American Standard Insurance Co. of Wisconsin v. Rider

475 S.W.2d 418
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 8, 1971
DocketNo. 9067
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 475 S.W.2d 418 (American Standard Insurance Co. of Wisconsin v. Rider) 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 Standard Insurance Co. of Wisconsin v. Rider, 475 S.W.2d 418 (Mo. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

HOGAN, Judge.

In this action for a declaratory judgment, plaintiff American Standard sought an adjudication that it was not obliged to defend certain actions for damages filed in the Circuit Court of Dent County. It appeals from an adverse judgment.

In barest sketch and outline, the background of the controversy is: That on October 31, 1967, a Mr. Ralph Rider made application to the plaintiff for an automobile liability policy covering a 1959 Lincoln Continental automobile. On November 1, 1967, plaintiff issued a policy to Mr. Rider covering the Lincoln, providing only insurance against liability for bodily injury and property damage, and uninsured motorist coverage as required by § 379.203.1 The policy contained a so-called “automatic insurance” provision under section IV thereof, which defined the word “automobile” to mean:

“1. Described Automobile — The motor vehicle or trailer described in this policy . . . [and]
[420]*4204. Newly Acquired Automobile — An automobile of the type described in this policy, ownership of which is acquired by the named insured (a) if it replaces an automobile owned by him and described in this policy, or (b) if an additional automobile, if the company insures all automobiles owned by him on the date of its delivery to him and (c) he, in either case, notifies the company within 30 days following delivery date. [Our emphasis.] The insurance with respect to any newly acquired automobile shall not apply to any accident or loss against which the named insured has other valid and collectible insurance.
As respects a newly acquired automobile which replaces an automobile owned by the named insured, such coverages under this policy which applied to the replaced automobile shall apply to such newly acquired automobile.
As respects a newly acquired additional automobile, only such coverages shall apply thereto as were, on the date of its delivery to the named insured, afforded by this company and common to all automobiles owned by him.
The named insured shall pay any additional premium required because of the application of this insurance to any such newly acquired automobile.”

While the policy was in effect, in fact, on the day before its expiration, plaintiff’s insured was involved in an accident while riding in an automobile owned by him but being driven by his brother, defendant Claude Theodore Rider. Plaintiff’s insured was killed in the accident, as was the driver of the other car, and a passenger in the Rider vehicle was injured. A wrongful death action and an action for damages for personal injuries were subsequently filed against defendant Claude Rider, and this Mr. Rider claimed coverage under the policy issued by plaintiff to its insured, Ralph Rider.

Shortly after the accident occurred, plaintiff discovered that the automobile in which its insured was riding when he was killed was not the Lincoln covered by the policy, but a 1960 Ford stationwagon which the insured had acquired on November 14, 1967, and licensed on December 4 thereafter. Admittedly plaintiff never received any notice of its insured’s acquisition of the Ford, either as a replacement for the Lincoln or as an additional automobile, and after investigating the accident plaintiff denied coverage on this ground. Plaintiff agreed to enter an appearance on behalf of defendant Claude Rider under a non-waiver agreement, which it did, and suggested to defendant Rider that he might have coverage under his wife’s automobile liability policy, which had been written by intervening defendant State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company. Thereafter, plaintiff filed this action, joining all the parties to the pending damage suits and its insured’s administrator as defendants. State Farm was permitted to intervene upon its representation that it might become the primary insurer should the court declare and adjudge that plaintiff was not obligated to defend the pending wrongful death action and personal injury suit. A trial was had to the court without the intervention of a jury, and after hearing evidence, which we shall discuss more fully in the course of the opinion, the trial court made the following findings:

1. That the automobile described in the plaintiff’s policy had been inoperable and had not been used by the insured for several months prior to the date of the accident and had never been restored to operating condition, but was, after the accident, sold for junk;

2. That the 1960 Ford was a “replacement” within the meaning of part IV (4) of plaintiff’s policy;

3. That plaintiff’s insured was the owner of the Ford and that defendant Claude Rider was operating the vehicle with the [421]*421insured’s permission at the time of the accident ;

4. That plaintiff’s insured did fail to give plaintiff the 30-day notice required by the “automatic insurance” provision above quoted, but that plaintiff was not thereby prejudiced.

The court therefore declared that plaintiff was obligated by the terms of its policy to defend the actions pending against defendant Claude Rider.

One of the questions presented on this appeal is whether or not the 1960 Ford sta-tionwagon was a “replacement” or a “newly acquired vehicle” within the meaning of part IV (4) of the policy. This issue was raised by the intervenor, who sought to show that the Lincoln covered by the policy was in reality both legally and mechanically inoperable at the time the insured acquired his Ford stationwagon, and at the time the accident occurred. In this connection, the intervenor had the evidence of one Wayne Barrett, who had “a little salvage yard” “across the road” from the insured’s residence. Mr. Barrett bought the Lincoln “two, three or four weeks” after the insured was killed on April 30, 1968. Prior to the time Mr. Barrett bought the car, it had been sitting across the road from his salvage yard for five or six months. When Mr. Barrett bought the car “it wasn’t in running condition,” and it “seemed” to Mr. Barrett that one or two of the tires were flat. It had to be moved to Mr. Barrett’s garage with a wrecker. Mr. Barrett further testified that he did not keep track of the insured’s activity; that sometimes it was “three or four days” between trips to his salvage yard, but that the Lincoln “was sitting there in the same place all the time”; and that the insured had “. . . talked about having the car worked on up there at the garage,” but Barrett had never discussed repair with the insured, because he, Barrett, didn’t operate the garage. Mr. Barrett was unable to say where the Lincoln was “as of any particular date.” The intervenor also produced records showing that the Lincoln was not licensed in 1967 or 1968, and it was stipulated that if the Ford was a “replacement” rather than a “newly acquired vehicle” and if notice of the acquisition of the Ford had been given, no additional premium would have been charged by the plaintiff for insuring the Ford rather than the Lincoln.

The plaintiff and the respondent intervenor have extensively briefed and argued the difference between a “replacement” vehicle and a “newly acquired vehicle” in the context of policy provisions similar to those set forth in the plaintiff’s policy. The law need not be discussed at length, for most of the precedents bearing on this point have been recently considered and distinguished in Beck Motors, Inc. v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
475 S.W.2d 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-standard-insurance-co-of-wisconsin-v-rider-moctapp-1971.