Meirthew v. Last

135 N.W.2d 353, 376 Mich. 33, 1965 Mich. LEXIS 194
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1965
DocketCalendar 67, Docket 50,570
StatusPublished
Cited by65 cases

This text of 135 N.W.2d 353 (Meirthew v. Last) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meirthew v. Last, 135 N.W.2d 353, 376 Mich. 33, 1965 Mich. LEXIS 194 (Mich. 1965).

Opinion

Black, J.

Plaintiff recovered judgment in the principal suit against defendant Last. The judgment not being paid, plaintiff sued out garnishment against the American Fellowship Insurance Company, designated herein as the garnishee. The garnishee filed disclosure denying liability, alleging that Last’s policy of liability insurance, which by the garnishee had been issued to Last and was in effect at the time plaintiff’s right of action against Last accrued, included under the heading “risks excluded” this clause:

“The company shall not be liable for any loss or claim arising while the automobile shall be rented or used for the transportation of passengers for a .specific charge. Under clauses H, I, and J, the company shall not be liable for any claim as a result of any injury to an employee of the insured while engaged in the business of the insured.”

The disclosure concluded:

“Garnishee further asserts that at the time plaintiff’s alleged cause of action arose, principal defendant James Last’s vehicle was leased to principal defendants James Gallo and Joe Bono, d/b/a Gallo Landscaping Company, for a specific charge and was being operated by an employee of the said James Gallo and Joe Bono, d/b/a Gallo Landscaping Company.”

*36 ' The first question is whether the garnishee stands legally estopped from defending on strength of such “risks excluded” clause. The second is whether proof or stipulated fact justifies the garnishee’s contention that plaintiff’s right of action accrued when Last’s insured motor vehicle was “rented or used for the transportation of passengers for a specific charge.” The circuit court ruled that the garnishee was so estopped and entered judgment accordingly. This appeal followed.

The point of estoppel turns upon these facts. The automotive collision which gave rise to plaintiff’s cause against Last occurred July 21, 1959. Plaintiff’s suit against Last was commenced October 1, 1959. Present counsel for the garnishee appeared and answered in his behalf. The same counsel conducted for Last all of the proceedings iisted in the calendar entries to and including rendition of the jury’s verdict and entry of plaintiff’s judgment against Last. The judgment was entered October 11, 1962. Such proceedings included the taking of all discovery depositions; the handling for Last of all proceedings leading up to and including the preparation and filing of the rule-required pretrial statement and, of course, whatever pretrial negotiations toward settlement counsel for plaintiff and counsel for the insurer carried on ex parte Last. Finally, the specific defense against policy liability, pleaded as above by the garnishee, does not seem to have been raised until its disclosure was filed.

What the garnishee did to its insured, and to plaintiff in turn, fully deserved the trial judge’s condemnation as recorded. Manifestly exasperated by the garnishee’s tactics, Judge Kaufman finally remarked to its counsel: “You want your cake and you want to eat it too.” As the discourse appears by transcript, the judge’s remark was stimulated by the garnishee’s continued retention of control over *37 Last’s defense, and over pretrial settlement negotiations, thus denying to Last fair and timely opportunity to protect his rights (a) by a before-trial suit for declaration of rights against his insurer, or (b) independent negotiation of settlement with plaintiff at some figure less than the jury’s substantial verdict, or (c) submission at trial of possibly available evidence that his motor vehicle was not being operated, at the time of this collision, in violation of- the “risks excluded” clause. To this we add that the record leaves no doubt that the garnishee, certainly by the time its answer for Last was filed in the principal suit, was possessed of all knowledge of facts which might tend to prove or disprove application of its presently pleaded “risks excluded” clause. Yet it gave no notice at all, to Last or anyone else, until February 27, 1962.

The garnishee relies upon a letter which, on the last given date, was mailed by it to Last. The letter is headed “notice of reservation of rights.” It reads:

“Whereas American Fellowship Mutual Insurance Company, hereinafter referred to as the company, has heretofore issued to you its policy of insurance, No. E-143822, insuring you against liability imposed upon you by law resulting from the operation of a 1950 Ford truck, motor number 98EQH8537, owned by you and described in said policy, and
“Whereas by reason of an accident involving said motor vehicle, while being operated by Homer Allen on July 2, 1959, which occurred on Dix at Moran Roads, Lincoln Park, Michigan, you have been sued by Dolores Tackett and Gertrude Meirthew in the circuit court for the county of Wayne, State of Michigan, for damages and injuries sustained in said accident, and
“Whereas certain summons and other pleadings issued out of said actions and served upon you have been tendered to the company;
*38 . “Now therefore you are hereby notified that the company will defend said actions pending against you through its regular attorneys, and will pay its said attorneys for all services in connection therewith, but the company in undertaking your defense, does so under a reservation of rights, and without prejudice, and subject to the conditions, limitations, exclusions and agreements of said policy, and subject to the express understanding that by so doing the company does not waive any of its rights to rely upon the provisions of said policy, and does not waive any defense it may have to any claimed liability under said policy.
“It is understood that the company does not undertake to pay any final judgment which may be rendered against you in said actions.
“You are also notified that you may, if you so desire, employ counsel at your own expense to assist in defending you in said actions.”

We hold the notice legally insufficient; also that it came too late to avoid presumptive prejudice of Last’s rights and plaintiff’s consequential rights. The notice was vague and uncertain. It smacks of bad faith for want of specific reference to that clause of the policy the garnishee has pleaded. In no field of law is legal duty more rigidly enforced than in instances as at bar. The insurer must fulfill its policy-contracted obligation with utmost loyalty to its insured; not for the purpose of developing, secretly or otherwise, a policy defense. When a conflict of interest — even a mere possibility thereof — arises, the law suggests (if it does not require) that the insurer act promptly and openly, on peril of estoppel, preferably upon a record made in the pending case (if pending as here) with the court fully apprised of all necessary details; also that the insurer act thus on time for arms’ length actions which may protect the respective rights of both parties to the' contract of insurance.

*39 The rule we apply was quoted from Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York v. Board of County Road Commissioners of Schoolcraft County,

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Bluebook (online)
135 N.W.2d 353, 376 Mich. 33, 1965 Mich. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meirthew-v-last-mich-1965.