Fasce v. Clark

121 P.2d 357, 12 Wash. 2d 300
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1942
DocketNo. 28261.
StatusPublished

This text of 121 P.2d 357 (Fasce v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fasce v. Clark, 121 P.2d 357, 12 Wash. 2d 300 (Wash. 1942).

Opinion

Driver, J.

By this action, Lewis Fasce, his son-in-law and copartner, Henry Bertero, and their wives, sought to recover damages from Dorcas Clark, an in *301 surance broker doing business as Clark Investment Company, for the breach of an alleged oral contract to procure public liability insurance for a Mack truck owned by the plaintiffs. The superior court entered findings, conclusions, and judgment in favor of the defendant, and the plaintiffs appealed.

For many years prior to December 9, 1936, appellants had operated a truck garden near Everett. They owned a Studebaker truck, which was in daily use, and a Mack truck, which they used only on infrequent occasions. The respondent, who had been doing all their insurance business, in February, 1935, had sold them a policy for their Studebaker with “five and ten” limit public liability and five thousand dollar limit property damage insurance. In August, 1936, when appellants thought they might have some use for the Mack truck and had procured a state license to operate it, respondent put on a binder coverage, but the truck was not used and this temporary insurance was permitted to lapse, appellants paying no premium therefor.

On December 9, 1936, as the Mack truck was being towed along a public highway, another vehicle collided with it, and the occupants of the latter were injured. One of them brought an action against Fasce and Bertero, appellants here, and recovered a judgment in the amount of $3,300, which was affirmed in Lewis v. Bertero, 194 Wash. 186, 77 P. (2d) 786. The judgment was not satisfied, and Lewis, the judgment creditor, sued out a writ of garnishment against the Great Lakes Casualty Company, a corporation (for convenience, hereinafter called the insurance company), on the theory that, as it had issued a policy of public liability insurance on the Mack truck, which was in force at the time of the accident, the insurance company was liable for the plaintiff’s judgment. In Lewis v. Bertero, 198 Wash. 296, 88 P. (2d) 433, this *302 court held that no valid contract of insurance had ever been consummated. The facts upon which the holding was based, as found by the trial court and affirmed on appeal, are fully reviewed in the opinion. We shall only briefly summarize them here.

Miss Clark (respondent in this case) testified in the garnishment proceedings that, on December 6, 1936, at Mr. Fasce’s home, she had a conversation with him in which he told her to put insurance on the Mack truck as he would soon be using it. Mr. Fasce testified that he wanted insurance placed on the vehicle, but he also stated that, at previous times, he had operated it without insurance. There was no evidence that, in their conversations, Miss Clark and Mr. Fasce had specified the amount or kind of insurance to be written.

Miss Clark ordered a public liability and property damage insurance policy for the Mack truck from the Seattle agents of the insurance company in a letter dated December 7, 1936, which the agents received on December 10th. It was established by the evidence, however, that the letter was actually written on December 9th, the day of the accident and after Miss Clark had been informed that it had occurred. The Seattle agents wrote a policy, dated December 10th, and forwarded it to her, but Miss Clark immediately sent it back to them with a letter in which she stated: “ ... as this [policy] was ordered and paid for Dec. 7th, will you re-issue the policy correctly dated.” (The written receipt which Miss Clark had given Mr. Fasce for the premium bore the date of December 9th.) A new policy, dated December 7th, was issued and delivered to the insured. Miss Clark did not inform the insurance company or its Seattle agents that the Mack truck had been involved in an accident until after the damage action had been started.

*303 This court concluded, in the cited garnishment case, that “Bad faith on Miss Clark’s part was clearly shown,” and that Mr. Fasce and his copartner (defendants there) had acted in collusion with her to defraud the insurance company (garnishee defendant and respondent). With reference to the legal effect of the conversation of December 6th between Mr. Fasce and Miss Clark, we said:

“It cannot be held that respondent [insurance company] is liable under an oral contract for insurance, based upon the conversation between Miss Clark and defendants on the afternoon of December 6th, as the facts would not support a finding that any definite contract for any particular amount or character of insurance was made that day.”

The case at bar is based upon the theory that the conversation of December 6th constituted a binding agreement to procure public liability insurance for the Mack truck; that respondent, Miss Clark, breached the contract by failing effectively to provide such insurance; and that she is liable to appellants for the amount of the judgment recovered against them in the damage action.

The trial court, in this case, concluded that the appellants were not entitled to recover for the following reasons: First, they failed to sustain the burden of proving that a contract to procure insurance had been consummated; second, that, even if appellants had established such a contract, the judgment in the prior garnishment action would bar or estop them from asserting it; and, third, the entire transaction was vitiated by the misrepresentation and fraud which the parties employed to deceive the insurance company and obtain insurance.

Appellants, by their various assignments of error, in effect, have challenged each of the trial court’s *304 three co-ordinate grounds of decision. We shall first consider the question whether appellants proved that there was an oral contract to procure insurance. In the present case, in order to show that the terms of the contract were sufficiently definite to make it legally enforcible, appellants undertook to prove that, in the conversation of December 6th, Mr. Fasce and respondent stated and agreed that the insurance policy which she was to place on the Mack truck was to be the same as the insurance on appellants’ Studebaker truck. In the present case, they were the only witnesses who testified with reference to the conversation in question. Respondent, who was called by appellants as an adverse witness, testified:

“Q. On December 6th you talked to him [Mr. Fasce] about insurance? A. Yes. Q. Where? A. Out at his place. Q. You went out there? A. Yes. Q. What was the conversation with reference to insurance on the Mack truck? A. I said, ‘are you going to be using your truck now, are you going to ■do this work’ and he said, T think so, you had better put it on.’ Q. Were those the exact words that were used? A. I couldn’t say they are exact words, they are a good part.”

Respondent’s attention was then directed to certain testimony which she gave at the trial of the garnishment action, and she was cross-examined at length by appellants’ counsel. The following appears to be the most favorable admission which they succeeded in ■eliciting from her:

“Q. Do you recall on December 8th you talked with Mr. Fasce or Mr. Bertero? A.

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Related

Lewis v. Bertero
77 P.2d 786 (Washington Supreme Court, 1938)
Lewis v. Bertero
88 P.2d 433 (Washington Supreme Court, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
121 P.2d 357, 12 Wash. 2d 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fasce-v-clark-wash-1942.