Motors Insurance v. Stanley

115 So. 2d 678, 237 Miss. 681, 1959 Miss. LEXIS 520
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1959
Docket41270
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 115 So. 2d 678 (Motors Insurance v. Stanley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Motors Insurance v. Stanley, 115 So. 2d 678, 237 Miss. 681, 1959 Miss. LEXIS 520 (Mich. 1959).

Opinion

*683 Gillespie, J.

The appellee, Dexter Stanley, filed suit in the circuit court against Motors Insurance Corporation, appellant here, for the recovery of the actual cash value of a 1956 Model GMC truck, and alleged that a valid collision insurance contract had been issued to appellee by appellant, and on November 16, 1957, the truck had been damaged in a collision and was a total loss. Appellee alleged that he purchased the truck from a dealer, David T. Dotson, in 1956. The policy exhibited to the declaration contained a provision excluding coverage if the truck “is or at any time becomes subject to any bailment lease, conditional sale, purchase agreement, mortgage or other encumbrances not specifically declared and described in this policy.”

Appellant’s answer charged that the appellee had no insurable interest in said vehicle and had assigned his interest in the same without the consent of the appellant, thereby violating the terms of the policy. Other defenses raised need not here be stated.

Yellow Manufacturers Acceptance Corporation intervened as a party plaintiff, asserting their claim under a conditional sales contract covering the subject vehicle and there is no issue in this’ appeal in connection with the intervening plaintiff. The case was submitted to the jury and a verdict was returned against appellant for $3500. Of this amount, Yellow Manufacturers Acceptance Corporation was entitled to received $2,271.61, the balance due on the conditional sales contract, and the appellee, Dexter Stanley, the balance of $1,228.39. Motors Insurance Corporation appeals from this judgment.

Appellant assigns as error the refusal of the lower *684 court to grant a new trial. One of the grounds for the motion of the new trial was that the verdict of the jury was against the overwhelming weight of the evidence. Since we think this assignment is well taken, it requires a discussion of the evidence in some detail.

Dexter Stanley, appellee, testified that he has been in the trucking business since 1949, and continued until seven or eight months prior to the date of the trial; and that he bought the GMC truck in question and produced the bill of sale therefor; that at the time he purchased this truck he had two small gravel trucks; that when the truck in question was wrecked, it was being driven by Charles Vance, employee and son-in-law of Mrs. L. M. Stanley; that the truck was kept part of the time at Kelly Stanley’s place under an arrangement with Kelly Stanley, or his wife, Mrs. L. M. Stanley (also known as Mrs. Marie Stanley); that Kelly Stanley paid the driver of the truck, who was Charles Vance. He stated that the arrangements between him and Kelly Stanley in relation to the truck was that whenever he wasn’t around Kelly Stanley or his wife made the payments and they used the truck some and he used it some, and that he, appellee, “got everything made out of it other than what it cost to run it;” that Mrs. L. M. Stanley made the payments and charged it to appellee’s account; that Mrs. Pauline Vance, wife of Charles Vance and daug’hter of Kelly and Mrs. L. M. Stanley, kept the books for Mrs. L. M. Stanley’s business; that the tag for the GMC truck was bought in Mrs. L. M. Stanley’s name but that the money came from appellee’s funds; that he never did sell the truck.

On cross-examination, appellee testified that he had never been in business with Kelly Stanley or Mrs. L. M. Stanley, hut that he had hauled for Mrs. Stanley, and that Kelly and Mrs. L. M. Stanley had owed him money for a long time; that he had paid $500 on the GMC truck, which represented the $500 side note to the *685 Dotson Motor Company, the seller of the truck, but that payments for the truck had been made by Mrs. L. M. Stanley and were charged to him by Mrs. Stanley’s bookkeeper. He said he had two small trucks hauling gravel for Mrs. L. M. Stanley, and they settled with him every month for this work. He admitted talking to the representatives of appellant insurance company some ten days after the GMC truck had been wrecked. A statement was introduced which he admitted signing at the time he talked to the representatives of appellant. In that statement appellee stated:

“I kept the truck about 3 months and I don’t think I paid any notes on the car except the side note. I then traded the truck to my brother Kelly Stanley in Winona for a 55 Chevrolet 2 ton truck and he have paid the payments since then. We never did change names or anything on the truck but just traded between ourselves. The license tag on the 550 GMC is registered in Kelly’s wifes name. No actually I don’t have any interest in the 550 any more as it is Kelly’s since our trade.”

Appellee testified that this statement is not true, but he admitted that he had a conversation with two representatives of appellant after which they wrote this statement out and read it to him in full and he signed it. He did not contend that he was coerced or otherwise induced to sign the statement but he said that he cannot read well and that the reason he signed it was that he thought they were going to replace the truck. He admitted telling the insurance men to settle with Kelly Stanley or Mrs. L. M. Stanley and he admitted knowing that the truck in question was registered in Mrs. L. M. Stanley’s name as the owner. He testified that Kelly Stanley had become bankrupt and the trucking business of Kelly Stanley had been continued in the name of Mrs. L. M. Stanley since the bankruptcy. Appellee stated that he got the profits from the truck in question which *686 was operated by Mrs. L. M. Stanley, but there is no testimony as to any specific item or amount of profit that he received or was entitled to therefrom.

Mrs. Panline Vance is the wife of Charles Vance and the daughter of Kelly Stanley and Mrs. L. M. Stanley. She testified the CMC truck in question belonged to her uncle, Dexter Stanley, the appellee. She said the only interest Mrs. L. M. Stanley had in the truck was “it was leased, I guess you would say it was leased, we just used it, we didn’t have a legal lease drawn up on it.” Mrs. Vance testified that under the lease agreement the cost of operating the truck and the monthly payments were to be paid out of the earnings from the truck and the balance divided between appellee and Mrs. L. M. Stanley. She said that she ran the L. M. Stanley business; and that they had had the GMC truck since about a month after Dexter Stanley purchased it. She said she bought the tag for the truck in her mother’s name but it was Dexter Stanley’s truck; that they bought the tag in Mrs. L. M. Stanley’s name because the job was Mrs. Stanley’s; that Mrs. L. M. Stanley paid the monthly payments of $214 each to the Yellow Manufacturers Acceptance Corporation and kept all the records on the payments. She introduced a ledged account whereon the indebtedness to Yellow Manufacturers Acceptance Corporation was set up as a debit on the books and as each monthly payment was paid, there was a credit entered against this account. She said that Mrs. L. M. Stanley paid Charles Vance for driving the truck for some four or five months prior to the wreck, and that Charles Vance never worked for Dexter Stanley and that Dexter Stanley had no connection with the business of Kelly Stanley or Mrs. L. M. Stanley.

Mrs. Vance testified that Mrs. L. M.

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

Related

First National Bank v. Canal Insurance Co.
328 So. 2d 230 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1976)
Southern County Mutual Insurance Co. v. Davis
506 S.W.2d 742 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1974)
American Fidelity Fire Insurance v. Hancock
186 So. 2d 212 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1966)
Morris v. American Fidelity Fire Insurance
173 So. 2d 618 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1965)
Dorsey Mississippi Sales, Inc. v. Newell
168 So. 2d 645 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1964)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 So. 2d 678, 237 Miss. 681, 1959 Miss. LEXIS 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/motors-insurance-v-stanley-miss-1959.