Purcell v. Michigan F. M. Ins. Co. of Detroit

173 S.W.2d 134, 295 Ky. 232, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 188
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJuly 15, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 173 S.W.2d 134 (Purcell v. Michigan F. M. Ins. Co. of Detroit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Purcell v. Michigan F. M. Ins. Co. of Detroit, 173 S.W.2d 134, 295 Ky. 232, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 188 (Ky. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Perry, Commissioner

Affirming.

The appellant, Mrs. Purcell, who was plaintiff below, brought this action against the appellee, Michigan Fire & Marine Insurance Co., hereinafter called the “company, ’ ’ to recover on an insurance policy issued her, insuring her against loss by “theft, robbery and pilferage” of her certain automobile therein described.

Plaintiff in her petition alleged that on the night of August 3, 1941, and while this contract of insurance was in force, her car was stolen by persons to her unknown; that on the morning following, some few hours after its alleged theft, the car was found but in a wrecked and demolished condition, at the foot of a cliff, some twenty-five or thirty feet high, in an old quarry, located on the Maple Grove road, some two and a half or three miles distant from plaintiff’s home in Mt. Vernon, Ky., and that immediately after the car was stolen, notice of such fact was given both the defendant and police.

The company by its answer denied that notice of loss had been given it in accordance with the provisions of the policy and further denied that the insured car was stolen. A reply was filed, completing the issues.

A trial had before a jury on this factual issue, as to whether or not the car was stolen, resulted in a verdict in favor of appellee.

Appellant asks a reversal of the judgment entered on that verdict for: (1) Error in overruling plaintiff’s motion for a peremptory instruction, made at the close of all the evidence; (2) because the verdict was flagrantly against the evidence; (3) error in permitting the introduction of prejudicial testimony on behalf of the appellee; and (4) misconduct on the part of counsel for appellee in reading to the jury a statement purporting to be an affidavit,, when, as a matter of-fact and as the record discloses, it was not an affidavit nor a copy of an affidavit.

The witnesses who testified in behalf of appellant, to maintain her position on this issue, were herself, her *235 husband, Ben Purcell (hereinafter called Purcell), and his friend, Ed Burnett.

The testimony of the plaintiff went no further than merely stating that she was the owner of the car in question and that at .¿bout six o ’clock on the evening of August 3, 1941, the night the car was allegedly stolen, her husband, Purcell, with her consent, took her car and drove away in it; that she did not thereafter see him until his return the folloAving morning, about seven o ’clock, when he was brought home by his friend and witness, Ed Burnett, in his car.

Plaintiff’s husband, Purcell, was her only witness Avho undertook to positively relate the time, place and circumstances under which the car was stolen from Mm, though by his testimony he gives but a very vague, confused and unsatisfactory story as to what transpired on this night in evidence, during wMch he was entrusted with and had the use, control and the driving of plaintiff’s car. Further it appears that Purcell was plaintiff’s only Avitness who was in a position and did purport and undertake to directly and positively testify both as to the fact and the attendant circumstances under which it is alleged her car was stolen from him on the night in evidence.

He testified, in effect, that his wife, though the owner of the car, did not herself drive it, but that he and his daughter, who each had a separate set of car keys, did; that on the evening in question his daughter had been driving the car and had left the keys in the ignition switch; that he, when starting to use the car, removed his daughter’s keys from its ignition switch, placed them in the glove compartment of the car, and inserted his own key in the switch; that, according to his story, he left his home about six o ’clock, drove down town, where he “milled around” until about ten o’clock, ^when he left Mt. Vernon and drove out a couple of miles to meet an unnamed and unidentified party in the country at an agreed meeting place; that he first stopped, for fifteen or twenty minutes, near the point of intersection of the Burr and Brush Creek roads and then drove on to the road that goes to Maple Grove, when, at about eleven o’clock, he again stopped and parked his car on the Maple Grove road at a point about a hundred or two hundred yards off of and beyond its point of intersection with the Brush Creek road, though he did not *236 know just how far this second stopping place was off the road, where he awaited the expected coming of his “date;” that his “date” soon met Mm and that they remained there until about eleven-thirty, when, after first locking his car, which was headed towards the Maple Grove or Ridge road, and pocketing his keys, they left together, going to some unnamed place on some mission not divulged by the evidence.

Further he testified that at about two-thirty (or some two and a half or three hours thereafter) he returned to the place where he and his unnamed companion had together left his car parked and found it gone; that after first there looking around for it, lié walked out the Maple Grove road for a distance of some five or six miles, hunting his car or until he came, at about daybreak, to the home of the witness Harve Bond, located on a side road, about a mile and a half off the main or Maple Grove road and a mile or two from the quarry where the wrecked car was found.

Purcell, when asked if he were not lost when he got to Bond’s, answered that he would not say he knew where he then was, as it was the first time he had been in that country. When'further asked if he did not “tell Bond he had a car over there somewhere, but didn’t know where,” he evasively answered, “Not in those words.” Further, he denied that he was intoxicated when he reached Bond’s home or that he asked Harve Bond to let him go into his house to get some sleep, or to take him home in his car as he went to work or to the store of his friend, Ed Burnett, at Brush Creek, but testified that Bond volunteered to take him to Ed Burnett’s at Brush Creek and did, arriving there around six o’clock, when, after telling Burnett about having-lost his car, Burnett drove him to Mt. Vernon; that on their way to Mt. Vernon, they stopped at a roadhouse, where he (Purcell) bought and drank two bottles of beer; that on arriving at Mt. Vernon, they first stopped, at Finnell’s garage, where Burnett, in Purcell’s presence, reported the loss of his car and requested that they send out their wrecking crew to bring it in.

Both Burnett and the employee to whom he talked state that Purcell was drunk or asleep, and that Burnett then took him to his home.

Burnett denies that when stopping at the garage he told them, in Purcell’s presence, where to go and get *237 Purcell’s car or that “Purcell had wrecked his car over there and didn’t know where it was” and for them to send out their wrecker and get it.

Purcell was further asked on cross-examination if he had not gone out on a “blind date” that night, to which he answered: “No, it was not a blind date. I knew where I was going.

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Related

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357 S.W.2d 863 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
173 S.W.2d 134, 295 Ky. 232, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/purcell-v-michigan-f-m-ins-co-of-detroit-kyctapphigh-1943.