Kemmer v. Sunshine Mutual Insurance

57 N.W.2d 856, 79 N.D. 518, 1953 N.D. LEXIS 58
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1953
DocketFile 7351
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 57 N.W.2d 856 (Kemmer v. Sunshine Mutual Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kemmer v. Sunshine Mutual Insurance, 57 N.W.2d 856, 79 N.D. 518, 1953 N.D. LEXIS 58 (N.D. 1953).

Opinion

Grimson, J.

Plaintiff was the owner of a farm located at the edge of Litchville in North Dakota. She lived in a house on that farm of which only the first story had been built. That was a basement story, four feet in the ground and four feet above the ground. The roof was fiat, covered with two layers of heavy roofing on boards plus two or three applications of heavy tar. The house was 32 x 40 ft., containing three bedrooms, a sitting room, kitchen and dining room combined, and a wash room. She had it completely furnished. On July 9, 1948, she took out an insurance policy in the defendant insurance company to protect household goods, personal effects and other personal property located in that house, from loss by fire, lightning, windstorm and hail to the amount of $2000.00. She paid the premiums on that policy. In late October or in November, 1949, she left her home and went to Corpus Christi, Texas. She was there interested in a curio business. She did not return until August 15, 1950. She left all her household goods, furnishings and personal effects in her Litchville home and in good condition. She left .a key to the house with a neighbor “to go and look over the premises and see how things are once in a while.” About June 25, 1950, a severe hailstorm struck the premises, followed by rain which lasted from 30 to 40 minutes. Some 45 to 80 holes were punched in the roofing by the hailstones. Water leaked through the roof and everything in the house became soaked with water. On June 28th a neighbor notified the plaintiff by mail of the damage to her property. She then notified the insurance company and made a claim for damages. She disposed of her business interest at Corpus Christi as soon as she could and return to Litchville on Aug. 15, 1950. The defendant insurance company offered her $67.00 in payment of her damages. The policy was in force at the time of the hailstorm.

*520 This action is brought upon the insurance policy for the damages resulting to her household and personal effects from the hailstorm of June 25, 1950, which she alleges in the complaint amounted to $2000.00. The defendant answers by a general denial, admitting the policy and alleging as an affirmative defense that the provisions of the policy had not been complied with, that plaintiff neglected to use reasonable means to preserve and save the property after the losses complained of and completely abandoned the property. Other allegations in the answer are not sustained by any evidence, and were apparently abandoned.

The case was tried to the jury who found for the plaintiff in the sum of $306.25. The plaintiff made a motion for a new trial which was denied by the court. This appeal is from the order denying that motion.

Both in her notice of appeal and in a separate specification the plaintiff demands a trial de novo in the supreme court. The law does not entitle her to that. Sec 28-2732 NDRC 1943 authorizes a trial de novo on appeal to the supreme court only in cases tried to the court alone.

This court has repeatedly held that a ease tried to the jury is not triable de novo upon appeal to the supreme court. In all cases tried to the jury a review in the supreme court is limited to the errors assigned or apparent on the face of the judgment roll. See Ripplinger v. Otten, 77 ND 531, 44 NW2d 60; First National Bank, Crary v. Bremseth, 60 ND 401, 234 NW 758; Baird v. First National Bank, 60 ND 286, 234 NW 71, and cases cited.

With her notice of motion for a new trial plaintiff filed specifications of error. All those specifications are classified under errors in law occurring at the trial. Some questions relating to the cause of the condition of the household goods on August 15, 1950, were objected to on the ground that no sufficient foundation had been laid and the objection was sustained. We find no reversible error in the rulings of the court on those questions. Two of the questions on which error is assigned -were answered later. Most of those errors are assigned in connection with the ruling of the court that evidence of the value of the household *521 goods on August 15, 1950, some 52 days after the hailstorm-was inadmissible.

The evidence showed that the plaintiff had left the premises before Dec. 1, 1949. The premises had remained vacant thereafter. The plaintiff was allowed to testify that the property then was in good condition, and to its value as of that time. The defendant, however, showed that in the spring of 1950 some water had seeped into that basement. A Mr. Larson with whom she had left the key found water in the basement in early May 1950, more than a foot deep. He had pumped it out. He again found-water in the basement about the 4th of June,.probably five.or six .inches deep. He again pumped it dry. On both occasions he saw the furniture and a trunk standing in- the water. As. to what damage was caused thereby is not shown but the defendant is not liable under its policy for that'damage, if. any. Right after the hailstorm one John Smith examined the property. He then found water in the basement 8 or 8i inches deep. He found the holes in the roofing. He saw furniture in the kitchen and a table with wet covering. He then notified plaintiff by ordinary mail and she again by ordinary mail asked him to get the key and show the insurance adjuster through the' house. Three weeks after the storm the adjuster came and Smith showed him through the house. At that time the water was-all gone. Smith observed the veneer of the piano was loosened up and the veneer of a violin case was -coming apart. A -daybed and a chest of drawers were wet. The chest was made-of three ply quarter inch board, glued together. A'pair of shoes was full of water. A week or ten days after the adjuster was there Mr. Smith, at the request of plaintiff, strung clothes lines in the middle of the living room and hung up to dry some -of the clothes that were in the cabinets, trunk and cedar chest. In a' couple of days he would fold them, lay them on -a table and hangup some more clothes. . He was in the process of thus drying-out the. clothes when plaintiff came back on August 15th.

Plaintiff was allowed to testify as to the condition and value of her. household goods before she left for Corpus Christi in the fall of 1949. That was proper. The property was of a kind that would remain in the same condition under ordinary cir *522 cumstances. State ex rel. McKittrick v. Graves, 346 Mo 990, 144 SW2d 91. While she was not allowed to testify as to its value on her return on August 15, 1950, she was allowed to testify as to its condition at that time and she described some of it as ruined. She said the bedding and clothes were “moldy, blue-gray, rotten” and the veneered material on the furniture was “warped and off, the varnish and paint all off.” The question is as to whether the court, under these conditions shown by the evidence, was in error in ruling out her testimony as to the value of the property on August 15, about 52 days after the hailstorm.

. The policy provided’ that the defendant should not be liable for loss caused by the “neglect of the insured to use all reasonable means to save and preserve the property at or after a loss.” The plaintiff had nothing done to preserve the property for about four weeks after the hailstorm. In the meantime the water on the furniture had dried, some of the effects thereof are shown.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 N.W.2d 856, 79 N.D. 518, 1953 N.D. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kemmer-v-sunshine-mutual-insurance-nd-1953.