Maryland Casualty Company v. Kramel
This text of 80 So. 2d 897 (Maryland Casualty Company v. Kramel) 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.
Opinion
MARYLAND CASUALTY COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Elmer E. KRAMEL and Frank W. Kramel, d/b/a Kramel Brothers, Defendants-Appellants.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*898 Gold & Hall, William E. Skye, Alexandria, for appellants.
Gist, Thornton & Murchison, Alexandria, for appellee.
AYRES, Judge.
This is an action in which plaintiff's insurer seeks recovery from its insured of amounts paid out in settlement of 57 separate property damage claims, each being less than $50, aggregating the sum of $1,534.84. From a judgment in favor of plaintiff as prayed for, defendants prosecute this appeal.
Defendants contend that they should have been protected against the aforesaid claims by a policy of insurance issued by plaintiff, and in their answer pray for a reformation of the insurance contract. Defendants particularly alleged that a clause providing for a $50 deductible per claim basis was inserted in said policy through mutual inadvertence, error and mistake on the part of both plaintiff and defendants.
There is little, if any, dispute about the facts. Defendants are engaged in the paint contracting business under the name of Kramel Brothers. Plaintiff, through its agent, Spengler Insurance Agency, Inc., issued, effective as of June 1, 1949, and expiring 12 months thereafter, a Manufacturers' and Contractors' Schedule Liability Policy. By endorsement of September 13, 1949, the policy was amended to cover property liability damage providing for a maximum liability of $1,000 for each accident and $10,000 in the aggregate, which limits, however, were increased to $10,000 and $25,000, respectively, in an amendment and endorsement of September 17, 1949. These endorsements were issued by Black, *899 Rogers & Company, plaintiff's general agents in the State of Louisiana. A renewal policy, effective June 1, 1950, with an expiration date of June 1, 1951, was duly issued and was in effect on January 16, 1951, the date of the occurrence of the accident which gave rise to these claims. While it is clearly established that the policy in effect at the time of the accident was intended and understood as a renewal of the previously existing policy, there was inserted in the latter policy the $50 deductible clause provision.
In procuring both the original policy and its renewal, it was the intention that it afford full, or 100 percent, coverage. Such was the intention of the defendants and the president of plaintiff's agent, as shown by their positive and unequivocal testimony to that effect, and which is in no way controverted. Neither defendants nor plaintiff's local agent had any notice or knowledge of the deductible provision in said policy until after the occurrence of the accident forming the basis of the claims herein made. The first information that either had of such provision in the policy was from plaintiff's adjuster while proceeding to make an investigation and adjustment of said claims. Immediately upon receipt of this information defendants offered to pay such additional premiums in accordance with a proper rate which could have been fixed on plaintiff's application to the rating commission.
As an affirmative pleading in its original petition, plaintiff alleged that the $50 deductible provision was written into the policy pursuant to a special regulation of the National Bureau of Casualty Underwriters, dated July 8, 1949, and adopted by the Louisiana Rating Commission effective as of July 11, 1949. Accordingly, it was asserted that the endorsements of September 13 and 17, 1949, should have been written subject to the aforesaid deductible provision as theretofore adopted by the rating commission, and that the failure so to do was due to inadvertence on the part of plaintiff.
Similarly, it is contended by the defendants that the insertion of the deductible clause in the renewal policy was an inadvertent mistake which should be corrected by reformation of the contract. Plaintiff, however, insists that it would not have written the policy without the $50 deductible provision, and attempted to show that no such coverage was written by other major insurance companies in the State.
Plaintiff's contentions lose much of their force and fail to carry conviction for two reasons: (1) The policy effective June 1, 1950, was clearly intended by all parties as a renewal of the former policy, and, (2), there is no basis for the conclusion that the coverage desired by defendants could not have been legally written by plaintiff or any other qualified insurer, although the coverage would probably have carried a different and increased rate, which could have been obtained by application to the rating commission.
There is ample authority for the reformation of insurance contracts where, by reason of mutual mistake, the policy as written does not express the actual intent of the parties. 29 Am.Jur., p. 237, "Insurance", § 241, states the general rule as follows:
"Reformation of an insurance policy may be had, in general, where, by reason of fraud, inequitable conduct, or mutual mistake, the policy as written does not express the actual and real agreement of the parties. More particularly, if by inadvertence, accident, or mistake the terms of a contract of insurance are not fully or correctly set forth in the policy, it may be reformed in equity so as to express the actual contract intended by the parties, if the mistake is mutual or if there has been fraud or inequitable conduct by one of the parties to the contract. A suit for a reformation may be and usually is maintained after a loss which would fall within the policy as reformed. If an insurer has agreed to renew a policy but in fact issues a new policy *900 containing different terms, the policy may be reformed to read the same as the original policy." (Emphasis supplied.)
44 C.J.S., Insurance, §§ 278 and 279, pp. 1108-1112, likewise states the general rule pertaining to this subject. For instance, it is therein stated:
"An insurance contract is no different from any other when the rules of law governing the reformation of written agreements are to be applied to it. Like other written instruments, * * * a policy or other written contract of insurance is subject to reformation by a court of equity in a proper case so as to make it conform to the actual agreement of the parties; and, according to the decisions on the question, this is true even after loss or expiration of the policy. * * *
"To justify the reformation of an insurance contract or policy, it must appear that a valid agreement exists and, according to the decisions on the question, that by reason of accident, inadvertence, fraud, or mistake, or, more properly speaking, mutual mistake of the parties or a mistake on the part of one and fraud on the part of the other, or mistake, error, accident, or inadvertence on the part of the draftsman or scrivener in reducing the contract to writing, the policy or other written contract fails to express, or conform to, the real agreement."
The fact that the deductible provision contained in the renewal policy delivered to the defendants was undiscovered by them prior to the loss is of no importance or consequence. Their failure to read the policy does not necessarily bar their right to a reformation, even though they retained the policy without having examined its contents to ascertain whether or not it conformed with the contract agreed upon.
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80 So. 2d 897, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-casualty-company-v-kramel-lactapp-1955.