Automobile Insurance Exchange v. Wilson

124 A. 876, 144 Md. 249, 1923 Md. LEXIS 165
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 6, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 124 A. 876 (Automobile Insurance Exchange v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Automobile Insurance Exchange v. Wilson, 124 A. 876, 144 Md. 249, 1923 Md. LEXIS 165 (Md. 1923).

Opinion

Adkins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is from a judgjment in favor of appellee for five hundred dollars in a suit on a policy of insurance on an automobile against fire and theft. The amount of insurance was five hundred dollars and was for one year from June 3rd, 3922, to June 3rd, 1923. The date of the policy is Junel '8th, 1922. The automobile was stolen during" the early mom-* ing of Sunday, August 20th, 1922; the loss was reported by1 appellee to the Northeastern Police Station of Baltimore City on the afternoon of the same day, and to the insurance company, the appellant, on the afternoon of the next day. The *251 car was found some time during Sunday afternoon or night abandoned on Beisterstown road, taken possession, of by ap'pellant, and towed to Alain’s garage on said road. It had been burned but not totally destroyed. Mr. Fisher, an adjuster of appellant, took possession of it, had it stripped, and the parts removed to the upper floor of the garage. He testified at the trial that the car was still in his possession.

Between the date of the theft and the time of instituting this suit, demand for payment of the insurance was made a number of times. The claim was not paid but was never repudiated. In fact it appears in the record, without objection, that appellant offered appellee a ear which he refused, and made another offer to- pay him three hundred dollars, which was likewise refused. The original declaration in the case, filed October 31st, 1922, contained the common counts. This was. subsequently amended by leave of court, by .adding, a special count on the contract-.

Defendant demurred to the original and amended declarations and to each and every count thereof, which demurrer was overruled. We find no error in this ruling'. Indeed, no point was made of it either in appellant’s brief or oral argument.

General issue pleas were later filed by appellant, and the case was defended on alleged breach of warranties, and on a provision of the policy that it should be rendered null and void if the interest of the insured was or should become other than unconditional and sole ownership, it being contended that appellee did not have such ownership at the time thé policy was applied for and written. Attached to the policy is a “schedule of statements,” alleged to have been made by appellee in his application.

There is a provision, in the policy that it is issued “in consideration of the premium therefor, * * * and of the statements which are set forth in the schedule of statements and which the assured by the acceptance of this policy makes and warrants to he true.”

*252 Two of the statements appearing in the “Schedule” are alleged to he untrue, viz: 1. Oar used for pleasure only; 2. Cost to1 assured $775. Of these the second was, from all the evidence, undoubtedly untrue. The testimony of appellee himseif shows that the total amount Jie had invested in the car was only $452.28. He denies that he made the alleged representation as to the cost. As to the first, it is to be observed that the word, “only” was incorrectly added in the schedule made out by the company. It does not appear in the written application of appellee, filed by appellant as an exhibit in the ease. As this application was in the possession of the company, the inaccurate statement in the schedule is on a different footing from the assumed false statement appearing in a copy of the application attached to a policy in the Fletcher case, 117 U. S. 519, cited in the Main case in 140 Md. 220. In the Fletcher case, the falsification was alleged to have been made by an agent of the company, and it appeared in the original application made out by the agent, and the alleged true statement made by the insured to the agent does not appear* to have been known to the company.

The claim by appellant that the ear of appellee was used for business purposes is based on the following, testimony of appellee: Q. You worked for the Tip Top Bottling; Company? Ans. I was. Q. You sometimes took the car out for them, didn’t you? Ans. Sure, lots of times. Q. You used that for business as' well as pleasure, didn’t you ? Ans. Yes, that is pleasure and business both.

Appellee was an automobile mechanic and had no business of his own. It does not appear that he ever hired the car or made any profit by the use of it. Most of the cases cited by appellant in this connection are eases where passengers were carried for hire, or profit was piade by the use of the car* in business.

It certainly could not be held as a matter of law, in the circumstances of this case, that the statement in the application, that the car was used for pleasure, was untrue, simply *253 because, in attending to bis work as an employee, appellee sometimes used the oar aud frequently took bis employer out for a ride, in the absence of anything to show that he received compensation for it. If so, no man engaged in business who occasionally used his car to go to his place of business or for auy errand he might have during the day, although such use was merely incidental, and these occasions were opportunities for deriving pleasure from the ownership of the car, eouhl safely insure his automobile as “used for pleasure.”

It is' indeed questionable whether this warranty should he construed as being more than a representation in praesenti, but it is not necessary to decide that here. See United States Fire and Marine Ins. Co. v. Kimberly, 34 Md. 224; 26 C. J. p. 203, sec. 249.

Fix considering the contention of appellant, that the interest of appellee was other than nneoxiditional and sole ownership and that, therefore, under its terms: the policy* was null and void, the testimoxiy of appellee, for the purposes of the exceptions, in tills case-, must be taken as trxie. He testified as follows: That he and a friend of his named Aeree planxxed to buy the car together, but Aeree had no money, so appellee paid for it and took the receipt in his. own name, hut had the ear titled in the name of himself and Aeree. The car was purchased on March 22nd, 1922. Aeree intended to buy an interest in the ear later on. He was to be allowed to use the car and to become a part owner of it .after he made a payment, but he never made any payment on the car, and never had any use of the car, and never acquired any interest in it. At the time the: insurance was taken out Mr. Leland, who, as agent of the company, wrote the policy, was shown the title and knew at that time the ear Was titled in the two names. On August 18th, 1922, two days before the car was stolen, the title was put in the name of appellee alone. In order that a change of titling might be made Aeree signed a transfer to appellee.

*254 If appellee was in fact the rightful owner of the car, without incumbrance and in full control of it, at the inception of the policy and continuously up to the time it was stolen, there was no breach of the warranty as to ownership even though for a time the titling of the car indicated a joint ownership. 26 C.

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Bluebook (online)
124 A. 876, 144 Md. 249, 1923 Md. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/automobile-insurance-exchange-v-wilson-md-1923.