Davis v. Safe Insurance Co.

199 S.E. 364, 120 W. Va. 505, 1938 W. Va. LEXIS 122
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1938
Docket8601
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 199 S.E. 364 (Davis v. Safe Insurance Co.) 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
Davis v. Safe Insurance Co., 199 S.E. 364, 120 W. Va. 505, 1938 W. Va. LEXIS 122 (W. Va. 1938).

Opinion

Fox, Judge :

The Safe Insurance Company, plaintiff in' error herein, complains of a judgment of the circuit court of Wood *506 County, rendered against it in an action to recover on a policy of fire insurance on real estate, in favor of Floyd Davis, executor of the last will and testament of Lydia E. Spencer, for the sum of $1,199.00, based upon a directed verdict of a jury for $1,204.00, after deducting a $5.00 premium tendered the company but not accepted by it, representing the face of the policy sued on, $1,-000.00, and interest thereon to date of verdict. A motion was made to set aside the verdict, which was overruled, and to that action of the court this1 writ of error is prosecuted. The action was originally instituted in the name of Lydia E. Spencer, and upon her death thereafter, was revived in the name of the executor of her will. It was before this court upon certification of a question of liability under the policy at the time of the loss alleged, the plaintiff in error claiming that the policy had become forfeited for nonj-payment of the plremium named therein. Davis v. Safe Ins. Co., 117 W. Va. 405, 185 S. E. 690.

The contentions of the plaintiff in error are (1) that under the terms of the policy and the conditions attached thereto, the ascertainment of the value of the property destroyed by fire was a condition precedent to rendering any verdict in favor of the plaintiff, and that the value being uncertain, interest on any recovery could only run from date of verdict; and (2) that if the judgment and verdict be set aside for that reason, this court should reconsider its decision on the question certified, and that there was error in such decision. It is conceded, as we understand, that the second contention must depend on the first contention being sustained, under the holdings of this court in Pennington v. Gillaspie, 66 W. Va. 643, 66 S. E. 1009, and Atwater Company v. Fall River Pocahontas Collieries Company, 119 W. Va. 549, 195 S. E. 99. The ruling on the certified question must otherwise be treated as the law of the case.

The first point raised requires consideration of the value of the insured property, as fixed by the parties at the time of the issuance of the policy sued on. This policy *507 was dated the 21st day of February, 1933, and covered a period of one year from the 2nd day of March, 1933. The insured property was totally destroyed by fire on the 18th day of April, 1933. The policy in suit was a renewal of a policy issued March 2, 1927, upon the application of Lydia E. .Spencer to the insurance company, which, for the purposes' of this opinion, is considered a mutual company coming within the provisions of Article 5, Chapter 33, Code 1931, for insurance in the sum of $1,000.00 on a dwelling, the value of which was fixed in said application at $1,500.00, a copy of which is attached to and forms a part of the policy now before us. The original application on which the 1927 policy was issued was incorporated in the policy on which this action was instituted. The plaintiff in error contends that, notwithstanding the fact that the value of the insured property was fixed in the application for insurance at $1,500.00, the actual value thereof was an open question at the trial, and that proof thereof, on the part of the plaintiff, was a condition precedent to a recovery of any sum whatever. We cannot accept this contention.

We think that the parties dealt with each other upon an agreed value of $1,500.00, and that if such value is to be departed from it must be through some affirmative action on the part of the one who would seek to show a different value. At the date of the original application in 1927 the valued policy act hereinafter referred to was effective as to mutual companies. Shinn v. West Virginia Ins. Co., 104 W. Va. 353, 140 S. E. 61. It is contended that later, through legislative enactment, mutual companies were excluded from the valued policy act, but the fact remains that in 1927, when the value was agreed upon, the policy issued thereon was governed by that act, and from this it may reasonably be argued that the parties, at the original inception of this insurance, intended only to insure for two-thirds of the agreed value of the property. No change in value being shown, or attempted to be shown, we may assume that the policy sued on was issued under the same conditions, and upon *508 that assumption hold that the two-thirds value clause now contended for, if applied, would still warrant recovery of the face of the policy. The suggestion that judicial notice should be taken of the possible effect of the business depression known to have existed between 1927 and 1933 cannot be approved. If the insurance company was willing to accept the 1927 valuation and contract with reference thereto when the original policy was issued, as it did, no reason is perceived why it could not accept the same valuation when the 1933 policy was issued. If the value of the insured property had depreciated since 1927, the insurance company could have ascertained this fact, and was under no duty or obligation to issue a new policy in 1933 on the valuation agreed upon in 1927; and yet that is what it did when it incorporated the original application with its representation of value of the property insured. Its action was voluntary and it is bound thereby. We hold, therefore, that regardless of the construction which may be given to the act of 1929, hereinafter discussed, and the provision attached to the policy under authority of said act, the judgment complained of was warranted because, as a matter of fact, it does not exceed the two-thirds value provided for in the provision attached to the policy, and upon which the contention of the plaintiff in error rests. This holding disposes of the question of interest, because if there was a right to recover the face amount of the policy, the amount was certain and the claimant would be entitled to interest thereon from the date of proof of loss.

We are referred to Shinn v. Ins. Co., supra, wherein it was held that “the basis of recovery on a fire insurance policy on personal property is the actual loss sustained, not to exceed the amount of the policy”, and that “the application is no evidence of loss, but only of the value of the property at the time the application was made”. From this it is argued that the burden rested on the insured to prove the amount of the actual loss sustained. The Shinn case does not directly pass on the question of *509 burden of proof, but we are cited to Goodell v. Ins. Co., 111 Neb. 228, 196 N. W. 112; Security Insurance Co. v. McAlister, 90 Okla. 274, 217 Pac. 430; and Joyce v. Ins. Co. (Mo. App.), 211 S. W. 390, wherein the burden of proof is discussed. It should be noted that the Shinn case, as well as the cases cited above, refers to personal property, and except in the Shinn case, the insurers were, apparently, not farmers’ mutual companies, and no application containing representations as to value was involved; also, in the Joyce

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Bluebook (online)
199 S.E. 364, 120 W. Va. 505, 1938 W. Va. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-safe-insurance-co-wva-1938.