Dupree v. . Virginia Home Insurance Co.

92 N.C. 417
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 92 N.C. 417 (Dupree v. . Virginia Home Insurance Co.) 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
Dupree v. . Virginia Home Insurance Co., 92 N.C. 417 (N.C. 1885).

Opinion

SMITH, C. J.

The plaintiff’s action is upon a policy of insurance against fire, issued by the defendant company on the 3rd day of October, 1879, and its object the recovery of damages for the loss of a store-house and certain articles of personal property therein, that were burned on the 21st day of the same month. Besides controverting some of the allegations contained in the complaint, the answer sets up as a defence against the demand, false representations alleged to have been made in the plaintiff’s application for insurance, as to the value of the property proposed to be insured, and her failure, after the fire, to furnish, under oath, to the adjusting officer of the company sent to make examination, the full and detailed specifications of the building, its cost, and the other particulars required under the terms of the contract. The defendant avers that-the house and other articles are knowingly estimated by the plaintiff at double their real value, as grouped in her application, at the time; and these false and fraudulent estimates, as an inducing influence, enter into and vitiate the contract of insurance, and exonerate the company from any liability under it.

The aggregate valuation distributed among the several kinds of property, is put in the application at $1,700, whereof the sum of $1,132, not quite two-thirds, also ratably apportioned, is protected by the policy issued in response. Some discrepancy áp-pears in the enumeration of the several sums covered by the policy, which, added, make $1,066 and not the entire amount of the insurance. But the variance was not adverted to in the argument, nor does it affect the merits of the controversy, and we *420 notice it only to show that it has not been overlooked in examining the record. The parties accept the first-mentioned sum as that in dispute and this is assumed in the verdict for damages.

From the conflicting allegations made in the pleadings, issues in the form of inquiries are drawn out and were submitted to the jury, which, with the responses to each, in substance are as follows:

1. Did the defendant company issue the policy mentioned in the complaint? Answer — Yes.

2. Was the property covered by it destroyed by fire? Answer — Yes.

3. What was its first cost? Answer — $1,700.

4. What -was the value of the house and other insured proji-erty at the time of application for insurance, separately estimated? Answer — Walue of the house, $800; general merchandise, $600; counter, shelves, &c., in the house, $100; show cases, scales, drawers and furniture, $100.

5. What the value when destroyed by fire? In answer the jury make the same estimates, except that the general merchandise is valued at $750, an excess of $150 over the former.

6. Did the plaintiff know or have reason to believe that the property or any part of it was overvalued in her application? Answer — No.

7. What was the value of the property destroyed by the fire? Answer — $1,750.

8.Did the plaintiff furnish proof of loss in compliance with the conditions of the policy? Answer — Yes.

9. Piad a store-house located on the same land, and near the same site, been burned within three years next before the plaintiff Is application? Answer — Yes.

10. If so, and it was insured, by what company and for whose benefit was the insurance effected? Answer — By the Virginia Fire and Marine Insurance Company and for the benefit of W. E. Dupree.

In pursuance of these findings, judgment was rendered for the plaintiff, and the defendant appealed.

*421 The exceptions, thirty-six in number, to which is added another in the brief for the appellant, not found in the record, were taken during the various stages of the trial up to the final judgment, to rulings of the judge in the reception of evidence objected to — in the rejection of evidence offered by the appellant — in the framing of issues — in the refusal to give instructions asked — in the giving of such as are shown in the charge, and in other matters appearing in the transcript. These exceptions will be considered seriatim in the order of their enumeration.

(1) The defendant’s counsel moved for a continuance on account of the absence of a witness, the grounds for which were deemed insufficient by the court, and for this reason, as also in the exercise of a judicial discretion, the motion was denied. If repeated and uniform rulings that the granting or refusing a continuance of a cause is not a subject of appellate review are to have any force, this must be considered as settled. State v. Scott, 80 N. C., 365.

(2) The second exception is to the admission of proof of an application made by the plaintiff the preceding year, to the Virginia Fire and Marine Insurance Company, through the same general agency of Cameron, Hay & Co., by whom the present insurance was effected, upon the same substantial statement of facts in the application as far as pertinent to the controversy, her notification by these agents of the approaching termination of the time of insurance, and renewal solicited, her being supplied by them with a form of application to the defendant company, filled up, returned and polio}' issued, and that the first application was filled up, and the responses made out under the supervision of an agent of that company, sent to make a personal examination of the premises, preparatory to the issue of its policy. We do not see any valid objection to the proof of these facts. It was not offered to connect the defendant with the agent, so that from the relation, the knowledge acquired by the latter is in law to be deemed the knowledge of the principal and thus preclude the defendant from impeaching the plaintiff’s valuations as false and fraudulent, but to show upon what information, in possession of *422 Cameron, Hay & Co., the policy involved in this suit ivas issued and why no further inquiry was considered necessary. An examination which warranted the first, might well be considered, in the absence of any suggested change in the condition or value of the property, sufficient to authorize the issue of the last.

Moreover, the plaintiff sought a re-insurance in the same company, and the substitution of the defendant was the unasked act of the general agency, under an authority conferred and used at the discretion of the agency, and in which the plaintiff, indifferent in the matter, acquiesced. She ought not, therefore, to be placed in a less favorable position than she would be if the same company had re-insured.

The general agents did not, therefore, exclusively rely upon the plaintiff’s estimates, but were in possession also of the information supplied by the personal inspection of the agent of the former company, when they chose to transfer the application to the defendant, and both are in harmony with the plaintiff’s statement in the present case.

The material and important question then and now is, was there an intentional

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.C. 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dupree-v-virginia-home-insurance-co-nc-1885.