Old Colony Insurance Co. v. Trapani
This text of 118 So. 2d 850 (Old Colony Insurance Co. v. Trapani) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
OLD COLONY INSURANCE CO., Appellant,
v.
Frank TRAPANI, d/b/a Verrone Hair Stylists, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.
*851 John S. Neely, Jr., Fleming, O'Bryan & Fleming, Fort Lauderdale, for appellant.
T. Paul Hodge, Miller & Miller, Fort Lauderdale, for appellee.
ALLEN, Chief Judge.
The appellee, as plaintiff in the lower court, brought an action for reformation of an insurance contract and judgment thereon against the appellant as defendant. The complaint alleged that as a result of an injury to a customer in plaintiff's beauty parlor, plaintiff was forced to pay a judgment for the injury, for which plaintiff thought the Old Colony Insurance Company should have been liable as his insurance carrier. The defendant answered denying coverage under the policy with plaintiff, and alleged that there was no mutual mistake, thus no cause for the requested reformation. After trial before the chancellor, final judgment was entered granting reformation of the insurance policy and awarding plaintiff damages for the previously awarded judgment and attorney's fees plus interest thereon.
The plaintiff operates two beauty shops in the City of Fort Lauderdale, which will be hereafter referred to as the Searstown Shop and the Gateway Shop. In February, 1955, plaintiff negotiated with Cartwright and Coffman, insurance agents for defendant, for insurance coverage at the Gateway Shop. Apparently the plaintiff requested a policy to cover anything that might happen during the operation of the shop. The defendant's agents executed to plaintiff, with defendant as insuror, an Owner's, Landlord's and Tenant's Liability Policy covering the Gateway Shop.
Plaintiff did not read the policy but, if he had, he would have noticed that there was attached to the policy a rider entitled, "Exclusion of Professional Services," which stated:
"This endorsement, effective February 2, 1955
(12:01 AM, standard time)forms a part of policy No. CGL-354166 issued to Frank Trapini dba Verrone Hair Stylist by Old Colony Insurance Company. Such insurance as is afforded by the policy does not apply to the rendering of professional services or the omission thereof.
s/Basil C. Coffman Authorized Representative"The plaintiff thereafter opened the Searstown Shop in a new shopping center but did not obtain insurance coverage on this new shop. An accident subsequently occurred in the new shop. An employee of the plaintiff permitted an appliance, used in *852 rinsing the hair of the customer, to fall on the head of the customer, causing injuries to the customer's eyes and nose. Subsequently, the plaintiff called Cartwright, defendant's agent, and inquired as to whether his insurance policy covered such accidents at the Searstown Shop. Cartwright advised the plaintiff that such accidents at the Searstown Shop were not covered by the policy; but that such accidents occurring at the Gateway Shop would be covered. Plaintiff settled this claim for injuries with the customer.
On December 31, 1955, a similar accident occurred in the Gateway Shop. An employee of the plaintiff permitted the hair rinser to fall on a customer's head thereby causing injuries to the customer. The injury was reported to defendant's agents who in turn notified the defendant that it was their opinion that defendant was liable under the policy. After defendant investigated the accident, liability for the injury was denied by defendant on the basis that the accident occurred during the rendition of professional services which was excluded from coverage by the attached rider previously mentioned. The defendant thus refused to defend the suit filed by the customer and plaintiff hired an attorney and defended the suit. Judgment was recovered by the customer in the amount of $1,500, which plaintiff paid and in addition it appears that plaintiff expended $400 for attorney's fees. When the instant suit was tried and judgment entered for plaintiff, the chancellor awarded to plaintiff as damages: the $1,500 judgment plus the $400 for attorney's fees expended in the prior action; interest thereon of $114; $400 for attorney's fees in the present action; and also the costs expended by plaintiff in the instant suit making a total of $2,414.
The decisive question before this court is whether the plaintiff established sufficient evidence to justify the granting of reformation and judgment in its favor by the lower court. To justify the reformation of an insurance contract or policy it must appear that by inadvertence, fraud, or mutual mistake of the parties, the policy or contract fails to express, or conform to the contemplation of the parties. Where one of these grounds exists, equity will grant relief or reformation if it can be demonstrated that the contract, as reduced to writing, does not accurately set forth the meeting of the minds of the parties. Rosenthal v. First Nat. Fire Ins. Co., 74 Fla. 371, 77 So. 92.
In ascertaining whether a mistake actually exists, it is essential to determine the contemplations of the parties at the time the contract was reduced to writing. The plaintiff, Frank Trapani, testified that at the time he leased the premises where the Gateway Shop was located, the defendant's agent, Cartwright, told plaintiff that he would need "Owners' and Landlords' Liability Insurance." The plaintiff further stated that this was precisely the type policy which he subsequently purchased from defendant for coverage at the Gateway Shop. Cartwright testified that at the time he was discussing this insurance coverage with plaintiff that he may have told plaintiff that "if someone got hurt in his shop from a dryer falling on them, or some other falling object, he would be covered." At the trial Cartwright stated that he presumed he made this statement to plaintiff and that:
"I'm not changing that statement. I don't adjust the claims. I only sell the policies."
After plaintiff testified concerning the accident at the Searstown Shop, he stated that when he asked Cartwright if the accident was covered that Cartwright replied:
"`The policy you got doesn't cover the Searstown shop. Had the accident happened at the Gateway shop, you would have been covered.'"
Cartwright testified that plaintiff inquired whether the fact that the Gateway shop was covered would give him coverage at the Searstown shop under a blanket coverage. *853 Then, according to Cartwright's testimony, the following answer was given:
"He came over to see me some time after this occurrence took place, and asked whether he was covered under his policy at 1960 Sunrise. I told him it covered the location at 1960, but did not cover the location at Searstown.
* * * * * *
"No. I didn't say he would have been covered against that particular incident. I told him he had insurance and the company would protect him in the Sunrise store. This is the only verbal conversation between Frank and myself. The fact of whether the injury was a result of malpractice or the result of an ordinary occurrence, I am not in a position to determine that."
Cartwright also stated that he subsequently wrote the company to the effect that he, Cartwright, thought the injury at the Gateway shop was covered by plaintiff's policy with defendant company.
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118 So. 2d 850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/old-colony-insurance-co-v-trapani-fladistctapp-1960.