Neve v. Reliance Insurance Company of Philadelphia

357 S.W.2d 247, 1962 Mo. App. LEXIS 759
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 2, 1962
Docket23487
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 357 S.W.2d 247 (Neve v. Reliance Insurance Company of Philadelphia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neve v. Reliance Insurance Company of Philadelphia, 357 S.W.2d 247, 1962 Mo. App. LEXIS 759 (Mo. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

HUNTER, Presiding Judge.

This is an action on a fire insurance policy issued in the State of Kansas on property-located in Johnson County, Kansas. Plaintiff s-respondents, Nigel L. Neve and Mary Lois Neve, husband and wife, and residents of Kansas sued to recover for damages to their basement type house and contents resulting from explosion and fire on December 17, 1954. The agreed upon amount of the loss was $3,250.

The defense asserted by defendant-appellant, Reliance Insurance Company of Philadelphia, was that Nigel L. Neve intentionally caused the explosion and fire to occur in order to collect the insurance money in question.

In view of what we believe is the necessary disposition of this appeal a brief statement of the evidence is sufficient.

On the day of the fire Mrs. Neve left for work about 7:30 a.m. The two daughters left at 8:30 a.m. to go to school. Mr. Neve was alone in the house from then until he left it prior to the explosion.

The Chief of Police of Merriam, Kansas, happened to be in his car on the street near the house when the explosion and fire occurred. At once on his two-way radio he called the Police Dispatcher who immediately called the nearby fire department. Records of the fire chief showed this call was received at 3:48 p.m.; that the fire truck and crew left the fire station at 3 :50 p.m. and arrived at the scene of the fire at 3:51 p.m. The only door to the premises was locked and the firemen broke it down.

The fire was extinguished within a matter of minutes. An immediate inspection disclosed that the core of the gas cock (valve) in the main gas line to the circulating heater in the center of the house was lying on the floor and the gas cock was in an upside down position. As a result of the core being out of the gas cock a free flow of gas escaped into the premises. There was evidence that this gas filled the premises until ignited by a pilot light on a stove and that this took only a few minutes to occur.

Nigel Neve, was an experienced machinist and thoroughly understood the operation of the gas cock in question. Numerous witnesses on behalf of defendant testified that to remove the core from the gas cock required first the removal of a nut and washer. They stated the only way to account for the absence of the core would be for somebody to have intentionally removed it-They also testified that they had never-known a gas cock like this to be installed upside down, but it could be turned upside down with a tool. Mr. Neve was asked,. “Q. Now then, if this (gas cock) is installed with this washer on and with the nut on in position, would it be possible for this valve core to get out of there unless somebody took it out on purpose? A. No way that I know of.” There was also evidence to the effect the gas cock in question had. been properly installed.

The defendant adduced additional evidence which it contended had the effect of' making a very strong circumstantial case-that Mr. Neve had intentionally caused the-explosion and fire. The import of this evidence was: (1) There was but one way to-get in and out of the house and that was through the basement door which Mr. Neve locked when he left that afternoon and which the firemen had to break down to - enter the premises. (2) Neve was the last person known to- be in the premises and the last to leave before the explosion and fire.. (3) Contrary to the usual practice Mr. Neve just before 4:00 o’clock unexpectedly appeared at the school his daughters attended and took them with him; otherwise, they at the close of the school day would have • walked the three or four blocks home. (4) It would take Mr. Neve, or anyone, only about a minute to drive from the Neve ■ house to the school (while waiting at the school Mr. Neve heard the fire department goby). (5) About one and one-half months.. *249 before the fire Mr. Neve increased his insurance from $2,000 to $6,000 on both the house and its contents. (6) Plaintiffs were short of money and Mr. Neve had been out ■of work a substantial period of time. (7) Mr. Neve, before leaving the house on the afternoon of the explosion took with him his strongbox containing his insurance policy, some deeds and an abstract, his two dogs, his watchmaking tools, a valuable accordion, and a small stock of watches.

Mr. Neve testified that he had nothing to do with the explosion and fire, and did not cause them. He undertook in some detail to explain why he had picked up his daughters and had possession of the above mentioned items that afternoon.

At the close of the evidence and at plaintiff’s request, the following instruction was .given by the trial court:

“Instruction No. 3
“You are instructed that one of the defenses of Reliance Insurance Company of Philadelphia is that plaintiff Nigel Neve deliberately caused the fire and explosion in his residence on December 17, 1954. In this connection you are instructed that there is a natural presumption of innocence which •exists where an act of this nature is charged and you have a right to consider the improbability that one will •commit an act of criminal nature as an element necessarily involved. You may consider this as you should consider every material matter involved in the case, and after viewing the whole case, the verdict should be in accordance with the testimony and proof.”

Defendant contends the instruction contains a procedural presumption, evidentiary in nature, and that its propriety must be tested by the procedural laws of the forum (Missouri). Defendant assigns the giving -of this instruction as reversible error for the reasons: (1) This, as any rebuttable presumption, takes flight upon the introduction of evidence, however slight; and where evidence has been introduced to rebut the presumption, the giving of an instruction as to its existence is reversible error. (2) An instruction as to a presumption of evidence and improbability that one will commit an act of a criminal nature injects criminality into the case, and to so instruct is reversible error.

Plaintiff’s response is that Instruction No. 3 has the full sanction and approval of the Supreme Court of Kansas in Wallace v. Fidelity Phoenix Fire Insurance Company, 135 Kan. 133, 9 P.2d 621, having been adopted from the case of First National Bank of Portland v. Commercial Union Assurance Company, 33 Or. 43, 52 P. 1050. Plaintiffs also refer to defendant’s answer which reads in part: “11. Defendant states that the interpretation and construction of this policy shall be governed by the laws of the State of Kansas * * Further, that Kansas law was followed even to the extent that attorneys’ fees were assessed in accordance with Kansas procedure (fixed and allowed by the court). Hence, say plaintiffs, Kansas law applies in determining whether or not Instruction No. 3 is a proper instruction, and that it is a proper instruction.

The well established general rule is that the law of the forum (Missouri) controls as to procedure and as to all procedural questions. Absent something binding to the contrary, a litigant is not entitled to insist upon the trial of his rights or defense under the procedural laws of a sister state rather than under the procedural laws of the forum state. Lynde v. Western & Southern Life Ins.

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Bluebook (online)
357 S.W.2d 247, 1962 Mo. App. LEXIS 759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neve-v-reliance-insurance-company-of-philadelphia-moctapp-1962.