The plaintiffs, Phillip Bozza and Karen Bozza, individually and as shareholders of Ruzzo-Bozza Trucking Company (corporation), and the corporation brought suit against defendants claiming improper payment of insurance proceeds. From a summary judgment in favor of defendants, plaintiffs appeal.
The trial court ruled that:
1. Defendants did not owe any duty to Plaintiffs, Phillip Bozza and Karen Bozza, individually and as the shareholders of Ruzzo-Bozza Trucking Company, as a matter of law, and
2. [A]ny duty owed to Plaintiff Rozzo-Bozza Trucking Company, a NewMexico corporation, was fulfilled by the Defendants as a matter of law.
At the summary judgment hearing, counsel for plaintiffs conceded that no duty was owed to the Bozzas individually, but argued a duty was owed to them as shareholders of the corporation. Plaintiffs have not pursued their individual or shareholder claims on appeal by argument or authority; therefore, any challenge to the first ruling is deemed abandoned. Novak v. Dow,
Thus, the primary issue on appeal focuses on the second ruling that any duty owed to the corporation was fulfilled by defendants as a matter of law. We must determine if a genuine issue of material fact exists which would preclude summary judgment. We hold one does.
The corporation was incorporated in May 1981. At that time the Bozzas and Ruzzos purchased a 1970 Kenworth truck in the name of the corporation and insured it with Excess Insurance Company, Ltd. (Excess). In June 1981, Bruce Ruzzo, president of the corporation, reported the truck stolen and filed a proof of loss on behalf of the corporation. Excess assigned the claim to General Adjustment Bureau (GAB), who, in turn, gave it to its adjuster, Mary Campos, to handle. After GAB had completed its investigation, two drafts, each in the amount of $7,375 and made payable to the insured, Ruzzo-Bozza Trucking, were delivered to Ruzzo in settlement of the claim. Ruzzo endorsed the drafts on behalf of the corporation and obtained in exchange from a bank two cashier’s checks for like amounts also made payable to the corporation. Ruzzo then cashed these checks and absconded with the money. These facts appear to be undisputed.
What is controverted involves information made available to the defendants through Campos or directly prior to delivery of the settlement drafts. While the defendants call attention to affidavits and deposition testimony that reflect that Campos was only aware of internal corporate conflicts between Bozza and Ruzzo, as to which she had no “concern,” an affidavit of Bozza suggests more. Bozza stated that he told Campos, prior to delivery of the drafts, that he was suspicious that Ruzzo was going to abscond with the insurance money and not to pay him. Bozza said he asked Campos to notify him when the drafts were ready so he could accompany Ruzzo to pick them up. He also said that he told Campos that he was placing the title to the truck with the corporate attorney, William Aldridge, and that she should contact the attorney if she needed the title in order to disburse funds.
Aldridge’s affidavit states that he received the truck title from either Mr. or Mrs. Bozza, and then told Campos that he was the corporation’s attorney and that the insurance proceeds were to be paid through his office. Aldridge said he confirmed this with Campos’ supervisor. He said he was never contacted before delivery of the settlement drafts, but that Ruzzo had “wrongfully” taken the truck title from his office.
While defendants strenuously challenge the facts concerning these communications, the standard of review requires only that we determine if they raise genuine issues of fact, not whether they are true. Defendants recognize this, but contend that these facts are immaterial. We turn to the law to see if they are.
We are concerned with the law of agency. Defendants maintain that Ruzzo had apparent authority to act on behalf of and to bind the corporation. At all times material, Ruzzo was president; he reported the theft of the truck; he filed the proof of loss; and he dealt with and negotiated the settlement with Campos, all on behalf of the corporation. In Tabet v. Campbell,
The Doctrine of Apparent Authority is based upon an estoppel theory:
[T]he principal will not be permitted to establish that the agent’s authority was less than what was apparent from the course of dealing for when one of two innocent parties must suffer, the loss must fall upon the party who created the enabling circumstances. (Citations omitted.)
Southwestern Portland Cement v. Beavers,82 N.M. 218 , 221,478 P.2d 546 , 549 (1970).
Id. at 67,
We agree that the undisputed facts demonstrate that Ruzzo had apparent authority to act on behalf of the corporation initially, but did that change with the communication from Bozza and Aldridge? Tabet v. Campbell also says that a principal is bound by the actions taken under the apparent authority of its agent if the agent is in a position which would lead a reasonably prudgnt .p.erson to believe the agent possessed such apparent authority. The critical question here is whether defendants had notice or knowledge of limitations on Ruzzo’s authority, or possessed information which required them to make further inquiry before delivering the drafts to Ruzzo.
Restatement (Second) of Agency Section 135 (1958) provides:
When Third Persons Have Notice of Termination of Authority
A third person to whom a principal has manifested that an agent has authority to do an act has notice of the termination of authority when he knows, has reason to know, should know, or has been given a notification of the occurrence of an event from which, if reasonable, he would draw the inference that the principal does not consent to have the agent so act for him, that the agent does not consent so to act for the principal, or that the transaction has become impossible of execution.
Restatement, supra, Section 13b provides that, unless otherwise agreed, there is notification by the principal to the third person of revocation of an agent’s authority when the principal states that fact to the third person.
Here we have evidence that Bozza, vice president of the corporation, informed Campos that payment should not be delivered to Ruzzo. Also, there is the statement of Aldridge, who says he was corporate counsel, that the drafts should be delivered to him. This suffices, we believe, to raise a fact question as to whether defendants could still rely on Ruzzo’s apparent authority, at least to the extent of receiving payment on behalf of the corporation.
Due diligence must be employed by a third person with an agent to ascertain the truth of the facts with reference to authority, and a total failure to make inquiry is not ordinarily consistent with reasonable prudence. Anheuser-Busch, Inc. v. Grovier-Starr Produce Co.,
Whether an agency exists is ordinarily a question of fact which may be established by direct or circumstantial evidence. State v. De Baca,
The authorities relied on by defendants do not conflict with the result we reach. In City of Kiel v. Frank Shoe Manufacturing Co.,
Similarly, in Savidge v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.,
Finally, defendants GAB and Campos assert that the duty owed the insured corporation was fulfilled when the settlement checks were picked up by Ruzzo. In claiming the duty should not extend beyond that, defendants rely on Douglass v. Mutual Beneficial Health & Accident Ass’n.,
? stated in Sterling v. B. & E. Constructors, Inc.,
The corporation argues that a conspiracy existed between Campos and Ruzzo to defraud the corporation. We have examined the second amended complaint and can find no allegations of a conspiracy. Las Luminarias of the N.M. Council of the Blind v. Isengard,
Since the matter must be remanded, we simplify the issues. First, only the corporation has a cause of action. Second, that cause of action is for breach of contract in allegedly failing to pay the insurance
Defendants Excess and Market Finder argue that the direct claims against them as well as the claim for punitive damages have been settled even if the case is reversed for trial on the merits. As to the punitive damage claim, the trial court did not reach that issue since it dismissed on the question of liability. Defendants may invoke a ruling if they wish. As to the direct claim of liability, we fail to see where this makes any difference. Whether defendants had notice or knowledge of any restrictions or limitations on Ruzzo’s authority, directly or through Campos, would not matter. We do not understand that defendants deny Campos was acting as their agent in the adjustment of the claim.
Finally, with respect to plaintiffs’ appeal from the protective order, this is not a final appealable order, and this court has no jurisdiction at this time to consider it.
We reverse the summary judgment and remand for trial on the merits of the issue herein delineated. Plaintiff corporation may recover its costs of appeal.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
