Alamo Cas. Co. v. William Reeves & Co.

258 S.W.2d 211, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1764
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 13, 1953
Docket15414
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 258 S.W.2d 211 (Alamo Cas. Co. v. William Reeves & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alamo Cas. Co. v. William Reeves & Co., 258 S.W.2d 211, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1764 (Tex. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinions

MASSEY, Chief Justice.

From a judgment for plaintiffs to collect benefits under an automobile theft insurance policy, the defendant Insurance Company appealed.

Affirmed.

On November 8, 1951, Hollis Holliday purchased from a former owner a 1940 Ford Club Coupe automobile, paying a consideration to such former owner and assurm ing a balance owing on a note to Reeves & Company. Fire, theft and collision insurance policy contract No. 335532 of the Alamo Casualty Company had been in effect upon the automobile in the Insurance Company’s policy contract with the former owner. The coverage of this policy was transferred by the Insurance Company over to Hollis Holliday. In the face of the policy, protection under the mortgage clause extended only to Reeves & Company upon the unpaid balance of the note. During the policy period, to wit: on or about March 15, 1952, the car, while in the possession of U. J. Harwell at his home, was stolen. Harwell, a minor, is Holliday’s brother-in-law. The automobile was recovered approximately one week later in a totally demolished condition. At the time, there was a balance owing William Reeves & Company on its note in the sum of $140.

Subsequent to date of the loss, Hollis Holliday made claim upon the Alamo Casualty Company for the proceeds of the policy under its theft provisions. The Insurance Company proceeded to make an investigation, part and parcel of which consisted in taking statements from Holli-day and Harwell. In the statement it secured from Harwell, he stated in substance: “I am nineteen years of age, single, and reside at 1300 Denver in Fort Worth with my mother, Mrs. Jessie Cog-gins, telephone number NOrthcliff-4328. I am not employed at the present time. I am buying a 1940 Ford coupe through my brother-in-law’s name, as I am not old enough to buy a car in my own name. My brother-in-law’s name is Hollis Holli-day, 1319 Beach Street. The car is financed through Reeves Finance Company in Fort Worth and I still owe $140 on it. On March 14, 1952, my car was stolen from the driveway of my home between the hour of 12:00 midnight and 3:00 a.m. I had parked my car there at midnight and had gone riding with a friend of mine.” The statement taken from Holliday read in part as follows: “ ‘The note with Reeves and the title are in my name. This car was actually purchased for my brother-in-law, U. J. [213]*213Harwell, 1300 Denver, but as lie is under age and subject to draft call, I had it put in my name.’ ”

The Insurance Company denied liability for the payment of the claim filed by Holliday and suit was filed by Holliday and the Reeves Finance Company, as plaintiffs, against the Alamo Casualty Company, as defendant, the Finance Company seeking the $140 owed it upon the note and Hollis Holliday seeking the amount of loss he suffered in excess thereof.

The Insurance Company set up as defense to the suit so filed the contention that at the time of the purchase of the automobile by Holliday from the former owner, (which was also the time of the transferring of the coverage of the insurance policy over to him upon the automobile) he was actually acting upon the purchase as the agent for U. J. Harwell, his minor brother-in-law, and not for himself. If such was true, under'the provisions of the policy the Insurance Company was entitled to avoid •any obligation thereunder.

The defendant Insurance Company plead .alternatively that there existed, prior to the date of the loss by theft, an agreement between Holliday and Harwell to the effect that Harwell would pay to, or reimburse, Holliday the amount of money paid by Hol-liday for the automobile, whereupon Holli-day would transfer the title to the automobile to Harwell. It contended that this agreement constituted a conditional sale or •constituted an encumbrance upon the autor mobile in question, which entitled the company to avoid liability under the insurance policy under an express exclusion therein to the effect that there would be no liability under the policy if the automobile. described therein was the subject of a conditional sale or was encumbered by lien other than that disclosed in the face of the policy. The Insurance Company contended that possession of the automobile had passed to Harwell with transfer of title to follow upon performance of conditions subsequent, to wit: payment or reimbursement by Harwell to Holliday of the purchase price Holliday had paid for the same. It is to be noted that in depositions taken from Holliday and Harwell, subsequent to the filing of the suit but prior to the trial, Holliday testified that subsequent to the time of his purchase of the automobile he told Harwell that after the car was paid for he would make a present of it to Harwell if he (Holliday) did not need it anymore. That Harwell, in turn said he would pay him for the car. Har-well, in his deposition, said that Holliday agreed to allow him to pay Holliday for the car and that he (Harwell) intended to do this. These parts of the deposition were proven upon the trial. No. testimony therein related to the time or time limit for delivery of the possession of the automobile, and none to the time limit for performance by, Harwell. No other evidence adduced before the jury during the course of the trial related to these times or time limits.

Trial was to a jury and by evidence and stipulations a prima facie case of liability having been established, the court submitted to the jury, in addition to plaintiffs’ issues establishing the amount of the loss, the following defensive issues, based upon appellant’s contentions:

“Question No. 3: Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that Hollis Holliday purchased the 1940 Ford Club Coupe in question from C. H. Sanders, Jr.,‘for his brother-in-law, U, J. Harwell? Answer ‘Yes’ or ‘No’.
“Answer: No.
“Question No. 4: Do you find from a ■ preponderance of the evidence that Hollis Holliday was not the sole owner, as that term is herein defined, on or about March 15, 1952, of the automobile insured? Answer ‘He was the sole owner’ or ‘He was not the sole owner’.
“Answer: ‘He was the sole owner’ ”

(Note: “Sole Ownership” was defined as meaning that no other person has any interest in the property as owner.)

Based upon these answers by the jury to said special issues, coupled with a finding by the jury of loss (within the measure of damage provisions of the policy) of $375, the. court entered judgment in said amount in favor of Hollis Holliday and William Reeves & Company, the plaintiffs, as against the defendant Insurance Company, [214]*214from which judgment the defendant appealed.

As regards the alternative defense plead by the appellant Insurance Company, had the issue been raised in the evidence it would have been entitled to defeat the claim of the appellees, even though Holli-day originally took title for himself alone, if it could have secured an affirmative finding by the jury that an agreement existed between Holliday and Harwell at the time of the theft of the automobile, which, under the law, would constitute a conditional sale of the automobile, or an encumbrance upon the same. This was a provision in the policy contract. There appearing to have been no objection to the form of the issue, and question No. 3 disposing of the primary defense appellant relies upon, it was apparently upon this alternative theory that the court submitted, unconditionally, question No. 4 to the jury.

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Alamo Cas. Co. v. William Reeves & Co.
258 S.W.2d 211 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1953)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
258 S.W.2d 211, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alamo-cas-co-v-william-reeves-co-texapp-1953.