Cuthbertson v. North Carolina Home Insurance

2 S.E. 258, 96 N.C. 480
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 2 S.E. 258 (Cuthbertson v. North Carolina Home Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cuthbertson v. North Carolina Home Insurance, 2 S.E. 258, 96 N.C. 480 (N.C. 1887).

Opinion

Davis, J.

On the 17th day of November, 1882, the defendant company, for value, insured certain property of the plaintiff against loss by fire, for three months, beginning at 12 o’clock, M., on that day, and issued to him a policy therefor, in the sum of $1,000. On the night of February 16th, 1883, while said policy was in force, a portion of the property embraced therein was destroyed by fire, worth, as plaintiff alleges, the sum of $1,000 ; which sum, though demanded, the defendant company refuses to pay, and this action is brought for its recovery.

The application and policy of insurance are set out in the pleadings.

The defendant denies the right of the plaintiff to recover, and says that he did not have such an ownership of, or interest, title and estate in the property described in the policy as was represented by the plaintiff in his application.

For a further defence, the defendant says, that the plaintiff In his application, which was a part of the contract, represented that he was the sole and absolute owner in fee, of the property insured, and that there were no liens, incumbrances, ■or claims whatever against it, and that in response to questions propounded, the plaintiff failed to disclose fully and truly, his interest in said property, and that he was not the .sole and absolute owner thereof.

It is stipulated in the policy, that iu the event of loss, suit or action for the recovery of any claim by reason thereof, shall be commenced within one year, and the defendant *483 says this action was not commenced within one year, as required by the said provision.

The property is described in the policy, with its value and the amount insured, respectively, as follows: Gin-house, value $250, insured for $108; two gins and one feeder, $350, $153; seed-cotton in gin-house $150, $63; loose lint cotton $50, $19; cotton seed $75, $31; steam engine and boiler, located about twelve feet from gin-house, $1,000, $231; belting and shafting $175, $75; grist mill and fixtures $200, $80; saw-mill and fixtures $350, $153; cotton-press in gin-house $190, $81.

The plaintiff tendered the followiwg issues at the close of the evidence:

1. Did the plaintiff at the time of his application for insurance, and at the time his policy was issued thereon, have such an interest in the property insured or any part therof, as was the subject of insurance; if so, what part?

2. Did the plaintiff at the time of his application make any false representation as to his ownership of said property or any part thereof; if so, what part?

3. Did the plaintiff at the time of his application make. any false representation as to any lien, incumbrance or claim on said property or any part thereof; if so, what part ?

4. Did the plaintiff comply with the conditions and stipulations of the contract of insurance on his part ?

5. How long after the plaintiff’s cause of action accrued before this suit was brought?

6. Is the defendant indebted to the plaintiff in any sum under the said policy of insurane; if so, how much ?

His Honor refused to submit these issues, and in lieu thereof submitted, among others, the following :

I. Was the plaintiff, at the time when his application for insurance was made, the sole and undisputed owner of the engine and boiler, the belting and shafting, and the saw *484 mill and smoke-stack, bolding them free of any claim or incumbrance, as represented in the application?

III. Was the plaintiff at said time, the undisputed owner of the gin-house mentioned in said application and policy?

"VI. Did the plaintiff commence this action within the time limited for the commencement thereof, by the contract of insurance?

The plaintiff excepted to the refusal to submit the issues tendered by him, and to the 1st, 3d and 6th issues submitted by the Court, and this is the first error assigned.

The issues are made by the allegations of the complaint and denials of the answer, and should be only such as are necessary to determine the controversy between the parties. Often questions of fact are alleged and denied, which, whether found one way or the other, do not in themselves, decide the issue or issues involved, and it is not necessary, but often improper, to submit such questions of fact to the jury.

In Cedar Falls Co. v. Wallace, 83 N. C., 227, Dillard, J., approving Albright v. Mitchell, 70 N. C., 445, says: “It is not every matter alleged on one side and denied on the other, that in a legal sense is an issue, but only such as are necessary to dispose of the controversy; and to such necessary matters, the issues submitted ought to be confined as far as possible, in order to avoid embarrassment and confusion to the jury from a multiplicity of issues.”

The form in which issues are submitted is of little consequence, if the matters in controversy are clearly and fairly presented by them to the jury, but all immaterial and unnecessary issues should be avoided. In this case, eleven issues were submitted, some of them relating to the ownership of different portions of the property mentioned in the application for insurance, and to the value of separate parts of it, and which do not, however found, decide the controversy, but no exception was taken to them, and unnecessary *485 issues are not assignable for error, if not prejudicial, even if excepted to, and we only allude to it here, to suggest that in framing issues for the jury, only those presented by the pleadings which are decisive of the matters in controversy should be submitted, and under proper instructions from the Court, these may often be greatly narrowed.

In this case, the isues submitted by the Court in lieu of those tendered by the plaintiff, though several of them may be unnecessary, present fully the matters in controversy. The 1st, 3d and 6th, only are objected to, and these relate to material facts alleged and denied, and the exception cannot be sustained. We can see no error in rejecting the issues proposed and the substitution of those submitted.

Among the questions propounded in the application for insurance and the answers thereto, were the following:

1. “Are you the sole and undisputed owner, absolutely and in fee simple, of the said property as severally mentioned, and of the land on which it stands ?
2. “If not, state fully what your interest is? Answer— “All but the land.”
3. “ Is there any lien or incumbrance in, or any claim whatever against the said property? Answer — No.”

At the foot of the application and next preceding plaintiff’s signature thereto, is the following:

“I affirm and warrant that the foregoing answers are true, and that they shall constitute the basis of the policy that may be issued to me oh this application.” Signed by J. R. Cuthbertson.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 S.E. 258, 96 N.C. 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cuthbertson-v-north-carolina-home-insurance-nc-1887.