Mercantile Insurance Co. v. Murray

1935 OK 279, 43 P.2d 451, 171 Okla. 597, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 56
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 19, 1935
DocketNo. 22377.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1935 OK 279 (Mercantile Insurance Co. v. Murray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mercantile Insurance Co. v. Murray, 1935 OK 279, 43 P.2d 451, 171 Okla. 597, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 56 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

BUSBY, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court of Jackson county in favor of the defendant in error, as plaintiff, and against the plaintiffs in error, as defendants. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

The plaintiff, M. T. Murray, suffered a fire loss to his shoe store, known as The Bootery, located in Altus, Okla. At the time of the fire the plaintiff carried insurance on the stock of goods in the sum of $15,000, $11,000 of which was carried by the defendants and $4,000 carried by the Aetna Insurance Company.

Soon after the fire, E. A. Thompson, a representative of the Fuller Adjustment Company, called upon the plaintiff, representing the various insurance companies, the defendants herein, and conferred with the ¡plaintiff in an effort to effect a settlement. Shortly thereafter, othor adjusters came for the same purpose. The plaintiff and the adjusters were unable to agree on the value of the salvaged stock of merchandise, and, after some negotiations, the plaintiff and defendants agreed to submit to arbitration the amount of the plaintiff’s loss, and an agreement to that effect was entered into between the plaintiff and the defendants. The terms of the agreement were that plaintiff was to select one arbitrator and the defendants one arbitrator, and the two so selected were to select a third. Two appraisers were agreed upon and named in the written agreement. The plaintiff was awarded damages in the sum of $8,250. The plaintiff refused to abide by the decision of the arbitrators and brought suit against the defendants and the Aetna Insurance Company for their respective amounts of insurance held by each on the plaintiff's stock of merchandise.

The defendants filed their respective answers. A stipulation agreement was entered into consolidating the four causes of action against the defendants into one action for the purpose of trial and appeal, under No. 474. The suit against the Aetna Insurance Company was transferred to the federal court before the trial.

The defendants contended that the plaintiff, having agreed to appraisal and arbitration of the loss and damage and an appraisal having been made, the burden was on the plaintiff to prove the grounds for setting it aside. The plaintiff assumed that burden. The cause was tried to a jury and a verdict rendered in favor of the plaintiff. The jury found the total damages sustained were $14,300. Under the Instructions of the court, the jury apportioned the damages among the several defendants and rendered a judgment against each defendant. Consideration was given to the amount of insurance carried with the Aetna Insurance Company, not a defendant herein.

It will be necessary to consider at some length the grounds alleged in the plaintiff’s petition upon which he asked to have the award set aside.

In paragraphs 7 and 8 of the petition it was alleged that the purported award is invalid and not binding upon the plaintiff for the reasons:

*599 “* * * Tliat plaintiff was induced to enter into said arbitration agreement with the understanding- that the arbitrators to be selected were to be fair, impartial, qualified and competent parties and that said arbitration board was to arrive at the actual cash value of the property at the time of the fire and the value immediately thereafter and arrive at the loss and damage occurring thereby and that he would be given an opportunity to present evidence of his losses before said board of arbitration had completed its work, but plaintiff alleges that the said I. R. Slesnick, so designated by the adjuster for the defendant insurance compan5', was not a competent and disinterested appraiser, as required by the terms of the policy, but that he was a partisan of the company, a special friend of the adjusters, and that he had been employed previously for such purpose and that he was biased and prejudiced against such plaintiff and in favor of said defendant, and that such facts were unknown to the plaintiff at the time of the selection of said appraiser and up to and including the time when said pretended award was made. Plaintiff further alleges that he was not given an opportunity to present his evidence of loss at any time before the appraisers completed their work, and that, although he demanded that he exhibit to said hoard his hooks, inventories, etc., showing the amount of stock that he had on hand at the time of said fire, that said board arbitrarily excused him from their presence and refused to, hear and consider evidence of his loss as he desired to make proof of.

“Plaintiff alleges that he is informed and believes that when he was excluded from the room and building in which said board of arbitration was holding its hearing that the said I. R. Slesnick produced an alleged inventory which he claimed to the other members of said board to be an inventory of the stock of merchandise of the plaintiff at the time of said fire; that the said I. R. Slesnick represented to the members of said board that plaintiff could not be heard nor communicated with during its session; that the said Slesnick represented to the other members of said board that the defendant company and other insurance companies carrying insurance upon said stock had offered plaintiff the sum of $6,350 as damage, but that he would be willing to compromise by allowing plaintiff $8,250, and also represented that plaintiff only had $31,000 worth of insurance.

“(8) That the said Slesnick informed said other members that it was not necessary to arrive at the value of the salvaged stock; that he had had experience in matters of this kind before and that it was immaterial as to what said board might consider the value of such stock of merchandise before said fire and that he induced said other members of said board to sign said award, when in truth and in fact no actual loss was ever agreed upon by said board.

“That said representations of the said Slesnick were false and fraudulent in that the said Slesnick did not-have an inventory of the said stock of merchandise immediately preceding the fire, and the said Slesnick knew that he did not have the same; that said representations to said board that this defendant and other companies had only offered the plaintiff $6,350 was false for the reason that said insurance companies, through the adjuster, had offered this plaintiff $9,000 in settlement of said loss and that said Slesnick knew of such fact, and, the said Slesnick also knew that plaintiff had $15,000 insurance. That the representations of the said Slesnick that this plaintiff was not entitled to introduce evidence as to his loss and damage, and that said board was not permitted to communicate with him was false and fraudulent and known to be so by the said Slesnick and all of such representations were made by the said Slesnick for the purpose of obtaining the signatures of such other members of said board, through such fraud and trickery and in order to defeat, cheat and defraud this plaintiff of his just claim.”

The plaintiff testified that he demanded of the arbitrators that he be allowed to be present when the arbitrators were considering his fire loss and was told it would be all right. The witness testified as follows;

“Q. Did you go in with th&m? A. Yes, I went in the building when they first walked in and stayed a few minutes, and they commenced to discuss some matters there and they wanted to be left to themselves. Q.

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

Related

Massey v. Farmers Insurance Group
837 P.2d 880 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1992)
Craft v. Bates
1962 OK 122 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1962)
Independent - Eastern Torpedo Co. v. Price
1953 OK 74 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1953)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 279, 43 P.2d 451, 171 Okla. 597, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mercantile-insurance-co-v-murray-okla-1935.