "wriggle out"      of      its
negotiated insurance contract.               That, too, is a matter for
decision by the District Court.


SOURCES OF PUBLIC POLICY IN MONTANA
         "Public policy is that principle of law which holds
that no citizen can lawfully do that which has a tendency to
be   injurious   to       the public      or    against public         good."
Spaulding v. Maillet (1920), 57 Mont. 318, 323, 188 P. 377,
378-9.       Public       policy    is   typically      found     "in     the
constitution and the laws and the course of administration."
St. Louis Mining      &   Milling Co. v. Montana Mining Co. (1898),
171 U.S. 650, 655, 19 S.Ct.           61, 63, 43 L.Ed. 320, 322.           In
determining the public policy of this state, legislative
enactments must       yield    to     constitutional    provisions,       and
judicial      decisions        must      recognize      and      yield     to
constitutional        provisions       and     legislative    enactments.
Progressive Life Ins. Co. v. Dean (1936), 192 Ark. 1152, 97
S.W.2d    62; Electrical Contractors' Assln v. A.S.                Schulman
Elec. Co.    (1945), 391 Ill. 333, 63 N.E.2d              392.     Judicial
decisions are a superior            repository of       statements about
public policy only in the absence of constitutional and
valid     legislative declarations.           State ex        rel.   Holt v.
District Court (1936), 103 Mont. 438, 446, 63 P.2d                        1026,
1029; State v. Gateway Mortuaries, Inc.                    (1930), 87 Mont.
225, 235, 287 P. 156, 157.


PUBLIC POLICY AS EXPRESSED IN THE CONSTITUTION AND STATUTES
         We find nothing in the Montana Constitution declaring
a public policy on the question before us.                     We therefore
turn to relevant statutes and case law construing the same.
         Prior    to adoption of this             state's comprehensive
insurance code, Sections 33-1-101 et. seq., MCA, the law of
Montana provided that "[aln insurer is not liable for a loss
caused by the willful act of the insured; but he is not
exonerated by       the negligence of         the    insured, or of his
agents or others."          Section 40-604, R.C.M.           1.947 [repealed
19591.     This statute was based on Cal.Ins.Code               Section 533
(West 1972), which has been construed to prohibit insurance
coverage     of    punitive     damages       in    most     instances      in
California.       See, e.g.,   City Products Corp. v. Globe Indem.
Co.   (1979), 88 Cal.App.3d          31, 151 Cal.Rptr.          494.       See
generally        Comment,      Insurance for Punitive Damages: A
Reevaluation       28   Hastings      L.     J.     431,    446-58     (1976)
(discussion of California public policy against insurance
coverage of punitive damages).             Section 40-604 is no longer
law in Montana, having been repealed upon adoption in 1959
of the insurance code.              Transamerica argues that repeal
"does not mean that the legislature intended to bless the
sins of cheats, frauds, and oppressors, and absolve them
from wrongdoing. "          While    there    is    some    truth    in   this
assertion, we       conclude that not          even    Transamerica would
argue that a repealed statute has a life beyond the grave.
If there is a public policy against permitting coverage, it
must flow from an existing statute.
      Our attention is also directed to the punitive damages
law, Section 27-1-221, MCA, which provides that:
            "[iln any action for a breach of an
            obligation not arising from contract
            where the defenda.nt has been guilty of
            oppression, fraud, or malice, actual or
            presumed, the jury, in addition to the
            actual damages, may give damages for the
            sake of example and by way of punishing
            the defendant."
There is nothing in this statute amounting to an express
statement      on     the     public     policy       issue   before    us.
Nevertheless,       Transamerica       reasons      syllogistically    that,
because punishment is an explicit aim of applying punitive
damages, and because punishment, to be such, must cause its
recipient   to      suffer,    there    can    be    no   punishment   if   a
defendant is permitted to, in effect, "shift" the financial
burden of the imposed punishment to his or her insurance
carrier.    Transamerica thus concludes that a public policy
against coverage emanates from the concept of punishment as
embodied in the statute.         This is the conclusion reached by
courts in some states with the same or similar punitive
damage laws, see, e.g.,          City Products, supra          (construing
Cal.Civ.Code     Section 3294, which contains virtually the same
language as Section 27-1-221).                Although we are impressed
with the reasoning behind Transamerica's argument, we reject
it, for reasons discussed infra, as an inaccurate expression
of the practical consequences of applying punitive damages
law in some cases in Montana.
      Transamerica also directs our                 attention to Section
28-11-302,     MCA, which     provides    that   "[aln   agreement      to
indemnify a person against an act thereafter to be done is
void if the act be known by such person, at the time of
doing    it, to be      unlawful."      Transamerica     reasons that,
because insurance is a contract of indemnity, Section
28-11-302 operates as an express policy against coverage for
tortious acts warranting imposition of punitive damages.                We
reject this interpretation.
        Modern insurance contracts typically provide coverage
for a host of tortious activities, with the assurance that
the insured will be indemnified at least for compensatory
damages arising from unlawful conduct by the insured; e . g . ,
libel and      slander, malicious prosecution,            etc.        Even
Transamerica would not argue that Section 28-11-302 erects a
bar to liability insurance for compensatory damages, be they
awarded for ordinary negligence or malicious, fraudulent or
oppressive conduct.       The need to reduce financial risks and
promote economic stability in modern society has rendered
this statute applicable only to conduct defined as criminal.
        In   summary,    we   find   no    express   policy      by   the
legislature on the subject of              insurance coverage          for
punitive damages.       Although reasoned arguments can be made
for reading some kind of prohibition into the language of
the punitive damages statute, we decline to do so without
first examining judicial construction of that statute and
then    considering     the practical     consequences    of   awarding
punitive damages.


PUBLIC POLICY IN LIGHT OF JUDICIAL DECISIONS
        As   noted   above, a major       aim of awarding punitive
damages   is punishment   of   the   defendant   for   oppressive,
fraudulent or malicious conduct.       We have also recognized
that an award of punitive damages can serve as a deterrent
to like conduct by other individuals.       First Security Bank
v. Goddard (1979), 181 Mont. 407, 423, 593 P.2d        1040, 1049;
Butcher v.    Petranek (1979), 181 Mont.    358, 363, 593 P.2d
743, 745.    Whether both goals will be served adequately by
permitting insurance coverage of punitive damages has been
the principal concern of courts that have already addressed
the coverage question.
      Several courts have followed the lead of the Court of
Appeals of the Fifth Circuit and have concluded that the
mutual goals of punishment and deterrence are defeated if
coverage is permitted.     In Northwestern Nat'l Cas. Co. v.
McNulty (5th Cir. 1962), 307 F.2d      432, Circuit Judge John
Minor Wisdom made this oft-quoted observation:
             "Where a person is able to insure himself
             against punishment he gains a freedom of
             misconduct    inconsistent    with    the
             establishment of sanctions against such
             misconduct.    It is not disputed that
             insurance against criminal fines or
             penalties would be void as violative of
             public policy.    The same public policy
             should   invalidate any contract of
             insurance against the civil punishment
             that punitive damages represent.
             "The policy considerations in a state
             where ...    punitive damages are awarded
             for punishment and deterrence, would seem
             to require that the damages rest
             ultimately as well as nominally on the
             party actually responsible for the wrong.
             If that person were permitted to shift
             the burden to an insurance company,
             punitive damages would serve no useful
             purpose.  Such damages do not compensate
             the plaintiff for his injury, since
             compensatory damages already have made
             the plaintiff whole.     And there is no
             point in punishing the insurance company;
             it has done no wrong. In actual fact, of
             course, and considering the extent to
                 which the public is insured, the burden
                 would ultimately come to rest not on the
                 insurance companies but on the public,
                 since the added liability to the
                 insurance companies would be passed along
                 to the premium payers.     Society would
                 then be punishing itself for the wrong
                 committed by the insured."
307 F.2d     at 440-41.       For similar views, see City Products
Corp., supra; Ford Motor Co. v. Home Ins. Co. (1981), 116
Cal.App.3d       374, 172 Cal.Rptr. 59; Hartford Acc.      &    Indem. Co.
v. Village of Hempstead (1979), 48 N.Y.2d               218, 397 N.E.264
737, 422 N.Y.S.2d           47; First Nat'l Bank of St. Mary's v.
Fidelity     &   Deposit Co. (1978)       283 Md. 228, 389 A..2d 359,
367 (Levine J., dissenting); Harrell v. Travelers Indem. Co.
(1977), 279        Or.   199, 567 P.2d      1013, 1022     (Holman, J.,
dissenting).
         Upon reflection, we grant the intellectual appeal of
Judge Wisdom's reasoning, and recognize that it has been
both     praised      and     followed    in    other   jurisdictions.
Nevertheless, we find that this reasoning does not address
the substance of punitive damages law as applied in Montana.
To determine public policy concerning insurance coverage of
punitive damages solely on deductive conclusions like those
articulated by Judge Wisdom              "is to lean upon a slender
reed."     Missouri v. Holland (1920), 252 U.S.            416, 434, 40


         Oregon    Supreme    Court   Justice    Hans   Linde   correctly
observed in his concurring opinion in Harrell, supra, that
"[a] court-made public policy against otherwise lawful
liability insurance can be defended, not because the purpose
of punitive damages            is always deterrence        and -  -
                                                               because
insurance will always destroy their deterrent effect, but
only when these considerations apply." (emphasis his).                 279
Or. 199, 567 P.2d at 1029.          Empirical observation informs us
that many       kinds of willful and wanton conduct are never
successfully deterred by punitive damage awards.                     This is
especially true in automobile accident cases.                   See, e.g.,
the discussion in Lazenby v. Universal Underwriters Ins. Co.
(1964), 214 Tenn. 639, 383 S.W.2d            1, concerning the failure
of civil and criminal sanctions to deter wrongful conduct on
the highways.         We have few doubts that the deterrent impact
is minimal       in    cases   involving     other    types   of    tortious
conduct.        This leaves punishment as perhaps                  the only
effectively realizable goal of awarding punitive damages.
However, as will be pointed out in the discussion infra,
punishment in the context of punitive damages may come as a
wholly unanticipated aspect of one's conduct, thus weakening
the case against permitting             insurance coverage of all
punitive damage awards.
       In the instant dispute, First Bank                fears that      its
insurance contract with Transamerica will become virtually
worthless if it is exposed to punitive damage awards without
the possibility of coverage.          The Bank also claims that such
a fine line exists between conduct justifying imposition of
punitive damages and conduct not justifying such damages
that permitting         coverage   is not     in violation         of public
policy.    Both arguments warrant serious attention.
       The contract issued by Transamerica to First Bank is
not unlike many insurance agreements.                It includes coverage
for   false     arrest,   detention,    or    imprisonment, malicious
prosecution, wrongful entry or eviction, libel and slander,
racial     or     religious        discrimination,        and       wrongful
repossession.         All of these torts give rise to claims for
punitive damages; on this there is no dispute.                      In many
cases involving these torts, actual damages may be minimal,
but    the punitive damages        extremely     high.      Indeed, many
claims for relief are not made financially worthwhile
without the prospect of recovering punitive damages.                    See
Harrel, supra, 279 Or. 199, 567 P.2d              at 1029 (Linde, J.,
concurring).       Assuming that coverage was deemed contrary to
public     policy,     and   in   the   event    of minimal,        if any
compensatory damages, an insured facing a significant award
of punitives would receive little solace from what would
amount to a worthless insurance policy.
         The    "fine-line" problem     raised    by First Bank        also
suggests that a public policy against coverage would have
less than desirable results, especially where the defendant
is    again     assessed   a particularly       large    punitive    damage
award.        A consistent theme running through cases holding
that public policy does not forbid insurance coverage is
that juries and judges typically award punitives for a broad
range of conduct not often described as willful or wanton,
but as merely reckless or unjustifiable.            When combined with
the possibility that different fact finders in similar fact
situations may        reach differing        conclusions as to the
availability of punitive damages, the argument for denial of
coverage       becomes     difficult    to   sustain.       See     Skyline
Harvestore Systems, Inc. v. Centennial Ins. Co. (Iowa 1983),
331 N.W.21        106; First Nat'l Bank of St. Mary's, supra;
Harrel, supra; Lazenby, supra.          See also Comment, Insurance
Coverage of Punitive Damages 84 Dick.L.Rev.                  221, 231-33
(1980).        First Bank also emphasizes, and not without good
reason, that a defendant may be subject to a punitive damage
award     for     conduct n o t considered o r                  known      to    be    wrongful
p r i o r t o i m p o s i t i o n of t h e award.          See. e.g.,         G a t e s v.      Life

o f Montana I n s .          Co.    (Mont. 1 9 8 3 ) , 6 6 8 P.2d         213,     40 S t . R e p .

1287     (reinstating punitive                  damage a w a r d       against defendant
f o r c o n d u c t w h i c h a t t i m e c o m m i t t e d was n o t a c t i o n a b l e ) .     In

t h e s e i n s t a n c e s , f o r b i d d i n g c o v e r a g e a f t e r t h e f a c t may work
an i n j u s t i c e t o unsuspecting defendants.

         W e h a v e r e c e n t l y a t t e m p t e d t o come t o g r i p s w i t h t h e

problem of u n c e r t a i n t y i n t h e a r e a o f p u n i t i v e damages.                   In

Owens v . P a r k e r D r i l l i n g C o . ,     (Mont. 1 9 8 4 ) ,               P.2d               I



41     St.Rep.        66,      this      Court        acknowledged           the       expanded

availability           of    punitive       damage       awards       based      on c o n c e p t s
like     gross      negligence,          recklessness           and    unjustifiability.

With     respect       t o presumed m a l i c e          a s a ground           specified         in
S e c t i o n 27-1-221,        MCA,      for    imposing       exemplary o r           punitive
damages, t h i s C o u r t a d o p t e d t h e f o l l o w i n g s t a n d a r d :
                  "When        a p e r s o n knows o r h a s r e a s o n t o
                  know of f a c t s w h i c h c r e a t e a h i g h d e g r e e
                  o f r i s k o f harm t o t h e s u b s t a n t i a l
                  interests               of    another,          and        either
                  d e l i b e r a t e l y proceeds t o a c t i n conscious
                  disregard of o r i n d i f f e r e n c e t o t h a t
                  risk,           or       recklessly           proceeds         in
                  unreasonable disregard of o r i n d i f f e r e n c e
                  t o t h a t r i s k , h i s c o n d u c t meets t h e
                  s t a n d a r d of w i l l f u l , wanton, and/or
                  r e c k l e s s t o which t h e law of t h i s S t a t e
                  w i l l a l l o w i m p o s i t i o n o f p u n i t i v e damages
                  on t h e b a s i s o f presumed m a l i c e . "

Owens, s u p r a , 4 1 S t . Rep. a t 69.               Although w e have d e s c r i b e d
t h i s s t a n d a r d as "more d e f i n i t i v e a n d p e r h a p s more s t r i n g e n t

t h a n t h o s e of t h e p a s t , "     Owens, s u p r a , 4 1 S t . R e p .       a t 69, w e

acknowledge            that        fact-finders         may      still       wrestle            with
concepts        like        recklessness        and     reasonableness,               such      that
defendants         may       not    know       that    their       conduct       constituted
presumed m a l i c e u n t i l a f t e r t r i a l ,        and t h a t a d e f e n d a n t i n
one case may never know the sting of punitive damages while
another    defendant       in    a    similar    case may      be    faced with
financing a sizeable award.              Similarly, we have yet to work
out a definitive standard for "oppression" within the
meaning of Section 27-1-221.
      Even though we are further down the road to refining
the concept of punitive damages than are many other state
courts, the law is still in such a state of flux as to
warrant    caution    on        the    issue    of   whether    public    policy
prohibits coverage of punitive damages in all cases.                          We
therefore    decline       the       opportunity      to   define    limits   for
insurance coverage of punitive damages.                    Insurance companies
are more     than    capable of          evaluating        risks and    deciding
whether they will offer policies to indemnify all or some
conduct determined by             judges or juries to be malicious,
fraudulent or oppressive.              A likely response to this opinion
by some carriers may be the drafting of specific exclusions
of coverage of punitive damages.                     However, the fact that
some individuals may be willing to pay higher premiums for
such coverage may convince carriers to extend coverage in
some situations.       It is conceivable that a combination of
different approaches by insurance companies may result in a
delineation of the limits of coverage better than anything
this Court could establish.


CONCLUSION
     We find that providing insurance coverage of punitive
damages    is not contrary to public policy.                        Transamerica
admittedly has set forth a strong argument in support of an
opposite holding, but we find the consequences of adopting
t h a t p o s i t i o n unacceptable.         The problems posed by i n s u r a n c e
coverage of p u n i t i v e damages a r e unquestionably l i k e t h o s e
i n h e r e n t i n t h e Gordian Knot.            Unlike Alexander t h e G r e a t ,

however, we cannot make a c l e a n s l i c e through our v e r s i o n of
the    Knot,        in   order      to   unravel      all      the       aspects    of     the
question before               us,   without working          an    i n j u s t i c e t o many
policy     holders.             Alexander     dealt       only    with      an    inanimate

object;      we d e a l w i t h people.            Use of         the     judicial       sword
therefore       is inappropriate              in   this     case.         Here,     we    must
" u n t i e " t h e knot, p a i n s t a k i n g a s t h e p r o c e s s may be.          Until

such time t h a t t h e law of p u n i t i v e damages i s more c e r t a i n

and p r e d i c t a b l e , or u n t i l t h e l e g i s l a t u r e a l t e r s t h e law of
punitive       damages         or   expressly      declares          a   policy     against

coverage       in    all      cases,     we   leave      t h e d e c i s i o n of   whether
coverage w i l l         be    permitted      to   the     insurance c a r r i e r s       and
t h e i r customers.




W concur:
 e




Honorable Gordon R. B e n n e t t ,
D i s t r i c t Judge, s i t t i n g i n
p l a c e of Chief J u s t i c e Frank
I . Haswell.

Mr.   J u s t i c e Frank B . Morrison, J r . , s p e c i a l l y concurs                and w i l l

f i l e a s p e c i a l concurrence l a t e r .