ELRAC, Inc., d/b/a Enterprise
Rent-A-Car,
Respondent,
v.
Amnodia Masara et al.,
Appellants.
2001 NY Int. 76
MEMORANDUM:
The order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs.
Defendant Amnodia Masara rented a car from ELRAC and
signed a standard clause in the company's rental agreement
promising to indemnify ELRAC for any damage caused by her use of
the vehicle. When she rented the car, Masara declined to
purchase insurance from ELRAC that was offered for an added fee.
While being driven by Masara's father, Rafael Masara, the car was involved in an accident, causing property damage to three other vehicles. ELRAC settled the property damage claims, and brought this action seeking indemnification against the Masaras under the rental agreement. Supreme Court granted summary judgment to ELRAC and awarded indemnification, and the Appellate Division affirmed.
As we recently held in ELRAC v Ward, ___ NY2d ___ (April 3, 2001), section 370 of the Vehicle and Traffic Law requires rental car companies to obtain a minimum amount of insurance for their vehicles. That minimum insurance must "inure to the benefit" of any permissive users of the vehicles, including renters (Vehicle and Traffic Law § 370[1][b]). Moreover, self-insured rental companies like ELRAC are required to provide the same minimum coverage to their renters. We held in ELRAC v Ward that a rental company may not enforce an indemnification agreement for amounts up to those minimum insurance coverage requirements; however, an indemnification clause, "if otherwise valid, is enforceable for amounts exceeding the statutory minimum liability requirements."
We reject defendants' argument that Vehicle and Traffic
Law § 370 prohibits ELRAC from enforcing the indemnification
agreement in this case. Rafael Masara was not a permissive user
Further, ELRAC seeks indemnification for property damage to the other vehicles. While section 370 requires that rental companies obtain a minimum amount of coverage for bodily injury and death, it requires only a "maximum" coverage of $10,000 for property damage (see, Vehicle and Traffic Law § 370[1], [1][b]). As we stated in ELRAC v Ward, "since section 370 specifies no minimum insurance requirement for property damage, ELRAC may seek indemnification from its renters for property damage awards to the extent otherwise legally permissible."
We decline to adopt defendants' argument that the word
"maximum" in section 370 actually means "minimum." The
Legislature explicitly specified "minimum" coverage amounts for
other types of injury, but not for property damage. Statutory
language should generally be read in its "natural and obvious
sense" (1 McKinney's Cons Laws of NY, Statutes, § 232, at 392).
While defendants' reading, that the Legislature meant the term
"maximum liability" to establish a minimum threshold for property
damage coverage, might be consistent with the purpose of section
370, that reading is contrary to its plain language. "Maximum"
and "minimum" are not arcane, complex or ambiguous words; rather,
they are common words of everyday usage with clear meanings.
Defendants' remaining claims are without merit.