Doub v. Weathersby-Breeland Insurance Agency

233 S.E.2d 111, 268 S.C. 319, 1977 S.C. LEXIS 422
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 9, 1977
Docket20379
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 233 S.E.2d 111 (Doub v. Weathersby-Breeland Insurance Agency) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doub v. Weathersby-Breeland Insurance Agency, 233 S.E.2d 111, 268 S.C. 319, 1977 S.C. LEXIS 422 (S.C. 1977).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

The order under appeal correctly disposes of the issues and, with certain deletions, will be reported as the judgment of the Court.

ORDER OF JUDGE GRIMBALL

As originally brought, Insurance Company of North America was a defendant in this action; but, by Order of this Court dated July 16, 1975, filed July 21, 1975, a motion of that defendant for summary judgment as to it was granted, and it was dismissed from this suit, with prejudice. Consequently, the above named are the parties to this action, tried before this Court and a jury in the Court of Common Pleas for Richland County on February 4th, 1976.

This action arose following the collapse of the roof and damage to other parts of a building owned by plaintiff, who was and is in business as an individual, caused by the snow and ice storm in this section which occurred in January, 1973. Following this loss, plaintiff made claim for indemnity by reason of an insurance policy issued to him by Insurance Company of North America (INA) which had been written by and through Weathersby-Breeland Insurance Agency, the present defendant in this action. While neither the complaint nor its answer specify the legal identity of that Agency, the testimony at the trial was that, in 1973, and prior thereto, *322 it was a partnership, the partners being Jack R. Weathersby and Richard Breeland, both of whom testified at the trial.

The policy issued by INA was a standard fire insurance policy, providing coverage against fire and lightning, extended coverage, and vandalism and malicious mischief, in the amount of $40,000.00, for the period commencing July 7, 1971 and expiring July 7, 1974. The policy provided, inter alia:

Provisions Applicable Only to Windstorm and Hail: This Company shall not be liable for loss caused directly or indirectly by frost or cold weather, or ice (other than hail), snow or sleet, whether driven by wind or not.

By reason of this exclusion, INA denied coverage for this loss, and this action followed. As this Court construes the complaint, it is not an action on the policy (plaintiff apparently recognizing the validity of this exclusion), but is based on fraud and misrepresentation, seeking damages, actual and punitive, in the sum of $140,000. While in argument before this Court during the trial plaintiff indicated that the action might be based upon the insurance policy, the nature of the action, the allegations of the complaint, and the nature of relief sought compel the conclusion that the basis of this action is fraud and misrepresentation.

Most of the pertinent and controlling facts in this case are undisputed, and the documentary evidence is consistent throughout.

When plaintiff first acquired the premises insured, located on South Assembly Street in Columbia, he procured insurance coverage issued by American Casualty Company through the Hardy Insurance Agency of Columbia. This coverage was in the amount of $34,000.00, and insured against fire and lightning, extended coverage, and vandalism and malicious mischief. The premises consisted of three office rooms at the front, facing Assembly Street, and a large body shop building at the rear, where plaintiff conducted his business.

*323 Weathersby-Breeland rented the three office rooms at the front from plaintiff (the evidence is that it does so today) ; and when the American Casualty policy issued through the Hardy Agency expired in 1967, plaintiff testified that he decided to place all his insurance through Weathersby-Breeland. Defendant procured this policy from plaintiff and had issued another policy in The Hanover Insurance Company affording the same coverage as that provided by The American Casualty Company, except that, as agreed by both parties in their testimony, the amount of insurance was increased from $34,000.00 to $40,000.00 at the suggestion of the defendant.

The Hanover Insurance Company policy contained the same exclusion from loss “caused directly or indirectly by frost or cold weather, or ice (other than hail), snow or sleet, whether driven by wind or not”, as that contained in the INA policy, and identically the same exclusion was contained in the policy written by American Casualty Company through the Hardy Agency. It was written for a term commencing December 27, 1967, when the American Casualty Company policy expired, and expiring December 27, 1970.

On December 27, 1970, Weathersby-Breeland had another similar policy covering the premises issued to plaintiff in The Hanover Insurance Company, for a term commencing December 27, 1970, and expiring December 27, 1973. This policy covered the same risks and contained the identical exclusion from its coverage of “loss caused directly or indirectly by frost or cold weather, or ice (other than hail), snow or sleet, whether driven by wind or not.” For some reason, The Hanover Insurance Company cancelled the coverage by notification effective as of July 7, 1971; and after some negotiations neither relevant nor pertinent to the issues now before this Court, Weathersby-Breeland procured similar coverage on the premises in the same amount against the same risks from Insurance Company of North America.

It is undisputed, and cannot be disputed, since the policies speak for themselves, that the American Casualty policy writ *324 ten through the Hardy Agency, the two Hanover policies, and the INA policy, written through Weathersby-Breeland, all contained the same exclusion providing, in substance, that loss resulting from frost, cold weather, ice (other than hail), snow and sleet was not covered.

The basis of this action, as set out in the complaint, is as follows:

After alleging that Weathersby-Breeland was an agent of INA, their original co-defendant, plaintiff alleges that, when he purchased the INA policy, he thought he was procuring insurance with extended coverage, insuring his premises against loss due to natural hazards; that he was induced to purchase this policy by the representations of Weathersby-Breeland that the extended coverage insured and protected him against all loss due to natural catastrophe; that, relying on these representations, he cancelled his then existing coverage with other companies; that Weathersby-Breeland knew of his desire for total coverage against all natural hazards, and represented to him that he was covered against all such hazards; that, relying upon such representations, he did not read the policy issued to him and did not procure insurance from other sources; that Weathersby-Breeland knew or should have known that the policy they procured for him did not conform to these representations; and that, as a result of these misrepresentations, plaintiff is entitled to damages, actual and punitive, in the sum of $140,000.00.

Plaintiff admits that he never read the INA policy. Also, he read neither the American Casualty policy nor the two Hanover policies issued to him through Weathersby-Breeland following the expiration of the American Casualty policy written through the Hardy Agency, by his own admissions from the witness stand. Each of these four policies insured against identical risks, and each contained an identical exclusion eliminating from its coverage loss by frost, *325

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
233 S.E.2d 111, 268 S.C. 319, 1977 S.C. LEXIS 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doub-v-weathersby-breeland-insurance-agency-sc-1977.