East Texas Fire Insurance v. Kempner

34 S.W. 393, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 533, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 228
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 28, 1896
DocketNo. 1447.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 34 S.W. 393 (East Texas Fire Insurance v. Kempner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
East Texas Fire Insurance v. Kempner, 34 S.W. 393, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 533, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 228 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

FISHER, Chief Justice.

This suit was originally instituted by H. Kempner to recover on a fire insurance policy issued by the East Texas Fire Insurance Company on a store house in Giddings, Texas, which was destroyed by fire on the 8th of November, 1891.. Pending the suit H. Kempner died, and his surviving wife, Mrs. Eliza Kempner, made herself a party and prosecuted the suit to judgment.

The insurance company interposed the following special defenses:

1. That the policy was void on account of a change of occupancy of the building insured, without the knowledge or consent of the company.

2. That the policy was void, because after the issuance thereof there was an increase of the risk by the change in the occupancy of the building.

3. That the policy was void under the terms and conditions thereof, because the building became vacant and unoccupied for the purposes indicated in the contract of insurance.

A trial was held before the judge without the intervention of a jury. Judgment was rendered for the plaintiff for the full amount of the policy.

We find the following facts: November 12, 1890, the appellant insurance company issued its policy to H. Kempner, insuring the building described in the policy against loss by fire for two thousand dollars; the policy to expire November 12, 1891. H. Kempner was the owner of the property at the time it was insured and at the time it was destroyed by fire, which was on the night of November-8, 1891. After the destruction of the property all notices and proof of loss were given to appellant as the policy required, and the property so destroyed was of value sufficient to cover the amount of insurance.

On a slip partly printed and partly in writing attached to the policy— but what part is in writing and what part is printed is not shown — it is stated that the property insured is a “two story brick building with metal roof, and its additions, adjoining and communicating, including foundation, while occupied for the following purposes: saddlery and printing office, situated on lots 1 and 2, block No. 12, Giddings, Texas.”

The policy contains printed conditions as follows: “Article 2. This policy shall become void unless consent in writing is endorsed by the *538 company hereon in each of the following instances, viz.: Section 3. If the risk be increased by any change in the occupation of the building or premises herein described or by the erection or occupation of adja-' cent buildings, or by any means whatever within the knowledge of the assured. Section 4. It is a rule of this company not to insure any vacant or unoccupied building, and if any building herein described be or become vacant or unoccupied for the purposes indicated in this contract, without the consent of the company endorsed thereon, this policy shall at once become null and void, and any unearned premium on the same will be refunded to the assured on surrender of this policy.”

No consent as above required was given by appellant. The policy also stipulated that it was understood and agreed by and between the company and the assured that the policy was issued and accepted upon the terms and conditions therein stated, together with such clause and conditions, whether written or printed, as shall be attached to or contained in this policy, all of which are declared to be parts of the contract of insurance, and that said clause, terms and conditions cannot be waived or altered by any agent of the company.

H. Kenrpner died while this suit was pending and his wife, the plaintiff herein, first having qualified as administratrix of the community estate, prosecutes this suit.

The building in question at the time of the policy was issued, Nov. 12, 1890, was occupied by J. D. Northrup, the lower floor as a saddlery and hardware store and the upper floor as a printing office. It continued to be so occupied until February, 1891, when J. D. Northrup sold out the saddlery stock and a part of the hardware stock to E. Saetler. A part of the hardware was not sold, and it remained in the store with Saetler’s consent as the property of J. D. Northrup. Saetler continued the same business for a short time and made an assignment of the saddlery stock to one Geo. Seay, who, as assignee, sold the stock out, he. at the time occupying the store room as his office, he being a justice of the peace. The assignee sold the last of the saddlery stock a few days before Kirschner moved into the store, but he continued to occupy the lower floor as his justice of the peace office until after Kirschner moved in and after the printing office was moved out. When Saetler failed he assigned his hardware stock to one R. H. Northrup, who kept said stock in the insured building and sold it as he could, at the same time he had in his control in the building the hardware stock remaining unsold that belonged to J. D. Northrup.

J. W. Northrup occupied the upper story as a printing office until about the middle of August, 1891, when he moved out, so that Paul Kirschner could move into the building, which had previously been rented to him by J. D. Northrup. J. W. Northrup moved out the printing establishment of J. D. Northrup on Saturday, and on the following Monday Kirschner took possession of the building, cleaned it up, and on the following Tuesday moved in a stock of furniture, and it was so occupied up to the fire that destroyed the building, with the *539 addition that in October, 1891, a portion of the store room was used by one Jones as a restaurant and using therein a gasoline stove for cooking.

A part of the hardware that belonged to J. D. Eorthrup, which was in the store when he sold to Saetler, was permitted by the consent of Kirschner to remain in the building, and was, by J. D. Eorthrup, put in charge of his father, who sold said hardware as opportunity offered. Eorthrup when he sold out to Saetler moved to Houston, Texas.

That after Geo. Seay, the assignee of the saddlery stock of Saetler, sold it out, E. H. Eorthrup, as assignee of the Saetler hardware stock, still occupied the building and kept therein the unsold stock, and also, kept therein the goods belonging to J. D. Eorthrup remaining unsold; that while he did not in person remain all day long in the store every day he was there every day, selling and trying to sell the goods, and while not there, J. W. Eorthrup, in charge of the printing office upstairs, was duly authorized to price and sell the goods to customers. That during business hours one of the doors to store room below in front stood habitually open, and frequently more than one of the doors were open. That, in this way said E. H. Eorthrup occupied the building until after Kirschner had moved in and had moved his stock in, and that he moved out the Saetler hardware stock unsold after Kirschner had moved in,, at Kirschner’s request. The unsold hardware stock belonging to J. D. Eorthrup, with the consent of Kirschner, he still kept in the building, and a lot of the same, consisting of several cane mills, a number of cultivators, a lot of belting and shelf goods, remained there until the fire and were burned up, when the building was burned. It was shown that the building had been rented to Kirschner by J. D. Eorthrup before either the printing establishment or the hardware and saddlery business had moved out, and that the removal of the printing business was hurried up at the instance of Kirschner.

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Bluebook (online)
34 S.W. 393, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 533, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-texas-fire-insurance-v-kempner-texapp-1896.