State Ex Rel. Cashen v. DIST. CT., THIRTEENTH JD

482 P.2d 567, 157 Mont. 40, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 394
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1971
Docket12004
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 482 P.2d 567 (State Ex Rel. Cashen v. DIST. CT., THIRTEENTH JD) 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
State Ex Rel. Cashen v. DIST. CT., THIRTEENTH JD, 482 P.2d 567, 157 Mont. 40, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 394 (Mo. 1971).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE HASWELL

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an original proceeding by petitioner seeking appropriate relief from orders of the District Court of Yellowstone County (1) granting her insurer partial summary judgment eliminating her claim for exemplary damages, and (2) overruling her objections and requiring her to respond to her insurer’s request for admissions. This relief is sought in petitioner’s suit against her insurer and its adjuster to set aside her release, aid for damages arising out of settlement of a collision loss on her automobile.

Petitioner is an adult Indian who is an enrolled member of the Crow Tribe residing on the Crow Indian Reservation at Saint Xavier, Montana. On June 6, 1969 she purchased a used 1967 Ford Galaxie from Hardin Auto Company under an installment contract for $1,895. After deduction of a trade-in allowance and addition of finance charges, a credit life insurance premium, and title fees, the remaining balance of the purchase price was $1,302.57. This was to be paid in three installments: $512.57 on December 26, 1969; $185 on April 26, 1970; and $605 on December 26, 1970. Hardin Auto Company assigned this contract with recourse to the Big Horn County State Bank.

Collision insurance covering physical damage to petitioner’s automobile was secured from Farmers Insurance Exchange, the *42 insurer. This policy was a standard $100 deductible collision insurance policy giving the insurer the option of settlement of any loss thereunder by payment of either of the following amounts, less the deductible: (1) the reasonable cost of repairs not exceeding the actual cash value of the automobile at the time of loss, or (2) the actual cash value of the car at the time of loss.

After petitioner’s purchase of the ear, her son had an accident involving fender damage of $117, the transmission was repaired, and a burned out engine was replaced. At the time of the collision loss involved in this proceeding, petitioner still owed a balance of approximately $389 for these items.

On September 20, 1969 petitioner’s son had another accident with the car. The settlement of the collision loss in this accident forms the basis of petitioner’s suit in the district court and this original proceeding.

Following notice of the loss, the local agent of the insurer secured three repair bids on the damage: (1) Hardin Auto Company, $907.70 excluding frame damage and front end suspension damage; (2) Graham-Staunton Chevrolet, $1,085.73, excluding frame damage and front end suspension damage, and (3) Tom’s Auto Repair Shop, $1,066.62, with no exclusions. These bids were received by the Billings claim office of the insurer on November 3, 1969. An adjuster there, Ray Olson, received them on the following day and on November 5 drove to Hardin to examine the car and settle the loss. He was accompanied by a salvage buyer from Billings, Louis Schoenbeck.

In Hardin they examined the car. Schoenbeck estimated the cash value of the car immediately preceding the accident at $1,200, noting prior damage and repairs from three previous accidents. He fixed the salvage value of the car at $200. They next went to the Hardin Auto Company where they talked to Bill Christensen. Schoenbeck described the evidence of prior damages and repairs to the car and his estimate of $1,200. Christensen agreed. Olson accepted this figure of $1,200 as the actual cash value of the car at the time of loss.

Olson also was aware that petitioner owed a $1,302.57 balance *43 on the installment contract of purchase plus the $389 balance owed for prior repairs — almost $1700 on a car valued at $1,200.

Olson then drove to petitioner’s home to discuss settlement. Only two persons were present at this discussion and settlement: Olson and petitioner. Although many facts are in dispute concerning just what occurred at this time, it is clear that a settlement was made on the basis of repair costs with Olson delivering a settlement draft to petitioner for $927.50 payable to petitioner and the Big Horn County State Bank as joint payees. The settlement figure was based on a total repair cost of $1,012.50 plus a towing charge of $15 less the $100 deductible, and upon Olson’s opinion that the ear could be repaired on this basis. Thereafter Olson returned to Billings and was not involved in subsequent events.

Petitioner took the settlement draft to the Big Horn County State Bank on November 6, 1969. Both petitioner and the bank endorsed the draft containing (a release of all claims, and petitioner deposited the money in her account. Unknown to petitioner, the bank at that time deducted $512.57 of this deposit and applied it to payment of the first installment of the auto purchase contract due on December 26, 1969.

Petitioner then had Bud’s Standard Service repair the car as best they could at a cost of somewhere between $300 and $400. Petitioner was dissatisfied with the repairs and drove the car to Hardin Auto Company where she was told that the settlement should have been made in the first place on the basis of total loss. On January 19, 1970 petitioner notified the insurer of her dissatisfaction and requested that her car be satisfactorily repaired or replaced. Later, through her attorney, she demanded a total loss settlement of $1605 based on the top value of a car of that make and model in the N.A.D.A. Guide. Following refusal of this demand by her insurer, she filed suit in the district court.

In the district court suit petitioner seeks to have her release set aside on the ground of fraud, and to be awarded compensatory damages based on the total loss settlement heretofore men *44 tioned together with exemplary damages of $500,000. The claim for exemplary damages is based upon alleged fraud committed by the insurer in negotiating and settling her claim which is alleged to constitute both a breach of the insurance contract and violation of Chapter 35 of the State Insurance Code entitled “Trade Practices and Frauds,” sections 40-3501 through 40-3522, R.C.M.1947. Defendants are the insurer, Farmers Insurance Exchange, and the insurer’s adjuster, Ray Olson.

Considerable pretrial discovery was had by way of depositions, interrogatories, and requests for admissions. Involved in the present controversy are two separate orders of the district court: (1) An order granting partial summary judgment to defendants eliminating petitioner’s claim for exemplary damages, and (2) An order overruling objections to defendants’ requests for admissions relating to prior damage to the car, tracing its prior ownership, facts concerning the purchase transaction, and ordering petitioner to respond. In the instant proceedings before this Court, petitioner seeks review and reversal of these two orders of the district court.

The principal issue before us is the granting of partial summary judgment removing petitioner’s exemplary damages claim. Petitioner contends that her claim encompasses both a breach of the insurance contract and statutory violation of provisions of the state insurance code thereby entitling her to exemplary damages under State ex rel. Larson v. District Court, 149 Mont. 131, 423 P.2d 598.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
482 P.2d 567, 157 Mont. 40, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-cashen-v-dist-ct-thirteenth-jd-mont-1971.