Spaneas v. Travelers Indem. Co.

Decision Date30 July 1996
PartiesStephen SPANEAS v. TRAVELERS INDEMNITY COMPANY.
CourtUnited States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court

Alice Olsen Mann, Boston (Gary W. Harvey, with her) for defendant.

Thomas M. Neville, Waltham, for plaintiff.

Before LIACOS, C.J., and WILKINS, ABRAMS, GREANEY and FRIED, JJ.

WILKINS, Justice.

This appeal by the defendant insurer (Travelers) in large measure presents issues that we resolved today in National Union Fire Ins. Co. v. Figaratto, 423 Mass. 346, 667 N.E.2d 877 (1996). In January, 1989, Stephen Spaneas, an employee of Plaza Inn, Inc. (Plaza), was injured in a motor vehicle accident while in the course of his employment. Spaneas was in a motor vehicle owned by Plaza that an unidentified vehicle forced off the road. He received workers' compensation benefits and sought to recover uninsured motorist (UM) benefits under a business automobile insurance policy that Travelers had issued to Plaza.

In January, 1992, Spaneas filed this complaint for arbitration of his claim for UM benefits against Travelers. 1 The arbitration commenced in December, 1993, about one week before our opinion was released in Berger v. H.P. Hood, Inc., 416 Mass. 652, 624 N.E.2d 947 (1993), in which we rejected an employee's claim for UM benefits against his employer's insurers in circumstances that Travelers argues are similar to those in this case.

Three weeks after the Berger opinion was released, Travelers moved to stay the arbitration and for leave to file a motion for summary judgment late. A Superior Court judge declined to stay the arbitration but permitted Travelers to file a motion for summary judgment. Travelers promptly filed such a motion, which the same Superior Court judge denied. She did so in part on the ground that this case was distinguishable from the Berger case because Berger's employer was self-insured for automobile coverage and in this case the employer, Plaza, had UM coverage from Travelers. She also concluded that the principles stated in the Berger case should not be applied retroactively. We have considered and rejected each of these reasons in our opinion in the Figaratto case. National Union Fire Ins. Co. v. Figaratto, supra.

The arbitration continued, and, in May, 1994, the arbitrators found that Spaneas had sustained damages of $650,000, to be offset by workers' compensation benefits that he had received, with interest from the date of entry of his action against Travelers. Another Superior Court judge allowed Spaneas's motion to confirm the award and denied Travelers's motion to vacate the arbitration award. He ruled, in agreement with the judge who denied Travelers's motion for summary judgment, that the Berger case should not be given retroactive effect. Judgment was then entered against Travelers confirming the arbitrators' findings. We allowed Travelers's application for direct appellate review. We consider only issues that we have not decided today in National Union Fire Ins. Co. v. Figaratto, supra.

The question of the availability of UM coverage to Spaneas was not submitted to the arbitrators. The insurance policy provided for arbitration on demand when Travelers and an insured did not agree on the insured's right to recover against the uninsured motorist or on the amount of damages. Those are the only issues on which the arbitrators made findings and awards to Spaneas. They decided that Spaneas had a claim against an uninsured motorist and the damages that he had sustained from the accident. Travelers, therefore, was properly entitled to raise the coverage issue by its motion for summary judgment filed while the arbitration proceeding was continuing, and indeed could have raised the coverage issue in a challenge to the entry of judgment confirming the...

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