Lambert v. New England Fire Insurance

90 A.2d 451, 148 Me. 60, 1952 Me. LEXIS 13
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 24, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 90 A.2d 451 (Lambert v. New England Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lambert v. New England Fire Insurance, 90 A.2d 451, 148 Me. 60, 1952 Me. LEXIS 13 (Me. 1952).

Opinion

*62 Nulty, J.

This action comes before us on exceptions by the plaintiff to the order of a non-suit granted by the court at the October 1951 Term of the Kennebec County Superior Court. The action, by agreement, was tried before the court without a jury with right of exceptions reserved as to matters of law.

The claim is for loss or damage by fire to the plaintiff’s truck under a policy of insurance issued by the predecessor companies of the defendant under what was termed a combination automobile policy which was a policy representing two insurance companies, which companies, according to the admission of the defendant’s attorney, were consolidated into the New England Fire Insurance Company, the defendant in this action.

The plaintiff was the only witness and from his testimony and the documentary exhibits the following facts may be summarized: On April 11, 1949, plaintiff owned a 1944 GMC truck upon which, according to the evidence and to the declarations in the policy, there was no mortgage or other encumbrance. On that day he insured it against fire and other casualties through an authorized agency of the prédecessors of the defendant company. Two days later, on April 13, 1949, plaintiff executed and delivered to Marcoux’s Garage, Inc. an instrument admitted in evidence which, before lines were drawn through the signature, read as follows:

“1500.00 4/13 1949
1 year after date I promise to pay to the order of Marcoux’s Garage, Inc. Fifteen Hundred..... Dollars at 6% this note to cover 1944 GMC Army Truck Motor 270242700 Serial 168901 Value Received
Eddie Lambert”

*63 On the back of said instrument appears proper notation that it was duly recorded in the Town Clerk’s Office, Brooks, Maine, on April 14, 1949, and, likewise on the back thereof is a notation “paid 5/7/51, W. F. Marcoux.”

There is no evidence in the record which gives any indication that the defendant or any agent of the defendant was in any manner advised of the existence of said instrument for a considerable time after the loss which occurred on July 12, 1949, when, according to the evidence, the plaintiff, in endeavoring to avoid a collision with another automobile, pulled his truck off the road where it struck a tree, overturned and caught on fire and was practically a total loss. At the time of the fire said instrument was still in the possession of Marcoux’s Garage, Inc. and the record shows that the plaintiff was indebted on July 12, 1949, to Marcoux’s Garage, Inc. in the sum of $162. The plaintiff promptly notified the agent of the defendant and the next day they visited the scene of the accident and the exhibits duly admitted in evidence show that notice of loss by the plaintiff was sent to the defendant company on the day following the loss. From the record it appears that there was further delay in any adjustment of the loss due to the fact that the Office of the Insurance Commissioner of the State of Maine had indicated to the defendant agent that it was investigating the loss and directed that no adjustment be made until said office gave its consent. Time ran on and finally on January 17, 1951, the attorneys for the plaintiff took the matter up with the insurance agent of the defendant and learned that the Insurance Commissioner’s Office was no longer interested in the matter. The exhibits show there was further correspondence not only with the agent of the defendant but directly with the defendant. These negotiations, however, were of no avail and the instant action was instituted.

From the record it is apparent that the court, in granting *64 the non-suit based its action upon Paragraph (h) of the exclusion provisions of the policy which reads as follows:

. “This policy does not apply;-----(h) under coverages D, E, F, G, H, I, and J while the automobile is subject to any bailment lease, conditional sale, mortgage or other encumbrance not specifically declared and described in this policy;” (Under coverages in the policy, F includes fire.)

The plaintiff, while not admitting that said instrument hereinbefore set forth, executed and delivered on April 13, 1949, is an encumbrance, strenuously argues that Paragraph (h) under exclusions clearly applies only to encumbrances in existence at the time of issuance of the policy and that the words “specifically declared and described in this policy” can refer only to encumbrances in existence at the time of the issuance of the policy. In other words, the plaintiff’s claim is that future encumbrances are not covered and that the plain meaning of the language in the exclusion clause is not susceptible of the meaning placed upon it by the defendant. The defendant, although setting up several other matters of defense in his brief statement filed in the pleadings, stated at the time of argument that it rested its case solely on exclusion clause (h) hereinbefore set forth.

The evidence discloses that the reason that plaintiff gave the instrument dated July 13, 1949, to Marcoux’s Garage, Inc. was because he, plaintiff, was working for a man by the name of Lawler and contemplated terminating his employment. Plaintiff claimed he had information that his employer was going to attach his truck if he tried to terminate his employment and that he felt that if there was a mortgage on the truck it would prevent attachment of it by plaintiff’s employer and that his employer would have to see Mr. Marcoux if it were attached. This explanation by plaintiff is the basis for a strenuous argument by the plain *65 tiff that said instrument given by plaintiff to Marcoux’s Garage, Inc. is not a mortgage or other encumbrance. Plaintiff asserts that said instrument is a note; that it does not convey title and that, therefore, it is not a mortgage. Plaintiff also asserts that it is not a Holmes note or a conditional sale because there never was any title to the truck in Marcoux’s Garage, Inc. and that said instrument was without consideration and, as between the parties as a note, was absolutely void. Defendant asserts that said instrument is an equitable mortgage or, in any event, an encumbrance.

It is apparent from the summary of the facts that the main questions to be determined are whether or not said instrument dated April 13, 1949, given by plaintiff to Marcoux’s Garage, Inc. was a valid encumbrance on the truck, and, if so, did exclusion clause (h) of the insurance policy suspend the operation of the policy and render the policy inapplicable and prevent the plaintiff from recovering his loss under the policy.

Neither party argues that said instrument is a bailment lease or a conditional sale. Is it, then, either a mortgage or other encumbrance ? The word “mortgage” is a broad term and includes both legal and equitable mortgages. According to the text writers a chattel mortgage is defined as an instrument whereby the owner of personal property transfers the title to such property to another as security for the payment of money or the performance of some obligation or contract subject to be defeated on payment of the money or the performance of some obligation or contract. See 10 Am. Jur., Chattel Mortgages, Paragraph 2, Page 715.

We held in Delaval Separator Company v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 A.2d 451, 148 Me. 60, 1952 Me. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lambert-v-new-england-fire-insurance-me-1952.