Summary
Judgment reversed. Deen, P. J., and Pope, J., concur.
Summary
Judgment reversed. Deen, P. J., and Pope, J., concur.
Text
Roger Mills, James S. Strawinski, for appellant.
This case is another of the many stemming from Jones v. State Farm &c. Ins. Co.,
On April 2, 1976, Willie Penson completed an application for automobile insurance with Leader. His wife Margie was not a co-applicant or a named co-insured on the application. The insurance company issued the policy which included coverage for Mr. Penson from April 2, 1976, until April 2, 1977, and which purported to provide PIP or "no-fault" coverage in the minimum required amount of $5,000.
On March 12, 1977, Willie Penson, while a pedestrian, was killed in a motor vehicle accident. At the time of the death, Mrs. Penson did not have another automobile insurance policy nor, she claims, had ever read her husband's policy with Leader. She made no claim to the insurance company and initiated no communication with it in 1977. Apparently in 1983, Mrs. Penson saw a newspaper advertisement about possible recovery for certain individuals for PIP benefits due to the changes wrought by Jones and Flewellen; she then sought legal counsel.
On December 14, 1983, Penson's counsel wrote the insurer: "At this time, our client does hereby demand payment for all unpaid Personal Injury Protection benefits up to $50,000.00 in accord with O.C.G.A.
"Demand is hereby made for prompt payment of all sums due to our client under the authority of O.C.G.A.
On December 22, the attorney sent a follow-up letter with a copy of the December 14 demand. By letter of January 3, 1984, the insurance company's claims manager notified Penson's counsel: "please be advised that due to the age of this loss, we do not have any records in this office. Therefore, I have requested this file from our Home Office. Until I receive the file, I am not in a position to accept or reject your demand at this time." Penson's lawyer wrote again on February 7, asking whether the needed information had been received and whether the company would require additional proof of economic losses.
On February 29, Penson filed suit in her own name against the insurance company alleging that as a result of the fatal collision and pursuant to the terms of the subject insurance policy, she was entitled to receive in monthly installments up to $50,000 as survivor's benefits under OCGA
Penson filed a motion for partial summary judgment and then an amended motion for partial summary judgment on the grounds that there were no genuine issues of material fact as to 1) her standing to pursue the claim in her own name, 2) the amount of optional PIP benefits available to her under the policy, 3) the defectiveness of the insurance application, 4) her right to activiate $50,000 PIP coverage, 5) her tender of the premium due for $50,000 PIP and 6) her submission of reasonable proof of her claim for survivor's benefits. The insurance company filed its motion for summary judgment.
Following a hearing, consideration of the record, briefs and arguments of counsel, the trial court entered an order denying the insurer's motion for summary judgment and granting Penson's amended motion for partial summary judgment after finding that Penson had standing to pursue the matter in her own name, that the insurance application did not fully or substantially comply with OCGA
The insurance company appeals both the grant of Penson's motion and the denial of its motion. It contends that 1) appellee Penson is contractually barred from pursuing her claim because of a failure to comply with a condition in the insurance policy requiring notice to the insurance company as soon as practicable after an accident; 2) that the application for insurance signed by appellee's husband was in substantial compliance with OCGA
1. We first address appellee's standing to bring the lawsuit.
"Controversies arising under Georgia's Motor Vehicle Accident Reparations Act, OCGA
"A separate and distinct claim is a claim for any losses incurred by the insured to which the optional coverage might apply; that is, the insured must prove his damages by filing the appropriate proofs of loss and complying with applicable statutory and policy provisions." Bryant v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
Did appellee Penson have the right in her own name, to activate a claim for optional PIP benefits here? We conclude that she did.
There is no dispute that appellee is the lawful surviving spouse of the named insured. The surviving spouse of a deceased insured may, like the named insured, also receive and demand the benefit of $50,000 coverage upon tender of such additional premium as may be due, in a case in which the insurance applicant did not properly execute a signed rejection of optional benefits.
"The term 'insured' is defined under OCGA
Appellee had standing pursuant to OCGA
The earliest an action to obtain retroactive coverage for additional PIP benefits could be successfully maintained by appellee Penson would have been the date of her husband's fatal accident, March 12, 1977. [1] The statute of limitation in claims for optional benefits begins to run on the date of the accident, and therefore the claim for optional benefits under OCGA
More than six years having elapsed, appellee's suit is stale. On this basis alone, the trial court erred in granting partial summary judgment to Penson and in denying summary judgment to the insurance company.
Our decision renders it unnecessary to address the remaining issues raised by appellant in this appeal.
Douglas F. Aholt, for appellee.
Notes:
1. Basic PIP benefits would become due and payable as well on the date of the fatal accident.
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This document cites
- Supreme Court of Georgia - BRYANT v. ALLSTATE INSURANCE COMPANY., 254 Ga. 328, 326 S.E.2.d 753 (1985)
- Supreme Court of Georgia - COMMERCIAL UNION INSURANCE COMPANY v. HAWKINS et al., 254 Ga. 331, 328 S.E.2.d 532
- Supreme Court of Georgia - GEORGIA FARM BUREAU MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY v. MUSGROVE et al., 254 Ga. 333, 328 S.E.2.d 365
- Supreme Court of Georgia - PERRY v. INTERNATIONAL INDEMNITY COMPANY., 251 Ga. 709, 309 S.E.2.d 139 (1983)
- Supreme Court of Georgia - VAN DYKE v. ALLSTATE INSURANCE COMPANY., 250 Ga. 709, 300 S.E.2.d 673
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