American Food Management, Inc. v. Transamerica Insurance

608 S.W.2d 552, 1980 Mo. App. LEXIS 2712
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 3, 1980
DocketNo. WD 31598
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 608 S.W.2d 552 (American Food Management, Inc. v. Transamerica Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Food Management, Inc. v. Transamerica Insurance, 608 S.W.2d 552, 1980 Mo. App. LEXIS 2712 (Mo. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

American Food Management, Inc., (hereinafter insured) filed a declaratory judgment action in the Circuit Court of Boone County against Transamerica Insurance Company (hereinafter insurer) seeking a declaration of rights as to coverage under a policy of liability insurance issued by insurer to insured. Juanita Rae Couch (hereinafter Couch), claimant in a pending tort action against insured, was joined as an additional defendant. A judgment denying declaratory relief prompted an appeal by insured.

A pending tort action brought by Couch against insured in the Circuit Court of Polk County was being defended by insurer on behalf of insured under a “reservation of rights”. The nature of insurer’s “reservation of rights”, both as to form and content, nowhere appears in the record. However anomalous it may sound, precisely what coverage question or questions prompted the insurer to assume defense of the pending action under a reservation of rights, whether due to the insured’s purported violation of a policy condition or the purported applicability of a policy exclusion, is never definitively disclosed by either the pleadings or the evidence. Nor do the briefs of the respective parties on appeal fill this void.

The insured’s prayer for declaratory relief was couched in broad terms-that the court enjoin Couch from prosecuting the tort action pending in Polk County until the issues in the declaratory judgment action were determined,1 and that the court declare that insurer was obligated to defend the pending tort action on behalf of insured “without reservation of any right” and pay any damages recovered by Couch therein “up to the limits of the policy.” Following a bench trial, judgment was entered denying the relief sought by insured in toto, which, as disclosed by conclusions of law drawn by the trial court, was premised on grounds that insured had not met its burden of proving the “existence of a justicia-ble controversy” and that by reason of its failure to do so no controversy “ripe for a declaratory judgment” was presented.

Insured alleged in its petition for declaratory judgment, among other things, that the claim asserted by Couch in the pending tort action fell within the terms of the coverage afforded by the policy of liability insurance issued by insurer to insured. A look at the petition in the underlying tort action pending in the Circuit Court of Polk County, a copy of which was introduced in evidence, reveals that Couch alleged that she was an employee of Southwest Baptist College and that as a direct and proximate result of food particles on the floor and insufficient lighting she slipped, fell and sustained injuries in a food serving area on the premises of Southwest Baptist College in Bolivar, Missouri, which insured had contractually assumed responsibility for cleaning under a “food service” agreement entered into with Southwest Baptist College. The trial court, in essence, incorporated the aforementioned in one of its findings of fact. A copy of the “food service” agreement was incorporated by reference in Couch’s petition. Insofar as here pertinent insurer, in its answer to insured’s petition for declaratory judgment, denied, without explication, that Couch’s claim fell within the terms of the coverage afforded by said policy.

[554]*554The vacuous nature of the record in repeated instances makes it extremely difficult to relate the basis of the judgment rendered by the trial court to record. Certain other findings of fact recited by the trial court in the judgment rendered in the declaratory judgment action suggest that it assumed, albeit sub silentio, that a particular exclusion in the liability insurance policy in question prompted the insurer to defend the ancillary tort action under a reservation of rights. By way of elucidation, the following additional findings of fact, among others, were made by the trial court: that the “food service” agreement between insured and Southwest Baptist College “provides in pertinent part” that “Southwest Baptist College will make available to American Food, Inc. adequate food preparation and food service area completely equipped and ready to operate. Southwest Baptist College will make all repairs and replacements of equipment and furnishings in such area and furnish building maintenance service therein” and, also, that “American Food, Inc. will be responsible for the cleaning and sanitation of the food preparation area, snack bar area and serving area, including the inside windows of the service area”; and, further, that the policy of liability insurance issued by insurer to insured excluded coverage for “Blanket Contractual Hazard” which was defined therein as “liability assumed by the insured under any contract or agreement except an incidental contract, but this definition does not apply to a warranty of fitness or quality of the named insured’s products or a warranty that work performed by or on behalf of the named insured will be done in a workmanlike manner.”

The findings of fact heretofore recited, conjoined with the conclusions of law drawn by the trial court, latently suggest that the trial court concluded that whether insured was contractually responsible for the conditions in the area where Couch alleges she slipped and fell, as pleaded by Couch in her petition, was a common issue in both the pending tort action and the declaratory judgment action whose resolution, in either instance, required a construction of the “food service” agreement entered into between insured and Southwest Baptist College. Going a step further, the trial court may well have concluded that construction of the “food service” agreement in the pending tort action to the effect that insured was contractually responsible for the area where Couch slipped and fell was an essential element of Couch’s case against insured, and, likewise, an identical construction was a condition precedent to construing and determining the applicability vel non of the exclusionary clause recited in the trial court’s findings of fact.

Although no cases precisely in point have been cited or found, a number of principles have been gleaned from this and other jurisdictions which give some direction for determining whether the trial court erred, as claimed by the insured on appeal, in holding that insured had not met its burden of proving the “existence of a justiciable controversy” and that by reason of its failure to do so no controversy “ripe for declaratory judgment” was presented.

In Farmers Alliance Mut. Ins. Co. v. Reed, 530 S.W.2d 470 (Mo.App.1975), the court held that rendition of a judgment against an insured in a pending tort action was not a condition precedent to the existence of a justiciable controversy in a declaratory judgment action brought by an insurer to resolve a question of coverage under a liability insurance policy. After recognizing judicial existence of a distinction between jurisdiction of a court to grant declaratory relief and discretion vested in a court to exercise such jurisdiction, the court concluded that under the facts presented the trial court had not abused its discretion in electing to exercise its jurisdiction in the declaratory judgment action.

In Commonwealth Insurance Agency, Inc. v. Arnold, 389 S.W.2d 803

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Alavoor Vasudevan v. Deepa Vasudevan
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2015
Farmers Ins. Co., Inc. v. Miller
926 S.W.2d 104 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1996)
Taylor v. Coe
675 S.W.2d 148 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1984)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
608 S.W.2d 552, 1980 Mo. App. LEXIS 2712, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-food-management-inc-v-transamerica-insurance-moctapp-1980.