Martin Engineering Co., Inc. v. Opton

560 P.2d 617, 277 Or. 291, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 1116
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1977
Docket406151, SC 24309
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 560 P.2d 617 (Martin Engineering Co., Inc. v. Opton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin Engineering Co., Inc. v. Opton, 560 P.2d 617, 277 Or. 291, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 1116 (Or. 1977).

Opinion

*293 LENT, J.

This is a negligence action brought by plaintiff to recover from an insurance agent and his company the amount paid by plaintiff to settle a claim. The claim resulted from an erroneous land survey by the plaintiff. Plaintiff contended that its lack of insurance coverage for the survey error was due to defendants’ negligence in procuring insurance for it. The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff. Defendants appeal, claiming that one of the specifications of negligence submitted to the jury was not supported by any evidence.

Plaintiff is a corporation specializing in land surveying and civil engineering. Defendant Opton was plaintiff’s insurance agent. Defendants secured a professional Errors and Omissions (E&O) policy for plaintiff with Continental Casualty Company (CNA) for the period of September 15, 1966, to September 15, 1967. For various reasons a change in insurers was desired, and defendants obtained insurance for the plaintiff with Citizens Casualty Company of New York (Citizens) for the period of October 27, 1967, to October 27, 1968. Renewal of the Citizens policy was not possible due to financial difficulties experienced by the company. Subsequently, plaintiff purchased E&O coverage again from CNA. Citizens was eventually placed in liquidation on June 17, 1971.

On June 5, 1968, plaintiff committed a survey error. This error became known in 1972. A liability claim against plaintiff was made in 1972, and eventually the claim was settled by plaintiff for $13,000.00.

Plaintiff was denied insurance coverage for the incident by both CNA and Citizens. Citizens based its denial on the fact that the claim against plaintiff, which was made August 21, 1972, was not made during the operational period of the policy (October 27, *294 1967, to October 27, 1968). 1 CNA refused coverage because its policy required continuous coverage by CNA from the occurrence of the negligent act to the claim date. 2 This condition had not been met, for the error took place in June 1968, while the Citizens policy was in effect.

On April 16, 1975, in his second amended complaint, plaintiff contended that defendants were negligent in the following particulars:

1. In failing to exercise the reasonable care of an insurance agent in selecting an insurance company whose assets were adequate to protect plaintiff’s interests.
*295 2. In failing to exercise the reasonable care of an insurance agent in selecting, in 1967, a policy of insurance which adequately provided for the business activity and risk of the plaintiff.
3. In failing to exercise reasonable care, in 1968, in selecting and providing for plaintiff an insurance policy which adequately protected plaintiff for pre-existing errors and omissions.
4. In failing to warn plaintiff that change in insurance carriers in 1967 and 1968 would expose plaintiff to rejected coverage as to 1968 errors of plaintiff when defendants knew or should have known that such would occur.

This action was tried in October of 1975. After both parties had rested, defendants moved to strike each of the above specifications of negligence for lack of proof. The court granted the motion as to the first allegation only. The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff. Defendants’ motion for a new trial based upon submission of the second specification of negligence was denied. Defendants appeal.

Defendants have assigned as error the denial of its motion for a new trial. The denial of this motion for a new trial cannot be assigned as error on appeal. As a matter of substance, such a ruling is not an appealable order. Clubb v. Hanson, 272 Or 236, 244, 536 P2d 528 (1975); Unemployment Comp. Com. v. Bates, 227 Or 357, 360-61, 362 P2d 321 (1961). In their assignment of error, however, defendants reveal that their true objection goes to the submission of the second allegation of negligence contained in the amended complaint. 3

Given a timely motion, a trial judge is required to withdraw from consideration by a jury any allegation of negligence which is not supported by some evidence. *296 Alvarez v. Great Northern Ry. Co., 261 Or 66, 76, 491 P2d 190 (1971); Armstrong v. Stegen, 251 Or 340, 343, 445 P2d 509 (1968); Krening v. Flanders, 225 Or 388, 358 P2d 574 (1961). Our task, then, is to determine if there is any evidence in the record to support the determination that defendants were negligent,

"[in] failing to exercise the reasonable care of an insurance agent in selecting, in 1967, a policy of insurance which adequately provided for the business activity and risk of the plaintiff”

and that such negligence, if any, caused harm to the plaintiff. In so doing, we review the record in the light most beneficial to the party aided by the verdict. See e.g., Goodrich v. Ford Motor Co., 269 Or 399, 401, 525 P2d 130 (1974).

The questioned specification goes not to negligence in the selection of an insurer but to negligence in the selection of the policy irrespective of the identity of the insurer. By this allegation, plaintiff complains not of the act of changing insurance carriers (covered in part in specification four) but of the substance of the terms of the 1967 policy.

We fail to find evidence in this record which shows that the 1967 policy by its terms was deficient in protecting plaintiff from potential loss. According to the evidence, the 1967 Citizens policy provided for four times the maximum coverage of the prior 1966 CNA policy. If one assumes that the coverage of the 1966 policy was adequate "for the business activity and risk of the plaintiff,” then the expanded protection of the 1967 policy would be more than sufficient. In contrast to the CNA policy of 1966, the 1967 policy covered prior errors so long as continuous E&O coverage was maintained with any carrier, not necessarily Citizens. 4

It is clear then that the loss suffered by plaintiff was caused not by any error in selecting a particular amount or type of insurance in 1967 but in purchasing *297 insurance from a company which ceased to offer insurance shortly after 1967. By the terms of the 1967 policy, had coverage with Citizens been available through 1972 and had plaintiff continued such coverage, it would have been reimbursed for the payment occasioned by its error.

Plaintiff contends in its brief that,

«* * * [j]t is clear that a jury question was presented whether or not defendant exercised reasonable care in switching policies in 1967, without fully explaining the possible consequences, and without allowing the insured * * * to determine whether or not he wanted to take such a risk of noncoverage.”

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Bluebook (online)
560 P.2d 617, 277 Or. 291, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 1116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-engineering-co-inc-v-opton-or-1977.