Issue Information

LEGAL & BUSINESS REGLUATION

Uninsured/Underinsured Motorists Availability Act of 2001

Status: Sen. Scott Nein (R-Middletown) introduced SB 97 to eliminate the statutorily mandated offering of uninsured/underinsured (UM/UIM) insurance coverage in Ohio. It also maintains provisions of the statute previously enacted by the Ohio General Assembly that defines what coverage is, and what it is not. It provides an allowable exclusion from coverage under an employer’s insurance policy when the employee is not acting within the scope of their employment. Finally, it would provide a two-year time period within which insureds may make claims under their UM/UIM insurance coverage. Currently, personal injury attorneys are mining claims that have been closed for up to 15 years. Although legislation cannot remedy this costly situation, it can address future claims. Gov. Taft signed Sub. SB 97 into law on Tues., July 31, 2001. The bill now becomes effective 90 days after his signature (on Mon., Oct 29, 2001).

History: Scott-Pontzer V. Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Co. (June 1999) Christopher Pontzer was killed in an auto accident while driving his wife’s car on a personal errand, and NOT in the scope of employment. His widow, Kathryn Scott-Pontzer, claimed uninsured motorists benefits under a commercial auto policy of her husband’s employer, Superior Dairy. Liberty Mutual, Superior’s insurer, denied the claim because the corporation was the “name insured” not Pontzer, and he was not acting in the scope of his employment. The Ohio Supreme court, in a 4-3 decision handed down in June 1999, allowed the claim, however, saying Pontzer qualified as a named insured because corporations can only act through its employees, and because the policy did not specifically state that employees had to be working to be covered. The effect of this opinion is to extend comprehensive automobile insurance coverage to any employee working for an employer prudent enough to insure itself, regardless of whether the employee is within the scope of employment, or for example, driving to Florida for vacation.

Linko v. Indemnity Insurance Co. of North America
(December 2000) G. Michael Linko was killed in an auto accident in Chautauqua County, New York in November 1996. The executor of Linko’s estate, Patricia S. Linko, then brought suit claiming she was entitled underinsured motorists coverage under the business automobile policy Linko’s employer, Saint-Gobain Industrial Ceramics, Inc. had with Indemnity. Linko had been driving a company car when he was killed but Saint-Gobain’s corporate parent had rejected underinsured coverage. The form used to reject the coverage, however, simply lists the parent company’s name. Linko claimed in her suit that wasn’t a proper rejection of the coverage, the Ohio Supreme Court agreed by a 4-3 vote in December 2000. In its opinion, the Court established criteria for a valid rejection that was never contemplated by lawmakers. The court also said that all the related companies must be on the form so they can be “specifically offered the insurance” before expressly rejecting the coverage, changing the relationship between a parent company and its subsidiaries. Writing for the dissenters, Justice Deborah Cook said there simply isn’t any support in Ohio law for the court’s earlier requirement that policyholders “expressly reject” coverage or for Linko’s requirement that corporations go into such detail on rejection forms.

Ohio Chamber’s Position:
The Ohio Chamber of Commerce applauds Sen. Scott Nein’s introduction of SB 97 and is in support of this bill. This important measure would create a common sense remedy for the above Ohio Supreme Court decisions that have drastically impacted Ohio’s business and insurance markets through costly, never-before contemplated expansions of the state’s uninsured and underinsured laws.

Taking into account that personal injury trial lawyers get at least one-third of a settlement, these two rulings have created at least a half-billion dollar windfall for members of the Ohio Academy of Trial Lawyers who oppose SB 97.

Ohio’s reputation for having a healthy, available and affordable insurance marketplace has been greatly undermined by these Court decisions. Recent studies show that between 1994 and 1998 Ohio’s liability insurance premiums rose 10.1% compared to the national average of 1.4%. And the worst indication of the havoc these decisions will wreak on the insurance marketplace is yet to come.

Cincinnati Financial Corp., the largest issuer of commercial auto policies in Ohio already has paid over $40 million to cover claims allowed by these Court rulings. The company recently estimated the rulings will cost up to $100 million in unexpected claims. In total these decisions could result in insurance companies paying out more than $1.5 billion, driving premium increases through the roof. Many companies have already received renewal notices with 50 to 100 percent increases in the cost of uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage.

These Supreme Court rulings and their devastating effect on the Ohio insurance marketplace, are adding to Ohio’s unenviable reputation as a state with an unpredictable business climate caused by a Supreme Court majority that consistently exceeds its constitutional authority. When introducing SB 97, Sen. Nein pointed out that if this series of rulings by Justices Resnick, Douglas, Pfeifer and Sweeney were a natural disaster in terms of insured losses, they would constitute the costliest catastrophe in the world during the year 2000.

For more information contact Tony Fiore at (614) 228-4201, toll free at (800) 622-1893 or afiore@ohiochamber.com.