Mid-Continent Casualty Co. v. State Insurance Fund

1964 OK 210, 398 P.2d 92, 1964 Okla. LEXIS 491
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 30, 1964
DocketNo. 40170
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1964 OK 210 (Mid-Continent Casualty Co. v. State Insurance Fund) 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
Mid-Continent Casualty Co. v. State Insurance Fund, 1964 OK 210, 398 P.2d 92, 1964 Okla. LEXIS 491 (Okla. 1964).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Chief Justice.

Plaintiff in error, whose office is in Tulsa, is the successor of General Bonding Company (whose office was in Oklahoma City) as the insurer of the defendant in error, under a public liability and property damage indemnity policy, with a maximum coverage of $20,000.00, that was in force and effect at all times material to this case. The insuring entity will hereinafter be referred to merely as the “insurer”, which, during the earlier events herein narrated was General, later succeeded by Mid-Continent.

This action is an outgrowth of earlier litigation in which the insurer ostensibly attempted to fulfill its contract obligation under the policy to defend defendant in error, hereinafter referred to merely as “State Fund”, or “Fund”, against attempts by A. B. Bone and his wife, Ella Bone, to establish liability on the part of, and obtain from, the Fund, recompense, for damages they suffered in a collision between the automobile in which they were riding, and one driven by a Fund employee, Theodore Riley.

The Bones’ efforts were finally successful and culminated in their obtaining verdicts and judgments, affirmed by this Court, during the year 1959, in the sums of $28,-833.00 and $34,000.00, respectively, against Riley and the Fund jointly. For reports of these appeals, see State ex rel. State Ins. Fund v. Bone, Old., 344 P.2d 562, and State ex rel. State Ins. Fund v. Bone, Old., 344 P.2d 570, 571.

After the insurer had refused the Fund’s demands that it pay the total sum of these judgments, and the Fund had rejected its tender of $20,000.00 to apply ther.eon, and the Fund, in order to prevent execution from being levied against its property, had been compelled to pay the full amount of said judgments totalling, with interest and costs, the sum of $71,163.82, the Fund brought this action for damages in that amount against the insurer on the theory that the insurer had not discharged its obligation to the Fund by settling the Bones’ claims, thus forestalling the entry of said judgments against it. After the trial, at the close of which the insurer’s motion for a directed verdict was overruled, verdict and judgment were for the Fund, in the amount prayed for. Thereafter, the insurer perfected the present appeal.

In order to determine the issues of this appeal, it will be necessary to recapitulate some of the extensive factual background this controversy.

The accident occurred in January, 1953. Soon thereafter the Bones’ original attorney, who we will refer to as “Mr. O”, contacted one of the Fund’s attorneys, we will refer to as “Mr. P”, concerning the possibility of [94]*94the Fund’s recompensing the Bones for their damages without the necessity of court action to compel it.

Without ever receiving any tangible sign of interest in negotiating a settlement of the controversy from Mr. P, or the Fund, or its insurer, Mr. O, in March, 1953, instituted separate damage actions on behalf of Mr. and Mrs. Bone against Riley and the Fund in the District Court of Oklahoma County. One of these was that Court’s Cause No. 130,293, entitled: “Ella Bone, Plaintiff vs. Theodore Riley and the State Insurance Fund, Defendants”, and the other was said Court’s Cause No. 130,294, entitled: “A. B. Bone, Plaintiff vs. Theodore Riley and The State Insurance Fund, Defendants.”

The special defenses which the law firm retained by the insurer to represent the Fund, and hereinafter, referred to as “Attorney D” or the “D firm”, asserted on its behalf in the two actions, were: (1) The Fund’s immunity, as an agency of the State, from liability for the tort of an employee; (2) contributory negligence; and (3) unavoidable casualty.

Besides incorporating the mentioned claim of immunity in its answers, the Fund also asserted said claim in challenges to the court’s jurisdiction, which challenges were rejected by one of the Court’s judges before the answers were filed. It also asserted the claim, after filing its answer, in motions for judgment on the pleadings in the two cases. After the latter were overruled by another judge of the same court, it was decided to test the rulings of the two district judges on the “immunity” issue by instituting an original action in this court. This latter action was begun by an application for a writ of prohibition, filed in the name of the State on relation of the Fund, as petitioner. It is reported as State ex rel. State Ins. Fund v. District Court of Oklahoma County at 278 P.2d 841. (It is observed that the petitioner therein was represented not only by the D firm and the State Attorney General, but also by one of the Fund’s staff attorneys other than Attorney P.) After this Court had, by an ostensibly unanimous opinion promulgated in that case under the name of the late Mr. Justice Ben Arnold, granted the writ and directed dismissal of the action insofar as it concerned the Fund, upon holding therein, that said party, as a department of the State, is not liable in such actions as the Bones had filed (causes numbered 130,293 and 130,294, supra) and that the general statute authorizing the Fund to sue and be sued does not waive the sovereign immunity of the State from such suits, and after this Court had, during January, 1955, denied Respondents leave to file Second Petition for Rehearing in that case, the Bones were able later that year to procure enactment of House Bill No. 875, being a special act of the Twenty-Fifth Oklahoma Legislature purporting to specifically authorize suing the Fund for their damages. (S.L.1955, p. 596.)

Three days after the enactment of H.B. No. 875, supra, or on June 6, 1955, the Bones’ attorney, Mr. O renewed the effort he had, two years previously, made to commence negotiations with the Fund for a settlement of his clients’ claims for damages by a letter addressed to the Fund’s attorney, Mr. P, inclosing a copy of the newly enacted law. In the next letter, Attorney O is shown to have addressed to Attorney P— one dated September 6, 1955 — he disclosed that his clients had decided that if they were offered the sum of $10,000.00 and court costs in settlement of the two cases, they would accept such offer. In this letter, Attorney O stated, among other things in substance, that he felt that if the matter were properly presented to it this Court would overrule State ex rel. State Ins. Fund v. District Court of Oklahoma County, supra, but that he realized that this was only his idea, and not that of Attorney P. Despite this intimation of said Fund’s Attorney’s belief in the finality of Ms employer’s invulnerability to actions for damages incurred in the manner of the Bones’, Attorney P nevertheless forwarded copies of Mr. O’s letter inclosed in letters [95]*95dated September 7, 1955, he wrote on behalf of the Fund to the insurer and the D firm, as its counsel. In the latter letter, Attorney P demanded that the insurer accept the Bones’ offer to settle the cases for $10,-000.00, and stated, in substance, that if this were not done, the Fund would insist on the insurer’s paying “all damages, if any, which are rendered against the State Insurance Fund in excess of the policy limits.”

Attorney D answered Attorney P’s letter with one dated September 22, 1955, in which he stated in substance that he had “referred” the matter of settlement to General and “was authorized to state * * * that it did not * * * desire to attempt any settlement of the * * * cases, but prefers to wait until the legality of the legislative enactment, authorizing these suits, has been determined.”

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Bluebook (online)
1964 OK 210, 398 P.2d 92, 1964 Okla. LEXIS 491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mid-continent-casualty-co-v-state-insurance-fund-okla-1964.