Mary Wilkins, Carrie Peterson, Carroll T. Webb, Rufus Webb and George Webb v. Inland Mutual Insurance Company, a Body Corporate

253 F.2d 489, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 4898
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMarch 3, 1958
Docket7445
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 253 F.2d 489 (Mary Wilkins, Carrie Peterson, Carroll T. Webb, Rufus Webb and George Webb v. Inland Mutual Insurance Company, a Body Corporate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mary Wilkins, Carrie Peterson, Carroll T. Webb, Rufus Webb and George Webb v. Inland Mutual Insurance Company, a Body Corporate, 253 F.2d 489, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 4898 (4th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

HAYNSWORTH, Circuit Judge.

This action for a declaratory judgment was instituted by the insurance company in order to determine its rights and obligations under a standard automobile insurance policy with respect to an accident which occurred after the death of the named insured. A motion for summary judgment in favor of the insurance company was granted by the District Court because of the failure to give notice of the death. Inland Mutual Insurance Company v. Peterson, D.C.Md., 148 F. Supp. 392, 393. This appeal by the injured third person and by the mother and brothers of the named insured brings the questions here.

A policy in the form of the “National Standard Automobile Policy — Non-

Assessable — Form No. 8” was issued to William Albert Webb of Baltimore, Maryland, as of September 5,1953. It covered a Buick automobile registered in his name and, by endorsement, also insured his personal liability incurred while in permissive control of a private automobile owned by another.

The named insured died intestate on February 25, 1954. He left surviving him, his mother, Carrie Peterson, a sister and three brothers. Since there was no widow or child, his mother was his sole heir at law under the laws of Maryland. 1 No administration upon his estate has been had.

Shortly after the death, the mother went through the things in the decedent’s residence and searched through the Buick automobile, which was parked on the street nearby. She tired of seeing the automobile each time she went to the residence of her deceased son, and, approximately a week after his death, she asked his friend, Richard L. Gant, Jr., to move it. There was also some expectation that Gant might purchase the Buick, and it is not questioned that Gant’s subsequent use of the vehicle was with the permission of Mrs. Peterson.

On March 21, 1954, Gant, while driving the Buick automobile, struck a pedestrian, the defendant, Wilkins. She was carried to a hospital where her injuries were thought of insufficient seriousness to require admission. Gant was carried to a police station from which he was released after one of the decedent’s brothers had identified him as a permissive user of the vehicle.

No member of the decedent’s family ever made any effort to notify the insurance company either of the death of the named insured or of the accident. The company first was informed of these events a full year later when it received a letter from the attorney for Miss Wilkins.

We need not concern ourselves with the effect, under these circumstances, of the failure to give notice of the accident, for, as the District Court held, the failure to give notice of the death of the named insured relieved the insurance company of all liability under the policy.

A liability insurance policy is a personal contract. Except to the extent it is otherwise provided in the policy itself or by statute, it terminates upon the death of the named insured, and any permission which the named insured may have given another to use the vehicle is revoked. 7 Appleman, Insurance Law and Practice, 150; Collins v. Northwest Casualty Co., 180 Wash. 347, 39 P.2d 986, 97 A.L.R. 1235; New Century Casualty Co. v. Chase, D.C.W.Va., 39 F.Supp. 768; Bornbaum v. Employers’ Liability Assur. Co., 311 Mass. 282, 41 N.E.2d 54; Frankel v. Allied Mutuals Liability Insurance Co., 288 Mass. 218, 192 N.E. 517; *491 Hobbs v. Cunningham, 273 Mass. 529, 174 N.E. 181.

Against that background of the law, realization of the preoccupations of bereavement led to the insertion in standard policies of provisions for their automatic assignment upon the death of the named insured, subject to specified conditions, and the extension of their coverage (1) to the qualified personal representatives of the insured and, (2) pending the qualification of such a representative, for a limited period, to any person having proper temporary control and custody of the vehicle. The provision here is the standard one current at the time of issue. It is in the following language ;

“12. Assignment. Assignment of interest under this policy shall not bind the company until its consent is endorsed hereon; if, however, the named insured shall die or be adjudged bankrupt or insolvent within the policy period, this policy, unless cancelled, shall, if written notice be given to the company within sixty days after the date of such death or adjudication, cover (1) the named insured’s legal representative as the named insured, and (2) under coverages A, B and C, subject otherwise to the provisions of Insuring Agreement III, any person having proper temporary custody of the automobile, as an insured, but in no event for a period of more than sixty days after the date of such death or adjudication.”

Appleman appears to assume that written notice within the prescribed period is a condition precedent, in the classical sense, to the assignment of the insurance and the extension of its coverage beyond the life of the named insured. See Appleman, Automobile Liability Insurance, 462-465; 7 Appleman, Insurance Law and Practice, 152. It is framed in the language of a condition precedent to the consummation of any contractual relation between the insurance company and the persons within the definitions of the provision. Notice, however, given as late as the sixtieth day after the death is effective to impose upon the insurance company the burden of defending actions and paying idem-nity for liabilities accrued at any time within the sixty-day period. Obviously, during the entire period of sixty days, whether the notice is ever given or not, the insurance company is at risk. The substantial rights of third persons, founded upon the provisions of the contract, may be perfected retroactively, or made enforceable, by a voluntary and routine notice over which the company has no control. The clear existence of continuing risk assumed in a voluntary contract supported by adequate consideration suggests a pre-existing contractual relation even though the third party beneficiary must make an affirmative and timely election in order to avail himself of the benefits of the contract. The creation of the power, vested in another, by a mechanical act, to clothe himself with substantial rights and impose upon the promisor extensive detriment, suggests that performance of the mechanical act is a condition to the perfection and enforcement of a pre-existing contractual right rather than a condition precedent to the consummation of new contractual relations.

But whether the condition be designated as precedent or subsequent, written notice is clearly required by the terms of the policy, and, certainly in the absence of legal excuse, compliance is necessary if the liabilities assumed by the company in its policy are to be enforced. Whatever may be said of the language of the provision in other respects, there is no ambiguity in its requirement of written notice within the sixty-day period. We cannot read it out of the policy, or assume that the original parties to the contract intended what they clearly disclaimed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
253 F.2d 489, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 4898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mary-wilkins-carrie-peterson-carroll-t-webb-rufus-webb-and-george-webb-ca4-1958.