Frontier Insurance Agency, Inc. v. Hartford Fire Insurance

499 P.2d 1302, 262 Or. 470, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 497
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 27, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 499 P.2d 1302 (Frontier Insurance Agency, Inc. v. Hartford Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frontier Insurance Agency, Inc. v. Hartford Fire Insurance, 499 P.2d 1302, 262 Or. 470, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 497 (Or. 1972).

Opinion

*473 McAllister, j.

This is a declaratory judgment proceeding to determine the relative rights and liabilities between Hartford Fire Insurance Company, its agent, Frontier Insurance Agency, Inc., and its alleged insured, Gillespie Decals, Inc. The basic issue is whether Hartford is liable to Gillespie on an oral contract of insurance made by Frontier as Hartford’s agent. The trial court found that Hartford was liable to Gillespie and that Hartford was not entitled to indemnity from Frontier. Hartford appeals. We affirm.

The controversy arose out of the following circumstances. Gillespie was in the printing business in Portland and prior to August 1968 its sole place of business was 1910 SW Stevenson Road. Frontier is an independent insurance agency which represents a number of insurance companies, including Hartford. For many years Frontier handled all of Gillespie’s insurance business. On May 16, 1968, Hartford issued to Gillespie, through Frontier, its fire policy #52 FS 155139 for a term of three years, insuring for the sum of $50,000 a stock of merchandise located at 1910 SW Stevenson Road.

In August 1968 Gillespie expanded its business into a second location at 1131 SE Umatilla Avenue. At that time Mr. Locke, Gillespie’s General Manager, and Mr. Cheatham, Frontier’s President, discussed the insurance changes necessary because of Gillespie’s expansion into the additional location. It was agreed that the insurance coverage at the new location would include $50,000 fire insurance on the stock of merchandise and fire insurance on some new machinery, a Friden computer, and the accounts receivable records. All the new insurance was to be effective at the time *474 of the move in August 1968. Cheatham advised Gillespie that the stock of merchandise at the new location would be insured by adding the coverage to Hartford’s policy # 52 FS 155139.

For some unexplained reason Frontier apparently made no effort to obtain the additional insurance for Gillespie until about March 1,1969. At about that time Cheatham ordered from Hartford’s Portland office a fire insurance policy covering the equipment at the new location, including the computer, and a new policy covering those items for $37,000 was issued by Hartford.

Although Frontier could order new policies from Hartford’s Portland office, it was necessary that amendments to existing policies be ordered from Hartford’s Seattle office. Cheatham testified that he sent a memorandum dated March 3, 1969, to Hartford’s Seattle office requesting Hartford to amend policy # 52 FS 155139 to provide $50,000 fire coverage on the stock of merchandise at Gillespie’s new location. Hartford contends that it never received the memorandum and therefore took no action to provide the insurance requested therein. Frontier did not follow up its request and no insurance was written on the Gillespie stock at the Umatilla Avenue location.

A fire on January 25, 1970, at the Umatilla location resulted in an estimated loss of $107,571.81. Hartford paid that portion of the loss covered by its policy on the machinery and computer, but refused to pay for the loss to the stock of merchandise, contending that it had written no insurance covering the merchandise at the Umatilla location. This proceeding was *475 thereafter brought by Frontier to determine the inter se rights and liabilities of the parties.

Frontier filed a “Complaint in Equity for Declaratory Decree and Judgment,” naming Hartford and Gillespie as defendants. The complaint prayed for a declaration of the rights of all the parties, including a declaration that Frontier was not liable to either of the defendants, and for a decree reforming the insurance policy to include the merchandise at the Umatilla Street location up to $50,000. The complaint also prayed that Gillespie have a judgment against Hartford on the policy.

Although a similar procedure was employed in Leavens v. Northwestern Mutual Ins., 249 Or 418, 439 P2d 17 (1968), and there has been no objection to the procedure in this case, we have doubts about Frontier’s standing to assert Gillespie’s rights against Hartford. However, Gillespie filed a cross-complaint alleging that Hartford, through its agent Frontier, agreed to provide the additional coverage under the existing policy, and sought a declaration of its rights against Hartford and a judgment on the policy. By this cross-complaint, which is authorized by OES 16.315 (1) (a), Gillespie seeks the same relief which Frontier sought on its behalf. In Recall Bennett Com. v. Bennett, 196 Or 299, 249 P2d 479 (1952) this court held that omissions in the complaint in a declaratory judgment proceeding *476 were supplied by the allegations of a cross-complaint. The opinion quotes with approval the following from 1 Anderson, Declaratory Judgments § 306, p 707:

*475 “(a) One arising out of the occurrence or transaction set ’ forth in the complaint; * *
*476 “ ‘So, whether a complaint for a declaratory judgment states a cause of action is immaterial, where the defendant interposed a cross pleading tendering the same issues and a judgment thereon constitutes a complete adjudication of the rights of the parties since the defendant by tendering such counterclaim or cross-complaint became a plaintiff in effect and invoked the jurisdiction of the court and submitted to it.’ ” 196 Or at 320.

In the present case Gillespie has, by its cross-complaint, acquiesced in Frontier’s choice of forum, and Hartford has made no objection to the procedure employed. We therefore consider the issues raised by the parties as properly before us, but do not intend to express our approval of the procedure employed here and in Leavens in which an insurance agent, in an attempt to forestall claims by a disappointed client, employs declaratory judgment procedures to assert the client’s claims against the insurance company.

We next consider the scope of our review. Hartford contends that the case is in equity and that it is entitled to a review de novo. This depends on whether this is a suit in equity to reform Hartford’s policy 52 FS 155139 or whether it is an action at law on an oral contract to insure by amending the above-numbered policy. We think the question is answered by the pleadings.

Frontier expressed the gravamen of its complaint in the following language:

“That on or about the 3rd day of March, 1969, at the request of the defendant Gillespie Decals, Inc., the plaintiff [Frontier], acting on behalf and *477 as agent of the defendant Hartford Fire Insurance Company, bound and committed said company to a contract of fire insurance with the defendant Gillespie Decals, Inc. covering the contents of a second location at 1131 S. E. Umatilla Avenue, Portland, Oregon, in the sum of $50,000 and the said second location to be added to the aforesaid policy No. 52 FS 155139

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Bluebook (online)
499 P.2d 1302, 262 Or. 470, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frontier-insurance-agency-inc-v-hartford-fire-insurance-or-1972.