Gregory v. Pawtucket Mutual Fire Insurance

193 A. 508, 58 R.I. 434, 112 A.L.R. 1, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 62
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 16, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 193 A. 508 (Gregory v. Pawtucket Mutual Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gregory v. Pawtucket Mutual Fire Insurance, 193 A. 508, 58 R.I. 434, 112 A.L.R. 1, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 62 (R.I. 1937).

Opinion

*435 Moss, J.

This is a suit in equity brought in the superior court by Robert D. Gregory and Old Colony Cooperative Bank against Pawtucket Mutual Fire Insurance Company and Orient Insurance Company, as the insurers under two fire insurance policies for $4500 and $2000 respectively, that covered a two and one-half story frame dwelling house built about 1812 and located on a farm in this state, and which was burned to the ground on January 17, 1934, while these policies were in effect.

The insured were John P. La Fazia and his wife, who together owned both the house and farm at the time of the *436 fire. At that time Old Colony Cooperative Bank held a first mortgage on the property, securing a note of the La Fazias on which they then owed the bank $3493.11; and Joseph Mitola held a second mortgage thereon, securing their note on which they then owed him $4350. The interests of both of these mortgagees in the property were also covered by both of the two policies. Before the suit was brought the claims of Mitola and the La Fazias to recover on the policies were assigned to Gregory, who joined in the suit as assignee of these two claims.

The policies were in the Rhode Island standard form and contained provisions for the determination by appraisal of any loss covered thereby. In accordance with these provisions, the owners and mortgagees, on May 16, 1934, entered into a written agreement with the respondent corporations for an appraisal, by items, of the sound value of the property and the amount of loss or damage directly caused thereto by' the fire, “according to the actual cash value of said property at the time of the occurence of said loss or damage, with proper deductions for depreciation”; and appointed John Turgeon and Robert T. Collinge as appraisers, the former being the choice of the owners and mortgagees and the latter of the respondent corporations. In the same agreement it was provided that the appraisers should first select an umpire to whom should be submitted only any differences between the appraisers, if they should fail to agree. The appraisers accordingly appointed Henry Evans as umpire.

The appraisers failed to agree in their appraisals, disagreeing as to nearly all the items. Their differences were then submitted to the umpire, who made some investigations, and some conferences were held. It proving impossible to get an agreement of all three of them, Collinge and Evans, on November 13, 1934, signed and' delivered an appraisal or award, in which a depreciation of 50% was allowed; the net sound value of the insured property affected by the fire was fixed at $5055.07; and the net loss and damage at $4651.07. The complainants refused to abide by this award *437 and made a demand, which the respondents refused, for new appraisal proceedings and award.

On January 16, 1935, these complainants, to come within the time limit stated in the policies, brought, several actions at law in the superior court against the present respondents, upon the policies involved in this suit, to recover for the loss and damage to the insured property. On the same day the present suit was brought by a bill of complaint, in which, in substance, the facts above stated were set forth and some other alleged facts with which we are not now concerned. The complainants also alleged therein that the appraisal proceedings were irregular and improper and the award unjust and grossly inadequate and that the appraisal and award were inoperative and void, specifying, among other reasons for this last allegation, that the appraisers and umpire did not give the complainants or the insured or Joseph Mitola any notice of the appraisal proceedings or any opportunity to present evidence or otherwise to be heard upon the question of the amount of the loss or damage, either before or after the intervention of the umpire; that the appraisers and umpire acted on very inadequate and incorrect information as to the destroyed premises, and allowed a grossly excessive depreciation, based upon incorrect, incomplete and hearsay information, and ignored certain items of loss and damage.

The special relief sought by the complainants is set forth in the bill as being “that the rights, of the parties hereto in respect to the liability of said respondents to said complainants under and by virtue of said insurance policies as hereinbefore set forth be determined, and that the appraisal and pretended award, hereinbefore referred to, be vacated, set aside and annulled, and be declared to be inoperative and void and not to constitute a bar to the ascertainment of the full amount of said loss and damage;. that the parties hereto be temporarily and permanently enjoined from the further prosecution of the actions at law specified.”

The ease was heard by a justice of the superior court *438 on bill, answer, replication, and agreed statement of certain facts, and evidence. Testimony was introduced to show how the appraisers and the umpire proceeded and what information they had, in arriving at their figures of loss and damage, as to the plan, dimensions and construction of the house just before it was destroyed and as to improvements and fixtures which it then contained, so as to determine the cost of its reproduction; and as to its soundness of structure and condition of repair at that time, so as to determine the depreciation to be deducted from the cost of reproduction in arriving at its “sound value”, and to show how they obtained that information.

There was also introduced at the hearing much testimony by persons who had occupied the house or had examined it a short time before the fire, as to its general plan and construction, as to repairs recently made upon it and improvements and fixtures added to it, and otherwise as to its soundness and general state of repair. There was likewise introduced on both sides much testimony, by experts on building construction, as to the cost of constructing a new house of substantially the same plan and dimensions and otherwise substantially the same as the one destroyed, except that it would be constructed of modern materials and with modern methods of construction; and also as to the allowance to be made for materials salvaged, in estimating such cost; and as to the depreciation to be deducted from such cost of reproduction in order to determine the loss and damage. The experts for the respondents were the umpire, the appraiser who had signed the award, and one other expert. During the hearing, so far as the record before us shows, the question was not raised by anybody whether the justice, if he held the appraisal and award to be invalid, should proceed to determine, from the evidence introduced' at this hearing, the loss and damage caused by the fire.

After the hearing the justice filed a decision, in which he found, in substance, that before the award was made, the *439

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Bluebook (online)
193 A. 508, 58 R.I. 434, 112 A.L.R. 1, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregory-v-pawtucket-mutual-fire-insurance-ri-1937.