O'Connor v. Maryland Motor Car Insurance

122 N.E. 489, 287 Ill. 204
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1919
DocketNo. 12295
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 122 N.E. 489 (O'Connor v. Maryland Motor Car Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Connor v. Maryland Motor Car Insurance, 122 N.E. 489, 287 Ill. 204 (Ill. 1919).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellee, John J. O’Connor, having had his automobile stolen upon which he had a theft insurance policy in the appellant company, brought suit in the municipal court of Chicago to recover the value of the automobile as fixed by the policy. The trial court directed a verdict in his favor for $1375 and costs, and from the judgment entered thereon an appeal was taken to the Appellate Court, where the judgment was affirmed. The Appellate Court issued a certificate stating that the questions involved were of such importance that they should be passed upon by the Supreme Court, and the case is here by appeal.

Appellee was the owner of a Hudson car and insured it in the appellant company for one year from March 31, 1916, through Roy E. Claypool, an agent of the company. Sunday evening, September 10, 1916, O’Connor left his car at the corner of LaSalle' and Randolph streets; in Chicago, while he went to a near by restaurant, asking a street railway employee to watch it. A few minutes thereafter a young man jumped into the car, unlocked it and drove rapidly away. The next day appellee went to Claypool’s office and reported his loss and also sent a letter detailing the circumstances. About five days thereafter appellee bought a new car, giving his note therefor and assigning the policy here in question to the company from which he bought the automobile, as collateral security for the note. On November 15, 1916, the Chicago police department notified appellee that they had recovered the stolen car, and he accompanied a police officer to a down-town garage, where he identified it as the car which had been stolen from him. He refused, however, to take it, on the ground that he was entitled to the insurance money under the policy from the appellant company and that the car belonged to the company, and he wrote to the company to that effect, stating that he intended to use the money from said policy to pay off the note given for the new car. The company refused to pay the policy, on the ground that the car had been recovered and that appellee could take it if he desired. Appellee brought this suit for a recovery under the policy on February 21, 1917. The automobile was insured for an amount not exceeding $1375 against loss by fire, and also “against loss or damage by theft or robbery by any person or persons other than those in the employment, service or household of the insured.”

The policy provides among other things: “In the event of loss or damage under this policy this company shall be liable only for the actual cost of repairing, or, if necessary, replacing the parts damaged or destroyed. It shall be optional with this company to repair, re-build or replace the property lost or damaged with other of like kind and quality within a reasonable time, on giving notice, within thirty days after the receipt of the sworn statement of loss herein required, of its intention so to do, but there can be no abandonment to this company of the property described.” It further provides: “In the event of loss or damage the insured shall forthwith give notice thereof in writing to this company or the authorized agent who issued this policy and protect the property from further loss or damage, and within sixty days thereafter, unless such time is extended in writing by this company, shall render a statement to this company, signed and sworn to by said insured, stating the knowledge and belief of the insured as to the time and cause of the loss or damage.” The last provision of the policy, which it is particularly necessary to consider in. order to reach a correct conclusion on the questions here involved, reads as follows: “The sum for which this company is liable pursuant to this policy shall be payable sixty days after the notice, ascertainment, estimate and satisfactory proof of the loss herein required have been received by this company.”

Counsel for appellant state correctly, in our judgment, that the policy here in question is, in part at least, a combination of fire and marine insurance form of contract. Many decisions áre cited by counsel for each side with reference to loss under maritime insurance policies, and there can be no question that on principle the theft of an automobile insured against theft, and subsequently recovered, presents a case somewhat analogous to the capture of an insured ship in time of war which is subsequently recovered from the enemy and restored to the owner. A policy simi- , lar to the one here in question does not seem to have been construed heretofore by the courts of this State. The decisions from other jurisdictions on policies similarly worded may be' persuasive as to the conclusion to be reached but are certainly not decisive. The correct conclusion on the questions here raised depends largely upon the proper .construction to be given to the particular policy here in question.

Counsel for appellant contend, as we understand their argument, (i) that the policy denies the right of abandonment and recovery under the policy (because of such abandonment) for the total loss of the automobile; (2) that the alleged abandonment became wrongful or invalid upon the subsequent recovery of the automobile. These two claims, it seems to us, are in a sense inconsistent, for if there is no right of abandonment then there would be no rights growing out of the alleged abandonment that could be divested by subsequent occurrences. Abandonment, in its technical sense, means the relinquishment of a right; the giving up of something to which one is entitled; the giving up of a thing absolutely, without reference to any particular person or purpose. In maritime law it means relinquishment to the underwriters of all claim. ' (1 Corpus Juris, 5; 1 R. C. L. 2, 3.) Time is not an essential element of abandonment. The moment the intention to abandon and the relinquishment of possession unite the abandonment is complete. (1 Corpus Juris, 8.) Abandonment is not necessary when the loss is actually total, nor can the abandonment be made unless the loss is constructively total. It is never obligatory upon the insured but operates only as a voluntary transfer of title. (The St. Johns, 101 Fed. Rep. 469.) It is manifest from the provisions of the policy quoted above that it is intended there should not be any voluntary abandonment by the insured to the company, using that word in its technical sense, but it is also apparent from reading and construing the provisions of the policy together that it was intended that there could be no recovery for a total loss of the .automobile if the insurance company desired to replace the property on giving, in accordance with the terms fixed in .the policy, the required notice. The policy also provides that the sum for which the company is liable shall be payable in sixty days after notice and satisfactory proof of the loss. There can be no question that the liability of the company might be affected by the return of the automobile and the. giving, of the required notice before the expiration of the .sixty days, but we are disposed to hold that -if, after the notice and satisfactory proof of loss were given, sixty days had expired before the finding and return of the automobile, the policy intended that there might be full recovery from the company for the value of the automobile,— and this without reference to the question of abandonment. As we construe this policy as to loss by theft, the term “abandonment,” as used in the quoted provision, was intended to mean that there could be no voluntary abandonment (using the word in the technical sense) by the owner before the expiration of the sixty days.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 N.E. 489, 287 Ill. 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oconnor-v-maryland-motor-car-insurance-ill-1919.