Penix v. American Central Ins.

63 So. 346, 106 Miss. 145
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 63 So. 346 (Penix v. American Central Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Penix v. American Central Ins., 63 So. 346, 106 Miss. 145 (Mich. 1913).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant is the trustee in bankruptcy for the estate of A. H. Borah, a bankrupt. Among the assets of this estate was the insurance policy sued on, covering a stock of goods formerly owned by the bankrupt, and which had been destroyed by fire during the life of the policy. The insurance company having declined to pay for the loss of the goods, this suit was instituted..' At the close of the evidence a peremptory instruction Was given for the defendant, and there was a verdict and judgment accordingly. The ground of this peremptory instruction was the failure of the assured to comply with the iron-safe clause contained in the policy, which clause the reporter will set out in full.

Prior to the month of June, 1911, Borah was conducting a general merchandise business at Silver City, Mississippi. About this time he decided .to open a similar business in the city of Greenwood, and thereupon shipped to Greenwood from his Silver City-store certain goods, wares, and merchandise, with which, together with some other goods purchased from various wholesale merchants, he commenced business on the 26th of June, 1911. The policy sued on was executed on August 8th, and the fire which destroyed the stock of goods-occurred on August 15th. When the goods shipped from Silver City were packed preparatory to shipment a complete inventory thereof was made by Borah, and when they were received [162]*162at G-reeirwood they were checked into the store from this inventory; they being at that time the only goods in the house. Afterwards, and before the store opened for business, other goods were purchased from various wholesale merchants; invoices thereof being by these merchants delivered to Borah and the goods checked into the house from these invoices. This inventory and these invoices were kept by Borah in an iron safe at a place other than the store, and were produced at the trial. His set of books consisted of a small ledger containing several accounts; the only one having any real tendency to show the amount and value of the goods that went into and out of the store being his merchandise account. This account contains, oh the debit side thereof,' footings of the inventory and invoices of the goods received together with the names of the parties from whom purchased, and on the credit side the following items:

1911. Cr. June 26, by cash acc. C. S.$ 3.00

“ “ S. C. goods to S. C. 129.91

27, “ cash O. S. 4.00

30, “ “ C. S. from 28 — 30 . 5.00

July 3, “ C. S', from 1 — 3 . 4.50

8, “ “ “ “ 4 — 8 . 13.00

30, “ “ “ “ . 105.00

Aug. 9, > “ “ to Aug. 9. 76.00

18, “ Carruthers Jones Shoe Co. 81.70

Borah did not stay in this store himself, but it was managed and the business conducted by a clerk by the name of Lyell, who made all of the sales and sold only for cash. Lyell kept a memorandum book on which he entered, each day, the gross amount of cash sales for the day and whatever goods he took out for his own use. He kept no memorandum of the items composing these cash sales. Borah, at intervals, as shown by the credit side of merchandise account, would post these cash sales in his ledger, transferring thereto, not each item, or rather, [163]*163the amount of each day’s sales separately, but the aggregate amount thereof, in one item, lor the time elapsing since he last posted the account., -¡This hook was last posted on August 9th. Lyell slept and cooked his meals in the rear of the store, and this memorandum book in which he Intered the amount of the daily cash sales was not kept at night in a fireproof safe,'-or in a “place not exposed to a fire which wouldídestroy the aforesaid building,” but was kept by Lyell under his pillow when he retired to sleep. The fire ocqurred just after six o’clock in the evening. A short time prior thereto, Lyell lighted an oil stove on which he cooked his meals and placed on it some food which he desired £o cook for his supper. He then closed, locked, and left the store, went to a barber shop about four blocks away ...and was there shaved. He then went to a nearby baker shop, purchased a loaf of bread, and returned to the store, being absent altogether, according to his testimony, “forty or fifty minutes; maybe longer.” Just before he arrived at the store on his return his attention was called to the fact that it was on fire; and when he arrived he says that the fire was under such headway that he could do nothing to stop it. He had left this memorandum book, in which the daily record of the business was kept, in the store,.and it was burned. There was testimony showing that the store was, open and sales made after the 9th day of August, the last day on which the merchandise account was posted, up to and including the day of the fire: Lyell stated that when he closed the store he had not closed it- for the night, but intended to reopen it on his return, and, as his custom was, to keep it open for business until ten or eleven o ’clock. ?

Appellant’s contentions are: (1) That under the terms of the policy Borah was not .required to keep a set of books until he had made an, .inventory of the goods in the store; that he had made no such inventory, and under the policy had thirty days in which to do so, which thirty [164]*164days had not elapsed at the time of the fire; (2) if mistaken in this, that Borah substantially complied with that requirement of the policy by keeping the book containing his merchandise account, which account contains a conn píete record of the goods bought and sold except for the last several days before the fire, which was too short a time in proportion to the full time Borah had been in business, to be material; (3) if mistaken in this, that the book just referred to, together with the memorandum book kept by Lyell, did constitute a substantial compliance with this requirement, and that the policy was not violated by the last-named book being in the store and not in a fireproof safe, or some place not exposed to a fire which would destroy the building at the time of the fire, for the reason that when the fire occurred, the store was actually open for business within the meaning of the policy.

In support of his first proposition appellant’s counsel say that the inventory made by Borah of the goods shipped from Silver City to Greenwood was simply an invoice, and not an inventory within the meaning of the policy; and in support thereof we are referred to the case of Insurance Co. v. Bank, 71 Miss. 612, 15 So. 932. In that case the paper claimed to be an inventory was an invoice of the goods sold which had been checked with the goods by the purchaser prior to, or at the time, of his purchase, and before they were put into the store where the business was conducted.

• The paper here in question is not an invoice furnished by a seller to a purchaser, but is a list of the goods, together with their values, which first went into the,store, and therefore a list of all them on hand, made by the assured himself, treated by him as - an inventory, and preserved and introduced on the trial as such. It complies with all of the requirements of, and must be held to be, an inventory. Phoenix Insurance Co. v. Dorsey, 58 So. 778.

[165]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hood v. Fireman's Fund Insurance
412 F. Supp. 846 (S.D. Mississippi, 1976)
Burchfield v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.
118 So. 2d 767 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1960)
Stewart v. American Home Fire Ins.
52 So. 2d 30 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1951)
Central Manufacturers Mut. Ins. v. Rosenblum
177 So. 909 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1938)
National Fire Insurance v. Patridge
139 So. 876 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1932)
Block v. Detroit Fire & Marine Insurance
7 La. App. 20 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1927)
London Assur. Corporation v. Poole
101 So. 831 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1924)
Merchants' Union Ins. v. Johnson
99 So. 899 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1924)
Koshland v. Columbia Insurance
130 N.E. 41 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1921)
Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance v. Shapoff
179 Ky. 804 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1918)
Boulanger v. British Underwriters
75 So. 207 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1917)
Merchants' & Bankers' Fire Underwriters v. Foster
192 S.W. 811 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1916)
Miller v. Home Insurance Co. of New York
96 A. 267 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1915)
Fisher v. Sun Insurance
83 S.E. 729 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 So. 346, 106 Miss. 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penix-v-american-central-ins-miss-1913.