PER CURIAM.
The Alabama Insurance Guaranty Association ("AIGA") appeals from a summary judgment entered by the Montgomery Circuit Court in which that court determined that, as a matter of law, the AIGA could not recover substantial sums of money that it had paid, on behalf of the Water Works and Sanitary Sewer Board of the City of Montgomery ("the Board"), to an injured employee of the Board following the insolvency of the Board's workers' compensation
The legal proceedings leading to the judgment under review began in October 2009 when the AIGA sued the Board, seeking a declaration of the parties' rights and liabilities under the AIGA's enabling legislation, the Alabama Insurance Guaranty Association Act ("the Act"), which is codified in Chapter 42 of Title 27 of the Code of Alabama (1975). As a general rule, under the Act, when an insurer of risks that is licensed by this state is judicially declared insolvent and is ordered to be liquidated, any unpaid claims that are made against that insurer by residents of this state and that fall within the coverages in the policies issued by that insurer are "covered claim[s]" payable by the AIGA. See Ala.Code 1975, §§ 27-42-5(6) and 27-42-8(a)(1).
In October 2003, an AIGA claims examiner notified the Board by letter of Legion's insolvency. In that letter, the AIGA indicated that the Board's insurance claim might not fall within the definition of a "covered claim" in the Act. Under a 2000 amendment to the Act (Act No. 2000-743, Ala. Acts 2000), claims by an insured "whose net worth exceeds twenty-five million dollars ($25,000,000) on December 31 of the year" before an insurer's insolvency were, for the first time, excluded from the scope of "covered claim[s]" under the Act, and the AIGA was extended a concomitant right to recover moneys it had paid on behalf of such a high-net-worth insured. The October 2003 letter directed the Board to provide the AIGA with documentation of the Board's net worth. The Board failed to provide such documentation to the AIGA, prompting the AIGA claims examiner to send a second letter on November 10, 2003, to again seek that documentation and to warn that a failure to provide that documentation within 15 days might result in the Board's loss of rights and coverages under the Act. However, exactly 15 days later, the Board and its employee settled all aspects of the employee's workers' compensation claim; the AIGA funded the $40,000 compensation settlement amount and has since paid for the employee's medical benefits.
In January 2004, the AIGA claims examiner again contacted the Board, this time by sending a facsimile transmission indicating that the AIGA would need a response to "our letter" (presumably, a reference to the AIGA's November 10, 2003, letter). The Board did not respond to the facsimile transmission. There is no indication in the record that any further action was taken by the AIGA for a period of over five years after that facsimile message was sent as to the payment of the Board's insurance claim.
Pursuant to Act No. 2009-716, Ala. Acts 2009, which became law in May 2009, certain amendments to the Act went into effect on August 1, 2009. Among the changes made by the legislature was the addition of provisions to the Act under which (1) the AIGA was expressly empowered to request net-worth information
On October 30, 2009, shortly after the Board had denied the AIGA's reimbursement request, the AIGA brought its action; the AIGA sought, among other things, a judgment in the amount of $49,135.61 plus attorney fees and costs. The Board filed an answer denying liability and asserting, among other things, that the applicable statute of limitations barred the AIGA's reimbursement claim and that the portion of the 2009 amendments to the Act allowing recovery of attorney fees was unconstitutional as applied to the Board.
The primary dispute between the parties, as evidenced by their appellate briefs, concerns the applicable statute of limitations. The Board contends that the trial court properly applied a two-year statute of limitations to bar the large majority of the AIGA's reimbursement claim, averring that the reimbursement claim accrued upon the AIGA's initial payment of moneys on the Board's behalf in November 2003 and that the AIGA's claim is in the nature of a claim for either a statutory "penalty" or a tort claim not specifically enumerated
To properly answer that question, we must assess the nature of the AIGA's reimbursement right. As we have noted, the Act was amended in 2000 so as to exclude, for the first time, claims asserted by insureds having a net worth of over $25,000,000 from the scope of AIGA's indemnity responsibilities. See former § 27-42-5(4), Ala.Code 1975 (provision in effect from 2000 to 2009 defining "covered claim" under the Act). Likewise, the Act was amended in 2000 so as to extend to the AIGA "the right to recover from ... [a]n insured whose net worth ... exceeds twenty-five million dollars ... and whose liability obligations, including obligations under workers' compensation insurance coverages, to other persons are satisfied in whole or in part by the payments" made by the AIGA on that insured's behalf. Ala.Code 1975, former § 27-42-11(d) (in effect from 2000 to 2009). Thus, under the Act as it was in effect in November 2003, once a payment was made by the AIGA on behalf of a high-net-worth insured, the AIGA's right to recover that payment immediately vested; there is no indication in the Act itself that the AIGA's recovery right was in any way conditioned upon the status of the AIGA's knowledge concerning whether a particular insured had a high net worth.
The right to recover bestowed by the legislature upon the AIGA under the Act as it read in 2003 is not identified by the Act as a cause of action sounding in tort or in contract, nor is it labeled as a penalty to be imposed by a court upon an insured for having a relatively high net worth. Rather, it is a statutory right permitting the recovery of a liquidated sum: an amount equal to what the AIGA has paid on behalf of a high-net-worth insured. Our review of applicable Alabama law leads us to agree with the AIGA that the six-year statute of limitations provided in Ala.Code 1975, § 6-2-34, upon which the AIGA relies, does indeed apply in this situation. The AIGA's reimbursement claim is in the nature of a common-law action of debt (as opposed to assumpsit upon an express or implied contract) for the recovery of money provided by law. See City of Anniston v. Douglas, 250 Ala. 367, 371, 34 So.2d 467,
Based upon the foregoing facts and authorities, we conclude that the AIGA's reimbursement claim against the Board was timely brought in October 2009, less than six years after the AIGA made its first payment on behalf of the Board as a result of Legion's insolvency. Thus, the trial court erred in determining, as it did, that the AIGA's reimbursement claim against the Board was barred as a matter of law to the extent that it sought moneys paid more than two years before the AIGA brought its action in October 2009. As to that aspect of the trial court's judgment, we reverse, and we remand the cause to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
The AIGA further contends that the trial court erred in failing to award it attorney fees pursuant to subsection (h) of Ala. Code 1975, § 27-42-11, as amended in 2009. Based upon the trial court's determination that the AIGA was not entitled to recover the large majority of its payments on behalf of the Board to the employee, the trial court could properly have denied a fee award on the basis that the AIGA had not actually prevailed in the action without reaching the preliminary constitutional question raised by the Board concerning whether the 2009 amendment could properly be applied retroactively to the parties' dispute. Our reversal of the trial court's judgment as to the AIGA's reimbursement claim, however, necessarily implicates the correctness of the trial court's denial of a fee award; we thus reverse the trial court's judgment as to
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
THOMPSON, P.J., and PITTMAN, THOMAS, and MOORE, JJ., concur.
BRYAN, J., dissents, with writing.
BRYAN, Judge, dissenting.
In Jefferson County v. Reach, 368 So.2d 250, 252 (Ala.1978), the supreme court stated:
In the case now before us, the claim asserted by the Alabama Insurance Guaranty Association ("the AIGA") is not based on a promise; consequently, it is not a contract claim. See Jefferson County v. Reach. Because the AIGA's claim is not in contract, it is, in my opinion, governed by the two-year statute of limitations contained in § 6-2-38(l), Ala.Code 1975. Section 6-2-38(l) provides:
(Emphasis added.)
For its conclusion that the six-year statute of limitations contained in § 6-2-34(5), Ala.Code 1975,
I also conclude that the trial court did not err in denying an award of attorney fees to the AIGA. Section 27-42-11(h), Ala. Code 1975, provides that the trial court "may award to the [AIGA] attorney's fees and costs." (Emphasis added.) "`An award of attorney fees, where permissible, is a matter within the discretion of the trial court and will not be reversed on appeal absent a showing that the trial court abused its discretion.'" Feil v. Wittern Group, Inc., 784 So.2d 302, 315 (Ala. Civ.App.2000) (quoting ISS Int'l Serv. Sys., Inc. v. Alabama Motor Express, Inc., 686 So.2d 1184, 1189 (Ala.Civ.App.1996)). I see no indication that the trial court exceeded its discretion by not awarding attorney fees to the AIGA.