Traders & General Insurance Company v. Reynolds

477 S.W.2d 937, 1972 Tex. App. LEXIS 2550
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 29, 1972
Docket8082
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 477 S.W.2d 937 (Traders & General Insurance Company v. Reynolds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Traders & General Insurance Company v. Reynolds, 477 S.W.2d 937, 1972 Tex. App. LEXIS 2550 (Tex. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

CHADICK, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a trial court judgment allowing recovery under the uninsured motorist coverage of an automobile insurance policy.

Mrs. Patsy Black Reynolds was severely injured in a collision between the automobile she operated and one driven by Mike Lach. At the time of the collision a Traders & General Insurance Company policy afforded Mrs. Reynolds automobile liability insurance coverage; her policy contained a provision for standard form uninsured motorist coverage. At the time, also, Mike Lach had automobile public liability insurance provided by a Farmers Insurance Group policy. Mrs. Reynolds sued her own insurer, Traders & General Insurance Company, alleging that Mike Lach and Paul Pippins were racing each other at the time of the collision. And as a ground of recovery in the action, Mrs. Reynolds alleged Pippins was an uninsured motorist, that his negligence was a proximate cause of her injury and on that basis Traders & General was liable to pay her damages to policy limits by the terms of the uninsured motorist coverage.

Traders & General alleged, and it is undisputed, that plaintiff Reynolds had settled with Mike and Edna Lach and Farmers Insurance Group, their insurer, and executed a release for the sum of $10,000.00, and pleaded that such settlement barred Mrs. Reynolds’ recovery under the uninsured motorist provision. Both Mike Lach and Paul Pippins were brought into the suit as third party defendants by the insurance company.

In the trial of the case, the trial judge refused to admit proof of the settlement between plaintiff Reynolds and the Lachs and their insurer or of the release to them executed by Mrs. Reynolds, but these matters are in the record by bill of exception.

It is undisputed that Pippins was uninsured. The jury found causative negligence on the part of both Lach and Pippins, and assessed Mrs. Reynolds’ damages at $151,500.00. Judgment was rendered that Reynolds recover the sum of $10,000.00 from Traders & General Insurance Company (the policy limit), together with interest thereon, etc., and that Traders & General have recovery over against Paul Pippins, but granted Mike Lach’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and adjudged that Traders & General take nothing from him. In summary, as the record stands, Mrs. Reynolds was damaged $151,500.00 and has received $10,000.00 in settlement with Mike Lach and his insurer, and has a judgment for $10,000.00 against her own insurer, Traders & General. The question to be settled by this appeal is whether or not Traders & General should be allowed credit for the amount the joint tort feasor Mike Lach and his insurer paid in the settlement with Mrs. Reynolds for release of her claim against them.

With candor that distinguishes a confident advocate, counsel for Mrs. Reynolds proffers for determination the keystone question in this appeal. The first counterpoint grounds affirmance on the proposition that “ * * * those portions of the insurance contract relied upon by appellant are void;” and the second counterpoint on the affirmation that “ * * * appellant has no valid right of subrogation against an insured joint tort feasor.”

With the “intent and purpose” of providing “a means of protecting the conscien *939 tious and thoughtful motorist” of Texas from “financial loss caused by negligent, financially irresponsible motorists,” the Texas Legislature in 1967 enacted a law requiring that automobile liability insurance policies issued after the first day of October of that year provide uninsured motorist coverage unless a policy’s named insured rejects the coverage in writing. The enactment adhered to existing statutory policy and practice evidenced by Art. 5.06, Insurance Code, by authorizing the State Board of Insurance to promulgate the policy forms for the uninsured motorist coverage. This authority and duty of the State Board of Insurance is mentioned twice in the original Act which now appears as Art. 5.06-1 — Insurance Code, V. A.T.S. In execution of its responsibilities the State Insurance Board promulgated a form which appears in Part IV of the Traders & General Insurance Company policy in suit. Therein it is provided:

“In the event of payment to any person under this Part: (a) the company shall be entitled to the extent of such payment to the proceeds of any settlement or judgment that may result from the exercise of any rights of recovery of such person against any person or organization legally responsible for the bodily injury because of which such payment is made; (b) such person shall hold in trust for the benefit of the company all rights of recovery which he shall have against such other person or organization because of the damages which are the subject of claim made under this Part; (c) such person shall do whatever is proper to secure and shall do nothing after loss to prejudice such rights; (d) if requested in writing by the company, such person shall take, through any representative designated by the company, such action as may be necessary or appropriate to recover such payment as damages from such other person or organization, such action to be taken in the name of such person; in the event of a recovery, the company shall be reimbursed out of such recovery for expenses, costs and attorneys’ fees incurred by it in connection therewith; (e) such person shall execute and deliver to the company such instruments and papers as may be appropriate to secure the rights and obligations of such person and the company established by this provision.”

The sources of authority for the foregoing policy provision is found, if at all, in Article 5.06-1.(3), viz.:

“(3) In the event of payment to any person under the coverage required by this Section and subject to the terms and conditions of such coverage, the insurei making such payment shall, to the extent thereof, be entitled to the proceeds of any settlement of judgment resulting from the exercise of any rights of recovery of such person against any person or organization legally responsible for the bodily injury, sickness or disease, or death for which such payment is made, * * ⅝: >>

The Appellee argues that to allow the insurer recoupment in multiple vehicle situations, as here, is “tantamount to holding that an insured has uninsured motorist coverage in one-car accidents only, and no coverage in multicar accidents.” The argument runs that if Traders & General paid Mrs. Reynolds its policy limit of $10,000.00 but is immediately entitled to have the proceeds of the settlement of $10,000.00 Mrs. Reynolds made with the joint tort feasor Lach and his insurer, the uninsured motorist coverage she paid a premium for does not benefit her. This argument goes to the practicalities of the situation; it does not demonstrate that insurance to policy limits of $10,000.00 was not provided by the uninsured motorist coverage of the Traders & General policy as contemplated by law. But it does show clearly that uninsured motorist coverage under the circumstances of this case is of little or no monetary value to Mrs. Reynolds.

The fact that reparations payable under the uninsured motorist coverage *940 would produce nothing of value is urged as the factor that is inconsistent with and in derogation of Article 5.06-1, and is the vice that invalidates the policy provision allowing recoupment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
477 S.W.2d 937, 1972 Tex. App. LEXIS 2550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/traders-general-insurance-company-v-reynolds-texapp-1972.