Commercial Standard Ins. Co. v. Paul

245 S.W.2d 775, 35 Tenn. App. 394, 1951 Tenn. App. LEXIS 81
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 18, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 245 S.W.2d 775 (Commercial Standard Ins. Co. v. Paul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial Standard Ins. Co. v. Paul, 245 S.W.2d 775, 35 Tenn. App. 394, 1951 Tenn. App. LEXIS 81 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

HOWARD, J.

Referring to the parties as they appeared below, the complainant, Commercial Standard In *397 surance Co., filed this suit against the defendants, Mrs. Robbie M. Paul, Margaret Paul Aymon, William A. Na-bors, et al., for the purpose of ascertaining the rights of the parties under an automobile liability insurance policy issued by complainant. The original bill avers in substance that complainant, through its agent Kemp & Company, at Chattanooga, Tennessee, issued an automobile liability policy to the defendant, Robbie M. Paul, on a Dodge car, the effective date period being December 27, 1948 to December 27, 1949; that said policy was a renewal of a similar policy previously issued by complainant to assured on the same car for the year beginning December 1947, which policy took the place of one previously issued to assured in December 1946, by said agent, but with a different insurance company, and to which the complainant herein was not a party; that the Dodge car described in the two policies issued by complainant was not the property of the named assured, Mrs. Paul, but was the property of her daughter, the defendant Margaret Paul Aymon, being registered in the latter’s name.

The bill further sets out that the Dodge car owned by the defendant Aymon, and while driven by her and on her own business, was involved in an automobile accident on December 11, 1949, resulting in personal injuries to the defendants William Nabors, et al., for which the injured parties have filed suits for damages in the Circuit Court of Hamilton County against the defendants, Robbie M. Paul and Margaret Paul Aymon; that complainant, being uncertain as to its responsibility to defend these suits, and having requested the defendant Paul to sign a non-waiver agreement before undertaking such defense,- which she refused to sign, is entitled, because of these circumstances, to have the court declare its rights and responsibilities under the terms of the policy before *398 entering its appearance and assuming the defense of these actions at law.

It appears that the plaintiffs in the damage suits were made defendants herein for the purpose of enjoining them from taking further steps in said damage suits until the rights of . the parties are declared and settled, and they were enjoined from further prosecuting the damage suits pending the determination in this cause.

The defendants Nabors, et al., filed answers to the bill admitting that their suits were pending in the Circuit Court, but denied any knowledge of the transactions between complainant and the other defendants and demanded proof of the allegations of the bill.

The defendants Paul and Aymon filed an answer and cross-bill averring in substance that complainant’s agent, Kemp & Company, was advised prior to the time the policies were issued that the defendant Aymon (then Margaret Paul) was the owner of the Dodge car and asked that the contract of insurance be reformed to show this fact.

The complainant answered the cross-bill denying generally the material allegations thereof and averring that the agent, Kemp & Company, was acting as agent for another company when the first policy on the Dodge was written in .1946, and that any information obtained by said agent or should have been obtained at that time was not binding on complainant.

The Chancellor held in substance that complainant’s agent, Kemp & Company, was advised of the true ownership of the Dodge car and accordingly decreed a reformation of the policy. Prom the Chancellor’s decree the complainant has appealed to this Court, assigning errors.

The record reveals that Mrs. Paul is an elderly woman, a nurse by profession and operates a nursing home in *399 Chattanooga, and that her daughter Margaret lives in the home with her; that Mrs. Paul, being unfamiliar with the intricacies and technicalities of insurance and insurance policies, had for several years wholly depended upon Mr. J. M. Kemp, owner of Kemp & Company, complainant’s agent, to take care of all her insurance needs including, but not limited to, automobile insurance. It appears that Mrs. Paul did not drive a car and that her daughter Margaret did all the driving for her, which fact was known to Mr. Kemp prior to and at the time the policies in question were issued.

In 1947 Mrs. Paul owned a 1936 Chevolet car on which she carried liability insurance with the Car & General Insurance Corporation, Ltd., the policy having been issued in December 1946 by its agent, Kemp & Company, which at the time was also the agent of the Commercial Standard Insurance Company, complainant herein.

On August 11,1947, Margaret Paul (now Mrs. Aymon), purchased a 1946 Dodge automobile, having borrowed $1400 from her mother to apply on the purchase price. After the purchase was made it appears that Mrs. Paul, in the presence of her daughter, telephoned Mr. Kemp informing him of the transaction and requesting that he transfer the insurance carried on the Chevrolet to the Dodge car. She was informed by Mr. Kemp that this could be done and a new policy or indorsement was thereupon issued describing the Dodge car but erroneously naming Mrs. Paul as the insured and owner. Both Mrs. Paul and her daughter testified that Mr. Kemp was positively told at the time of the requested transfer that Margaret had bought and was the owner of the Dodge car.

In December 1947 when the policy which had been issued in the name of the Car & General Insurance Corpora *400 tion, LtcL, expired, a new policy was issued by tlie agent in the name of complainant company, in which Mrs. Paul was again named as the insured. Upon the expiration of this policy in 1948, a renewal policy was issued naming Mrs. Paul as the insured for the third time and this policy was in effect at the time of the accident on December 11,1949. It seems that the alleged error in the name on the policy was not discovered until after the accident by complainant’s attorney, because, as Mrs. Paul testified, she did not read the policies and depended solely upon Mr. Kemp to properly insure not only the automobile but all of her property, and that she did not know that the policy should have been in her daughter’s name.

Mr. Kemp testified that he remembered Mrs. Paul telephoning him about transferring the policy from one car to the other, but that he had no recollection of her telling him that her daughter was the owner of the Dodge car. He said, however, that Mrs. Paul was entirely trustworthy and truthful and that if she said she told him that Margaret had bought and was the owner of said car that he would not say that she did not so tell him, and that his agency received several thousand telephone calls a year regarding insurance matters. Because of the numerous telephone calls received by the agency, it is highly probable that Mr. Kemp would not remember the entire conversation which he had with Mrs. Paul regarding the ownership of the car. On the other hand, Mrs. Paul stated that she had made relatively fews calls regarding her insurance, and for this reason we think that she would more likely have a better recollection of the details of the conversation than would Mr. Kemp. It further appears that when Mrs. Paul telephoned Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
245 S.W.2d 775, 35 Tenn. App. 394, 1951 Tenn. App. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-standard-ins-co-v-paul-tennctapp-1951.