Progressive Specialty Insurance v. Carter

868 P.2d 32, 126 Or. App. 236, 1994 Ore. App. LEXIS 117
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 2, 1994
DocketCC-89-105; CA A72342
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 868 P.2d 32 (Progressive Specialty Insurance v. Carter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Progressive Specialty Insurance v. Carter, 868 P.2d 32, 126 Or. App. 236, 1994 Ore. App. LEXIS 117 (Or. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

LANDAU, J.

Plaintiff Progressive Specialty Insurance Company (Progressive) seeks to rescind a motor vehicle liability insurance policy on the basis of material misrepresentations on the application for insurance. The trial court denied relief, and Progressive appeals. We review de novo, ORS 19.125(3), and affirm.

In the fall of 1989, defendant Barry Carter (Barry) contacted his insurance agent, Johansen, to obtain motor vehicle liability insurance for himself, his wife and his 14-year-old daughter, who was permitted to drive the family car on occasion. Because of Barry’s poor driving record, however, Johansen was unable to obtain coverage from any of the companies for which she was authorized. She contacted Courtney, an agent selling insurance for Progressive. After obtaining a satisfactory quote from Courtney, Johansen met with him at her office, and the two jointly filled out an application form for Barry. They left blank those sections of the form for which they lacked information. Then Johansen mailed the partially completed application to Barry, with a cover letter instructing him to fill in his and his wife Barbara’s occupations, to include her driver’s license number, to date the application and to sign two signature lines. Barry completed the application as instructed.

Several sections of the application are relevant to this case. First, there is a section entitled “Driver Information,” in which there appears the following request:

“Complete for Applicant, Spouse, and all other persons age 15 and older residing with Applicant (licensed or not). Also list any other regular or frequent operators.”

In that section, the names of both Barry and Barbara are listed. Although both Johansen and Courtney knew that Brenda was a member of the household, they did not list her, because they did not know she drove the family car. Second, there is a statement that reads:

“All household members 15-24 years old, whether they drive or not, must be excluded.”

Third, there is a section entitled “Driver Exclusion(s),” in which there appears in small print:

[239]*239“Please remember to exclude all unlicensed or non-driving household members 25 or older and all household members under age 25.”

Two spaces are provided for “excluded drivers.” At the bottom is a signature line for the named insured, which begins after the printed word “Agreed.” Johansen and Courtney did not include Brenda’s name in that section; nor did they ask Barry to do so when they sent the form to him. Courtney, Progressive’s agent, understood the application and the company’s underwriting manual not to require the listing of Brenda in that section, because she was not a regular or frequent driver.

When Barry received the application, he reviewed it and noticed that it expressly required that all household members 15 to 25 years old be excluded. Because Brenda was only 14, he assumed she would be covered. He completed the highlighted portions of the application as requested. He did not list Brenda either as a “regular or frequent driver” or as an “excluded driver.” He signed and dated the application and returned it with a check for the full premium to Johansen, who forwarded the documents to Courtney. Courtney processed the application the same day.

Several days later, Barry telephoned Johansen to obtain clarification about the extent of coverage he would be obtaining. He had assumed that, because Brenda was not yet 15, she would be covered, but he was concerned that the policy had required any household member under 25 to be excluded. He asked Johansen whether Brenda would be covered if she were not named in the driver exclusion section. Johansen checked with Courtney, and, as she recalls, the conversation went as follows:

“I asked him, Tf we don’t exclude Brenda, is she covered?’ and his response to me was, ‘Well, you can try.’ And I said, ‘Well, I know if she was not excluded on my policy she would be covered.’ And he said — and we talked about it some more, and he said, ‘Well, I guess.’ And then, as I walked out the door, I said, ‘Now if we don’t exclude Brenda, is she covered?’ And he said, ‘Yes.’ And I left.”1

[240]*240Johansen relayed that information to Barry.

The following week, before the policy was issued, Brenda was involved in an automobile accident while she was driving the family car. All named individual defendants were injured in the accident. Johansen was notified of the accident, and she contacted Courtney. Shortly after the accident, Progressive delivered Barry a copy of the policy. A copy of the completed application was not attached to the policy. When Progressive discovered that the driver had been Barry’s 14-year-old daughter, it sent Barry a notice canceling his policy.

Progressive then brought this action to rescind the policy on the ground that Barry had obtained it by fraudulently omitting Brenda as a named driver in the application.2 Without deciding whether Barry engaged in any misrepresentation, the trial court denied relief on the basis of ORS 742.013,3 which it construed as precluding rescission of an insurance policy when the application containing the alleged misrepresentations had not been physically attached to the policy. Progressive assigns error to the trial court’s decision. [241]*241Defendants argue that the trial court correctly applied the statute. They also argue that, even if the trial court erred in applying ORS 742.013, it was correct in denying Progressive any relief, because Progressive failed to prove that Barry had made any misrepresentations. Progressive argued that it has established Barry’s misrepresentations.

We need not address the statutory basis for the trial court’s decision, because we agree with defendants that Progressive failed to prove any misrepresentations. Although the trial court did not rule on that issue, we may uphold the trial court’s decision on grounds different from those it relied on if, on de novo review, we find the necessary facts to support the alternative grounds. As the Supreme Court explained in State Farm Fire v. Sevier, 272 Or 278, 298, 537 P2d 88 (1975):

“We are reluctant to reverse a trial court on grounds or theories other than those on which a case is tried and decided * * *. The considerations are different in cases in which we affirm a trial court. In such cases, when the trial court arrived at a correct result, but on grounds different than those which, in our opinion, are more proper as the basis for such a result, we believe that it is not improper to affirm the trial court; provided, of course, that the pleadings are sufficiently broad and there is sufficient evidence in the record, as in this case.
“We believe that this is particularly proper in suits in equity, which we try de novo on appeal.”

See also Hanneman v. Jones, 45 Or App 1005, 1010, 609 P2d 912 (1980). This is such a case.

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Bluebook (online)
868 P.2d 32, 126 Or. App. 236, 1994 Ore. App. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/progressive-specialty-insurance-v-carter-orctapp-1994.