Shrewsbery v. National Grange Mutual Insurance

395 S.E.2d 745, 183 W. Va. 322, 1990 W. Va. LEXIS 91
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1990
Docket19191
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 395 S.E.2d 745 (Shrewsbery v. National Grange Mutual Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shrewsbery v. National Grange Mutual Insurance, 395 S.E.2d 745, 183 W. Va. 322, 1990 W. Va. LEXIS 91 (W. Va. 1990).

Opinion

NEELY, Chief Justice:

Earl F. Shrewsbery appeals to this Court the entry of a directed verdict against him in the Circuit Court of Raleigh County in his action to recover damages occasioned by his termination as an independent agent for the National Grange Mutual Insurance Co.

Mr. Shrewsbery, an independent insurance agent in Beckley, became an agent for National Grange Mutual Insurance Co. on 1 July 1980. On that date, the parties signed a contract called the Agency Agreement, which governs the parties’ rights and obligations. Mr. Shrewsbery wrote more than seven hundred policies for National Grange during the next five years, with total premiums per year as high as $186,-000, primarily for automobile liability policies and household casualty policies. National Grange found that Mr. Shrewsbery’s policies had generated too many losses, and in August 1985 the company gave Mr. Shrewsbery notice that they were ending the Agency Agreement in ninety days (the time set in the contract for termination by either party.) Mr. Shrewsbery does not contest National Grange’s decision to end his agency with the company.

The dispute in this case arose over National Grange’s treatment of the “expira-tions,” renewals, and commissions on policies Mr. Shrewsbery had written before his agency was ended. Specifically, Mr. Shrewsbery claims that National Grange “ran off,” converted, or improperly interfered with Mr. Shrewsbery’s possible renewals of policies he had issued to National Grange’s insureds.

When National Grange ended Mr. Shrewsbery’s agency, the company contacted his automobile insurance customers, as required by regulations of the state insurance commissioner, telling them that their agent was no longer working with the insurance company. This action was pursuant to W. Va. Informational Letter No. 39, promulgated by the Insurance Commissioner on 1 July 1986. Informational Letter No. 39 required that, upon termination of an agent, the insurer must send a letter to each automobile policyholder, informing *324 him that the agent was no longer with the company, and that each insured had a choice: Remain with the insurance company directly, without an agent; or go to the former agent to investigate taking out a new policy with another company the agent represented. The regulation was meant to protect policyholder’s rights not to be can-celled simply because the agent was no longer with the company. Letter No. 39 included a sample form letter for each insurer to adopt. Each company was required to file its adopted form letter with the insurance commissioner, or face “disciplinary action” for not complying with the new regulations.

The form letter adopted by National Grange tracked word-for-word the sample letter promulgated by the insurance commissioner. After mailing the letter to each policyholder, if the policyholder did not respond, National Grange sent another form, to the effect that the policy would not be renewed unless the policyholder elected to do so. Those policyholders who did not elect to renew had their policies cancelled.

In Informational Letter No. 39, the insurance commissioner expressed his own awareness that the new regulation might conflict with expiration rights between insurance company and agent: “While this department is aware of contractual agreements between agents and companies, the company’s primary responsibility is to serve its policyholders in a manner consistent with the insurance laws of West Virginia.”

Mr. Shrewsbery was free to contact his insureds himself to encourage them to switch to another company he represented. In the case of the agent’s household insurance policies, National Grange simply notified each insured that Mr. Shrewsbery was no longer their agent and that they should see him to discuss renewals of their policies. Mr. Shrewsbery could then renew their policies through other companies he represented or refer them to another National Grange agent.

The agency agreement essentially prohibited the company from using Mr. Shrewsbery’s customer list (“expirations”) to procure renewals with National Grange through another of its agents. It also gave Mr. Shrewsbery up to one year’s worth of commissions for renewals after the end of his agency with National Grange.

Mr. Shrewsbery brought this action against National Grange for breach of contract, tortious interference with contract, conversion, and other claims not before the Court on this appeal. After evidence was presented to a jury, the Circuit Court of Raleigh County directed a verdict in favor of the defendant. This appeal followed. 1

I. Tortious Interference with Contract

It is impossible for one party to a contract to maintain against the other party to the contract a claim for tortious interference with the parties’ own contract. Neither party is a stranger to the contract. Each party has agreed to be bound by the terms of the contract itself, and may not thereafter use a tort action to punish the other party for actions that are within its rights under the contract. As to the relations between agent and company, the contract governs. Thus, as parties to that contract, the insurance company could not be liable to the agent for interference with its own contract. In a case on similar facts, the Georgia court has written, “It is generally held that no liability for procuring a breach of contract exists where the breach is caused by the exercise of an absolute right — that is, an act which a man has a definite legal right to do without any qualification.” Williams v. Faircloth, 259 Ga. 767, 386 S.E.2d 151, 154 (1989); Schaeffer v. King, 223 Ga. 468, 470, 155 S.E.2d 815, 816 (1967). In this case, we believe, National Grange’s treatment of Mr. Shrewsbery and his customers is not actionable, because the company was simply *325 exercising the rights it possessed under the contract between the parties.

If National Grange has acted in violation of its contract with Mr. Shrewsbery, his proper remedy would be an action for breach of contract. In this case, Mr. Shrewsbery has focussed his attention more on the contracts between National Grange and its own insureds than on his own contract with National Grange. In National Grange’s relations with its insureds, Mr. Shrewsbery contends, the company has sought to procure a breach of contract between Mr. Shrewsbery and his insurance customers. This interference with contract claim also must fail, because the company is a principal party to the insurance contracts themselves, not a third party. And it is black letter law that no one can be liable for tortious interference with his own contract.

Moreover, Mr. Shrewsbery, as an agent (in the full legal sense) for National Grange, was not a party to the insurance contracts. Mr. Shrewsbery seriously misconstrues the role of an insurance agent. He is not party to a contract with the insured; rather, he helps the company procure and service the company’s contract with the insured. An agent, then, is but an incidental beneficiary to the contract between insured and insurance company.

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Bluebook (online)
395 S.E.2d 745, 183 W. Va. 322, 1990 W. Va. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shrewsbery-v-national-grange-mutual-insurance-wva-1990.