Prestigiacamo v. American Equitable Assurance Co.

221 S.W.2d 217, 240 Mo. App. 839, 1949 Mo. App. LEXIS 321
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 4, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 221 S.W.2d 217 (Prestigiacamo v. American Equitable Assurance 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
Prestigiacamo v. American Equitable Assurance Co., 221 S.W.2d 217, 240 Mo. App. 839, 1949 Mo. App. LEXIS 321 (Mo. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinions

Plaintiff sued defendant, a foreign insurance corporation, for the full face amount of a $2500 fire insurance contract on the theory that the policy contained a latent ambiguity. The property insured was described as two buildings, each insured for $1250, whereas, plaintiff contends, the property is really but one building, which fact the agent knew, and that he agreed to so insure it. The case was tried to the court, without a jury, and judgment was for plaintiff for $2500, and for penalty and attorneys' fees of $500. Defendant appeals.

The property fronts 100 feet on the south side of East 12th Street, in Kansas City. The policy was in evidence and on the outside front jacket the following appears: "Property Bldg. 1511-1513 and 1515-17 *Page 844 East 12th $2500.00." On the first page of the policy, on the first line, appears the following: "Amount $2500.00 Rate (.82/2.05 (1.91/4.775 Premium $85.30." Attached to said front page is a sheet designated: "Mercantile Building Form," on the face of which appears the following: $1250.00 on each of the two, three story composition roof brick buildings * * * situated 1511-13 East 12th Street and 1515-17 East 12th Street City of Kansas City State of Missouri."

Plaintiff acquired the property in 1921. An architect testified to the effect that the lines of the roof and foundation indicate that it is one single building, constructed at one time; that the second and third floors are occupied as apartments; that the first floor is occupied by a number of store rooms, a portion of the basement being used by the occupant of the store room over it; that the basement is one basement, in that the separate compartments thereof communicate and open into each other; that the entire building is heated by one furnace; that there is no solid fire wall that runs from the floor of the basement to the roof; that in about the center of the first floor front there is a barber shop, extending to the back of the building, which would be bisected, or nearly so, if a fire wall were built from the basement to the roof through the center of the building; and that this barber shop bears the street number 1513½, which number is not mentioned in the policy.

Mike Prestigiacamo testified that plaintiff, his father, expects to will this property to him and to his brother; that he looked after one side of the property and his brother the other side; that each collected rents and attended to repairs on his respective side of the property; that the cost of insurance was shared by them; that from the income of the property they paid expenses, gave plaintiff $30 per month, and kept the remainder; that a Mr. Bennett, employed by A.P. Nichols Company, the insurance agency which had written the insurance on the property before witness had anything to do with its management, came to see him, at his store in the building, and asked about writing a new policy. Over defendant's objection he was permitted to testify to the following: that he called his father by telephone and his father said to have a $5000 policy written; that he told Bennett what his father said and that Bennett asked if it was to be written half on the east building and half on the west; that he asked his father about that matter; that his father said that it was one building and that he wanted the policy so written; that he told Bennett what his father said; that Bennett said that it could not be done because there were two buildings and that the Missouri Inspection Bureau had it so mapped, listed, and rated; that his father told him to show Bennett through and over the building, which he did; that they went through the basement and saw the openings therein, and went onto the roof; that Bennett then agreed that it was, in *Page 845 fact, one building instead of two; that Bennett proposed that they go to the office of the Missouri Inspection Bureau, (which is an agency existing for the purpose of rating insurance risks), and there procure a re-rating of the building, to make the same conform to the actual facts; that they went to said office and were unable to procure an interview immediately; that witness was unable to wait and that Bennett told him that he need not wait, that it was one building, that he would see to the matter and would write the policy as a single risk on one building; and that witness departed.

Witness further stated that there was, at that time, a mortgage against the property, same being held by the Merchant's Bank; that some time after the above conversation occurred, witness received a statement for payment of the insurance premium; that he went to the bank and requested that he be shown the policy; that the attendant handed to him two policies, one of which was the policy here sued on, and the other a policy for a like sum, issued by Fireman's Insurance Company of Newark, New Jersey, through the same agent; that he looked at the front outside jacket of each policy and noted that the amount of each was $2500 on property located at 1511-13 and 1515-17 East 12th Street; that he made no further examination of the policies; that he did not know, until after the fire, that each of the policies purported to insure two separate buildings for $1250 each, instead of one building for $2500.

It was agreed that the total damage to the property far exceeds the sum of $5000, of which all but $41.69 occurred in that portion of the property known as 1511-13 East 12th Street; and that $41.69 damage occurred in that portion known as 1515-17 East 12th Street. No damage occurred in the barber shop, No. 1513½, a part of which room was located on either side of a line dividing 1513 and 1515.

Plaintiff made demand for the full amount of the loss under the policy, that is $2500. Defendant offered to pay $1250, in full settlement of the damage to what it calls the building located at 1511-13 East 12th Street, claiming that to be the full amount of its liability under that portion of the policy; and it offered to pay $20.85 for damages occurring at 1515-17 East 12th Street.

Defendant offered the testimony of Mr. Gill, of the Missouri Inspection Bureau. He stated that the bureau is recognized under the statutes and by the Department of Insurance as the authorized agency for the purpose of determining and publishing rates to be charged by fire insurance companies on property such as this; that according to maps and records, on file and kept by the bureau, the property herein was, for insurance purposes, two buildings, one at 1511-13 and the other at 1515-17, on March 9, 1939, when this policy was executed; that it had been so rated for many years prior thereto; that on December 12, 1940, the bureau corrected its records and listed the property as one single building because it was learned that no fire *Page 846 wall separates one part of the structure from the other; that a blanket policy could have been written, when this policy was issued, covering the property as one building but a higher rate would have attached.

Defendant's counsel stated, during the course of the examination of the witness, that if defendant had written a $5000 policy on the property as one building, without attaching a blanket coverage form and charging a higher rate than is here charged, it would be compelled to pay the full $5000 loss, if one occurred, and be subject to a fine, under the provisions of the statute.

Mr. Bennett testified that his aunt constructed the building which is the subject of the insurance contract; that A.P.

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Bluebook (online)
221 S.W.2d 217, 240 Mo. App. 839, 1949 Mo. App. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prestigiacamo-v-american-equitable-assurance-co-moctapp-1949.