Bloch Bros. v. Liverpool London Globe Ins. Co.

94 So. 562, 208 Ala. 523, 1922 Ala. LEXIS 325
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 26, 1922
Docket2 Div. 800.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 94 So. 562 (Bloch Bros. v. Liverpool London Globe Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bloch Bros. v. Liverpool London Globe Ins. Co., 94 So. 562, 208 Ala. 523, 1922 Ala. LEXIS 325 (Ala. 1922).

Opinions

McCLELLAN, J.

The appellant partnership was awarded a money judgment against C. E. Shuptrine, the action being commenced by garnishment in which the appellee insurance company was made garnishee. The garnishee answered not indebted, and the answer was contested. Motion by plaintiffs to require oral answer was granted; but the order .of the court seems not to have been carried into effect. The court, on hearing on evidence, discharged the garnishee. Shuptrine, having suffered a fire loss under a policy issued by the Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Company, received from the company, through the hand of its local agent, Helmer, the following written instrument (presently unimportant features being omitted):

“New Orleans, La. Jan. 3, 1921.
“[Seal.] Loss No. 54907.
“If the receipt on the reverse side is properly signed by all parties at interest
“Pay to C. E. Shuptrine nineteen hundred seven and no/l00 dollars, same being in full settlement, compromise and discharge of all claims and demands for loss or damage by fire, hail or windstorm on date indicated in receipt referred to.
“To Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Company, Limited, Now Orleans, La.
“R. H. Aleoek, Manager.”
Indorsed: “Paid, Whitney-Central Nat’l Bank, New Orleans, La., Jan. 7, 1921. Draft Clerk.”

Reverse side:

“Received of the Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Company, Ltd., nineteen hundred seven and no/100 dollars in full settlement, compromise and discharge of all claims and demands for loss occurring on the 18th day of December, 1921, to the property insured by its policy No. 842698 issued at its Selma, Ala., agency, and said policy is hereby reduced accordingly.
“C. E. Shuptrine, L. S.”

This paper was delivered to Shuptrine at Selma, Ala., on January 5, 1921, and his signature made thereon as indicated. Helmer testified that on January 5, 1921, Shuptrine “by indorsement assigned the check (i. e. the instrument set out above) to the City National Bank of Selma, Ala., and turned it over to me to be delivered to the bank.” Plaintiffs’ objections, to be later considered, being overruled, Helmer further testified:

“There was no agreement with the company, but there was an understanding with the City National Bank, Mr. Shuptrine, and me, that when it came it was to bo turned over by me for Mr. Shuptrine to the bank, and the bank was to pay me out of the draft a claim of about 8250 which I had against Mr. Shuptrine, and retain the balance of the draft on account of a debt which the bank held against Mr. Shuptrine. This was done, and the whole transaction was completed in accordance with the understanding on the evening of the 5th of January, 1921, during banking hours, and before the garnishment was served. The draft was turned over to Mr. Shuptrine and accepted by him on the 5th of January in full settlement of the loss and all claims he held against the company under the insurance policy. All this was a personal agreement of mine and not an agreement made for the company. * * * I *525 have no authority to accept drafts drawn on the company. I did not accept the draft in question; that is, the draft or check given Sir. Shuptrine.”

On the morning of January 6, 1921, the plaintiffs (appellants) sued out the mentioned writ of garnishment against the insurance company, and it was then executed by service upon Helmer, the authorized agent, for that purpose, of the insurance company.

On January 7, 1921, the insurance company paid the sum called for in the instrument; the Whitney-Central National Bank at New Orleans indorsing the fact of payment on the instrument as appears ante.

W. H. Hackney, special agent for the insurance company, testified that when advised by Helmer of the circumstances stated he wired the insurance company at New Orleans “in an effort to stop payment of the draft in question, but was advised that the draft had already been paid that day.” This was the entire evidence.

It is to be noted that the controversy is between the insurance company and the appellants, neither the Selma Bank nor Helmer being parties to the cause.

[1 ] That the instrument sent by the insurance company, through its local agent at Selma, Ala., to Shuptrine, was not a “negotiable instrument,” is a proposition not contested by the parties. While the instrument was not a “negotiable instrument,” yet it was in nature similar to a draft drawn by the drawer, upon the drawer as drawee, in favor of a third person. It possessed some of the characteristics of a “draft” in which the drawer and drawee were the same person or entity. It was signed by the manager, the agent, of the drawer whose authority to do so is not questioned. It was made payable to C. E. Shuptrine upon the contingency that he should sign “the receipt on the reverse side” of the paper. The payee signed this “receipt.” Thereupon the instrument became the unconditional promise of the insurance company to pay O. E. Shuptrine on demand the sum stated therein—so without necessity for acceptance by the drawerdrawee or other act or assurance thereby to constitute it a binding obligation between it and Shuptrine. In executing the “receipt on the reverse side,” consistent with the only contingency imposed by the instrument, Shuptrine not only acknowledged the receipt by him of the sum stated, but he also gave the insurance company an unqualified acquittance to the extent that sum reduced the policy designated by number therein. His acceptance of the instrument and the execution of the “receipt” was with the express effect that “said policy is hereby reduced accordingly” (italics supplied). According to the terms of the instrument, including the “receipt” as thus executed, and the -undisputed testimony of the witness Helmer that Shuptrine accepted the instrument “in full settlement” of his claim under the policy, the effect of the instrument’s acceptance thus made and thus shown operated thereupon, on January 5, 1921, to satisfy the insured’s demand for fire loss within the protection of the policy. Lee v. Green, 83 Ala. 491, 3 South. 785; Keel v. Larkin, 72 Ala. 493, 501, 502.

[2, 3] It is manifest that at the time the writ of garnishment was served on' January 6, 1921, the insurance company was indebted through the assurance given by the instrument set out above. When delivered to Shuptrine by the company’s agent at Selma, and the “receipt” was executed by Shuptrine, the instrument evidenced an indebtedness to him. It was his chose in action. The obligation of the garnishee to pay him continued unless legally assigned by him (Code, § 5158), the asserted satisfaction of the obligation not having been accomplished until subsequent to the service of the writ of garnishment. The relative rights of the plaintiffs and of the garnishee depend upon the status existing when the writ of garnishment was served. Feore v. Mississippi Transp. Co., 161 Ala. 567, 49 South. 871, among others. Payment to the defendant in the main cause or to a third person after service of the writ will not avert the garnishee’s liability otherwise shown. 20 Cyc. p. 986; Fowler v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 So. 562, 208 Ala. 523, 1922 Ala. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bloch-bros-v-liverpool-london-globe-ins-co-ala-1922.