Employer's Liability Assurance Corp. v. Mid-State Homes, Inc.

467 S.W.2d 386, 250 Ark. 789, 1971 Ark. LEXIS 1331
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 24, 1971
Docket5-5588
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 467 S.W.2d 386 (Employer's Liability Assurance Corp. v. Mid-State Homes, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Employer's Liability Assurance Corp. v. Mid-State Homes, Inc., 467 S.W.2d 386, 250 Ark. 789, 1971 Ark. LEXIS 1331 (Ark. 1971).

Opinion

J. Fred Jones, Justice.

Mid-State Homes, Inc. filed suit against Etheene Peterson in the Lafayette County Chancery Court to foreclose a mortgage on a house previously damaged by fire. The Employer’s Liability Assurance Corporation, Ltd. intervened and paid $2,-647.04 into the registry of the court as the total amount it owed under a fire insurance policy issued to Etheene Peterson.

This is an appeal by The Employer’s Liability Assurance Corporation, Ltd., hereinafter called “Employer’s”, from a decree in favor of Etheene Peterson for the amount of $7,100 plus statutory penalties and attorney’s fee. On appeal to this court Employer’s has designated the following point on which it relies for reversal:

“The court erred in allowing, over appellant’s continuous objection, testimony regarding total loss, the testimony relating to whether or not the insured premises was a total loss at the time of the trial, rather than immediately following the fire.”

The facts, as near as we can determine from the récord, appear as follows: Etheene Peterson owned a lot in the town of Lewisville in Lafayette County, Arkansas, and contracted with the Jim Walter Corporation to construct a residential building on the lot. She paid $500 down on the building and on March 2, 1962,. she executed her promissory note secured by a mortgage to Jim Walter Corporation in the amount of $7,027.20, payable in 144 monthly installments of $48.80 each, commencing oh May 5, 1962. Of this amount $4,095 represented principal balance of the purchase price, and $2,932.20 represented interest over the life of the note. The house was completed within about two or three weeks and Miss Peterson started renting it to her sister for $40 per month. On March 12, 1962, the note and mortgage were assigned to Mid-State Homes, Inc.

On March 30, 1965, Employer’s insured the property against loss by fire under a policy in the face amount of $7,100, with Etheene Peterson as the primary beneficiary and with a loss payable clause in favor of Mid-State Homes, Inc. or its assignee, as their interest might appear. The record is not clear as to insurance on the property prior to 1965 but it appears that there was additional insurance not germane to the issues in this case.

Etheene Peterson collected the rents from her sister and made the regular monthly payments on the mortgage indebtedness until the house was severely damaged by fire on April 6, 1966. All payments were made to Mid-State through June, 1966, but no payments were made on the note after that date. On July 12, 1967, Etheene Peterson signed a proof of loss directed to Employer’s setting out that the actual cash value of the property at the time of the loss was $7,100; that the whole loss and damage amounted to $3,392.68, and that the amount of the claim (apparently because of other insurance) was $2,647.04.

The record is very vague as to the cause for the delays in the collection and payment of the insurance which is the primary subject of this litigation, but it would appear from the overall record that negotiations were going on between Mid-State Homes, Inc. and Jim Walter Corporation on the one side, and Employer’s on the other side, and that Etheene Peterson knew very little about what was going on between the companies. The record indicates that $1,000 or $2,000 in insurance was paid on the fire loss by a company not involved in this litigation, but the record is not clear as to whom the amount was paid, or whether any of it was credited on the note. In any event, according to computation of balance due, filed as exhibit by Mid-State Homes, Inc., Miss Peterson had paid $2,342.40 on the mortgage indebtedness as of July 5, 1966, and still owed as of February 17, 1969, accrued payments in the amount of $1,561.60 and unaccrued principal in the amount of $3,123.20, all of which, together with an insurance premium advanced by Mid-State on July 5, 1965, amounted to a total balance of $4,214.63.

The record indicates that sometime after July 12, 1967, when the proof of loss was signed by Miss Peterson, Employer’s sent its draft in the amount of $2,647.04 to the attorney for Mid-State Homes, Inc. By letter dated September 8, 1967, the draft was returned to Employer’s with demand for additional amount, two paragraphs of the letter being as follows:

"Even though the house was covered by more than one (1) policy, under the Mann case, 196 F. Supp. 604, where a home was covered by two (2) policies, the Court in construing the statute found that the total recoverable is the aggregate of the face value of both policies.
We therefore request that you forward your check for $3,606.87, representing the amount of the mortgagee’s interest in the property, to us as attorneys for Mid-State Homes, Inc., the mortgagee of the property.”1

In any event, Employer’s refused to pay any additional amount above the $2,647.04 indicated in the original proof of loss, and this was the amount they subsequently paid into the registry of the court.

On October 23, 1967, Mid-State Homes, Inc. filed its suit against Etheene Peterson for the amount of $4,006.87 it alleged was due and owing on the aforesaid note and prayed a foreclosure of the mortgage against the property. On November 10, 1967, Etheene Peterson filed her answer admitting nonpayment as alleged and setting up usury as a defense. On December 7, 1967, Employer’s filed its intervention setting out its receipt of proof of loss signed on July 12, 1967, and alleging that it stood ready, willing and able to pay according to the proof of loss and it tendered into the registry of the court the sum of $2,647.04. On January 10, 1968, Etheene Peterson filed an answer to the intervention and a cross-complaint against Employer’s. She admitted that she signed the proof of loss as alleged by Employer’s, but alleged that the actual cash value of the property at the time of the fire was $7,000, and that the total damage because of the fire was $6,000. She alleged that the total amount of insurance in effect on the property was $9,000, $7,000 of which was the obligation of Employer’s. She prayed judgment against Employer’s for 7/9 of $7,000 or $5,444.44, together with interest, penalties and attorney’s fee.

The only testimony offered at the trial was that of Etheene Peterson, Mary Lee Peterson, Casey Jones, Bob Bums, Tom Roberts and Jim Fuller. Etheene Peterson testified that she is unable to read and write except that she is able to sign her name. She testified that she purchased a lot for $550 and had a house erected thereon by Jim Walter Corporation paying $500 down on the house. She testified that the house was completed in two or three weeks and that her sister lived in the house. She testified that the house was damaged by fire on April 6, 1966, and had not been lived in since that date. She admitted the execution of the note and mortgage and that she made no further payments after the one she made in June, 1966. She testified that she reported the fire to the “Jim Walter people” the next morning after the fire occurred, and that some of the “Jim Walter people” came out from Texarkana in about a month. She says that some insurance adjusters came to see her about three months after the fire. She says that the “Jim Walter people” made several trips and that men she thought to be insurance adjusters came with them.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Opinion No.
Arkansas Attorney General Reports, 2001
McCorkle v. Valley Forge Insurance
665 S.W.2d 898 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 1984)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
467 S.W.2d 386, 250 Ark. 789, 1971 Ark. LEXIS 1331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/employers-liability-assurance-corp-v-mid-state-homes-inc-ark-1971.