Metropolitan Casualty Ins. Co. v. Heard

1936 OK 585, 63 P.2d 720, 178 Okla. 461, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 860
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 6, 1936
DocketNo. 26854.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1936 OK 585 (Metropolitan Casualty Ins. Co. v. Heard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Casualty Ins. Co. v. Heard, 1936 OK 585, 63 P.2d 720, 178 Okla. 461, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 860 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

CORN, J.

The plaintiffs brought suit against Bert Moore, the bus driver for the White Oak school district, for the death of their child, recovered judgment, issued execution which was returned • unsatisfied. Then the plaintiffs brought garnishment proceedings against the Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company of New York, a corporation, which for convenience will be referred to herein as the insurance company.

The plaintiffs in their affidavit for garnishment state that prior to September 4, 1933, members of the White Oak school board paid a sum of money to this insurance company by delivering the same to its agent, Hugh Ratcliff, in consideration of the company’s agreement to put in force an insurance policy to protect Bert Moore, driver of said bus, and to become liable for the payment of $5,000 in case of loss or damages, and that the company accepted said money and agreed to put said insurance in force and became liable and indebted to the said Bert Moore in case a judgment went against him, and that plaintiffs were entitled to have said sum applied on their judgment against Bert Moore.

The insurance company filed an answer denying liability, to which the plaintiff replied and elected to take issue, as provided by statute.

In the opening statement, the insurance company offered as its only defense that its agent, Hugh Ratcliff, had no means of knowing when to place the policy in force until he was informed by the school board that the school had opened. Throughout the trial and in the testimony of Hugh Ratcliff, the only witness for the insurance company, the company admitted that the money was ac cepted and retained by Ratcliff to put the policy of insurance in force, covering the school term. The plaintiffs denied that the school board or anybody else was to notify Ratcliff of the opening of school, and contended that from 1927, at the request of Rat-cliff for the insurance company, the school board at the close of the school in the spring surrendered ' the old policy, which was always issued for a period of one year, and permitted the insurance company to retain the three months’ unearned part of the pro,-, mium for the year to put in force the policy for the next year, the same contract of insurance, and that while it was true that in some cases the policy did not come to the district clerk until a few days after the opening of school, it always provided that it began with the opening of school and covered the entire school term, and that for this particular year, in addition to the established custom, there was a definite understanding and agreement that Ratcliff, in behalf of this company, should rewrite this policy covering this term.

Hugh L. Ratcliff testified: That he did not write the policy until he was instructed to do so by the superintendent of the school, who came into his office on September 4th, told him that school was in session and advised him of the accident; that he was not accustomed to putting the policy in force until he was notified that school had opened. *462 On cross-examination, he admitted that shortly after this accident occurred (probably within an hour or so afterwards) Mr. Roberts came into his office and asked to see the policy and Ratcliff told him he thought he had mailed it out to Mr. Castro, clerk of the school board.

Mr. Castro, who was a member of the board at the time of the accident, testified that never at any time did Mr. Ratcliff require any member of the board to notify him that it was time to put the policy in force for another year, that he just went ahead and did that.

Several members of the school board testified that at the end of the school year the policy was canceled, that at the time of its cancellation it was understood that same would be re-renewed at the beginning of the next scho.ol year, and that the unearned premiums paid on the policy so canceled were retained by Ratcliff to be applied on a new policy of insurance; and that at no time had any member of the board notified said agent that school would start at a certain time, except one year when the term began in August instead of the usual time in September.

Within an hour or so after the accident and before Ratcliff had learned of the same, Roberts had a conversation with him and asked him about the policy, and in substance he told Roberts he had mailed it out to Castro. That language not only indicates that he was to issue the policy, but that he had already issued it.

This is borne out further by the cross-examination of Mr. Ratcliff, when the following occurred-:

“Q. Do you remember, Mr. Ratcliff, that shortly after this accident occurred, on the same day and probably within an hour or so, I came down there and asked to see the policy and you told me that you thought you had mailed it out? A. I remember you came down, yes, but I don’t remember — (hesitating) Q. And you said you had mailed it out to Mr. Castro, and I went out there to look for it? A. Ah-huh. * * * Q. This statement here is a statement you mailed those gentlemen on the same day that the accident occurred, to wit: On September 4, 1933, showing you had applied the return premium on the new policy, is that right? A. I believe that’s right; yes, sir. Q. And it is correct? A. I think it is absolutely correct.”

The insurance policy was found in the mail the day after the accident, and purports to have been issued the day before and specifically provides that it is written to protect this bus driver, Bert Moore, and Ratcliff admits that he retained the part of the unearned premium from the cancellation of a former policy held by this school district with this company for the protection of the same bus driver.

Ratcliff testified:

“Well, I can only be positive it was customary to retain the unearned premium and apply it on the same insurance in the fall.”

In addition to his testimony just quoted, he did apply it on this policy as shown -by the statement which he mailed out under the same date as the accident.

The argument of the insurance company that there was not a meeting of the minds of the contracting parties is without legal foundation, since all of the testimony is to the effect that it was to be the same policy, on the same party, for the same purpose, in the same amount, between the same contracting parties, or, in other words, in the nature of a renewal.

The contention by the insurance company to the effect that there is not sufficient evidence of Ratcliff’s authority as agent of this company is without foundation. Eirst, because on page 69 of the case-made is an admission or agreement between the parties that Hugh L. Ratcliff, or H. L. Ratcliff, was, at the time of the accident and had been for some years before, the duly authorized and acting agent of this garnishee corporation.

The record shows he did issue this insurance policy as the authorized representative of this company, on the day school opened, effective at 12 o’clock noon of said day, and that the accident happened in the forenoon of said day. It is further shown by the testimony that when he canceled the former policy he was to reissue this same policy, and that he retained the money belonging to this company and applied it on this policy.

We quote the following testimony at this time:

“Q. Did you ask Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 585, 63 P.2d 720, 178 Okla. 461, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-casualty-ins-co-v-heard-okla-1936.