Galt v. Phoenix Indemnity Co.

Citation74 App. DC 156,120 F.2d 723
Decision Date26 May 1941
Docket NumberNo. 7591.,7591.
PartiesGALT v. PHŒNIX INDEMNITY CO., Inc.
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — District of Columbia Circuit

Alvin L. Newmyer and David G. Bress, both of Washington, D. C., for appellant.

Henry I. Quinn, of Washington, D. C., for appellee.

Before GRONER, Chief Justice, and MILLER and VINSON, Associate Justices.

MILLER, Associate Justice.

Herbert S. Bryant, who was in government service, with the National Museum, in Washington, owned a Ford automobile, upon which he had a policy of automobile insurance in the Phoenix Indemnity Company. He gave permission to his nineteen year old son, Dean Bryant, to drive the automobile, with a party of his young friends, by way of the Skyline Drive in Virginia, to Duke University, in Durham, North Carolina. While near Dillwyn, Virginia, the Ford car overturned and Elizabeth Galt, one of its occupants, was injured. Following the accident, Dean Bryant made a statement to the Insurance Company as to the cause thereof, in which he stated that on a stretch of practically straight road, while the car was going at a speed of about fifty miles an hour, Elizabeth Galt, who was sitting on the front seat with him, opened the cowl ventilator of the car, whereupon dust, dirt and cigarette ashes were blown from the floor of the car into his eyes; he was momentarily blinded, and lost control of the car, which then overturned. He stated that the weather was clear at the time of the accident; the road was dry; there was no other interfering traffic; neither he nor any of the other members of the party had been drinking. He stated further that none of the occupants of the car had made any complaints concerning the manner in which he was driving the car; that he was driving carefully at the time of the accident; and that the accident was caused solely by his being blinded by dust blown up from the floor when the cowl ventilator was opened. Similar statements were made and signed by the three other occupants of the car, Yale B. Huffman, Jr., Virginia Elizabeth Seal, and Elizabeth E. Galt.

Thereafter, Elizabeth Galt brought suit against Dean Bryant, on account of the injuries suffered by her in the accident. On the day before the trial, Yale Huffman, Jr., informed the insurer that the statement which he had previously signed was false. As a result of this disclosure, the Insurance Company required the insured to sign a "non-waiver" agreement. This agreement provided that the rights of neither the insured nor the insurer under the insurance policy would be waived because of the defense of the case, by the insurer; and that it should not be "construed as a waiver of the right of the Company, if in fact it has such right, to deny liability to the said Dean Bryant under the said policy . . . ."

At the trial Elizabeth Galt, together with Yale Huffman, Jr., and Virginia Seal, repudiated the statements which they had made to the Insurance Company representative. Each testified in substance that the four occupants of the automobile, at the suggestion of Dean Bryant, and to protect him from the wrath of his father, agreed to tell the story which appeared in the statements made by Dean Bryant and by each of them; but that in fact the statements were untrue. Specifically, each of the three testified that Dean Bryant was driving at approximately seventy miles an hour, and that each had protested one or more times to him against driving so recklessly. In addition, Elizabeth Galt testified that she did not open the ventilator but that Dean Bryant had kicked it open. Dean Bryant, however, testified in support of the statement which he had made to the Insurance Company representative, and denied that he had asked the others to testify falsely, or to make any false statement.

Following a verdict in her favor, judgment was entered for Elizabeth Galt against Dean Bryant. In an effort to secure satisfaction of the judgment, an attachment was issued against appellee, the Phoenix Indemnity Company. Appellee replied, in response to interrogatories, that it had issued the automobile insurance policy, but it denied liability thereunder. Elizabeth Galt traversed the answers of the Insurance Company and prayed judgment against it for the amount of the judgment which she had recovered against Dean Bryant. The issue thus presented was tried to a jury. In this case, as in the earlier one, Elizabeth Galt, Virginia Seal and Yale Huffman, Jr., testified that the statements made by each of the four occupants of the automobile to the Insurance Company representative were false; and each of the three testified similarly, as in the earlier trial, as to what actually occurred at the time of the accident. Dean Bryant, however, again testified without qualification in support of his first statement. At the close of appellant's evidence, the lower court directed a verdict in favor of appellee. This appeal is from the judgment entered thereon.

The question which we must decide is whether the case was properly taken from the jury. The rule governing this question is that the motion to direct a verdict admitted every fact in evidence which tended to sustain appellant's case, together with every inference reasonably deducible therefrom;1 and that if there was any evidence from which the jury could reasonably have found for the appellant, upon proper instructions of law, the order directing a verdict was improper.2

The theory of appellee's defense is that there was a breach of the so-called cooperation clause of the insurance policy, the pertinent language of which reads as follows: ". . . The Assured shall cooperate with the Company, except in a pecuniary way, in the defense of claims and suits and in prosecuting appeals." Appellee assumes, in support of this theory, that Dean Bryant's statement of the cause of the accident was false, and that the testimony given by the other occupants of the car was correct. The lower court proceeded upon the same theory; in fact, in its opinion, after referring to the testimony of the three witnesses it said: "If that testimony is to be believed, the defendant has supported its claim that Bryant breached the cooperation clause of his insurance contract. That testimony has been matched only by one piece of evidence. The plaintiff, seeking to rebut, has relied solely upon the testimony of Bryant in his deposition. In that deposition Bryant still says that he told the truth in his statement to the insurance company. How can this plaintiff seek to recover on the testimony of Bryant, when it is utterly inconsistent with her own, not only in the former trial, but in this one, and inconsistent with the testimony of other witnesses that were produced in the former trial by her and vouched for by her? If this case should go to the jury on Bryant's testimony, when the plaintiff at the former trial had refuted the statement made by Bryant, and by now pinning her hopes for her success in this case upon that which she then denounced as false, when she could not have had a verdict or judgment in the former case if she had relied upon Bryant's version of the occurrence, it would be, in my opinion, a distortion of justice to allow her now to collect the judgment that she then obtained upon the other theory of fact, by now espousing the claim then made by Bryant and by him alone." But the question is not whether appellant's position is inconsistent, or whether in the court's opinion it would be a distortion of justice to allow her to recover under the circumstances. The question is whether there was any evidence upon which the jury could reasonably have found that Dean Bryant did cooperate with the Insurance Company. There was such evidence, and the case should have gone to the jury3 for its determination of the question of fact.4 Herbert S. Bryant, the father, testified that his son, Dean Bryant, had cooperated with the Insurance Company; specifically, that the son had stayed out of school in California and had come to Washington to testify. The father also testified that the son had never refused to do anything requested of him by the Insurance Company.

"It is well settled that, to relieve the insurer of liability on the ground of lack of cooperation, discrepancies in statements by the insured must be made in bad faith and must be material in nature and prejudicial in effect."5 In the present case there were no such discrepancies. To the contrary, Dean Bryant told the same story, consistently and unwaveringly, to the representative of appellee, at the trial between himself and Elizabeth Galt and at the trial between Elizabeth Galt and appellee. Interestingly enough, the story which he told, if true, proved that Elizabeth Galt, herself, caused the accident and that he was not negligent; hence, that neither he nor appellee was liable. Although Dean Bryant's veracity was impeached, it was impeached by three witnesses who, as the necessary basis therefor, confessed their own untrustworthiness. And, it must be remembered, they did this in order to secure for Elizabeth Galt a judgment against the same Dean Bryant. Plausible as their story may be, convincing as it may...

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    ...that position, he may not thereafter, simply because his interests have changed, assume a contrary position." Galt v. Phoenix Indem. Co., 120 F.2d 723, 726 (D.C.Cir.1941). Prior agency determinations, such as the one made by the OPM in this case, are analogous to the "legal proceeding" desc......
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