HARTS v FARMERS INSURANCE EXCHANGE
Docket No. 110683
Supreme Court of Michigan
July 30, 1999
461 Mich 1
Argued April 6, 1999 (Calendar No. 5). Decided July 30, 1999.
Gloria and Tyrone Harts brought an action in the Kent Circuit Court against Farmers Insurance Exchange and Gregory Pietrzak, an insurance agent, claiming that the Farmers insurance contract that Mr. Pietrzak sold them was inadequate because it did not include uninsured motorist coverage. The court, Donald A. Johnston, J., granted summary disposition for the defendants, finding that under Bruner v League General Ins Co, 164 Mich App 28 (1987), there was no special relationship between the agent and the client, and, thus, the agent had no duty to advise the plaintiffs concerning the adequacy of their coverage. The allegations that Farmers Insurance was negligent likewise were rejected. The Court of Appeals, SAWYER, P.J., and BANDSTRA and E. A. QUINNELL, JJ., affirmed in an unpublished memorandum opinion (Docket No. 193312). The plaintiffs appeal.
In an opinion by Justice TAYLOR, joined by Chief Justice WEAVER, and Justices CORRIGAN and YOUNG, the Supreme Court held:
Except under very limited circumstances not present in this case, a licensed insurance agent owes no affirmative duty to advise or counsel an insured about the adequacy or availability of coverage.
1. Under the common law, Mr. Pietrzak had a duty to comply with the various fiduciary obligations he owed to Farmers and to act for its benefit. Moreover, because he was Farmers’ agent, he had no common-law duty to advise the plaintiffs. An insurance agent whose principal is the insurance company owes no duty to advise a potential insured about any coverage. The agent‘s job is to merely present the product of his principal and take such orders as can be secured from those who want to purchase the coverage offered.
2. The Legislature has long distinguished between insurance agents and insurance counselors, with agents being essentially order takers, while insurance counselors function primarily as advisors. However, the general no-duty-to-advise rule, where the agent functions as simply an order taker for an insurer, is subject to change when an event occurs that alters the nature of the relationship between the agent and the insured, such as where the agent misrepresents the nature or extent of the coverage offered or provided, an ambiguous request is made that requires a clarification, an inquiry is made that may require advice and the agent, although not required, gives advice that is inaccurate, or the agent assumes an additional duty by either express agreement with or promise to the insured.
3. In this case, there is no documentary evidence suggesting that Mr. Pietrzak misrepresented the coverage offered or provided. Further, there is no evidence that Mr. Harts made a request about insurance coverage that might be construed as ambiguous or that would have required clarification. Nor did Mr. Pietrzak expressly agree or promise to advise Mr. Harts about insurance coverage generally or uninsured motorist coverage specifically. Because the plaintiffs have failed to establish the duty element of their negligence claim against Mr. Pietrzak, summary disposition in favor of Mr. Pietrzak was proper. Because they cannot establish liability against Mr. Pietrzak, the agent, they likewise cannot establish vicarious liability against Farmers, the principal. And because Mr. Pietrzak was under no obligation to give advice about uninsured motorist coverage, Farmers cannot be liable for any alleged negligent supervision. Accordingly, summary disposition in favor of Farmers was proper.
Justice CAVANAGH, joined by Justices BRICKLEY and KELLY, concurring, stated that in light of the extensive statutory scheme for qualification, a licensed insurance agent is much more than one who merely presents products and
Affirmed.
James R. Rinck for plaintiffs-appellants.
Wheeler, Upham, P.C. (by Gary A. Maximiuk and Jack L. Hoffman), for defendants-appellees.
TAYLOR, J. We granted leave in this case to determine whether a licensed insurance agent owes an affirmative duty to advise or counsel an insured about the adequacy or availability of coverage. We hold that, except under very limited circumstances not present in this case, an insurance agent owes no such duty to an insured. We therefore affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals, which affirmed the trial court‘s grant of summary disposition in favor of defendants.
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
In early 1993, plaintiffs, Tyrone and Gloria Harts owned a Chevrolet Cavalier that was covered by a policy of no-fault automobile insurance they had purchased from defendant Farmers Insurance Exchange, through defendant Gregory Pietrzak, a licensed insurance agent selling insurance exclusively for Farmers. The policy covering the Cavalier did not include optional uninsured motorist coverage.
While driving the Cavalier on February 15, 1993, Mrs. Harts was involved in an automobile accident with an uninsured vehicle. Mrs. Harts was injured, and plaintiffs’ six-year-old son was killed. The Harts received from Farmers the personal injury protection benefits due them under the Cavalier policy. They also subsequently obtained a $2 million default judgment against the driver and owner of the uninsured vehicle. However, they have never collected any money on this judgment.
The Harts then filed suit against Mr. Pietrzak and Farmers. They contended that Mr. Pietrzak was negligent in selling them an insurance policy that was inadequate because it did not contain uninsured motorist coverage. They also contended that Farmers was vicariously liable for Mr. Pietrzak‘s negligence and actively negligent for its own failure to properly supervise Mr. Pietrzak.
The discovery phase of the case revealed the extent of the parties’ prior dealings. Beginning in 1989, the Harts had insured a series of six vehicles, including the Cavalier, with Farmers, first with agent John Straub and then beginning in 1992 with Mr. Pietrzak. During the time that they had insured with Mr. Straub, they had purchased for one of their vehicles, a Buick Century, uninsured motorist coverage. This coverage, however, was canceled by Mrs. Harts when the policy on the Century was reinstated after it had lapsed for nonpayment.
On the applications for coverage with respect to vehicles other than the Century, including the application for the Cavalier that was signed by plaintiffs less than one month before the accident, plaintiffs did not select uninsured motorist coverage on the space provided on the application form.
While Mr. Harts had no recollection of any conversations with Mr. Pietrzak concerning the nature or extent of the coverage obtained on the Cavalier, Mr. Harts did recall an earlier conversation in which he discussed “full coverage” for the Century with Mr. Pietrzak. However, Mr. Harts did not at that time request uninsured motorist coverage on the Century even though the Harts had earlier had such coverage on this vehicle. Further, it is noteworthy that yet another conversation concerning “full coverage” occurred when the policy on the Century was trans-ferred to an Aerostar, and again Mr. Harts made no request for uninsured motorist coverage.
Defendants moved for summary disposition pursuant to
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
A motion pursuant to
III. ANALYSIS
On appeal, plaintiffs acknowledge that no special relationship as required by Bruner exists in this case. However, they contend that this Court should reject Bruner‘s requirement of a special relationship and allow them to sue Mr. Pietrzak for his negligence in failing to offer them any advice or counsel concerning uninsured motorist coverage.2 In short, they ask this Court to determine that a licensed
Whether a duty exists is a question of law that is solely for the court to decide. Murdock v Higgins, 454 Mich 46, 53; 559 NW2d 639 (1997). In considering this question of duty and its potential expansion, it is appropriate to first look at the common-law duties inherent in an insurer-agent-insured relationship and then to consider the extent to which this relationship has been affected by certain Michigan statutes that are relevant to the establishment of an agent‘s duty.
It is uncontested, indeed it is essential to the cause of action pleaded by plaintiffs, that Mr. Pietrzak was Farmers’ agent. As such, under the common law, he had a duty to comply with the various fiduciary obligations he owed to Farmers and to act for its benefit. Hawkeye Casualty Co v Frisbee, 316 Mich 540, 548; 25 NW2d 521 (1947); 1 Restatement Agency, 2d, § 13, p 52; 2 Restatement Agency, 2d, § 387, p 201. Moreover, because he was Farmers’ agent, he had no common-law duty to advise plaintiffs. See Bruner, supra at 31-32; see also Nelson v Davidson, 155 Wis 2d 674, 680-681; 456 NW2d 343 (1990); 4 Couch, Insurance, 3d, § 55:5, pp 55-11 to 55-14. This general common-law rule is no doubt premised, at least in part, on the nature of the relationship of the parties. Schultz v Consumers Power Co, 443 Mich 445, 450; 506 NW2d 175 (1993). Specifically, the relationship between the insurer and insured is a contractual one. See House v Billman, 340 Mich 621, 626; 66 NW2d 213 (1954); Drouillard v Metropolitan Life Ins Co, 107 Mich App 608, 620-621; 310 NW2d 15 (1981). The relationship between the insurer and its agent is controlled by the principles of agency. Hawkeye Casualty Co, supra at 548; Rorick v State Mut Rodded Fire Ins Co, 263 Mich 169, 171; 248 NW 584 (1933); Luellen v New York Life Ins Co, 201 Mich 512, 518; 167 NW 950 (1918).
Sound policy reasons also support the general rule that insurance agents have no duty to advise the insured regarding the adequacy of insurance coverage. For instance, in Nelson v Davidson, supra at 681-682, the Wisconsin Supreme Court noted that a contrary rule (1) “would remove any burden from the insured to take care of his or her own financial needs and expectations in entering the marketplace and choosing from the competitive products available,” (2) could result in liability for a failure to advise a client “of every possible insurance option, or even an arguably better package of insurance offered by a competitor,” and (3) could provide an insured with an opportunity to self-insure “after the loss by merely asserting they would have bought the additional coverage had it been offered.”3
Thus, under the common law, an insurance agent whose principal is the insurance company owes no duty to advise a potential insured about any coverage. Such an agent‘s job is to merely present the product of his principal and take such orders as can be secured from those who want to purchase the coverage offered.4
Our Legislature also recognizes the limited nature of the agent‘s role. Those who offer insurance products have been regulated by statute in Michigan for at least
However, as with most general rules, the general no-duty-to-advise rule, where the agent functions as simply an order taker for the insurance company, is subject to change when an event occurs that alters the nature of the relationship between the agent and the insured. This alteration of the ordinary relationship between an agent and an insured has been described by our Court of Appeals as a “special relationship” that gives rise to a duty to advise on the part of the agent. Bruner, supra; see also Marlo Beauty Supply, Inc v Farmers Ins Group of Cos, 227 Mich App 309, 314-315; 575 NW2d 324 (1998); Stein v Continental Casualty Co, 110 Mich App 410, 416-417; 313 NW2d 299 (1981); Palmer v Pacific Indemnity Co, 74 Mich App 259, 267; 254 NW2d 52 (1977). While we agree with Bruner that there must be “some type of interaction on a question of coverage,” id. at 34, we do not subscribe to the possible reading of Bruner that holds reliance on the length of the relationship
In this case, there is no documentary evidence suggesting that Mr. Pietrzak misrepresented the coverage offered or provided. As stated, plaintiffs had in fact received notice that uninsured motorist coverage was available for the Cavalier only three months before the accident. Further, there is no evidence that Mr. Harts made a request about insurance coverage on the Cavalier that might be construed as ambiguous or that would have required clarification. Mr. Harts never requested or inquired about “full coverage” on the Cavalier. Finally, Mr. Pietrzak did not expressly agree or promise to advise Mr. Harts about insurance coverage generally or uninsured motorist coverage specifically. Thus, with respect to the coverage obtained on the Cavalier, no event occurred that could or would take this case outside the general rule that Mr. Pietrzak owed plaintiffs no duty to advise them about coverage.
Notwithstanding this fact, plaintiffs encourage this Court to eliminate the general no-duty-to-advise rule and replace it with a rule that would impose a duty to advise in cases such as the one at bar, which, to be perfectly clear, would apparently be all cases concerning the purchase of insurance. However, we decline this invitation in light of the public policy established by the Legislature‘s active role in this area and the previously noted compelling reasons that militate against the imposition of such a duty. Rather, we agree with the Wisconsin Supreme Court in Nelson, supra at 683, which, when faced with such an issue, stated that “if such a duty is to be imposed on the [insurance agent], it should be imposed as a statutory one and not an implied judicial one.” See also, generally, O‘Donnell v State Farm Mut Automobile Ins Co, 404 Mich 524, 542; 273 NW2d 829 (1979).
Accordingly, because plaintiffs have failed to establish the duty element of their negligence claim against Mr. Pietrzak, summary disposition in favor of Mr. Pietrzak was proper. Smith, supra; Schultz, supra at 449. Because plaintiffs cannot establish liability against Mr. Pietrzak, the agent, they likewise cannot establish vicarious liability against Farmers, the principal. Kerry v Turnage, 154 Mich App 275, 281; 397 NW2d 543 (1986); Lincoln v Gupta, 142 Mich App 615, 622; 370 NW2d 312 (1985). And, because Mr. Pietrzak was under no obligation to give advice about uninsured motorist coverage, Farmers cannot be liable for any alleged negligent supervision. Accordingly, summary disposition in favor of Farmers was proper. Therefore, for the reasons stated in this opinion, we affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals.
WEAVER, C.J., and CORRIGAN and YOUNG, JJ., concurred with TAYLOR, J.
Interestingly,
(1) that certain persons may act for an insurance agent as long as there is a written contract and the licensed agent has notified the commissioner of insurance of the contract.
(2) that clerical or administrative persons employed by an insurance agent may “take insurance applications or receive premiums.”
(3) that these clerical persons may bind coverage within the agent‘s office.
These persons appear to be the “order takers” rather than the highly regulated insurance agents.
Given this extensive statutory scheme, it appears that our Legislature contemplated much more for the role of a licensed insurance agent than one who presents products and takes orders.
BRICKLEY and KELLY, JJ., concurred with CAVANAGH, J.
Notes
Thus, as part of his function as an order taker, an insurance agent may, but is not required or under any duty to, give “customary advice.”A person shall not . . . provide advice, counsel, or opinion with respect to benefits promised, coverage afforded, terms, value, effect, advantages, or disadvantages of a policy of insurance . . . unless he or she is licensed as an insurance counselor . . . . This section does not prohibit the customary advice offered by a licensed insurance agent. . . .
