Mueller v. American Indemnity Co.

120 N.W.2d 89, 19 Wis. 2d 349
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 5, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 120 N.W.2d 89 (Mueller v. American Indemnity Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mueller v. American Indemnity Co., 120 N.W.2d 89, 19 Wis. 2d 349 (Wis. 1963).

Opinion

*351 Dieterich, J.

The pleadings in the instant action consist of a summons and complaint and stipulation entered into between the plaintiff and defendant pursuant to sec. 269.01, Stats., 1 as an agreed case which directed the trial court to enter judgment in accordance with its determination.

The action was commenced by service of a summons and complaint in January, 1960. No answer was filed on behalf of the defendant Insurance Company. The case was submitted to the trial court on stipulated facts as an agreed case pursuant to sec. 269.01, Stats., in October, 1961. The stipulation entered into between the plaintiff and defendant provided in part as follows:

“The plaintiff is an adult, employed as a salesman and traveling representative, . . .
“. . . at all times material hereto, was the owner of a 1957 Chevrolet . . .
“The defendant, American Indemnity Company, is a foreign insurance company, with its home office at Galveston, Texas, . . . engaging in the business of issuing policies of automobile insurance in the state of Wisconsin . . . the state of Louisiana . . . and elsewhere.
“On . . . the 7th day of April, 1959, the defendant, through its . . . authorized agent, at New Orleans, Louisiana, issued to the plaintiff its family combination automobile policy . . . with the policy period being March 24, 1959, to March 24,1960, both dates inclusive. . . .
“The plaintiff, through the defendant’s agent, paid the defendant a total premium for said policy in the sum of $190.40.
“Under date of June 12, 1959, the defendant, through its issuing agent, Dixie Insurance Agency, Inc., forwarded a *352 notice of cancellation of said policy addressed to the plaintiff at 905 Royal Street, New Orleans, Louisiana, which was the address of the plaintiff as indicated in the policy previously issued. . . .
“. . . The same was returned to the defendant’s agent unclaimed. ...
“. . . there was due to plaintiff a return premium in the amount of $150.90. This amount was credited to the account of the defendant’s agency, Dixie Insurance Agency, Inc. No attempt was . . . made to forward this sum to plaintiff either at the address indicated at New Orleans, Louisiana, nor to any other address at which the plaintiff was, . . .
“The plaintiff did not . . . advise the defendant, or its authorized agents, ... of any change in his mailing address until . . . the 6th day of October, 1959 [at which time he received information of the notice of cancellation].
“On the 2d day of October, 1959, the plaintiff while driving the automobile described in the policy . . . was involved in a two-car collision at the intersection of West Holt street and South Fifty Eighth street in the county of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. . . . timely notice of such accident was furnished to the defendant through its authorized agents . . . sufficient notice of a claim arising out of said accident made by one Robert Schmidt (driver and owner of the other vehicle) was also given to the defendant through its duly authorized agent.
“As a result of the collision . . . plaintiff’s automobile was damaged, and the . . . reasonable cost of the repairs necessitated by reason of said collision ... is in the sum of $862.10, . . .
“Plaintiff incurred medical expenses because of personal injuries sustained by him in said accident in the total sum of $50, . . .”

Counsel for the defendant does not concede, and challenges, the relevancy and materiality of the statements of fact below:

“. . . Plaintiff . . . filed with the Wisconsin motor vehicle department, a report of accident. Included therein was . . . form SR-21 describing the date and location of the acci *353 dent, describing the vehicle, naming the driver and owner, and naming the defendant as the Insurance Company whose policy was claimed to cover the plaintiff as owner and operator. . . . pursuant to the statutes of the state of Wisconsin, . . . form SR-21 was . . . mailed to and received by the defendant.
“The defendant did not, for more than thirty days after the receipt by it of the said SR-21, mail to or file with the Wisconsin motor vehicle department any statement indicating either that it had any policy defenses or that it had no automobile liability policy in effect on the date of the accident.
“The statement which the automobile liability insurer is authorized to file under the Wisconsin statutes, in the form adopted by the Wisconsin motor vehicle department, permits the following statement:
“□ No automobile liability policy was in effect on the date of the accident.”

The issues on this appeal are:

(1) Whether by its conduct defendant is estopped from challenging the judgment of the trial court.

(2) Whether defendant by failure to return an SR-21 to the motor vehicle department has waived its right to declare that it did not have a policy of automobile liability insurance in effect at the time of the collision involved.

(3) Whether defendant under Louisiana law had effectively canceled plaintiff’s automobile insurance policy prior to the accident in question.

(1) Estoppel.

Counsel for plaintiff contends that in all fairness defendant should not be allowed to appeal the trial court’s judgment because defendant neither served an answer to plaintiff’s complaint nor responded to plaintiff’s brief. However, defendant did agree to submit the action on facts stipulated by both parties. Hence, the provisions of sec. 269.01, Stats., apply.

*354 In those cases which are determined as agreed cases under sec. 269.01, Stats., it is not necessary that defendant serve an answer. In Luebke v. Watertown (1939), 230 Wis. 512, 284 N. W. 519, an appeal by plaintiff was entertained by this court where defendant had not filed an answer to plaintiffs complaint, but defendant was not prejudiced thereby on that appeal.

(2) Failure to Return an SR-21.

Counsel for both parties cite an article by Walter M. Bjork of Madison, entitled, “The New SR-21 Look in Wisconsin,” published in the February, 1958, issue of the Wisconsin Bar Bulletin, pp. 12-21. This scholarly article states that (p. 14):

. . the company need not file an SR-21 unless it wishes to assert one or more of the seven statements provided on the form. . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 N.W.2d 89, 19 Wis. 2d 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mueller-v-american-indemnity-co-wis-1963.