Summary
Certiorari to the Court of Appeals of Georgia -- 168 Ga. App. 187., Case No. 40461. Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except Clarke, Smith, and Gregory, JJ., who concur specially, and Marshall, P. J., and Weltner, J., who dissent., Case No. 40404. Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur.
Summary
Certiorari to the Court of Appeals of Georgia -- 168 Ga. App. 187., Case No. 40461. Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except Clarke, Smith, and Gregory, JJ., who concur specially, and Marshall, P. J., and Weltner, J., who dissent., Case No. 40404. Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur.
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John E. James, James E. Butler, Jr., Ben B. Mills, Jr., Alfred L. Allgood, William S. Stone, Don C. Keenan, Andrew E. Estes, Lamar Sizemore, amici curiae.Fain, Gorby, Reeves & Moraitakis, Donald M. Fain, Charles A. Wiley, Jr., Groover & Childs, Denmark Groover, Jr., for appellee.Howard, Cook & Mullinax, C. Alan Mullinax, Judy C. King, for appellant.
These cases are here on certiorari. Tolison v. Ga. Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co.,
About April 17, 1979, Helen Tolison, the wife of the appellant, Harold Tolison, applied, on behalf of herself and Harold, for a motor vehicle liability insurance policy with Georgia Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company (Georgia Farm Bureau). The application is a two-sided document. The front page, most of which is filled with standard information concerning the insured and the insured's car, contains a square on about the middle of the page which provides information concerning ten available insurance coverages, including the applicable benefit limits and deductibles for each type of coverage. The square is in graphic form, with the left hand column providing, in abbreviated form (e.g., "PIP" for Personal Injury Protection), the types of cover-ages available. To the right of the listed coverages, the different policy limits and deductibles available for each type of coverage are located in boxes, and, preceding each of these boxes is an empty box in which the insured is to place a check mark if he or she desires that amount of coverage. If no check mark precedes any limit for a type of coverage, then that coverage is not provided. In the instant case, the box providing for the basic $5,000 PIP coverage was checked. Immediately below the entire square is an acknowledgment statement in small, bold-faced capitals and a signature space for the insured. The acknowledgment provides that the insured "hereby acknowledges that I have accepted the coverages and/or limits that have a check . . . placed in front of above items and the absence of a check . . . indicates my rejection of that coverage and/or limit." Mrs. Tolison signed the form at the space provided under the acknowledgment and on the bottom of the back page. These two locations were the only signature spaces provided on the form.
On July 15, 1979, Harold was involved in an accident, and in the fall of 1981 he filed a complaint against Georgia Farm Bureau seeking retroactive increases in optional PIP benefits on the ground that he was not given the requisite opportunity to accept or reject those benefits. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. In an affidavit given by Helen Tolison in support of her husband's motion for summary judgment, she states that the insurance agent did not explain the optional PIP coverage that was available, and that the separate spaces provided on the application for acceptance or rejection of optional coverages were not checked by her. Conversely, in an affidavit submitted in support of Georgia Farm Bureau's motion for summary judgment, the insurance agent who handled the Tolison application states that he explained each of the optional coverages in detail, that he explained each optional benefit would require an additional premium, and that Mrs. Tolison expressed an interest only in the most basic, inexpensive no-fault coverages.
The trial court granted Georgia Farm Bureau's motion for summary judgment and denied Tolison's. The Court of Appeals reversed the grant of summary judgment to Georgia Farm Bureau, finding that the application violated OCGA
709, 711 (
The policy application in Nixon consisted of two pages, and each was signed at the bottom. Notices on both the first and second pages directed the insured to complete the second page, which was titled "OFFER TO PURCHASE ADDITIONAL COVERAGE APPLICATION." Part 1 of the second page was titled "OPTIONAL PERSONAL INJURY PROTECTION COVERAGE," and immediately below this heading were two boxes, one below the other. The first box was followed by a statement which provided, "I do not want to purchase Optional Personal Injury Protection Coverage," and the second was followed by a statement which provided, "I want to purchase Optional Personal Injury Protection Coverage as indicated below." The line below the latter statement contained three boxes. To the right of each of these boxes were the aggregate benefit limits available for optional PIP coverage. They were $10,000, $25,000, or $50,000. The insured, if he or she desired to have optional PIP coverage, was to place an "x" in the box to the left of the amount desired. Nixon put an "x" in the box to the left of the statement "I do not want to purchase Optional Personal Injury Protection Coverage." Nixon, supra, p. 469.
In the instant case, as in Nixon, the form clearly does not contain both a signature indicating the insured's acceptance or rejection of optional PIP benefits and a signature indicating the insured's acceptance or rejection of vehicle damage coverage. See OCGA
The information on optional PIP coverage on the form in Nixon was prominently displayed in a separate part of the form and was provided in clear and easily readable sentences. On Georgia Farm Bureau's application the information on optional PIP benefits is contained in a small square, in which is compacted a list of ten available coverages, along with the benefit limits and deductibles available for those coverages. Compounding the confusion is that all this information is provided in abbreviated form, with no explanations of the meaning of the abbreviations. Thus, even though a signature space, along with an acknowledgment, is provided below this square, and even though a check was placed on the form in the box designating a desire for only the basic $5,000 PIP coverage, we find that the form does not clearly reveal whether Helen Tolison made a knowing waiver of her husband's right to optional PIP coverage. Therefore, we must conclude that the form was not in substantial compliance with OCGA
2). The next issue is whether the Court of Appeals was correct In holding that, even though Georgia Farm Bureau's application form did not meet the statutory requirements, the case should go to the jury to let it determine the insured's right to optional PIP benefits. The court made this ruling because of conflicting testimony in the record concerning whether the insured was aware of his right to optional coverages. We reverse this part of the Court of Appeals' opinion.
In Flewellen, supra, 250 Ga. at 714, we stated that "[t]he purpose of the statute [OCGA
GREGORY, Justice, concurring specially.
The substantial compliance rule is inappropriate here and will do nothing but create confusion for the bar and the people of this state if it is used to govern application of OCGA
In Flewellen v. Atlanta Cas. Co.,
Because application of the rule of two signatures reaches the same result as the majority opinion, and not because I believe we should use the substantial compliance rule, I concur in the judgment only as to Division 1 of the majority opinion. I concur in Division 2 of the majority opinion.
I am authorized to state that Justice Clarke and Justice Smith join in this special concurrence.
MARSHALL, Presiding Justice, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent from the judgment in case no. 40461. I adhere to the rule of substantial compliance as announced in St. Paul Fire &c. Co. v. Nixon,
I am authorized to state that Justice Weltner concurs in this dissent.
1984
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This document cites
- Supreme Court of Georgia - ST. PAUL FIRE & MARINE INSURANCE COMPANY v. NIXON., 252 Ga. 469, 314 S.E.2.d 215
- Supreme Court of Georgia - VAN DYKE v. ALLSTATE INSURANCE COMPANY., 250 Ga. 709, 300 S.E.2.d 673
- Georgia Court Of Appeals - Tolison v. Georgia Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company., 168 Ga. App. 187, 308 S.E.2d 386 (1983)
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