Argonaut Insurance Companies v. Tri-West Construction Co.

691 P.2d 1258, 107 Idaho 643, 1984 Ida. App. LEXIS 539
CourtIdaho Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 21, 1984
Docket14467
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 691 P.2d 1258 (Argonaut Insurance Companies v. Tri-West Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Argonaut Insurance Companies v. Tri-West Construction Co., 691 P.2d 1258, 107 Idaho 643, 1984 Ida. App. LEXIS 539 (Idaho Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

*645 SWANSTROM, Judge.

This appeal stems from an action to collect an insurance premium. For several years, the plaintiff, Argonaut Insurance Companies, provided workmen’s compensation insurance coverage to the defendant, Tri-West Construction Company. A dispute arose over the amount of premium due under the contract in 1977 and Argonaut brought suit. The district court held that Tri-West owed an additional premium of $5,009 to Argonaut. Tri-West appealed and Argonaut filed a cross-appeal. We affirm the judgment.

The facts may be stated briefly as follows. Tri-West’s annual insurance premium was based upon the remuneration it paid to its employees. The premium was calculated by applying a specified rate to the amount earned by Tri-West’s employees. Different rates were applied to the different classes of employees. For example, a lesser rate was applied to clerical help than was applied to sheet metal workers. In calculating the annual premium, Argonaut first estimated the total cost of that premium for the next one-year period and then billed Tri-West for a portion of that cost. At the end of the one-year period, Argonaut audited Tri-West’s payroll ledgers to arrive at a final total premium. After crediting the prepaid premium, Argonaut then billed Tri-West for the additional premium owed.

This procedure was followed for the period ending May 1, 1977. Argonaut had an independent auditor examine Tri-West’s books and then prepared an invoice, requesting an additional premium of $15,149. This premium was calculated by Argonaut using information obtained by the auditor, including a listing of more than a hundred persons who received remuneration from Tri-West during the policy period. Argonaut caused this invoice to be delivered to Tri-West through Argonaut’s “producer,” Insurance Associates Corporation (IAC). Tri-West refused to pay, asserting that Argonaut had included, in its calculation, the earnings of outside salesmen, subcontractors, and others who were not intended to be covered by Tri-West’s workmen s compensation insurance. This, according to Tri-West, produced an inflated figure for the total premium.

A meeting between Argonaut and TriWest was arranged to resolve their differences. Present at this meeting were Argonaut’s collection manager, Tri-West’s president and owner William B. Cafarelli, and Dick Marmillion of IAC. Following this meeting and after receiving additional information from Tri-West regarding the classification of the personnel on its payroll ledger, Argonaut sent a letter and a new invoice to Tri-West. The letter stated that, based upon additional information furnished by Tri-West, Argonaut had dropped seventy-eight “subcontractors” from the list, leaving fifty-five persons who had received remuneration from Tri-West. Argonaut enclosed a “revised final” invoice for the annual premium calculated upon the remuneration Tri-West paid to those fifty-five persons. The letter gave credit for the deposit already paid and stated a balance due of $5,009. Tri-West, however, also failed to pay this invoice.

Argonaut then brought suit, first alleging that Tri-West owed it $5,009; later alleging, in an amended complaint, that $15,149 was due and owing. The district court held that the $5,009 invoice constituted an “account rendered” which became an “account stated” upon Tri-West’s acceptance of it and that, therefore, Tri-West owed Argonaut $5,009. The court further held that the result would be the same even had there been no account stated. The evidence, the court indicated, was sufficient to support a judgment for Argonaut under the insurance contract in the amount of $5,009. Tri-West appealed, contending that the evidence was insufficient to support the district court’s judgment. Argonaut cross-appealed, arguing that the court should have awarded it $15,149.

ACCOUNT STATED

In O’Harrow v. Salmon River Uranium Development, Inc., 84 Idaho 427, 373 P.2d 336 (1962), our Supreme Court said:

*646 To constitute an account stated the transaction must be understood by the parties as a final adjustment of the respective demands between them and the amount due. An account stated becomes a new contract which exhibits the state of account between the parties and the balance owing one to the other, and two things must appear, first a mutual examination of the claims of each other by the parties; and second, that there is a mutual agreement between them as to the correctness of the allowance and disallowance of the respective items or claims and of the balance as struck upon the final adjustment of the whole account and demands on both sides ____ An account stated must receive the assent of both parties; the minds of the parties must meet for an account becomes stated only by reason of acquiescence in its correctness.

Id. at 430-31, 373 P.2d at 338. The “account, in order to constitute a contract, should appear to be something more than a mere memorandum; it should show upon its face that it was intended to be a final settlement up to date, and this should be expressed with clearness and certainty.” Davidson Grocery Co. v. Johnston, 24 Idaho 336, 345, 133 P. 929, 931-32 (1913).

Here, the district court found that the invoice was more than a mere memorandum and that Argonaut intended that it be a final settlement of the account. These findings are not clearly erroneous and therefore will not be set aside on appeal.

The district court also found that the evidence was sufficient to show that Tri-West had assented to the account rendered. Such assent, which transforms an account rendered into an account stated, may be either express or implied. O’Harrow v. Salmon River Uranium Development, supra. Assent is implied from a failure to object to a billing within a reasonable period of time. See Tri-County Insurance, Inc. v. Marsh, 608 P.2d 190 (Or.Ct.App.1980). Such a failure raises a rebuttable presumption of assent. “To give an account rendered the force of an account stated because of silence on the part of the one receiving the account, the circumstances must be such as to support an inference of agreement as to the correctness of the account. Such an inference may be rebutted.” Old West Enterprises, Inc. v. Reno Escrow Co., 86 Nev. 727, 476 P.2d 1, 3 (1970).

Tri-West contends that it did not remain silent, but objected to the account rendered. The court, however, found that “[Tri-West] did not object to the $5,009.00 billing for additional premium.” An objection to an account rendered must be “more than a mental operation on the part of the person receiving the account, and must be made to the party rendering the account, or to his duly authorized agent, or at least to one whom the debtor believes to be such. ” 1 Am.Jur.2d ACCOUNTS AND ACCOUNTING § 30 at 405 (1962) (emphasis added).

The record supports a finding that TriWest did not make any response or objection to Argonaut directly.

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Bluebook (online)
691 P.2d 1258, 107 Idaho 643, 1984 Ida. App. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/argonaut-insurance-companies-v-tri-west-construction-co-idahoctapp-1984.