Great American Ins. Co. of N.Y. v. Clayton

99 S.W.2d 172, 266 Ky. 409, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 670
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 4, 1936
StatusPublished

This text of 99 S.W.2d 172 (Great American Ins. Co. of N.Y. v. Clayton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Great American Ins. Co. of N.Y. v. Clayton, 99 S.W.2d 172, 266 Ky. 409, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 670 (Ky. 1936).

Opinion

*410 Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming in part and reversing in part.

This is the second appeal of these cases; onr opinion disposing of the first one is reported in 247 Ky. 612, 57 S W. (2d) 467, 469. In it the salient and material facts forming the conditions at the time the policies sued on were obtained are set out and they will not be repeated in this opinion any more than is necessary for its comprehension. We reversed the judgments of the trial court against each of the appellants in that appeal, and in the opinion, after analyzing the facts and adopting the principles of law that we concluded were applicable thereto, said: “We conclude that the court erred in sustaining the plaintiff’s motion for a peremptory instruction and in overruling similar motions made by the defendants.”' That opinion is the law of the case under the same, or substantially the same, facts, and the same conclusions would be compelled now, unless upon the last trial additional material and relevant testimony was introduced to alter the case and render it a submittable one to the jury.

Learned counsel for appellants strenuously insist and argue that no such testimony was heard at the last trial which was had after the filing of the mandate from this court, and at which the same verdicts returned on the former trial were rendered; whilst equally learned counsel for appellee contend to the contrary. Of course, as is usual, other questions are injected into the case and laboriously discussed by both sides, but, if the contention of appellants’ counsel is correct and should be sustained; it becomes unnecessary to even refer to, much less discuss, any of the other questions. Since we have concluded that the argument of appellants’ counsel should be sustained, except as to the Great American Insurance Company of New York, we will proceed at once to demonstrate why we have so concluded, and will then follow the disposition of that question to a determination of the case as to that excepted appellant.

'The two policies, one with the North River Insurance Company and the other with the American Insurance Company (two of the appellants herein) were issued on March 28, 1929, by a local insurance agency located in Pineville, Ky., the partners in which were W. S. Mory, John Matt Pursifull, and C. T. Woolum, operating under the partnership name of “Kentucky In *411 suranee Agency”; whilst the policy in the appellant Great American Insurance Company was issued to take effect on March 31, 1929, and by an agency located in Middlesboro, Ky., near which latter city the insured property was located, but which was some twelve or fifteen miles from Pineville. The occurrences resulting in the situation described in our former opinion happened prior to the application for the two policies issued by the Pineville agency, but the renewal policy of the Great American Insurance Company of New York was actually written and delivered to plaintiff and appellee before then, but not to take effect until the following March 31, when the then existing policy of the same company for the same amount expired. So that the renewal policy was both issued to and received by the insured before the defensive matters herein relied on occurred.

A different situation exists as to the other two appellants, and the way and manner that they became involved is, in substance, this: The insured, because of the conditions described, became alarmed, and he called upon the agency which issued the only policy he was carrying (and which had been renewed to take effect in the future, as we have indicated), for additional insurance which he had been warned and advised to do by his physician associates and friends, as set out in his statement made to the deputy state fire marshal, J. B. Coffee, an exact copy of which appears in our first opinion. He was informed that the agency represented no company that would take the additional insurance that he desired; whereupon he journeyed to Pineville, where he met one Atterbury in the office of the Kentucky Insurance Agency and applied to him for additional insurance; but Atterbury informed him that he represented no company that would issue policies covering the character of risk involved, which were located outside of the city of Pinéville, and directed him to a member of the Kentucky Insurance Agency, Dr. Mory, who occupied an adjoining office in the practice of his profession of chiropractor. The insured, with Atterbury’s assistance, succeeded in having Mory to issue the two policies of North River Insurance Company and the American Insurance Company, both of which his agency represented, but neither of which was represented by Atterbury.

Appellee on the second trial admitted all the facts *412 stated in our first opinion and also testified that: “I took out insurance [meaning the two policies now under consideration] as a precaution,” and that “He [Dr. Hoskins] told me I was liable to get killed or blown up.” His testimony as a whole indisputably demonstrates that he was induced to procure the last two policies because of the created conditions in the mine where he resided and had his office, and the threats that had been made against his propérty and possibly against him, unless he evacuated the premises he was then occupying and relinquished his employment as physician for the miners at work in the mine. To avoid and circumvent the conclusions announced in our first opinion, plaintiff stated at the last trial that, when he approached Atterbury for the additional insurance, “he asked me how I was getting along and I said all right, that I had had a little trouble, and I told him that I wanted more insurance. I just left it up to Mr. Atterbury how much, and I had this insurance policy in my pocket. ’ ’ He also stated that he then said: “You don’t know what is going to happen,” and that, “When I asked for additional insurance I also told Mr. Atterbury when he asked me how I was when I came in. I said I had been having a. little trouble and when I went in with Mr. Atterbury to where Dr. Mory was I said, ‘You don’t know what is going to happen,’ and they wrote me up the $4,000.00 additional insurance,” He never at any time denied the facts contained in the statement he made to the deputy fire marshal, but which he admitted in his testimony given on the last trial. It is therefore insisted that the testimony on the trial now being reviewed met the objection that was made and sustained to the judgment at the first trial, because the agent that issued the policy was informed of the conditions. But we cannot agree therewith, for the plain and manifest reason that the very essence of the danger to the risk was not told to the agent by the insured according to his inserted testimony above. There is a vast difference between a threat to dynamite and destroy property and a statement of “having a little trouble.” It requires no argument to demonsrate that proposition.

Atterbury, Mory, and one Oldfield were introduced at the last trial, none of whom testified at the first one. Besides attempting to prove what occurred at the time of the procuring of the last two policies by Atterbury and Mory, those three witnesses testified as experts to- *413 prove that insurance companies generally would issue policies under the established conditions without hesitation, and that therefore the concealments relied on as a defense were immaterial.

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Related

Great American Insurance Co. of New York v. Clayton
57 S.W.2d 467 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1932)
Federal Fire Insurance Co. v. Harvey Co.
10 S.W.2d 311 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1928)

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Bluebook (online)
99 S.W.2d 172, 266 Ky. 409, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-american-ins-co-of-ny-v-clayton-kyctapphigh-1936.