Mutual Fire Insurance v. Owen

129 A. 214, 148 Md. 257, 1925 Md. LEXIS 28
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 30, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 129 A. 214 (Mutual Fire Insurance v. Owen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mutual Fire Insurance v. Owen, 129 A. 214, 148 Md. 257, 1925 Md. LEXIS 28 (Md. 1925).

Opinion

Walsh, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought by the appellee, the plaintiff1 below, against the appellant, the defendant below, to recover for a loss alleged to have been suffered, by the plaintiff under a fire insurance policy issued by the defendant.

On February' 13th, 1919, the plaintiff, who was then conducting a store in a rented building in Charles County, in *260 sured his stock of merchandise in the defendant company for eight hundred dollars. Later on he erected, at his own expense, a store building on ground owned by Ms infant ward, Claude Jameson, under an oral agreement that the ward would, on becoming of age, give Mm a deed for tbe land on which the store building stood. There was also a written agreement between tbe plaintiff and Ms ward providing that the former should have the right to remove the store building at any time within a year after the ward became of age. Tbe plaintiff testified, without contradiction, that this written agreement was to he relied upon only in the event that the ward repudiated his oral agreement to convey the land, and the written agreement, itself could, of course, have been repudiated, and it actually contained a provision recognizing tbe right of the ward to repudiate it when he attained Ms majority. It .also appeared that this land was to be conveyed in settlement .of certain damage inflicted by tbe ward on two horses of the plaintiff. On December 7th, 1921, about three months after the plaintiff had moved into his new storeroom, Mr. Eeave, an agent of the defendant, whom the plaintiff had known for about twenty-seven years, called on him, and as a result of this call the plaintiff increased the amount of insurance on his merchandise to fifteen hundred dollars, and took out nine hundred dollars insurance on Ms store building, the additional insurance being subsequently noted on his original policy. At the time this additional insurance was applied 'for the- plaintiff signed an application for it in blank, which application was apparently filled out later by the agent Eeave. In this application, after the printed words “Title to the real estate is in,” the word “applicant” was written, but as the plaintiff testified that he signed the application in blank, and Eeave, though a director in the defendant company at the time of the trial, did not testify at all, it is a fair assumption that Eeave inserted the word ‘“applicant.” It does not appear from the record that the plaintiff ever saw the application again, except when the defendant introduced it in evidence at the trial. The original policy itself only *261 described tlie property as situated in the “storehouse of assured, situated at Welcome, Charles County,” and no change was made in this description when the additional insurance was taken out.

In the fall of 1923 the plaintiff, having previously decided to move to his wife’s farm in Baltimore County, made some effort to dispose of the store, and between October 10th and 14th, 1923, an inventory of the stock of goods was made for the purpose of fixing a selling price, but, no purchaser having been secured, the plaintiff began to sell the goods at cost. During the first part of November, 1923, he began moving his farming equipment to Baltimore County, and oji the night of November 15th, 1923, while this moving was still being carried on, the store building and its contents were completely destroyed -by fire. Tbe plaintiff notified the defendant of the loss, and requested payment in full under the policy. The defendant insisted upon strict proof of the loss. The plaintiff submitted what he thought was sufficient proof, and, payment not being made, he brought this suit. A verdict and judgment for the full amount of the policy, with interest, was obtained below, and the defendant appealed.

The record contains eight exceptions, the first four1 dealing with questions of evidence, and the last four being taken to the action of the trial court on the prayers, and we are also a,-Led to review the action of the lower court in overruling a demurrer to the declaration.

The overruling of the demurrer was entirely proper. It was apparently intended to raise the question of whether or not the seventh count in the declaration contained a. sufficient averment of the insurable interest of tbe plaintiff1 in the property destroyed, but as the declaration, in addition to tbe seventh count, also contained the common counts in proper .form, and the demurrer was to the whole declaration, it was necessarily overruled. “If any one count is good the demurrer cannot be sustained.” Pearce v. Watkins, 68 Md. 534, 538.

The refusal of the court below to grant tbe defendant’s *262 first prayer, asking that the ease be taken from the jury, forms the basis of the seventh exception, and as the determination of the propriety of the court’s action on this prayer involves the two chief defenses in the case, we will consider it first.

The reasons urged by the defendant in support of this prayer were, first, that the plaintiff’s evidence showing his compliance with the requirements of the policy regarding ‘proof of loss’ was insufficient to go to the jury, and, secondly, that his evidence showing that he fully .and truly disclosed to the defendant his interest in and title to the property destroyed, as required by sections 34 and 35 of the terms and conditions of 'both the policy and application, was insufficient to go to the jury. After the fire the plaintiff notified the defendant that the plaintiff’s account books and records had all been destroyed in the fire, and the defendant then demanded that the plaintiff furnish duplicate bills for the goods destroyed, as required by section 21 of the terms and conditions of the policy. The learned court 'below granted the plaintiff’s = first prayer, ¡which instructed the jury that the plaintiff could not recover unless they found that he furnished duplicate bills for goods purchased by him “as far as it was possible for him to do under the circumstances of this case,” .and it is not contended 'that this is not a correct statement of law. Mutual Fire Ins. Co. v. Pickett, 117 Md. 638; Farmers Fire Ins. Co. v. Mispelhorn, 50 Md. 180. Bht the defendant, as we stated above, does contend that there was not sufficient evidence in the case to warrant the submission of this question to -the jury. The plaintiff and his wife 'testified that -the former dictated and the latter wrote letters to all the firms -they could recall having dealt with, over thirty in all, requesting duplicate bills, that those who did not answer were written to a second time, that personal calls were made on some of them and one was called on the telephone, that nineteen bills were received and turned over to the defendant, that some of the firms were out of business and others were unable to furnish bills because the plaintiff *263 dealt largely on a cash basis and no book records of such purchases were kept. In addition to the foregoing the plaintiff, in further compliance with the terms of the policy, submitted himself to the adjuster and the .counsel for the defendant for examination concerning these duplicate hills ■and other details connected with his proof of loss. In Mutual Fire Ins. Co. v. Pickett, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
129 A. 214, 148 Md. 257, 1925 Md. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-fire-insurance-v-owen-md-1925.