Pencil v. Home Insurance

28 P. 1031, 3 Wash. 485, 1892 Wash. LEXIS 113
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1892
DocketNo. 309
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 28 P. 1031 (Pencil v. Home Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pencil v. Home Insurance, 28 P. 1031, 3 Wash. 485, 1892 Wash. LEXIS 113 (Wash. 1892).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Stiles, J.

The third paragraph of the complaint alleged the issuance of the policy, by the appellant, and gave its [487]*487date, number, amount, property insured, time, and premium paid; and the seventh alleged performance of all the conditions contained therein by the respondent. The first error assigned is the admission of the policy in evidence at the trial “because the plaintiff declares upon an unconditional policy of insurance, while the policy offered in evidence is a conditional one.” The case here is precisely like that of Clark v. Phœnix Ins. Co., 36 Cal. 168, and the offer of the policy was held there to be a variance; but our code, §§ 105-6-7 (1881), provides what shall be done in such instances, and as nothing of the kind was done, and the evidence showed the fire not to have been of the excepted classes, we find no reversible error.

The policy covered “one hundred and thirty-five dollars on his Nerbin safe,” and “thirty-five dollars on his store fixtures,” besides insurance on stock, and the complaint alleged the loss of the “whole of said stock and fixtures.” It is insisted that there could be no recovery for the safe because its loss was not specially pleaded. At the trial objection was made to the testimony of Pencil that the safe was worth $35, which the court overruled. We think it clear, taking the complaint altogether, that the safe and store fixtures were intended to be covered by the word “fixtures” used in the allegation of loss quoted above; and there was evidently no surprise to the company in that construction, since the proof of loss submitted to it immediately after the fire made known the claim that the safe had been destroyed.

The policy contained an arbitration clause whereby it was provided that no suit should be commenced until after an award obtained in the manner stipulated, and it was submitted by the appellant without argument that it should have had a charge to the jury, as requested, upon that subject. But we do not consider that this case demanded a charge upon that point. Under the policy, arbitration was [488]*488to be resorted to only when the parties could not agree upon the amount of loss. Here, however, within a few hours after the loss, the company assumed an attitude of hostility toward Pencil, from which it has never desisted, by asserting that he set out the fire which burned the property insured, and declining to pay anything on that ground. In the face of such a position it could hardly be expected that the insured would be required to demand an arbitration, and it is very certain that the company never called for one.

This policy contained an express written stipulation that there might be other insurance to the amount of $1,840, and a printed condition as follows:

“In no case shall the claim be for a greater sum than the actual damage to or cash value of the property at the time of the fire, nor shall the assured be entitled to recover of this company any greater proportion of the loss or damage than the amount hereby insured bears to the whole sum insured on said property, whether such other insurance be by specific or by general or floating policies.”

The policy was itself specific, the insuring clause covering “$400 on his stock of boots and shoes; $1,440 on his stock of general merchandise, not including boots and shoes; $135 on his Nerbin safe; $35 on his store fixtures.” Now, it appeared that subsequent to the issuance of the policy of the appellant the respondent obtained from another company a second policy of $400 on his stock of general merchandise, not including his stock of boots and shoes, so that he had in all $2,140 insurance on that class of goods. Under this state of the evidence appellant asked the court to charge that, if the jury found for the plaintiff, the verdict should in no event be for an amount in excess of the proportion of the total damages which the sum insured under the policy in suit bore to the total amount of insurance on the property, A precisely similar clause in a [489]*489policy was construed in Hibernia Ins. Co. v. Starr, Tex. May 9, 1890, 13 S. W. Rep. 1017, and it was there held error to refuse an instruction of the kind here requested, and, as we think, with good reason. But in this case the instruction as requested was not applicable, for the reason that the apportionment, if any, must have been between the two policies for $1,440 and $400, respectively, on the general merchandise; and it was faulty in that it did not have coupled with it a direction to the jury that, unless they found the whole value of the general merchandise destroyed to have been less than $1,840, there was no apportionment to be made. The object of such clauses is to restrict the recovery of the assured to his actual loss, and to require of each insurer the payment of only its proportion of the actual loss in case the total loss is less than the total insurance. Obviously, then, if in this case the value of the general merchandise was greater than $1,840, there could be no apportionment. Had a proper charge, as above outlined, been proposed, it would have been error for the court not to have given it, though we doubt very much whether, under the evidence and the general finding of the jury, it would have been of any avail to the appellant.

i The next point made is upon the refusal of the court to give a charge concerning the ownership of the property at the time it was insured, to the effect that unless, according to the terms of the policy, Pencil was the sole owner, the policy was void. The fact appeared from the evidence to be, that Pencil was doing business in a building owned by one Cooper, who himself had a few goods in the store. Cooper, about the time Pencil commenced business, proposed that he become a partner with Pencil, putting in the use of his building and certain money he expected to receive, and the goods he had, as his part of the capital. Cooper was postmaster at West Seattle, and kept the post office in the same building. Pencil assented to the pro[490]*490posal of Cooper, with the evident idea, however, that the arrangement should not take effect until Cooper received his expected money. This state of expectancy ran along for several months, until Cooper finally gave up the project, because he was convinced that he could not get the necessary money. In the meantime, some things were done which would have been done had they been partners, Cooper assisting in making sales and drawing some money. But all the time Pencil clearly bought goods and managed the business as his own, and when Cooper dropped the idea of becoming a partner, there was no valuation of the stock and settlement of accounts, but Pencil bought such of Cooper’s goods as remained unsold, and there the matter between them ended. The policy of insurance was issued while Cooper was still a prospective partner, and the appellant claimed that it should be allowed to go to the jury upon the proposition that Pencil and Cooper were partners, and therefore the sole property in the goods was not in the former. It is the rule that, where a party presents a case upon a certain theory, and produces even slight evidence in support of that theory, he is entitled to have the jury properly charged upon it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 P. 1031, 3 Wash. 485, 1892 Wash. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pencil-v-home-insurance-wash-1892.