Collins v. Farmers Insurance Exchange

135 N.W.2d 503, 271 Minn. 239, 1965 Minn. LEXIS 721
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 21, 1965
Docket39485
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 135 N.W.2d 503 (Collins v. Farmers Insurance Exchange) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins v. Farmers Insurance Exchange, 135 N.W.2d 503, 271 Minn. 239, 1965 Minn. LEXIS 721 (Mich. 1965).

Opinion

Rogosheske, Justice.

Appeal by defendant from a denial of its alternative motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or a new trial.

Plaintiff brought an action against defendant in September 1962 for the recovery of medical and hospital expenses alleged to have resulted from an accident which occurred when he was driving an automobile owned by his wife. He claimed under the medical-pay provisions of an *241 automobile liability policy issued by defendant to Ms wife. The portion of the policy wMch fixes coverage provides that defendant agrees—

“To pay all reasonable expenses actually incurred for necessary medical, surgical, * * * hospital * * * services * * *;

“To or for the named insured or a relative who sustains bodily injury, caused by accident, while occupying or through being struck by an automobile.”

An accident is defined as “an undesigned, sudden and unexpected event.” The policy limit is $5,000.

Viewing the evidence most favorably to sustain the verdict for plaintiff, these facts were established. On the night of January 4, 1960, plaintiff, having met his sales supervisor, a Mr. Scarborough, in a hotel in Faribault, Minnesota, was asked by Scarborough to drive him to his home in the same city. Snow or freezing rain was falling and the streets were slippery. Plaintiff, relatively unfamiliar with Faribault, was being directed by Scarborough. As they approached an intersection, Scarborough unexpectedly told plaintiff to turn left. Plaintiff turned too quickly for his speed, skidded, and crashed into a utility pole.

Implicit in the jury’s verdict is a finding that as a result either of his car’s going out of control or of its collision with the pole plaintiff suffered a subarachnoid hemorrhage. It was determined during subsequent treatment at the Mayo Clime that the hemorrhage was due to a ruptured aneurysm. There was expert medical testimony to support the jury’s finding that the rupture was caused either by excitement when the car skidded or by the jolt of the crash against the pole.

Plaintiff’s medical and hospital bills exceeded the $5,000 limit of the policy. However, after defendant denied liability, it was stipulated that plaintiff, with his counsel’s assistance, negotiated compromise settlements of these expenses, reducing the total to $2,250, which was paid to various claimants. Plaintiff nevertheless claimed that his full expenses were in the words of the contract “actually incurred” and he ought to recover the full $5,000. The trial court so held.

On this appeal, defendant separates its numerous assignments of error into three categories: Lack of jurisdiction; errors of law occurring at trial; and misconduct of plaintiff’s counsel.

*242 Plaintiff commenced this action on September 27, 1962, by serving summons and complaint on Clayton Wanous, identified as the district manager or district agent of defendant at .Owatonna. Defendant complains, first, that service on its agent was a breach of the insurance contract because of the provision that “[s]ervice of process * * * against the Exchange shall be upon the Farmers Underwriters Association, Atty. in fact,” and Wanous was not an agent of Underwriters Association. This argument is facile; although the California Exchange may appoint a domestic attorney in fact to accept service for it within California, that appointment is additional to, not destructive of, the means of service provided for by Minnesota law within this state. 1 Whether or not proper service was accomplished, then, depends upon the requirements of our law.

Service of summons upon foreign corporations is governed by Rule 4.03(c), Rules of Civil Procedure, which provides in part:

“Service of summons within the state shall be made as follows: # * * *

“Upon a domestic or foreign corporation, by delivering a copy to an officer or managing agent, or to any other agent authorized expressly or impliedly or designated 1 by statute to receive service of summons, and if the agent is one authorized or designated under statute to receive service any statutory provision for the manner of such service shall be complied with.”

Under this rule, it is clear that service may be made by delivering a copy of the summons and complaint to either (1) “an officer,” (2) a “managing agent,” (3) “any other agent authorized expressly or impliedly” to receive service, or (4) any agent “designated by statute to receive service.” In the case of foreign insurance companies, Minn. St. 543.08 designates the insurance commissioner to receive service and to forward the summons, this provision of the statute being one of the portions not superseded by Rule 4.03 (c) . 2

*243 Defendant argues that service upon the insurance commissioner is the only, or at least the favored, means of service on a foreign insurance company. But there is nothing in the rule that leads one to that conclusion, and that construction would overturn law that has been settled for almost as long as there has been more than one means of service upon insurance companies. 3 Rule 4.03(c) clearly makes equally acceptable four alternative persons to whom a summons can be delivered in order to effectuate service.

The issue then is whether Clayton Wanous was an agent authorized to receive service. By his own testimony, he was at least impliedly authorized to do so since he admitted that he did so in the normal course of business and that he believed he accepted and forwarded plaintiff’s summons and complaint to defendant’s home office. Their receipt is not disputed. We have no difficulty in agreeing with the trial court that the insurer intended that receipt of service be within Wanous’ authority because it was “directly connected with and essential to the business expressly entrusted to the agent,” 4 even though not expressly stated.

Defendant assigns four errors of law occurring at trial. The first concerns the trial court’s instruction to the jury that plaintiff could recover if his hemorrhage occurred any time after his car went out of control. Since the evidence concerning the sequence of hemorrhage, loss of control, and collision was in dispute, a finding of liability or no liability turned on the instruction. According to the trial coúrt’s memorandum accompanying its denial of defendant’s post-trial motions, the court proposed in chambers the instruction ultimately given and both parties acquiesced. In giving the instruction, the court made liability turn on whether the aneurysm ruptured before or after “the car went out of control and hit the telephone pole.” After plaintiff pointed out that the jury might take the court’s language to mean that in order to find for plaintiff they must find that the rupture occurred after both loss of control and collision, the court clarified its instruction so that the *244 jury understood that they might find for plaintiff if the rupture occurred after either

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Bluebook (online)
135 N.W.2d 503, 271 Minn. 239, 1965 Minn. LEXIS 721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-farmers-insurance-exchange-minn-1965.