Old Saucelito Land & Dry Dock Co. v. Commercial Union Assurance Co.

5 P. 232, 66 Cal. 253, 1884 Cal. LEXIS 750
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1884
DocketNo. 8,405
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 5 P. 232 (Old Saucelito Land & Dry Dock Co. v. Commercial Union Assurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Old Saucelito Land & Dry Dock Co. v. Commercial Union Assurance Co., 5 P. 232, 66 Cal. 253, 1884 Cal. LEXIS 750 (Cal. 1884).

Opinion

McKinstry, J.

The defendant, an English insurance company, insured plaintiff upon a certain building in Marin county, in a sum not to exceed $1,500, and received the premium. The building was destroyed by fire.

The policy of insurance provided: “The capital stock and funds of the company shall be subject and liable to pay to the said insured, his, or her, or their, executors and administrators, all the damage and loss which the insured shall suffer by fire on the property hereinbefore mentioned, not exceeding, on each item respectively, the sum hereinbefore declared to be insured thereon, and not exceeding the whole sum of fifteen hundred dollars, United States gold coin, but subject always to the conditions and stipulations indorsed hereon, and which constitute the basis of this insurance.”

Among the conditions and stipulations indorsed were the following :

“VIII. That persons insured by this company sustaining any loss or damage by fire, shall forthwith give notice of such loss, and shall, within a reasonable time, render an accurate and particular account of their loss or damage respectively, as the nature and circumstances of their respective cases will admit; such account of loss to have reference to the value of the property destroyed or damaged immediately before such fire; and shall verify the same by solemn declaration or affirmation before a justice of the peace, and shall produce such other evidence as the directors or their agents may reasonably require; and until such declaration or affirmation, account and evidence are produced, the amount of such loss, or any part thereof, shall not be payable or recoverable. And if there appear any fraud or false declaration, or that the fire shall have happened by the procurement or willful act, means or connivance of the insured or claimants, lie, she, or they shall be excluded from all benefit under this policy.
“ IX. That in every case of loss or damage for which the said company shall be liable, the same on being duly proved, and the accounts adjusted, shall either be paid immediately, or the said company shall have the option, where the insurance may be on goods, to supply the insured with the like quantity of goods of the same sort and kind, and of equal value and good[255]*255ness, with those destroyed or damaged by fire; or where the insurance may be on houses and buildings, the said company shall have the option, with all convenient speed, to rebuild or repair and reinstate the same, and put them into as good and substantial condition as they were in at the time when such fire happened.
“ X. That in case of difference of opinion as to the amount of loss or damage, such difference shall be submitted to the judgment of two disinterested and competent men, mutually chosen, (who in case of disagreement shall select a third) whose award shall be conclusive and binding on both parties.”

The plaintiff in its complaint, after stating facts showing that a difference arose as to the amount of loss, adds:

“ That plaintiff thereupon, and on request of defendant, chose one S. M. Hill, and the defendant chose one A. A. Snyder, to whose judgment the plaintiff and defendant mutually submitted all differences of opinion between the plaintiff and defendant, resulting from or growing out of said loss, and all difference of opinion as to the amount of said loss, and said plaintiff notified said Hill to arbitrate said amount of loss. That said Hill and Snyder met to arbitrate said amount, but failed to agree upon the amount of said loss, or any amount as due from defendant to plaintiff by reason of said loss, and failed to adjudicate upon any differences between plaintiff and defendant growing out of said loss—and failed to select a third person, as provided in section x. of the conditions, annexed to the policy of insurance, to assist in determining said amount, and failed to make any award; and thereupon said plaintiff, after waiting a reasonable time, withdrew from said arbitration, and notified the defendant that it had so withdrawn prior to the commencement of this action, and no award has ever been made.” The answer denies these averments.

The court below found: “ That no arbitrators were appointed or mutually chosen by the parties to this action, to appraise, at its true cash value, or at all, the amount of loss or damage, and that the difference of opinion between plaintiff and defendant had not been submitted, as required by the tenth condition of the policy. That the plaintiff had at no time offered to submit such difference of opinion to arbitration or take any steps [256]*256to procure arbitration or award; and that the failure to submit such difference of opinion to arbitration was in no manner the fault or result of any action suffered or taken by defendant, but that, on the contrary, defendant had always been willing to ""submit such difference,” etc.

The finding passed upon the issue. The complaint does not allege that plaintiff offered to submit, etc., and that defendant refused, but on the contrary, that the parties did select arbitrators. If, however, the averments could be construed as averments that plaintiff had sought to have the matter, as to amount of loss, submitted, the court found that plaintiff at no time offered to submit it, or took any steps to procure such submission, etc.

The evidence justified the findings of the court.

The appellant contends:

First.—The agreement to submit the difference of opinion as to the amount of loss or damage to the judgment of two disinterested men, etc., whose award should be conclusive and binding (in the absence of an agreement that the arbitrators shall be the exclusive and only tribunal to which the parties will appeal),^ does not debar the aggrieved party from appealing to the courts.
Second.—The promise of defendant being to pay damages in-j curred by fire—not an award—its contract is broken by its | failure to pay such damages. It is well settled, that a general1 provision that all disputes which may arise in the execution of a contract shall be decided by arbitrators, will not be allowed to deprive the courts of their jurisdiction. But the parties to a\ contract may fix on any mode they think fit to liquidate dama-1 ges, in their own nature unliquidated ; and, in such case, no recovery can be had until the prescribed method has been pursued, or some valid excuse exists for not pursuing it. In the case now here, if the parties made the submission to arbitration a condition precedent to the right to bring an action on the policy, the judgment should be affirmed.

In Elliott v. Boyal Exchange Insurance Company, L. R., 2 Exch. 241, the form of the policy was a covenant by the defendants that their capital stock, etc., should be subject to make good the plaintiff’s loss, not exceeding £2200, according to the exact tenor of the articles hereunto subjoined.” One of [257]

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Bluebook (online)
5 P. 232, 66 Cal. 253, 1884 Cal. LEXIS 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/old-saucelito-land-dry-dock-co-v-commercial-union-assurance-co-cal-1884.