McClelland v. Greenwich Insurance

107 La. 124
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 15, 1901
DocketNo. 14,026
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 107 La. 124 (McClelland v. Greenwich Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McClelland v. Greenwich Insurance, 107 La. 124 (La. 1901).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Blanchard, J

Plaintiff, E. IT. McClelland, owned a store house and the ground it was situated on, and a stock of goods, wares and merchandise which had been placed in the premises. He was- a country merchant .

He became indebted .to S. Gumbel & Co. for advances made, and, it seems, they, for their own protection and his, took out a policy of insurance against fire, in the name of McClelland, in the sum of $2,500 as follows: $600 on the .building, $200 on the furniture and fixtures, and $1700 on the stock of goods — the policy reading: “loss, if any, payable to S. Gumbel & Go. as interest may appear.”

The store house and its contents were destroyed by fire and the parties failing to agree as to the amount of loss to be paid, this suit was brought by McClelland and Gumbel & Co. as joint plaintifEs.

From a judgment in their favor for $2466.93, defendant prosecutes this appeal. Of the amount awarded, it was decreed that $410.56 be paid to Gumbel & Co. as the extent of their interest in the policy; the remainder to the plaintiff McClelland.

To defendant’s objection that Gumbel & Co. were improperly joined as parties plaintiff, it suffices to say that the policy itself stipu[126]*126lates an interest in it m their favor, and to the extent of that interest it was not improper practice for them to join with McClelland as plaintiffs in the action.

The evidence discloses that defendant company sent an adjuster to the plaintiff McClelland at the scene of the fire, that he took the measurements of the burned building and at his suggestion an architect was employed to make an estimate of the cost of replacing it; also that the adjuster took the plaintiff’s books relating to his mercantile business, the invoices of goods, etc., away with him, went over them carefully, and thus possessed himself of all necessary facts and figures.

Later, the parties met in New Orleans, at the office of the Insurance Agent who had issued the policy, and there the company’s adjuster (the same who had been sent to the scene of the fire) offered plaintiffs $1600 in full settlement of the loss. This was refused, plaintiffs expressing their willingness to accept $1800. The adjuster declined to increase his offer to that sum.

After this, we hardly think the Company is in a position to urge in defense that it is not shown any written notice of the fire, nor preliminary proofs of loss, were delivered to it, as the terms of the policy require.

The evidence sufficiently discloses, we think, the insurable interest of the plaintiff McClelland in the property destroyed by the fire. It is made plain that he owned the store building and its contents, and sufficiently so that he owned the ground upon which the building was located.

The fact that the tax collector had recovered a judgment against McClelland on behalf of the State and the parish, aggregating $220, with penalties and cost, which bad not been paid at the date of the insurance. and which operated as a lien and privilege upon all the movable, and a mortgage on all the immovable, property he owned, and the fact that the laud upon part of which the storehouse was located was still incumbered with a vendor’s privilege to secure part of the original purchase price thereof, did not invalidate the contract of insurance in the absence of a showing mad: by the defense that a particular statement of interest had been required of the insured and he had made fraudulent concealment or misrepresentation of such interest. Richards on Insurance, 2nd Ed.. Sec. 136. p. 143: Sec. 145, p. 155; Wood on Insurance, 2nd Ed., Vol. 1, See. 168, pp. 387-8; Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law. Vol. 7, 1st Ed., p. 1020; Ins. Co. vs. Haven, 95 U. S. 249.

[127]*127With, reference to this, this Court said in Adema vs. Ins. Co., 36 La. Ann. 655:—

But unless the true ownership or interest in the property is required by the conditions of the policy to ,be specifically and particularly and accurately set forth, it will be in general sufficient if the assured has an interest under any status of ownership or possession, in cases where no inquiries are made at the time the application is presented or the policy executed.

It does not appear that any inquiries were made at the time the application for this insurance was presented touching the status of the property as to the interest of the assured therein, or as to liens or mortgages thereon, and we do not construe the conditions of the policy as requiring ownersip or interest in the property insured to be specifically and particularly set forth. The fact that the insured owed debts, which operated as a lien or mortgage on the property, did not take the property out of the category of the “unconditional and sole ownership” requirement of the policy. Richards on Insurance, 2nd Ed., Sec. 143, p. 153.

The morning of the day the fire occurred a deputy sheriff of the Parish visited plaintiff’s store, armed with a writ of fieri facias that had issued on the judgment, which the tax collector had recovered against him, and under authority of this writ announced a seizure of a show case and its contents, one lot of notions, one lot of woolen goods, another of cotton goods, one lot of ginghams, one lot of hats, one hundred and twelve pairs of shoes and eighty-four pieces of calico. The goods thus levied on, it appears, constituted but a comparatively small portion of the stock on hand. The main portion of the stock, and the building and ground upon which it is situated, he did not disturb.

The contention of -the defendant is that what the deputy sheriff thus did rendered void the whole policy, and in support of this cites a clause in the policy to the effect that if any change, other than by the death of the assured, take place in the interest, title or possession of the subject of insurance (except change of occupants, without increase of hazard), whether by legal process or judgment, or by voluntary act of the insured, the entire policy is vitiated.

The contention of the plaintiffs is that to avoid a policy of insurance by reason of seizure made under execution, the seizure must be effectual, and that what the deputy sheriff did evidenced neither in fact or in law a seizure of the goods — that there was no actual taking of possession.

[128]*128The evidence discloses that the deputy sheriff did not take the goods out of the store; he left them there; he did not lock the store and take the key away with him; he did not dispossess the plaintiff McClelland of his occupancy of the store; McClelland continued to occupy it, continued his business as merchant in it, continued to sell from the stock which the deputy -sheriff had not disturbed; no- keeper was appointed to the goods which the sheriff announced he seized — -at least it does not appear that he appointed one; his return on the writ does not so state; the officer seems to have merely set apart certain goods and informed the defendant in execution that he had seized them.

This was not an effectual seizure. There was no actual dispossession of the owner. The levy upon the goods was merely formal. McClelland’s possession was not divested.

In Western Assurance Co. vs. Layer, 14 Ins. Law Journal 552, the sheriff levied on the stock of a manufacturer, and placed a bailiff in charge, who was instructed not to interfere with the business of the concern.

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Bluebook (online)
107 La. 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclelland-v-greenwich-insurance-la-1901.