Curnow v. Phœnix Insurance

16 S.E. 132, 37 S.C. 406, 1892 S.C. LEXIS 34
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 26, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 16 S.E. 132 (Curnow v. Phœnix 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
Curnow v. Phœnix Insurance, 16 S.E. 132, 37 S.C. 406, 1892 S.C. LEXIS 34 (S.C. 1892).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice McGowan.

The defendant company, by its agents duly qualified and authorized thereto, executed its policy of insurance in writing, and thereby insured Mrs. A. J. Levy against loss or damage by fire, to the amount of $2,500, on a stock of merchandise, consisting principally of dry goods, groceries, notions, &c., contained in the one-story building situate on south side of Railroad Avenue street, in the town of Blackville, South Carolina. On October 18,1889, said stock of merchandise was totally destroyed by fire, of which loss notice and proofs were given, and payment demanded within the time prescribed. But the defendant corporation refused payment, and denied liability. Afterwards, on April 22,1890, [408]*408the said A. J. Levy duly assigned said policy of insurance and all moneys due thereon to the plaintiff, Sarah V. Curnow, upon certain trusts, and for the purposes in said deed of assignment, more particularly set forth; and on May 15, 1890, the said assignee brought this action against the defendant company for the insurance money, $2,500, in the County of Barnwell, South Carolina. The defendant company answered to the merits, admitting some paragraphs of the complaint and denying others. The case seems to have been in the United States court, but was “remanded” to the State court.

The cause came on for a hearing before Judge "Wallace, who, on motion of the counsel for the defendant, dismissed the complaint, “because it appears that the plaintiff is a non-resident of this State, the defendant is a foreign corporation, and the cause of action did not arise in this State, and the subject of the action is not situated in this State,” &c. Then the plaintiff moved to be allowed to amend her complaint, by adding thereto a copy of the assignment referred to in the complaint, claiming that the same would show that Mrs. A. J. Levy, a citizen of this State, and the original holder of the policy, still has a substantial interest therein. This motion was refused, on the ground that the court, having no jurisdiction of the action, can make no order in the cause. At the suggestion of counsel, the judge stated, “that the word 'record’ is used to embrace only such part of the record as was submitted to him at the argument of the motion, which was the complaint and the papers to which it referred.” The plaintiff appeals to this court from the order dismissing the complaint herein, and from the judgment entered up thereon, and from the order refusing the motion of the plaintiff to amend the complaint herein, upon the following grounds:

1. Because the policy sued on was issued by the defendant through its agent in this State on property in this State, where the loss occurred, and the policy and the loss thereunder was the cause of action, and his honor, therefore, erred in dismissing the complaint for want of jurisdiction.

2. That it appears from the complaint and the policy attached thereto, that the assured, A. J. Levy, was a resident of [409]*409this State, the property insured situate in this State, and that, subsequent to the loss, and after proof of loss by her, she assigned her right of action in and upon certain uses and trusts only, and the Circuit Judge erred in holding, that the court was without jurisdiction.'

3. That, under and by virtue of chapter 37, sections 1353—4, of the General Statutes of South Carolina, the courts of this State have jurisdiction of all actions against foreign insurance companies doing business in this State, for liabilities incurred in this State, and the action herein was a liability incurred in this State, and the Circuit Judge erred in holding, that he did not have jurisdiction.

4. That the defendant was a foreign insurance company doing business iu this State with a duly authorized agent, upon whom service could be made, as required by chapter 37, General Statutes, and upon whom service was made in this case; and the liability upon which the action herein was brought, having arisen upon a policy issued in this State,- upon property situate within this State, both at the time of issuing the policy and of the loss, the Circuit Judge erred in holding, that the court was without jurisdiction.

5. That the Circuit Judge erred in holding, that he did not have power to grant the amendment asked for.

6. That the amendment asked for by the plaintiff was in the interest of right and justice, and his honor, the Circuit Judge, erred in not allowing the same.

Section 423 of the Code provides, that “an action against a corporation by or under the laws of any other State, government, or country, may be brought in the Circuit Court: (1) by any resident of this State, for any cause of action; (2) by a plaintiff not a resident of this State, when the cause of action shall have arisen, or the subject of the action shall be situated, within this State.”

1 There was interesting argument at the bar as to whether the provisions of chapter 37 of the General Statutes do not, in the case of foreign insurance companies, authorize, by necessary implication, an action by a non-resident upon a policy of insurance issued in this State, through a local [410]*410agent established in the State, upon property situate in this State, at the time of insurance and loss thereunder. It is certainly true that the chapter of the General Statutes referred to contains some exacting requirements as to a foreign insurance corporation doing business in this State; as, for instance, that said company must take out a license from the comptroller general of the State, and have a reliable local agent in the State, whose warrant of appointment shall continue valid and irrevocable until another agent or attorney has been substituted, so that at all times, while any liability remains outstanding, there shall be within the State an agent or attorney as aforesaid, and shall contain a consent, expressed, authorizing process of law, to be served on said agent or attorney, for all liabilities of every nature incurred in this State by said company, &c. This would seem to have in contemplation legal proceedings in this State for all liabilities incurred in this State. But we do not think it necessary to go into that matter in this case, and we make no ruling upon the subject.

2 3 Then recurring to section 423 of the Code. It is sometimes difficult to have a clear view of what is “the subject of the action.” As I understand, this is not a simple money demand, although in case of recovery the amount is fixed; but an agreement for the performance of mutual covenants as to particular property. But, as we think, it is less difficult to determine whether the cause of action arose within this State. It is obvious that, by the loss of the goods, the proper proofs, and the refusal of the defendant company upon demand to pay the insurance, the cause of action had accrued before the assignment of the policy to the plaintiff. If Mrs. Levy, the assured, had brought the action herself, no possible objection could have been made to the jurisdiction, and it seems to me that it would seem rather a strange result, if the identical cause of action already accrued could not be enforced in our courts by one who became the assignee of the. right, primarily for the purpose of saving a debt due to herself, simply for the reason that she happened to be a non-resident of the State.

But where did the cause of action arise? “When a contract [411]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 S.E. 132, 37 S.C. 406, 1892 S.C. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curnow-v-phnix-insurance-sc-1892.