Harold Rabb v. Public National Insurance Company

243 F.2d 940, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 3014
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 10, 1957
Docket12984_1
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 243 F.2d 940 (Harold Rabb v. Public National Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harold Rabb v. Public National Insurance Company, 243 F.2d 940, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 3014 (6th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

SHACKELFORD MILLER, Jr., Circuit Judge.

Appellee insurance company instituted this declaratory judgment action seeking a declaration of rights as to the existence or nonexistence of an oral liability insurance contract upon the automobile of an army officer, Lt. Moores, which was involved in an accident about 6:20 p. m. on May 27, 1954, near Richmond, Ky. As a result of the accident Lt. Moores was killed and the appellant, who was a passenger in the car, was injured.

Lt. Moores, whose post of duty was Fort Sill, Oklahoma, was a resident of Richmond, Ky., and was on leave at the time of the accident. He had purchased the automobile in Richmond on May 17, 1954, but was unable at the time of purchase to obtain insurance coverage through his local insurance agent because of the general policy of insurance companies not to write policies of liability insurance on military personnel, which was regarded as sub-standard and calling for a higher than usual premium rate. The companies represented by the local agent would not write an automobile policy of insurance covering a soldier. The local insurance agent undertook to secure coverage through other agents without success. Among those whom he contacted was a man named Morgan Tn Lexington, Kentucky, who was the manager of Coal Operators Casualty Company, one of the companies represented by the local agent. Morgan told the local agent that his company would not write a policy for a soldier. Some three days later, on May 26, 1954, Morgan came to Richmond to see the local agent and found him at the golf club. After talking a few minutes, the subject of insurance for Lt. Moores was brought up again and Morgan said that he believed he could help place the insurance through a friend in Louisville who wrote that kind of insurance. The local agent suggested that Morgan contact the Louisville agent by long distance phone “and see if we can get this placed for him.” The two men went to the locker room of the club and Morgan called the Louisville agent and talked to him about the matter. Whether this telephone conversation resulted in a contract of insurance covering the automobile of Lt. Moores is the issue presented. Appellant contends that this conversation constituted an oral contract of insurance covering Lt. Moores’s automobile with $25,000-$50,- *942 000 liability limits. Appellee contends no contract of insurance was entered into at that time or any time before the accident.

Under the law of Kentucky, in order for an oral contract of insurance to exist, it is necessary that the minds of the parties meet on the following essential matters: (1) the subject matter, (2) the risk insured against, (3) the rate of premium, (4) the duration of the risk, (5) the amount of insurance and (6) the identities of the parties. Shawnee Fire Insurance Co. v. Roll, 145 Ky. 113, 140 S.W. 49; Kitchen v. Yorkshire Insurance Co., 226 Ky. 376, 10 S.W.2d 1074.

There was the following evidence before the District Judge.

Morgan testified that he called the Louisville agent from the Richmond Country Club with the local agent beside him and gave the Louisville agent what “limited information” the local agent had at the moment; that he asked the Louisville agent if he would bind the risk and the agent said that he would; that he did not recall discussing with him the limits of liability; that there was no discussion of the amount of the premium; that the insured’s address, age, and occupation was necessary information for the insurer to have; that he had ridden in the automobile and from observation knew it was a shiny, new, blue Ford with Fordo-matic drive, but that he did not know the motor number or anything like that. The appellee’s agent asked for more information because he didn’t have enough information after the conversation to write the policy.

The local agent testified that Lt. Moores told him that “he had just bought an automobile and would like to have some insurance on it”; that he, the agent told Lt. Moores that “it is awfully hard for a soldier to get insurance, much less an unmarried soldier, but I will try for you”; that Lt. Moores wanted comprehensive coverage and collision and liability insurance, but the amount of liability was never mentioned; that in the conversation between Morgan and appellee’s agent, Morgan told the agent the automobile was a new 1954 Ford Tudor, valued at around $2,200 to $2,300 and had been paid for in cash and that Lt. Moores would like to have fifty dollars deductible, comprehensive coverage and twenty-five and fifty thousand liability. On cross-examination he stated it was the usual custom not to write a soldier an automobile liability policy with liability limits greater than five and ten thousand dollars, and that he had never tried to write such a policy with greater limits; that he did not tell Morgan what limits of liability he wanted; that he did not at that time know Lt. Moores’s age and that his age would make a difference with respect to writing the policy and the premium to be charged; that there never was any agreed premium; that every state has a different premium charge and he didn’t know what it would be; and that he never told Lt. Moores that he had been able to get a binder on the risk. He had previously told Lt. Moores he thought it would cost between one hundred and one hundred and fifty dollars. However, the evidence showed that such a policy with only five and ten thousand dollars limit would cost approximately $298.

Appellee’s agent testified that Morgan called him on the phone for the purpose of finding out whether he would write the type of insurance that Lt. Moores apparently wanted; that Morgan did not ask him to bind the risk and that he did not bind it; that he did not have enough information from Morgan to be able to tell whether his company would take it or couldn’t take it; that it was necessary for him to know, among other things, the applicant’s age, what he paid for the car, where he was stationed and where the car was to be operated; that Morgan was not able to give him enough information to tell what the risk was or the premium for the risk; that limits of liability were not discussed in the conversation; that the standard limit of liability coverage on a military risk was *943 five and ten thousand dollars; and that he told Morgan to send the necessary information to him and that he would then contact the local agent “and tell him what we could do with the risk.”

At 8:52 a. m., May 28, 1954, which was the day following the accident, there was received in Morgan’s office a letter from the local insurance agent, reading as follows: “Per our conversation on Mr. Moores of this morning, I am forwarding the necessary information for issuance of his policy.” The letter said that Moo'res was in the Army, stationed at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, described the automobile, and stated, “coverage comprehensive, $50.00 collision, 25/50/5 liability. This is class No. 1 and Mr. Moores is single and 26 yrs. of age.” The local agent testified that Lt. Moores’s age and where the car was to be used would have a bearing on the premium to be charged. There was a pencil notation on the bottom of this letter in Morgan’s handwriting as follows: “Bound — Wed. May 26/1954 Spurlin Ins. Agency — Telephone Conversation Morgan/Spurlin.” The letter was in turn transmitted by Morgan to appellee’s Louisville agent about noon on the same day shortly before learning of the accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 F.2d 940, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 3014, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harold-rabb-v-public-national-insurance-company-ca6-1957.