Boone v. Lowry

657 P.2d 64, 8 Kan. App. 2d 293, 1983 Kan. App. LEXIS 112
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 6, 1983
Docket53,858
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 657 P.2d 64 (Boone v. Lowry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boone v. Lowry, 657 P.2d 64, 8 Kan. App. 2d 293, 1983 Kan. App. LEXIS 112 (kanctapp 1983).

Opinion

Harman, C.J.

Retired: Michael Boone appeals from a judgment denying garnishment of MFA Mutual Insurance Company. The garnishment was based upon an errors and omissions policy MFA had issued covering its agent, Robert T. Lowry, against whom Boone had obtained a default judgment based upon a fire insurance policy purportedly to be issued by MFA or Kansas Fair Plan upon Boone’s house. The big issue is whether violation of a cooperation clause in the agent’s errors policy resulted in substantial prejudice to the insurer’s ability to defend itself.

Appellant Boone owned a home in Junction City. In late 1978 his homeowner’s insurance company informed him his current policy would not be renewed. In December of that year he went to the Junction City office of appellee MFA Mutual Insurance Company seeking replacement coverage for his property. De *294 fendant Robert T. Lowry was MFA’s agent. Appellant applied for $21,000 insurance, to be procured through Fair Plan (Kansas All-Industry Placement Facility) or MFA, and Lowry assured him there would be no problem. MFA participates in the Fair Plan program and its agents are authorized to handle applications for Fair Plan insurance. Lowry thereafter advised appellant and appellant’s house mortgagee that appellant’s improvements were insured. Lowry, however, did not obtain an insurance policy on appellant’s house and contents, which were destroyed by fire February 14, 1979.

Neither Fair Plan or MFA had received an application from Lowry. After the fire appellant made demand of MFA for $21,000 for the loss. MFA investigated the matter, as a result of which it denied liability.

On September 20,1979, appellant filed suit against both agent Lowry and MFA for $21,000 on the theory that a contract of insurance arose by reason of Lowry’s conduct.

Shortly after summons was served on Lowry, he left Junction City for parts unknown, abandoning his job and family, and despite extensive efforts by MFA to locate and persuade him to return to Junction City, he has not been heard from since, except for a phone call by him from Enumclaw, Washington, in an abortive effort to talk to one of MFA’s home office attorneys.

About this time, MFA discovered that Lowry had been a dishonest agent — he had been binding applications for insurance for potential insureds and keeping the premiums and he had embezzled $7,500 in premiums, perhaps more.

MFA’s local counsel first entered an appearance on Lowry’s behalf in Boone’s suit on the fire policy. Later, with permission of the court upon statement of local counsel that the appearance had been made inadvertently, MFA withdrew from that representation of Lowry, without reservation of rights. (Discovery of MFA’s records later revealed home office direction that local counsel appear on behalf of Lowry in the action. MFA’s home office claims attorney acknowledged that the statement that MFA had never intended to represent Lowry was incorrect.) This withdrawal resulted in appellant taking a default judgment against Lowry for $21,000.

Appellant’s claim against MFA on the purported insurance contract proceeded to trial. The jury rendered a verdict against *295 MFA for $6,536.50. MFA appealed this judgment. Because of valued policy law and an oral instruction diluting its efficacy, this court determined that the verdict was an improper compromise on the issues of liability and damages, and directed reversal and new trial on all issues (Boone v. Lowry, No. 52,747, memorandum opinion filed February 25, 1982, rev. denied April 14, 1982).

While the appeal just mentioned was pending, appellant commenced this proceeding, one in garnishment to collect from MFA $21,000, the amount of his default judgment against Lowry, by reason of an agent’s errors and omissions policy which MFA had issued insuring its erstwhile agent Lowry.

The trial court heard the garnishment action and denied liability, ruling that the errors and omissions policy was applicable but that Lowry had breached the cooperation clause of the errors and omissions policy to MFA’s prejudice. The matter is here for review.

The trial court’s findings and conclusions are as follows:

“1. On September 19, 1979, plaintiff Michael E. Boone brought suit in this Court in this case against Robert T. Lowry, an insurance agent in Junction City, and MFA Insurance Companies claiming that plaintiff made application to defendant Lowry for fire insurance and was advised by Lowry that there would be no problem. Defendant Lowry advised Boone’s mortgagee, Citizens Savings Association, that the improvements were insured. On February 14,1979, Boone’s residence property burned. Boone learned he had no insurance. Following the filing of the law suit mentioned and service of summons upon him on September 20,1979, Lowry left Junction City, his insurance office, his wife and six children.
“2. MFA attempted to get in touch with Lowry but was unable to do so until after the principal case against MFA was tried to a jury and the jury awarded a verdict in Boone’s favor of $6,536.50.
“3. By reason of Lowry’s disappearance and failure to be present for the taking of a non-waiver of rights and for trial, MFA decided it should not attempt to defend Lowry based on his violation of the cooperation clause.
“4. On September 29,1980, a default judgment was taken in favor of Boone and against Lowry in this Court in this case in the amount of $21,000.00..
“5. Defendant Lowry was insured by the garnishee at all times material hereto under a policy of liability insurance entitled ‘Insurance Agents and Brokers Errors and Omissions Policy.’
“6. Said policy provided in part that the insurer would pay all sums which the insured shall become legally obligated to pay on account of any claim made against the insured and caused by any negligent act, error or omission of the insured in the conduct of the insured’s business as an agent of MFA Mutual Insurance Company or its affiliated or subsidiary insurance companies or of any other insurance company for which the insured shall have acted at the time of the *296 negligent act, error or omission with the written consent of MFA Mutual Insurance Company.
“7. Plaintiff claims and testified at the jury trial involving the principal case against MFA that he sought insurance in the amount of $21,000.00 from defendant Lowry on or prior to December 17, 1978, and that he applied for insurance both with MFA and to the Kansas All-Industry Placement Facility (FAIR Plan). Although others were made earlier, MFA now solely claims the ‘cooperation clause’ was materially breached by Lowry and affords a defense on this garnishment.
“8. Prior to suit being filed by plaintiff, garnishee investigated plaintiff s claim and garnishee’s representatives discussed the matter with Lowry on several occasions. On no occasion either before or after filing of the lawsuit did Lowry refuse upon request to discuss plaintiffs claim with any representative, employee or attorney for garnishee, but he later absented himself so no request could be made of him. Seven months elapsed

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Bluebook (online)
657 P.2d 64, 8 Kan. App. 2d 293, 1983 Kan. App. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boone-v-lowry-kanctapp-1983.