Cheboygan County Road Commission v. Auto-Owners Insurance

Beasley, P.J.

(dissenting). I respectfully dissent.

After a bench trial, the trial judge filed a written opinion in which he made findings of fact and conclusions of law from which he awarded judgment to plaintiff in the sum of $6,120.93.

His findings of fact are supported by competent evidence and his conclusions of law are not clearly erroneous. I do not perceive the clear error that would cause reversal. I would vote to affirm. *686counter-offer. This conclusion seems hasty. By its terms, the November 27, 1972, letter refers to possible settlements with potential claimants, whereby new wells would be drilled at an estimated cost of $2,000 per well. The settlement offer is that upon furnishing to defendant of a release from a potential claimant, defendant will pay to plaintiff one-half of plaintiff’s share of the settlement cost.

*685Specifically, the majority states that in a letter dated November 27, 1972, the attorney for plaintiff made a written offer on behalf of plaintiff to settle with defendant insurance company. The majority says that defendant responded with a letter dated April 12, 1973, which was in the nature of a

*686The November 27, 1972, letter and the transcript make it clear that defendant was aware that plaintiff had made an agreement with the State Highway Department to share equally the settlement costs.

This November 1972 offer should be viewed in the light of the testimony which indicated continuing communication between the attorney for plaintiff and the attorney for defendant regarding settlement with the individual claimants. For example, plaintiff’s attorney testified:

"You have to understand this — every time a new claim arose, every time there was a new development of any kind, Mr. Gillett was contacted, the matter was discussed, and during the whole series of events in the series of conversations, the matter of dispute between Auto-Owners and the Cheboygan County Road Commission was also discussed. So I had many replies, but verbal; but this one is the first written one. You have to understand, the amounts involved were changing daily, or weekly, because while each individual claim was separate from the others, the amounts involved were different.”

Defendant’s April 1973 response was an acceptance of the November 1972 proposed settlement formula. Since defendant was aware of plaintiff’s agreement to share the cost of the settlements *687with the State Highway Department, agreeing to contribute one-quarter of the total of $23,400, or $5,850, was exactly the same thing as accepting an offer to "underwrite” one-half of the road commission cost.

Consequently, as far as the settlement formula was concerned, defendant’s April 1973 letter response was not a counter-offer, but, rather, an acceptance of plaintiff’s offer of a settlement formula for the plaintiff’s costs of settlement with the various individual claimants.

The majority states the letter did not mention future claims. As indicated, I do not so interpret it. The November 1972 letter refers to wells that had not yet been dug and which were to be dug only on obtaining a release from a potential claimant. I interpret the November 1972 letter as a unilateral, continuing offer by plaintiff to settle coverage under the insurance policy. Obviously, the attorneys for the parties treated it as a settlement. The April 12, 1973, letter response by the attorney for defendant constituted an acceptance of the claims that had been settled to that date. In the same letter, defendant sought a release for any future claims, but, in fact, defendant did not insist upon it. On the contrary, defendant accepted the settlement formula when further claims were made, as evidenced by defendant’s tender of a settlement check for an increased amount, namely, $6,120.93. The tender of the settlement check by defendant was not conditional upon a release of any possible future claims.

The trial court heard the testimony and reviewed the instruments. He then found an accord and satisfaction between plaintiff and defendant regarding defendant’s obligations under the policy. I do not find this to be erroneous under the defini*688tion which the Supreme Court set forth in Stadler v Ciprian:1

"It is necessary in order that an accord and satisfaction may constitute a settlement of a disputed claim, there must have been, ñrst, an agreement between the parties, — an accord, — a meeting of the minds of the parties upon the proposition, that something new and different be substituted for the existing claims of the parties; and second, there must have been a satisfaction or at least some legal excuse for not performing and carrying out the accord.”

Further, he specifically found that plaintiff, Che-boygan County Road Commission, knew of the written offer its attorney made on November 27, 1972, and permitted its attorney to go ahead and negotiate settlements in conjunction with the attorney for defendant.

There is nothing in this record to indicate anything other than that plaintiff’s attorney negotiated settlements in good faith believing he had authority to do so.

The attorneys for plaintiff and defendant agreed there was a genuine issue under the insurance policy as to whether seepage of salt into the water supply system was an occurrence within the coverage.2

The belated decision by plaintiff to go back on the agreement with defendant which its attorney had undertaken was ineffectual. I would hold that plaintiff was bound by its attorney’s actions rendered in good faith on behalf of plaintiff within the scope of his retainer. Similarly, defendant was bound by the actions of its counsel with respect to the settlement.

*689Contrary to the position of the majority, I do not find defendant offering new and different terms. The record supports the conclusion that a binding accord and satisfaction was made.

I would affirm the trial court’s entry of judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $6,120.93.

265 Mich 252, 262; 251 NW 404 (1933).

This insurance coverage issue was never litigated on the merits.