Liverpool & London & Globe Ins. Co. v. Jones

197 S.W. 736, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 843
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 28, 1917
DocketNo. 134.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 197 S.W. 736 (Liverpool & London & Globe Ins. Co. v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Liverpool & London & Globe Ins. Co. v. Jones, 197 S.W. 736, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 843 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

HIGHTOWEIRi, O. J.

This suit was bro'ught by Roland Jones and C. A. McKnight, composing the firm of Roland Jones & Co., against the Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Company, Limited, to recover $27,-452.25, besides interest, the alleged value of 405 bales of cotton, alleged to have been destroyed at the San Augustine Compress Company’s plant, at San Augustine, Tex., on March 24, 1914, and to have been covered by a blanket policy of insurance issued by the defendant in favor of plaintiffs in the sum of $100,000, covering cotton in bales belonging to the plaintiffs, situate anywhere in the state of Texas.

The defendant filed its answer, admitting the issuance of the policy, and also admitting that some bales of cotton, but not as many as 405 bales, belonging to the plaintiffs, had been destroyed on the date and at the place mentioned in plaintiffs’ petition, and further alleged that by a provision of the policy the loss, if any, due thereunder, was payable to banks having made advances against said cotton, to the extent of such advances, and that defendant had been notified that the First National Bank of San Augustine, the Stone Fort National Bank of Nacog-doches, and the Commercial Guaranty State Bank of Nacogdoches had made advances against said cotton, and prayed that such banks be made parties to the suit. The defendant not only denied that the number of bales destroyed and the value of same were less than claimed, but urged, as a further defense against the entire demand of plaintiffs, breaches of the record warranty clause contained in the policy sued on, and also alleged fraud on the part of plaintiffs in presenting their claim.

Each and all of the above-mentioned banks were made parties defendant, as. prayed by the insurance company, and each filed its answer, setting up the amounts of their respective advances on the cotton destroyed, and prayed for judgment against the defendant insurance company for the same.

Plaintiffs filed their first amended original petition, containing, substantially, all the material allegations made in their original petition, but in the amended petition alleging that the value of the cotton destroyed was $25,979.68.

The defendant insurance company having alleged, in its answer, that the plaintiffs breached one of the warranty clauses contained in said policy relating to the keeping .of a set of books by plaintiffs, and also having alleged fraud on the part of plaintiffs in the presentation of their claim’to defendant, plaintiff's filed a supplemental petition, denying the allegations in defendant’s answer, to the effect that plaintiff's had failed to keep a set of books as contemplated by the policy sued on, and further denying the allegation in said answer that plaintiffs were guilty of fraud in presenting their claim to defendant, and pleaded specifically that the books kept by plaintiffs were such as were contemplated by the terms of said policy, and that there was no breach of warranty in that respect, as claimed by defendant; and plaintiffs further alleged, in this supplemental petition, that if there was, in fact, a breach of any warranty relating to the keeping of such books, that such breach was waived by defendant, and that defendant was estopped to claim any such breach, and praying, in conclusion, for all relief, as prayed for in their amended petition.

Before the trial commenced, it was agreed as between the plaintiffs and said banks, the Stone Fort National Bank of Nacogdoches, the Commercial Guaranty State Bank of Nac-ogdoches, and the First National Bank of San Augustine, that all of the 405 bales of cotton, which, so far as they were concerned, were lost by the fire in question; that the First National Bank of San Augustine furnished the money for the purchase of 298 bales of the cotton destroyed; that of the 405 bales of cotton destroyed, the Commercial Guaranty State Bank of Nacogdoches had furnished the money for the purchase of 53 bales of such cotton; that the Stone Fort National Bank of Nacogdoches had furnished the money for the purchase of 54 bales of such destroyed' cotton, and that each of said banks had a lien upon such cotton to secure the amount of money which each had respectively furnished for the purchase of same; and that, as between the plaintiff's and said banks, the banks were entitled to recover the amount of money set forth in their answers, and if there should be a recovery by the plaintiff's, as against the insurance company, sufficient to liquidate the entire indebtedness of said banks, that each should recover the full amount so furnished by it for the purchase of said cotton, receipts for which each bank, respectively, held; but if there should be a recovery by the plaintiffs against the insurance company for a less sum than would be sufficient to liquidate all of the debt due each bank, that each should recover of the total recovery of plaintiff's in the proportion to the relation that the number of bales held by each should bear to the 405 bales destroyed.

The case was tried with a jury and was submitted upon special issues, and the jury’s answers to such special issues will be hereinafter referred to, in so far as the same are considered material and necessary to a disposition of this appeal.

Upon conclusion of the evidence, the insur- *738 anee company, plaintiff in error liere, requested the court to give to the jury a peremptory instruction in its favor, which request was by the court refused, and the fust assignment of error contained in the brief of plaintiff in error challenges the correctness of the action of the court in. ref using this special instructiofi.

The proposition under this assignment is:

“The undisputed evidence showed that the plaintiffs had violated the record warranty clause of the policy sued on_, in that they failed to keep a s?t of books, showing a complete daily record of all cotton handled, showing among other things the weight and classification of each bale, and all purchases, sales, and shipments, with the identity of each bale, and its location and removal from yards or compresses to other locations, and to produce such books to the defendant after the loss.”

Defendants in error have, in their brief, interposed objections to the consideration by this court of this assignment of error made by plaintiff in error, and claim that the assignment should not be considered by this court, for the reason, as alleged by defendants in error, that plaintiff in error has not complied with rule 31 (142 S. W. xiii), relating to the assignments‘of error in this court, in that said assignment of error and proposition are not followed by such statement of what appears in the record relative to such assignment as is required by said rule. Rule 31 referred to, in so far as applicable here, provides that propositions under assignments of error shall be followed by a brief statement, in substance, of such proceedings, or part thereof, contained in the record, as will be necessary and sufficient to explain and support the proposition, with a reference to the pages of the record; that such statement must be made faithfully, in reference to the whole of that which is in the record having a bearing upon said proposition, upon the professional responsibility of counsel who makes it, and without intermixing with it arguments, reasons, conclusions, or references.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
197 S.W. 736, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liverpool-london-globe-ins-co-v-jones-texapp-1917.