Cobb & Seal Shoe Store v. Aetna Insurance

59 S.E. 1099, 78 S.C. 388, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 239
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 18, 1907
Docket6690
StatusPublished

This text of 59 S.E. 1099 (Cobb & Seal Shoe Store v. Aetna Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cobb & Seal Shoe Store v. Aetna Insurance, 59 S.E. 1099, 78 S.C. 388, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 239 (S.C. 1907).

Opinions

October 18, 1907. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The plaintiff recovered judgment on defendant's policy of fire insurance covering a stock of shoes in a store at Edgefield, S.C. Motions made by the defendant for direction of a verdict and for a new trial were refused, and the main points involved in the appeal relate to the grounds on which these motions were based.

The plaintiff was duly incorporated under the name of Cobb Seal Shoe Store, but did business under the name of Cobb Seal, and the policy was issued in the name of Cobb Seal instead of the proper corporate name. The defendant asked the Court to hold, as a matter of law, the corporation Cobb Seal Shoe Store could not recover on a policy of insurance issued in the name of Cobb Seals. O.H. Cobb testified to informing *Page 390 Norris, the insurance agent, of the incorporation and of the true corporate name when he was negotiating for the insurance, and before the policy was issued. If the real meaning of the contract was to insure the corporate property for the benefit of the corporation, designating the corporation as Cobb Seals, instead of using its true corporate name, cannot have any effect to relieve the insurance from liability. A contract is good between the parties, no matter how incorrect the names used in the paper may be, if it appears they were intended as the names of the parties to be bound by the contract or to receive its benefits. Neely v.Yorkville, 10 S.C. 147; 1 Thompson on Corporations, sec. 294.

Evidence that there was no such legal entity as Cobb Seals, and that the defendant's agent before issuing the policy knew the property was owned by the corporation Cobb Seal Shoe Store, tended strongly to show the failure to use the true corporate name in the policy was a mere inadvertence, and that "Cobb Seals" in the contract meant the corporation. It follows there was no such failure to show a contract with the plaintiff corporation as to require the Court to direct a verdict for the defendant or order a new trial.

The policy requires: "1st. The insured will take a complete itemized inventory of the stock on hand at least once in each calendar year, and unless such inventory has been taken within twelve calendar months prior to the date of this policy, one shall be taken, in detail, within thirty days of the issuance of this policy, or this policy shall be null and void from such date, and upon demand of the assured the unearned premium from such date shall be returned."

The plaintiff, having just opened the Edgefield store, had not taken stock and had no inventory when the contract of insurance was made, unless the invoices of the goods purchased are to be so regarded. The invoices and all the books relating to the Edgefield business were burned in the *Page 391 store, but there was evidence that the plaintiff kept in a safe in its Abbeville store duplicate invoices of all goods sent to the Edgefield store. As an inventory at the time the business opened, which was less than twelve months before the date of the policy, the plaintiff offered a set of these invoices showing all goods which had been received at the opening. A merchant's invoices are written itemized accounts, sent to him by the seller of the goods purchased, and the prices charged. His inventory of goods is his stock-taking, written out in detail. It consists of a detailed descriptive list of all the articles in the store, with a bona fide estimate of the market value of each article. Obviously, it is not true, as a general proposition, that a collection of all the invoices, less the aggregate sales, is the equivalent of an inventory. After goods have reached the store-house, they may be stolen, or prove to be worth less than the invoice price, because unsalable or shop-worn.

The difference between the invoice price and the inventorial value increases with the duration of the business. Therefore, when applied to a mercantile business which has continued long enough for the difference between the sum of the invoices, less the sales, and the inventory to be material, we give full assent to the following cases holding the inventory required by this provision of a policy cannot be supplied by the invoices. So. Ins. Co. v. Knight (Ga.),36 S.E., 821; Fire Assoc. v. Masterson (Tex.),61 S.W., 962; Home Ins. Co. v. Delta Bank (Miss.), 15 So., 932. This business had continued for about five months, a period long enough for material loss and depreciation, when the fire occurred, and, therefore, we think the plaintiff's position, that the sum of all the invoices, less the sales, was equivalent to an inventory made at the time of the fire, is untenable.

But at the beginning of the business, a formal inventory or taking of stock would show practically the same articles in the store-house as the invoices preserved by the merchant as a record of the goods in his store at the opening. As *Page 392 the valuations in the inventory rest on the merchant's own estimate, the inventory taken at the beginning would show stock of estimated value greater than the sum of the invoices; for it is fair to assume the business would not be undertaken unless the merchant supposed the goods to be worth more in his store-house than the invoice prices.

Therefore, with perfect fairness to the insurer, at the opening of the business invoices of the goods received might be regarded the same as a formal inventory; that is the merchant's descriptive list of all articles in the store, with his estimate of the value of each.

In this case, the policy was issued about twenty days after the business opened, and O.H. Cobb, the head of the plaintiff corporation, produced a separate set of invoices, which he testified was a complete list of the goods on hand when the business was opened and which he kept in the store at Abbeville. These invoices may fairly be taken as an inventory made within twelve months prior to the date of the policy. Such an inventory, like any other, is. of course, subject to attack for lack of verity. We are of the opinion the Circuit Judge was right in refusing to direct a verdict against the plaintiff for failing to comply with the requirement of the policy as to the inventory. The plaintiff, at the least, was entitled to have the jury decide whether the invoices of the goods on hand when the store was opened was in substance an inventory. Madden v. Ins. Co., 70 S.C. 302,49 S.E., 855. This conclusion was in accord with the decision of the Court of West Virginia, in Ruffner v.Ins. Co., 53 S.E., 944. In Carp v. Nat'l Assurance Assoc. (Mo.), 99 S.W. 523, plaintiff's file of invoices was held equivalent to a book showing all goods purchased.

The iron safe clause further provides: "2d. The assured will keep a set of books, which shall clearly and plainly present a complete record of business transacted, including all purchases, sales and shipments, both for cash and credit, from date of inventory, as provided for in first section of this clause, and during the continuance *Page 393 of this policy. 3d. The assured will keep such books and inventory, and also the last preceding inventory, if such has been taken, securely locked in a fire-proof safe at night.

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Bluebook (online)
59 S.E. 1099, 78 S.C. 388, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cobb-seal-shoe-store-v-aetna-insurance-sc-1907.