Snethen v. OKL. UN. OF FARMERS EDUCATIONAL & CO-OP. UN.

664 P.2d 377, 38 A.L.R. 4th 531
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 15, 1983
Docket56104
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 664 P.2d 377 (Snethen v. OKL. UN. OF FARMERS EDUCATIONAL & CO-OP. UN.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snethen v. OKL. UN. OF FARMERS EDUCATIONAL & CO-OP. UN., 664 P.2d 377, 38 A.L.R. 4th 531 (Okla. 1983).

Opinion

664 P.2d 377 (1983)

John O. SNETHEN, Appellant,
v.
OKLAHOMA STATE UNION Of the FARMERS EDUCATIONAL AND CO-OPERATIVE UNION OF AMERICA, Appellee.

No. 56104.

Supreme Court of Oklahoma.

February 15, 1983.
Rehearing Denied June 21, 1983.

Gerald E. Durbin, II, Lisle, Patterson & Durbin, Oklahoma City, for appellant.

Sarah J. Rhodes, Abowitz & Welch, Oklahoma City, for appellee.

*378 OPALA, Justice:

The dispositive issue on certiorari is whether a good-faith purchaser for value of a stolen motor vehicle has an "insurable interest" in the property within the meaning of 36 O.S. 1981 § 3605.[1] We answer in the affirmative.

The insurance company [insurer], defendant below, issued an automobile insurance policy to John O. Snethen [insured], plaintiff below, providing coverage against collision loss for his used 1978 Cadillac automobile. Shortly after the purchase the insured's *379 car was involved in a collision with another vehicle. Before a claim for this damage came to be settled between the insurer and insured, the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation [OSBI] discovered that the car was a stolen vehicle. Neither the insured nor the insurer knew this before the accident. The OSBI then seized the car for its return to the rightful owner. The insurer subsequently refused to pay for the loss and the insured pressed his claim under the collision coverage of the policy. The trial court rendered summary judgment for the insurer. The Court of Appeals affirmed based on our opinion in Ernie Miller Pontiac v. Home Insurance Co.[2] which holds that a good-faith purchaser for value of a stolen vehicle does not have an insurable interest. We granted certiorari on the petition by the insured to reconsider our holding in Ernie Miller Pontiac. We now vacate the Court of Appeals' opinion and reverse the trial court's judgment.

It is well settled that both the validity and enforceability of an insurance contract depend upon the presence of insurable interest in the person who purchased the policy.[3] Considerations underlying the insurable interest concept are generally articulated in terms of policy (1) against allowing wagering contracts under the guise of insurance,[4] (2) against fostering temptation to destroy the insured property in an effort to profit from it and (3) favoring limitation upon the sweep of indemnity contracts.[5]

Most forms of wager agreements were valid at common law. They were deemed enforceable until a series of statutes were passed to outlaw the use of insurance contracts to conduct wagers.[6] Wagering is regarded as detrimental to society. It encourages the wagerer to affect by unnatural means the results of the contingent event and increases the insurer's risk of disproportionate indemnification to an insured who has no relationship to, or pecuniary interest in, the insured subject. The goal of insurance is to indemnify the insured for a loss encountered by the impairment of an interest in the subject. Wagerers suffer no such loss. They actually profit from the occurrence of the contingent event. It is for the purpose of placing a limit on the insurer's indemnification duty that the law undertook to require the insured to have an insurable interest.[7]

Public policy which favors suppression of temptation to destroy one's insured property underlies the law's requirement of an insurable interest.[8] If the insured has no interest in the property, he suffers no loss from its destruction but actually profits from it. The insurable interest concept tends to deter the temptation to destroy the property which is covered against the risk of loss.

While American jurisdictions generally agree with the public policy considerations that underly the necessity for an insurable interest, they stand divided on what constitutes an insurable interest. Two basic theories were evolved for measuring the nexus which must be present between the property and its insured for an insurable interest to attach.[9] The literature refers to one of these as the "legal interest" and to the other as the "factual expectation" theory.

Jurisdictions holding to the view that no insurable interest attaches to a stolen automobile in the hands of a good-faith purchaser *380 found their conclusion upon the legal interest theory. Those states that adhere to this concept require that insurable interest be rested upon a legally cognizable interest in the property.[10] This view has its roots in Lord Eldon's opinion in Lucena v. Craufurd.[11] It was there stated that an interest is insurable only if it is a legal or equitable right enforceable either at law or in chancery.[12] This represents the strict approach to insurable interest.[13]

Those jurisdictions which allow the bonafide owner of a stolen vehicle to recover follow the "factual expectation" theory. Under this theory there is an insurable interest in the property if the insured would gain some economic advantage by its continued existence or would suffer some economic detriment in case of its loss or destruction.[14] This theory — contrary as it is to the one espoused by Lord Eldon — also derives from Lucena v. Craufurd. It was expressed there in Lord Lawrence's separate opinion.[15] He believed that a person has an insurable interest if he stands in some relation to, or has concern in, the insured property which may be prejudiced by the happening of the events insured against. It was his view that the insured must be so circumstanced with respect to the insured subject-matter as to make him interested in its preservation.[16]

We are inclined to the view articulated by the courts adhering to the "factual expectation" test. An interest held in a stolen vehicle by its good-faith purchaser is by that test regarded as insurable.[17] Once the relationship between the insured and the property is found to be lawful and to create a substantial economic interest, the underlying criteria which make up an insurable interest are met. The insured does hence have a right to enforce the contract regardless of the property's legal status. In the case at bar, the substantial economic interest was created when the insured paid $6,500 for his car and, additionally, parted with his own vehicle as a trade-in. This pecuniary interest, coupled with the insured's undisputed lack of knowledge of the vehicle's stolen status, is adequately substantial. It suffices to negate any notion or intimation of a wager contract. Moreover, the transfer of such a substantial value cannot be viewed as encouraging the insured to destroy the vehicle in order to collect insurance proceeds. Because of the lost investment, indemnification will not amount here to a "profit".

While the insured doubtless does have substantial economic interest, more than that appears to be required. The terms of § 3605(B) explicitly call for an interest that is "lawful".

*381 It is a general rule of law that no one can confer or transfer a better title than that which he has, unless some principle of estoppel should operate to bar an otherwise superior claim.[18] Neither can a person be divested of his property without his consent. While a good-faith purchaser under a defective title cannot hold against the true owner,[19] he does have lawful possession against all the rest of the world.[20]

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Related

Gray v. Holman
1995 OK 118 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1995)
Howard v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance
496 N.W.2d 862 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1993)

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Bluebook (online)
664 P.2d 377, 38 A.L.R. 4th 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snethen-v-okl-un-of-farmers-educational-co-op-un-okla-1983.