Miller v. Hartford Fire Insurance Company

102 N.W.2d 368, 251 Iowa 665, 1960 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 572
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 5, 1960
Docket49853
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 102 N.W.2d 368 (Miller v. Hartford Fire Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Hartford Fire Insurance Company, 102 N.W.2d 368, 251 Iowa 665, 1960 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 572 (iowa 1960).

Opinion

Garrett, J.

A. B. Schario, owner of a house in Woodbury County, Iowa, notified the Woolridge. Insurance Agency, Sioux City agent of the defendant Hartford Fire Insurance Company, his insurer, of a fire loss on his property. The agent referred the claim to Western Adjustment and Inspection Company, appellant, for investigation and report. When, appellant’s manager, Leroy Bean, received the claim he assigned it to Richard Brennan, an adjuster employed by appellant, who went to the premises and inspected the damage.

The owner told Brennan a contractor had estimated the damage at $5000 which Brennan thought was too high. Brennan then called plaintiff-appellee, Charles Miller, and asked him to inspect the property and submit a competitive estimate. Appellee later telephoned Brennan stating the damage was about $3500 which Brennan thought was also too high. The next day appellee submitted to Brennan a written estimate of -$2995.90.

Appellee claimed Brennan told him he had the low bid and to proceed with the repairs. When the repairs were completed *668 the insurer and adjustment company refused to pay therefor, claiming Sehario was responsible for the fire. Appellee then brought suit against the insurance company. When the company denied liability and the authority of the adjustment company to bind it in any way appellee amended his petition making the adjustment company a party defendant.

At the close of plaintiff-appellee’s evidence the court, on motion of the insurance company, directed a verdict in its favor. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff against the adjustment company and it has appealed from judgment on the verdict and the order sustaining the insurer’s motion for directed verdict.

I. There is no dispute as to the amount in controversy. No objections were interposed to the court’s instructions to the jury including the instruction that in the event of a verdict for plaintiff it should be for $3045.

II. Appellant contends the contract to repair the insured property was between plaintiff and Sehario, the owner, and that it and the insurance company were not indebted to plaintiff on contract or otherwise in any amount. Whether there was a contract and who the parties thereto were was a question of fact for the jury.

Plaintiff testified that since 1936 he had been engaged as a general contractor in the construction, reconstruction and repair of dwelling houses. “Q. At whose request did you go to look at the property? A. I came back to my office and there was a phone call to call Mr. Brennan of the Western Adjustment.” He knew Mr. Brennan always called him Dick; he had had several other prior dealings with the Western Adjustment and Inspection Company. “Q. Over what period of time? A. Oh, since 1936, the past twenty-two years.” He had met Mr. Brennan about four years before when he first started as an adjuster and he had dealings with him in his capacity as an adjuster for that company before. “Q. Did you phone or give an estimate to Mr. Brennan? A. I called Mr. Brennan on the phone and told him that it was kind of a serious fire, and he says, well, he said to give me the figures to his office, and' they would go from there. Q. Did you give Mr. Brennan a figure as to what it would cost, or what.you would charge to restore 'the building? A. I did. *669 Q. What was that figure? A. It was in the $3000 figure, three thousand some odd dollars. I can’t say exactly. It might have been $3100 or $3050. I had nothing in writing with him. I never ever gave a written contract in all my experience with adjusting. I followed the usual procedure I follow in connection with adjustments with this company. I sent Mr. Brennan the estimate. It was a written estimate somewhere between $3000 and $3100, or something like that. This was on the day after I looked it over. After I submitted the figure to him I next heard from him within a day or two after I had been out there. Q. All right, now what did he say when he called you on the phone ? A. He said I was low bidder, and that I could proceed on those figures, but he wouldn’t allow the painting on the outside. In response to this telephone conversation with Mr. Brennan, we started to work.”

Plaintiff further testified that when he first went out to look at this fire loss he saw a Mr. Schario out there. He had never seen him before. He never knew him or heard of him before. He had never seen this house before. He first learned there had been a fire out there when Mr. Brennan called him on the telephone. “Q. Was this bid that you made for that construction job to include everything except painting? A. There was some basement work that he hired out to the lady of the house that he said he would pay her a dollar an hour if she would clean the house basement and I believe inside the cabinets and the dishes, and there was another man there that he hired to assist her. Q. Were you there when he did that ? A. I was. He took — he told me not to figure the cost, he would hire them to do that. Q. Do you know whether he did or not? A. He did.” Plaintiff had had negotiations with Mr. Brennan from time to time on other matters, too. When he completed the work he reported to Mr. Brennan or his company. After demands for payment he called Mr. Bean “* * * he told me well there wouldn’t be too much to worry about because there was a mortgage on the property, and that I would get my money probably over a period of time.” He stated he had no dealings with the insurance company, and he never had dealings with insurance companies. “Q. Was this transaction handled in substantially the same way as all other *670 loss and. repairs of that kind ? A. On about the same basis.” He talked to no one other than Mr. Brennan or Mr. Bean concerning this job. All of the above testimony was received over the objection that it was incompetent under the statute of frauds. Passing this question for the moment, it is our opinion the jury could find from the evidence set out, ample support for its verdict against the adjustment company.

Appellant contends that under the interpretation of the evidence most favorable to appellee there was no valid offer, acceptance, consideration or mutual assent shown between said parties and that the terms of the alleged contract were so vague and indefinite as to render it void and unenforceable.

If these contentions were sustained by the evidence or lack of it we would be compelled to reverse the judgment of the trial court. Giving the evidence the most favorable interpretation it is entitled to it meets all of appellant’s challenges. The transactions between the parties were handled “in substantially the same way as all other loss and repairs of that kind.” The amount of the claim was not questioned. The jury could find from the evidence that all of plaintiff’s dealings were with Brennan and Bean; that they represented they had authority to order the repairs; that the quality of the work was satisfactory; that plaintiff made an offer which was accepted; that he carried out the verbal contract on his part and that he thereby became entitled to the consideration or contract price.

“The determination that an agreement is sufficiently definite is favored. The courts will, if possible, so construe the agreement as to carry into effect the reasonable intention of the parties if that can be ascertained.” 12 Am. Jur., Contracts, section 64, page 556.

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Bluebook (online)
102 N.W.2d 368, 251 Iowa 665, 1960 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-hartford-fire-insurance-company-iowa-1960.