Jimmy N. Looney, Clinton M. Hickman, Betty Cureton, Margaret Coon, Martha Cooper and R. T. Cooper v. Allstate Insurance Company

392 F.2d 401
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 4, 1968
Docket18851
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 392 F.2d 401 (Jimmy N. Looney, Clinton M. Hickman, Betty Cureton, Margaret Coon, Martha Cooper and R. T. Cooper v. Allstate Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jimmy N. Looney, Clinton M. Hickman, Betty Cureton, Margaret Coon, Martha Cooper and R. T. Cooper v. Allstate Insurance Company, 392 F.2d 401 (8th Cir. 1968).

Opinion

BLACKMUN, Circuit Judge.

Allstate Insurance Company instituted this diversity declaratory judgment action under 28 U.S.C. § 2201 against its insured, Jimmy N. Looney, and against Clinton M. Hickman, Betty Cureton, Margaret Coon, Martha Cooper and her husband, and Southern Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Co. The case was tried to the court without a jury and on stipulated facts. Judge Young entered judgment granting Allstate the favorable declaratory relief it sought. The individual defendants appeal.

The litigation arises from a two-automobile collision near Marked Tree, Arkansas, on November 18, 1965. It concerns Allstate’s coverage for Looney and its obligation to appear and defend him. One of the automobiles in the collision was a Cadillac owned by Hickman but driven by Looney and with Hickman as a passenger. The other was one driven by Mrs. Coon, with Miss Cureton and Mrs. Cooper as passengers. Hickman and the three women sustained serious personal injuries. Both vehicles were damaged.

In May 1964 Looney had a Tennessee mailing address but resided across the state line in Olive Branch, Mississippi. He was an independent truck driver and milk hauler. He applied to Allstate for comprehensive coverage on his 1962 truck-tractor which he used to pull a milk trailer. He indicated to Allstate that he would be hauling milk in Tennessee and Mississippi primarily for a named producers association and that his entire route did not extend beyond a 50 milé radius.

Looney’s application was processed by Allstate’s regional office. That office decided that a restrictive form of coverage would be issued. It classified the vehicle as “Class 4, Heavy Truck”. The premium charged was one on file with the Tennessee Insurance Commissioner. With his application Looney signed an indorsement agreement reciting that the policy was to apply “only while the automobile is within a 50 mile radius of the limits of the city or town where the automobile is principally garaged”.

The policy was issued effective May 15, 1964, for a one year term. It was in Allstate’s “Illustrator” form known in *403 the trade as the 1955 basic automobile policy. 1 Allstate employed this form for commercial coverage on vehicles larger than a pickup truck and also for assigned risk vehicles. ' The policy, by a check in a box on its first page, described the purpose of the truck’s use as “Commercial”. Another box, denominated “Pleasure and Business”, was not checked. A rider referred to the insured vehicle as one “classified as ‘Commercial Milk Hauler’ ” and provided the 50 mile radius limitation “except for the occasional use of such automobile for personal, pleasure or family purposes beyond such 50 mile radius”. Looney occasionally made some personal use of his truck in addition to his commercial use.

Among the contract’s insuring agreements was a provision that if the insured is an individual and “owns a private passenger automobile covered by this policy, such insurance as is afforded by this policy * * * with respect to said automobile applies with respect to any other automobile”, subject to conditions not pertinent here. “Private passenger automobile” was defined to mean “a private passenger, station wagon or jeep type automobile, and also includes * * * any automobile the purposes of use of which are stated in the declarations as ‘pleasure and business’ ”. And in a section of the policy entitled “Conditions Applicable to All Coverages” the term “pleasure and business” was defined “as personal, pleasure, family and business use”.

At the time Looney applied to Allstate he also owned a 1963 Ford passenger automobile which he regarded as his family car. The Ford was insured by Southern. Southern’s policy covered Looney while he was driving another automobile. The monetary amount of Southern’s coverage, however, was less than Allstate’s.

The term of the Allstate contract was extended in due course to May 15, 1966. The policy thus was in effect at the time the November 1965 accident occurred. The site of the accident was beyond the 50 mile radius specified in the Allstate policy.

Looney gave notice of the accident to both Southern and Allstate. Southern determined that its policy afforded the terms of its coverage to Looney while he was driving the Hickman automobile. It undertook a routine investigation. Looney’s report to Allstate was by telephone to its Memphis claims office on November 22. The report was taken by a clerk who completed a form from the information furnished by Looney. She confirmed Looney’s coverages and the coverage card reflected the contract as an “Illustrator” policy. The report was referred to a claims supervisor.

Written statements were then taken from Looney and Hickman. The supervisor requested, as a part of usual administrative routine, that Allstate’s clerical employees file an SR-21 form with the State of Arkansas. This is one required by the Arkansas Motor Vehicle Safety Responsibility Act, Ark.Stat.Ann. Title 75, Chapter 14, and, specifically, by §§ 75-1419 (Repl.1957 and 1967 Supp.). 2 The form was dated December 6, 1965, was filed by Allstate on December 8, and was finally accepted as refiled on January 6, 1966. It named Hickman and Looney as the Cadillac’s owner and operator, respectively; gave the date and place of the accident and the Allstate policy number; and also gave notice that *404 the policy was in effect on the date of the accident and applied to Looney as operator. At that time no coverage question was detected by Allstate and no notice of reservation of rights was given to Looney.

Hickman made claim that his Cadillac be repaired under the collision coverages of Looney’s policies with Allstate and Southern. Allstate assumed that its policy extended this protection and that, with dual coverage, it and Southern should share the collision loss equally. It agreed with Southern and Hickman on a loss figure and paid half ($687.50) of the amount to Looney and Hickman by draft dated January 27, 1966.

On January 25, 1966, Miss Cureton sued Hickman and Looney in federal court in the Eastern District of Arkansas for $500,000. Service was effected and notice thereof received by both Allstate and Southern. The two companies jointly employed the attorneys who represent Allstate on this appeal. These attorneys filed a timely answer for Looney 3 and communicated with Hickman’s lawyer about his plans to file pleadings for Hickman. Allstate, by letter, advised Looney that the coverage under its policy was less than the amount claimed in the Cureton suit and that it was his privilege to have a personal attorney at his own expense.

On February 3, 1966, Mrs. Coon and Mr. and Mrs. Cooper sued Hickman and Looney in the same court for damages aggregating $250,000. Service was effected and notice given to Allstate and Southern. They asked the same lawyers to provide the defense to this second suit. Again Allstate advised Looney by letter of its coverage limits. On February 7 Allstate wrote Mrs. Coon’s attorney concerning salvage bids for her automobile.

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Bluebook (online)
392 F.2d 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jimmy-n-looney-clinton-m-hickman-betty-cureton-margaret-coon-martha-ca8-1968.