Hill v. Home Ins. Co.

125 S.W.2d 189, 22 Tenn. App. 635, 1938 Tenn. App. LEXIS 64
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 29, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 125 S.W.2d 189 (Hill v. Home Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. Home Ins. Co., 125 S.W.2d 189, 22 Tenn. App. 635, 1938 Tenn. App. LEXIS 64 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

This is a suit brought in the Chancery Court of Lawrence County, on June 24, 1936, by Mrs. Nora Hill, a resident citizen of Lawrence County, against the Home Insurance Company, a nonresident corporation, and “The Peoples Insurance Agency, doing business in the State of Tennessee with its office in the city of Law-renceburg, Lawrence County, State of Tennessee, and citizens and residents thereof.”

In her bill, complainant stated that, ‘' The Peoples Insurance Agency of the city of Lawreneeburg, Lawrence County, Tennessee, is made a party hereto by reason of being the representative of the Home Insurance Company as its agent in Lawrence County, Tennessee, and for the purpose of the service of process upon said agent as provided by statute; no recovery being sought in dollars and cents against said agency.”

No question arises on the record with respect to the service of process on the defendants named, or either of them, as both of the named defendants appeared and (after their demurrers had been overruled) answered to the merits, and no decree was rendered either for or against The Peoples Insurance Agency; hence there is no occasion for us to give any further consideration to The Peoples Insurance Agency as a party to this cause, although (for some reason not apparent) it appears to have joined in the appeal by which the case was brought to this Court.

Complainant sought by her bill to recover of the defendant the sum of $500, with interest and a statutory penalty, upon a policy of insurance issued by the defendant on November 29, 1933, by which defendant contracted to insure the complainant against the loss of, or damage to, a certain dwelling-house in Lawrence County, Tennessee, by fire, lightning and windstorm, to the amount of $500.

On final hearing, the Chancellor adjudged and decreed that the complainant recover of the defendant, The Home Insurance Company, the sum of $500, with interest from February 12, 1934, and all the costs of the cause; whereupon the defendant brought the case to this Court by appeal and has assigned errors here. As before stated, The Peoples Insurance Agency joined in the appeal, and it has also joined in the assignments of error in this Court; but we are wholly unable to perceive anything in the decree of the Chancery Court that entitles The Peoples Insurance Agency to prosecute an appeal *637 therefrom. When we refer herein to the defendant, or to the appellant, it will be understood that The Home Insurance Company is intended.

Preliminary to the disposition of the assignments of error, certain undisputed facts disclosed by proof predicated on appropriate pleadings will be stated.

The complainant, Mrs. Nora Hill, is a daughter of J. S. Baxter and wife, Martha E. Baxter, and the wife of L. M. (Luther) Hill, all of whom lived near the town of Lawrenceburg during the period covered by the transactions involved in this case. The fire insurance policy on which complainant is suing in this case was issued by defendant on November 29, 1933, pursuant to a written application of date November 21, 1933, to which the name of complainant was signed by her husband, L. M. Hill, who was authorized to act as complainant’s agent for the purposes of such application. An insurance agency, operated by ft. E. Lumpkins under the trade name of "The Peoples Insurance Agency, ’ ’ was the local agent of defendant at Lawrence-burg through whom, and by whom, the application was transmitted to the defendant’s Branch Office in Chicago, Illinois. All applications to defendant for insurance on farm property in the State of Tennessee are handled through defendant’s Branch Office in Chicago.

The dwelling-house which was the subject of the insurance thus applied for and issued, stood on a tract of land containing seventy acres, more or less, situated in the 8th Civil District of Lawrence County, Tennessee, about one and one-half miles from the town of Lawrenceburg.

At the time the aforesaid application for insurance was made, and at the time the policy was issued, complainant was in possession of said land and the building's thereon, claiming to be the owner thereof by virtue of an instrument executed and acknowledged by her father and mother, J. S. Baxter and wife, on March 25, 1920, but which was not delivered until August 29, 1932, on which latter date it was delivered to complainant and was duly registered in the Begister’s Office of Lawrence County. This instrument was, in form, an ordinary deed of conveyance of the aforesaid tract of seventy acres of land, with the usual covenants, except that it contained a reservation by the makers as follows: "This deed is not to be in effect until after our and both of our deaths and we are to have full control off this land to manage as we please and we are to have rent of land as long as either one of us live. Then after both of our deaths this deed is to be in full force and effect. ’ ’

The dwelling-house described in the aforesaid application and policy was destroyed by fire on January 8, 1934.

On February 1, 1934, J. S. Baxter and wife filed a bill in the Chancery Court of Lawrence County against their said daughter, Mrs. *638 Nora Hill (tbe present complainant) and her. husband, L. M. Hill, alleging, in substance, that tbe aforesaid instrument bearing date of March 25, 1920, and executed by them, was intended to be, and was in fact and in law, a testamentary paper and not a deed of conveyance in praesenti, and praying that tbe Court so declare and order tbe instrument surrendered to them.

On February 12, 1934, F. H. Cornell, Manager of defendant’s Branch Office at. Chicago, Illinois, wrote and mailed a letter to tbe complainant, Mrs. Nora Hill, at Lawrenceburg, Tennessee, which letter was received in due course of mail by complainant, and which reads as follows:

• ‘‘You are hereby respectfully notified that The Home Insurance Company denies any and all liability to you under policy C C 45740, for the loss of the dwelling described therein as situate on farm of 70 acres in the 8th Civil District about one and a quarter miles southwest of Lawrenceburg, Lawrence County, Tennessee, said to have been destroyed by fire on Jan. 8, 1934, and further, being advised that you are not the sole and absolute owner of the above described property, said policy is declared null and void and cancelled from date of issue, and tender of the total premium paid $31.70, is hereby made in the form of cheek drawn to your order. If this tender is not ac-i ceptable in the form offered, cash will be substituted on return of the check.
“None of the terms and conditions of your application on which the above policy was issued, or the policy itself, have been or are waived, and all rights of defense which may now or hereafter exist against any claim under said policy, or for or on account of said loss, are specifically reserved.
“You are kindly requested to return the policy in the enclosed stamped and addressed envelope.”

To the letter just quoted complainant replied by letter of date February 17, 1934, as follows:

“I have your letter of February 12th pertaining to the fire loss sustained on January 8th, 1934, upon dwelling located upon property owned by me under a deed from J. S. Baxter et ux upon which dwelling Policy No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 S.W.2d 189, 22 Tenn. App. 635, 1938 Tenn. App. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-home-ins-co-tennctapp-1938.