Jim and Rose Rouse v. Household Finance Corporation , 144 Idaho 68 ( 2007 )


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  •                 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
    Docket No. 32886
    JIM and ROSE ROUSE, husband and wife,      )
    )
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,                )
    Boise, February 2007 Term
    )
    v.                                         )
    2007 Opinion No. 58
    )
    HOUSEHOLD FINANCE CORPORATION, )
    Filed: March 29, 2007
    and      JOHN        DOE     INSURANCE )
    COMPANIES,          dba     HOUSEHOLD )
    Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk
    FINANCE,                                   )
    )
    Defendants-Respondents.               )
    Appeal from the District Court of the Fifth Judicial District, State of Idaho, Twin
    Falls County. Honorable G. Richard Bevan, District Judge.
    District court decision granting summary judgment, affirmed.
    Dehaan & Associates, Twin Falls, for appellants. Harry Clifford Dehaan, VI
    argued.
    Naylor & Hales, P.C., Boise, for respondents. Colleen Denise Zahn argued.
    __________________________________
    BURDICK, Justice
    Jim and Rose Rouse (collectively the Rouses, individually Jim and Rose) brought suit
    against Respondents, Household Finance Corporation and Household Life Insurance Company
    (collectively HFC) for, inter alia, breach of an insurance contract and negligence. The Rouses
    appeal from the district court’s grant of HFC’s motion for summary judgment. We affirm.
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    In February 2003 the Rouses received a home equity loan through Household Finance
    Corporation. In connection with this loan the Rouses also obtained credit life and disability
    insurance. No insurance application was needed because of the small amount of the loan. The
    Rouses received certificates of insurance for these insurance policies at the closing of the loan,
    both of which provided that the insurance would automatically end without notice on the date the
    loan was refinanced.
    The following February, Household Finance Corporation approached the Rouses about
    refinancing their loan. Angela Hasher, a Household Finance Corporation employee, explained
    1
    that interest rates had decreased and it would be advantageous for the Rouses to refinance; the
    Rouses would be (and were) able to pay off other bills, receive almost $2000 in cash, and
    decrease their monthly payment. They decided to refinance and closed on the new loan on
    March 4, 2004.        The Rouses also wished to obtain credit life and disability insurance in
    connection with this loan. Since this loan was larger than the 2003 loan, underwriting was
    required.
    At this closing, the Rouses signed insurance applications for credit life and credit
    disability insurance. The Rouses made a loan payment, which included insurance premiums for
    both credit life and credit disability insurance. On April 19, 2004, the Rouses were informed that
    their insurance applications had been denied due to Jim’s health issues.1 The Rouses then
    received a refund of the premiums they had paid. In June 2004 Jim was diagnosed with terminal
    brain cancer.
    In their amended complaint, the Rouses allege breach of contract, estoppel, fraud in the
    inducement and negligence. HFC then moved for summary judgment, and the district court
    granted this motion and dismissed the Rouses’ complaint. The Rouses now timely appeal that
    decision and order to this Court.
    II. ANALYSIS
    Although the district court dismissed their entire complaint, the Rouses argue only that
    the district court erred in granting summary judgment to HFC on their breach of contract and
    negligence claims. We will address each of these issues and then turn to HFC’s request for
    attorney fees on appeal.
    When reviewing a motion for summary judgment, this Court uses the same standard
    employed by the trial court when deciding such a motion. Kolln v. Saint Luke’s Reg’l Med. Ctr.,
    
    130 Idaho 323
    , 327, 
    940 P.2d 1142
    , 1146 (1997).                    “[I]f the pleadings, depositions, and
    admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to
    any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law” summary
    judgment is proper. I.R.C.P. 56(c). The burden is on the moving party to prove an absence of
    genuine issues of material fact. Evans v. Griswold, 
    129 Idaho 902
    , 905, 
    935 P.2d 165
    , 168
    1
    Jim had a kidney removed due to cancer in July 2001. However, on the application he disclosed only that he had
    had the kidney removed, not that he had been diagnosed with cancer. Jim revealed this diagnosis in response to
    HFC’s investigation of his insurance application.
    2
    (1997). In addition, this Court views the facts and inferences in the record in favor of the non-
    moving party. 
    Id.
    A. Contract Claims
    The Rouses argue that an oral contract of insurance was created and that HFC must be
    bound by the representations Hasher made to them. Moreover, they argue that their assumption
    that they had insurance was reasonable based on HFC’s course of conduct. In support of their
    contention that HFC entered into an insurance contract with them, the Rouses point this Court to
    a line of cases recognizing that insurance companies are bound by the acts and representations of
    their agents, Benner v. Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Co. of Idaho, Inc., 
    96 Idaho 311
    , 312,
    
    528 P.2d 193
    , 194 (1974), and that these oral contracts are subject to special rules of
    construction, Gordon v. Three Rivers Agency, Inc., 
    127 Idaho 539
    , 542, 
    903 P.2d 128
    , 131 (Ct.
    App. 1995).
    While these statements of law are correct, the Rouses’ reliance on them is misplaced as
    the Rouses assume that a contract was formed and point only to cases where a contract had been
    formed. Under Idaho law, insurance agents can form oral contracts of insurance. Foremost Ins.
    Co. v. Putzier, 
    102 Idaho 138
    , 143, 
    627 P.2d 317
    , 322 (1981). However, there must be a meeting
    of the minds to form a contract. Inland Title Co. v. Comstock, 
    116 Idaho 701
    , 703, 
    779 P.2d 15
    ,
    17 (1989). A meeting of the minds is evidenced by a manifestation of intent to contract which
    takes the form of an offer and acceptance. 
    Id.
     The Rouses, however, have offered no evidence
    that a contract was formed.
    Here, there is simply no evidence that there was a meeting of the minds. The language
    of the applications the Rouses signed at closing makes clear that the applications may or may not
    be approved. These applications were titled “Notice of Proposed Group Disability Insurance”
    and “Notice of Proposed Group Life Insurance.” They both provided that if the application was
    approved, the effective date would be the date of application, that if the application was not
    approved “any premium . . . paid will be refunded . . . or credited to your account,” and that the
    insurance benefits summarized on the application “will only apply if your application for
    insurance is approved.” Likewise, the Optional Credit Insurance Disclosure attached to the
    refinancing agreement provided: “there will be no insurance until the insurer has approved your
    application (if one is required). . . .” The Rouses were later sent a letter indicating that their
    applications had been denied and received a refund of their premiums.
    3
    The Rouses fail to provide evidence of acceptance. In opposition to HFC’s motion for
    summary judgment, the Rouses offered a single citation to the entire deposition of Rose Rouse.
    However, a review of that entire deposition fails to reveal a single instance of Rose testifying
    that an agent of HFC told the Rouses their application had been approved. Instead, Rose testifies
    only that she assumed the insurance coverage would continue. Rose first testified:
    Well, I assumed that since we had the insurance and we were just redoing it, that
    we’d still have it. Because she told me that we wouldn’t have to redo—we
    wouldn’t have to have a new appraisal done on the house. We would just be able
    to refinance and the interest rate would be lower, and just—You know, the fact
    that they could end the insurance never entered the conversation.
    When asked, “who said that you had the insurance?” Rose replied:
    Well, they were just letting us—You know, I mean, I assumed that we had it;
    because we filled out the papers and they told us how much it was going to be and
    asked us what we wanted. And other than that, I mean, I can’t really say any
    special person said, you know, that—we talked to would have said that we had it.
    Likewise, Rose stated in her testimony that she did not question anyone at HFC about
    signing papers acknowledging that “there will be no insurance until the insurer has approved
    your application. . . .” Rose did not question this, “Because I was just so sure that we had
    insurance. I mean, there wasn’t any doubt in my mind that we wouldn’t get it.”
    Therefore, because there is no evidence of a meeting of the minds between the Rouses
    and HFC, no insurance contract was formed. Thus, we affirm the district court decision granting
    summary judgment to HFC on the Rouses’ contract claims. Moreover, since there are no facts
    indicating that a contract was formed, we need not reach the Rouses’ remaining arguments on
    their contract claim.
    B. Negligence
    The Rouses argue that the district court erred when it determined that HFC did not breach
    any duty owed them. They contend that there are genuine issues of material fact regarding
    whether HFC, acting as an insurance agent, breached the duties it owed them.
    Idaho law recognizes a “special relationship” between the insurer and the insured and
    also recognizes that this relationship requires that “the parties deal with each other fairly,
    honestly, and in good faith. . . .” Featherston v. Allstate Ins. Co., 
    125 Idaho 840
    , 843, 
    875 P.2d 937
    , 940 (1994) (citing White v. Unigard Mut. Ins. Co., 
    112 Idaho 94
    , 99, 
    730 P.2d 1014
    , 1019
    (1986)) (internal citations omitted).
    4
    The Rouses maintain that HFC breached the duties it owed them and offered the affidavit
    of Larry Stumpf, an insurance agent, to support their allegations. This affidavit provides:
    6. Conduct that would fall below the requisite standard of care for an insurance
    agent selling insurance in Twin Falls, Idaho would include advising a client to
    change policies or to obtain other insurance and then allowing the previous
    insurance to cancel or lapse before ensuring the new coverage was approved and
    in effect.
    7. In other words, if the client loses insurance coverage because the agent did not
    ensure continuity of coverage, the agent’s conduct by not ensuring continuity of
    coverage falls below the requisite standard of conduct.
    Stumpf’s affidavit, however, offers no evidence that HFC breached its duty to deal fairly,
    honestly and in good faith. There is no evidence in the record that HFC advised the Rouses to
    change policies and then “allowed” their insurance to be cancelled. Hasher did not advise the
    Rouses to change their insurance policy nor could she allow or prevent their previous insurance
    from lapsing—by contract that policy ended when the Rouses refinanced.
    Moreover, no other evidence before this Court suggests that HFC breached the duty to
    deal fairly, honestly and in good faith. While the Rouses complain that they were never
    informed that their insurance policies could be cancelled if they refinanced, the 2003 insurance
    documents specifically provide that the coverage will be cancelled if the loan is ever refinanced,
    and Rose admits she read these documents. Moreover, as discussed above, all the evidence in
    the record indicates that the Rouses were informed they were only applying for coverage. As
    such, there is no genuine issue of material fact as to the Rouses’ negligence claim, and the
    district court correctly granted summary judgment to HFC on this issue.
    C. Attorney Fees
    HFC requests attorney fees pursuant to I.C. § 12-121. Under that section, we may award
    attorney’s fees to the prevailing party “if the Court finds that the case was brought, pursued or
    defended frivolously, unreasonably or without foundation.” Gallagher v. State, 
    141 Idaho 665
    ,
    669, 
    115 P.3d 756
    , 760 (2005). The Rouses did not bring or pursue this appeal frivolously,
    unreasonably or without foundation. Therefore, we decline to award attorney fees.
    VII. CONCLUSION
    We affirm the decision of the district court granting summary judgment to HFC. There is
    no evidence in the record that an insurance contract was formed between HFC and the Rouses.
    5
    Likewise, there is no evidence that HFC breached any duties in negligence it owed the Rouses.
    We decline to award attorney fees; costs to Respondents.
    Chief Justice SCHROEDER and Justices TROUT, EISMANN and JONES, CONCUR.
    6
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 32886

Citation Numbers: 144 Idaho 68, 156 P.3d 569

Judges: Burdick, Eismann, Jones, Schroeder, Trout

Filed Date: 3/29/2007

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/6/2023