Ramstead v. North-West Insurance Company

450 P.2d 538, 252 Or. 423, 1969 Ore. LEXIS 530
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 450 P.2d 538 (Ramstead v. North-West Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ramstead v. North-West Insurance Company, 450 P.2d 538, 252 Or. 423, 1969 Ore. LEXIS 530 (Or. 1969).

Opinion

McAllister, J.

This is a suit to reform a policy of automobile liability insurance and to recover on the policy as reformed. The trial court denied relief and plaintiff appeals.

There is no dispute about the facts, most of which were stipulated. The defendant North-West Insurance Company is an Oregon corporation engaged in writing automobile insurance in Oregon. North-West wrote all its Oregon business through its general agent Meridian, Inc., which was its only licensed agent in Oregon. North-West and Meridian occupied the same offices in Portland and, for the purposes of this case, Meridian was North-West’s alter ego.

*425 Arnold Dunsworth lived in Cottage Grove and owned a 1951 Plymouth and a 1955 Buick. Prior to October 3, 1964, Dunsworth obtained liability insurance on both vehicles in separate policies issued by a Farmers Insurance Group company through George B. Schwieger, Jr., its agent in Eugene. The Schwieger agency was represented by its salesman, Bobert D. Spence. On October 3, 1964, Dunsworth requested the Schwieger agency to cancel the insurance on the Plymouth because it had broken down and was no longer operable. The policy was cancelled.

On October 22 Spence notified Dunsworth by telephone that Farmers was cancelling the policy covering the Buick. Spense told Dunsworth that: “We could process an application through North-West” and Dunsworth asked Spence to insure the Buick. On the same day Spence filled out, on a form provided by North-West, an application for a policy insuring Duns-worth against liability and property damage for the basic limits. In the application Spence, by mistake, described the Plymouth as the vehicle to be insured instead of the Buick. Spence knew that the Plymouth was broken down, but carelessly obtained the car description from the wrong prior policy. Immediate coverage was effected on October 22 by a telephone call from the Schwieger agency to Meridian, who agreed to bind the risk for five days pending receipt of the application. A written binder Avas executed by Meridian on October 22 and a copy mailed to SchAvieger. Later the policy involved in this suit describing the Plymouth as the insured vehicle was issued by NorthWest and mailed to Schwieger.

On October 24 Dunsworth turned over to the *426 Sehwieger agency two refund checks on his prior policies which substantially paid the premium on the new North-West policy.

On October 25, 1964, Dnnsworth was involved in an accident while driving his Bnick. As a result of the accident four actions for damages were brought against Dunsworth and were defended by North-West under a reservation of rights agreement. The lawsuits were terminated by the entry,-with the consent of North-West and Dunsworth, of judgments in favor of the four plaintiffs for a total:of- $10,000. NorthWest then denied liability on the sole ground that its policy did not cover the Buick involved in the accident. Thereafter Dunsworth assigned all of his interest in the policy to the plaintiff Gordon A. Ram-stead, who brought this suit to reform the contract to describe the Buick as the insured vehicle. Plaintiff also prayed for an allowance of attorney’s fee.

The ease turns on whether the Sehwieger agency was an agent of North-West. Both George B. Sehwieger, Jr., and his employee Spence were licensed agents of the Farmers Insurance' Group and apparently were engaged primarily in writing for Farmers. Neither was licensed by North-West, which had no licensed agent in Oregon except its general agent, Meridian, Inc.

However, for a period of two or three years Sehwieger had been doing business for North-West through Meridian, Inc. Apparently the insurance written with North-West consisted of insurance risks that Farmers had declined to write or, as in this case, had cancelled.

Meridian produced business for North-West from agents such as Sehwieger by sending to them application forms, rate cards and related information. The *427 correspondence with the agents was supplemented by the use of field men who apparently called on the agents. Schwieger had an open account with Meridian and “he was billed for each policy written with the company at the end of the month.” Meridian looked to Schwieger for payment of the premiums and had no direct contact with the insured. The premium for Dunsworth’s policy was billed to Schwieger by Meridian and paid for by Schwieger in accordance with the usual practice.

Local agents such as Schwieger could bind NorthWest on a risk by filling out an application indicating thereon the date and hour the application was prepared and mailing it so it would be postmarked the same day. Under those circumstances Meridian, Inc., agreed to “bind coverage as of the hour indicated.” If the application- was not mailed on the same day, Meridian agreed that coverage would be bound on a date and at a time determined by the postmark. In *428 the case of Dunsworth’s policy the Schwieger agency made certain that coverage would he effective immediately by a telephone call to Meridian.

North-West contends that neither Schwieger nor his salesman Spence were agents of North-West because they had not been authorized in writing to act as its representatives pursuant to the applicable statutes. Defendant’s contention is stated in its brief as follows:

“In the case at bar, neither the producing agent, George B. Schwieger, nor his employee, Robert D. Spence, were authorized in writing to act as agents of the Defendant in October of 1964. Nor did either of them receive an agency appointment or license from the Defendant as specified in ORS 736.405 to 736.425. Therefore, neither of them had authority to negotiate contracts of insurance on behalf of the Defendant, nor did either have the power to bind the Defendant by their negotiations or representations.”

The statutes on which North-West rests its case *429 are ORS 736.005 (3) (e) and 736.425 (2) as effective in October, 1964.

ORS 736.005 (3) (e) defines an insurance agent as follows:

“ ‘Insurance agent’ or ‘agent’ means a person authorized in writing by any insurance company lawfully authorized to transact business in this state to act as its representative, with authority to solicit, negotiate and effect contracts of insurance in its behalf, * *

ORS 736.425 (2):

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Related

C.I.S. Northwest, Inc. v. Berjac of Portland, Inc.
742 P.2d 618 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1987)
Arley v. Chaney
496 P.2d 202 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1972)
North-West Insurance v. Schweiger
479 P.2d 506 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1971)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
450 P.2d 538, 252 Or. 423, 1969 Ore. LEXIS 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramstead-v-north-west-insurance-company-or-1969.