Home Ins. Co. v. Moore Rawls

117 So. 524, 151 Miss. 189, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 293
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1928
DocketNo. 27193.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 117 So. 524 (Home Ins. Co. v. Moore Rawls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Home Ins. Co. v. Moore Rawls, 117 So. 524, 151 Miss. 189, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 293 (Mich. 1928).

Opinion

*194 McGowen, J.

Appellees, Moore & Rawls, filed their bill in the chancery court of Jones county against the Home Insurance Company, an insurance corporation, upon a fire insurance policy, alleging a loss thereunder by fire of two railroad cars delivered to the Canal Lumber Company on a logging* railroad track at Benmore, Miss., for the plaintiffs; the material part of said policy being as follows: :

“Moore & Rawls,
“Benmore, Mississippi.
“$5,000.00 — On cars delivered to the Canal Lumber Company for the assured by the G. M. & N. Railroad at Benmore, Mississippi, and covers all such cars, while in their possession, or on the sidetrack of the G. M. & N. Railroad, or the Canal Lumber Company’s logging railroad, and for which they are legally liable.
*195 “It is understood and agreed that all matters affecting’ values, depreciation, and repairs in connection with losses on rolling; stock described herein and insured hereby, shall be settled in accordance with the rules of the Master Car • Builders ’ Association.
“Attached to and forming part of policy No. 1255 of the Home Insurance Company of New York, issued at its Laurel, Miss., agency.”

It is alleged that, after the issuance of said policy, and while same was in full force and effect, the Gulf, Mobile & Northern Bailroad Company, being the G., ML & N. B. B. Co., delivered to the Canal Lumber Company two box cars belonging* to said railroad, Nos. 4028 and 4059, and that said cars were in insured’s possession on the logging track of the Canal Lumber 'Company, and that said “cars were placed for complainants, and complainants were bailees of said cars.”

The bill further alleged that prior to the delivery of the two cars there had been destroyed by fire, on said railroad, cars which had been delivered there for the use of complainants, and, after said loss, the railroad company refused to deliver cars on the tracks of said logging railroad unless and until complainants agreed and contracted with the railroad, company to pay it for all cars lost, destroyed, or injured, regardless of the manner or cause of such loss, and the circumstances of negligence surrounding same, and that the railroad company and Moore & Bawls entered into such agreement in order to obtain cars from the railroad company.

The bill further alleges that on March 31, 1924, the cars here insured, while in the complainant’s possession, as a result of fire set out by the locomotives of the logging railroad of the Canal Lumber Company, were destroyed by fire, that Moore &• Bawls knew that the engines of the Canal Lumber Company’s logging railroad were accustomed to throw out sparks, and that there was no guard or protection of said cars on the tracks of said *196 logging railroad against said sparks from the locomotives. The value of one car was one thousand one hundred six dollars and twenty-one cents, and the other one thousand seventy-one dollars and seventy-eig'ht cents.

The bill further alleges that the Gr., M. & N. R-. R. Co. sued Moore & Rawls in the circuit court of Perry county for the value of said, cars, and recovered judgment against Wilson Moore, one of the complainants, in the sum of two thousand one hundred seventy-seven dollars and ninety-nine cents, with interest from date of the loss of the cars. There was no service of process on Rawls, and no judgment. The Canal Lumber Company was also sued in the same action, and filed its pleas, alleging- that it had no interest financially or otherwise, in the cars destroyed by fire. Moore pleaded the general issue to the proceeding against him.

The railroad company dismissed its suit against the Canal Lumber Company, and in the trial of the case in the circuit court a jury was impaneled, verdict rendered for amount sued for, and judgment entered accordingly in favor *of the railroad company against Moore, a member of the firm of Moore & Rawls, for said sum with interest.

The bill prayed for a decree against the insurance company for the sum of two thousand one hundred seventy-seven dollars and ninety-nine cents, with interest, and for general relief.

The insurance company, appellants here, filed a motion to require the complainants to be more specific as to the' allegations in the bill in reference to the contract entered into between the Gr., M. & N. R. R. Co. and Moore & Rawls as to the delivering and placing’ of cars on the logging tracks of the Canal Lumber Company for the use of complainants as bailee, to which the complainants answered, setting up the oral contract entered into between the railroad company and Moore & Rawls in refer- *197 once to the liability of the latter for the destruction or loss and damage to cars, which answer is here set out:

‘£ Complainants answering; the motion of defendant for certain specifications as to the allegations of the bill of complaint, says the contract between complainants and the Gulf, Mobile & Northern Railroad Company with reference to liability for destruction or for loss or for damage to ears placed on the tracks of Canal Lumber Company for the use of complainant was a parol contract; that it resulted from negotiations continuing between the 1st of January, 1924, and the early days of March, 1924; that two cars so delivered to Canal Lumber Company had been destroyed on or about January 1st; that the railroad company refused to make any more deliveries of cars for complainants unless complainants would agree and obligate themselves to pay the railroad company the value of the cars lost or destroyed, or compensate them for the damage done to said cars, while on the Canal Lumber Company tracks; that complainants then and there agreed to pay to the railroad company the value of the cars lost or destroyed, or compensate for any damage, just as is customary in the settlement of such claims among common carrier railroads; that said agreement was concluded and reached just prior to the date of the issuance of the policy sued on, the exact date not being known to complainants; that the Canal Lumber Company had nothing to do with the contract, and its only relation was that of furnishing the track on which the cars delivered by the railroad company were to be moved.”

Thereupon the insurance company interposed its demurrer to the bill, alleging- the insufficiency of the bill on three grounds as follows:

“(1) That by the terms of the contract sued on the loss by fire of the cars in question did not impose upon Moore & Rawls any obligation for which they were ‘legally liable.’ Hence no liability arose as a result of *198 the fire raider the contract sued on by the Home Insurance Company to Moore & Rawls.
“ (2) The contract for reimbursement between Moore & Rawls and the,Gulf, Mobile &

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Bluebook (online)
117 So. 524, 151 Miss. 189, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-ins-co-v-moore-rawls-miss-1928.