First time it happened to me, I was 16 and working at a gas station in Detroit (circa 1970, when
the attendants pumped the gas, and offered to do A LOT more). Point is, at least as far as I know, they've all done it since the beginning of
Healey Time.
I did manage to cure the problem on my own car, inadvertently though, not that it's necessarily a popular modification; I have a twenty-eight (28) gallon fuel tank, and its height (double that of a stock tank, with the same perimeter dimensions) required the use of a 45* rubber/fabric hose connector pirated from a late-model MGB, and the steel filler neck tube from an earlier version of same.
I did also install a
vacuum-breaker, sort of a check valve, but it's not a vent, per se; it allows air in to replace the fuel that has been drawn out, but wouldn't let fuel out if the shiny-side was down__or allow air to escape during fill ups.
Old habits die hard,
but one thing you can do to minimize any gasoline getting onto the paint work, and this may be dependent on the governing fuel dispensing regulations in your locale, is to physically hold the rubber flap surrounding the nozzle tight to the top of the filler neck. Any gas splashed up against it will have to drain back down the tube.
It's been a long time since I've seen a
completely naked nozzle, but if you live somewhere that still has them (1. it probably won't be for long...) you could make one up and carry it with you; just need a nice disc of rubber (3" OD x 1/2" thick) and punch a hole in the middle of it.