Phoenix Ins. Co. v. Jordan

184 S.W.2d 721, 28 Tenn. App. 11, 1944 Tenn. App. LEXIS 57
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 29, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 184 S.W.2d 721 (Phoenix Ins. Co. v. Jordan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phoenix Ins. Co. v. Jordan, 184 S.W.2d 721, 28 Tenn. App. 11, 1944 Tenn. App. LEXIS 57 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

*14 HICKER.SON, J.

Clysta Jordan and Lonise Staples, colored women, filed the original bill in this cause to recover under a fire insurance policy which was issued to them by defendant, Phoenix Insurance Company. The issues made by the original pleadings were: (1) complainants were not the sole and unconditional owners of the insured property; (2) the Insurance Company had waived its right to rely upon the requirement of the policy that the insureds must be the sole and unconditional owners of the insured property, or the Insurance Company was estopped to rely upon that condition in the policy; (3) complainants .were estopped to assert the source or chain of title under which they claimed to be owners of the insured property because Clysta Jordan in a former suit had testified directly to the contrary; and (4) complainants were judicially estopped to assert that the Insurance Company had waived the provision in its policy which required sole and unconditional ownership of the insured property to be in the insureds; for in asserting such waiver complainants impliedly admitted that they were not the sole and unconditional owners of the insured property, and that position was directly inconsistent with the position which they took in their sworn proof of loss wherein they alleged: “ At the time of the fire, the interest of your insured in the property described by this policy was sole and unconditional ownership, and no other person or persons had any interest therein or incumbrance thereon.”

U'pon these issues the proof was taken. After the case was tried in the Chancery Court complainants amended their bill so as to allege:

“That R. D. Black, deceásed, was a negro born in slavery in the State of Tennessee, and of slave parents, *15 and that therefore with respect to property rights was illegitimate, and at the time of his death intestate and without issue, his real estate descended and vested in fee simple in his widow, Medora Black.”

The Insurance Company filed an answer to this amendment in which it set out various reasons why the amendment should not have been allowed, which we shall consider later, and stated as follows:

‘1 This defendant denies that the said R. D. Black was horn a slave of slave parents, and denies that with respect to property rights he was illegitimate; and this defendant denies that the widow of R. D. Black took a fee simple title to the real estate of R. D. Black at the time of his death.
“On the contrary, this defendant avers that the said R. D. Black was legitimate, and horn free, of free parents; and it avers that at the time of his death his property descended to his brothers and sisters under Section 8380 of the Code and not to his widow. ’ ’

The Chancellor entered a decree in favor of complainants for the face amount of the policy with interest. Prom that decree the Insurance Company perfected a broad appeal to this Court and assigned’ errors. Complainants also assigned errors.

R. D. Black, a colored man, owned a house and lot in Nashville, Tennessee. Medora Black was his ydfe. Medora Black owned a small lot which adjoined the lot of her husband. When R. D. Black died these two deeds were placed of record in Davidson County, Tennessee. Thereupon Medora Black, the widow, put a picket fence around both lots, tore down the little three room house which was on the lot that her husband had owned, and built a five or six room substantial house on this lot. She *16 paid some notes which, were due on the house and lot which was owned by her husband after his death. She paid for the new house entirely out of her own funds. The money to make these payments was earned by her by washing and ironing. She exercised complete control over this property from the death of her husband on January 19,1914, until the widow died on April 20, 1932. After the death of it. D. Black, Medora Black married James H. Brien and lived with him until her death. On March 14, 1932, Dora B. Brien (Medora Black) executed a will in which she stated:

“I will and bequeath to my present husband, James EL Brien, all of my real estate for his natural life, provided he does not marry again. At the death of my husband this property will revert to my two cousins jointly to-wit: Louise Staples and Colista Jordan.’/

The property in question here was then fully described in the will.

After the death of Medora Black Brien, her husband, James H. Brien, continued to live on this property until he remarried. Upon his marriage Louise Staples and Olysta Jordan demanded that he give them possession of real estate which had been devised to them by their cousin, Dora B. Brien, his wife, construing the will to mean that his interest in the real estate ceased when he remarried. He refused to surrender possession of the property and suit was brought' in the Chancery Court of Davidson County to eject him on September 20, 1933. The case was styled Clysta Jordan v. Louise Staples and James H. Brien, No. 46,693. In that bill, which was sworn to by Clysta Jordan, it was alleged:

“That the said R. D. Black died as above set out in 1914 on January 14th. That there were no children born *17 to the said E. D. Black and the said Dora Black and that there was no children born to the said E. D. Black during his life time. That at his death there were no brothers, sisters of his nor were his mother or father living- and the said Dora Black being the only heir of the said E. D: Black inherited said property as the said E. D. Black died intestate.”

Clysta Jordan gave a deposition in that case in which she testified, directly contrary to the allegations of her bill, that E. D. Black had a sister and brother living at the time he died.

James H. Brien abandoned that suit and surrendered possession of the property to Clysta Jordan and Louise Staples, who claimed it under the will of Medora Black Brien.

During the time that James H. Brien occupied this property, after the death of Medora Black Brien, the house was insured by the Phoenix Insurance Company in the name of James H. Brien. On September 21, 1933, this insurance was transferred to Clysta Jordan and Louise Staples by an endorsement which stated:

“It is understood and agreed that title to property insured* under this policy is now vested in Clysta Jordan and Louise Staples. All other terms and conditions of the policy remain the same.”

The endorsement was signed: “J. 0. Treanor & Son, Agents.”

Thereafter on July 7, 1937, the defendant Insurance Company issued the policy upon which the present suit is based to “Clysta Jordan and Louise Staples.” Clysta Jordan told the agent of the defendant company that she and her sister, Louise Staples, beame the owners of this property under the will of their cousin, Medora Black. *18 There was some controversy as to whether the name of Lonise Staples should appear in the policy as one of the insureds, but the company insisted that the policy should be written in both names.

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Bluebook (online)
184 S.W.2d 721, 28 Tenn. App. 11, 1944 Tenn. App. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phoenix-ins-co-v-jordan-tennctapp-1944.