Cappellar v. Queen Insurance

21 W. Va. 576, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 129
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 21 W. Va. 576 (Cappellar v. Queen Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cappellar v. Queen Insurance, 21 W. Va. 576, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 129 (W. Va. 1883).

Opinion

Green, Judge,

announced the opinion of the Court:

The question in this case is: When a declaration in an action on a policy of insurance is filed in the form prescribed by chapter 66, of Acts of 1877, section 1, and a plea is filed by the defendant in the form prescribed by the-act, and issue is joined thereon as prescribed in section five of said act, and the plaintiff'or defendant or both of them without being required so to do by the court under sections two and three of this act files under sections four and five of this act the statements in writing referred to in these sections, should the court regard these statements, as if they were a portion of the pleadings in the case, and refuse to permit them or any portion of them to be filed, because when offered to be filed the court is of opinion, that such statements, or any particular part thereof, do not allege facts, which in the opinion of the court constitute, if true, a defense to the action; or when offered to be filed by the plaintiff do not state facts, which in [592]*592the opinion of the court constitute, if true, a good rejoinder by the plaintiff to the facts embraced in the statement hied with the defendant’s plea; or under the sixth section of said Act of 1877 should the court strike out such statement filed by either party, or any part thereof, when such statement or part thereof is sufficient to notify the adverse party in effect of the nature of the claim or defense intended to be set up against him or even when such is not the case ? In other words : Under this chapter 66 of the Acts of 1877 should these statements be regarded in the nature of pleadings, and as being liable to be stricken out by the court, if they he such, as if formally pleaded, would have been liable to demurrer; or under this act are these statements similar to the bill of particulars or account, which the plaintiff is required in an action of assump-sit to file with his declaration by section 11, chapter 125 of Code of West Virginia; or to the account of payments and set-off which the defendant is required to file with his plea by section 4 chapter 126 of the Code of West Virginia, it being well settled, that these bills of particulars or accounts filed with the pleadings are not in the nature of pleading, but are to be regarded merely as notices of what will be proven at the trial; and if they are too vague, the penalty imposed on the party filing them is the exclusion of his evidence of any matters not described in such bill of particulars or account so plainly as to give the adverse party notice of its character, and by the 46th section of chapter 131 of Code of West Virginia, the court is authorized in any action or motion to order either party to file such bill of particulars, which the statute provides shall be subject to the same rules and be regarded in like manner as the bill of particulars filed in an action of assumpsit, or with pleas of payment or set-off?

Section 4 of chapter 66 of Acts of 1877, is as follows: “To any declaration or count'in a policy of insurance, whether the same be in the form prescribed by this act or not, and whether the action he covenant, debt or assumpsit, the defendant may plead, that he is not liable to the plaintiff, as is in said declaration alleged. But if in any action on a policy of insurance the defense be that the action can not he maintained because of the failure to perform or comply with, or violation of any [593]*593clause, condition or warranty in upon or annexed to the policy, or contained in or upon any paper, which is made by reference a part of the policy, the defendant must file a statement in writing specifying by reference thereto or otherwise, the particular clause, coudition or warranty in respect to which such failure or violation is claimed -to have occurred; and such statement must be verified by the oath of the defendant, his officer, agent or .attorney-at-law to the effect, that the affiant believes that the matter of defense therein stated will be supported by evidence at the trial.” And the sixth section oí said act is as follows: “If either party to the action fail to file any statement required of him by this act, or by the other party pursuant to this act, or if the statement be adjudged insufficient in whole or in part, the court, as justice may require, may grant further time for filing the same, or permit the statement filed to be amended, or may at the trial exclude the evidence offered by the party in default as to any matter he has so tailed to state, or has insufficiently stated. But no statement, which in the particulars required by or under this act to be stated, or referred to therein is sufficient to notify the adverse party in effect of the nature of the claim or defense intended to be set up against him, shall be adjudged insufficient.”

This Court has repeatedly decided, what it seems to me was perfectly clear under the statute independently of any decision, that a bill of particulars or account filed- with an action of assumpsit or with a plea of payment or set-off under our Code, if defective, could be taken advantage of by the opposite side not by demurrer, but only by moving to exclude the evidence from the jury, which might be offered to sustain such imperfect bill of particulars. or account, and that such bill of particulars or account constituted no part of the pleadings in the case. See Choen v. Guthrie et al., 15 W. Va. p. 113 and 114; Abell v. Penn Mutual Life Ins. Co., 18 W. Va. 412, 413; Smith v. Townsend, supra.

Now it does seem to me quite obvious, that this chapter 66 of the Acts of 1877, p. 89, was simply intended to extend the provisions of the Code of West Virginia, to which wTe have referred as requiring in certain cases a bill of particulars to be filed with the declaration, plea or rejoinder, as the [594]*594case might be, to actions on policies of insurance brought under this act, and that it was required, that the statement to-be filed under chapter 66 of Acts of 1877 in actions on policies of insurance, when not those ordered by the court to be filed, were to stand in exactly the same relation to the case as did these bills of particulars now required to be filed under the Code. "When such bills of particulars were filed in actions of asimmpsit with the declaration, or were filed by the defendant with his pleas of payment or set-off, the court did not and could not properly pass on their sufficiency when filed. But if they turned out to be so vague as not to give plainly to the adverse party notice of their character, he was protected from resulting injury not by striking them out when offered to be filed because of their insufficiency but by excluding any evidence, that might bo offered to sustain any item in his bill of particulars too vaguely described to give the adverse party notice of its character. This was certainly ample protection against vague and insufficient bills of particulars.

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

Related

Crouch v. Franklin National Insurance
140 S.E. 681 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1927)
Seyler v. British America Assurance Co.
77 S.E. 555 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1913)
Levy v. Scottish Union & National Insurance
52 S.E. 449 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1905)
Tucker v. Colonial Fire Insurance
51 S.E. 86 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1905)
Bentley v. Standard Fire Insurance
23 S.E. 584 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1895)
Mong v. Roush
11 S.E. 906 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1886)
Wheeling v. Black
25 W. Va. 266 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1884)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 W. Va. 576, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cappellar-v-queen-insurance-wva-1883.