Gurley v. Montgomery First National Bank, N.A.

160 S.W.3d 863, 2005 WL 995964, 2005 Mo. App. LEXIS 660
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 29, 2005
Docket26190
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 160 S.W.3d 863 (Gurley v. Montgomery First National Bank, N.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gurley v. Montgomery First National Bank, N.A., 160 S.W.3d 863, 2005 WL 995964, 2005 Mo. App. LEXIS 660 (Mo. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

KENNETH W. SHRUM, Judge.

Mary Gurley (“Plaintiff”) sought damages from Montgomery First National Bank (“Bank”) on a negligent misrepresentation theory. Specifically, she alleged Bank had continuously represented that her husband was insured by a term life policy, but belatedly (after her husband died), she learned no such coverage existed.

*866 The jury awarded Plaintiff $150,000 for damages and attorney fees. In a judgment on remittitur, the trial court reduced this amount to $143,368.57. Bank appeals, presenting four claims of trial court error: (1) error in denying Bank’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (“JNOV”); (2) instructional error (verdict director); (3) error in the admission of testimony; and (4) error in awarding attorney fees.

We reverse that part of the judgment awarding attorney fees to Plaintiff. In all other respects, the judgment is affirmed as modified.

FACTS

Plaintiff married Bill Gurley (“Bill”) in 1950. The couple lived on a farm in Pem-iscott County, Missouri, for most of their married life. 1 Bill’s farm business was the family’s only income source, as Plaintiff was a “housewife” who raised their six children. As part of the farming operation, Bill and Plaintiff borrowed money each year.

Customarily, Bill “made two payments” on his annual crop loan, i.e., “he brought in the [farm] proceeds, and the settlement in February, and then, when he gathered the wheat, he’d take in the wheat settlement and everything, and ... July, or August, there, and settle.” Each year that Plaintiff and Bill borrowed money, they requested credit life insurance coverage insuring Bill’s life. The premium for the credit life insurance was then included in the farm loan. The obvious purpose was to protect Plaintiffs economic interests should Bill die, i.e., assure Plaintiff would be debt free since she could not repay a loan out of her $600 monthly social security benefit.

In November 1997, Plaintiff and Bill borrowed $91,570 from Bank. The loan included an amount needed to buy a sixteen-month credit life insurance policy for Bill. By its terms, the loan matured in February 1999. However, a county-wide crop failure and resultant income loss prevented Bill and Plaintiff from paying the note in full at maturity.. For the next two years, the loan was extended or renewed several times. When Bill died on February 9, 2001, the loan was not yet fully paid.

Plaintiff filed this suit after learning the life insurance coverage on Bill had expired before he died. She testified that during the two-year period when the loan was either extended or renewed, Bank consistently told Bill and her that Bill had credit life insurance; that Bank employees made such. representations each time she and Bill dealt with them; that based on these representations, the couple did not seek insurance elsewhere as they believed adequate coverage existed through Bank; and that Bill died believing he had life insurance that would cover the couple’s indebtedness to Bank. Plaintiff specifically denied being notified by Bank that theré was no life insurance coverage after the initial loan period.

Contrarily, Bank’s vice-president Bill Sharp (“Sharp”) testified that before Bill died, he sent a letter to Plaintiff and Bill that informed them no credit life insurance existed. Sharp explained that after the initial sixteen-month period of insurance expired, neither Bill nor Plaintiff completed the necessary paperwork to extend or obtain additional coverage. According to Sharp, this lack of cooperation continued despite the Bank informing them of the deficiency, i.e., not having credit life insur- *867 anee. In his words, the couple took no action to cure the problem.

The jury found for Plaintiff and this appeal followed.

DISCUSSION AND DECISION

Point I: Did Plaintiff Fail To Make Submissible Case?

Bank’s first point maintains the trial judge erred when he denied its motion for JNOV because Plaintiff failed to present sufficient evidence to make a submissible case based on a negligent misrepresentation theory. In the argument part of its brief, Bank characterizes Plaintiff’s testimony as “vague, misleading and erroneous” and then states, in conclusory fashion, that her testimony does not “constitute sufficient evidence to make out a submissi-ble case.” Our review of this point is undertaken with these following principles in mind.

To make a submissible case of negligent misrepresentation, Plaintiff had to prove: (1) the speaker supplied information in the course of his or her business; (2) due to the speaker’s failure to exercise reasonable care, the information was false; (3) the information was intentionally provided for the guidance of a limited group of persons in a particular business transaction; and (4) in justifiably relying on such information, the listener suffered a pecuniary loss. Kesselring v. St. Louis Group, Inc., 74 S.W.3d 809, 818[2] (Mo.App.2002).

We will reverse a judgment in a jury-tried case on the grounds of insufficient evidence only where there is a “complete absence of probative fact” to support the jury’s verdict. Bland v. IMCO Recycling, Inc., 67 S.W.3d 673, 682[25] (Mo.App.2002). Moreover, we review the evidence in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, disregarding all contrary evidence. Id. at 682[23J. A case should only be taken from a jury when the facts in evidence and the inferences fairly drawn therefrom are so strongly against the plaintiff as to leave no room for reasonable minds to differ. Wright v. Over-The-Road, 945 S.W.2d 481, 498 (Mo.App.1997).

Here, Plaintiff testified unequivocally that each time she and Bill signed loan documents with Bank (including extension agreements), they were told by Bank employees that Bill would have credit life insurance. Obviously, the “insurance coverage” statements attributed to Bank employees by Plaintiff were made in the course of Bank’s business and were intentionally provided by Bank to Plaintiff and Bill. Thus, the first element was proven.

As to the second element, admittedly, the information given Bill and Plaintiff was false. Bill was not insured after the initial sixteen-month coverage period, despite Bank employees’ representations to the contrary. On this record, the jury reasonably could have inferred that Bank employees who made these representations failed to use reasonable care, either by not following up and getting the insurance, or by not checking the file and learning that the original policy was for only a sixteen-month term. Sufficient evidence exists to satisfy element two.

Third, the information given by Bank’s employees to Plaintiff and Bill, i.e., Bill had credit life insurance, was not part of a broad credit life sales program or other generalized promotion by Bank.

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Bluebook (online)
160 S.W.3d 863, 2005 WL 995964, 2005 Mo. App. LEXIS 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gurley-v-montgomery-first-national-bank-na-moctapp-2005.