Williams v. Cass-Crow Wing Cooperative Assn.

28 N.W.2d 646, 224 Minn. 275, 1947 Minn. LEXIS 533
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 3, 1947
DocketNo. 34,375.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 28 N.W.2d 646 (Williams v. Cass-Crow Wing Cooperative Assn.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Cass-Crow Wing Cooperative Assn., 28 N.W.2d 646, 224 Minn. 275, 1947 Minn. LEXIS 533 (Mich. 1947).

Opinion

Julius J. Olson, Justice.

In our statement of facts we shall refer to the parties as they were named in the court below, i. e., plaintiff, defendant, and garnishee. We find the facts to be substantially as follows:

The garnishee is a foreign corporation duly authorized to transact business in this state. It writes policies of public liability insurance and thereby agrees to pay, for an adequate consideration, on behalf of the insured and within prescribed limits, such sums as the insured may be required to pay to third persons for liability imposed by law upon the insured for bodily injuries and property damage sustained as a result of accidents proximately caused by the insured’s negligence in the conduct of his business. Under the policy presently involved, the insurer was also obligated to investigate and defend, at its own expense, all claims arising thereunder. During the times here involved, the policy issued by the garnishee to defendant was in full force and effect.

Defendant is a Minnesota cooperative association, having for its business the purchase and the sale to its patrons of petroleum products, fuel, fertilizer, and other articles of merchandise. It operated a bulk station at Brainerd, Minnesota, and also owned retail filling stations at Pequot Lakes and Pillager. The station at Pequot *277 Lakes is the one here involved. That station was leased to one Sig-ville Anderson on a monthly rental basis, and he operated it as his own private enterprise, bnt he made most of his purchases of petroleum products from defendant on a wholesale basis. He also purchased such products from other dealers.

On March 14,1945, plaintiff was seriously injured by a fire which destroyed the farm home in which she, her husband, and three children resided near Pequot Lakes. She and her family lived some ten miles beyond Pequot Lakes, approximately 25 miles from Brai-nerd, so that her home was at least 85 miles from Brainerd. The explosion which destroyed plaintiff’s home and injured her was caused by what she supposed was pure kerosene. It was supposed to have been purchased at defendant’s station at Pequot. On June 27, 1945, plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for personal injuries against defendant. Plaintiff prevailed and recovered a judgment against defendant for $10,000 on January 12, 1946. On January 15, 1946, plaintiff instituted the present proceeding against the garnishee, having been authorized to do so by an order of the court. This took place after the garnishee had appeared in the garnishment proceeding and denied all liability on its part to defendant. In this proceeding, a supplemental complaint was duly served. The garnishee answered, and plaintiff replied.

On plaintiff’s motion in the court below and over the garnishee’s objection, the court submitted this question to the jury:

“Did the defendant, Cass-Crow Wing Cooperative Assn., a corporation, give notice of the happening of the accident involved in this case to the garnishee [Shelby Mutual Plate Glass & Casualty Company, a corporation] as soon as practicable?”

The jury answered this in the affirmative. The court instructed the jury:

“* * * If you are satisfied by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the Cass-Crow Wing Cooperative Association did give notice to the insurance company of the happening of the accident herein involved as soon as practicable, that is, as soon as reasonable, *278 under the facts and circumstances disclosed by the evidence, then you should answer the question ‘yes.’ * * * If you are not satisfied by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the Cass-Crow Wing Cooperative Association did give notice to the insurance company of the happening of this accident as soon as practicable, that is, as soon as reasonable under the facts and circumstances herein disclosed, then you should answer the question 'no.’ ”

The garnishee excepted “to the court submitting the issue to the jury (1) on the ground that the court should have held as a matter of law that notice was not given as soon as practicable; (2) that the court should instruct the jury to answer the question 'no’ as a matter of law.”

The important and, we think, decisive question here is whether the giving of notice to the garnishee presented a fact question. If it did, liability should follow.

Except for the question submitted to the jury, the case was tried to the court, which did “specifically adopt the verdict of the jury” and did “specifically find that the notice of the said accident was given by the defendant to the garnishee as soon as practicable after the accident to plaintiff and that the defendant did not breach the terms of the policy with respect to the giving of notice of the accident.”

The summons and complaint in the main action were served upon L. E. Glanville, defendant’s local manager at Brainerd, on June 27, 1945. Being uncertain as to what procedure should be taken, he called up the president of defendant, who came to Brainerd the following day. Pursuant to his instructions, Glanville telephoned garnishee’s St. Paul agency as to what should be done with the papers thus handed him. He testified that in the conversation then had, the garnishee’s representative told him:

“Mail the summons down here to us and we will take care of it, and go ahead about your business and don’t worry. We are the official worriers.”

*279 Glanville first learned of the Pequot Lakes accident when he read of it in a Brainerd paper shortly after it happened. He next heard of it on March 19, when the state oil inspector called on him at the bulk station. He was told by the inspector that the kerosene “that was supposed to have caused this fire up at Pequot was supposed to have been purchased from our station at Pequot.” He attempted to communicate with Anderson’s station at Pequot, but, not being able to get Anderson, talked to Mrs. Anderson, who said she did not know of any record of this sale of kerosene to plaintiff. The inspector, however, found that gasoline and kerosene had been mixed at the bulk plant in Brainerd because of a faulty distributing system, and he so advised Glanville. Defendant’s tanks at Brainerd, Pequot, and Pillager were officially sealed by the inspector that day. From that time on, no one representing or claiming to represent plaintiff made any claim against defendant, nor was any information brought to, any of defendant’s officers that any such claim was thought of until the summons and complaint were served on June 27. At the time of the state inspector’s visit, which occurred some five days after the fire, the garnishee thinks that defendant had acquired sufficient information about it to realize fully that trouble might ensue and that duty demanded that defendant give the garnishee the notice required under the terms of the policy. As a matter of fact, however, the inspector did not know that the kerosene purchased at Pequot Lakes had come from the Brainerd station. His examination was based solely upon the mixture of gasoline with kerosene purchased at the Anderson station.

Plaintiff, in her brief, recites the fact that this accident happened some 40 miles from Brainerd and that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
28 N.W.2d 646, 224 Minn. 275, 1947 Minn. LEXIS 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-cass-crow-wing-cooperative-assn-minn-1947.