Summary
Judgment affirmed. McMurray, P. J., Banke, P. J., Sognier, Pope, Benham and Beasley, JJ., concur. Carley, J., concurs in the judgment only. Birdsong, C. J., dissents.
Summary
Judgment affirmed. McMurray, P. J., Banke, P. J., Sognier, Pope, Benham and Beasley, JJ., concur. Carley, J., concurs in the judgment only. Birdsong, C. J., dissents.
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Stanley A. Coburn, Stephen J. Caswell, for appellant.
On January 17, 1985, the appellee, Yuwanna Lowery, was injured when a vehicle in which she was a passenger ran off the road and into a culvert. The vehicle was driven by Donald Belcher and insured by the appellant, Universal Security Insurance Company. Both Belcher and Lowery claimed that driving off the road had been necessary to avoid a head-on collision with another vehicle that had crossed the centerline. There was no physical contact between the two vehicles, and the other vehicle immediately left the scene. Both Lowery and Belcher filed claims under the uninsured motorist coverage of the policy issued by Universal Security, each corroborating the other's description of how the incident occurred. The trial court denied Universal Security's motion for summary judgment against Lowery in this case, and this interlocutory appeal by Universal Security followed. Held:
It was undisputed that the policy issued by Universal Security excluded coverage when there was no physical contact with the uninsured vehicle unless the facts could be corroborated "by competent evidence other than the testimony of any person having a claim under this or any similar insurance as a result of such accident." OCGA
Acknowledging that a literal reading of the statute justifies the trial court's denial of summary judgment in this case, Universal Security contends that such a construction defeats the legislative intent of eliminating fraudulent claims of negligent drivers. See Martin v. John Doe,
BIRDSONG, Chief Judge, dissenting.
As I believe the majority opinion tends to thwart the legislative intent to preclude the potential for fraud claims made by a claimant against his insurer for a John Doe accident under uninsured motorist coverage in cases of non-contact accidents, I must respectfully enter my dissent thereto.
Under the provisions of OCGA
As I perceive the intent of the legislature, a disinterested eyewitness must observe the accident and corroborate the contention of proximate cause as being in a "miss-and-run" driver. Under such circumstances, such corroboration is as valid as actual contact with the John Doe vehicle. The statute patently has considered the possibility of an actual "miss-and-run" vehicle (that is a truthful assertion by a lone driver) but the legislature apparently determined that the potential for fraudulent claims overrides such valid claims. The determinative criteria would seem to be that the claim for financial recovery (greed) tends to override the honesty of such claims. Thus a single driver injury must be corroborated by actual contact and ascertainable damages by the John Doe car or by an unimpeachable eyewitness.
The result in the majority by allowing the driver and the passenger to corroborate one another is to vitiate the caution exercised by the legislature in requiring physical contact in a John Doe accident. The possibility of fraud by the driver and passenger is equally as great as fraud by the driver alone where each is a claimant against John Doe for the element of greed still can override the element of honesty.
Though there may be much merit in the argument that antithetical interests between the driver and passenger is a sufficient check to potential collusion, that antithesis should be shown by the filing of a complaint against the driver as well as the John Doe vehicle. The passage of OCGA
I respectfully dissent.
Lloyd W. Hoffspiegel, David G. King, D. Glenn Brock, Michael D. Sigler, for appellee.
1987
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