Agee v. Employers' Liability Assurance Corp.

253 S.W. 46, 213 Mo. App. 693, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 69
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 18, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 253 S.W. 46 (Agee v. Employers' Liability Assurance Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Agee v. Employers' Liability Assurance Corp., 253 S.W. 46, 213 Mo. App. 693, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 69 (Mo. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

ARNOLD, J.

This is an action to recover for the loss of a platinum diamond bar pin, alleged to Lave occurred within the terms of a residence theft policy issued by defendant to plaintiff, which said policy contained an endorsement covering all loss by robbery of property of assured or any permanent member of his household.

*695 Oil March 4, 1921, Mrs. Evelyn A gee, wife of the insured, was wearing a diamond platinum pin about two and one-half inches in length, having three large diamonds in the center, surrounded by some forty or fifty small diamonds. She was wearing the pin on a “georgette” lace front attached to her dress by means of safety pins. It was pinned to this lace front and locked. She had bought a waist on the Walnut Street side of Kline’s Cloak & Suit Company in Kansas City, Mo., and after ¿having tried on the new waist, she noticed the pin was securely attached to her waist front. She 'thereupon went to the cashier’s desk to pay for the waist and while waiting for her package and change, she decided to go into the Main Street side of the store to make some other purchases. The store in question occupies part of the entire block betwleen Main and Walnut streets. An alley divides the store into two buildings and in passing from one building to the other it is necessary to pass through swinging doors into a vestibule, some four or five feet wide by five to six feet long, thence across the alley into a similar vestibule leading into the other building.

On the occasion in question, Mrs. Agee left the cashier’s desk and started toward the vestibule, but before entering therein, a little girl ran into her skirts and made some remark about Mrs. Agee’s black glasses. Mrs. Agee spoke to the child, then proceeded toward the other section of the store, and as she was passing through the vestibule, she was jostled by several unknown persons coming from the opposite direction, who crowded against her. After she passed out of the vestibule, she noticed her clothing was out of order, her waist front torn loose from her dress and hanging, a piece torn therefrom, and her bar pin gone. At the time this discovery was made, the persons who had crowded against, and jostled her, had disappeared. She returned at once to the cashier’s desk and reported the incident, and also sought the nearest policeman and reported the matter to him. She *696 called plaintiff by telephone and the two went at once to the local office of defendant and reported the loss. The agent of the defendant company reduced her statement to writing in1 condensed form and it was then signed by plaintiff.

On April 4th, a month after the occurrence, defendant wrote a letter to the- assured informing him that the company’s “investigation discloses that the loss of your wife’s bar pin did not occur as the result of robbery as defined by provision No. 1 on the Personal Holdup endorsement attached to your policy. Apparently there was no forcible taking; of property by violence inflicted upon the person of your wife, nor was she put in fear of such violence.” Further the letter'inf ormed the insured of the refusal of the company to assume any liability on account of said loss. This suit followed.

The petition alleges facts as above outlined, placed the value of the pin at $1500, and asked judgment therefor, together with $150' for statutory vexatious delay and $500 attorney’s fee. The answer and reply thereto were general denials.

The trial w'as to a jury, resulting in a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $1000 on the policy, $67.50 interest, $100 damages and an attorney’s fee of $250, and judgment therefor was accordingly entered. 'Motions for new trial and in arrest were unsuccessful and defendant appeals.

The first question presented for our consideration in the charge that the court erred in refusing defendant’s instructions in the' nature of demurrers, offered at the close of plaintiff’s case and again at the close of all the evidence. This assignment involves the construction of the “Personal Holdup Endorsement” clause of the policy, which reads: “In consideration of an additional premium of $19, it is agreed that $5000' of the insurance under this policy is hereby extended ... to cover for all loss by robbery of property of the assured or of any permanent member of the assured’s household who does not pay board or rent or of a relative of the assured *697 permanently residing with him . . . subject to all the general provisions of the policy as originally written and to the following special provisions:

“Special Provisions, 1. Robbery as used in this endorsement shall mean .a felonious taking of property by violence inflicted on the person from whom the property is taken, or by putting such person in fear of violence.”

This is the only special provision in this endorsement involved in this appeal. It is urged by defendant that the provision of the endorsement quoted above does not render defendant liable under the facts in evidence in this case. It is argued that the heading of the endorsement clearly defines the intent of the contract following thereunder.

We cannot accept defendant’s contention on this point as conclusive, nor are we warranted in accepting the heading of the endorsement as controlling. It must be conceded that the heading of the endorsement could have been other than the one employed. Reference to the special clause above quoted shows beyond question that in order to bring the robbery within its terms, there must be a showing either of “a felonious and forcible taking of property by violence inflicted upon the person,” or “by putting such person in fear of violence.” Under the facts herein, we may eliminate the second of these disjunctive elements. There was no testimony tending to show that Mrs. Agee was ‘ ‘ put in fear of violence. ’ ’ The determination of this appeal, then, will be controlled by the first element mentioned, to-wit, whether or not there was “a felonious and forcible taking of property by violence inflicted upon the person” of Mrs. Agee.

We apprehend there will be no question that the taking of the pin was ‘ ‘ felonious, ’ ’ if the taking was as the evidence for plaintiff tends to show. We hold there was substantial evidence that the pin was so taken. On this point the testimony of Mrs. Agee alone is sufficiently substantial to Warrant the submission of the case to the *698 jury on that point. She stated she observed the pin on her waist just before leaving the counter' after she had tried on the new waist; that the pin then was fastened securely; that the small child ran against her and that she was jostled and crowded by persons in the vestibule; that immediately thereafter she observed her clothing* disarranged., the front of her waist torn and hanging, and the bar pin gone. We think this testimony sufficient to form.a basis for a reasonable conclusion by the triers of fact that there was violence used in the taking of the bar pin from the person of Mrs. Agee; that this violence was inflicted upon the person of Mrs. Agee cannot be seriously denied, as the clothing she wore at the time was disarranged and torn.

Violence is defined as force, “physical force; force unlawfully exercised.” Anderson’s Law Diet.

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Bluebook (online)
253 S.W. 46, 213 Mo. App. 693, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/agee-v-employers-liability-assurance-corp-moctapp-1923.