Citizens United Reciprocal Exchange V. , 223 N.J. 143 ( 2015 )


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  •                                                       SYLLABUS
    (This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the
    convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please note that, in the
    interest of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized.)
    Citizens United Reciprocal Exchange v. Sabrina A. Perez, et al. (A-67-13) (073384)
    Argued March 3, 2015 -- Decided August 13, 2015
    FERNANDEZ-VINA, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
    In this appeal, the Court considers whether the issuer of a basic automobile insurance policy, voided due to
    a fraudulent application, must pay the liability claims of innocent third parties.
    In March 2010, defendant Sabrina A. Perez applied for an automobile insurance policy with Citizens
    United Reciprocal Exchange (CURE). Perez chose a “basic” coverage policy with an optional $10,000 coverage
    limit for third-party bodily injury liability. Although CURE’s application required Perez to list all household
    residents of driving age, she failed to disclose defendant Luis Machuca. Effective March 23, 2010, CURE issued an
    automobile insurance policy covering Perez’s 1997 Honda Accord. Had Perez identified Machuca on her
    application, CURE would not have issued the policy due to Machuca’s poor driving record.
    On April 21, 2010, Machuca, operating Perez’s automobile with defendant Jonathan Quevedo as a
    passenger, was involved in an accident with defendant-respondent Dexter Green. Green filed a personal-injury
    claim against Perez’s policy, as did Machuca. CURE denied both claims and informed Perez that her policy was
    void from the outset due to her fraudulent failure to disclose Machuca on her application. CURE then filed a
    complaint. It sought a declaratory judgment, including a finding that it had no obligation to cover any claims that
    might arise from the accident, including those of Green, the innocent third party. The court determined that Perez’s
    policy could be rescinded and voided, but noted that in situations where an insurance policy is voided as a result of
    misrepresentations made by the insured, innocent third parties are nonetheless entitled to coverage. Relying in part
    on New Jersey Manufacturers Insurance Co. v Varjabedian, 
    391 N.J. Super. 253
    (App. Div.), certif. denied, 
    192 N.J. 295
    (2007), the trial court determined that Green was entitled to $15,000 per-person/$30,000 per-accident coverage,
    which it deemed to be the minimum mandated by New Jersey law.
    CURE appealed, and, in a split decision, the Appellate Division affirmed. 
    432 N.J. Super. 526
    (App. Div.
    2013). The majority held that an insurer may void a policy for fraud even when a claim is filed by an innocent third
    party. However, relying on Varjabedian, the majority added that a voided policy is to be molded to the mandatory
    minimum liability coverage of $15,000/$30,000, and concluded that Green was entitled to $15,000. In contrast, the
    dissent asserted that an innocent injured third party should not be entitled to more coverage than that provided under
    the issued policy. The dissent found Varjabedian inapplicable because it addressed a “standard policy” rather than a
    “basic policy” like the one at issue here. It concluded that, while CURE could void the policy as to Perez and
    Machuca, it could not void the policy as to Green, the innocent third party. However, the dissent explained that
    Green was entitled only to the amount of liability coverage provided by the original policy – the optional $10,000
    liability limit.
    CURE appealed as of right pursuant to Rule 2:2-1(a)(2), and filed a petition of certification seeking review
    of other issues. This Court granted CURE’s petition. 
    217 N.J. 292
    (2014).
    HELD: Where a policyholder elects to add the basic policy’s optional $10,000 coverage for third-party bodily
    injury in the original contract, the insurer shall be liable to innocent third parties for the contracted $10,000 amount
    as the minimal amount available under New Jersey’s compulsory system of automobile insurance coverage, even
    when that basic policy is later voided due to a fraudulent application. In contrast, when an insured elects not to add
    the basic policy’s optional $10,000 coverage in their original contract, the insurer shall not be held liable to any
    injured, innocent third-party claimants under that contract.
    1. The law in New Jersey is settled that where a factual misrepresentation is made in an insurance application,
    rescission may be justified if the insurer relied on the misrepresentation in determining whether to issue the policy.
    It is undisputed that Perez, by failing to list Machuca as a household member of driving age, made a material
    misrepresentation to CURE from the time of her application through the time of the accident. Consequently, CURE
    was justified in revoking Perez’s policy based on this misrepresentation. However, the Court has repeatedly held
    that rescission of a policy due to an insured’s material misrepresentation at the policy’s inception does not mean that
    the insurer escapes liability as to innocent third parties. (pp. 9-11)
    2. Turning to the extent of CURE’s liability for Green’s claims, the Court notes that, prior to 1998, New Jersey
    automobile insurance law required all drivers to maintain mandatory bodily injury liability protection of at least
    $15,000 per individual and $30,000 per accident, in a scheme known as the “standard policy.” N.J.S.A. 39:6A-2(n).
    In 1998, as part of the Automobile Insurance Cost Reduction Act (AICRA), the New Jersey Legislature authorized a
    more affordable basic policy as an alternative to the benefits covered under the standard policy. N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3.1.
    Although, in contrast to the standard policy, the basic policy does not mandate personal liability insurance, it
    explicitly offers applicants the option of adding personal injury liability coverage in an amount up to $10,000.
    N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3.1(c). (pp. 11-14)
    3. Pre-AICRA, New Jersey’s appellate courts interpreted the relevant statutory schemes to require $15,000/$30,000
    coverage for innocent third parties, which they deemed to be the mandatory minimum under New Jersey law. Post-
    AICRA, the Law Division, in Mannion v. Bell, 
    380 N.J. Super. 259
    , 260-61 (Law Div. 2005), determined that
    AICRA’s basic policy, with its optional liability insurance, overrode the minimum compulsory insurance. However,
    in New Jersey Manufacturers Insurance Co. v Varjabedian, 
    391 N.J. Super. 253
    (App. Div.), certif. denied, 
    192 N.J. 295
    (2007), the Appellate Division overturned Mannion, concluding that, in light of the absence of a mandatory
    minimum amount of liability coverage in the basic policy, the required compulsory insurance liability limits
    remained $15,000/$30,000. (pp. 14-16)
    4. The Court expressly rejects the Appellate Division majority’s conclusion that CURE must provide, on a
    rescinded basic policy, up to $15,000 liability coverage based on the reasoning set forth in Varjabedian. As the
    Appellate Division dissent determined, Varjabedian is factually inapplicable here. Unlike the standard policy at
    issue in Varjabedian, this appeal involves a basic policy, which, under N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3.1(c), mandates no
    minimum bodily injury coverage but provides that the policyholder may elect to purchase such coverage in an
    amount up to $10,000. Thus, the question is what amount, if any, an innocent third party may recover under a
    voided basic policy that includes the optional $10,000 of coverage permitted by N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3.1(c). (pp. 16-17)
    5. Where a policy is rescinded due to an insured’s fraud, a claimant under the policy must be evaluated as if he or
    she held the status to which he or she would have been entitled absent the fraud. Here, Perez contracted for third-
    party bodily injury liability coverage in the amount of $10,000. Given that this optional coverage is created by
    statute and is part of New Jersey’s comprehensive scheme of automobile insurance coverage, it would be both unjust
    and contrary to public policy to invalidate and disregard this minimal amount of liability coverage bargained for by
    the insured. Likewise, it would be improper to hold the insurer liable for an amount in excess of that for which it
    had previously contracted. Accordingly, the Court concludes that where an insured elects to add the basic policy’s
    $10,000 coverage for third-party bodily injury, the insurer shall be liable to innocent third parties for the contracted
    $10,000 amount as the minimal amount available under New Jersey’s compulsory system of automobile insurance
    coverage, even when that basic policy is later voided. Thus, CURE is liable to Green in the amount of $10,000, the
    optional coverage amount for which Perez contracted when she purchased the policy. (pp. 17-19)
    The judgment of the Appellate Division is REVERSED.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER; JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, PATTERSON, and SOLOMON;
    and JUDGE CUFF (temporarily assigned) join in JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA’s opinion.
    2
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    A-67 September Term 2013
    073384
    CITIZENS UNITED RECIPROCAL
    EXCHANGE,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    SABRINA A. PEREZ, LUIS
    MACHUGA, and JONATHAN
    QUEVEDO,
    Defendants,
    and
    DEXTER GREEN and PROGRESSIVE
    GARDEN STATE INSURANCE
    COMPANY,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    Argued March 3, 2015 – Decided August 13, 2015
    On certification to and appeal from the
    Superior Court, Appellate Division, whose
    opinion is reported at 
    432 N.J. Super. 526
             (App. Div. 2013).
    Eric S. Poe argued the cause for appellant.
    Marc A. Deitch argued the cause for
    respondents (Kent & McBride, attorneys).
    George R. Hardin argued the cause for amicus
    curiae Insurance Council of New Jersey
    (Hardin, Kundla, McKeon & Poletto,
    attorneys; Mr. Hardin and Arthur A.
    Povelones, Jr., on the brief).
    JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA delivered the opinion of the Court.
    1
    In this appeal we consider whether the issuer of a basic
    automobile insurance policy, voided due to a fraudulent
    application, must pay the liability claims of innocent third
    parties.    The insurer takes the position that it should not be
    required to pay any claims to injured third parties because
    N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3.1 does not mandate a minimum amount of
    liability coverage under a basic automobile insurance policy.
    We disagree and hold that, where a policyholder purchases the
    basic policy’s optional $10,000 coverage for third-party bodily
    injury in the original contract, the insurer is liable for
    coverage in that contracted $10,000 amount.
    I.
    The facts are undisputed.   In March 2010, defendant Sabrina
    Perez applied for an automobile insurance policy with Citizens
    United Reciprocal Exchange (“CURE” or “the company”).     Perez
    chose a “basic” coverage policy with an optional $10,000
    coverage limit for third-party bodily injury liability.       CURE’s
    application required Perez to list all household residents of
    driving age.    Perez failed to disclose that defendant Luis
    Machuca,1 the father of her two children, was a resident of her
    household.     Based on Perez’s application, CURE issued an
    automobile insurance policy, effective March 23, 2010, that
    1   The caption misspelled Machuca as Machuga.
    2
    covered Perez’s 1997 Honda Accord.   Had Perez identified Machuca
    as a household member of driving age, CURE would not have issued
    the policy to Perez due to Machuca’s poor driving record.
    On April 21, 2010, Machuca, operating Perez’s automobile
    with defendant Jonathan Quevedo as his passenger, was involved
    in an auto accident with defendant-respondent Dexter Green.
    Green sustained injuries and filed a personal-injury claim
    against Perez’s policy.   Machuca also filed a claim for injuries
    against Perez’s policy.   CURE denied both personal injury claims
    and, by letter dated May 27, 2010, informed Perez that her
    insurance policy was void from the outset because she had
    fraudulently failed to disclose Machuca on her application.
    CURE filed a complaint against Perez, Machuca, and the
    remaining defendants, seeking a declaratory judgment.     CURE
    sought three particular findings.    First, CURE requested that
    the court declare the insurance policy rescinded and void.
    Second, CURE asked the court to find that CURE had no obligation
    to cover any claims that might arise from the accident,
    including those of Green, the innocent third party.     Finally,
    CURE asked that the court require defendants to reimburse the
    company for all expenses incurred, including court costs and
    attorney fees, because Perez had violated the Insurance Fraud
    Prevention Act (“IFPA”), N.J.S.A. 17:33A-1 to -34.
    3
    Default judgments were subsequently entered against Perez,
    Machuca and Quevedo, all of whom failed to respond to CURE’s
    complaint.   Green, through his insurance company, defendant-
    respondent Progressive Garden State Insurance Company
    (“Progressive”), filed an answer and ultimately agreed to try
    the case on stipulated facts.
    After hearing arguments, the trial court determined that
    Perez’s policy could be rescinded and voided.   The court awarded
    CURE court costs and attorney fees because Perez violated the
    IFPA.   The court further denied all claims asserted by Machuca
    against Perez’s policy, finding that Machuca was part of the
    fraudulent misrepresentations to CURE.
    The trial court noted, however, that in situations where an
    insurance policy is voided as a result of misrepresentations
    made by the insured, innocent third parties such as Green are
    nonetheless entitled to coverage.   Relying on New Jersey
    Manufacturers Insurance Co. v. Varjabedian, 
    391 N.J. Super. 253
    (App. Div.), certif. denied, 
    192 N.J. 295
    (2007), and Marotta v.
    New Jersey Automobile Full Insurance Underwriting Ass’n., 
    280 N.J. Super. 525
    (App. Div. 1995), aff’d o.b., 
    144 N.J. 325
    (1996), the trial court determined that Green was entitled to
    $15,000 per-person/$30,000 per-accident coverage
    (“$15,000/$30,000 coverage”), which the court deemed to be the
    4
    minimum coverage mandated by New Jersey law.   See N.J.S.A.
    39:6A-3; N.J.S.A. 39:6B-1.
    CURE appealed the decision, and, in a split decision, the
    Appellate Division affirmed.   Citizens United Reciprocal Exch.
    v. Perez, 
    432 N.J. Super. 526
    (App. Div. 2013).   The majority
    held that insurance carriers may void an insurance policy for
    fraud even when a claim is filed by an innocent third party.
    The majority added, however, that a voided policy is to be
    molded to the mandatory minimum liability coverage,
    $15,000/$30,000.    In its explanation, the majority applied the
    principle announced in Varjabedian and concluded that a carrier
    seeking to void coverage cannot rely on the basic policy’s lack
    of mandated liability coverage to avoid providing the minimum
    compulsory $15,000/$30,000 liability limits to innocent third
    parties.   Noting that the Legislature might wish to consider
    revisiting the issue, the Appellate Division majority ultimately
    concluded that Green was entitled to $15,000 for his injuries.
    The dissenting member of the panel disagreed, instead
    asserting that an innocent injured third party should not be
    entitled to more coverage than that provided under the issued
    policy.    The dissent contended that the majority opinion was in
    direct opposition to this Court’s holdings in Palisades Safety &
    Insurance Ass’n v. Bastien, 
    175 N.J. 144
    (2003), and Rutgers
    Casualty Insurance Co. v. LaCroix, 
    194 N.J. 515
    (2008).    While
    5
    the dissenting judge did not disagree with the holding in
    Varjabedian, he found the case inapplicable because it addressed
    a “standard policy” rather than a “basic policy” like the one at
    issue here.    Ultimately, the dissent concluded that CURE was
    free to void the policy as it applied to Perez and Machuca, but
    that the policy could not be voided as to Green, an innocent
    third party.   The dissent explained that Green was entitled to
    only the amount of liability coverage that the original policy
    provided -- the optional $10,000 liability limit.
    Because a member of the Appellate Division panel dissented,
    CURE filed an appeal as of right pursuant to Rule 2:2-1(a)(2).
    In addition, CURE filed a petition for certification with this
    Court seeking review of several other issues.       We granted CURE’s
    petition.   Citizens United Reciprocal Exch. v. Perez,
    
    217 N.J. 292
    (2014).    We also granted amicus curiae status to
    the Insurance Council of New Jersey (“ICNJ”).
    II.
    A.
    Petitioner CURE asserts that the Appellate Division’s
    decision is “wide of the mark.”       According to CURE, in the wake
    of the Automobile Insurance Cost Reduction Act (AICRA), N.J.S.A.
    39:6A-1.1 to -35, which created a “basic policy” with no
    requirement of bodily injury liability coverage, automobile
    drivers no longer have a basis to expect that other drivers will
    6
    maintain bodily injury liability coverage.   CURE relies on
    
    Marotta, supra
    , 280 N.J. Super. at 532, for the proposition that
    New Jersey requires defrauded insurance carriers to provide
    benefits to injured third parties to the extent of compulsory
    insurance coverage required by law on the date of the accident.
    By this logic, CURE asserts, Green is owed no coverage.     CURE
    criticizes the trial court and Appellate Division’s reliance on
    Varjabedian, which it contends incorrectly interpreted Marotta
    as requiring $15,000/$30,000 coverage.   According to CURE,
    Marotta required only the minimum coverage mandated by law at
    the time of the incident, whatever amount that may be.
    CURE argues in the alternative that, even if this Court is
    not persuaded by its “all-or-nothing” argument, the most it can
    logically owe to Green is $10,000, the amount actually purchased
    by contract.   That amount, CURE contends, should be provided to
    only those third parties who do not have first-party
    uninsured/underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage, as the UM/UIM
    carrier should be the insurer chiefly liable for damages.
    In sum, CURE urges this Court to clarify whether, in the
    wake of AICRA, a voided basic policy permits an innocent third
    party to recover (1) the minimum standard policy statutory
    amount; (2) the voided policy limit; or (3) nothing at all.
    B.
    7
    Green and Progressive (collectively “respondents”) counter
    that, regardless of the passage of AICRA and the creation of the
    “basic policy,” a carrier seeking to retroactively void coverage
    cannot rely on the basic policy’s lack of mandated liability
    coverage to avoid providing the $15,000/$30,000 minimums set by
    N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3 and 39:6B-1.   Respondents therefore contend
    that the appellate majority correctly affirmed the trial court’s
    decision pursuant to 
    Varjabedian, supra
    , which found that
    “[f]rom the perspective of the insurers’ obligation, the
    required compulsory insurance liability limits remain
    $15,000/$30,000.    Indeed,” respondents stress, “N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3
    is titled ‘Compulsory automobile insurance coverage; 
    limits.’” 391 N.J. Super. at 258
    .   Respondents further contest CURE’s
    reliance on Marotta because it preceded AICRA and therefore did
    not address or interpret the basic policy under that Act.
    C.
    ICNJ, appearing as amicus curiae, supports the position
    advanced by CURE.   ICNJ maintains that, under N.J.S.A. 39:6A-
    3.1, the mandatory minimum bodily injury liability coverage
    provided by the Legislature for a basic policy is $0 and that
    both the appellate majority and dissent erred in concluding
    otherwise.   ICNJ specifically contends that, with the creation
    of the basic automobile insurance policy under AICRA, the New
    Jersey Legislature consciously chose to eliminate any minimum
    8
    compulsory bodily injury coverage so as to decrease the cost of
    insurance to drivers who might otherwise have operated uninsured
    vehicles.   Accordingly, ICNJ argues that superimposing mandated
    liability coverage in the event of policy rescission -- where no
    such coverage is mandated otherwise -- increases the financial
    impact on insurers and decreases their ability to make
    affordable insurance coverage available in the market.
    ICNJ further contends that it was unjust and inequitable
    for the lower courts to rely on Varjabedian and thereby increase
    CURE’s liability exposure for Green’s claims to $15,000, when
    its exposure would have amounted to only $10,000 had the policy
    not been invalidated due to Perez’s fraud.   In support of that
    argument, ICNJ cites 
    LaCroix, supra
    , 194 N.J. at 526, in which
    this Court declared that a party should not be permitted to
    improve their claim against an insurance policy solely because a
    misrepresentation was made in the application process.
    III.
    “It is settled that a material factual misrepresentation
    made in an application for insurance may justify rescission if
    the insurer relied upon it to determine whether or not to issue
    the policy.”   Remsden v. Dependable Ins. Co., 
    71 N.J. 587
    , 589
    (1976); see also Mass. Mut. v. Manzo, 
    122 N.J. 104
    , 115 (1991)
    (explaining that misrepresentation is material if it “naturally
    and reasonably influence[s] the judgment of the underwriter in
    9
    making the contract at all, or in estimating the degree or
    character of the risk, or in fixing the rate of premiums”).
    Indeed, we have long stated that “[t]he right rule of law . . .
    is one that provides insureds with an incentive to tell the
    truth.   It would dilute that incentive to allow an insured to
    gamble that a lie will turn out to be unimportant.”    
    Bastien, supra
    , 175 N.J. at 148 (quoting Longobardi v. Chubb Ins. Co. of
    N.J., 
    121 N.J. 530
    , 541-42 (1990)).
    It is undisputed that Perez, by failing to list Machuca as
    a household member of driving age on her initial application,
    made a material misrepresentation to CURE from the time of her
    insurance application through the time of the automobile
    accident at issue.   Perez’s misrepresentation precluded CURE’s
    evaluation not only of the underwriting risk of having a second
    driver in the household, but also of Machuca’s driving record
    and relevant claims history.   CURE was therefore denied
    essential information relevant to its assessment of risk and,
    ultimately, to its decision to issue a policy insuring Perez.
    Applying the standard we set forth in 
    Remsden, supra
    , we find
    that CURE was justified in revoking Perez’s policy based on her
    material factual 
    misrepresentation. 71 N.J. at 589
    ; see also
    
    Bastien, supra
    , 175 N.J. at 149.
    IV.
    10
    Although CURE was indeed able to rescind Perez’s policy,
    thereby depriving her of any coverage as a named insured, “that
    does not mean that it escapes liability with respect to
    innocent, third-party members of the public whose protection is
    a paramount concern of the PIP (Personal Injury Protection), no-
    fault system.”   
    Bastien, supra
    , 175 N.J. at 149.   Indeed, we
    have repeatedly held that, “[e]ven when a policy is rescinded,
    for such reason as an insured’s material misrepresentation in
    respect of the policy at its inception, PIP benefits may
    nevertheless remain payable to innocent third parties.”
    
    LaCroix, supra
    , 194 N.J. at 524 (citation omitted); see also
    Proformance Ins. Co. v. Jones, 
    185 N.J. 406
    , 420 (2005);
    
    Bastien, supra
    , 175 N.J. at 149; 
    Marotta, supra
    , 280 N.J. Super.
    at 532.
    In accordance with the well-established jurisprudence of
    this State, we find CURE liable for respondents’ third-party
    bodily injury claims.    See 
    LaCroix, supra
    , 194 N.J. at 523-24;
    
    Proformance, supra
    , 185 N.J. at 420; 
    Bastien, supra
    , 175 N.J. at
    149.    We see no compelling need to depart from the overwhelming
    precedent and policy considerations supporting that position.
    V.
    Having determined that CURE is liable for respondents’
    claims, we now consider the extent of that liability.     We hold
    that, as the Appellate Division dissent found, CURE is liable
    11
    for the $10,000 coverage for which Perez opted when she
    purchased her policy.
    A.
    New Jersey has a long-established and comprehensive
    statutory no-fault insurance system “designed to ensure that
    persons injured in motor vehicle accidents are compensated
    promptly for their injuries and financial losses by immediate
    recourse to insurance or public funds.”   Craig & Pomeroy, New
    Jersey Auto Insurance Law § 1:1 (2015); see Amiano v. Ohio Cas.
    Ins. Co., 
    85 N.J. 85
    , 90 (1981); Potenzone v. Annin Flag Co.,
    
    191 N.J. 147
    , 152 (2007).   As this Court explained in Ross v.
    Transport of New Jersey, the no-fault system centers on the
    Compulsory Insurance Law, N.J.S.A. 39:6B-1 to -3, which requires
    that owners of motor vehicles registered or principally garaged
    in New Jersey maintain liability insurance for certain mandatory
    minimum amounts.   Ross v. Transport of New Jersey, 
    114 N.J. 132
    ,
    135-36 (1989); see N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3, -6B-1(a).
    Prior to 1998, New Jersey automobile insurance law required
    all drivers to maintain mandatory bodily injury liability
    protection of at least $15,000 per individual and $30,000 per
    accident.   This scheme –- known as the “standard policy,”
    N.J.S.A. 39:6A-2(n) -- was formerly the only way an automobile
    owner in New Jersey could satisfy the compulsory insurance
    12
    requirement set forth in N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3 and N.J.S.A. 39:6B-
    1(a).
    In 1998, however, as part of AICRA, L. 1998, cc. 21-22, the
    New Jersey Legislature authorized a “basic automobile insurance
    policy” as an alternative to the mandatory liability and PIP
    benefits coverage required under the standard policy.       N.J.S.A.
    39:6A-3.1.    The legislative purpose of this alternative was to
    reduce the cost of auto insurance so as to make coverage
    affordable for individuals with limited income, while
    maintaining a sufficient rate of return to the insurance
    carriers.    N.J.S.A. 39:6A-1.1; N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3.3; Sponsor’s
    Statement to S. 3 (Apr. 24, 1998).     Although the basic policy is
    generally less expensive than the standard policy, it does not
    include the same level of protection:
    As an alternative to the mandatory      coverages
    provided in sections 3 and 4 of         [N.J.S.A.
    39:6A-3 and 39:6A-4], any owner . . .   may elect
    a basic automobile insurance policy     providing
    the following coverage:
    a. Personal injury protection coverage, for
    the payment of benefits . . . to the named
    insured and members of his family residing in
    his household . . . not to exceed $15,000 per
    person per accident . . . .
    b. Liability insurance coverage insuring
    against loss resulting from liability imposed
    by law for property damage . . . in an amount
    or limit of $5,000 . . . .
    c. In addition to the aforesaid coverages
    required to be provided in a basic automobile
    13
    insurance    policy,    optional    liability
    insurance coverage insuring against loss
    resulting from liability imposed by law for
    bodily injury or death in an amount or limit
    of $10,000 . . . in any one accident.
    [N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3.1 (emphasis added).]
    As made clear by that statutory language, the basic policy,
    by default, does not provide for or mandate personal liability
    insurance like its “standard policy” counterpart.      N.J.S.A.
    39:6A-3.1(c).   Nevertheless, the basic policy explicitly offers
    applicants the option of adding personal injury liability
    coverage in an amount up to $10,000.      
    Ibid. Our appellate courts
    have interpreted the relevant
    statutory schemes to require $15,000/$30,000 coverage for
    innocent third parties, which they have deemed to be the
    mandatory minimum coverage provided under New Jersey law.
    
    Marotta, supra
    , 
    280 N.J. Super. 525
    ; 
    Varjabedian, supra
    , 
    391 N.J. Super. 253
    .      In Marotta, an appellate panel reasoned that
    an injured third party “has the right to expect that all other
    drivers will be insured to the extent required by compulsory
    insurance.”   
    Ibid. We affirmed that
    judgment “substantially for
    the reasons expressed in the opinion of the Appellate Division.”
    Marotta v. N.J. Auto. Full Ins. Underwriting Ass’n, 
    144 N.J. 325
    , 326 (1996).      At the time Marotta was decided, however,
    AICRA had not yet been enacted and the only option for auto
    14
    insurance was the standard policy, which required every vehicle
    owner to have $15,000/$30,000 coverage.
    In a post-AICRA case, the Law Division ruled that AICRA’s
    basic policy, with its optional liability insurance, overrode
    the minimum compulsory insurance in New Jersey.      Mannion v.
    Bell, 
    380 N.J. Super. 259
    , 260-61 (Law Div. 2005).      Under that
    ruling, the court concluded that there was no longer any
    compulsory liability insurance.    Ibid.
    In 
    Varjabedian, supra
    , the Appellate Division overturned
    
    Mannion. 391 N.J. Super. at 260
    .     The panel determined that the
    basic policy did not displace the compulsory $15,000/$30,000
    coverage called for under the policy in issue.      
    Ibid. On the issue
    of minimum liability coverage required to be provided
    under the rescinded standard policy with which the panel was
    grappling, the panel specifically noted:
    The alternative coverage provided by a basic
    policy under N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3.1 mandates no
    minimum amount of liability coverage. It only
    provides for optional liability coverage. The
    only mandated or compulsory minimum liability
    coverage limits in our statutes are the
    $15,000 per injury and $30,000 per accident,
    prescribed in both N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3 and
    N.J.S.A. 39:6B-1.     Accordingly, a carrier
    seeking to retroactively void coverage based
    upon the prior conduct of its insured
    tortfeasor cannot rely on the alternative
    basic policy’s lack of mandated liability
    coverage to avoid providing the minimum
    compulsory   non-cancelable    $15,000/$30,000
    liability limits.
    15
    [Id. at 260.]
    The Varjabedian panel thus concluded that, “[f]rom the
    perspective of the insurers’ obligation, the required compulsory
    insurance liability limits remain $15,000/$30,000.”      
    Id. at 258.
    B.
    The Appellate Division majority in the instant case relied
    on that logic from Varjabedian in its determination that, even
    under basic policies, insurers are liable to innocent third
    parties for $15,000/$30,000 coverage.       
    Perez, supra
    , 432 N.J.
    Super. at 534.
    We expressly reject the Appellate Division majority’s
    conclusion that CURE must provide, on a rescinded basic policy,
    up to $15,000 liability coverage based on the reasoning set
    forth in Varjabedian.       As the dissent determined, Varjabedian is
    factually inapplicable here.      That case involved a standard
    policy, which, under N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3 and N.J.S.A. 39:6B-1,
    requires all drivers to maintain mandatory $15,000/$30,000
    coverage.    This appeal involves a basic policy, which, under
    N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3.1(c), mandates no minimum bodily injury
    coverage but provides that the policyholder may elect to
    purchase such coverage “in an amount or limit of $10,000.”
    Thus, we must consider in this case what amount, if any, Green,
    as an innocent third party may recover under a voided basic
    16
    policy that includes the optional $10,000 of coverage permitted
    by N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3.1(c).
    An insured’s fraud should not enhance recovery by a third
    party.   See 
    Bastien, supra
    , 175 N.J. at 151-52 (disallowing
    recovery for wife injured when driving husband’s car because
    husband’s application did not disclose wife as driver and she,
    as spouse, was in position to correct application and therefore
    not innocent third party).   Rather, as we stated in 
    LaCroix, supra
    , “a claimant [under an automobile policy] must be
    evaluated as if he or she held the status to which he or she
    would have been entitled had the named insured completed the
    application 
    honestly.” 194 N.J. at 526
    .
    In LaCroix, an automobile insurance company sought to
    rescind the insured’s policy because he made a material
    misrepresentation by not including his teenage daughter as a
    household resident in his insurance application.   
    Id. at 519.
    Ultimately, this Court determined that the daughter was an
    innocent party entitled to recovery under the insurance policy.
    
    Id. at 530.
      Warning that claims should be assessed as if the
    policy had not been voided and that an insured’s fraud may not
    enhance the coverage provided by the policy, 
    id. at 526,
    this
    Court confirmed that the recovery by the insured’s daughter
    could not exceed the minimum compulsory benefits mandated by
    17
    statute for standard policies like the one at issue, 
    id. at 532
    (citing 
    Marotta, supra
    , 280 N.J. Super. at 532).
    Here, Perez contracted for third-party bodily injury
    liability coverage in the amount of $10,000.   Although the
    $10,000 coverage was optional rather than compulsory, it is an
    option created by statute, N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3.1(c), and is part of
    our comprehensive scheme of automobile insurance coverage
    required of motorists on the roadways in New Jersey.   Given that
    the statute aims to encourage drivers to seek coverage, we find
    that it would be both unjust and contrary to public policy to
    invalidate and disregard this minimal amount of liability
    coverage bargained for by the insured.    Indeed, a contrary
    result would undermine the purpose and practicality of this
    State’s comprehensive statutory no-fault insurance system.
    
    Bastien, supra
    , 175 N.J. at 149.    It would likewise be improper
    to hold the insurance carrier liable for an amount in excess of
    that for which it had previously contracted, such as the $15,000
    amount found appropriate in these circumstances by the appellate
    majority.
    Accordingly, we conclude that where an insured elects to
    add the basic policy’s optional $10,000 coverage for third-party
    bodily injury in their original contract, the insurer shall be
    liable to innocent third parties for the contracted $10,000
    amount as the minimal amount available under our compulsory
    18
    system of automobile insurance coverage, even when that basic
    policy is later voided.   Thus, evaluating the amount of recovery
    to which Green would have been entitled had Perez not
    fraudulently completed her insurance application, we hold that
    CURE is liable to Green in the amount of $10,000.   We further
    hold that when an insured elects not to add the basic policy’s
    optional $10,000 coverage in their original contract, the
    insurer shall not be held liable to any injured, innocent third-
    party claimants under that contract.
    VII.
    The judgment of the Appellate Division is, therefore,
    reversed.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER; JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, PATTERSON,
    and SOLOMON; and JUDGE CUFF (temporarily assigned) join in
    JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA’s opinion.
    19
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    NO.       A-67                                      SEPTEMBER TERM 2013
    ON CERTIFICATION TO AND APPEAL FROM                Appellate Division, Superior Court
    CITIZENS UNITED RECIPROCAL
    EXCHANGE,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    SABRINA A. PEREZ, LUIS
    MACHUGA, and JONATHAN
    QUEVEDO,
    Defendants,
    and
    DEXTER GREEN and PROGRESSIVE
    GARDEN STATE INSURANCE
    COMPANY,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    DECIDED                 August 13, 2015
    Chief Justice Rabner                       PRESIDING
    OPINION BY             Justice Fernandez-Vina
    CONCURRING/DISSENTING OPINIONS BY
    DISSENTING OPINION BY
    CHECKLIST                                REVERSE
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER                        X
    JUSTICE LaVECCHIA                           X
    JUSTICE ALBIN                               X
    JUSTICE PATTERSON                           X
    JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA                      X
    JUSTICE SOLOMON                             X
    JUDGE CUFF (t/a)                            X
    TOTALS                                      7