McMillan & Son v. Insurance Co. of North America

58 S.E. 1020, 78 S.C. 433, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 236
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 2, 1907
Docket6700
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 58 S.E. 1020 (McMillan & Son v. Insurance Co. of North America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McMillan & Son v. Insurance Co. of North America, 58 S.E. 1020, 78 S.C. 433, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 236 (S.C. 1907).

Opinions

November 2, 1907. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The plaintiffs, in the first named case, recovered judgment against defendant for $1,745.29 on a policy of insurance issued February 9, 1903, on a stock of general merchandise, furniture and fixtures at Mullins, S.C. which was destroyed by fire December 27, 1903; and in the second named case recovered judgment against defendants for $1,734.00 on a policy of insurance issued September 4, 1903, on the same stock of general merchandise at Mullins, S.C. destroyed by fire as stated.

These cases were heard together in this Court, as they involved substantially the same facts and are controlled by the same principles of law.

The main controversy on the trial and on the appeal relates to the question whether the policies were forfeited *Page 436 by failure to comply with the "iron safe clause." This clause provides that the assured shall take a complete itemized inventory of the stock once a year, keep a set of books which shall clearly and fully present a complete record of the business transacted, including all purchases, sales and shipments, both for cash and credit, from date of inventory and during the continuance of this policy, and will keep such books and inventory securely locked in a fire-proof safe at night and at all times when the building mentioned in the policy is not actually open for business; or, failing in this, the assured will keep such books and inventory in some place not exposed to a fire which would destroy the aforesaid building; further providing, that a failure to provide such set of books and inventory for the inspection of the company shall render the policy null and void and constitute a perpetual bar to any recovery thereon.

The assured kept an iron safe in their store room, and kept a set of books, consisting of an inventory book showing inventory taken January 5, 1903, an invoice book, a journal, cash book and ledger. Account of cash sales from January 5, 1903, to August 17, 1903, was kept in one book. This book being filled, they entered cash sales in the journal from August 17th to September 9th, and thereafter to the time of the fire in a separate book. The defendant concedes that all the books were delivered to it after the fire, except the book showing cash sales from January 5th to August 17th. The failure to deliver this book is the point relied on as in violation of the iron safe clause. The plaintiff, Joseph A. McMillan, managing partner, and the clerk, John McMillan, testified that the last time they saw this book it was in the safe where it was usually kept. Joseph McMillan testified that after the fire the books were taken from the safe and deposited in the Bank of Mullins, and were delivered to the adjuster of defendant on December 31, 1903; that until the adjuster called his attention to the absence of entry of cash sales from January 5th to August *Page 437 17th he thought he had delivered all the books to the adjuster. A.L. DeRossett, the adjuster, testified that no such cash book was ever delivered to him; that Joseph A. McMillan told him that it was destroyed in the fire, and gave him an affidavit to that effect on February 20, 1903, which was introduced in evidence. Thus an issue was raised for the jury as to whether such cash book was ever in the hands of the adjuster. On this point the Court charged, in effect, that if plaintiff did have a complete set of books and turned them over to the adjuster, that was a compliance with the policy. It is contended that there was error in this charge, as there was no evidence on such issue. The charge was correct, as a matter of course, and as there was some evidence tending to show that the book was not in use at the time of the fire, and was last seen in the safe where it was usually kept by those in charge of it, and that the books in the safe after the fire were delivered to the adjuster, it was for the jury to say whether the book was delivered to the adjuster or was destroyed in the fire.

In this connection, it is relevant to notice the exception which complains that the Court erred in charging: "If you find from the evidence that the books were actually kept and securely locked in an iron safe, then the law raises the presumption that having once been in the safe they continued there, unless it be shown that they were taken out, on the general rule that where any state of facts is shown to be in existence, the law presumes that that state of facts continues until it is shown that it has been changed." As it is manifest that an inanimate object like a book would remain in an iron safe where it was securely locked until removed by some agency, we fail to see how the charge could be prejudicial to appellant. Under this charge, if the jury should accept the adjuster's statement that the cash book in question was not delivered to him by McMillan, and should accept McMillan's statement that he delivered to the adjuster all the books found in the safe after the fire, then the inevitable inference would *Page 438 be that the book was not in the safe at the time of the fire. But, on the other hand, if the jury should accept the statement of the McMillans that the book was last seen by them in the safe before the fire, and there is nothing in the circumstances to indicate removal by accident or design before the fire, then the necessary inference would be that the book was in the safe at the time of the fire; and if nothing in the safe was destroyed by the fire, and if McMillan delivered to the adjuster all the books in the safe after the fire, the inference would be that the cash book was delivered to the adjuster. The statement of Joseph McMillan to the adjuster during the negotiations for a settlement, that the book was destroyed in the fire, and his affidavit to that effect on February 20th, drawn by the adjuster, may have been regarded by the jury as the mere expression of McMillan's opinion or belief that such was the only way he could account for the absence of the book if he did not deliver it to the adjuster, for at folio 227 of the Brief, on the trial of the second named case above, the adjuster testified that McMillan said, "He presumed the book got burned." But if the statement of McMillan to the adjuster was meant to convey the idea that he actually knew that the book was destroyed in the fire while out of the safe, still it was for the jury to decide between the truth of that statement and his positive testimony on the stand that he last saw the book in the safe.

In the first named case the Court, in part, instructed the jury: "If you find that they substantially complied with that provision, so that the defendant has not been either defrauded or put to any disadvantage in its efforts to ascertain the truth in reference to the character and condition of the property at the time of the fire, and should find that the plaintiffs acted in good faith, even though there might accidentally by some possibility have been a defect and some book and paper was missing, not by plaintiff's design, but as the result of accident; and yet that the plaintiffs furnished to the defendant all the evidence and *Page 439

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 S.E. 1020, 78 S.C. 433, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmillan-son-v-insurance-co-of-north-america-sc-1907.