General Insurance Company of America, and Interveners, Sherman L. Jones v. Western Fire & Casualty Company

241 F.2d 289
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 26, 1957
Docket16196
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 241 F.2d 289 (General Insurance Company of America, and Interveners, Sherman L. Jones v. Western Fire & Casualty Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Insurance Company of America, and Interveners, Sherman L. Jones v. Western Fire & Casualty Company, 241 F.2d 289 (5th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

John R. BROWN, Circuit Judge.

Here, as now elsewhére so common, e. g., Continental Casualty Co. v. Suttenfield, 5 Cir., 236 F.2d 433, 435; United Services Automobile Ass’n v. Russom, 5 Cir., 241 F.2d 296, the traffic accident has become a mere incident to the vigorous battle between insurers, each of whom by a full use of fluid inconsistent defenses reminiscent of c immon law pleading disclaim all liability but then assert that another, not it, is liable. Maryland Casualty Co. v. Southern Farm Bureau Casualty Ins. Co., 5 Cir., 235 F.2d 679.

In that struggle, substituted for the forgotten circumstances of the occurrence are the collateral controversies, removed in time and distance, relating to the issuance of the policies, conduct and action of the assuréds, underwriters, agents, application and construction of abstruse policy clauses; and the like.

*291 So, it is here: 1 if Western’s 2 policy was in force on the Jones Ford, it is liable for all. If not, then General, 3 under the drive-other-car extension of its policy bears the whole loss.

The District Court, in a non-jury trial, held that (a) Western’s policy was void because of misrepresentations by Mrs. Jones and her son Sherman concerning ownership of the 1950 Plymouth; and (b) the 1951 Ford was not a “newly acquired automobile” under Clause IV of the policy, note 2, supra.

Unlike Didlake v. Standard Insurance Co., 10 Cir., 195 F.2d 247, 33 A.L.R.2d 941, so much relied on by Western, where a willful, purposeful scheme was used to deceive both agent and company into believing that the named adult, rather than the minor for whom no insurance could *292 be procured at all, was the sole owner and expected user of the car, this record compels the conclusion and reflects an underlying approach that if there were misrepresentation, it is so merely because of what the law attaches to conduct. For nowhere is there a suggestion that mother or son were knowingly misstating, or attempting to conceal, facts, or that Agent Hutson was misled by these long-time acquaintances or was consciously doing wrong. The mother, a widow running a farm with all of its chores, taking in washing, doing cleaning and other odd jobs for support of her family, and Sherman, the twenty-year-old son just returned from Korea with a 100% total disability rating for war-inflicted wounds, were each ignorant of insurance and business matters. What they were trying to do — What the policy of the Texas Motor Vehicle Safety Responsibility Law, Art. 670Ih, Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes, encourages its citizens to do, is to procure liability insurance protecting them and members of the public for the operation of the 1950 Plymouth car in the affairs of mother and son. In that process, they were attempting fully to state all of the facts, furnish all of the information and answer all of the que¡ not adequate, or if noi by Agent Hutson, or by him to the compan cause of anything whic perienced people consci stions. If it was fully understood ¿orrectly reported y, it was not bell these two inex-iously did.

Title to the 1950 Plymouth was in the name of both mother and son. It was the third of a succession of used Plym-ouths purchased since the boy’s return from war and needed by him in his frequent trips to Veterans Hospitals for treatment. The first, á 1941 model, was paid for entirely by the mother. Traded in as a substantial payment for a second 1941' model, the balance on it was paid one-third by the mother and two-thirds by the son. With her'consent, this was traded for the 1950 Plymouth. While the mother was liable ‘as a co-signer on the Conditional Sales Contract, it was intended that Sherman would make all of the payments from hiq Government disability benefits.

Western’s position, sustained below, was that while title was in (or partly in) Mrs. Jones, the car “really” belonged to the boy so that there was a breach of the representation 4 oí ownership.

*293 In the discussion with Agent Hutson, mother or son, or both, stated the facts about the title and the co-signed notes. The mother, apparently because another agent had declined to issue a policy for the stated reason that the boy was a minor, asked if the insurance couldn’t be put in Sherman’s name. Hutson replied that he could not issue a policy to a minor, so it would have to be in Mrs. Jones’ name. While it was done in this fashion, Agent Hutson manifested his full understanding that Sherman was the one principally concerned as the premium for liability coverage, paid by Sherman’s check for the precise amount (the mother paid for medical reimbursement coverage), was calculated under the Texas Manual Rate for drivers under age 25. And with the policy, he delivered to each of them in their respective names, an identification card showing that the 1950 Plymouth was issued by Western.

The Trial Court’s findings of misrepresentation, 5 if a finding of fact as distinguished from the possible legal effect of conduct, lack requisite foundation and are thus clearly erroneous under Fed.Rules Civ.Proc. rule 52(a), 28 U.S.C.A. The testimony of mother and son was clear that they gave Agent Hut-son the full facts concerning the nature of Sherman’s ownership and interest in the car. 6 Conceding that, as interested parties, the Court had wide latitude in rejecting it altogether, there is an entire want of evidence then to support the contrary fact — -i.e., misrepresentation of sole ownership in the mother. This is so because Agent Hutson, as a witness, would neither admit nor deny that the Joneses had given the information testified to by them. 7

On this analysis the findings, we think, were, in reality a conclusion that Western was deceived because what Hutson knew was not imputable to it. This rests, in turn, on the assumption that Agent Hutson had no authority whatever to write insurance to cover liabilities of a minor owner. But there is *294 no substantial foundation for this. By ingenious cross examination skillfully executed, mother and son, repeated extensively in the various shades presented by permissible leading questions, the idea that Hutson had told them he could not write a policy for minors and if he did, the company would send it back. The scope of agency can, however, hardly be established by such declarations of the agent, 2 Tex.Jur., Agency, § 125; Foote v. De Bogory, Tex.Civ.App., 179 S.W.2d 983, error refused, WM; McCormick on Evidence, § 244, p. 519 (1954).

Hutson’s own testimony, had it stood alone, might possibly have permitted such a finding.

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241 F.2d 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-insurance-company-of-america-and-interveners-sherman-l-jones-v-ca5-1957.