Boling v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.

466 S.W.2d 696, 1971 Mo. LEXIS 1045
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 10, 1971
Docket55646
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 466 S.W.2d 696 (Boling v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boling v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co., 466 S.W.2d 696, 1971 Mo. LEXIS 1045 (Mo. 1971).

Opinion

PRITCHARD, Commissioner.

This is a declaratory judgment action by which Aetna Casualty and Surety Company asked that its automobile liability policy issued to Donald Boling be declared excess coverage to a similar policy issued by State Farm to Paul Hunt, d/b/a Hunt Materials Company. The occurrence which gave rise to the dispute between the two companies was an automobile accident in which Boling, the driver, with Hunt as a passenger in the right front seat, ran off the shoulder of the Foristel, Missouri, exit to Interstate 70, lost control of the car which then turned over and injured Hunt. Hunt filed suit against Boling in the Circuit Court of St. Charles County, Missouri, and State Farm refused to defend Boling therein or indemnify him for any judgment obtained by Hunt. The basis of the refusal was and is that Hunt was a named insured in the policy and was excluded from bodily injury recovery by reason of this exclusion: “This insurance does not apply under: * * * (i) coverage A, to bodily injury to the insured or any member of the family of the insured residing in the same household as the insured; * *

The resolution of the issue requires a consideration of whether the policy was, under the facts, issued to Hunt individually or to the corporation, Hunt Materials, Inc., of which Hunt was president and general manager.

Donald L. Boling was an employee of Hunt Concrete Company which was a partnership in which Paul Hunt had an interest. Hunt also had an interest in Hunt Materials, Inc.; Louisiana Concrete Company, Incorporated; Pittsfield Concrete, Incorporated; and several different businesses. Hunt Materials operated basically out of Montgomery City, Missouri, as a ready-mix plant, and had offices in Warrenton, from which all billing was done by Boling. Boling, however, was on the payroll only of Hunt Concrete and Louisiana Concrete. When the accident occurred he and Hunt were on the way home from a St. Louis Cardinal ball game. Boling then lived at Warrenton and Hunt at Wright City, about six miles away. Boling was driving the 1966 Buick Wildcat, which was titled “Hunt Materials” with the signature of the owner thereon, “Hunt Materials, Paul Hunt, Pres.” The Wildcat was paid for by Hunt Materials through a loan from Mound City Trust Company to which payments were made by that corporation.

On the day of the accident, July 18, 1967, Boling and Hunt were in St. Louis to purchase parts for a conveyor at the Warrenton plant. They then went to the Missouri State Bank and Trust Company where Hunt talked with the officers about investing in the bank through the means of a holding company. Then Hunt called Jack Regal about $44,000.00 owed to Hunt, and talked to him at a restaurant where Boling and Hunt had dinner. Thereafter they all walked over to the ball game. The 1966 Wildcat was used by Paul Hunt as his personal and business car.

The retail order for the Buick of Phil Beck Motors, Inc. had Hunt Materials as purchaser, the signature of the purchaser being “Hunt Materials Paul Hunt Pres.” On the same date Hunt Materials, Inc. issued its check, signed by Paul Hunt, to Phil Beck for $645.00. The corporation owned the Buick and Hunt had no ownership interest in it individually.

The automobile application to F. W. Werges, State Farm’s agent, was made out: “Hunt, Paul d/b/a Hunt Materials, Inc.”, Warrenton, Missouri. The occupation or business was stated, “Manager of Business”; the employer was “Self.” Under “Drivers” the owner was stated to be Paul Hunt who signed under “Applicant’s Signature.” The chattel mortgage to the Mound City Trust Company on the Buick showed the mortgagor to be “Paul Hunt, DBA Hunt Materials” and was signed by Paul Hunt. Hunt received $3,100.00 from State Farm *698 for medical expenses and signed a release made out in the name of “Paul Hunt DBA Hunt Materials,” “Hunt Materials Inc. Paul Hunt.” Checks issued by it were to Paul Hunt for $2,000.00; to Paul Hunt DBA Hunt Materials, Inc. and Mound City Trust Company for $1,833.01; to Paul Hunt DBA Hunt Materials, Inc. for $1,266.99; and to Collector of Revenue, “Credit State Road Fund for acct. of Hunt Materials, Inc.”, for $16.35 (for a road sign destroyed in the accident). The premiums on the policy were paid by checks of Hunt Materials, Inc., and were signed by Paul Hunt.

Werges handled the financing on the car and prepared the application for insurance and the chattel mortgage. The choice of the terminology “Paul Hunt, d/b/a Hunt Materials Inc.” was something that Werges put down, and the forms were signed in his office. Werges saw the purchase order for the Buick He testified that Hunt told him he wanted the name “Paul Hunt D/B/A Hunt Materials Company” on the policy for .tax purposes, but he did not make a statement that “he wanted this to be insured as a corporate vehicle and not in his individual name.” On deposition Werges had testified that as to phraseology of the insured’s name, “A. This is generalities again. Usually when a car is in the business name or something, we have to show the insured’s name and then show the business name. Q. Is there some sort of rule on that? A. It is just the way I have always done it. I presume it is correct. That is the way I have been instructed to do it.” On cross-examination Werges testified: “Q. At that time didn’t you tell us you did it that way because that is the way you always did it? A. That is the way I do it in this business, yes, sir. Q. It wasn’t something Mr. Hunt suggested to you or told you to do, was it? A. Mr. Hunt didn’t tell me, 1 put it down there. * * * MR. O’LEARY: He told you it was a company car? [Objection] A. He wanted it in that name because he thought it would be a tax advantage. Q. When you say he wanted it in that name, what are you referring to, what name? A. In the Hunt Materials’ name. Q. Inc.? A. That name, yes, sir. Q. You added the Paul Hunt, d/b/a part of it, didn’t you? A. Because Paul was the one I was insuring. Q. But the selection of the entire phrase, Paul Hunt, d/b/a Hunt Materials, Inc., was something you came up with, not that he told you to do it this way or that way, isn’t that true, Mr. Werges? A. That is true, yes, sir.” Werges knew that Hunt Materials, Inc. was located in Warrenton and that Hunt did not live there.

Mary Sue Toedebusch was employed by Werges as a secretary. The application for the State Farm policy was in her handwriting, but she could not remember if Hunt came in and talked to her or to Werges. It is possible that she prepared the application on the basis of an application for financing on the car; and it is possible that the application was in her handwriting even though Werges talked to Hunt. Mary Sue was sure that she .typed up the chattel mortgage application because she did all of them.

State Farm’s underwriting superintendent, Orrin Lashbrook, construed the application for insurance to mean that it was intended to insure the individual, Paul Hunt. It’s agent’s service manual is: “A. If the applicant is a corporation, use the corporate name exactly as it appears in the charter of the corporation, usually found on letterheads or heading of a statement, and so forth. Do not use the name of the officer of the corporation.”

It is obvious that the “Named Insured” in the policy is uncertain or ambiguous, i. e., was the policy issued to Paul Hunt individually or to Hunt Materials, Inc., Warrenton, Missouri ? The parties in effect treat this insuring clause as being uncertain or ambiguous and each relies on extrinsic evidence to demonstrate their positions of coverage and noncoverage.

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Bluebook (online)
466 S.W.2d 696, 1971 Mo. LEXIS 1045, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boling-v-state-farm-mutual-automobile-insurance-co-mo-1971.