American Insurance Company v. Rector

290 S.W. 367, 172 Ark. 767, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 43
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 31, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 290 S.W. 367 (American Insurance Company v. Rector) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Insurance Company v. Rector, 290 S.W. 367, 172 Ark. 767, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 43 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

Smith, J.

On November 6,1922, the appellant insurance company issued to appellee a fire insurance policy for a three-year period on his farm residence for $700, with additional insurance of $300 on the household furniture, etc. On March 7, 1925, the house was destroyed by fire, but the contents were saved by the caretaker. The house was totally destroyed, and this suit was brought to collect the insurance thereon. The insurance company defended upon the grounds that there had been a change of possession which avoided the policy, and that the insured had not made proof of loss as required by the policy. Liability was denied upon both grounds. The trial resulted in a verdict for the insured for $700, with a penalty of 12 per cent, and an attorney’s fee of $100, and from the judgment therefor is this appeal.

Appellee, the insured, was a married man at the time the policy was issued, and his wife lived with him in the insured property, but she abandoned him. Their separation had been impending for some time, and a brother of appellee had unsuccessfully attempted to effect a reconciliation. As appellee expressed it, he and his wife “divided,” and it appears to have been agreed that he should haul her effects from their residence to the place to which she had decided to remove. Pursuant to this arrangement, appellee’s brother, who was a tenant on the farm where the insured residence was located, moved into the insured property, and appellee’s wife moved out the following day. Appellee testified that his brother moved in in order that he might take care of the property. His brother had been living in another house on the farm, which he vacated, "and was placed, in the insured house as a caretaker, and no increased rent was charged against his brother.

Appellee testified that, immediately after his wife left him, he secured employment to drive a team, and, to enable him to make two trips each day, he stayed in Dardanelle, instead of his own home, but that he left his' personal effects at home and retained a furnished room there, and returned home every Saturday night. Appellee secured a divorce, on some ground not stated, and married again, and, after his second marriage, resided in Dardanelle, but he testified that he did this because it made him more accessible to his work, and that he intended at all times to return to his home — the insured property — when his employment terminated, hut the house burned before that time, and that, even after his second marriage, he only removed from the house a feather-bed and some pillows.

The policy sued on contained the following provision: “If any change takes place in the title, possession or interest of the assured in the above mentioned property, * * * then * * * this policy shall be null and void. ’ ’

It is insisted that there was a violation of this provision, and that the policy was invalidated on that account.

Upon this feature of the case the court charged the jury as follows: “Now, if Rector’s brother went into that property as Rector’s tenant and occupied it as his tenant, the court tells you that the policy is void, because it is in violation of that clause that requires him to maintain his residence and ownership, and the possession would be changed from that of the original owner to that of a tenant. The court tells you further that, if his brother went in there as his agent and maintained his residence in that building as Rector’s agent and not as his tenant, then the policy is not void on that account; * * * if he maintained his possession by either remaining there himself or keeping some one there for him, taking care of his property for him, the court tells you that he did not change his possession. * * *”

It is insisted that this instruction is not only abstract as applied to the facts of this case, but is an incorrect interpretation of the stipulation of the policy quoted above in any case.

We do not think either objection to the instruction is well taken. In addition to the facts stated above, appellee testified that he told Mr. George, the agent who wrote the policy, that he was staying temporarily in Dardanelle, and that his brother was in charge of the insured property for him, and that George told him that this Would not invalidate the policy. George denied having this conversation. Appellee testified that' he had not put his brother in charge for any definite time, and that he retained the right to reenter and take possession at any time, and that it was his intention always to reoccupy the property when his employment terminated. That the house which his brother vacated when he rémoved into the insured property remained vacant, so that his brother could move back into it when told to do so,-and his brother did return to that house when the insured house burned. He-did not charge his brother any rent, and he kept a portion of his effects in the insured property at all times, and had the right to retake possession on demand. Appellee further testified, as stated, that he had advised the agent, George, of his temporary removal from the property, and that George said that this fact would not affect the insurance. If this be true — -and the jury evidently credited the testimony — the jury was warranted in finding that the agent did not regard the circumstance as being a change of possession. The agent made no attempt to -cancel the policy, and, if there was a change of possession, the question might have been raised whether this provision of the policy had been waived; but that issue was not submitted to the jury. The question of fact submitted was whether there had been a change of possession.

We are of the opinion that the testimony warranted the finding that the temporary arrangement recited did not constitute a change of possession. Not only did the right of possession remain in appellee, but he left a portion of his household goods in the house in charge of a caretaker.

In the case of Planters’ Mutual Ins. Assn. v. D.ewberry, 69 Ark. 295, 62 S. W. 1047, 86 Am. St. 195, the policy sued on contained the stipulation that if “ * * * any change takes place in the title, occupation or possession * * *” of the insured property, the policy should be void. The owner of the property leased it to one Haile for a year, and gave Haile possession thereof, and moved away from the premises, which remained in the exclusive possession of Haile until the house was destroyed by fire. The court held that there had been a change of possession and occupancy and that the policy had been thereby invalidated.

It may be said that the policy there sued on contained a stipulation against a change either of occupancy or possession, and that there was a change both of occupancy and possession, as the owner relinquished the right of occupancy and possession to another for a definite time, and, as the opinion recites, Haile was occupying the house exclusively at the time of the fire.

Here the stipulation is only against a change of possession. One might be in possession of property which he did not occupy, and one might give another the right to occupy which would deprive the owner of his right of possession, at least for the period of time that the right of occupancy exists. But this is the question which the instruction quoted submitted to the jury. Under the instruction the jury was told to find for the defendant insurance company if it were found that the occupant was not in possession for the owner.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Progressive Mutual Insurance v. Burrell Motors, Inc.
143 S.E.2d 757 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1965)
Farmers Mutual Ins. Co. v. Denniston
376 S.W.2d 252 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1964)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
290 S.W. 367, 172 Ark. 767, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-insurance-company-v-rector-ark-1927.