Yeager v. Farmers Mutual Insurance

453 S.E.2d 390, 192 W. Va. 556, 1994 W. Va. LEXIS 279
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1994
Docket22159
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 453 S.E.2d 390 (Yeager v. Farmers Mutual Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yeager v. Farmers Mutual Insurance, 453 S.E.2d 390, 192 W. Va. 556, 1994 W. Va. LEXIS 279 (W. Va. 1994).

Opinion

CLECKLEY, Justice:

This case involves two certified questions from the Circuit Court of Harrison County relating to whether a farmers’ mutual fire insurance policy is subject to the valued policy law under W.Va.Code, 33-17-9 (1957). For the following reasons, we hold it is not.

I.

On May 1, 1988, the plaintiffs, Clarence and Margaret Yeager, and another individual, who is not a party to this action, entered into a lease-purchase agreement for some property in Harrison County. According to the plaintiffs, the total purchase price of the land and the two homes situated upon the land was $35,000. The plaintiffs resided in one of the houses and purchased an actual cash value fire insurance policy from the defendant, Farmers Mutual Insurance Company. Farmers Mutual Insurance Company valued that house at $35,000. The plaintiffs also purchased $17,500 of personal property insurance for the contents in the house. Thus, the plaintiffs real and personal property fire insurance totaled $52,500. 1

On April 7, 1991, the house where the plaintiffs resided was destroyed by fire. *558 Subsequently, the plaintiffs filed a claim with the defendants and submitted a statement of proof of loss in the amount of $33,465. The plaintiffs accepted payment from the defendants in this amount minus a $250 deductible. The plaintiffs also signed a form agreeing to fully release the defendants from all claims arising out of this property loss.

Several months later, the plaintiffs, by counsel, made a compromise demand for settlement against the defendants in the amount of $41,466. The defendants refused to pay the demand, and, on April 13,1992, the plaintiffs filed suit in Harrison County against the defendants. In their suit, the plaintiffs alleged, inter alia, the defendants are required to pay them the full amount of the policy, not the actual cash value of property. The defendants filed a motion for summary judgment and a motion to dismiss. In support, the defendants argued that farmers’ mutual fire insurance companies are not subject to the valued policy law contained in W.Va. Code, 33-17-9. By order dated March 30, 1993, the circuit court denied the defendants’ motions.

Thereafter, by order dated October 12, 1993, the circuit court certified the following two questions to this Court.

“1. Does the “Valued Policy Law,” West Virginia Code Section 33-17-9, apply to a Farmers Mutual Insurance Company in the case of a total loss by fire of a family home and residence, and the contents thereof, that was insured by a Farmers Mutual Fire Insurance' Company for a far greater amount than the actual value of the destroyed home and contents? [Answered yes by the circuit court]-.
“2. If the “Valued Policy Law,” West Virginia Code Section 33-17-9, does apply to a Farmers Mutual Insurance Company that insured a family home and its contents for a value greater than the actual value of such home and its contents, does a failure to pay policy limits for the total loss by fire of such a family home and its contents render a signed release of all claims for such fire loss void or voidable? [Answered yes by the circuit court].”

II.

This Court first held farmers’ mutual fire insurance companies were subject to our valued policy law in Shinn v. West Virginia Insurance Co., 104 W.Va. 353, 140 S.E. 61 (1927). At that time, the valued policy law was contained in 1923 W.Va.Acts, c. 34,

§ 40a, and had remained unchanged from its enactment in 1899 W.VaActs, c. 33. 2 Significantly, in Shinn, we-could not find any indication by the legislature to suggest that it intended farmers’ mutual fire insurance companies should be excluded from the valued policy law. 104 W.Va. at 361, 140 S.E. at 64. Therefore, we determined in Syllabus Point 4:

“Section 40a of chapter 34 of the Code, chapter 33 of the Acts of the Legislature of 1899, making all firb insurance companies doing business in this state liable for the whole amount of the insurance upon real estate stated in the policy of insurance, in case of total loss by fire or otherwise, applies to mutual companies organized under the provisions of chapter 55 of the Code.”

In other words, without any legislative indication to the contrary, we applied the valued policy law to farmers’ mutual fire insurance companies.

Shortly after our decision in Shinn, the legislature, by 1929 W.VaActs, c. 25, added § 13a to 1923 W.Va.Acts, c. 55, § 13, which was one of the farmers’ mutual fire insurance company provisions. 3 This amendment gave *559 farmers’ mutual fire insurance companies the right to use in their policies “the two-thirds, three-fourths, eighty per cent and ninety per cent value clauses and all similar clauses, when properly incorporated in or attached” to the policies. The amendment further stated “[a]ll acts and parts of acts inconsistent herewith are hereby repealed.” Later, this version of 1923 W.VaActs, c. 55, § 13a, was incorporated in W.Va.Code, 33-5-4 (1931). W.Va.Code, 33-5-4, stated, in relevant part:

“Every [farmers’ mutual cooperative fire insurance company], when so authorized to transact business, may issue policies of insurance, signed by its president and secretary, agreeing in the name of the company to pay all damages caused by fire, lightning, hail or tornado to the property insured during, the life of the policy, and may use in such policies the two-thirds, three-fourths, eighty per cent and ninety per cent value clauses and all similar clauses when properly incorporated in or attached to such policies; and when so used and incorporated, such clauses shall be valid and effective.”

By making this amendment, the legislature took an affirmative step to declare that farmers’ mutual fire insurance companies are not subject to the valued policy law as this Court held in Shinn. Instead, the clear language of the statute permits farmers’ mutual fire insurance companies to use a percent value in their policies.

We addressed this amendment in Davis v. Safe Insurance Co., 120 W.Va. 505, 199 S.E. 364 (1938). Although we determined the policy at controversy in Davis was issued prior to the amendment and controlled by the valued policy law, we held the 1929 amendment conferred upon farmers’ mutual fire insurance companies the authority to have percent valued liability clauses. 120 W.Va. at 512, 199 S.E. at 367. We also said that, because the 1929 amendment was a general statute covering all fire insurance and not merely insurance on real estate, the 1929 amendment did not repeal the valued policy law of 1899. 120 W.Va. at 512, 199 S.E. at 367. Nevertheless, we concluded that by adopting the 1929 amendment “the legislature clearly had in mind granting to the mutual companies described therein authority to use the two-thirds and other liability clauses therein mentioned in policies issued by them.” 120 W.Va. at 512, 199 S.E. at 367.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hoover v. West Virginia Board of Medicine
602 S.E.2d 466 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 2004)
Estate of Davis ex rel. Casey v. Farmers Mutual Insurance
533 S.E.2d 33 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 2000)
Adkins v. Merow
505 S.E.2d 406 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1997)
Lawson v. County Commission of Mercer County
483 S.E.2d 77 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1996)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
453 S.E.2d 390, 192 W. Va. 556, 1994 W. Va. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yeager-v-farmers-mutual-insurance-wva-1994.