Truck Insurance Exchange v. Whitaker

278 P.2d 277, 71 Nev. 1, 1955 Nev. LEXIS 54
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1955
Docket3792
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 278 P.2d 277 (Truck Insurance Exchange v. Whitaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Truck Insurance Exchange v. Whitaker, 278 P.2d 277, 71 Nev. 1, 1955 Nev. LEXIS 54 (Neb. 1955).

Opinion

*3 OPINION

By the Court,

Merrill, C. J.:

This is an action brought by respondents upon an oral contract of insurance to recover compensation for motor vehicle upset. Judgment of the trial court pursuant to jury verdict, was in favor of respondents in the sum of $6,500; and this appeal is from that judgment. Appellant contends that no oral contract of insurance ever existed and this is the principal question involved upon this appeal.

In 1948 respondent Musgrave operated a cattle auction and sales yard in the city of Fallon. As a part of his operations he owned a number of trucks used in transporting cattle to and from the yard in connection with the sales transactions. During this same year respondent Whitaker was engaged in the business of livestock transportation, in the course of which he used two large tractor-trailer combinations.

In February 1949, Whitaker purchased a one-half interest in the auction sales yard of respondent Mus-grave and the new partnership assumed the name of Valley Livestock Sales Yard. While the assets of the sales yard, including its trucks, were taken in ownership by the new partnership, Whitaker retained sole title *4 to his tractor-trailers which continued in the business of livestock transportation. The two businesses (livestock sales and livestock transportation) were, however, consolidated and thereafter operated as a single business enterprise save for bookkeeping segregation.

At the time of the formation of the partnership, all motor vehicles were covered by a flat-rate insurance policy issued by appellant insurance company for public liability, property damage, collision, fire and theft. In March 1949 the partners concluded that their motor vehicle insurance could more economically be had by changing from a flat-rate policy to a gross-receipts policy under which premiums would be fixed at a rate computed upon the gross receipts received from the operation of the insured vehicles. Appellant, through its local agent, Stanley Hyman, prepared such a policy. The vehicles covered, however, included not only those which hauled for revenue but also those which hauled for the sales yard in the normal course of its business and thus received no revenue for their hauling. The result was a rate of insurance which staggered the partners. Agent Hyman was summoned, posthaste, to accomplish a revision.

In the forepart of April 1949 a conference was held respecting this matter, to which we shall later refer in more detail. Resulting from this conference two policies of insurance were issued by appellant company. One covered the vehicles owned by Whitaker which were engaged in the transportation business. It was a gross-receipts policy and included cargo and collision coverage as well as public liability, property damage, fire and theft. The policy covered not only the scheduled vehicles but, as to bodily injury and cargo, any vehicles hired or used by the insured. The rate for the listed, owned vehicles, with full coverage, was $6.10 per $100 revenue. For hired vehicles with limited coverage, the rate was $2.43 per $100 of revenue.

The second policy was a flat-rate policy covering the *5 vehicles owned by the partnership and used in the sales yard business. It did not include collision or cargo insurance.

Among the vehicles owned by the sales yard, covered by its flat-rate policy and not covered by the Whitaker gross-receipts policy was a Diamond-T tractor and Fruehauf trailer combination. In October 1949 this combination unit, loaded with hogs sold to a California meat company, was wrecked while crossing the Sierra enroute to the purchaser. Claims for cargo and collision loss were filed with appellant. The cargo claim was allowed upon the apparent theory that the tractor-trailer at the time was being hired or used by Whitaker under his policy. The collision claim was disallowed; and this action resulted.

Respondents contend that their insurance coverage was not limited to that specified by the two written policies. They contend that an oral contract was made between themselves and appellant, through its agent Hyman, whereby any of the sales yard trucks normally not engaged in revenue hauling, which might engage in such hauling, would, while so hauling, be insured for cargo and collision upon the same terms and for the same rate as applied to the Whitaker trucks under the gross-receipts policy. Appellant does not question the authority of its agent, Hyman, to enter into such a contract. It denies that such an agreement ever was reached. By its verdict the jury apparently found that the minds of the parties had met upon such an engagement.

Appellant’s first contention is that there is no evidence in the record upon which such a factual determination could have been based. We feel there is ample evidence. It lies primarily in the testimony of respondents and their employees as to conversations had with agent Hyman. These conversations were flatly denied by Hyman. The responsibility of the jury under these circumstances was clear. It must decide which version of the conversations was entitled to belief. Clearly it *6 decided in favor of the testimony of respondents and their employees.

Testimony in support of the oral contract divides the conversations into two groups: those prior to the issuance of the policies in which insurance was discussed and ordered; those after issuance of the policies in which the existence of the coverage was confirmed. Five witnesses testified on behalf of respondents. Without specifying the source of the testimony and paraphrasing it for purposes of clarity, their statements present the following story:

Agent Hyman having been summoned to accomplish a revision of the first gross-receipts policy, a conference took place in which Musgrave and certain employees participated. Hyman was advised that, in the interests of economy, the sales yard would eliminate collision and cargo insurance on its trucks. Since its operations normally were within a limited radius of Fallon, it was felt that the risk would not be too great. The large trucks owned by Whitaker, however, engaged as they were in interstate revenue hauling over mountainous routes, would require full coverage. The result of this discussion was agreement upon the two policies eventually issued. Hyman was then advised that in occasional emergencies sales yard trucks would be drafted into revenue-transportation service, and that these, therefore, should also be covered for cargo and collision. Hyman advised that these could not be included in the gross-receipts policy with full-time cargo and collision coverage without increasing the minimum premium or premium rate. He stated, however, that appellant, without increase of premium, would give them cargo and collision coverage limited in time to the periods when they were actually engaged in revenue hauling. All that would be necessary to accomplish such coverage would be to report their receipts for such trips and pay premium thereon in the same manner and at the same time that receipts were reported and premiums paid under *7 the policy set up for the units regularly engaged in revenue hauling.

After issuance of the policies Hyman conferred with Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
278 P.2d 277, 71 Nev. 1, 1955 Nev. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/truck-insurance-exchange-v-whitaker-nev-1955.