National Bank of Commerce, of the Estate of Earl W. Smith, Jr. v. Royal Exchange Assurance of America, Inc.

455 F.2d 892, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 11233
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 17, 1972
Docket71-1191
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 455 F.2d 892 (National Bank of Commerce, of the Estate of Earl W. Smith, Jr. v. Royal Exchange Assurance of America, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Bank of Commerce, of the Estate of Earl W. Smith, Jr. v. Royal Exchange Assurance of America, Inc., 455 F.2d 892, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 11233 (6th Cir. 1972).

Opinion

CELEBREZZE, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from the District Court’s judgment for Defendants-Appel-lees in a suit involving insurance coverage on a 41-foot yacht owned by Earl W. Smith, Jr. The yacht sank on the Mississippi River near Memphis, Tennessee, on July 14, 1968, taking the life of a guest, Mrs. Joan Heimert Talbot, whose administratrix has filed a wrongful death action against Smith. Defendants-Appellees denied insurance coverage as to the yacht itself and any liability which might be incurred through the wrongful death action.

This diversity action was originally filed by Smith against Royal Exchange Assurance of America, Inc. (Royal Exchange) whose insurance policy had covered a 38-foot yacht previously owned by Smith, and William H. McGee & Company (McGee & Co.), a marine underwriter which had issued Royal Exchange’s policy on Smith’s 38-foot yacht. Subsequently, a Memphis insurance agency, Charles W. Harmon & Company (Harmon & Co.) and two of its officer-agents, Charles Canon and Tom Webb, were joined as defendants and third-party defendants. Prior to trial Smith died, and the suit was revived by the National Bank of Commerce, his executor and Plaintiff-Appellant in the present appeal.

In its complaint and at trial, Plaintiff-Appellant contended that a valid oral agreement to insure Smith’s 41-foot yacht as of May 16, 1968, had been entered into between Smith and agent Webb in a telephone conversation on that date. Alternatively, Plaintiff-Appellant asserted that the conduct of the several Defendants-Appellees in “unreasonably delaying notifying” Smith until after the July 14, 1968, sinking that his request for an endorsement covering the 41-foot yacht had not been accepted constituted an implied acceptance of the insurance and/or a negligent breach of the insurer’s duty giving rise to liability in tort.

At the close of all of the evidence, the District Court submitted six interrogatories in the form of special verdicts to the jury. As discussed in full below, the District Court instructed the jury that if they determined under interrogatory number 1 that no oral agreement for immediately binding insurance was entered into by Smith and agent Webb on May 16, 1968, the remaining interrogatories relating to implied acceptance and negligent conduct by Defendants-Appellees could not be answered. Upon the jury’s determination under interrogatory number 1 that no oral agreement was entered into, the District Court ruled that Smith was estopped from relying on an implied acceptance of his application for an endorsement covering his 41-foot yacht and the alleged failure of Defendants-Appel-lees to notify him that he had no insurance. Judgment was therefore entered for Defendants-Appellees.

On appeal, Plaintiff-Appellant asserts that the District Court erred in not permitting the jury to answer interrogatories 2 through 6 independently of their answer to interrogatory number 1. For the reasons set forth below, we reverse the judgment of the District Court and remand for a new trial.

*895 I.

The facts relevant to this appeal, as they appear in the record, are summarized as follows. Smith had purchased various types of insurance, including auto and marine, through Harmon & Co. since 1949. Generally, Smith would telephone Harmon & Co.’s office requesting specific insurance, and two or three weeks after such calls he would receive the requested policy or endorsement indicating that coverage was effective as of the date of his telephone call. In September 1964, Smith obtained insurance on a 38-foot yacht from Harmon & Co., and this policy was renewed annually. The last such renewal covered the period October 15, 1967, through October 15, 1968, under a Royal Exchange policy issued through McGee & Co.

On May 16, 1968, Smith telephoned agent Webb at Harmon & Co., informing him that he wanted to transfer the coverage from his 38-foot yacht to a new 41-foot yacht which he was going to pick up in several weeks. Smith claimed that Webb told him he was “covered as of that moment.” Webb, however, testified that he merely told Smith that he would write to McGee & Co. asking that an endorsement be issued substituting the new yacht for the old one. Pursuant to this telephone conversation, Webb’s secretary sent a letter to McGee & Co. on May 16, 1968, requesting the latter to issue an endorsement effective that date covering the 41-foot yacht and eliminating the 38-foot yacht.

On May 24,1968, Edward J. Welty, Jr., an underwriter at McGee & Co’s Chicago office, wrote to Harmon & Co. acknowledging the May 16, 1968, request for an endorsement for the 41-foot yacht and further stating

“[I]n order that we may properly rate this boat, we need some additional information and are, therefore, enclosing one of our applications for your use. Our rates include credits for various items of safety equipment which are enumerated in the enclosed application.”

On June 3, 1968, agent Webb forwarded the application form to Smith and enclosed a speed memorandum relaying to Smith the above-quoted portion of McGee & Co.’s letter and requesting that Smith return the completed application to Harmon & Co.’s office as promptly as possible.

On or about June 11, 1968, Smith and his Pilot, Sonny Miller, picked up the 41-foot yacht at the Chris Craft factory in Holland, Michigan. Miller testified that while he and Smith were waiting to try out the new yacht, Smith left him for a moment for the purpose of telephoning to have the offshore insurance 1 transferred from one boat to the other. After two or three days of testing the new yacht at Holland, Michigan, Miller and Smith started the trip to Memphis via Lake Michigan and rivers connecting to the Mississippi. After his return to Memphis, Smith struck a submerged cable with his new yacht on June 13, 1968, incurring serious damage to one propeller and shaft. The cost of repairs totaled $357.86, for which no claim was ever submitted to Harmon & Co., McGee & Co., or Royal Exchange.

On June 17, 1968, the above-mentioned application form was received by Harmon & Co. from Smith, 14 days after agent Webb had sent the form to Smith. Harmon & Co. forwarded the completed form to McGee & Co. in Chicago, where it was in turn forwarded to McGee & Co.’s home office in New York with the following speed memorandum by Edward J. Welty enclosed:

“Attached corres, is self explanatory. Please let us have a quotation at your earliest convenience.”

A reply was sent by McGee & Co.’s home office on June 1, 1968, advising Welty *896 that because their experience on large yachts had been poor, the Company was unwilling to take full coverage on Smith’s 41-foot yacht but would participate in one-third of the total coverage. In a letter sent June 25, 1968, Welty informed Harmon & Co. of the above reply from McGee & Co.’s home office and their inability to take the full coverage on Smith’s new yacht.

On June 28, 1968, Harmon & Co.’s secretary wrote to Welty acknowledging the latter’s June 25th letter, noting that Smith paid $71,000 for his new yacht, and requesting that McGee & Co.

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455 F.2d 892, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 11233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-bank-of-commerce-of-the-estate-of-earl-w-smith-jr-v-royal-ca6-1972.