Farm Bureau Insurance Co. of Arkansas, Inc. v. Running M Farms, Inc.

237 S.W.3d 32, 366 Ark. 480
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 1, 2006
Docket05-920
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 237 S.W.3d 32 (Farm Bureau Insurance Co. of Arkansas, Inc. v. Running M Farms, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farm Bureau Insurance Co. of Arkansas, Inc. v. Running M Farms, Inc., 237 S.W.3d 32, 366 Ark. 480 (Ark. 2006).

Opinion

Robert L. Brown, Justice.

Appellant Farm Bureau Mu.tual Insurance Company of Arkansas, Inc. (Farm Bureau) appeals from a judgment in favor of appellees Running M Farms, Inc.; S&K Company, Inc.; and Sumner Mitchell. 1 Farm Bureau raises several points for reversal, including lack of standing on the part of Sumner Mitchell to sue. It further contends, in the case of Running M Farms, Inc. and S&K Company, Inc. (the farming corporations), that Arkansas has not recognized the tort of negligent performance of an insurance contract and that there was insufficient proof of tortious interference with a contract or business expectancy. We agree with Farm Bureau, and we reverse and remand.

We set out a portion of the relevant facts in the first appeal of this matter:

Mitchell, a farmer, is president of Running M Farms and S&K Company, two farms located in Hempstead and Lafayette Counties. On March 18,1997, Mitchell purchased crop-hail insurance from Appellant for wheat crops that he had planted on each farm. One policy covered 520 acres of the 590 acres of wheat planted on Running M Farms, and a second policy covered the entire 350 acres of wheat planted at S&K Company. According to eyewitnesses, a storm moved through the area where the farms were located on the morning of April 22,1997, producing heavy rains, high winds, and marble-sized hail. Mitchell testified that at the time of the storms he was at a nearby airstrip where he maintained a crop-dusting business. After the storm passed, Mitchell drove to his farms to determine if his crops had sustained any damage. Mitchell visited S&K Company first, where he discovered some wheat plants with split flag leaves, bruised stems, and a few broken-over plants. He then went to Running M Farms and again noticed some plants with split flag leaves and bruised stems. According to Mitchell, of the wheat planted at Running M Farms, all but a twenty-acre circular patch, was hit by hail.
Mitchell contactedWilliamTipton, a staff adjuster for Appellant, to report the damage to his wheat crops. After inspecting the crops, Tipton sent Mitchell a letter stating, “[t]here is no coverage under your crop hail policy for damage to the flag leaf of your wheat. If you see some direct damage in the future to the head or stalk, I will be happy to reinspect the wheat again with you.” While harvesting the wheat on S&K Company, Mitchell noticed some damage to the stalks and heads. He contacted Tipton and requested a reinspection. Following this reinspection, Appellant offered Mitchell $6,900 in settlement of his claim.
After declining the offer, Appellees filed suit, alleging that Appellant had breached its contract resulting in damages of $70,000 to Running M Farms and $54,000 to S&K Company. Appellees filed several amended complaints during the course of this litigation, adding various claims for extra-contractual damages, fraud, bad faith, and tortious interference with a business expectancy. The case was originally scheduled to go to trial on August 23,1999, but after Appellant filed a pleading entitled “Confession of Judgment,” admitting liability under the insurance policy in the amount of $76,000, the matter was continued, and a new trial was scheduled for June, 2000.
Appellant subsequently filed a motion to withdraw its confession of judgment on the basis that the parties were in dispute regarding the effect of the confession and that it was not possible to avoid a trial. The trial court granted Appellant’s request, and the case proceeded to trial on June 22,2000. At the close of Appellees’ case, Appellant moved for a directed verdict, but the motion was denied. Appellant then rested without presenting any further evidence. The case was submitted to the jury, which was unable to agree on a verdict. The jury was then dismissed and a mistrial declared. Following the mistrial, Appellant filed “A Motion For Judgment Notwithstanding The Verdict And Motion To Deny New Trial,” alleging that Appellees failed to present sufficient proof to create a jury question on the breach of contract issue and also failed to offer proof as to the amount of damages incurred. The trial court denied Appellant’s motion and this appeal followed.

Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co. of Arkansas, Inc. v. Running M Farms, Inc., 348 Ark. 313, 315-17, 72 S.W.3d 502, 504-05 (2002) (Running M Farms I). We dismissed the appeal and cross-appeal in Running M Farms I due to the fact that the circuit court’s denial of Farm Bureau’s motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict was not a final, appealable order.

There are other relevant facts necessary to a full understanding of the current appeal which were not included in our factual recitation in Running M Farms I. After the appellees filed their first suit in 1997, the circuit court dismissed their bad-faith claim in 1998, following a motion by Farm Bureau. After the mistrial was declared in the first trial and the first appeal of this matter in 2002, which resulted in our opinion in Running M Farms I, Farm Bureau again confessed judgment in this matter on the insurance-policy claims in the amount of $45,000 for Running M Farms, Inc., and $31,500 for S&K Company, Inc., for a total of $76,500. The confessed judgment for breach of contract is not an issue in this appeal, which leaves only those matters regarding the appellees’ tort claims in contention.

The second trial in this matter was held in 2004. At that trial, Mitchell testified that in 1997, he made Farm Bureau an offer of settlement of “$50,000, somewhere like that,” and then for fifty percent of the value of the policies, which he estimated at about $62,000. Following jury verdicts on special interrogatories, the circuit court entered an amended judgment on June 9, 2005, and awarded the contract damages previously confessed as well as these damages in tort: Sumner Mitchell, $1,477,994.20; Running M Farms, Inc., $402,311.50; and S&K Company, Inc., $388,811.50. The circuit court refused to award a twelve percent penalty and attorney’s fees to the appellees under Ark. Code Ann. § 23-79-208 (Repl. 2004).

I. Standing of Sumner Mitchell

We first address the issue of whether Sumner Mitchell had standing to sue Farm Bureau based on that insurer’s performance of the insurance policies it had entered into with the farming corporations.

Farm Bureau claims that Mitchell had no standing as a shareholder or guarantor of the farming corporations to raise the tort claims. Thus, Farm Bureau urges that on the issue of Mitchell’s standing to sue as an individual, the circuit court erred in denying its motion to dismiss, its motion for summary judgment, its motion for a directed verdict, and its motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Mitchell counters that he had standing to sue as a third-party beneficiary under the policies at issue, both as a shareholder and as a guarantor.

We treat the question of standing to sue as a threshold issue. See, e.g., Brewer v. Carter, 365 Ark. 531, 231 S.W.3d 707 (2006).

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Bluebook (online)
237 S.W.3d 32, 366 Ark. 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farm-bureau-insurance-co-of-arkansas-inc-v-running-m-farms-inc-ark-2006.