Lawson v. Southern Fire Insurance

21 P.2d 387, 137 Kan. 591, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 301
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 6, 1933
DocketNo. 31,101
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 21 P.2d 387 (Lawson v. Southern Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawson v. Southern Fire Insurance, 21 P.2d 387, 137 Kan. 591, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 301 (kan 1933).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

These were consolidated actions to recover on two [592]*592insurance policies which covered an airplane hangar near Arkansas City which was destroyed by fire.

Plaintiff, Lee Lawson, owned the hangar; his father, plaintiff Nathaniel Lawson, had a mortgage on it. It had been purchased in Texas from the federal government by the Arkansas City chamber of commerce, transported from Texas, and reerected on leased premises near Arkansas City. It had a capacity to house twelve airplanes, with a work shop and repair annex attached thereto. It was insured in various amounts, aggregating $8,000, by different insurance companies. The insurance contracts of present concern, for $2,000 each, were effected in June, 1930. In consideration for this insurance plaintiff paid $8.80 in cash and gave his promissory note for $200 payable in seventy days. This insurance was negotiated between Lee Lawson and Walter Colvin, local agent and representative of defendant companies. Colvin accepted the note for $200, and it was agreed that he should hold the policies until the note was paid. Any other facts which may require attention will be stated as we proceed.

The hangar was totally destroyed by fire on July 6, 1930. Payment of the insurance was resisted by these defendants, and this action followed.

Plaintiffs’ respective petitions recited pertinent facts on which to predicate prima facie liability. Defendants filed separate answers in which they denied that Lee Lawson was the'owner of the hangar, and denied that he had any insurable interest in it. It was alleged that at the time the inshrance contracts were effected defendants were not aware that the hangar was on leased premises; that they did not know that the hangar was mortgaged by Lee Lawson to Nathaniel Lawson; that Lee Lawson did not perform the obligations to which he was bound by the terms of the policies and in consequence they never became effective.

Defendants’ answers admitted that shortly after the fire their agent was notified of the loss, but that formal proofs thereof had never been made by plaintiffs and that the submission of these had not been waived. It was also alleged that Lee Lawson had misrepresented and overstated the value of the haqgar and that defendants had relied thereon.

Defendants also pleaded certain paragraphs of the policies, which, among other matters, provided that the insurance contracts would be altogether void if the insured had concealed or misrepresented [593]*593any material fact, or if the interest of the assured was other than unconditional and sole ownership, or if the insured building was situated on land not owned by the insured in fee simple. It was also alleged that Lee Lawson’s ownership of the hangar was only conditional; that the Arkansas City chamber of commerce had an interest in it, and that the title and ownership of the hangar was vested in one Thompson, lessor of the aviation field on which the hangar was situated.

Further allegations of the answers were that the premiums on the policies had never been paid; that the policies had never been delivered, and that defendants were not liable thereon.

These actions were begun on August 14, 1931, some thirteen months after the fire. The following day plaintiffs served notice on defendants to take the deposition of Lee Lawson in Arkansas City on August 25, 1931. Counsel for both parties appeared, and Lawson’s deposition was begun and continued until the following day, at which time it was completed.

The action came on for trial on April 22, 1932, before a jury. Lawson’s deposition was read over defendants’ objection. Other oral and documentary evidence was adduced at length by the parties. The jury returned verdicts for plaintiffs for the amounts of the policies in both cases. Motions for a new trial were overruled and judgments entered accordingly.

Defendants appeal, urging various errors which so far as practicable will be noted in the order of their presentation.

1. The first error urged relates to the admission of Lee Lawson’s deposition in evidence. They argue that while our code permits depositions of witnesses to be taken, it does not include parties. Under our practice, however, a party may be a witness, and, therefore, Lawson’s deposition was as regularly taken as if he had no interest in the litigation. (18 C. J. 611; 4 Jones on Evidence, 2d ed., p. 3620; 2 Bancroft’s Code Practice and Remedies, § 1163.) In this case it was peculiarly proper and prudent to take Lee Lawson’s deposition. He followed the dangerous vocation of an aviator; after the destruction of his hangar his vocation had taken him to Mexico for a number of months, and when his deposition was taken he was about to set out for California. Defendants argue that it was unfair to take Lawson’s deposition so quickly after beginning the action when counsel had not had sufficient time to familiarize themselves with the case so as to cross-examine him thoroughly. However, the [594]*594trial did not occur for more than seven months after his deposition was taken, and not during that interval did they discover anything which they might have elicited from Lawson if his deposition had not been taken until some later date. The trial court’s ruling on this point was correct.

2. It is next contended defendants’ demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained. Various points are argued under this assignment, one of which is that by agreement of plaintiff and defendant’s agent, Colvin, the policies were retained by the latter, and were to be thus retained by him until Lawson had paid the note he had given for the balance of the premiums. Defendants argue from this arrangement that the policies were never delivered.

(a) That the instruments never did pass into the possession of plaintiffs was not in dispute; but whether the circumstances under which they were retained by defendants’ agent had the legal effect of no delivery is quite a different proposition. Plaintiffs’ note was accepted for the unpaid balance of the premiums. Defendants’ ' agent had authority to make that arrangement. The policies recited that they became effective according to their tenor on the dates of their execution. In his daily reports the agent had notified the companies of these particular risks he had obligated them to carry. Under such circumstances it was of no importance that there never was any manual delivery of the policies. (26 C. J. 58.) Indeed it has been held that where a contract of insurance is actually made the insured is bound although the contract itself had never been reduced to writing and no policy executed. (Wilson v. Insurance Co., 90 Kan. 355, 357, 358, 133 Pac. 715.)

(b) The next point urged in support of the demurrer to the evidence is based on the policy provisions that they should be void if the interest of the assured was other than unconditional and sole ownership, and likewise void if the assured had concealed or misrepresented any material fact pertaining to the subject of the contract. Answering the last point first, the record does not show that plaintiff Lawson concealed or misrepresented any material fact relating to the subject of this insurance. He advised the agent that the hangar was on leased ground, and the agent so informed his principals in his daily report. Lawson gave the agent his opinion that the value of the hangar was $12,000 or $13,000, and that he understood that it had cost the government $18,000.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Robinson
608 P.2d 1014 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 1980)
Fox v. Wilson
507 P.2d 252 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1973)
State v. Kirk
472 P.2d 237 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1970)
State v. Ireton
392 P.2d 883 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1964)
State v. White
152 P.2d 80 (Utah Supreme Court, 1944)
State v. Inverarity
92 P.2d 45 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1939)
Brenneisen v. Phillips
45 P.2d 867 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1935)
Bagley v. District Court
254 N.W. 26 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 P.2d 387, 137 Kan. 591, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawson-v-southern-fire-insurance-kan-1933.