McCulley v. Cherokee Insurance

359 S.W.2d 561, 49 Tenn. App. 713, 1962 Tenn. App. LEXIS 138
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 27, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 359 S.W.2d 561 (McCulley v. Cherokee Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCulley v. Cherokee Insurance, 359 S.W.2d 561, 49 Tenn. App. 713, 1962 Tenn. App. LEXIS 138 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

COOPER, J.

These five suits, which were consolidated for trial, were brought by the plaintiff seeking to recover for the loss by fire of personal property insured by the [715]*715several defendants. Each defendant, through its agent Romines-Wallace of Sweetwater, Tennessee, issued a policy in the face amount of $3,000.00 insuring the contents of the plaintiff’s warehouse building located near the Dixie-Lee Junction (junction of U. S. Highways 70 and 11) about 5 miles north of Lenoir City, Tennessee. The warehouse and contents were totally destroyed by fire on December 31, 1958.

In his declarations, the plaintiff alleged that he properly notified each defendant of the fire and his loss, and complied with the terms of the policies of insurance, including the furnishing of proof of loss; but that the defendants arbitrarily refused to make payment under the policies. Plaintiff then asked that he be awarded a judgment for the full amount of each policy, with interest and statutory penalty.

The defendants filed identical pleas, as amended, denying liability on the grounds that

(1) plaintiff’s claim of loss was excessive, rendering the policy null and void;

(2) plaintiff had failed to comply with the provision of the policy concerning proof of loss;

(3) plaintiff misrepresented material facts and circumstances following the loss, and deliberately overvalued his loss, breaching the provisions of the policy and rendering it null and void; and

(4) the suit was premature in that the purported proofs of loss did not comply with the provisions of the policy with respect to substantiation of the amount claimed.

[716]*716After Rearing the proof, the court directed a verdict for the defendants on the issue of the statutory penalty and submitted the other issues to the jury. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and awarded damages in the amount of $7500.00. The trial court then entered a judgment against all defendants for the sum total of $7500.00.

The defendants moved for a new trial and a directed verdict on numerous grounds. In sustaining these motions, the trial court stated:

“The plaintiff’s insistence in the beginning was that the value of that merchandise * * * was something over Nineteen Thousand Dollars * * * and he insisted at the trial, in his testimony, that it was even more than that by virtue of his having remembered that he had omitted certain items from his original list submitted, * * *.
“He had been called upon to produce supporting documents in the form of invoices and cancelled checks and he had asserted at one time or another that he had those documents and then later took the position that they were destroyed in the fire, and then he was called upon to produce from the vendors duplicates of the invoices * * *. [H]e did not produce or offer to present to the Court one duplicate invoice or one cancelled check or anything whatever to support his contention as to the value of the destroyed property, notwithstanding the fact that he had previously and repeatedly been called upon to support his claim with such documentary evidence. Notwithstanding the fact that he must have known, as a reasonable man, in view of all that transpired by way [717]*717of discovery depositions and investigations, that the issue, the great 'presiding issue in the trial of his lawsuit, would be his veracity, he did not offer or make any pretense to buttress Ms case or to fortify Ms position by any evidence that was easily available to Mm. * * * [emphasis supplied]
4s5 ^ ^
“Now then one of the grounds of the motion is that the verdict is such as to evince passion, prejudice and unaccountable caprice on the part of the jury. How did the jury arrive at this verdict: It is not as though there were a discrepancy of a few dollars or even of several dollars between the verdict and the plaintiff’s testimony as to his damage * * *. Now there is a wide gulf between those figures, and how do you account for that? How can it be explained upon any reasonable basis ? It was not a matter of reducing the plaintiff’s damages because of any act or omission on his part, such as we have in automobile accident cases, where the question of remote and indirect negligence on the part of the plaintiff is involved * * There is nothing like that involved here, * * *. There is no proof on the defendant’s side that would justify Seventy-Five Hundred Dollars ($7500.00) as a verdict by the jury. The plain fact is that the jury just split each of those policies in half. Now then it is obvious that in so doing, this jury (1) did not believe the plaintiff’s testimony; (2) must have believed that he knowingly and wilfully misrepresented his loss; and (3) that the jury therefore was guilty of unaccountable caprice and prejudice and passion in just splitting those policies in half arbitrarily and [718]*718giving the plaintiff half of the amount of his insurance * * *.
“I have never seen a man on the witness stand who became so hopelessly entangled in falsehoods as that man did, that plaintiff. He evaded every question as long as he could, he squirmed like a worm in hot ashes from the time he got on the witness stand until he got off, and it must have been plain to any seasoned lawyer that he was falsifying over and over and over and over again * * *. He claimed in his original list, submitted under oath, that those items were worth the amounts that he set opposite them, and the proof is that only a matter of days or weeks before the fire, a short period of time at the most, he bought them on the open market for only a fraction of what he claimed their value was. The jury didn’t believe him, that is manifest. I don’t think any other reasonable man could have believed him.
“Now upon this motion for a new trial, the Court sits as the thirteenth juror. The Court had reasons for not sustaining the motions for peremptory instructions at the time; but now, upon this motion for a new trial, in view of what has gone into this record, the Court feels that the plaintiff’s testimony was a fabrication of falsehood and that from the beginning, even up to and including his testimony on the witness stand, he has so callously and so falsely misrepresented material facts that he cannot be allowed to prevail.”

The plaintiff filed motions “to vacate and set aside the directed verdicts and reinstate the verdict of the jury; or, in the alternative, to grant the plaintiff a new trial”.

[719]*719When these motions were overruled, the plaintiff perfected his appeal.

In his assignments of error, the plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in sustaining the defendants ’ motions for a new trial and in directing a verdict for the defendants in that the “issues as joined, and all of the evidence addressed thereto, were matters upon which reasonable minds might differ, and were thus matters peculiarly within the province of the jury. ’ ’

In these cases, it was undisputed that the plaintiff purchased the warehouse in question on October 13, 1958 in order to conduct auto and furniture auction sales. Preparatory to opening for business, the plaintiff purchased a large quantity of furniture, mostly used, and stored it in the concrete block building. The plaintiff also moved furniture from his home in Harrogate, Tennessee.

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Related

State v. Dankworth
919 S.W.2d 52 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 1995)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
359 S.W.2d 561, 49 Tenn. App. 713, 1962 Tenn. App. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcculley-v-cherokee-insurance-tennctapp-1962.