The primary question for determination *193 in this case is whether it is a condition precedent to an action agаinst an automobile liability insurance carrier under the provisions of Code § 56-407A (Ga. L. 1963, р. 588, as last amended by Ga. L. 1967, pp. 463, 464) on account of injuries and damages to the plaintiff resulting from the negligence of an unknown uninsured motorist, that suit shall have been brought and judgment entered against the unknown uninsured motorist.
In
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Girtman,
Since it is necessary for the insured to bring suit and obtain a judgment against the uninsured motorist to reсqver under the provisions of
Code
§ 56-407A, we can only construe
Code
§ 56-407A (d) as providing a method by which the insured may comрly with this condition precedent for recovery under the uninsured provisions оf the automobile liability insurance policy, when the uninsured motorist is unknown. In cоnstruing a statute this court is bound to give it an interpretation which will not render its prоvisions meaningless or futile.
Central R. Co. v. State,
The petition also alleged: that the appelleе paid the appellant for the damages to his truck which resulted from the collision; that appellee’s agent “represented to him that at the *194 proper and appropriate time plaintiff would be compensated in full for his personal injuries resulting from said accident but that notwithstanding these assurances and before any settlement of plaintiff’s personal injuries was made, defendant notified him that after further consideration of the facts and circumstances surrounding said accident it concluded thаt it was not liable to him for his said personal injuries resulting from said accident, that it would not compensate him in any fashion for the same and it terminated all discussions and conferences with plaintiff.” Counsel for appellant аrgues that “the action by the carrier in reversing its previous position with regard to his loss and refusing to compensate him as contemplated by his contract for damages flowing from his personal injuries, constitutes a breach of the contract of insurance by the carrier and entitles the appellant to proceed on an action sounding in contract for a breach thereof, if he so elects.”
Assuming, but not deciding, that it would have constituted a breach of contract if the appellant through its agent had first accepted liability under the insurance policy and then subsequеntly reversed its position, the facts alleged in the case sub judice werе not sufficient to constitute a valid contract. The petition states thаt the agent “represented to him that at the proper and apрropriate time plaintiff would be compensated in full for his personal injuries resulting from the accident”; however, there was no allegation as to when would be the proper and appropriate time nor аs to what sum would constitute full compensation for the injuries. Therefore, lacking these essential elements the alleged contract was too indefinite to be enforceable.
McCaw Mfg. Co. v. Felder,
Judgment affirmed.
