Roach v. Harmonia Fire Ins. Co.

145 So. 769, 176 La. 356, 1933 La. LEXIS 1549
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 3, 1933
DocketNo. 31886.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 145 So. 769 (Roach v. Harmonia Fire Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roach v. Harmonia Fire Ins. Co., 145 So. 769, 176 La. 356, 1933 La. LEXIS 1549 (La. 1933).

Opinion

O’NIEEL, C. J.

This is a suit on a fire insurance policy for $2,000 on household furniture and effects. The plaintiff claimed also the statutory penalty of 12 per cent, damages, and $750 as a reasonable attorney’s fee, under section 3 of Act' No. 16S of 1908. The defendant, answering the suit, denied virtually every allegation in the plaintiff’s petition, except the fact that the policy was issued, and set up two special pleas in defense of the suit. The special pleas were, first, that the property was incumbered by a chattel mortgage at the time of the fire, and, second, that the plaintiff misrepresented material facts concerning the subject of the insurance, and swore falsely with reference thereto, in that he swore that his loss was $2,545.25, when in fact it was not over $500.

The plaintiff filed a plea of estoppel, averring that, after the fire, and on the day it occurred, the insurance adjuster representing the company asked for permission, and was given permission, to take possession of the furniture and effects that were damaged, but not totally destroyed, and did then take possession of such furniture and effects, with the promise that the company would have them repaired and renovated at the company’s expense, and would pay the value, to be ascertained, of the furniture find effects that were totally destroyed.

The district judge gave judgment for the plaintiff for $2,000, and the statutory penalty of 12 per cent, damages, and $300 for the attorney’s fee. The defendant has appealed from the decision.

The appellant’s plea that the plaintiff was guilty of misrepresentation and false swearing, with reference to the value of the property destroyed or damaged, is not sustained by the evidence. There were some exaggerations on the part of the plaintiff and his wife, in their valuation of some of the articles of furniture; but there is no proof of willful misrepresentation or false swearing. It is *359 very natural for a person to be mistaken as to tbe value, or even tbe cost, of an article in his or her household furniture or effects, which, to any one else, would be only secondhand furniture, or junk.

The defendant’s other special plea has for its support the fact that there was a chattel mortgage on the furniture to secure a loan of $130. The debt appears to have been reduced to $120 at the time of the fire. The 'mortgage was given before the policy was issued, but was recorded after' the policy was issued. It seems that there was also a vendor’s lien and chattel mortgage for $30 on a gas stove bought after the policy was issued; but the defendant makes no complaint about that. The clause invoked by the defendant, in the policy, is that “This entire policy, unless otherwise provided by agreement indorsed hereon or added hereto, shall be void * * * if the subject of insurance be personal property and be or become incumbered by a chattel mortgage.” The plaintiff invokes the provisions of Act No. 222 of 1928, p. 291, to the effect that a fire insurance policy shall not be declared void by the insurer for a breach of any representation, warranty or condition contained in the policy, or in the application therefor, 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 either such a breach 'as would increase either the moral or physical hazard under the policy, or shall be such a breach as would be a violation of the warranty or condition requiring the insured to take and keep inventories and books showin; a record-of- his business.

'■'Th/e defendant contends that a chattel mortgage on personal property covered by fire insurance does, essentially, increase the moral hazard. There are judicial decisions to that effect; but whether they should be deemed controlling in a ease where the value of the property exceeds by nearly one-fourth the amount of the insurance, and where the amount of the debt secured by the chattel mortgage is not more than a twentieth of the value of the property, is not so certain; and it is a question which we are not compelled to decide in this case, because the evidence leaves no doubt that the insurance company waived whatever right the company might have had to contend that the policy was void because of the chattel mortgage on the property.

The fire occurred early in the morning; between 3 and 4 o’clock. Later in the day, an adjuster representing the insurance company visited the scene and made an inspection of what remained of the furniture and effects'. That afternoon he checked off the furniture and effects on a list furnished by the insured and the latter’s wife, and proposed to them that he, the adjuster, on behalf of the insurance company, would take possession of the furniture and effects that were damaged but not totally destroyed, and have them renovated at the expense of the company, and that the company would pay the value, to be ascertained, of the furniture and effects that were totally destroyed. The insured and his ■wife consented to the proposal, and the adjuster had all that remained of the furniture hauled to a furniture establishment to be repaired, and had all that remained of the bedding and fabrics hauled to a cleaning establishment to be cleaned and renovated. The •adjuster testified that, before he took possession of the furniture and effects for the insur *361 anee company, he asked the insured and his wife if there was a chattel mortgage on the property, and that they replied that there was none. They denied, in their testimony, that any inquiry was made about a chattel mortgage on the property until the next day after the adjuster had taken possession of it. It was admitted by the adjuster, in his testimony, that the wife of the insured told him of the chattel mortgage on the next day after he had taken possession of the damaged furniture and effects, and that he verified the statement by referring to the mortgage records, and then notified the insurance company of the chattel mortgage. He did not return the damaged furniture and effects to the insured, or offer to return them, and was not instructed by the insurance company to return them. The insurance company merely instructed the adjuster to have the insured examined under oath, according to one of the clauses in the policy. The examination was had on the nineteenth day after the date of the fire, and a transcript of the answers given by the insured under oath was sent by the adjuster to the insurance company’s home office. Thereafter the company instructed the adjuster to inform the insured that the company denied liability. Even then, and up to the time of the trial of the case, no offer was ever made to return the damaged furniture and effects which the adjuster had taken possession of for the insurance company. The furniture 'that was sent by the adjuster to the repair shop was afterwards damaged on account of a leaky roof, and the bedding and fabrics that were sent to the cleaning establishment were either sold or held for the cost of renovating them; during all of which time the insured and his wife were not informed of the whereabouts of their furniture and effects.

There is a preponderance of evidence to the effect that the adjuster did not ask whether there was -a chattel mortgage on the property when he took possession of it. When he was.

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Bluebook (online)
145 So. 769, 176 La. 356, 1933 La. LEXIS 1549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roach-v-harmonia-fire-ins-co-la-1933.