Cincinnati Insurance Co., and Cincinnati Casualty Co. v. David C. Avery

914 F.2d 255, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 25025, 1990 WL 132245
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 12, 1990
Docket89-5536
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 914 F.2d 255 (Cincinnati Insurance Co., and Cincinnati Casualty Co. v. David C. Avery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cincinnati Insurance Co., and Cincinnati Casualty Co. v. David C. Avery, 914 F.2d 255, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 25025, 1990 WL 132245 (6th Cir. 1990).

Opinion

914 F.2d 255

Unpublished Disposition
NOTICE: Sixth Circuit Rule 24(c) states that citation of unpublished dispositions is disfavored except for establishing res judicata, estoppel, or the law of the case and requires service of copies of cited unpublished dispositions of the Sixth Circuit.
CINCINNATI INSURANCE CO., and Cincinnati Casualty Co.,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
David C. AVERY, et al., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 89-5536.

United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.

Sept. 12, 1990.

Before KENNEDY and ALAN E. NORRIS, Circuit Judges; GADOLA, District Judge.*

ALAN E. NORRIS.

Plaintiffs Cincinnati Insurance Company and Cincinnati Casualty Company ("the companies") filed a declaratory judgment action seeking a determination that they had no liability to their insureds, defendants Drs. Bruce and Shirley Avery, for "excess insurance" in an amount over $100,000, as the result of an accident in which the Averys' son was struck by an underinsured motorist. The companies maintained the Averys had rejected excess coverage, while Dr. Bruce Avery contended that his signing of a rejection form for additional coverage was the product of a misleading representation by an agent of the companies. The companies appeal from a jury verdict in favor of the Averys. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I.

Dr. Bruce Avery and his partners in a medical practice maintained a professional liability insurance policy with the companies through a local agency, the Shafer Insurance Agency. The named insureds were the partnership and each of the partners in the medical practice. Dr. Shirley Avery maintained a separate medical practice and carried her own separate professional insurance.

As an added benefit to the professional policy held by Dr. Bruce Avery and his partners, the companies offered a $3,000,000 personal umbrella endorsement. The personal umbrella endorsement covered the Averys and their children who resided with them. At its inception, the policy did not include uninsured or underinsured motorists ("UIM") coverage. In 1982, the Tennessee legislature enacted a statute requiring all umbrella policies issued in the state to include UIM coverage equal to the umbrella amount unless rejected by the insured. The statute had the effect of providing the Averys with $3,000,000 of personal UIM coverage under the personal endorsement to the professional policy.

Initially, the companies did not charge any additional premium for the new UIM coverage. But, in April 1986, the companies sent a memo to all its Tennessee agents advising them of the change in Tennessee law and asking them to offer this coverage to all umbrella insureds for an additional premium, or to obtain a rejection of the coverage. In May 1986, Linda Fletcher, a new agent with the Shafer agency, sent a letter and a one-page form entitled "Application for Excess Uninsured Motorist Coverage" to Dr. Bruce Avery's office manager, Beulah Murrah, advising her to have each of the partners complete the form. The form contained boxes which were to be checked to either accept or reject "excess uninsured motorists coverage." Neither the form nor the letter explained the term "excess" as it related to the Averys' policy, however.

Dr. Bruce Avery testified that he did not understand the effect of the form so he asked his office manager to telephone the agency to find out its purpose. Murrah telephoned Linda Fletcher and was told that "nothing will change" if Dr. Avery rejected the excess coverage. Fletcher testified at trial that she was unaware that Dr. Avery had $3,000,000 of personal uninsured motorists coverage by operation of law. She believed that Dr. Avery had only $100,000 of primary coverage, and that by signing the rejection form, he would not change the amount of his coverage under the policy. Murrah repeated Fletcher's statement that "nothing will change" to Dr. Avery.

Dr. Avery was also under the false impression that the rejection form pertained only to the professional policy and not to his personal endorsement. He testified he was less concerned about the amount of UIM coverage for the business cars since he neither owned nor drove any of the cars. Neither the rejection form nor the letter stated that the form pertained to the personal umbrella endorsement, although Linda Fletcher testified at trial that she had twice told Beulah Murrah in telephone conversations that the rejection form did apply to the physicians' personal umbrella endorsements. Believing both that the rejection form pertained only to the professional policy and that "nothing will change" if he rejected the excess UIM coverage, Dr. Avery signed the form rejecting the coverage.

Less than one month later, in July 1986, the Averys' son was injured in a motorcycle accident by an underinsured motorist. The Averys filed a claim but the companies denied liability for any amount over the $100,000 of primary coverage offered by the policy. The companies filed this action seeking a determination that it had no liability for the excess uninsured motorists coverage.

At trial, both parties initially proceeded upon the belief that mutual mistake was the theory upon which defendants' relief depended. However, they later realized that while both parties operated under a mistake at the time the rejection form was signed, they were operating under two different and separate mistakes. The agent mistakenly believed that the Averys had only $100,000 of UIM coverage and that rejection of the excess coverage would not change that $100,000 coverage. The Averys, on the other hand, based upon past assurances from the agency, believed they were heavily insured with UIM coverage and mistakenly understood Fletcher's assurance to mean rejection of the "excess" coverage would not change that heavily insured status. The statement "nothing will change," which the agent admitted having made, meant different things to each party.

In closing argument, the Averys argued that Dr. Bruce Avery's rejection was the result of a unilateral mistake as to a material fact which was proximately caused by an agent of the companies. They maintained that in rejecting the excess coverage, they relied upon Fletcher's statement that "nothing will change" and but for the statement, would not have rejected the additional coverage. They also contended that they believed Fletcher's statement was true since the parties had a course of dealing in which all major changes in the policy were explained in a personal conference. Since the rejection did in fact change their coverage, they sought rescission of their rejection of the coverage on the ground that they were misled as to the effect of signing the rejection. The Averys also contended in their complaint and in a bench conference prior to closing arguments that relief was proper under the doctrine of equitable estoppel, but the court did not charge the jury on those grounds, saying "you can't use estoppel to create a right."

The companies argued that Dr. Avery's rejection was caused not by any mistake made by the agent or by any assurance that "nothing will change," but by his own erroneous belief that the rejection form applied only to the professional policy and the business cars. The companies argued that since the companies did not know of, cause, or in any way induce that belief, reformation of the insurance contract would be improper.

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914 F.2d 255, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 25025, 1990 WL 132245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cincinnati-insurance-co-and-cincinnati-casualty-co-v-david-c-avery-ca6-1990.