Keyes, to Use v. Continental Cas. Co.

183 A. 672, 121 Pa. Super. 359, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 199
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 17, 1935
DocketAppeal, 394
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 183 A. 672 (Keyes, to Use v. Continental Cas. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keyes, to Use v. Continental Cas. Co., 183 A. 672, 121 Pa. Super. 359, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 199 (Pa. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. <T.,

Action in assumpsit on a policy of casualty insurance, insuring the owner of an automobile against liability for accidental personal injury to another. It was tried by a judge of the municipal court without a jury.

The appellant raises a number of questions, which we have carefully considered. We find substantial merit in only two of them, viz.: (1) The defendant’s motion to amend the affidavit of defense should have been allowed; (2) the evidence in the record failed to show a substantial compliance by the assured, or any one in her behalf, with the clause in the policy requiring prompt — “immediate”—notice of any suit for damages against the assured, growing out of an accident covered by the policy, by forwarding to the insurer the summons or other process served upon her.

The facts necessary for an understanding of the case are as follows:

The legal plaintiff, Vera E. Keyes, while a resident of the State of Ohio, secured from the defendant insurance company, through its general agents, Case & West, the policy in suit insuring her, inter alia, against liability for damages on account of bodily injuries accidentally suffered by reason of the ownership or use of the automobile described in the policy to the amount *362 of $5,000 for one person, and $10,000 in all. While the policy was in force she moved her residence to the State of Massachusetts, where she was obliged by law to take out such insurance with a company authorized to do business in that State, which the defendant company was not; she, accordingly, took out a similar policy, in the same amounts, with the use plaintiff, New Hampshire Mutual Liability Company. Defendant’s policy contained the following clause: “5. OTHER INSURANCE. If the assured named in the Schedule carry a policy of another insurer against a loss covered by this policy, such Assured shall not be entitled to recover from the Company a larger proportion of the entire loss than the amount otherwise payable under this policy bears to the total amount of valid and collectible insurance applicable to the said loss.”

On May 26, 1927, when both policies were in force, the legal plaintiff, while driving the automobile owned by her and referred to in said policies of insurance, in East Woburn, Massachusetts, ran into and severely injured a child five years old, named Joseph Perry. The legal plaintiff promptly mailed a letter to Case & West, general agents of the defendant company informing them of the accident, and on August 10, 1927, the use plaintiff wrote defendant company in care of Case & West, notifying it that Miss Keyes’ car had on May 26, 1927 caused severe injuries to one Joseph Terry (sic) and that she had informed it that her car was also insured in defendant company. The letter went on to say: “In view of this fact, it seems to us as if this was a case in which both companies were implicated and have got to combine toward an adjustment of the claim. We have made a complete investigation of this accident and will at any time be glad to discuss the case with any of your representatives.”

The defendant company made no reply to the use *363 plaintiff but on August 15,1927 wrote the legal plaintiff that it had received a letter from New Hampshire Mutual Liability Co. advising that she had had an accident on May 26, which caused some injury to one Joseph Terry (sic) and that she was also carrying liability insurance on her car with it, continuing: “Will you kindly give us the detailed information with reference to this accident so we can properly handle same? We are inclosing a blank report and will appreciate it if you will complete and return same. Since you have moved to Massachusetts it is possible you will want to discontinue our policy, and if this is the case, we will ask that you kindly return the policy which we mailed you for the current year, No. CA842103. The accident would of course be covered under the old policy which was in force in May. Thanking you for your kind attention, we are” etc.

Neither the legal plaintiff nor the use plaintiff replied to this letter and nothing further seems to have been done regarding it.

The claim not having been settled, the said Joseph Perry, by his father Joseph W. Perry, and Joseph W. Perry in his own right brought an action against the legal plaintiff on December 26, 1929 in the District Court of the United States at Trenton, N. J.

Neither the legal plaintiff nor the use plaintiff gave the defendant company any notice of the bringing of this action until over eleven months after suit was brought, and two or three days before it was listed for trial; nor was the summons or other process in said action, or any copy of it, ever sent to defendant company by the legal plaintiff or by the use plaintiff, to whom the same had been sent by the legal plaintiff. The use plaintiff had in the meantime assumed the defense of said action and on November 29, 1930 their attorneys wrote defendant company a letter concerning it, which is not printed in the record, but the defend *364 ant’s reply is printed, in the margin. 1 This letter was incorrect as to defendant company having received no report of an accident which occurred on May 26, 1927; but it correctly stated the fact that no notice of the filing of the law suit had been given it nor any summons in the suit forwarded to it. The lower court, in stating the contrary in its opinion, is clearly in error. The appellee admits it. Defendant disclaimed liability because of such failure to give written notice. The legal plaintiff and use plaintiff attempt to confine the disclaimer to failure to give notice of the accident, — and the court below, apparently, took the same view — but a fair construction of the letter is otherwise. The letter complains not only of the insured’s failure to “report” the *365 accident, but also that “she gave us no notice whatever of the filing of the law suit and did not send summons to this office or any representative of the Company.” When immediately thereafter it disclaims liability because of the failure to give “prompt written notice,” a reasonable view is that the disclaimer was based on the failure to give notice of the law suit and forward summons as well as to report the accident; and that there was no waiver of all defenses except failure to report the accident.

The policy provides: “1. Notice, Claims and Suits. The Assured shall give to the Company or to its authorized agent immediate written notice of any accident covered hereby and shall also give like notice of claims for damages on account of such accidents. If any suit is brought against Assured to recover such damages the Assured shall immediately forward to the Company, at its office in Chicago, every summons or other process served upon him. The Company shall have the exclusive right to contest or settle any of said suits or claims. The Assured shall not interfere in any way respecting any negotiations for the settlement of any claim or suit, nor in the conduct of any legal proceedings, but shall, at all times, at the request of the Company, render to it all possible cooperation and assistance.

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Related

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380 A.2d 1245 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1977)
Bethlehem Steel Co. v. Continental Casualty Co.
208 F. Supp. 356 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1959)
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62 Pa. D. & C. 183 (Cumberland County Court of Common Pleas, 1947)
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56 Pa. D. & C. 551 (Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 A. 672, 121 Pa. Super. 359, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keyes-to-use-v-continental-cas-co-pasuperct-1935.