Plaintiff sued defendant, her insurance agent, to recover damages for defendant’s alleged failure to provide collision insurance coverage on plaintiffs automobile, which was totally demolished in a collision with a train. After the jury had reached an eleven to one impasse, the trial court declared a mistrial, reconsidered defendant’s motion for directed verdict based on plaintiffs failure to put on evidence of damages to the car, and granted defendant’s motion. Plaintiff appeals that action, as well as the court’s striking of testimony on the value of the auto prior to the crash
Plaintiff purchased a 1981 Datsun 200SX for $9,120 in October of 1981. She had liability insurance with State Farm Insurance through defendant’s agency and had collision coverage with a different agent. When it came time to renew her collision insurance, plaintiff called defendant to get her collision insurance through defendant so that her liability and collision coverage would be with the same agent. Defendant provided temporary collision coverage pending a final decision from the underwriter at State Farm. In a letter dated 13 October 1982, plaintiff was notified by an underwriter from State Farm that her collision insurance would be cancelled 29 October 1982 because of the number of motor vehicle violations and accidents accumulated by plaintiff and her daughter, who was also covered under the collision policy. On about 15 November 1982, plaintiff called defendant to discuss the points which had been assigned to her because of the number of violations and accidents. She told defendant her daughter had moved from her home and had her own coverage and that her points should be removed from plaintiffs policy. Defendant said words to the effect that she “would take care of it.” Plaintiff contends the “taking care of it” meant providing collision insurance, though she did not ask defendant specifically to obtain collision coverage for her. Defendant contends that all plaintiff asked her to do was to remove plaintiffs daughter’s points from her policy and that only the removal of those points from the policy was what she said she would take care of. She did not attempt to get collision insurance for plaintiff, and from 29 October 1982, plaintiff had no collision insurance. On 11 December 1982, plaintiffs car was demolished whan a friend of hers drove the car into a train. What was left of the car was repossessed and sold for $1,100 by the bank which had financed its purchase.
Plaintiff sued defendant to recover damages “of at least $8000.” Although plaintiff sued under four causes of action, the only two at issue on appeal are her claims that the defendant’s failure to provide coverage constituted negligence and that defendant’s statements to plaintiff constituted an unfair trade practice in violation of G.S. 75-1.1.
We first address the plaintiffs contention that it was error for the trial court to grant defendant’s motion for directed verdict on the unfair trade practice claim. Plaintiff claims that defendant’s statements misled her into believing she had collision insurance. She argues that it is sufficient to show that defendant’s words had a capacity to mislead or create a likelihood of deception, with no requirement to show bad faith by the defendant. While plaintiffs analysis of the legal standard is correct,
see Marshall v. Miller,
We next consider plaintiffs contention that the trial court erred in striking testimony about the value of the Datsun from an
employee of the Northwestern Bank. Plaintiff called as a witness Bob Reed, an employee of the bank which financed the
“To introduce evidence on valuation, a proper foundation must be laid. First, it must be shown ‘that the witness is familiar with the thing on which . . . [he] professes to put a value and [second] that he has such knowledge and experience as to enable him intelligently to place a value on it.’ [Citation omitted.]”
Broughton v. Broughton,
Lastly, we consider whether the court properly granted defendant’s motion for directed verdict on the negligence claim, predicated upon plaintiffs inability to prove damages due to her failure to offer any evidence of the value of the car immediately prior to its destruction. Either evidence of the difference in market value before and after the injury or evidence of the cost of repairs would have been sufficient proof of damages.
See, e.g., Light Co. v. Paul,
Affirmed.
