Hawkins v. Glens Falls Insurance

177 S.E. 442, 115 W. Va. 618, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 124
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1934
Docket7930
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 177 S.E. 442 (Hawkins v. Glens Falls Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hawkins v. Glens Falls Insurance, 177 S.E. 442, 115 W. Va. 618, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 124 (W. Va. 1934).

Opinion

Kenna, Judge :

S. A. Hawkins and Hattie B. Hawkins, trading and doing business as Hawkins Sundry Company, brought notice of motion on a fire insurance policy issued to them by the defendant, Glens Falls Insurance Company, upon a stock of goods located in a building wherein they did •a drug store business at Davy, McDowell County, West Virginia. A demurrer to the notice was overruled and the defendant pleaded the general issue, filed a special' plea alleging that the insured property had been burned by the policyholders or by one of them, and filed its specifications of defense, setting out several respects in which it contended that conditions and warranties of the policy of insurance had been violated by the policyholders. From a judgment, based upon a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs for $1,012.02, the defendant company prosecutes this writ of error.

The errors relied upon here by the defendant in the trial court are:

(1) That at the trial it proved incendiarism to the degree that all reasonable minds would unite in regarding it established as a fact and therefore that the trial court erred' in refusing a peremptory instruction in behalf of the defendant.

(2) That inasmuch as the plaintiffs filed a proof of *620 loss in which they made oath to a total destruction of the insured property, and inasmuch as the proof at the trial shows that a material and valuable part of the property insured was salvaged, that the insured are shown as a matter of law to have been guilty of a fraudulent breach of the conditions of the policy, and therefore the trial court erred in not giving a peremptory instruction on behalf of the defendant; and

(3) That the trial court erred in the giving of certain instructions bn behalf of the plaintiffs and in refusing to give certain instructions on behalf of the defendant.

The struggle in the trial court was lengthy, tedious and vigorously contested on both sides; each issue of fact was developed and countered to its ultimate ramification. Within the scope of a written opinion, we cannot discuss all of the various matters of fact upon which the decision of the case must, in the main, rest. We simply comment upon those that seem to us controlling.

The place of business operated by the plaintiffs was in a street running parallel with the railroad which lay across the street from plaintiffs’ store. Looking from the railroad towards plaintiffs’ store, to the right is the Sneider-Harris building, and to the left is the building occupied by the Army & Navy store. All three buildings are two-story, and the proof shows that in the building occupied by the plaintiffs’ store, there is an apartment in which his family lived, and that there is a similar apartment over the Army & Navy store in which the Hunt family lived. Both the buildings occupied by plaintiffs and the Army & Navy store are of brick construction. The three buildings do not adjoin, but are separated by spaces apparently about six feet wide, and between the Army & Navy store building and the building occupied by the plaintiffs an outdoor stairway goes up from the sidewalk to a covered landing from which both the apartments are entered.

On the night of Friday, July 30, 1932, fire broke out in the Sneider-Harris building. This fire burned all that night, all of the following day and into Sunday, the day *621 on which the fire broke out about two o’clock in the morning in the plaintiffs’ place of business.

The main circumstances depended upon by the plaintiff in error as showing 'incendiarism are the following:

1. A-conversation had between six and seven o’clock on the evening of the day preceding the fire (which occurred between two and three o’clock in the morning) between Tipton Hawkins, son of the insured, and Katherine Hunt and Gladys Davis, who were at the time residing in the adjoining apartment, in which it is asserted that Tipton Hawkins stated that there would be another fire that night in the drug store building adjoining, "that they had better pack their stuff and get ready to move, and that they would not, the next day, at that place, eat a chicken that they were preparing. When asked how he knew there would be another fire, he allegedly stated he had heard a conversation on the roof of the drug store building immediately before the time at which he was speaking, “that didn’t sound so good”.

Katherine Hunt and Gladys Davis both testified to the statement supposedly made by Tipton Hawkins in this conversation. Tipton Hawkins denied the statements categorically and in detail. It is urged by the plaintiff in error that Tipton Hawkins’ own bare denial should not be accepted as overcoming the superior proof of the defendant on this question. At best, this is a difficult proposal to accept as a matter of law. Since, under the circumstances, the bare denial of Tipton Hawkins appears to have been the only proof available to the defendant in this connection, we cannot escape regarding it as a jury •question.

2. A conversation had by Tipton Hawkins with Carl • Burgess immediately preceding the fire, and the circumstances leading up to that conversation. Burgess testified that he happened by the drug store just a few minutes before the fire, and that Tipton Hawkins at that ■time was standing at the front doorway with a shotgun resting against his chest, holding the main door open with one hand and the screen door open with the other; that while in this position and before discovering the *622 presence of Burgess, Hawkins spoke to someone in the back of the drug store in effect saying, “for God’s sake” for them to hurry before a crowd gathered, to which adjuration by Hawkins the person in the back of the store responded, “O. K., it wont be long now”. Just after this occurred, according to Burgess’ testimony, Clarence Griffith walked out past Hawkins at the front door and spoke to him, Burgess, after which Hawkins pushed him and urged him to leave because something was about to happen he would not wish to witness. Burgess testified that he went home and-within a few minutes, the alarm drew him back to the drug store where the fire was in progress.

Clarence Griffith was produced as a witness for . the defendant in the trial court, but was not asked concerning this circumstance. He totally fails to corroborate the statement of Burgess. Furthermore, the whole of it was unequivocally and emphatically denied by Tipton Hawkins, and several other witnesses who were with Tipton Hawkins on the evening of the fire testified to circumstances that would have rendered it highly improbable, if not impossible, of occurrence. In these circumstances, we cannot fail to believe it was a question for the jury.

3. Clarence Griffith, who was employed at the garage operated by Hunt, another witness for defendant, testified that on the evening of the fire he at one time had sold five gallons of gasoline to Tipton Hawkins and four gallons to Max Cline, and that on each occasion, the gasoline had been taken- away in a container furnished by Griffith; and that on the last occasion, when Hawkins took the gasoline away, Griffith asked him what he was going to do with it, and received a reply indicating the purpose of Hawkins to be the burning of the drug store and the finishing of the burning of the clothing store next door.

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Bluebook (online)
177 S.E. 442, 115 W. Va. 618, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawkins-v-glens-falls-insurance-wva-1934.