Home Indemnity Co. v. Finley

261 F. Supp. 318, 1966 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7555
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Arkansas
DecidedDecember 9, 1966
DocketNo. LR-65-C-205
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 261 F. Supp. 318 (Home Indemnity Co. v. Finley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Home Indemnity Co. v. Finley, 261 F. Supp. 318, 1966 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7555 (E.D. Ark. 1966).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

HENLEY, Chief Judge.

This declaratory judgment suit is now before the Court on an amended motion filed by plaintiff, The Home Indemnity Company, following a non-jury trial but prior to entry of judgment. By its motion plaintiff asks, in effect, that the Court vacate and reverse its orally announced finding and conclusion that at the time of a motor vehicle collision to be described the defendant Margriet Long was an omnibus insured under a liability policy issued by plaintiff to Mrs. Long’s employer, the defendant Sammy J. Kelly, and that she is presently entitled to protection under that policy. The motion is opposed by the defendants Albert Finley and Lois Finley, his wife, and by the defendant Billy Whitener. Mrs. Long has never entered any appearance in the case or filed any pleading of any kind.

The accident in question took place on October 4,1965, at a point on U. S. Highway 67 between Bald Knob and Bradford, Arkansas. Three vehicles were involved. Mrs. Long was driving a pickup truck belonging to her employer, Kelly. Albert Finley was operating a vehicle belonging to his wife; and Billy Whitener was operating his own vehicle. The collision involved the striking of the Finley car by the vehicles operated by Mrs. Long and Whitener. Mr. Finley was injured as a result of the accident, and his wife’s car was damaged.

Immediately prior to the accident Mrs. Long stated to Dorothy Brahic and Geneva Brahic that she was operating the Kelly truck with Kelly’s consent. Soon after the accident Kelly made a somewhat ambiguous statement to Arkansas State Trooper Elmer Belcher, who investigated the wreck, which statement was subject to the interpretation that Mrs. Long had Kelly’s express or implied consent to operate his truck.

However, two days after the accident Mrs. Long stated to an adjuster for the plaintiff insurance company that at the time of the collision she was operating the Kelly truck without his knowledge or consent. That statement was later reduced to writing and Mrs. Long swore to the truth of its contents.

On October 28, 1965, Mr. and Mrs. Finley filed suit in this Court against Mrs. Long, Kelly, and Whitener alleging in substance that the accident and its consequences were proximately caused by the concurrent negligence of Mrs. Long and Whitener, and that at the time of the accident Mrs. Long was acting within the scope of her employment by Kelly.

Kelly’s insurance company, plaintiff here, immediately undertook the defense of its named insured and filed an answer denying liability. However, the insurance company declined to defend the action on behalf of Margriet Long since if she was driving the truck without Kelly’s knowledge or consent, she was not covered by the policy and no duty was owed to her by the insurer.

In late November 1965 plaintiff commenced this action against Mrs. Long, the Finleys, and Whitener seeking a declaratory judgment to the effect that Mrs. Long did not have the consent of [320]*320Kelly to her operation of the truck, and that she was not covered or protected by the policy.

In December 1965 the discovery depositions of Long and Kelly were taken in both cases. In both depositions the deponents swore that when the accident occurred Mrs. Long did not have Kelly’s consent to drive the truck.

Armed with those depositions plaintiff moved for summary judgment. The Finleys countered with an affidavit from Trooper Belcher referring to the earlier oral statement of Kelly. The motion was denied.

The cases were consolidated for purposes of trial and were heard by the Court without a jury. In the course of the trial Mrs. Long, who had filed no answer, was called to the stand as a witness for the Finleys. She was not asked about the accident but was asked whether she had Kelly’s permission to drive the truck on the occasion in question. In direct contradiction of her earlier sworn statement to the adjuster and of her own deposition she swore that she had Kelly’s permission at the time, and she persisted in that testimony despite a vigorous cross examination by counsel for Kelly and the insurance company.

At the conclusion of the trial the Court announced its findings and conclusions from the bench. It was found that the accident was proximately caused by the concurrent negligence of Whitener and Long, but that at the time of the accident Mrs. Long was not acting in the scope of her employment by Kelly; that Long was 75 percent to blame for the accident, and that Whitener was 25 percent to blame; that Mr. Finley had been damaged to the extent of $16,500 and that Mrs. Finley had been damaged to the extent of $3,165. It was also found that Mrs. Long was driving the Kelly truck with Kelly’s permission, so that she would have been an omnibus insured under the policy.

The legal consequences of those findings, to which findings the Court now adheres, were that Mr. and Mrs. Finley would be entitled to judgment against Whitener and Mrs. Long, jointly and severally, but with rights of contributior. between the two defendants, and that plaintiff in this case would be liable, on account of the status of Mrs. Long, to pay or contribute to the payment of the Finley judgment up to its policy limits. Since it had been found that Mrs. Long was not acting in the scope of her employment when the accident occurred, it followed that Kelly would be entitled to a dismissal of the personal injury suit against him.

Based upon the fact that Mrs. Long had testified in direct contradiction to her previous sworn statement and depositions, plaintiff filed the instant motion before entry of judgment in either case. It is the theory of plaintiff that the conduct on the part of Mrs. Long which has been described amounted to a violation of the standard cooperation clause contained in the policy.

In resisting the motion the Finleys and Whitener urge that plaintiff’s present contention cannot be considered post-trial; that plaintiff waived the cooperation of Mrs. Long and is estopped to rely on her alleged lack of cooperation; and that in any event the cooperation clause does not apply to the situation presented here.

The problem presented by the motion has been complicated perhaps by the fact that the declaratory judgment suit and the personal injury suit were tried together, and that the same attorney represented the plaintiff in this case and the defendant Kelly in the personal injury case. The Court will say that at an early stage it rejected plaintiff’s request for a trial of this suit in advance of a trial of the personal injury suit and, on its own motion, consolidated the two cases for trial. Further, in the course of the trial the Court reserved ruling on Kelly’s motion for judgment at the close of the Finleys’ case.

The contention of the defendants that plaintiff’s present contention cannot be heard post-trial is without merit. When the complaint in this case was filed, plaintiff may well have [321]*321thought that it had no basis or occasion for pleading lack of cooperation as an alternative to a plea of non-coverage. Actually, plaintiff’s problem about cooperation did not really arise until Mrs. Long after persisting for months, except for her oral unsworn statement to the Bahics, in her position that she lacked permission to drive the truck, suddenly did an about face and gave testimony which the Court ultimately credited.

Nor is there any merit to defendants’ claim of waiver and estoppel.

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261 F. Supp. 318, 1966 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-indemnity-co-v-finley-ared-1966.