Hanover Fire Ins. Co. v. Wood

104 So. 224, 213 Ala. 132, 39 A.L.R. 1436, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 184
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 28, 1925
Docket6 Div. 120.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 104 So. 224 (Hanover Fire Ins. Co. v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanover Fire Ins. Co. v. Wood, 104 So. 224, 213 Ala. 132, 39 A.L.R. 1436, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 184 (Ala. 1925).

Opinion

SAYRE, J.

Appellee had judgment against appellant in an action on a policy of fire insurance. Appellee was a merchant, and the policy covered his stock of goods and store fixtures. The policy contained the following, covenants:

“The following covenant and warranty is hereby made a part of this policy:

“First. The assured will take a complete itemized inventory of stock on hand at least once in each calendar year, and unless such inventory has been taken, within twelve calendar months prior to the date of this policy, one shall be taken in detail within 30 days of issuance of this policy, or this policy shall be null and void from such date, and upon demand of the assured the unearned premium from such date shall be returned.
“Second. The assured shall keep a set of books, which shall clearly and plainly present a .complete record of business transacted, including all purchases, sales, and shipments, both for cash and credit, from date of inventory, as provided for in first section of this clause, and during the continuance of this policy.
“Third. The assured will keep such books and inventory, and also the last preceding inventory, if such has been taken, securely locked in a fire proof safe at night, and at all times when the building mentioned in this policy is no [not] actually open for business; or, failing in this, the assured will keep such books and inventories in some place not exposed to fire which would destroy the aforesaid building.
“In the event of failure to produce such set of books and inventories for the inspection of this company, this policy shall become null and void, .and such failure shall constitute a perpetual bar to any recovery thereon.”

The main insistence for appellant is that appellee breached the covenant, supra, in that he failed to keep a set of books which clearly and plainly presented a complete record of the business transacted by him, and upon this is based the argument for a reversal on the first assignment of error, *134 which is that the trial, court erred in refusing appellant’s request for the general affirmative charge.

This question depends upon the testimony of appellee, all such records as he kept having been wholly destroyed by the fire. As to the facts involved, he was examined at considerable length, but his account of what he did in the way of keeping a record of the transactions of his business may be fairly stated as follows: He used the “MeCaskey system” in keeping a record of his transactions with credit customers. ' According to this system there was an arrangement of compartments, one for each customer — in appellee’s case 600 of them, though appellee had not that number of credit customers— with a cash drawer and a cashier’s window in the, midst. There was also an arrangement of 'drawers below to which old accounts were transferred. “This MeCaskey register was 6 feet long, about 2% high, but the little register” — meaning, as we understand, the arrangement of drawers below— “where you keep your accounts, 2 feet long and 2 feet high.” “It was a regular chart of your daily business by cards, and there were bottom drawers for those, and there was a daily business, a weekly business, and a monthly business drawer. That was the only books I had, except my ledger and daybook. I kept all of my purchases in the daybook, and received on accounts also in that book, and I transferred them at the end of the week to the register.. I used the ledger for purchases and sales, and then the MeCaskey system for my customers; just for my daily credit business.” At the end of each day’s business the total of credit sales would be noted on a daily report sheet which was kept in the register. In the same manner, memoranda showing payments by credit customers were kept in the register. We understand appellee’s testimony to intend that, at the end of each credit period, weekly, or monthly — or even daily, if he gave credits for a day only — the loose slips were taken from the register and deposited in the little register, or drawers below. Merely the totals were noted on appellee’s so-called ledger. Appellee kept a, daybook and a ledger. He used the ledger “for purchases and sales” — you might say si summary on a ledger of my imrchases and sales. “At the end of the week I would transfer them to this ledger.” Purchases of country produce and expenses were noted on the daybook. Appellee testified:

“I got an invoice for every article that I bought from a jobber, and I would put that in the ledger the number of the invoice, the date, from whom I bought it, and the amount. I would then file the invoices on a file after doing that, for future reference, so I could go back through my books. The book for those invoices was kept under my desk. * * * When I sold goods for cash, I would register that on the cash register, and if I sold on a credit, I did as I have detailed with the MeCaskey register.”

Appellee also testified that he took an inventory of his stock of goods according to contract. The fire which destroyed appellee’s stock of goods' and fixtures occurred . aftér the store had been closed for the night.

By the great weight of authority the warranties — or conditions subsequent, as we had better describe them in view of the very general rule of the courts to construe them liberally — are held to be perfectly reasonable and binding upon the assured. This court has distinctly and repeatedly announced its concurrence in this propositibn. Georgia Home Ins. Co. v. Allen, 128 Ala. 451, 30 So. 537; Day v. Home Ins. Co., 177 Ala. 607, 58 So. 549, 40 L. R. A. (N. S.) 652; Insurance Co. v. Williams, 200 Ala. 681, 77 So. 159, where other cases are cited; 26 C. J. 250, note 57; Cooley’s Ins. Briefs, 1814. It may be well also to advert to the doctrine that:

“There is no authority in the courts, on the supposition that the purposes which the parties intended to secure may have been unnecessary or as well secured by other means to disregard the valid requirements and conditions of such contracts, or to • construct by implication or otherwise, a new agreement in place of that deliberately made by the parties.” Dwight v. Insurance Co., 103 N. Y. 346, 8 N. E. 654, 57 Am. Rep. 729; Day v. Home Ins. Co., supra.

However, as the result of the rule of liberal interpretation in favor of the assured, it is by this court, and very generally, held that substantial compliance with the requirements of the policy in this regard is sufficient; but “the books must show with reasonable certainty a complete record of the insured’s business transactions, including purchases and sales for cash or credit-” Insurance Co. v. Williams, supra. “No particular mode of keeping books is required if the amount and value of the goods destroyed may be ascertained therefrom with reasonable certainty by a person of ordinary intelligence, with the assistance of those who understand the system with which the books are kept, but otherwise unaided by parol.” 26 C. J. 254, citing Home Ins. Co. v. Williams, 237 F. 171, 150 C. C. A. 317; Fire Association of Philadelphia v. Williams, 200 Ala. 688, 77 So. 166; Insurance Co. v. Williams, 200 Ala. 681, 77 So. 159; Fidelity-Phoenix Ins. Co. v. Williams, 200 Ala. 678, 77 So. 156. The law requires no particular form of bookkeeping; but it

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Bluebook (online)
104 So. 224, 213 Ala. 132, 39 A.L.R. 1436, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanover-fire-ins-co-v-wood-ala-1925.