International Ins. Co. v. Masur

404 So. 2d 1313
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 29, 1981
Docket14647
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 404 So. 2d 1313 (International Ins. Co. v. Masur) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Ins. Co. v. Masur, 404 So. 2d 1313 (La. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

404 So.2d 1313 (1981)

INTERNATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Charles D. MASUR and Reliance Insurance Company, Defendants-Appellees.

No. 14647.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

September 29, 1981.

*1314 Davenport, Files, Kelly & Marsh by William G. Kelly, Jr., Monroe, for plaintiff-appellant.

Theus, Grisham, Davis & Leigh by J. Michael Hart, Monroe, for defendant-appellee, Charles Masur.

Brittain & Williams by Joseph Payne Williams, Natchitoches, for defendant-appellee, Reliance Ins. Co.

Before PRICE, MARVIN and FRED W. JONES, Jr., JJ.

MARVIN, Judge.

In this declaratory judgment action under LRS 22:1406 D(1), defendant, the uninsured motorist insurer, appeals a judgment decreeing that uninsured motorist coverage is $750,000 rather than $25,000 which is the amount the insurer contends was selected by the named insured in lieu of the statutorily provided amount equal to the liability limits of the policy ($750,000).

Section 1406 D(1)(a) requires that uninsured motorist coverage in an automobile liability insurance policy shall be not less than the limits of bodily injury liability provided by the policy unless a named insured rejects in writing the coverage or selects lower [uninsured motorist] limits. This subsection also provides that any document signed by the named insured which initially rejects UM coverage or selects lower limits shall be legally effective whether or not that document is physically attached to the policy.[1]

*1315 The lower court held that the selection of lower UM coverage had to be both in writing and signed by the named insured, notwithstanding a finding by the lower court that the insured selected and intended, and the policy, as written and delivered before the accident here in question, provided, that the UM coverage be lower limits of $25,000 rather than the $750,000 bodily injury liability limits. We affirm.

The policy in question was effective for the one year period beginning October 1, 1978. The named insured is Monroe Scrap Materials, Inc., which, in earlier policy periods with other liability insurers, had selected $750,000 liability coverage and $25,000 UM coverage.

Before October 1, 1978, the corporation asked the Seymour Insurance Agency to review its insurance policies and make proposals to provide insurance coverage for Monroe Scrap.

Seymour discussed the matter with Meyer Weldman, majority stockholder and chief executive of the corporation, with Charles Masur, a minority stockholder, an officer of the corporation and manager of its scrap operation, and with Meyer Weldman's secretary of 35 years, Mrs. Holden, who was also office manager of the corporation. Charles Masur, Meyer Weldman's son-in-law, who was seriously injured in an automobile accident about three months after the policy was written, is a claimant-defendant in this action.

Seymour understood that Monroe Scrap desired the same liability insurance coverages it had before, including the $25,000 UM coverage and $750,000 liability coverage. Masur gave Seymour copies of prior policies. Masur also gave Seymour a copy of a current proposal by a competing insurance company (Liberty Mutual) showing the same proposed coverages of $750,000 liability and $25,000 UMC. The Seymour proposal contained the same limits. It was also shown that Masur himself signed a written selection of $25,000 UM coverage for Monroe Scrap in the policy written by another agency and another insurer for the preceding policy periods beginning October 1, 1976.[2] Masur also authorized Seymour to obtain experience rating data on Monroe Scrap from the Louisiana Insurance Rating Commission in a letter to the commission dated August 29, 1978.

The Seymour proposal of September 27, 1978, to Monroe Scrap is detailed and compares its premiums with the Liberty Mutual premiums for workers' compensation coverage, comprehensive general liability, and comprehensive automobile liability. The Seymour proposal on Monroe Scrap's desired coverages in the comprehensive automobile liability policy reads as follows:

               "COMPREHENSIVE AUTOMOBILE LIABILITY
                ----------------------------------
"Comprehensive Auto Liability:       "$750,000 Single Limit Liability
including Owned,
Non-Owned & Hired Automobiles            2,000 Medical Payments
                                        25,000 Uninsured Motorists
"Physical Damage Coverages:          "Based on Expiring Auto Policy
                                     Schedule as we [do] not
                                     have an updated Fleet Schedule.
                                     To be adjusted per insured's
                                     requirements."

*1316 The discussion with Seymour by Monroe Scrap executives led Seymour to understand that Monroe Scrap desired the same liability and UM coverages it had in prior years.

Seymour's proposal was verbally accepted by Monroe Scrap, and in letters of September 29, 1978, Monroe Scrap informed both the Southeastern Compensation Rating Bureau and the Louisiana Insurance Rating Commission to recognize Seymour as agent of record for Monroe Scrap on all insurance matters. A temporary insurance binder that was given to Monroe Scrap by Seymour about September 28, 1978, effective October 1, 1978, and the policy that was delivered by Seymour to Monroe Scrap about October 17, 1978, each expressly provided the $750,000 automobile liability limits and the $25,000 UM limits.

Before the policy was delivered to Monroe Scrap, the insurer directed Seymour on October 12, 1978, to obtain the signature of Monroe Scrap on the UM selection form which accompanied the policy. Through inadvertence, the UM selection form was returned to Seymour unsigned. On December 15, 1978, Mr. Seymour was again reminded of these events by his commercial accounts manager. On January 8, 1979, Seymour's manager mailed, among other things, a UM selection form to Mrs. Holden at Monroe Scrap with this instruction:

"Also, I am attaching `Uninsured Motorists Protection Option Selection Form' which I would appreciate your getting signed by Mr. Weldman and returning to my attention ..."[3]

*1317 On January 9, 1978, at Weldman's instruction, Mrs. Holden signed Mr. Weldman's name to the UM selection form on behalf of the corporation, and returned the form to Seymour. Mrs. Holden testified that it was an oversight that the form had not been signed when the policy was delivered.

On January 6, 1979, Masur sustained bodily injury in an automobile accident and made claim for $750,000 under the UM coverage against the insurer of Monroe Scrap, who then brought this action for a declaratory judgment. This action, filed earlier in 1980, was tried in December 1980. Meyer Weldman died before trial.

THE LAW

Much has been written about UM coverage by the courts, the legislature, and others since its inception in Louisiana by Act 187 of 1962. See generally § 1406 D(1) as annotated, LSA-LRS Title 22, and Shepherd's citations. Dozens of amendments and reenactments and scores of cases have considered problems of UM coverage.

UM coverage first became statutorily mandated under Act 187 of 1962, but this Act provided that the statutory UM coverage was not applicable where the insured "shall reject the coverage." To this rejection provision, the legislature added the selection disjunctive by Act 154 of 1974.

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