Alliance Ins. Co. v. Alper-Salvage Co.

19 F.2d 828, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2356
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 10, 1927
Docket4794
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 19 F.2d 828 (Alliance Ins. Co. v. Alper-Salvage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alliance Ins. Co. v. Alper-Salvage Co., 19 F.2d 828, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2356 (6th Cir. 1927).

Opinion

KNAPPEN, Circuit Judge.

Appellee brought this suit in a Tennessee court against nine insurance companies to recover damages claimed to have been suffered through the failure and neglect of the representative of those companies seasonably to carry out the agreement hereinafter set forth.

Plaintiff’s retail stock of goods, together with furniture and fixtures, in its store at Chattanooga, Tenn., was insured against loss and damage by fire by a series of nine standard form policies, severally issued by the respective defendants herein, and aggregating $16,500. On February 4, 1925, a fire in an adjoining building caused damage by water and smoke to plaintiff’s stock and fixtures. On or about February 12, plaintiff and the insurance companies agreed in writing upon an appraisal. The appraisers, with the aid of an umpire, made an award on March 5th, fixing the sound value of the stock at $17,670.75, the loss thereon at $8,835.25, the total value of the furniture and fixtures at $1,879, and the loss thereon at $300, making a total loss of $9,135.37. Ón the next day, March 6th, the insurance companies, in writing, formally notified plaintiff that under the terms of the policies the companies interested would take over the stock on the basis of the award made by the appraisers, and enjoining plaintiff to hold the stock intact “until it can be cheeked out by you to the representative of the companies. * * * The representative for the companies will be on the ground to-morrow, at 10 a. m., prepared to have the stock cheeked out, and you are requested to have your representative at your place of business * • * * at that time. Yerbal notice has been served on the manager of the business, Mr. Dave Alper, and you, of course, will be held responsible for the merchandise as named in the inventory.” 1

*830 The next morning plaintiff’s representative met the representative of the- insurance companies at the store, and, through its attorney, demanded payment of the award, and declined to turn over the stock, except upon payment therefor, or upon receipt of drafts, upon the insurance companies, to be paid in the usual course of business, announcing itself prepared, however, to make such delivery immediately upon receipt either of such drafts or of the cash. The award was not then paid, nor drafts upon the insurance companies therefor given, nor was the stock removed by the insurance companies, until March 27th, 21 days after the companies had given notice that they would take over the stock on the basis of the appraisement referred to. Meanwhile the stock was kept locked up in the store, an additional lock being put by the insurance companies’ representative thereon, each party having a key, and neither being able to enter without the presence of the other.

In this suit, brought to recover several thousand dollars damages for asserted delay in removing the stock and compliance with the accepted award, plaintiff was awarded $400.95, being interest, rental of store, and salary of plaintiff’s manager, for the 21 days between the acceptance of the award and its payment and removal of the stock accordingly. The ease is here on defendants’ sole appeal. 2

Upon the merits, we think plaintiff has suffered a substantial grievance. Before receipt of notice that the companies would take over the stock, plaintiff had arranged to have a fire sale in the store in question. The notice, of course, put an end to that. Plaintiff also intended to continue its business immediately in that store, and arranged to bring in a stock it had elsewhere. The companies’ representative presumably so understood. (The plaintiff actually proceeded with its business as soon as the companies took the stock away.) Plaintiff therefore could not afford to surrender its lease or break up its organization.

The District Judge, before whom the testimony was taken in open court, -says: “The weight of the proof is that the Alper Company was on March 7th ready to deliver the goods upon receipt of the price.” 3 The judge also said: “The defendants kept the locks upon the doors, and likewise continued their refusal to pay, although payment was being continually demanded by the Alpers and their [attorney] until March 27, 1925.” We are bound to accept these conclusions of fact, which not only axe not against a preponderance of the evidence (Carey v. Donohue [C. C. A. 6] 209 F. 328, 331), but, in our opinion, clearly conform thereto. We also accept the conclusion of the District Judge stated in the margin. 4

We think the trial court rightly rejected the defendants’ contention that they had 30 days after the receipt of the appraisal (or the uneonsumed remainder of the 30-day period allowed for election) within which to take the goods. The clause relied upon by defendants as having such effect is printed in the margin. 5 But we think it clear that, while the companies had a specified 30 days within which to give notice of an intention to take the goods, it furnishes not even color-able basis for a contention that, after notice of the election, they had another 30 days in which to pay, or the unconsumed remainder of. the 30 days allowed for making the election.

We see no merit in the suggestion that plaintiff has sustained no damage because of defendants’ delay in carrying out their contract to take and pay for the goods, because *831 of the fact that the same practical result would have followed if defendants had not elected until the end of 30 days. Defendants did elect on March 6th, and presumably because they thought it to their interest to do so.

We agree with the District Judge in the conclusion that the adjuster’s notice of March 6th referred to, together with the placing of the locks upon the store, was a specific notice to plaintiff that the companies would take the goods at their appraised value, and that, upon this record, “when defendants put the two locks upon the doors, this resulted in a practical eviction of the plaintiff for business purposes”; and this, we think, is not made the less true or the les3 injurious from the fact that plaintiff originally thought it fair to attach the locks (although it was not consulted upon that subject) at a time when it seemed justified in expecting practically immediate payment of the appraised valuation.

We think the record would amply support a conclusion that any necessary cheeking of the stock, and its removal from plaintiff’s store (thereby restoring the same to use during what the undisputed testimony shows was the busiest season of the year), could easily have been done in about one day.

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Bluebook (online)
19 F.2d 828, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alliance-ins-co-v-alper-salvage-co-ca6-1927.