Farmers Insurance Exchange v. Schropp

567 P.2d 1359, 222 Kan. 612, 1977 Kan. LEXIS 347
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 11, 1977
Docket48,408
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 567 P.2d 1359 (Farmers Insurance Exchange v. Schropp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers Insurance Exchange v. Schropp, 567 P.2d 1359, 222 Kan. 612, 1977 Kan. LEXIS 347 (kan 1977).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Miller, J.:

Farmers Insurance Exchange appeals from judgments in excess of its policy limits, entered against it and in favor of Michael D. Schropp and the Estate of Clint R. Sohl, deceased, following a jury trial. Farmers raises a barrage of issues which will be discussed later in this opinion.

This action was commenced as a declaratory judgment suit by Farmers. It arises out of a two-car collision which occurred on October 25, 1969, on U.S. Highway No. 56, near Ellinwood, Kansas. Clint R. Sohl, insured by Farmers, was driving an eastbound vehicle, a Ford Falcon. He was accompanied by a friend, Daryl C. Thompson. Michael Blackman was driving a Plymouth *614 sedan in a westerly direction on the same highway. Passengers in the Blackman car were Michael D. Schropp, Stephen L. Dunham and Stephen M. Arnold. The Ford driven by Sohl veered into the left or westbound lane as it rounded a curve. It collided with the Blackman Plymouth, striking it fully front to front in the westbound lane. The physical evidence at the scene, the highway patrol report, and the photographs all support these facts. There were no witnesses except the occupants of the vehicles. Sohl and Thompson were killed; Blackman, Schropp, Dunham and Arnold sustained personal injuries, those of Schropp being by far the most serious.

Farmers investigated immediately. The facts outlined above were known to it within a few days; they are included within the report of Farmers’ investigator, prepared November 28, 1969. Insofar as liability is concerned, no subsequent facts were learned. The only later developments were in the physical condition and health of the injured persons. Schropp was in intensive care for over thirty days. During that time, one of Farmers’ adjusters called on Schropp’s mother three times, and each time told her that if she would send the medical bills to him, Farmers would take care of them. On December 30, 1969, Robert Howard, who had been retained as counsel for Schropp, wrote to Farmers and accepted its offer to make advance payments of medical bills. He enclosed statements totaling $9,144.65. Almost a month later Farmers replied, stating that it was not then in a position to make advance payments, but it might be shortly, and it would be in touch with Howard in the near future regarding settlement.

The company did not contact Howard regarding settlement. On February 13, 1970, Howard again wrote the company. He enclosed Schropp’s medical and hospital bills, which then exceeded $26,000.00, and he made formal demand for payment of the policy limits in settlement of the Schropp claim. (The policy limits were $25,000 for one person, maximum of $50,000 for each accident.) Howard fixed a ten-day time limit for acceptance of the demand.

Russell Cleeton, the claims manager who was handling the matter for Farmers, was given policy limits authority — authorization to pay the entire $50,000 to settle all claims arising out of this collision, or $25,000 to settle any one claim — on February 20, 1970. On the same date Cleeton wrote Howard, saying that it *615 would take Farmers a few days longer but “. . . we will certainly give you a decision as to your client’s claim just as soon as it is feasibly possible to do so under the circumstances.”

At that time, Cleeton was aware that the specials (hospital and medical expenses) for the other claimants totaled only four to five thousand dollars. On February 26, 1970, Cleeton shipped the company file to Mr. Turner for handling, and shortly thereafter Cleeton called Howard and told him that it would be necessary for Howard to petition for the appointment of an administrator of the Estate of Clint R. Sohl, and to file a formal claim in that proceeding.

Howard, as attorney for Schropp, then filed a petition for administration of the Estate of Clint R. Sohl in the probate court of Pawnee County, Kansas, on March 12, 1970. On March 26, the matter came on for hearing. The court appointed Morgan Wright as administrator, and issued letters of administration to him. Farmers, having resisted Wright’s appointment, authorized its attorneys, who were acting as counsel for Sohl’s parents, to appeal Wright’s appointment to the district court. The district court heard the matter on May 19,1970, and affirmed the orders of the probate court and the appointment of Wright as administrator. Petitions for allowance of demands were filed against the estate by Michael D. Schropp, Michael G. Blackman, and Stephen M. Arnold.

Farmers then decided not to litigate the matter in Pawnee County. On July 2, 1970, it filed a petition for declaratory judgment in the district court of Barton County, Kansas, joining Blackman, Schropp, Dunham, Arnold, and the parents and next of kin of Daryl C. Thompson as defendants. Farmers had made no overtures or offers of settlement to any of the parties. The policy limits authority given to its claims manager in February remained unexercised.

Farmers paid $50,000 into court at the time the declaratory judgment action was filed. It alleged that it was in doubt as to whether it should pay any part of the proceeds to the defendants; it asked the court to determine its rights and those of the defendants; and it asked that it be released from all further liability to the defendants. Schropp moved to join the Estate of Sohl as an additional party defendant; Farmers opposed that motion. After hearing, the district court found the estate to be a necessary party *616 and granted the motion, joining Sohl’s estate as a party defendant.

On September 15, 1970, counsel for Blackman, Schropp, Dun-ham, Arnold, and for the parents of Thompson, stipulated that by reason of the extremely serious injuries sustained by Schropp, the value of his claim against the Estate of Sohl greatly exceeded $25,000, that being represented by Farmers to be the limit of coverage which would apply to the Schropp claim. Counsel further stipulated as to the apportionment of the remaining $25,000 among defendants Blackman, Dunham, Arnold, and the parents of Thompson. This stipulation, by its terms without prejudice to the claims of Schropp against Farmers and the Estate of Sohl, was filed September 15,1970. It was approved on March 2, 1971, and disbursement of the $25,000 apportioned as stipulated between Blackman, Dunham, Arnold, and the parents of Thompson, was ordered, all without prejudice to the claims of Schropp. The remaining $25,000 was not disbursed at this time.

Schropp, meanwhile, filed a counterclaim against Farmers and a cross-claim against the Estate of Sohl in the declaratory judgment action. He sought judgment against Farmers for $26,817.55, representing his total medical and hospital expense, which he claimed Farmers had contracted to pay; he sought judgment against the Estate of Sohl for $776,817.55 for damages based on negligence, and he sought an additional judgment against Farmers for $750,000 of that amount, contending that Farmers had handled his claim in a negligent manner and without good faith, had failed and refused to settle the claim within its policy limits, and had demonstrated negligence and bad faith in violation of its duties to its insured, and he contended that Farmers had obligated itself to the Estate of Sohl and to Schropp to pay the full amount of his loss.

Farmers replied.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
567 P.2d 1359, 222 Kan. 612, 1977 Kan. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-insurance-exchange-v-schropp-kan-1977.