Royal Insurance Co. v. McIntyre

35 L.R.A. 672, 37 S.W. 1068, 90 Tex. 170, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 458
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 35 L.R.A. 672 (Royal Insurance Co. v. McIntyre) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Royal Insurance Co. v. McIntyre, 35 L.R.A. 672, 37 S.W. 1068, 90 Tex. 170, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 458 (Tex. 1896).

Opinion

DENMAN, Associate Justice.

McIntyre brought this suit against the Royal Insurance Company, alleging in substance that said company issued to him upon his two and one-half-story frame building a policy of $2000, additional concurrent insurance for $1500 having been permitted *172 in another company; that while said policy was in full force the house was totally destroyed by fire, whereby loss occurred to him of $3500 and whereby defendant became liable and promised to pay him said $2000, for which he sought judgment.

The Insurance Company answered, among other things, (1) a general denial; (2) that the policy sued on contained a stipulation to the effect that if there be other insurance on the building said company should be liable for no greater proportion of the loss sustained than said $2000 might bear to the whole amount of such insurance; that the building was not a total loss, but was only damaged to the extent of $1887; that in addition to the policy of $2000 issued by defendant, the German Insurance Company had a policy thereon amounting to $1500; that if defendant is liable to plaintiff, it is only liable for four-sevenths of said $1887, to-wit, $1076.28, the same being its proportionate amount of damage caused to the building by the fire.

Thus it will be observed that plaintiff sought to recover for a total loss, while the defendant contended that the loss was not total, but that the house was merely damaged.

According to the ^pstimony of plaintiff, the roof was burned off and the east wall, where the fire caught from an adjoining building, was practically destroyed, and the rooms in the attic as well as the attic floor were ruined, but the second and lower stories, together with the partitions, doors, windows, blinds, the south, west and north walls, were still standing in position and not injured to any great extent; the plastering, papering and floors and the finish of the wood-work inside was very much damaged by water; and taken as a whole the building was totally ruined.

O’Riley, witness for defendant, testified that the debris of the roof was all piled on the attic floor, but the fire did not burn through the floor; that there was a little stairway leading from the second to the third floor and where the fire had fallen down this stairway it had burned it; that the cornice on the inside all round the building was charred and injured so as to necessitate taking it off and replacing it; that all.the laths and a greater part of the ceiling over the second story were still on; that the building was not burned anywhere on the inside below the attic floor except a portion in the extreme east of the kitchen and the room upstairs over the kitchen; that the damage did not extend below the third or attic floor of the building; that a greater portion of the weather-boarding on the east wall—that is the front portion of the east wall—would only require repainting; that about two-thirds of the weather-boarding of the east wall was entirely burned off and only about two-fifths unfit for use; that none of the storm sheeting of the east wall was burned off, and all could be used in rebuilding, but it was charred—probably one-half of it had been injured and charred in some way by the fire; that there were no holes burned through the east walls; that none of the sash of east wall Avere out of place, yet several of them were damaged to such an extent they could not be used; that some of the blinds of the windows on the east wall were still in *173 position and could be used; that the base and water table of the east wall were perfect; that none of the studding of the east wall was entirely burned away; that none of the east wall was out of plumb or in danger of falling; that there was not a wall in the building that was out of plumb; that only a small portion of the studding on the east wall had been charred and injured at all by the fire, it having been protected by the sheeting, none of which had been burned through; that to make the wall as good as new, two or three of the studding will have to be taken out. With the exception of the specific injuries to the building above stated the general tenor of this witness’ testimony was to the effect that the house was not injured except some damage to the plastering and interior finish in different portions of the house by water.

The testimony is quite voluminous and not necessary to be stated, but we have given a portion of that of the two witnesses above without undertaking to give their language or to state the facts in the order in which they appear in the testimony, in order that the general tenor of the testimony on each side may be understood.

The defendant offered to prove by several expert witnesses “the cost of repairing and restoring said building to its original usefulness, strength and utility; that this could be done at a cost of from $1300 to $1800; the value of the material still uninjured in said house, and that the same was worth about $3500; that the value of the house after the fire was about $3500; that about 90 per cent of the material still in the house after the fire was uninjured, and that the remainder of said building could be used for reconstructing said building; that only about 30 per cent of the building had been destroyed; that the building could be renewed and rebuilt without tearing it down; that the greater portion of said building remained still uninjured and intact, and that by replacing the damaged portions the building would have been as good as new;” which evidence was excluded by the court, to which action of the court defendant duly reserved its bill of exceptions. The plaintiff recovered a judgment against defendant for the full amount of the policy, which judgment having been affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals the cause has been brought to this court by the Insurance Company,' assigning as error the action of the Court of Civil Appeals in holding that the trial court did not err in excluding said testimony.

We have not been able to find either in the cases or text books any instance in which the admissibility of such evidence has been challenged, and therefore know of no direct authority upon the question; but a careful reading of many reported eases, both upon maritime and fire insurance, convinces us that such evidence has been generally received, upon the issue as to whether the loss was total or partial, both in the English and American courts: Aranzamendi v. La. Ins. Co., 3 La., 432; 22 Am Dec., 136; Saltus v. Ocean Ins. Co., 12 Johnson, 107; 7 Am. Dec., 290; Rosette v. Gurney, 11 C. B., 176; Grainger v. Martin, 2 B & S., Q. B., 456; Moss v. Smith, 9 M. G. & S., 93; Adams v. McKenzie, 13 C. B. (N. S.), *174 442; Wallerstein v. Col. Ins. Co., 44 N. Y., 204; Great Western Ins. Co. v. Fogarty, 19 Wall., 640; Ampleman v. Ins. Co., 35 Mo. App., 308-320; Harriman v. Queen Ins. Co., 49 Wis., 71; Brady v. N. W. Ins. Co., 11 Mich., 426-449; Williams v. Hartford Ins. Co., 54 Cal., 442.

But while the apparent general reception of such evidence, in the absence of an objection to or discussion of its admissibility, tends to show the consensus of opinion as to its competency among the many learned writers, advocates and jurists who have been called upon to deal with the intricate question as to whether a loss was total or partial, nevertheless the subject is not entirely free from difficulty.

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Bluebook (online)
35 L.R.A. 672, 37 S.W. 1068, 90 Tex. 170, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/royal-insurance-co-v-mcintyre-tex-1896.