Robert M. Guthrie filed an action against Palomar Insurance Corporation and Brenda Reese, alleging negligent failure to provide insurance coverage on a vehicle of Mr. Guthrie's. The jury awarded Mr. Guthrie $40,000, and the trial court entered judgment on the verdict. Contending that Mr. Guthrie was required to prove Palomar's duty to obtain coverage by expert testimony and that Mr. Guthrie did not so prove that duty, Palomar and Ms. Reese made a motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, which the trial court deniеd.
In 1985, Mr. Guthrie purchased a tractor-trailer, which he leased to Blue Star Ready Mix ("Blue Star") in Russellville. Blue Star is a business owned and operated by members of Mr. Guthrie's family, including his father J. Frank Guthrie and his brother Frank L. Guthrie. Blue Star owned several tractor-trailers, cement mixers, and other items of "heavy" equipment, which were insured through Palomar. During 1985 and 1986, Mr. Guthriе's tractor-trailer was insured through Palomar as part of Blue Star's fleet, and Blue Star paid for the insurance by deducting the cost of the premium from the revenues generated by the tractor-trailer.
In 1986, Mr. Guthrie married and moved to Montgomery. He started a construction company, which obtained its general liability and workmen's compensation insurance through Palomar. Brenda Reese was Mr. Guthrie's "customer sales representative" for Palomar, and she was who Mr. Guthrie talked to, obtained premium information from, and otherwise conducted his Palomar insurance transactions with.
In 1987, Mr. Guthrie and his brother, Frank L. Guthrie, discussed having the tractor-trailer insured under a policy other than Blue Star's fleet policy. Mr. Guthrie contacted Ms. Reese, who gave him a premium rate for insuring the tractor-trailer individually. That premium rate was much highеr than the premium rate for the tractor-trailer as part of Blue Star's fleet. After talking to his father, Mr. Guthrie contacted Ms. Reese and told her to put the tractоr-trailer on the fleet policy, to bill him for all the premiums, and to send all correspondence concerning the vehicle to him. Ms. Reese placed thе tractor-trailer on the fleet policy and billed the insurance to Mr. Guthrie's construction company's insurance account. Still in 1987, Ms. Reese mailed him two premium notices for the tractor-trailer's insurance. She also noted in her file, which was kept at Palomar's office, that she was to bill Mr. Guthrie separately for the traсtor-trailer, although the premium was being paid at the Blue Star fleet rate. Ms. Reese mailed notice of that arrangement *1306 to Blue Star. In the spring of 1987, Mr. Guthrie contаcted Ms. Reese and obtained additional insurance on the tractor-trailer. Again, that insurance was billed to Mr. Guthrie's account; Mr. Guthrie's account number was placed on the policy under the phrase "named insured."
In both 1987 and 1988 Mr. Guthrie received premium renewal notices for his workmen's compensation and general liability insurance. In the previous years he had also automatically received the renewal notices and bills on vehicles he had insured with Palomar, including the traсtor-trailer. He had not received a renewal notice for the tractor-trailer when he was informed on May 29, 1988, that it had been stolen. When Mr. Guthrie telephonеd Ms. Reese to file a claim for the theft of the tractor-trailer, she notified him that the policy had lapsed in April 1988. When Mr. Guthrie asked Ms. Reese why he had not been notified that he needed to renew the policy, she said that she did not know why.
At trial, Mr. Guthrie had the deposition of Susan Gardner, the manager of Palomar's commerciаl insurance department, read into the record. She testified that Ms. Reese's job as a customer sales representative was to service and market аccounts. She further testified that most of Palomar's commercial insurance policies provided coverage for one year; that on accоunts where there was under $10,000 in premiums "we will automatically renew the coverages, send a letter to the insured and say this is expiring coverage" before the coverage expires (on accounts with $10,000 or more in premiums Palomar sends a person to contact the insured); that the reason Palomar sends the letter is tо make sure that the customer "has proper coverages on the equipment . . . to keep the business." Brenda Reese also testified that she commonly nоtifies customers of the day of expiration in order to inform them of what insurance they have and to attempt to keep their business. The record indicates that Mr. Guthrie's premium for the tractor-trailer was less than $10,000.
Mr. Guthrie claimed that Palomar and Ms. Reese negligently failed to provide coverage on the tractor-trailer. Mr. Guthrie must prove four elements to prove negligence: (1) a duty to a foreseeable plaintiff, (2) a breach of that duty, (3) proximate cause, and (4) injury/damаge. Rutley v. Country Skillet PoultryCo.,
Citing Atwater Creamery v. Western National Mutual InsuranceCo.,
No doubt, as Mr. Guthrie argues, although a person may not owe a duty to another, a duty can arise when that person volunteers to aсt on behalf of another. Berkel Co.Contractors, Inc. v. Providence Hospital,
Furthermore, expert testimony is not necessary, indeed should not be admitted, " 'unless it is clear that the jurors themselves are not capable, from want of experience or knowledge оf the subject, to draw *1307
correct conclusions from the facts.' " Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v.White,
Reviewing the evidence stated earlier in this opinion, we conclude that the jury could properly find that Palomar and Ms. Reese assumed a duty to notify Mr. Guthrie of the time for renewal and the time of the lapse of his insurance policy for the tractor-trailer. Ms. Reese handled all of Mr. Guthrie's commercial insurance for three years. The defendants provided Mr. Guthrie insurance policies for Mr. Guthrie's business and the tractor-trailer. Ms. Reese sent Mr. Guthrie policy renеwal notices on his insurance policies from 1986 to 1988, except, however, she failed to send him the renewal notice for the 1988 coverage on the traсtor-trailer. Neither Ms. Reese nor Palomar instructed Mr. Guthrie that they intended to treat the policy on the tractor-trailer differently than they did the other policiеs of insurance. Furthermore, Susan Gardner's testimony indicated that in the case of customers such as Mr. Guthrie, who had policies on which the premiums totalled less than $10,000, "wе will automatically renew the coverage, send a letter to the insured and say this is expiring coverage."
Palomar and Ms. Reese did not show that it is "clear that thе jurors themselves . . . from want of experience or knowledge,"Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. White,
Mr. Guthrie proved that Palomar and Ms. Reese assumed a duty to him. He did not have to prove the existence of that duty by expert testimony. Accordingly, the trial court did not err by submitting the case to the jury without expert testimony to prove the alleged duty. The judgment is due to be affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
HORNSBY, C.J., and MADDOX, SHORES and HOUSTON, JJ., concur.
