Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York v. Southall

1967 OK 235, 435 P.2d 119
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 21, 1967
Docket41019
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1967 OK 235 (Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York v. Southall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York v. Southall, 1967 OK 235, 435 P.2d 119 (Okla. 1967).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This case involves garnishment proceedings in Tulsa County District Court’s Cause No. 99499, in which a judgment of $7500.00 in damages obtained by Laurissa Southall, as plaintiff, against Sarah Dunn and Horace W. Oates, as defendants, for injuries to her person and automobile, as a result of an automobile collision, was affirmed in Dunn v. Southall, Okl., 373 P.2d 35.

Thereafter, the defendant Dunn’s insurance carrier, Automobile Club Insurance Company, hereinafter referred to as “AC”, satisfied $5,000.00 of said $7500.00 joint judgment by paying Southall that coverage limit of said defendant’s policy with said Company.

Thereafter, when Southall attempted, by garnishment proceedings, to obtain satisfaction of the twenty-five-hundred-dollar unsatisfied balance of her judgment out of money, or assets, she evidently thought Sarah Dunn’s co-defendant, the other judgment debtor, Oates, had in the custody of a Tulsa Bank, Oates commenced efforts to compel AC Insurance Company, as a garnishee, to pay that part also, and to obtain damages against AC by suing it in Cause No. 64116, of Tulsa County’s Common Pleas Court for its alleged negligence, not only in failing to obtain a settlement of Dunn v. Southall, supra, at a figure less than the amount of the judgment Southall later obtained therein, but also in the manner in which the attorneys, procured to represent Sarah Dunn and him (as “an additional insured” under the policy said Company had issued to her) had handled their defense in the trial of that case.

In his affidavit for the garnishment of the AC Company, Oates alleged most of the. same facts concerning said Company’s alleged neglect of his and Sarah Dunn’s interests in the matter of Laurissa South-all’s chose in action against them, as he-alleged in the Common Pleas Court Cause-No. 64116, supra, against said Company.

The particular phase of the controversy directly involved in this appeal, began when. Southall, the judgment creditor, proceeded, in garnishment against Oates’ insurance-carrier, the plaintiff in error, hereinafter-referred to as “garnishee”.

Pursuant to the court order served upon it to reveal whether or not it was indebted to Oates, this garnishee took the position,, in its answer to the order, that, if it had any obligation to indemnify Oates against such a judgment as Southall had obtained against him and his co-defendant in the Dunn Case, supra, it was only “excess liability”, that did not accrue until the “primary” insurance carrier (AC) had discharged all of its obligations to both the judgment creditors. (Oates, as well as Dunn). As evidence that the AC Company had not yet done this,, said garnishee attached to its answer, as “Exhibit A”, a copy of Oates’ petition in the-Common Pleas Court Cause No. 64116,. supra.

After a hearing on the garnishee’s answer, at which it was stipulated that if' Oates were present as a witness “he would', testify to everything in” the affidavit he had filed for the garnishment of the AC Insurance Company, and copies of Dunn’s, policy from AC, and Oates’ policy from the-present garnishee (plaintiff in error), were-both introduced in evidence, the court entered the order complained of in this appeal, decreeing and directing this garnishee to-pay into the Clerk of said Court to await distribution pending disposition of the Common Pleas Court Cause No. 64116, supra,, the sum of $2500.00 plus interest from the-date of the garnishment summons issued for said garnishee. After the overruling of’ its motion for a new trial, this garnishee-lodged the present appeal on original record.

*121 The garnishee’s sole proposition for reversal is as follows :

“The Trial Court erred in holding that a judgment creditor has the right to garnishee an excess insurance carrier of the judgment debtor when there is a controversy and suit pending between the judgment debtor and the primary insurance ■carrier to determine whether or not the primary insurance carrier has discharged all of its liability on behalf of the judgment debtor.”

In its argument under this proposition, the •garnishee attempts to show that, on the basis of the evidence that must be considered as introduced under the above mentioned stipulation of counsel, it was established that the ■other insurer, the AC Company, had not discharged its duties to Dunn and Oates in ■the matter of protecting them against liability, in excess of its policy limits. The legal ■conclusions drawn in said argument from what may be accepted as the facts concerning AC’s neglect in that regard are disputed by counsel for the defendant in error, Laurissa Southall (hereinafter referred to as “garnisher”) as not contemplated in the stipulation he made with this garnishee’s ■counsel at the trial; but, regardless of the truth, or untruth, of the charges made regarding AC’s neglect in the handling of the controversy which resulted in the seventy-five-hundred-dollar judgment in the Dunn Case, supra, perhaps the least that can be said of AC’s potential liability to this garnishee’s insured, Oates, is that it is “contingent”, or dependent, upon the outcome •of the Common Pleas Court case (No. ■64116, supra). Garnishee contends that, by the same token, its “excess liability”, under the “Other Insurance” provisions of the policy it issued Oates, is also contingent and unliquidated, until that case is tried and a final judgment entered therein. As demonstrating that such a contingent liability is not garnishable, garnishee cites the provisions of Tit. 12 O.S.1961, § 1186. The only part of said statute which the garnishee relies upon, as prohibiting its garnishment ■in this case, is as follows:

“No judgment shall be rendered upon a liability of the garnishee arising—
* ⅜ * * * *
“Fourth, By reason of any money or other thing owing from him to the defendant, unless before judgment against the defendant it shall become due absolutely and without depending on any future emergency.
* * * * * *_»

It may be conceded that the AC Insurance Company’s liability, if any, to Dunn and Oates for the way in which it handled Laurissa Southall’s claim against them (out of which the Dunn Case, supra, evolved) will not “become due absolutely” until Cause No. 64116, supra, is tried and a final judgment entered therein; and gar-nisher’s argument is to the effect that it may never be tried, and that Oates might never have instituted such an action, in either of which events, she (Southall) “might wait in vain and perhaps forever” to collect from this additional insurer the rest of her judgment in the Dunn Case, supra.

There is an important difference between the kind of cause of action, and potential liability, involved in Oates’ suit against AC Company pending in the Common Pleas Court (No. 64116, supra) and the obligation that the garnisher in the present District Court garnishment proceedings is attempting to enforce against garnishee under the “Other Insurance” provisions of its insurance contract or policy with Oates. This provision is as follows:

“Other Insurance

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United Adjustment Services, Inc. v. Professional Insurors Agency, LLC
2013 OK CIV APP 67 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2013)
Wilson v. Gipson Ex Rel. Gipson
1988 OK 35 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1988)
Tyson v. Casualty Corp. of America, Inc.
560 P.2d 238 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 1977)
Cue v. Casualty Corporation of America
537 P.2d 349 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 1975)
Steffens v. American Standard Insurance Co. of Wisconsin
181 N.W.2d 174 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1970)
Pringle v. Robertson
465 P.2d 223 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1967 OK 235, 435 P.2d 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-casualty-co-of-new-york-v-southall-okla-1967.