Insurance Company of North America v. Kay Frances Davis

398 F.2d 418, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 6091
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 16, 1968
Docket25347_1
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 398 F.2d 418 (Insurance Company of North America v. Kay Frances Davis) 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
Insurance Company of North America v. Kay Frances Davis, 398 F.2d 418, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 6091 (5th Cir. 1968).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Circuit Judge:

This was an action brought by appellee Kay Frances Davis to recover an amount asserted to be due under one of the provisions of an insurance policy issued by appellant Insurance Company of North America. The district court granted ap-pellee’s motion for summary judgment for the amount sued for, together with a penalty of twelve per cent plus reasonable attorneys fees under a Texas statute. The district court deferred the fixing of the amount of attorneys fees. Appellant appeals from this adverse judgment.

Mrs. Davis brought suit in her individual capacity and as natural tutrix of her minor children to recover the proceeds of an insurance policy allegedly due as a result of the death of her husband, Daniel Davis, who on October 20, 1966, was killed while a passenger in a helicopter owned and operated by Petroleum Helicopters, but chartered to Trunkline Gas Company. Appellant INA had in full force and effect an insurance policy issued to Trunkline and certain affiliated companies. The policy was mainly a liability policy insuring the named insureds against liability for personal injury or death arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use of the aircraft covered by the policy.

There is no issue that the policy in question covered the aircraft in which Davis was killed. The issue concerns Coverage D of the policy, which provided as follows:

“Coverage D — Admitted Liability and Weekly Indemnity. That the company’s limit of liability under Coverage B for each person, as recorded in Condition #1 shall be offered in payment by the company, to the extent of the applicable limit of liability hereinafter indicated in the Schedule of Benefits, in full settlement of any claim because of bodily injury sustained by a passenger (as defined in the policy) carried in an insured aircraft whether or not the insured is legally liable in respect of such bodily injury claim, provided (a) bodily injury results in loss of life, dismemberment or disability as described in the Schedule of Benefits, and (b) the injured passenger, or any persons claiming by, through or under him, shall first execute a full release for oil claims for damages against the insured in the manner requested by the company. The word ‘passenger’ shall include any employee of the insured, whether or not such injury is sustained while such employee is engaged in the employment of the insured. Where bodily injury is sustained by an employee while engaged in the employment of the insured, such employee, or any persons claiming by, through or under him, shall not be required to release the insured in respect of claims under any workmen’s compensation law. In the event the injured passenger or any persons claiming by, through or under him, shall fail to accept in writing within thirty days from the date of offer, the voluntary payment offered under the declarations of this policy, the company will no longer be bound by the undertakings expressed in this coverage and this policy shall operate as though this coverage had never been issued.” (Emphasis added.)

After preliminary negotiations, appellant INA, pursuant to provisions of Coverage D, sent a letter to appellee’s attorney offering a payment of $100,000.-00 in return for a release to be signed by all persons claiming under Mr. Davis. Appellee refused to sign the requested release and meanwhile had filed suit for the amount. INA defended on the ground that it was entitled to demand a full release in return for the $100,000.00 payment. Both sides moved for summary judgment and the district court granted the appellee’s motion and denied appellant’s on the ground that the demanded release was too broad. The court held that to require such a release was in violation of the terms of the Coverage D of the policy and thus INA’s refusal to *420 pay appellee the amount due under the policy because of her refusal to sign this release constituted an arbitrary and capricious refusal to pay: “To require the plaintiff to execute this release as a condition precedent to receiving the money due under Coverage D of the policy in question was an arbitrary and unreasonable requirement not called for by the terms of this policy.”.

Appellant INA maintains that the district court erred and asserts that it was only asking for the full release as permitted by the terms of the insurance policy and that appellee was offering only a restricted release which would not afford the insured Trunkline the full protection of a full release. Appellant asserts that such release offered by ap-pellee was a limited release or covenant not to sue which would not prevent other parties sued by appellee from impleading the insured for indemnity or contribution.

The judgment of the district court that INA was not entitled to its demanded form of release is correct. The terms of Coverage D require a “full release of all claims for damages against the insured (Trunkline and affiliates) in the manner required by the company.” It is plain by the terms of the release demanded by INA that appellant was requiring much more than was authorized by the language of the contract as a condition precedent to payment. The demanded release in question provided in part that Mrs. Davis and her children

“forever compromise, release, acquit and discharge Insurance Company of North America, Panhandle Eastern Pipeline Company, and Andareo Production Co., Century Refining Co., National Helium Corp., and Trunkline Gas Company from and against any and all claims under said policy ANM 7 7140 and all claims for personal injury, property damage, medical expenses or any other claim whatsoever arising out of or any way relating to the death of Daniel W. Davis which resulted from a helicopter crash on or about October 20, 1966 near Leland, Mississippi, including but not limited to those matters asserted in the action entitled Kay Frances Davis v. Insurance Company of North America, No. 117-222 of the docket of the Nineteenth Judicial District Court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge, State of Louisiana, and she does hereby authorize her counsel of record, Dan A. Spencer, Esq., to have the said suit dismissed with prejudice, each party to bear her of its own respective costs.” (Emphasis added.)

It is interesting to note that appellees were known to INA at the time of the demanded release to have instituted a separate suit against Petroleum Helicopters, from whom Trunkline chartered the helicopter involved on the theory as evidenced by a letter written by appellee’s counsel to INA’s counsel, that Petroleum was liable because Trunkline’s charter contract with Petroleum expressly provided for full control of the aircraft by employees of Petroleum. Thus, ap-pellee refused to sign the release on the theory that to do so would amount to a complete release of all third parties even though they were not insured under the policy in question, and that such a release would release Petroleum who was not covered by the policy in question and against whom appellee believed she had a valid cause of action. The district court intelligently theorized why INA was interested in obtaining this kind of release. The claims manager of INA stated in his deposition that he was aware of the existence of an insurance policy of INA insuring Petroleum.

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398 F.2d 418, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 6091, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/insurance-company-of-north-america-v-kay-frances-davis-ca5-1968.