United States Fidelity and Guaranty Co. v. Gable
This text of 220 A.2d 165 (United States Fidelity and Guaranty Co. v. Gable) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinions
Plaintiff insurance company brought a declaratory judgment action in the Washington County Court of Chancery seeking a declaration of non-liability on the part of the company under the terms of a policy issued to the defendants, the terms and conditions of which, says the company, were not complied with by the defendant.
Hearing was had on the petition on November 1, 1965; findings of fact were made and an order made for judgment for the defendants. Appeal has been taken here from the judgment order, as well as to certain of the findings of fact.
It is apparent that this petition was instituted after the entry of a suit for damages brought by a Mrs. Johnson against the defendants Gable in the United States District Court for the District of Vermont, with service being made on the defendants on February 5, 1965. The contention of the plaintiff company is that the Gables did not give it the notice required under the terms of their insurance policy of the incident that brought about the lawsuit.
The policy of insurance here involved was not received in evidence in the lower court, and is not before us now.
[521]*521The condition of the policy with which the plaintiff says the Gables did not comply, and which is the only section of the policy in evidence here, is as follows:
“When an occurrence takes place, written notice shall be given by or on behalf of the insured to the company or any of its authorized agents as soon as practicable.”
In May of 1962, the Gables were owners of a one-family house in Barre, Vermont, which they had leased to Mr. and Mrs. Johnson. Mrs. Gable received a phone call on May 30th from Mrs. Johnson. Mrs. Johnson said that she had fallen down an unspecified stairs in the house and had hurt her back, but had not received medical attention. She inquired if the Gables had insurance coverage.
Mrs. Gable responded by saying that she had no personal knowledge of insurance coverage, but would have to ask her husband relative to this inquiry. Mrs. Gable informed her husband of the call from Mrs. Johnson.
Mrs. Johnson never contacted the Gables on any aspect of the claimed fall and injury again, nor did she ever seek a further answer on the insurance coverage carried by the Gables. The bringing of the lawsuit in the Federal Court nearly three years later was the only other notification of the incident received by the Gables.
For a period of time after the phone call, and until Mrs. Johnson left the leased premises, Mrs. Gable saw Mrs. Johnson on several occasions and inquired as to her health. Each time Mrs. Johnson replied that she was fine. On one of these occasions, Mrs. Johnson was shoveling snow from a driveway.
It is not disputed that the Gables never notified the plaintiff insurance company of the call from Mrs. Johnson, and that the first notification had by the company of the incident was at the time that suit was filed in Federal Court.
The defense of the Gables is that as prudent and reasonable persons they believed that at the most the injuries to Mrs. Johnson were of a trivial nature for which she did not intend to make any claim of any kind against the defendants.
The controlling issue presented to the Chancellor for determination was whether the report of the incident made by Mrs. Johnson in the telephone call to Mrs. Gable was such an occurrence to require the insured to report the event at once to the insurance carrier. Possibly, the insurance policy issued by the plaintiff may contain a definition [522]*522of the word “occurrence” as used in the only clause of the policy in evidence here, but such policy is not here.
In the absence of such policy, we construe “occurrence,” under the coverage of the policy, to mean an incident which could subject the defendants to legal liability to pay damages for bodily injury. The duty of the defendants was to report such incidents to the plaintiff company, as soon as practicable. Farm Bureau Mutual Automobile (Nationwide) Insurance Co. v. Greist, 251 F. 2d 85, 86.
Notice is an essential requirement in order to fix liability on an insurance carrier where there has been such an occurrence or accident as will lead the ordinary prudent and reasonable man to believe that it might give rise to a claim for damages. Nye v. Louis Ostrov Shoe Company, 43 N. E. 103, 106.
However, there may be circumstances that will explain or excuse a delay in giving the notice required by a policy of insurance, and show it to be reasonably prompt. The question of whether the delay is explained or excused is one for the trier to decide, and the burden of proof is upon the party upon whom the duty of giving of the notice devolved. Houran, Admr. v. Preferred Ins. Co. of N. Y., 109 Vt. 258, 266, 195 Atl. 253.
This is because the requirement that notice of the occurrence of an accident be given refers only to accidents which cause a loss covered by the policy. Delay in notice is generally held excusable in the case of an accident which is trivial and results in no apparent harm, or which furnished no ground for an insured, acting as a reasonable and prudent man, to believe at that time that a claim for damage will arise. 29 Am. Jur. §1394; 18 A.L.R. 2d 472.
“The question of the reasonableness of the insured’s determination as to whether the controverted event constituted a trivial occurrence or an accident within the meaning of the terms of the insurance policy must be resolved on the basis of the facts as they existed at the time of the accident and not in the light of hindsight. There was either a compliance with the policy provisions at that time, or there was not, and compliance or non-compliance cannot be established by subsequent events.” Bennett v. Swift & Co. et al, 170 Ohio St. 168, 163 N.E. 2d 362, 367.
This was a question of fact to be determined by the chancellor who was the trier of fact. Possibly, the chancellor may have believed that he had determined the question by Finding 12: “There was no evi[523]*523dence that the reporting of the occurrence under the circumstances when it was reported was not ‘as soon as practicable’.”
But this is, at best, only a finding that the plaintiff had presented no evidence that the reporting of the incident was not as soon as practicable. There was no burden on the plaintiff to offer such evidence. The burden of proof was on the defendants here to introduce evidence that the delay in reporting the incident of the telephone conversation to the company at the time it was made was excusable under the then existing circumstances. It was for the chancellor to determine whether or not the evidence of the defendants made the admitted delay in the reporting of the incident in question excusable and this finding was not made. Without such finding, the judgment is without adequate support.
For the reason that a finding one way or another on this essential fact is important to a final determination of the issue presented, the cause must be remanded for a rehearing. This result makes unnecessary our consideration of the various exceptions to findings of fact, and failure to find, briefed by the plaintiff, with one exception.
The insurer challenged the chancellor’s finding that there was no prejudice to the insurer because there was no notice to it of the occurrence involved. Its position is based upon Houran Admr.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
220 A.2d 165, 125 Vt. 519, 1966 Vt. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-fidelity-and-guaranty-co-v-gable-vt-1966.