Murdaugh v. Traders & Mechanics Ins. Co.

62 S.E.2d 723, 218 S.C. 299, 1950 S.C. LEXIS 78
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 28, 1950
Docket16437
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 62 S.E.2d 723 (Murdaugh v. Traders & Mechanics Ins. Co.) 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
Murdaugh v. Traders & Mechanics Ins. Co., 62 S.E.2d 723, 218 S.C. 299, 1950 S.C. LEXIS 78 (S.C. 1950).

Opinion

Lide, Acting Associate Justice.

This action was originally brought by James Murdaugh, as plaintiff, against Traders & Mechanics Insurance Company, as defendant; for the recovery of the amount of a fire insurance policy, with interest, in the Court of Common Pleas for Aiken County, resulting in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the full amount claimed. The case comes before us upon the appeal of the defendant from this judgment. Pending the appeal, the plaintiff, James Murdaugh, died intestate, and the cause was continued in the name of Essie Murdaugh, as administratrix of his estate. However, James Murdaugh will hereinafter generally be referred to as the plaintiff, and the appellant as the defendant or the defendant company.

This case came on for trial before Hon. William H. Grimball, Judge of the Ninth Circuit, then presiding in the Second Circuit, and was by agreement of counsel tried before him, without a jury, upon an agreed statement of *302 the testimony, there being' no substantial dispute as to the facts of the case. And in due course the Presiding Judge filed his decree, dated June 14, 1949, ordering that the plaintiff have judgment against'the defendant in the amount of the policy, to wit, $800.00, “together with interest thereon at the legal rate since the date of the fire, to wit, October 16, 1946, together with the costs of this action”.

The plaintiff, James Murdaugh, was the owner of a certain lot in the City of Aiken upon which his dwelling house was situate; and on the 10th day of April, 1946, the defendant Company, through its Aiken agency known as Lyon-Croft Mutual Insurance Agency (a partnership consisting of two sisters, Mrs. F. Ella Croft and Mrs. Mary C. Lyon) issued the policy of fire insurance in question here to the plaintiff, James Murdaugh. The policy is a standard policy insuring the property of James Murdaugh for the term of one year from April 10, 1946, to April 10, 1947, against all direct loss by fire, etc., the premium of $7.52 being duly paid by the insured; and the policy states the agreed value of the building as being $800.00, and the total agreed insurance allowed on the building likewise as being $800.00. The policy also contained the usual mortgage clause, providing that the loss, if any, on the building, should be payable to F. Ella Croft, the mortgagee. However the mortgages which were held by Mrs. Croft were paid and satisfied prior to the occurrence of the fire hereinafter mentioned.

On or about the first day of August, 1946, the plaintiff, •James Murdaugh, being in need of money, especially because of the illness'of his wife, applied to the First Federal Savings and Loan Association, of Augusta, Georgia, for a loan of $1,500.00, out'of which the mortgages held by Mrs. Croft were to be paid, and were subsequently paid. His application was approved, and on August 5, 1946, he executed a mortgage on his property to the Association in order to secure the sum of $1,500.00. The transaction in behalf of the Association appears to have been handled by Mr. Theo *303 F. Balk, Executive Vice-President arid Treasurer thereof. We quote the following from the testimony of Mr. Balk relating specifically to the insurance on the property:

“At the time the loan was closed Murdaugh also' advised that he had a small insurance policy over his residence with the Eyon-Croft Agency in Aiken. I told him that it would be necessary to carry $1,500.00 insurance over his property and to go to his agency in Aiken and increase his insurance to $1,500.00 for fire and extended coverage insurance, and to bring or send said policy to' the Association.

“On September 18th, since we had heard nothing further from Murdaugh concerning his insurance policy since the time of the closing of his loan, the Association instructed Sanford and Corbitt, Agents for the Monarch Fire Insurance Company, to place a binder for $1,500.00 insurance on the property in order that the Association would be protected in the event of a loss. At this time Sanford and Corbitt were advised that they might possibly not be privileged to write any or all of this insurance in the event that the mortgagor, James Murdaugh, had acquired or had sufficient insurance to protect the Association. The Association requested this binder from the Monarch, Fire Insurance Company on September 18th without consultation with James Murdaugh and without his knowledge that same was being done. The binder was requested solely for the purpose of the protection of the Association(Emphasis added.)

Mr. Balk further says in the course of his testimony:

“From -the time of the closing of Murdaugh’s loan on August 5th to the time that his house was destroyed by fire on'October 16th, 1946, the Association heard nothing from Murdaugh as to what he had done about increasing his insurance over his house, and to my knowledge Murdaugh was not advised and had no knowledge of the fact that we had requested a binder for $1,500.00 with the Monarch Fire Insurance Company”

*304 The plaintiff, pursuant to the directions of the Association through Mr. Balk, called on Mrs. Lyon, of the Lyon-Croft Mutual Insurance Agency, in Aiken, and asked her to increase his policy to $1,500.00 as he was getting a loan from the Association, but she informed him that she could not increase’ the policy (quoting) “as in her opinion my house was not worth any more than $800.00”. And we also quote the following from his testimony:

“After she told me this I went on back to work and didn’t do any more about my insurance until my house was destroyed by fire on the morning of October 16, 1946. On this date my house burned down and my granddaughter was burned up with the house. I went by Mrs. Lyon’s office and told her that my house had burned and asked for payment of the $800.00, which was the amount of the insurance I had with her over the house. Some time later I received a registered letter telling me that Mrs. Lyon’s company refused to pay the amount of the loss and offered to return to me the premium of $7.52 which I had paid.” (But he refused to accept the return of the premium).

We also quote the following from plaintiff’s testimony:

“From, the time my loan was closed on August 5, 1946, to the time my house was burned on October 16, 1946, I did not see, talk, or have any communication of any kind with Mr. Balk or the Association concerning my insurance. I did not advise them that Mrs. Lyon would not increase my insurance from $800.00 to $1,500.00, and neither did I ask or authorize the Association to increase my insurance and I know nothing at all, of my own knowledge, as to. what they might have done concerning more insurance.”

In consequence of what we have just stated this action was commenced on May 17, 1947, by the plaintiff, James Murdaugh, against the defendant, Traders & Mechanics Insurance Company, to recover the full amount of his policy with interest, the complaint being in the usual form. The defendant answered admitting the issuance of the policy, and *305 admitting that in December, 1946, it had advised the plaintiff of its denial of liability on the policy and its refusal to pay the amount of loss, and that it tendered the amount of the premium, $7.52, to the plaintiff, which he had refused.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 S.E.2d 723, 218 S.C. 299, 1950 S.C. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murdaugh-v-traders-mechanics-ins-co-sc-1950.