Nora L. Nicholson brought suit against her insurance agent, Jack Epps, his agency, Epps Insurance Agency, Inc., Rucker & Associates, Inc., the general agent, and Dependable Insurance Company, Inc., the insurance carrier, to recover damages from a fire loss on rental property she owned. The trial court granted summary judgment to Rucker & Associates, Inc., and Dependable Insurance Company, Inc., and granted partial summary judgment as to coverage to Epps and Epps Insurance Agency, Inc., while denying summary judgment in their favor as to negligence. Nicholson appeals from the grant of summary judgment, and Epps and his agency appeal from the denial of summary judgment in their favor as to negligence.
The record reveals that Nicholson lived at 1543 North Flatrock Road, Douglasville, and owned a rental house at 1471 North Flatrock Road. She had purchased insurance on both her residence and the rental house for several years from Epps, who had visited her home and knew the tenant in the rental house. Nicholson requested that Epps obtain a policy covering the rental premises, and at Epps’ request, a policy purporting to cover 1471 North Flatrock Road was issued by Dependable Insurance Company in June 1984. The rental home was substantially destroyed by fire in March 1985, during the term of the policy. Nicholson filed her claim with Dependable, which denied liability, asserting that the policy was a homeowners’ policy, providing coverage only for owner occupied dwellings. It is uncontroverted that Nicholson received a copy of the policy prior to the fire loss, and that the policy defines “residence premises” as “the one or two family dwelling, other structures, and grounds or that part of any other building where you reside and which is shown as the ‘residence premises’ in the Declarations.” The Declarations portion of the policy *247 states that “[t]his policy insures Nora L. Nicholson, 1471 N. Flatrock Road, Douglasville, Ga. 30135.”
1. In case number 76355, Nicholson contends the trial court erred by granting summary judgment in favor of the defendants as to coverage because the insurance policy was ambiguous, and thus must be construed most strongly against the insurer, and in favor of coverage, citing
Davis v. United American Life Ins. Co.,
2. In case number 76354, Epps and his agency maintain that while the trial court correctly granted summary judgment in their favor on Nicholson’s claim as to coverage, the trial court erred by denying their motion for summary judgment as to Nicholson’s negligence claim, because the case, rather than sounding in tort as alleged by Nicholson, sounds in contract as a suit to recover for Epps’ breach of a contract to procure insurance as instructed. Epps argues that Nicholson was under a duty to examine the policy, and her failure to do so relieves him of liability for any lack of coverage. We agree and reverse.
“[T]he general rule [is] that an insured has a duty to examine
*248
and reject a policy providing incorrect or insufficient coverage. . . .”
King v. Brasington,
Nicholson was under a legal duty to read her policy, and she failed to comply with that duty. Accordingly, in addition to summary judgment in their favor as to coverage under the policy, Epps and his agency were entitled to the grant of summary judgment in their favor as to the negligence claim.
Judgment affirmed in Case No. 76355. Judgment reversed in Case No. 76354.
