Cody v. Insurance Company of Oregon

454 P.2d 859, 253 Or. 587, 1969 Ore. LEXIS 495
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 454 P.2d 859 (Cody v. Insurance Company of Oregon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cody v. Insurance Company of Oregon, 454 P.2d 859, 253 Or. 587, 1969 Ore. LEXIS 495 (Or. 1969).

Opinion

HOLMAN, J.

This is an action for damages because of the breach of a claimed contract of fire and extended coverage insurance. Defendant insurance company appealed *589 from.- a judgment in favor of plaintiff, who was' the person claimed to have been insured.

After verdict and judgment for plaintiff, he is entitled to the most favorable statement of facts that is justified by the evidence. The following is such a statement. Plaintiff was the owner of airport facilities. About October 1, 19G2, plaintiff leased the facilities to one Mitzel, with whom he agreed that the facilities would be insured by Mitzel in plaintiff’s favor. After the signing of the lease, Mitzel and plaintiff consulted on October 3 with Eobert Young, an insurance agent, concerning coverage. Young inspected the facilities and told plaintiff and Mitzel they were covered for a designated part of the facilities for fire and extended coverage insurance including damage by windstorm. Young was an agent of defendant with authority to accept coverage upon defendant’s behalf without first notifying the company. There were no exceptions to the kinds of property he was authorized to insure.

On October 4, Young wrote to defendant, requesting a policy on the property from October 3. The letter detailed the terms of the insurance. Defendant issued no policy and the request was returned to Young by defendant with the information that the defendant did not write airport coverage. No notice was given plaintiff or Mitzel that the policy was not being issued or that there was no coverage. Young did not inform plaintiff of the company with which he was placing the risk.

On October 10, after defendant’s refusal to issue the policy, Young requested an insurance broker to attempt to secure coverage for plaintiff. Before any coverage was secured by the broker, the Columbus Day windstorm of October, 12, 1962, inflicted damage upon *590 the facilities upon which Young had told plaintiff he had coverage.

Plaintiff notified Young of the damage. Four or five days later Young sent out two contractors to estimate the extent of the damage. Three weeks later he sent a contractor to repair a hole in the roof of a hangar. Thereafter, Young told plaintiff that the broker he had contacted on October 10 was trying to get out of the coverage. Plaintiff, Young and Mitzel went together to the broker’s offiee. The broker denied securing any coverage for plaintiff. About Christmas, 1962, Young told plaintiff, for the first time, there was no coverage.

In 1963 plaintiff consulted an attorney concerning his rights against Young. In June, 1963, an action was filed against Young. On September 22, 1964, Young’s deposition was taken in that case and he was asked to produce all of his corresponcenee relative to the matter. He produced his letter to defendant requesting the issuance of the policy to plaintiff, and plaintiff was thus informed for the first time of defendant’s possible interest in the matter. On September 20,1965, two days less than a year after plaintiff’s discovery of Young’s letter to defendant, plaintiff filed the present action, claiming defendant was orally bound by Young on the risk at the time of the loss. Plaintiff also pleaded that by failing to disclose its coverage until September 22, 1964, defendant was estopped to assert any policy provision that an action must. be commenced within 12 months after the loss. ORS 744.100 provided that all such policies of insurance must contain a provision requiring that an action upon the policy be brought within one year of the alleged *591 loss. Defendant filed an answer which included a denial and an affirmative defense that the action was not commenced within a year of the loss.

Defendant contends the trial court erred in not granting an involuntary nonsuit or a directed verdict in its favor. It first asserts that there were only vague discussions of possible coverage which did not constitute sufficient evidence of an actual agreement. Before an oral contract of insurance can exist, five elements must he agreed upon. They are:

1. The thing insured.

2. The risk insured against.

3. The amount of insurance.

4. The duration of the risk.

5. The premium to he paid.

Rodgers Ins. v. Andersen Machinery, 211 Or 459, 469, 316 P2d 497 (1957); Cerino v. Oregon Physicians’ Service, 202 Or 474, 484-485, 276 P2d 397 (1954); Cleveland Oil Co. v. Ins. Society, 34 Or 228, 233-234, 55 P 435 (1898).

Young’s letter to defendant requesting the issuance of the policy included specific terms covering the first four requisites listed above. Plaintiff and, to some extent, Mitzel testified these were the terms agreed upon. It is difficult to visualize how Young knew the terms to place in his letter to defendant in the absence of an agreement with plaintiff and Mitzel on them. In addition, plaintiff and Mitzel testified that the premium was to he approximately $300 and that Young told them that they were not to worry, that there was coverage as of the time of their discussion. The evidence was adequate for the jury to find that the terms were specific, that an agreement had *592 been reached, that Young had the authority to and did assume the risk for defendant, and that no cancellation of the coverage occurred prior to the loss. Defendant makes no contention that, if it was once bound, the coverage could be terminated other than by notice to plaintiff. It only contends it was not bound in the first instance.

Defendant next contends that plaintiff’s complaint failed to state facts sufficient to estop it from asserting the statutory twelve-month time limitation contained in ORS 744.100 for bringing an action under a policy of fire insurance. One seeking the benefit of an estoppel must plead the facts out of which the estoppel arises. Reed v. Commercial Ins. Co., 248 Or 152, 154, 432 P2d 691 (1967). The allegations of the complaint are as follows:

“VII.
“That the plaintiff, as insured owner of the said buildings, notified the defendant of said windstorm damage loss through its agent, Robert Young, who originally informed the plaintiff that said loss was covered by said verbal binder but, subsequently, notified the plaintiff there was no coverage' for said loss and that the defendant refused to pay. said sum or any part thereof. ■
“VEIL
“That on or about September 22,1964, the plaintiff learned from said Agent Young for the first time, the name of the defendant and that said binder, marked Exhibit “A” had been issued and bound coverage with said defendant.
“IX.

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Bluebook (online)
454 P.2d 859, 253 Or. 587, 1969 Ore. LEXIS 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cody-v-insurance-company-of-oregon-or-1969.