Rayford v. &198tna Ins. Co.

193 So. 413
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 30, 1940
DocketNo. 2052.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 193 So. 413 (Rayford v. &198tna Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rayford v. &198tna Ins. Co., 193 So. 413 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

OTT, Judge.

The suit is to recover on a fire insurance policy for $500, plus 12 per cent penalty and $250 attorneys fees, interest and cost. The policy was issued on June 13, 1936, and covered a dwelling occupied by plaintiff and his wife at a place called Turkey Creek in Evangeline Parish, part of the insured building being used for the post office at that place, plaintiff’s. wife being the postmistress and lie being assistant postmaster. The fire occurred after midnight on March 23, 1937, while both plaintiff and his wife were away from home.

The sole and only defense is that the policy was void because of the breach of a ■condition therein to the following effect:

“This entire policy * * * shall be void * * * if the interest of the insured be other than unconditional and sole •ownership; or if the subject of the insurance be a building on ground not owned by the insured in fee simple.”

It is alleged in the answer, and shown on the trial of the case, that the only title that the insured had to the property was a letter or contract from the Opelousas-St. Landry Securities Co., Inc. dated October 8, 1935, wherein the said company agreed to sell plaintiff eight acres of land at Turkey Creek. No deed was executed to the land, but the contract stipulated that pending the execution of the deed, plaintiff was to have the right to take possession of the land and to erect or move buildings thereon.

After plaintiff secured this agreement from Securities Company to sell him the land, he constructed the house on it, and he and his wife lived in the house and operated the post office in part of the building. No deed was ever made to plaintiff covering the land on which the house was situated, and while plaintiff did own the building covered by the insurance, he did not own the land on which the house was situated in fee simple. Therefore, unless the insurance company is prevented from setting up a breach of this provision in the policy, as a defense because of Act No. 222 of 1928, the policy was voided by a breach of the condition therein requiring that the land on which the insured building is located be owned by the insured in fee simple. Campbell v. Richmond Ins. Company, 156 La. 455, 100 So. 679.

Act No. 222 of 1928 provides in substance that no policy of fire insurance shall be declared void by the insurer for the breach of any representation, warranty or condition contained in the policy, nor shall any such breach avail the insurer to avoid liability, unless such breach shall exist at the time of the loss and shall be such a breach as would increase either the moral or physical hazard under the policy.

Where the insurance company desires to set up as a defense a breach of a condition or warranty in the policy, it not only must specially plead and prove the breach, but it must also allege and prove that such breach increased either the moral or physical hazard under the policy. Further more, the company must show facts and circumstances which caused the increase in the hazard by reason of the breach. Knowles v. Dixie Fire Ins. Co., 177 La. 941, 149 So. 528.

As facts and circumstances to show that the breach of the condition in the policy requiring the insured to be the unconditional owner of the land on which the insured building was located did increase the moral hazard at the time of the fire, defendant showed that the land on which the building was situated was in litigation between a man named Causey and the Opel-ousas-St.' Landry Securities Co. Inc.; that *415 on December 10, 1936, three or four months before the fire, a judgment had been rendered in the district court by default in favor of Causey and against said Securities Company decreeing Causey to be the owner of the land which the Securities Company had agreed to sell to plaintiff and on which he had erected the building; that plaintiff himself was then in litigation with said Causey on account of some charge of trespass made by Causey against plaintiff; that plaintiff knew of this litigation between Causey and the Securities Company which had not terminated at the time of the fire in March, 1937that at that time, under the judgment, neither the Securities Company nor its author in title was the owner of the land on which plaintiff had constructed the building; that this judgment decreeing Causey to be the owner of the land was in effect at the time of the fire, and the judgment was not reversed until May 24, 1937, when the Supreme Court remanded the case for a trial on the merits. Causey v. Opelousas-St. Landry Securities Co., 187 La. 659, 175 So. 448.

It was further shown that at the time of the fire,- plaintiff was under sentence of eighteen months in a federal reformatory for the embezzlement of some postal funds while acting as assistant postmaster; that he began serving this sentence some three weeks before the fire; that the fire was strongly suspicious of incendiary origin (in fact plaintiff alleges in his petition that he cannot account for the origin of the fire except on the theory of incendiarism).

The trial judge rendered judgement in favor of plaintiff for the amount of the policy plus 12 per cent penalty, interest and $250 attorneys fees. The defendant has appealed.

It is well to state here that defendant does not claim that either plaintiff or his wife burned or caused to be burned the insured building, and there is no evidence to create even a suspicion that they did so. On the contrary, the evidence shows that if the fire was of incendiary origin, neither plaintiff nor his wife was involved in the arson, but if someone did set fire to the building it was some third person. However, the question is not whether the insured caused the destruction of the building, but the question is whether or not the breach in a condition of the policy increased the moral hazard at the time of the loss.

What is meant by an increase of the moral hazard is well stated in the case of Knowles v. Dixie Fire Ins. Co., supra, as follows [177 La. 941, 149 So. 531]:

“The term ‘moral hazard’ as used in the act and in the decisions relates to the pecuniary interest which the insured or some other person has either in protecting the property from loss by fire or destroying it. The moral hazard is least when the pecuniary interest of the insured in protecting it is greatest. It is greatest when his pecuniary interest is such that he might gain most by burning it. While the confession may be a sad commentary on human nature, yet it is a fact known to all that men’s pecuniary interests do sometimes influence their conduct even to the extent of burning their own property in order to collect insurance policies.”

If the fact that plaintiff had been sentenced to a federal reformatory for embezzling postal funds did actually increase the moral hazard — -that is, by making him more likely to have the house burned because of his financial condition or because of lowering his social and business standing — there is nothing to show that the breach in the policy relative to the fee simple ownership of the land had anything whatever to do with this increase in the-moral hazard. Indeed, the moral hazard" created by this circumstance would have been increased as much (if it was increased) had plaintiff held an iron clad title-to the land on which the building was situated.

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193 So. 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rayford-v-198tna-ins-co-lactapp-1940.