MISSISSIPPI INS. UNDERWRITING v. Maenza
This text of 413 So. 2d 1384 (MISSISSIPPI INS. UNDERWRITING v. Maenza) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
MISSISSIPPI INSURANCE UNDERWRITING ASSOCIATION
v.
Peter J. MAENZA and Mississippi Insurance Commission.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*1385 Watkins & Eager, P.N. Harkins, III, Jackson, for appellant.
Michael B. Martz, Jackson, for appellee.
Before PATTERSON, C.J., and BROOM and DARDEN, JJ.
BROOM, Justice, for the Court:
Insurance premium payments (renewal of existing policies) mailed two days before expiration of the existing coverage but not received until the day after coverage allegedly expired are background to this property insurance litigation. Mississippi Insurance Underwriting Association (MIUA herein) had written the insurance coverage.[1] The Circuit Court of the First Judicial District of Hinds County upheld the decision of the Mississippi Insurance Commission awarding coverage to the policyholder, Peter J. Maenza. We affirm.
Since 1976, the plaintiff/appellee Maenza had coverage with MIUA on his Biloxi property which received damage from Hurricane Frederic on September 11, 1979. On the premise that Maenza's coverage lapsed because his premium payment was received one day late rather than on or before the September 10, 1979, due date, MIUA rejected his claim. When MIUA received the premium payment on September 11, 1979, the hurricane was in the area and MIUA determined that the coverage could not be made effective "until the hurricane had cleared the gulf." After MIUA denied coverage, its appeals committee upheld the denial and Maenza appealed to the Mississippi Insurance Commission. Miss. Code Ann. § 83-35-21 (1972). In reversing the appeals committee's denial of coverage, the Commission directed MIUA to issue the desired coverage effective on the anniversary date of the policy: September 10, 1979. MIUA then appealed to the circuit court where coverage was upheld, and now MIUA appeals here.
Thomas J. Silman of Biloxi, the producing agent for Maenza, testified that he mailed the renewal applications to MIUA from the Biloxi post office on September 8, 1979. Undisputedly, the renewals were not received at the Jackson MIUA office until September 11. MIUA elected to treat the documents as applications for new coverage rather than as renewals of existing policies. On September 20, MIUA sent Silman a letter informing him that the applications could not be processed because Hurricane Frederic had been designated a hurricane as of 5:00 p.m., September 10. According to Rule III, 3(b)(5) of the MIUA Manual of Rules and Procedures, no application for new or increased coverage will be accepted when a designated hurricane is in the Gulf of Mexico. After the hurricane threat passed, five new MIUA policies were issued to Maenza with a September 14, 1979, effective date.
*1386 G.O. Leird, MIUA's office supervisor responsible for office procedures, testified that the documents were treated as applications for new coverage because they were received on September 11 after expiration of the policy one day earlier. Leird said that when the one-year MIUA contracts expire with no notice of renewal, MIUA assumes the business has been placed in the voluntary market because MIUA loses "quite a bit of business" each year to that market. However, Leird's further testimony was that he knew of no reason why Maenza's policies would not have been renewed upon receipt of the applications and premium payments other than the fact that they were received when the hurricane was in the Gulf and were received one day after the stated expiration date. When specifically asked by a commissioner whether MIUA would have rewritten the policies on the Maenza property, Leird replied, "I think we would have, yes ... [h]ad it been on time, we would have."
Thus arises the issue: is renewal of insurance effective when application and payment are mailed by the insured, or does it become effective when received by MIUA? The Insurance Commission ruled that the renewal became effective when the application and premium payment were deposited in the mails in time to reach MIUA prior to the stated expiration date. This conclusion was reached by the Commission after laying the blame for the confusion in the case "at the door of the United States Postal Authorities." According to the Commission, the renewal applications would have been received by MIUA on time had the postal service not delayed in handling the letters. Further ruling of the Commission was that as between the parties, the insurer (MIUA) should bear the imputed responsibility for the postal service's negligence and delay because MIUA invited, requested, authorized and acquiesced in the use of the mails for transporting all correspondence, applications, premium payments, notices, policies, etc., and thus adopted the postal service as its agent. Appellant MIUA urges reversal of the Commission's decision on two grounds. First, it argues that agent Silman (Maenza's representative) made the offer to contract and, as the offeror, Maenza should bear the consequences of any delay on the part of the post office.
Significant and applicable here is Mississippi Code Annotated § 83-35-15(2) (1972), which states in part, "[a]ny policy issued pursuant to the provisions of this section shall be renewed annually, upon application therefor, so long as the property meets the definition of `insurable property' set forth in section 83-35-3(d)." (emphasis added). From the plain language of this statute, we find the legislature envisioned that automatic renewals would occur when applications were made therefor. This apparently was MIUA's policy because, according to Leird, had Maenza's application been delivered on time and the hurricane not been in the Gulf, the policies would have been automatically renewed. Such automatic renewals show that the offer for renewal is made by MIUA when it sends its notice of expiration, and is accepted by the offeree/insured when he sends in his premium payments to be automatically renewed. Thus MIUA's first argument lacks merit.
MIUA's second argument is that its rules require actual receipt of the premium before coverage can be effected. It cites 14 J. Appleman, Insurance Law and Practice, § 7990 (1944), which states in part that "[t]he effect of mailing a premium, as regards payment, depends wholly upon the intention of the parties... . [G]enerally payment of a premium would not be effected until actual receipt by the insurer... ." Appellant MIUA contends that Mississippi Code Annotated § 83-35-15(2) (1972) and the MIUA Manual show an intention by the Association not to be bound until receipt of a premium. The portion of § 83-35-15(2) relied upon by MIUA states, "If the association determines that the property is insurable and that there is no unpaid premium due from the applicant for prior insurance on the property, the association, upon receipt *1387 of the premium or such portion thereof as is prescribed in the plan of operation, shall cause to be issued a policy of essential property insurance for a term of one (1) year." We note that MIUA does not quote the remainder of the subsection, which states,
[a]ny policy issued pursuant to the provisions of this section shall be renewed annually, upon application therefor, so long as the property meets the definition of "insurable property" set forth in section 83-35-3(d)." (emphasis added).
Clearly the portion of the subsection cited by MIUA refers to new coverage, whereas the second sentence in the subsection refers to renewals.
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413 So. 2d 1384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mississippi-ins-underwriting-v-maenza-miss-1982.