Smith v. Farmers Union Mutual Insurance

2011 MT 216, 260 P.3d 163, 361 Mont. 516, 75 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 575, 2011 Mont. LEXIS 312
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 30, 2011
DocketDA 10-0638
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2011 MT 216 (Smith v. Farmers Union Mutual Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Farmers Union Mutual Insurance, 2011 MT 216, 260 P.3d 163, 361 Mont. 516, 75 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 575, 2011 Mont. LEXIS 312 (Mo. 2011).

Opinion

JUSTICE BAKER

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Plaintiffs Patrick and Pamela Smith (the “Smiths”) appeal the judgment of the Eleventh Judicial District Court, granting Defendant Farmers Union Mutual Insurance Company’s (“FUMIC”) motion for summary judgment and denying plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment. The following issues are presented on appeal:

¶2 1. Whether the District Court erred in granting summary judgment to FUMIC.

¶3 2. Whether the District Court erred in denying Smiths’ motion for partial summary judgment.

¶4 We reverse the District Court on the first issue, and affirm the court’s ruling on the second issue.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶5 At all times relevant to this lawsuit, the Smiths resided at their home on Winterhawk Drive in Bigfork, Montana. In late 2007, they purchased a homeowner’s insurance policy on the residence from Wayne Treweek, a FUMIC agent in Kalispell. A separate insurance policy covered a larger, second home the Smiths were in the process of building at another site on the property. This initial policy term ran from December 13,2007, to December 13,2008. FUMIC elected to offer the Smiths the option to renew their policy on identical terms, and sent an offer in late October to the Smiths, instructing them to mail a renewal payment by December 13,2008, and to contact Treweek with any questions or concerns. The renewal declaration stated that “[t]o insure continuous coverage we must receive your payment in our office prior to the due date shown above.” The Smiths failed to remit *518 payment to Treweek or to FUMIC by the December 13 due date.

¶6 On December 18, FUMIC terminated its contract with Treweek to sell FUMIC insurance products. It sent a letter the next day to Treweek’s customers, including the Smiths, to inform them of the cessation of the relationship. Smiths do not deny receiving this letter. On December 18, FUMIC sent the Smiths a Lapse Notice (hereafter sometimes referred to as the “offer to reinstate”), stating that their policy had lapsed because of nonpayment of the renewal premium, and offering to reinstate the policy with no lapse of coverage if the Smiths submitted payment by December 28, 2008. Despite the contemporaneous termination of FUMIC’s relationship with Treweek, the Lapse Notice listed Treweek as the Smiths’ agent and required receipt of payment by FUMIC “or by the agent.” The Lapse Notice did not specify the method of payment, nor specific addressee to which payment must be submitted-it merely stated that “payment” must be “received” by the due date. Treweek’s address alone was listed on the notice; the envelope itself listed FUMIC’s address and included a preaddressed payment envelope addressed to FUMIC as well, according to affidavit testimony. Smiths dispute that a pre-addressed envelope was included. The notice also stated that if payment was received after December 28, it would be at FUMIC’s sole discretion whether or not to reinstate the policy. Because December 28 fell on a Sunday, the operative date for timely receipt of the payment was Monday, December 29.

¶7 On Friday, December 26, Patrick Smith phoned Treweek’s office to inquire about making a payment on the policy to ensure it would not lapse. Lori Gibson, an employee in Treweek’s office, informed Smith that Treweek was no longer a FUMIC agent, and that Smith should mail his payment to the “home office.” Smith avers that he does not recollect the instruction to mail payment directly to FUMIC. In any case, on that Friday, December 26, Smith purchased a money order with cash from Glacier Bank in Kalispell for the minimum premium payment of $176.00, made the money order out to “MFU Insurance Agency” as directed by the notice, and mailed the money order to Treweek’s office. Smith’s name was typed directly on the money order, but the space for “Purchaser Signer for Drawer” was left blank. On the back of the money order, a section entitled “Purchaser’s Agreement” states: ‘You, the purchaser, agree to immediately complete this Money Order by filling in the front of the Money Order, signing it, and addressing it at the bottom. The terms of this Money Order bind you, your heirs, or others who receive this Money Order from you.” Smith *519 stated that he was not instructed to sign the money order, and did not know that his signature was expected as he had sent unsigned money orders in the past that a related Farmer’s Union company had accepted, and some money orders, such as those issued by the U.S. Postal Service, do not contain a signature line. The drawer of the money order was MoneyGram Payment Systems, Inc., a Minneapolis corporation in the money order business; the drawee was listed as Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. out of Massachusetts.

¶8 On Monday, December 29,2008, Patrick Smith drove to Kalispell to run errands, and stopped by Treweek’s office to confirm that his payment had been received. Terri Saubert, an employee at Treweek’s office, located the envelope Smith had sent the previous Friday in the stack of mail delivered moments prior. Saubert called the Great Falls FUMIC office while Smith talked with Lori Gibson, with whom he had initially discussed sending the payment. Saubert reached Terri Humble, a Great Falls FUMIC employee, who informed her that although the policy was scheduled to be canceled that day, the 29th, to go ahead and send the payment to the Great Falls office. Humble testified via affidavit that she instructed Saubert to send the payment in “for review”; Saubert has no recollection of this qualified acceptance and testified via affidavit that she would have inquired further if she had heard such a statement, as the direction to send a payment “for review” would have been unusual. Saubert testified via affidavit that based on past practices, if there were any question of nonacceptance of the payment, she would have been transferred directly to Humble’s supervisor Bill Zins. Based on Humble’s statements and FUMIC’s past practices, Saubert informed Smith that FUMIC had accepted his payment and that continuing coverage had been procured. Following Humble’s directions, Saubert mailed Smith’s envelope to the Great Falls FUMIC office later that day. It was received the following day, Tuesday, December 30.

¶9 Smith returned from his errands in Kalispell on December 29 to find the Crestón Volunteer Fire Department hosing down the charred skeleton of the house he had just returned from insuring. Smith immediately submitted a claim to FUMIC and was referred to claims adjuster Rial Gunlikson. Gunlikson had Smith sign a form authorizing FUMIC to conduct its own investigation of the fire, in addition to that conducted by the Crestón fire department. Both investigations concluded that the fire’s accidental cause was a meat smoker in active use in the garage.

¶10 After FUMIC’s on-site investigation concluded on January 5, *520 2009, Smith called Gunlikson to check on the insurance proceeds, as the family was temporarily residing in their camper. Gunlikson indicated to Smith over the phone that there was a problem with his payment. FUMIC followed this conversation up with a letter from counsel informing Smith of denial of coverage, dated January 8, 2009, and returned Smith’s money order the following day.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2011 MT 216, 260 P.3d 163, 361 Mont. 516, 75 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 575, 2011 Mont. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-farmers-union-mutual-insurance-mont-2011.