Paine v. Albany Insurance Co.

299 S.W.2d 897, 1956 Mo. App. LEXIS 226
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 7, 1956
DocketNo. 22472
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 299 S.W.2d 897 (Paine v. Albany Insurance Co.) 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
Paine v. Albany Insurance Co., 299 S.W.2d 897, 1956 Mo. App. LEXIS 226 (Mo. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

DEW, Presiding Judge.

This action was brought by the plaintiff under a fire insurance policy issued by the defendant to recover for the loss by fire of certain restaurant equipment. The verdict and judgment were in favor of the defendant, and plaintiff has appealed.

According to the plaintiff’s testimony he purchased the restaurant in question, paying $2,100 for the equipment, which was inventoried at the time of purchase. The defendant had issued its fire insurance policy in the sum of $1,500 on the contents of the restaurant before plaintiff purchased it, which policy was duly assigned to the plaintiff with the approval of the defendant, through its agent Julius Koenigsdorf. Defendant twice thereafter renewed the policy for the same amount on the same property in the name of the plaintiff. The last policy was in effect at the time of the fire loss in evidence. All premiums on the above pol[899]*899icies were duly paid by the plaintiff after the date of the purchase.

Plaintiff operated the restaurant 21 months. He had made tentative plans to close the restaurant before the end of April 1952, and to obtain a better location. He had planned to move to Armourdale, Kansas, where the location was better for patronage. His bills except current accounts, were paid up. He had given notice to terminate his tenancy. On the evening of April 21, 1952, as usual, plaintiff stopped on his way from his regular place of employment and ate his evening meal at the restaurant, and about 7:00 o’clock he locked up. He then drove a lady employee to her home and then drove to his own home. About midnight the employee, who had been called by one Max Koenigsdorf, telephoned him that the restaurant was on fire. He dressed and immediately went to the restaurant. The fire department had left, except the chief. The front door glass was broken out. The premises were dark and water was dripping from all parts of the restaurant and ashes and embers were everywhere.

Plaintiff found that the gas had been turned off and the electricity disconnected. The back wall had been pushed out and a lot of debris was out on the back porch. The kitchen was all charred and blistered, and ashes all over the floor. The shelves were charred and blistered and water-soaked. The burning paint falling from the ceiling scorched and blistered the areas wherever it fell. A curtain at the front window had holes burned in it and it was water-soaked. Burning paint and plaster had fallen on the refrigerator and made charred or singed marks. The marble top on the back -bar was stained and the wood charred. Water and paint had fallen on the finish of the refrigerator, and the water had gotten into the insulation and motors. The stools at the counter were burned and water-soaked, and the pedestals spattered with burning paint. Records in the juke box were melted. Silverware was tarnished, and the china was charred, checkered and blackened. The metal on the gas range was discolored and blistered by the falling paint and was water-soaked, and the large canopy built in over the stove was damaged, and debris had fallen from it into the air intakes of the burners of the range, and the steam table connected with the range was blistered, charred and warped. Plaintiff testified as to the many items later listed for the defendant, and claimed to have been damaged by the fire, which list contained the plaintiff’s valuations. The itemized statement referred to showed a total valuation as of the time of the fire of $2,278.55.

Plaintiff’s witness Gus Nichols, a dealer in store fixtures and equipment, testified that he bought the salvage of the insured property from the plaintiff for $45; that it had been damaged by fire, water and smoke. He said he had to work on the property, but he resold the fan and cash register and that there was some salvage on the range, which had been pretty well burned. The pedestal fan, which had been wrapped in tarpaulin, had been cleaned up and had been resold for $65. He said he had taken the cabinet off the cash register, put in new checks, and cleaned it up. He said the exhaust fan and circulating fan were no good. He said he had sold the stools and pedestals for junk. He had given the electric refrigerator to a colored woman in return for removing it. This witness was asked if, in his opinion, any of the equipment, after it had been refinished, would have been of the same quality and as good as before the fire. He said only a few items, such as the stools, a fan and the cash register. He said the counter would cost as much to refinish as it would to buy a new one. He said he sold the parts of the stove for salvage. The canopy over the stove, he said, could not have been repaired so that he would have made a profit out of it. He was asked:

“Q. Did you ever figure what it would cost to sell him used equipment ? A. Yes. To replace — well, not to [900]*900completely replace it, I mean we can’t go in and replace everything that he has, but I mean I could set him up another place, I think we told him at that time, which I am not clear on, approximately $2,000. * * *
“Q. But you think it would cost $2,-000 to put that back? A. Yes, to open any kind of a hamburger stand or anything else it would still run you approximately $2,000.
“Q. And that would be used equipment? A. Used equipment only, depending on the size of the place.
“Q. But this place you think would be about $2,000? A. Yes, I think— * * * I told him it would be about $2,000 to $2500 because I happened to have some stuff that I could give him a good buy on.
“Q. I see. This is the man you are referring to right back here ? A. * * Paine.”

Defendant’s adjuster sent the plaintiff a complete proof of loss in which the value of the property before the fire was stated as $2,250, and the loss at $798, which proof of loss defendant asked plaintiff to sign. It did not, however, continue its offer to pay that amount at the trial.

The policy in question contained the following clause: “This entire policy shall be void if, whether before or after a loss, the insured has willfully concealed or misrepresented any material fact or circumstances concerning this insurance or the subject thereof, or the interest of the insured therein, or in case of any fraud or false swearing by the insured relating thereto.”

Plaintiff, or one of his employees reported the fire to the defendant the next day after its occurrence. Defendant’s adjuster, Mr. Butler, went to view the fire loss at once and left his card. Plaintiff called on Mr. Butler the following Saturday “to see how he was coming out on any adjustment.” Butler was not yet ready to take up the matter and in a few days got word to plaintiff that a list of the contents of the building would be required. Plaintiff had prepared his itemized list and valuations after consulting catalogs, advertisements and other restaurant operators. Plaintiff was asked: “Q. In your opinion was the total that you have placed on the claim you made to Mr. Butler of $2,278.55 the reasonable value of the equipment that was damaged? A. Yes.” He said he had given notice to terminate his tenancy and having been unable to get any results from the defendant, he had to sell the salvage in order to get out of the building.

Defendant admits in its brief that the fire in the restaurant resulted in “fire, heat, water or smoke damage in varying degrees to most of the contents therein”; that plaintiff notified defendant on the next day after the fire, and that its adjuster Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
299 S.W.2d 897, 1956 Mo. App. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paine-v-albany-insurance-co-moctapp-1956.