Coppin v. Shelter Mutual Insurance Co.

742 P.2d 594
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 18, 1987
Docket64287
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 742 P.2d 594 (Coppin v. Shelter Mutual Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coppin v. Shelter Mutual Insurance Co., 742 P.2d 594 (Okla. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

BRIGHTMIRE, Presiding Judge.

Among the issues raised by the appealing defendant is one challenging the propriety of certain substantive instructions given by the trial court which defendant claims was a reversible error that deprived it of a fair trial.

We agree with this contention.

I

Underlying the controversy are these un-controverted facts. In December 1982, plaintiff, Farrell Coppin, applied for insurance coverage on his Muskogee County residence through an agent of defendant Shelter Mutual Insurance Company. The two-page application which was filled in by the agent’s secretary and signed by plaintiff, did not disclose an insured fire loss suffered by plaintiff several years earlier, or that his house was for sale. The agent inspected plaintiffs property, took a picture of it, and advised plaintiff that it was covered effective December 30, 1982.

On August 29, 1983, personal property belonging to plaintiff with a stipulated value of $9,714.48 was stolen from his premises — a loss covered by the Shelter policy. Plaintiff made a claim for the loss which precipitated an investigation by the carrier to determine if any ground existed for denying the claim. Eventually, it was denied for the reason that neither the plaintiffs earlier fire loss nor the fact his house was up for sale was disclosed on the lengthy application. This lawsuit ensued.

In its answer Shelter admitted issuing a homeowner’s policy to plaintiff which it says, on the one hand, was “in effect at the time of the theft loss”, and on the other hand, was “void ab initio” because plaintiff “made misrepresentations, omissions, and concealed facts and/or made incorrect statements which were fraudulent or material to the acceptance of the risk or the hazard assumed by the insurance carrier; or that the insurer in good faith would not have issued the policy if the true facts had been known to this defendant.”

At trial during plaintiff’s presentation of a prima facie case certain evidence was also elicited tending to support Shelter’s defenses. Shelter’s demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence was overruled and it offered further evidence with regard to nondisclosure of the fire loss and marketing of the house.

Plaintiff’s effort to rebut the defense consisted of this: The answers on the policy, he said, were written in by the agent’s secretary during a telephone interview. With regard to the fire loss matter plaintiff said he told an adjuster during a tape-recorded interrogation that he did not mention the seven-year-old fire loss to the secretary because she asked about losses that had occurred within the preceding two or three years. And with respect to the sale of his property plaintiff pointed out that Shelter in fact knew about it, indeed had documentary proof of it, by virtue of a photograph its agent had taken of the front of the house during the inspection made before deciding to issue a binder — a photograph which had to show the “for sale” sign planted in the front yard.

The dispute was tried to a jury which returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the stipulated amount of the loss. Shelter appeals advancing several propositions in support of its bid for a new trial.

II

Shelter’s first assignment of reversible error is the giving of a directory instruction which, among other things, failed to permit a jury finding with respect to one of its two theories of defense.

This contention has merit. In its answer Shelter alleged three factless conclusions in defense of its denial of plaintiff’s claim, namely, that plaintiff made misrepresentations and concealments which were “[1] fraudulent or [2] material to the acceptance of the risk or the hazard assumed by the insurance carrier; or [3] that the insurer in good faith would not have issued the policy if the true facts had been known to this defendant.” These conclu *596 sions closely parallel the three recovery-preventing items set out in 36 O.S.1981 § 3609. 1 At trial, however, Shelter emphasized the first two defensive conclusions although it did mention the third one in a requested instruction. Likewise, in its appellate brief, Shelter narrows its defense theories to the first two statutory recovery preventatives and argues that in giving Instruction No. 15 — a directory charge which partially included only one of its two defensive theories — the court incorrectly directed that the jury’s verdict “shall be for the plaintiff” if it finds “that the plaintiff did not make a false statement or misrepresentation in the insurance application, or that if he did, it was not made in bad faith or with the intent to deceive.” 2

The argument is that not only did the trial court erroneously inject an irrelevant issue — plaintiff's faith — but it failed to permit the jury to pass on Shelter’s second theory — that plaintiff made material misstatements of fact which induced Shelter to provide subject coverage.

Plaintiff responds to the attack by pointing to Instruction No. 10 — a verbatim statement of § 3609 — and contends it cured any defect in No. 15 because the jury was instructed to read the instructions as a whole.

This response, while it sounds pretty good, does not as a practical matter furnish an acceptable basis for resolving the issue. If one instruction directs the jury to render a certain verdict upon finding a particular thing to be a fact, we are at a loss to understand how the jury can follow such direction and at the same time in some way apply supplementary legal information supplied in another instruction like, say, No. 10. Plaintiff says the problem can be resolved nicely by assuming the jury read the two instructions together as they were supposed to have, and should have, done. This, we think, is an implausible rationalization. The successful undertaking and execution of such a feat by a jury is difficult to perceive. The only way the jury can reconcile the two instructions is to add the findings of parts 2 and 3 of No. 10 to the findings required in the directive of No. 15 and ignore that part of the directive requiring the finding of bad faith.

This, of course, is tantamount to asking the jury to merge or restructure the instructions and apply them as recast — an objective we daresay, aside from being improper, has to remain in the realm of fantasy given the current limitations of modern man’s mental and intellectual capabilities. We are certain the trial court would have *597 been appalled if the jury had returned to the courtroom or sent a note asking if it could do just that — or, what would perhaps have been more embarrassing — requested the court to do it for them!

An analysis of Instruction No. 15 and a review of its legal shortcomings will make more vivid the fallacy of plaintiffs position. The jury was obliged to return a verdict for plaintiff if one of two root facts were found: (1) That plaintiff did not make a false statement on the application; or (2) if he did, it was not made in bad faith or with intent to deceive.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
742 P.2d 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coppin-v-shelter-mutual-insurance-co-oklacivapp-1987.