BEHRINGER, Plaintiff and Respondent, VS. STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY and others, Defendants and Respondents: RINGLE and another, Defendants and Appellants.
Supreme Court of Wisconsin
April 9—May 7, 1957.
275 Wis. 586
For the respondent Ella Behringer the cause was submitted on the brief of Smith, Okoneski, Puchner & Tinkham of Wausau.
For the respondent State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company as insurer of Henry Leffel there was a brief by Roberts, Roe, Boardman, Suhr & Bjork of Madison, and oral argument by Walter M. Bjork.
For the respondent State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company as insurer of Robert Behringer there was a brief by Schmitt & Wurster of Merrill, and oral argument by C. B. Wurster.
For the respondents Arden Leffel and Henry Leffel there was a brief by Krueger & Fulmer of Wausau, and oral argument by Burton E. Fulmer.
CURRIE, J. It is contended by Universal Underwriters that the affidavits in support of the motion for summary judgment conclusively establish that the SR-21 was filed
Under the provisions of
The briefs of counsel raise certain issues with respect to the application of Quin v. Hoffmann, supra. One of such issues is whether Quin v. Hoffmann should not be reconsidered and repudiated because of the amendment made to
In Laughnan v. Griffiths (1955), 271 Wis. 247, 73 N. W. (2d) 587, we analyzed the Wisconsin Safety Responsibility Law (
“We confine our determination at this time to holding that an automobile liability insurance company can make itself liable on a policy issued by it where, after investigating the facts, it, acting through a duly authorized agent or employee, voluntarily files with the commissioner an SR-21 form admitting coverage as to the accident described in such SR-21 intending to be bound thereby, even though without the filing of the SR-21 there might not be liability.”
By use of the words “intending to be bound thereby” we did not have reference to any undisclosed subjective intention of the company, but only that the company had filed the SR-21 for the purpose of complying with the Safety Responsibility Law.
We also held in the Laughnan Case that
Our analysis of the Safety Responsibility Law in the Laughnan Case clearly demonstrated that the objective of such act was to protect the persons damaged or injured through the negligence of an operator of a motor vehicle. This was accomplished by providing a penalty against such operator and, if he were not the owner of the vehicle driven
Keeping in mind the objective of the law, if a policy of existing automobile liability insurance is to be relied upon as the source of compensating the person who has sustained damage or injury, surely the legislature intended this to be as effective for such purpose as the alternative method of depositing security with the commissioner. However, as borne out by our decision in the Pulvermacher Case, the legislature, albeit possibly unintentionally, left one loophole in accomplishing such result. This came about by not providing that such existing policy of insurance meet any higher or more stringent requirements than specified by
We deem it highly significant that the Safety Responsibility Law affords a sixty-day period following receipt by the motor vehicle department of the accident report before the driver‘s license and the vehicle‘s registration may be suspended because of failure to either file a proper SR-21, or to
In those situations where greater liability is imposed upon the insurance company, which has filed an SR-21, than it originally contracted for when it issued its policy, the same is one imposed by statute as a result of its voluntary act in filing the SR-21. We have an illustration of a similarly imposed statutory liability provided in another phase of the instant appeal. Under the provisions of
To permit Universal Underwriters to introduce evidence at the trial of the within action, that Arden Leffel had no legal permission from either his father or Ringle to operate the insured vehicle, would be to repudiate the certification contained in its SR-21. This it cannot do.
The rationale of the within opinion on the effect of the filing of an SR-21 requires that we reconsider the basis of our decision in the Pulvermacher Case as to the reason advanced as to why the insurance company there was not barred from asserting the defense of a policy exclusion clause. We there held that the filing by the company of the SR-21 did not bar its right to assert the exclusion clause as a policy defense because there had not been an intentional relinquishment of a known right. We are now satisfied that an insurance company, which files an SR-21, is barred from asserting an exclusion clause in its policy as a defense, if, in order to do so, it must rely upon the occurrence of facts which it could have discovered by the exercise of due diligence within the sixty-day period allotted by statute for the filing of the SR-21.
However, in the Pulvermacher Case the injured person, who is the third-party beneficiary that the Safety Responsibility Law was designed to protect, was the named insured under the policy. The Safety Responsibility Law should not be so construed that the filing of an SR-21 would give such named insured the right to recover upon his own policy of insurance when he had already expressly contracted in such policy that there would be no coverage as to his own damages. This is because the SR-21 is filed to protect such named insured, as owner of the insured vehicle, against having his vehicle registration suspended. In this respect it is a filing for and in behalf of the insured and he should not be permitted to use it as a weapon against the Insurance Company.
Universal Underwriters contends that in the instant case it does have a valid defense based upon an exclusion clause in the policy. Such clause provided that the policy does not apply “to liability assumed by the insured under any contract
It would seem that such liability of Henry Leffel for the acts of operation of his son, Arden, is one imposed by statute1 rather than the result of a contract or agreement. Lackey v. Olds & Stoller Inter-Exchange (1927), 80 Cal. App. 687, 252 Pac. 672, and Marple v. American Automobile Ins. Co. (1927), 82 Cal. App. 137, 255 Pac. 260. Furthermore, the omnibus coverage clause of Universal Underwriters’ policy makes any person an additional insured thereunder who uses the insured vehicle, “provided the actual use of the automobile is by the named insured or with his permission.” Henry Leffel had express permission from Ringle to use the car, and such use, therefore, included the right to permit someone else to operate it. Maurer v. Fesing (1940), 233 Wis. 565, 571, 290 N. W. 191, and Schimke v. Mutual Automobile Ins. Co. (1954) 266 Wis. 517, 521, 64 N. W. (2d) 195.
However, even if there had been a violation of this particular exclusion clause by reason of Henry Leffel signing Arden‘s application for an instruction permit, this was a fact which Universal Underwriters should have discovered by the exercise of due diligence prior to the filing of the SR-21. This precludes it from raising such issue now.
By the Court.—That part of the order denying summary judgment as to the appellant Universal Underwriters is affirmed; and that part of the order denying summary judgment as to the appellant Ringle is reversed, and cause remanded with directions to enter judgment dismissing the complaint as to him. The respondents shall be entitled to tax costs.
FAIRCHILD, J. (concurring). Quin v. Hoffmann (1954), 265 Wis. 636, 62 N. W. (2d) 423, held that permission given to an unlicensed driver is not “permission” as used in the statutory omnibus coverage clause. In my opinion that decision should be overruled. It was apparently considered that
Because the foregoing is a sufficient basis for the result, I express no opinion as to the theory upon which the majority opinion is based. With reference, however, to the discussion of Pulvermacher v. Sharp, ante, p. 371, 82 N. W. (2d) 163, set forth in the majority opinion, the following observation is pertinent. Counsel in the Pulvermacher Case did not attack the validity of the policy provision excluding from coverage afforded to an additional assured his liability to a named assured. Such validity was evidently considered established in Frye v. Theige (1948), 253 Wis. 596, 34 N. W. (2d) 793. Although the opinion in the Frye Case sought to distinguish Schenke v. State Farm Mut. Automobile Ins. Co. (1944), 246 Wis. 301, 16 N. W. (2d) 817, the principle of the Schenke Case was in my opinion correct and controlling. The court ought to return to it. The exclusion of liability to a named assured causes an additional assured to enjoy less protection than the policy gives the named assured and violates
